Sunday, October 28, 2012

F E M A: Disaster Alert

Sunday, October 28, 2012 3:33 PM
WASHINGTON - At the direction of President Obama, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is coordinating the federal government's assistance and preparations to support states affected by Hurricane Sandy. Today, the President joined an operations briefing at the National Response Coordination Center at FEMA Headquarters in Washington D.C. During the briefing the President received an update on preparedness activities underway from Administrator Craig Fugate and FEMA Regional Administrators, and an update on the storm from National Hurricane Center Director Dr. Rick Knabb. The President continues to direct Administrator Fugate to ensure that federal partners continue to bring all available resources to bear to support state and local responders in potentially affected areas along the East Coast as they prepare for severe weather. FEMA has already deployed teams and has pre-staged resources to potentially affected states and areas ahead of the storm and FEMA continues to urge residents in potentially affected areas to be prepared.
"As conditions worsen along the Mid-Atlantic and other parts of the East Coast, residents need to listen to the direction of local officials," urged Fugate. "This is a large storm and the potential impacts from wind, coastal flooding, inland flooding, rain and snow will affect many states.  If you're on the coast, it's time to act and follow evacuation orders. If you're inland, now is the time to make final preparations.  Be ready for power outages and stock up on emergency supplies of food, water, medications, and other supplies."
Today, the President declared an emergency for the State of Maryland.  The President's action authorizes FEMA to coordinate all disaster relief efforts to provide assistance for required emergency measures to save lives and to protect property and public health and safety in the City of Baltimore and all counties in the State of Maryland.
FEMA and its federal partners remain in close coordination with states and tribal governments and continue to coordinate resources to provide support as needed. FEMA Incident Management Assistance Teams and liaison officers have deployed to potentially affected states along the East Coast to support preparedness activities and ensure there are no unmet needs.  Mobile Emergency Response Support (MERS) personnel and teams are in place or are en route to Delaware, the District of Columbia, New York, New Jersey, North Carolina and Pennsylvania to support the states with secure and non-secure voice, video, and information services, operations, and logistics support to state response operations, and with any potential requests for assistance.
According to the NOAA National Weather Service 2 p.m. advisory, hurricane force winds are expected along portions of the coast between Chincoteague, Va. And Chatham, Mass.  Tropical Storm force winds are expected north of Chatham to Merrimack River, Mass., the lower Chesapeake Bay and south of Chincoteague to Duck, North Carolina.  Hurricane Sandy is expected to produce significant precipitation over widespread areas causing inland flooding, coastal storm surge, snow, and possible power outages. 
Individuals in the region should continue to monitor NOAA Weather Radio and their local news for updates and directions provided by their local officials.  State and local officials make determinations and announcements about evacuations. We urge the public to listen to the instructions of officials, and if told to evacuate - evacuate.
The FEMA smartphone app provides safety tips and displays open shelter information at www.fema.gov/smartphone-app. To find an open Red Cross shelter, download the Red Cross Hurricane app or visit redcross.org.
To support potential pre- and post storm evacuations, in coordination with U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) through Emergency Support Function 8, FEMA has the capability to activate ambulance contracts to support state requirements to evacuate patients if needed and requested.
In anticipation of the potential impact from the storm, the American Red Cross mobilized hundreds of disaster workers, readying shelters and coordinating efforts with community partners in potentially affected states and the Department of Health and Human Services has two 50-person disaster medical assistance teams pre-staged in the mid-Atlantic, prepared to deploy quickly along the East Coast if needed. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers deployed temporary emergency power teams along the East Coast.  Power teams consist of planning and response teams and resource support staff to assist with critical infrastructure. 
The Department of Energy (DOE) is working closely with FEMA, and in support of state and local officials who are responsible for working with utilities as they prepare for storms, deployed emergency response personnel to FEMA Regional Response Coordination Centers (RRCC) in Massachusetts, New York, and Pennsylvania, and additional personnel are on standby to assist.  DOE is working with states and local partners as the electric industry begins the process of pre-mobilizing storm and field personnel to assist in power restoration efforts. 
U.S. Northern Command deployed Regional Defense Coordinating Officers (DCO), and portions of the Defense Coordinating Element (DCE), in advance of the storm, to validate, plan and coordinate potential Department of Defense (DOD) support of FEMA's response operations and to facilitate DOD support of life-saving and response operations.  FEMA and DOD are establishing Incident Support Bases in Westover, Mass. and Lakehurst, New Jersey to position supplies including water, meals, blankets and other resources closer to potentially impacted areas, should they be needed.
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is monitoring the storm and will take steps to prepare and protect FAA facilities and equipment that are in the projected path of the storm, including control towers, radars and navigational aids. The FAA's top operational priority is to quickly re-establish air traffic service to support disaster relief efforts. The FAA Air Traffic System Command Center will maintain constant communications with the airlines, the military, business aviation and airports in the storm's path. They will advise the FAA about their flight schedules and plans to evacuate aircraft from affected areas and the FAA will share information about the status of the air traffic control system and availability of air routes.
Preparedness Actions
Take Action. Time is limited to prepare your family, home or business to lessen the impact of severe weather.  Coastal and inland residents should ensure that their families have an emergency plan and emergency kits in their homes and cars.  Some of the items in a basic emergency kit include: one gallon of water per person per day, for drinking and sanitation; at least a three-day supply of non-perishable food; battery-powered radio and a NOAA Weather Radio; flashlight and extra batteries; and First Aid kit. 
Those in areas where the storm is expected to produce snow should also have supplies in their emergency kits such as rock salt or environmentally safe products to melt ice on walkways, snow shovels, adequate clothing and blankets to keep warm and heating fuel like dry, seasoned wood for the fireplace or wood-burning stove. Both hurricanes and winter storms often cause power outages, take steps now to ensure you can sustain yourself for at least 72 hours if needed.  
More information about what to do before, during and after a disaster can also be found visiting www.ready.gov and www.listo.gov. The FEMA mobile site (http://m.fema.gov), smartphone app (www.fema.gov/smartphone-app), and text messages (www.fema.gov/text-messages) also provide regular updates. Sharing information using social media tools is also a good way for residents to stay informed. Follow FEMA online at www.fema.gov/blogwww.twitter.com/femawww.facebook.com/fema, and www.youtube.com/fema
FEMA's mission is to support our citizens and first responders to ensure that as a nation we work together to build, sustain, and improve our capability to prepare for, protect against, respond to, recover from, and mitigate all hazards.

Monday, October 22, 2012

DEBATE MAGIC



Presidential Polls Show Dead Heat Between Barack Obama, Mitt Romney

Posted: Updated: 10/22/2012 5:46 pm EDT
WASHINGTON -- The latest tracking surveys continue to show a remarkably close race between President Barack Obama and Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney, with Obama maintaining very narrow advantages in crucial battleground states like Ohio that will likely decide the election.
Eight new national tracking polls released since Saturday reinforce the conclusion that the race for president remains at a near deadlock nationwide. Three of the surveys give a slight edge to Romney, three give the edge to Obama and two show an exact tie, including the latest from NBC News and the Wall Street Journal.
2012-10-22-nationalpolls.png
Two of the polls are particularly at odds: The Gallup Daily tracking poll continues to give Romney an advantage of 7 percentage points (52 to 45 percent), while an Investors Business Daily/TIPP survey shows Obama with a 6-point lead (48 to 52 percent).
The differences among these surveys, whether the result of ordinary random sampling error or variations in the methods used by the pollsters, are less important for the moment than their collective finding of a near tie nationwide. The HuffPost Pollster poll tracking model, which takes into account all public polls both national and statewide, currently shows a virtual tie as of this writing. Any brief uptick for Obama since the second presidential debate has been washed out by the surveys released since Saturday.
But the near tie nationwide continues to translate into narrow but statistically meaningful advantages for Obama in a handful of states that will likely decide the outcome of the election.
In Ohio, for example, a new survey released on Monday morning by CBS News and Quinnipiac University shows Obama holding a lead of 5 percentage points over Romney (50 to 45 percent). That result represents a net 5-point gain for Romney since the previous Quinnipiac survey before the two presidential debates that showed Obama leading by 10 points (53 to 43 percent).
Obama's Ohio margin was much closer, however, on several automated telephone surveys conducted in the past week, polls that are banned by federal law from dialing cell phones. According to a recent government survey, more than half of the adults in Ohio either have only a mobile phone (33 percent) or use their mobile phone to answer most of their calls (18 percent). A live interviewer poll conducted by Fox News last week that sampled both landline and mobile phones gave Obama a 3-percentage point edge in Ohio (46 to 43 percent).

Thursday, October 11, 2012

NASA MARS ROVER UPDATES

Latest News

Mars rock known as 'Jake Matijevic'

Mars Rock Touched by NASA Curiosity has Surprises

The first Martian rock NASA's Curiosity rover has reached out to touch presents a more varied composition than expected from previous missions.
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Mission Images

Target: Jake Matijevic Rock

NASA's Mars Science Laboratory Image

High-Resolution View of Cross-Section Through a Mars ...

NASA's Mars Science Laboratory image
This image shows the wall of a scuffmark NASA's Curiosity made in a windblown ripple of Martian sand with its wheel. The upper half of the image shows a small portion of the side wall of the scuff ...
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Too Big for the Sieve

NASA's Mars Science Laboratory Image
In this image, the scoop on NASA's Curiosity rover shows the larger soil particles that were too big to filter through a sample-processing sieve that is porous only to particles less than 0.006 ...
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Sand Filtered through Curiosity's Sieve

NASA's Mars Science Laboratory Image

Thanks for the Scrub

NASA's Mars Science Laboratory Image
This image from Curiosity's Mast Camera shows NASA's Curiosity rover just after discarding a soil sample as part of its first "decontamination" exercise. A small amount of remnant material is visible ...
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Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Truth and Economy

HuffPost QuickRead...

GOP Congressmen May Give Up On Bush Tax Cuts For The Rich: Report »

The Huffington Post  |  Bonnie Kavoussi  |  October 09, 2012 at 11:01 AM
After years of relentless opposition, some Republican Congressmen may be willing to allow the high-income Bush tax cuts to finally expire, the Financial Times reports. Yes, certain Republican Congressmen have begun privately arguing that it would be best for the party to succumb to Democratic demands and allow the Bush tax cuts to expire on income above $250,000 if President Barack Obama wins reelection, which the aide acknowledges would leave Republican Congressmen with not "much leverage," ...

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Focus On Debates

      DEBATES DEBATES DEBATES DEBATES DEBATES


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11 Key Reads on the Economy Ahead of Tonight’s Debate

Members of the media prepare on Oct. 2, 2012, for tonight's first presidential debate on domestic issues. To prepare you, we've rounded up some of the best coverage of the critical economic issues in the presidential election. (Win McNamee/Getty Images)
Oct. 3: This post has been corrected.
With tonight's debate focusing on domestic policy, we've rounded up some of the best coverage of the critical economic issues in the presidential election. (Don't worry; they're not all long reads.)
State of the Economy
Romney Better Off for Not Asking as Economy Improves Since 2009, Bloomberg, September 2012
The Romney campaign often asks the question, are you better off than four years ago? Bloomberg looked at 70 indicators of economic well-being and according to 51 of them — including growth, hiring, housing starts and the stock market — things are indeed better now than when President Obama took office. Of course, the economy was in big trouble four years ago, the recovery isn't exactly rip-roaring, and it isn't often clear what can be attributed to Obama's policies.
Fiscal Cliff
The Fiscal Cliff, In Three and A Half Graphics, NPR Planet Money, September 2012
On New Year's day, spending cuts and tax increases are set to go into effect, unless Congress votes otherwise — what's known as the "fiscal cliff." Leave it to Planet Money to create one of the clearest explanations of the cuts and tax increases: three graphics break it all down.
Debt and Deficits
Obama vs. Boehner: Who Killed the Debt Deal?, The New York Times Magazine, March 2012
Last year, Obama and Republican House Speaker John Boehner almost hashed out a "grand bargain" to cut the deficit by $2.8 trillion over the next decade. This is the best account of how that deal fell apart — what ultimately put U.S. on the path to the fiscal cliff it faces in January. Short on time? Check out the short video explainer that accompanies the piece.
The Three Best Charts on How Clinton's Surpluses Became Bush and Obama's Deficits, The Washington Post, September 2012
As the national debt hit $16 trillion last month, the Post's Ezra Klein rounded up three charts to explain how that happened. Each chart accounts for how the debt built up slightly differently, but they agree on one thing: "The primary drivers of the debt predate Barack Obama," Klein writes. "The post-9/11 wars and security build-up, the Bush tax cuts, and the 2001 and 2008 recessions simply began before Obama became president."
Financial Reform
Bank Lobby's Onslaught Shifts Debate on Volcker Rule, Bloomberg, March 2012
Though the financial reform bill known as Dodd-Frank was passed in 2010, details are still being hashed out — and in cases weakened — amid a flurry of lobbying. (As the New York Times reported, Congress members themselves are still working behind the scenes to influence how the law is enacted). Romney has pledged to repeal Dodd-Frank.
Bailout — for Banks and Homeowners
Bailout Tracker, ProPublica, ongoing
Four years later, how much are taxpayers in the red from bailing out companies during the crisis? We gave the latest tally last month, showing how the government is likely to lose billions on General Motors, and has actually profited from the bank bailouts.
The Great American Foreclosure Story: The Struggle for Justice and a Place to Call Home, ProPublica, April 2012
A deep dive into the causes and consequences of the housing crisis, and how many of Obama's policies have fallen short of expectations. Some pin the failure of those policies on the banks: A recent study says that some of the country's biggest banks failed to help some 800,000 homeowners get loan modifications through a government program. As Businessweek pointed out, Romney's housing plans, while still vague, appear similar to Obama's.
Jobs and Stimulus
Work, Esquire, March 2012
We often hear the numbers, but Esquire showcased the human side of long-term unemployment with this collection of profiles. (Yahoo! also explored the issue using a selection of readers' own stories, in July 2011. They showcased the thousands of submissions on a Tumblr, which is still being updated.)
Number of Green Jobs Fails to Live Up to Promises, The Bay Citizen, August 2011
While President Obama once promised the stimulus and other programs would create five million green jobs over 10 years, the Bay Citizen says the "results so far suggest such numbers are a pipe dream." In addition to scandals like Solyndra, some clean-tech companies simply didn't produce as many jobs as hoped. SolFocus, featured in this article, employed 90 people, and outsourced the construction of its solar panels to China — another key issue in the campaign. (ProPublica also has a database letting you see how stimulus money has been spent in your community.)
The Safety Net
Even Critics of Safety Net Increasingly Depend On It, New York Times, February 2012
In 2010, spending on programs like Medicare, Social Security and Medicaid consumed 66 cents of every dollar of revenue, up from 37 cents for every dollar in 2000. This money has increasingly gone to the middle class. This piece provides a good primer on the safety net and its expansion, surveying several sides of the debate — including those who collect benefits while voicing their support for cutting assistance.