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Zivile Roditis has spent the last week anxiously watching the Kilauea volcano, belching and churning molten lava into her neighborhood in Leilani Estates.Now experts fear Hawaii's Kilauea volcano is at risk of explosive eruptions that could emit "ballistic projectiles," the USGS says.And concerns emerged that the lava could get near the Puna Geothermal Plant, where flammable liquids are stored, CNN affiliate Hawaii News Now reported. 446
at a Colorado nursing home, but the facility is defending its reputation.Miaya Ramirez only worked for University Heights Rehab & Care a few months but what she saw will stay with her much longer. “Patients being neglected, not getting showers, not getting fed properly, being left in their room, unsanitary conditions, being left in soiled briefs,” Ramirez explained to KMGH. The week after she started working, Ramirez says the Director of Nursing asked her to lie on a state report about being understaffed. “We had holes in the staffing book and the DON (Director of Nursing) asked me to fill in people's names in the staffing book and I told her I didn’t feel comfortable doing that,” she said. Ramirez says she was suspended and ultimately fired for trying to care for patients not being helped by nursing staff. She says the doctor of one patient even called police about the neglect. “When the doctor pulled the bandages off she couldn't believe what she saw; she said the wounds were worse,” Ramirez said. “She asked if the dressings were being changed when they were supposed to, if the resident was getting up out of bed when she was supposed to and I told her 'no,'” Ramirez said. Ultimately, Ramirez was fired for putting a clean bandage on that patient. She shared recordings of her termination. University Heights said she was operating out of the scope of care. “What they told me was I should have left the dirty bandage on her backside,” Ramirez said. Operated by Vivage, University Heights says Ramirez is a disgruntled employee and her claims are unsubstantiated. “We are truly a very compassionate organization with a lot of experience. We are the largest provider of skilled nursing in the state of Colorado,” Daphne Bernstein, Senior Vice President of Business Development, said. But complaints investigated by the 1844

Your local airport probably looks a lot different these days. It's no secret that the airline and travel industry has been hit hard. After Sept. 11, 2001, travelers that were encouraged to arrive to the airport at least two hours early for extra security checks. You still have to get there early, but it’s to have your temperature taken. And amid the pandemic, fewer travelers are passing through airports.“We’ve never seen this kind of extended impact on aviation. In the history of aviation, our passenger numbers are where they were in 1965, so that gives you a sense of how dramatic the decrease in passengers has been.” Becca Doten, a spokesperson for Los Angeles World Airports, said.Also known as LAX, it's the third-largest airport in the world. It’s the No. 1 origination and destination airport in the world and it’s undergoing massive changes.“We’ve installed touch-free faucets in the restrooms, touch-free water bottle refill stations, touch-free water fountains as well as employing UV technology to clean our air in our terminals,” Doten said.There are Plexiglas barriers everywhere. Even the elevators are touch-less.“Making it so elevators stop on every floor so you don’t have to touch the buttons and installing anti-bacterial sanitizing buttons and film in areas that people do need to touch,” Doten said.Concessions are mobile too. And the vending machines aren't full of snacks, but personal protective equipment.“You can find vending machines that will have hand sanitizer, face coverings, gloves and unique items like UVC light to clean your phone and all are TSA compliant so you can take what you purchase there through TSA with no problem,” Doten said.ACI, or Airports Council International, advocates for airports around the world. It has been guiding both big and small airports as all of them undergo changes to make people safe.“It’s tasking us to find methods and means of things that we’ve never come up with before to keep our industry going,” said Lew Bleiweis, who is the chair of the ACI’s North America branch.Pittsburgh, for instance, came out with a cleaning robot that shines UV rays on surfaces around the terminals. Other cities are installing new ventilation systems to purify the air in the terminals.“Almost every airport, if not all of them in North America, have instituted more cleaning protocols, more routines,” Bleiweis said. “A lot of airports are using electrostatic cleaners that you see spray out a mist that adheres to surfaces killing off viruses.”And he says, imagine a futuristic world of travel. That's where most airports are headed.“There will be sensors and touch-less things in the ground or in the floor or walls that will be able to facial recognize who you are and send an automatic boarding pass to your device,” Bleiweis said.When asked if travelers are getting more comfortable with all the recent industry changes, Bleiweis said, “I would say it was going in that direction and people are getting more comfortable. The resurgence that’s come up in Florida, Texas, California, that has really put the question as to whether people want to get on an airplane or not."Bleiweis says there has been an incline as we move through the summer. It'll be interesting to see what happens after Labor Day and as we approach the holidays.“Airports are and the aviation system are huge economic drivers in this country and across the world and people have to feel comfortable to travel and we need to get those wheels turning in the economic portion of aviation,” Bleiweis said.Doten said, “It’s going to be a long, slow recovery for the airport and travel industry, however we feel that as people feel safer and understand the steps we’re taking, they’ll feel more comfortable coming back to our airport.”But she also says LAX in particular has spared no expense in making major changes to bring people back to the skies. 3889
is a necessary part of a child's life. But try telling that to Marie Dellafranca, vice president of South Shore Villas Condominium Association at West Babylon, Long Island.On May 20, she sent a warning letter to condo owners Robert and Angelica Parker. Their 4-year-old son Liam loves riding his tricycle and scooter around the grassy triangle in front of their unit."We understand that the weather has gotten nice out but unfortunately, there are rules and regulations in the By-laws," the letter read. "That it is not safe for kids to play on common area grounds. Please take this as a precaution measure so that we would not have to enforce the fine that is association with this. It is 0 per violation."The Parkers looked through 38 pages of the association's by-laws, but didn't see any prohibiting kids from playing outside. They asked Dellafranca to show it to them. She couldn't.Dellafranca later said they received complaints from one condo owner about the children of three families playing outside in a "noisy fashion." The Parkers said the two other families told them they hadn't received a letter from the condo board."It makes us question why he's the only one, considering other children play outside here all the time," said Robert Parker, who works in law enforcement. "He also happens to be the only Latino child. So that raises questions about the possible motive for something like that."Angelica Parker, Liam's mother, is from the Dominican Republic.Vincent Dellafranca, the husband of the South Shore Villas Condominium Association vice president, denies the letter was sent based on the boy's race."Don't make it racial," Vincent Dellafranca told reporters. "Everybody else was told the same thing, and they follow the rules."That's not true. Robert Parker has pictures of other family's children playing outside with Liam.Vincent Dellafranca also claimed the by-laws were written by the New York State Attorney General's office. When asked why children were not permitted to play outside, he cited the rules set up by the AG."We just follow the rules. We don't make them," Vincent Dellafranca said.A staffer for the attorney general's office denied that it had passed such a regulation."The Office of Attorney General does not have oversight of Condo by-laws," the staffer said.The Dellafrancas say they are concerned about the safety of the children playing and other members of the condo community."What if they hit somebody when they're riding or they run into somebody's car by accident?" Marie Dellafranca said.Vincent Dellafranca claimed the children ride their bikes in the condo parking lot. Not true, says Angelica Parker."I'm constantly with my son making sure he doesn't go near anyone's cars," she said.The Parkers have filed a discrimination complaint against South Shore Villas with the New York State Human Rights Division."There's nothing wrong with a child playing outside. It's part of living in a condominium. This isn't an over 55 or a senior community. Children should have the same rights here as anyone else," Robert Parker said.Liam's ability to continue riding his tricycle outside, like any other 4-year-old child, now depends on the findings of a state inquiry. This story was originally published by Arnold Diaz on 3273
YORBA LINDA, Calif. (CNS) - The wind-driven Blue Ridge Fire in Yorba Linda that has burned 14,334 acres, destroyed a structure and damaged seven others was 16% contained Wednesday morning and the evacuation warning for the southern portion of Diamond Bar will be lifted, according to the Los Angeles County Fire Department.Some roads in the area have started to reopen -- one of two lanes will be open on southbound state Route 71 while crews fix a fire-damaged guardrail, and is expected to be completed by 4 p.m. Traffic was also being allowed on the SR 91 connectors to the 71, a Caltrans spokesperson said.Meanwhile, SR 142 remains closed from Chino Hills Parkway to Portola Parkway and the 71 southbound at Euclid Avenue off-ramps were also closed, Caltrans said.The estimation of burned acreage was lowered Tuesday night from about 15,200, according to Orange County Fire Authority spokesman Steve Concialdi. As of Wednesday morning, there was still no word on the cause of the fire.Travis Wylie, a 36-year-old captain with Cal Fire out of San Bernardino, told City News Service the fire was "very active," saying crews started to get a handle on flames around 3 a.m., when the Santa Ana winds started to die down. "With the fuel moistures and everything, it's kind of burning erratic. The fuel moistures are really low."Wylie said he was also training two rookie firefighters, and that the fire provided invaluable experience for them as they were able to practice tactics like emergency back-burning as a defensive mechanism.The brush fire, initially called the Green Fire Fire, was reported at 12:55 p.m. Monday next to the Green River Golf Club, off of Green River Road and the Riverside (91) Freeway in Corona, according to the Corona Fire Department.Evacuations were ordered for 5,958 homes in Chino Hills and 2,500 in Yorba Linda. In Brea, 276 homes were ordered evacuated, 680 homes voluntarily evacuated and no homes were damaged, officials said.Flames from two small spot fires jumped the Corona (71) Freeway Tuesday, but were quickly extinguished, said Orange County Fire Authority Capt. Jason Fairchild.Brea and Chino Hills officials were handling evacuation orders, said Orange County Fire Authority Capt. Thanh Nguyen. "We're trying to organize it so it's one central point of information."The OCFA issued evacuation orders about 11 p.m. Monday for residents living in thousands of homes in the following areas:-- The Hidden Hills community and Yorba Linda, north of the Riverside (91) Freeway, east of Gypsum Canyon-- All of Carbon Canyon from the county line to Summit Ranch in Chino in San Bernardino County-- Homes on the east and west sides of Carbon Canyon Road, including Sleepy Hollow, Oak Tree Downs, Pine Valley Estates, Western Hills and Summit Ranch to the west of Chino; Valley Springs, Carriage Hills and Old Carbon Canyon Road to the eastMandatory evacuations were issued just after midnight Tuesday by Brea city officials for residents in all of Carbon Canyon, east of Brea Hills to the county line, including the Olinda Village and Hollydale neighborhoods, and voluntary evacuations were urged for the Olinda Ranch and Brea Hills areas.Temporary evacuation points in Orange County were at the Brea Community Center, 695 Madison Way; Santiago Canyon College, 8045 E. Chapman Ave.; Woodbridge High School, 2 Meadowbrook, Irvine; Norman P. Murray Community Center, 24932 Veterans Way, Mission Viejo; El Toro High School, 25255 Toledo Way, Lake Forest, and Thomas Lasorda Jr. Field House, 4701 Casa Loma, Yorba Linda.The Brea Community Center, El Toro High School and Lasorda Field House were open around the clock while the others were open until 9 p.m., but Woodbridge High will be open overnight if needed.About 2 a.m. Tuesday, L.A. County officials issued an evacuation warning for an area south of Diamond Bar, bordered by Grand Avenue to the north, Diamond Bar Boulevard to the west, the Los Angeles/Orange county line to the south and the Los Angeles/San Bernardino county line to the east. It was rescinded about 10 a.m. Wednesday.Mandatory evacuation orders were issued at 4:25 a.m. Tuesday in the San Bernardino County city of Chino Hills for residents south of Soquel Canyon Parkway, including the entire area of Bell Ridge Drive and Golden Terrace Drive on the west to Misty Hill Drive on the east.Also under a mandatory evacuation order are communities north of Soquel Canyon Parkway at Pipeline Avenue, west of Wickman Elementary School, including homes on Winged Foot Way, Pebble Beach Lane, Singing Hills Drive, August Drive and Firestone Lane.Evacuation orders issued Monday night included all Carbon Canyon from the county line, west of Sleepy Hollow to Summit Ranch on both the north and south sides of Carbon Canyon Road and the Village Oaks area, west of Peyton Drive near Bayberry, including Oak Creek Road, Oak Canyon Drive and Oak Crest Drive and the entire Vellano community. The evacuation order includes Sleepy Hollow, Hill of Hope, Hillcrest, Oak Tree Downs, Pine Valley Estates, Western Hills Estates, Valley Springs/Western Hills Oaks, Carriage Hills and Old Carbon Canyon Road to the south.An evacuation warning was issued about 1:25 a.m. Tuesday for residents in the Butterfield Ranch, west of Butterfield Ranch Road, south of Pine Avenue to the Chino Valley (71) Freeway.There were no evacuation orders or warnings for Corona, according to the OCFA.The head of the fire entered Orange County about 1:20 p.m. Monday, and the flames raced toward Yorba Linda, posing a threat to scores of residences.A grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency was secured Monday by Gov. Gavin Newsom, which will assist local and state agencies responding to the fire to apply for 75% reimbursement of their eligible firefighting costs.Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairwoman Michelle Steel signed an emergency declaration Tuesday and asked the governor to sign one as well for the county to free up more funding.Because of the wildfires, the Santa Ana Zoo was sheltering about 150 animals from the Orange County Zoo, located in Irvine Regional Park. 6119
来源:资阳报