Saturday, February 16, 2013

Rainwater Thief


Oregon man in possession of 13 million gallons of illicit rainwater sentenced to jail

An Oregon resident with 3 massive man-made ponds on his property is sentenced to 30 days in jail after being found guilty (again) of collecting rainwater without a permit.





I’ve taken a look at some mighty impressive rainwater collection systems in the past, but it appears that Gary Harrington, 64, takes the proverbial cake when it comes to hoarder-esque rainwater collection activities: over the years, the Oregon resident has built three massive reservoirs — in actuality, they’re more like proper man-made ponds — on his 170-acre property on Crowfoot Road in rural Eagle Point that hold roughly 13 million gallons of rainwater and snow runoff. That’s enough agua to fill about 20 Olympic-sized swimming pools.
 
Of course, it boggles the mind as to what a single man needs that much rainwater for. One would assume that Harrington is reusing it both for irrigation purposes and for non-potable indoor use as well, which, unlike in many states, is permitted in Oregon. But 13 million gallons? Apparently Harrington, who has stocked at least one of the  reservoirs with largemouth bass and built docks around it, believes that his watery stash is a much-needed necessity when wildfires pop up in the area. “The fish and the docks are icing on the cake," Harrington tells the Medford Mail Tribune. "It's totally committed to fire suppression."
 
The bigger story here is that rainwater collection is indeed kosher in Oregon, provided that you’re capturing it from an artificial, impervious surface such as a rooftop with the assistance of rainwater barrels. But an extensive reservoir set-up complete with 10- and 20-foot-tall dams is verboten without the proper, state-issued water-right permits — after all, Oregon law dictates that water is a publicly owned resource — and Harrington did not possess said permits.
 
And so, after a protracted battle with Oregon’s Water Resources Department, Harrington was convicted of nine misdemeanors and sentenced to 30 days in jail, slapped with a $1,500 fine, and ordered to breach his dams and drain his ponds. After the sentencing in late July, Harrington surrendered himself to authorities late last week and began his stint at the Jackson County Jail. 
Apparently, once upon a time, the state did indeed allow Harrington — code name: “Rain Man" — to collect water in his reservoirs. However, officials reversed their decision the same year, 2003, that the three permits were issued, citing a 1925 law that states the city of Medford holds all exclusive rights to "core sources of water" in the Big Butte Creek watershed and its tributaries.
 
Despite withdrawal of the permits, Harrington kept on defiantly collecting under the belief that the laws did not apply to his situation, adamant that the water was coming strictly from rain and snow melt and not from tributaries flowing into the Big Butte River as officials had claimed. Harrington tells CNSNews.com: "They issued me my permits. I had my permits in hand and they retracted them just arbitrarily, basically. They took them back and said, 'No, you can't have them.' So I've been fighting it ever since."
 
It gets even more messy with accusations of water diversion and a three-year bench probation issued against Harringon in 2007. In that case, Harrington plead guilty and agreed to open up the gates of his reservoirs only to close them back up again shortly thereafter. 
 
Oregon Water Resources Department Deputy Director Tom Paul tells the Medford Mail Tribune: “Mr. Harrington has operated these three reservoirs in flagrant violation of Oregon law for more than a decade. What we're after is compliance with Oregon water law, regardless of what the public thinks of Mr. Harrington.”

Source: http://www.mnn.com/your-home/at-home/blogs/oregon-man-in-possession-of-13-million-gallons-of-illicit-rainwater-sentence

Friday, February 15, 2013

Cosmic Coincidence

Asteroid over California, same day as Russian meteorite impact


View more videos at: http://nbcbayarea.com.





February Meteor Mystery

2/15 Russian Meteor news:

Video Courtesty: Russia Today

























Czech Republic Legalizes Medical Marijuana Use


PRAGUE -- Czech President Vaclav Klaus has signed into law legislation that makes it legal in the Czech Republic to use marijuana for medical treatment.
Klaus gave his approval on Friday, after the law had been approved by both houses of Parliament.
It allows marijuana to be imported and later grown locally by registered firms licensed for such activity, which is currently illegal.
Patients will need a prescription from a doctor to get the drug at pharmacies, and treatment will not be covered by health insurance. Patients wouldn't be allowed to grow marijuana at home.
Medical marijuana use is legal in a number of European countries and parts of the United States. The drug is commonly used to relieve conditions such as chronic pain and cancer.
Czech Republic Medical Marijuana

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/15/czech-republic-medical-marijuana_n_2693657.html

Boeing 707 roll by Test Pilot Tex Johnson


Boeing 707 roll by Test Pilot Tex Johnson




Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Cell circuits remember their history


Cell circuits remember their history

MIT engineers design new synthetic biology circuits that combine memory and logic.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — MIT engineers have created genetic circuits in bacterial cells that not only perform logic functions, but also remember the results, which are encoded in the cell’s DNA and passed on for dozens of generations.
Cell circuits remember their history

The circuits, described in the Feb. 10 online edition of Nature Biotechnology, could be used as long-term environmental sensors, efficient controls for biomanufacturing, or to program stem cells to differentiate into other cell types.

“Almost all of the previous work in synthetic biology that we’re aware of has either focused on logic components or on memory modules that just encode memory. We think complex computation will involve combining both logic and memory, and that’s why we built this particular framework to do so,” says Timothy Lu, an MIT assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer science and biological engineering and senior author of the Nature Biotechnologypaper.

Source: http://web.mit.edu/press/2013/cell-circuits-remember-their-history.html

Sunday, February 10, 2013

High cost of post-combat struggles

Last year, as the Iraq and Afghanistan wars began to wind down, releasing tens of thousands of soldiers, the Defence Secretary Leon Panetta voiced concern there was an "epidemic" of suicides. This is contested, but in 2012 more active-duty US soldiers killed themselves than were killed in combat: 177 against 176. The trend was reflected across the wider US military: 349 suicides, 295 combat deaths.

Military suicides have, in fact, been steadily escalating but were masked by high combat deaths, now falling. In 2010 and 2011, 499 and 417 US troops died in action, while military suicides averaged 300 a year.

A 2011 report, Losing the Battle, from the Centre for a New American Security, depicts a worsening crisis, with one suicide every 36 hours between 2005 and 2010. "The numbers continue to grow," says Phillip Carter, director of the CNAS Military, Veterans and Society Programme.

Carter says the task of reducing suicides is compounded by a hazy understanding of what pushes some soldiers, and not others, over the edge. "We know that there is a correlation between combat stress and suicide. But we don't know exactly what factors cause some people to commit suicide. There doesn't seem to be any obvious answer."

Numerous causes are cited, including post-traumatic stress disorder [PTSD], traumatic brain injury [TBI], depression, broken relationships, insomnia, legal issues, substance abuse or reluctance to seek help in a military culture that traditionally sees this as unmanly. One fear is suicides have yet to peak, especially among Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, who are 30 to 200 per cent more likely to kill themselves.

Then there is the challenge of reintegrating into civilian life, given that fewer than 1 per cent of Americans have served in Iraq or Afghanistan. Many veterans are left with a deep sense of isolation, unable to expunge anguish about horrible things they have seen or done.

A big problem is lack of empirical data. Last month the Veterans Affairs Department - criticised for doing too little, too late - released The Suicide Data Report 2012. On average 22 veterans (as against those still in uniform) kill themselves each day.

Robert Bossarte, who compiled the VA report, told the Washington Post the rise reflects a wider national trend, where suicides rose almost 11 per cent between 2007 and 2010.

Read the full article: http://bit.ly/YKhVc6