• NWS offices utilize the real-time reporting of weather events to assist in warning operations, but certainly hurricanes Katrina and Rita have shown us that ham radio operators are equally important during the recovery phase of large-scale natural disasters,' Floyd pointed out. (arrl.org)
  • Moody's noted that after Hurricane Katrina, besides widespread infrastructure damage, revenue declined significantly for New Orleans because a large percentage of the city's population left permanently. (flaglerlive.com)
  • Hurricane Katrina made landfall in New Orleans on August 29, 2005, but the decisions that caused the disaster extend across the twentieth century. (harvard.edu)
  • Easily the best book on the subject since Douglas Brinkley's 2006 The Great Deluge: Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans, and the Mississippi Gulf Coast …The fact that Katrina's impact fell disproportionately on poor Louisianans raises a host of issues that Horowitz addresses better than any previous narrative history of the catastrophe. (harvard.edu)
  • This month was the worst September on record in terms of the number of named storms, and 2020 overall is second only to 2005's devastating succession of hurricanes (which included Katrina) in the number of named storms over the entire season. (progressivereform.org)
  • For this project, "concurrent disasters" refers to natural disasters such as hurricanes, wildfires, and earthquakes that occur at the same time as an infectious respiratory disease pandemic. (cdc.gov)
  • The process of moving out of harm's way has taken many different forms - from a few households to whole communities, before and after disasters, and in response to earthquakes, floods, and hurricanes. (vox.com)
  • Lightning kills more people each year in the United States than hurricanes, volcanoes, and earthquakes combined. (medscape.com)
  • With so much going on in the news these days regarding the pandemic, extreme weather events including the 'dual' Hurricanes Laura and Marco, massive and numerous wildfires in California, hurricane-force derecho in Iowa and other parts of Midwest and the social justice unrest, you may not have noticed some of the President's recent executive orders. (ucsusa.org)
  • Brilliant…If you want to read only one book to better understand why people in positions of power in government and industry do so little to address climate change, even with wildfires burning and ice caps melting and extinctions becoming a daily occurrence, this is the one… Horowitz shows-patiently and damningly-how the decisions made by Louisiana's political and business elite systematically rendered the region vulnerable to disaster. (harvard.edu)
  • Multiple staff deployments, expanded roles related to the pandemic, staff shortages, worker safety precautions, and new staff resiliency and operational planning needs required the business model of emergency management preparedness and response to adapt - especially for the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season, the third most active in history. (cdc.gov)
  • Peng was feared to be held incommunicado by the Chinese government in 2021 after she accused retired Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli of coercing her into sex during a years-long on-off relationship. (worldcrunch.com)
  • METHODS: A retrospective data analysis was performed for all single-substance lacrimator exposures in the United States reported to the National Poison Data System between 2000 and 2021. (cdc.gov)
  • CONCLUSION: Lacrimator exposure calls to United States poison centers decreased from 2000 to 2021. (cdc.gov)
  • And in Texas, at least 42 workers died of heat exposure between 2011 and 2021, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, though labor advocates say the number is much higher because other causes are cited in many deaths. (iww.org)
  • A 2021 investigation by NPR and Columbia Journalism Investigations found nearly 400 workers had died of environmental heat exposure in the previous decade, with Hispanic workers - who make up much of the nation's farm and construction workforce - disproportionately affected. (iww.org)
  • Making your school mercury-free reduces the chance for spills and exposures. (cdc.gov)
  • State Sen. Joe Gruters and Rep. Randy Fine have introduced legislation that would increase fines on local governments over sewage spills in Florida waterways. (wmfe.org)
  • Ham radio operators and volunteers at Miami work together when hurricanes threaten to provide real-time weather data and damage reports to the Hurricane Center's forecasters. (arrl.org)
  • This is congruently true for extreme weather events such as hurricanes, as evidenced by the National Hurricane Center's reduced annual average track forecast errors from 1970 to 2014 ( Figure 1 ). (nationalacademies.org)
  • There has been a lot in the news recently about current volcanic activity - Merapi in Indonesia and Bezymianny in the Kamchatka peninsula in Russia, but while most reports have focussed on the very real dangers to the local populace and air traffic, volcanoes can have important impacts on climate as well. (realclimate.org)
  • The Free National Movement (FNM) government, elected in May 2017, has sought to manage an economy dealing with the dual, unprecedented economic crises wrought by the passage of Hurricane Dorian in September 2019 and the effects of the global COVID-19 pandemic, projected to inflict combined losses of $7.5 billion or 60 percent of GDP. (state.gov)
  • And it's doing it at a time when affected communities - especially Black, Brown, and low-income communities - are all the more vulnerable to natural disaster due to the Trump administration's rollbacks of environmental safeguards and its reckless response to the COVID-19 pandemic. (progressivereform.org)
  • Our findings indicate that government leadership supported prioritizing health equity from the beginning of the pandemic, seeing it as a need and vital part of the response framework. (bvsalud.org)
  • Having partnerships, resources, and infrastructure in place before the pandemic facilitated the establishment of equity-focused COVID-19 response activities. (bvsalud.org)
  • The hurricane proved to be among the most destructive storms in history for several islands in the region. (wikipedia.org)
  • Just a few days before the President's executive order announcement, on August 6, NOAA's Climate Prediction Center released an updated Atlantic Hurricane Season Outlook to say that this year's atmospheric and oceanic conditions are primed to fuel storms in the Atlantic which could lead to an "extremely active" season. (ucsusa.org)
  • this hurricane season started earlier than ever , with 9 named storms in early August, something we usually don't see until September. (ucsusa.org)
  • With 13 named storms to date and Hurricane Laura currently bearing down on the Gulf Coast as a Category 4 hurricane, states and local communities alike will clearly need disaster assistance to clean up and work on getting back to 'normal. (ucsusa.org)
  • Fugate said changes in the earth's climate may not be increasing the number of storms, but their features are getting more intense - highlighted by the record rainfalls from Hurricane Harvey in Texas and Irma holding maximum sustained winds of 185 miles per hour for more than 24 hours. (flaglerlive.com)
  • It is a situation, moving forward for Florida, we being the hurricane capital of the country, not only storms that could come each and every year, but more storms and more damaging storms," Salna said. (flaglerlive.com)
  • An extraordinary Atlantic hurricane season is still underway, one that has seen the National Hurricane Center exhaust its supply of names and resort to Greek alphabet for remaining storms. (progressivereform.org)
  • FIGURE 1 National Hurricane Center annual average official track errors as a function of forecast lead time for Atlantic Basin tropical storms and hurricanes, 1970-2014, with least squares trend lines superimposed. (nationalacademies.org)
  • NOAA found that during the past decade, we experienced more than twice the number of billion-dollar disasters compared to the previous decade (119 versus 59) and that the "increase in exposure and vulnerability, as well as climate change…" are responsible. (ucsusa.org)
  • The Fifth National Climate Assessment explores subnational climate change risks, impacts, and responses in each of the 10 regions shown. (globalchange.gov)
  • David Markell , Steven M. Goldstein Professor, FSU College of Law, presented a draft paper entitled Sea Level Rise and Changing Times for Florida Local Governments in a workshop at the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law, Columbia Law School (Oct. 2015). (constantcontact.com)
  • Fugate noted that the credit-rating agency Moody's Investor Services Inc. last month announced that climate change is forecast to heighten exposure to economic loss, which will place short- and long-term credit pressure on state and local governments. (flaglerlive.com)
  • Erik Salna, associate director and meteorologist at Florida International University's hurricane research center, said "more and more" research supports that climate change is causing increasingly intense hurricane rainfall. (flaglerlive.com)
  • There's no mystery as to why: Climate change is driving an increase in the frequency and strength of Atlantic hurricanes. (progressivereform.org)
  • While Trump is pouring fuel on the fire, 2020's portent of a future dominated by intersecting environmental and social disasters is made possible only by long-term government inaction and half-measures that fail to address climate change, toxic pollution, and social and economic inequality. (progressivereform.org)
  • In this first webinar, panelists drew on their diverse expertise and experiences in the Gulf and Atlantic coastal regions to highlight the particular impacts of climate-driven pollution on water quality and the communities that depend on those water resources. (progressivereform.org)
  • Using the Superfund program and its many remaining climate-vulnerable toxic waste sites as an example , CPR Member Scholar and University of Houston Law Center Professor Victor Flatt described how the static nature of pollution regulation is partly responsible for failures to address climate-driven pollution and how broad reforms requiring coordinated adaptation policymaking among different government agencies can be part of the solution. (progressivereform.org)
  • Even as incidents like the Arkema chemical plant explosion driven by Hurricane Harvey have grabbed headlines ( and led to a climate justice movement in the courts ), the Trump administration has repealed federal safeguards against chemical disasters at tens of thousands of the largest, most polluting hazardous industrial facilities in the nation. (progressivereform.org)
  • The current El Niño, which peaked at the end of 2015, offered a unique opportunity for governments, scientists, economists, humanitarian agencies, development professionals and the media to share perspectives on the transformation of climate forecasts to climate services in the past two decades. (columbia.edu)
  • 56 Responses to "Current volcanic activity and climate? (realclimate.org)
  • Develop tabletop exercises and other technical resources to support concurrent disaster planning, preparedness, and response activities in the future. (cdc.gov)
  • Changes in broader weather patterns caused Hugo to take an accelerated northwestward trajectory towards the Southeastern U.S., culminating in Hugo's landfall on Sullivan's Island, South Carolina, as a Category 4 hurricane on September 21. (wikipedia.org)
  • Hugo was the strongest hurricane to make landfall on the continental U.S. since Hurricane Camille in 1969. (wikipedia.org)
  • Leading researcher Brian LaPointe of Florida Atlantic University states that "our research has found that nitrogen and phosphorus from land-based runoff and pollutants, including nitrogen-heavy fertilizers and sewage waste, are washing into rivers such as the Mississippi and the Amazon. (geiworks.com)
  • And we're seeing this across, not just in our Atlantic basin, but across the world. (flaglerlive.com)
  • Many of the communities now being affected by seaweed are still recovering from Hurricane Irma, so bringing back tourism dollars is especially critical. (geiworks.com)
  • Many Hurricane Irma evacuees say they're apprehensive of packing up and leaving their homes again because forecast models failed to match the final track of the September storm. (flaglerlive.com)
  • A survey by the initiative - whose members include the non-profit FAIR Foundation, Ocala-based Custom Windows Systems, the Florida Home-Improvement Association, Security First Insurance, the Ygrene Energy Fund, the International Hurricane Research Center at Florida International University and the Salvation Army - found one in four Floridians are now less trusting of hurricane forecasts because of Irma. (flaglerlive.com)
  • A Mason-Dixon Polling & Research poll in mid-October found that only 57 percent of Floridians said they would follow an evacuation order in the face of a hurricane similar in strength to Irma because the drifting nature of the storm's track initially had an East Coast landing. (flaglerlive.com)
  • Conduct a needs assessment to identify gaps and challenges faced by state, tribal, local, and territorial (STLT) environmental and public health agencies when responding to concurrent disasters. (cdc.gov)
  • The goal is to create a resource hub for state, tribal, local, and territorial (STLT) jurisdictions to enhance their preparedness, response, and recovery for concurrent disasters. (cdc.gov)
  • The DRF is the primary federal disaster relief program that makes funds available to states, tribal, local and territorial governments for disaster response and recovery. (ucsusa.org)
  • If you live in coastal areas at risk, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) encourages you to begin preparing yourself for hurricane season. (cdc.gov)
  • All HIV services are free in Jamaica and high-quality condoms are distributed at local health centers and can also be purchased at many pharmacies and supermarkets (see Sec. 11, Ch. 10, Sexually Transmitted Infections ). (cdc.gov)
  • The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is considering initiating a study into the health effects of high exposure to toxic algae on Lake Okeechobee. (wmfe.org)
  • OBJECTIVE: To characterize patterns of lacrimator exposures in the United States, we describe temporal trends of calls to poison centers by demographics, substances, medical outcomes, exposure sites, and scenarios. (cdc.gov)
  • Each tier triggers public services, including weather alerts and public health information campaigns, as well as other emergency response efforts such as opening cooling centers and sending community health teams to check on high-risk populations. (scientificamerican.com)
  • Since early 2015, experts have monitored the development of one of the largest El Niño events of the last 50 years, and notably, the largest since the 1997-98 El Niño that shocked global food, water, health, energy and disaster-response systems and erased years of development gains. (columbia.edu)
  • On Martinique, incredible amounts of Sargassum have been choking local waterways. (geiworks.com)
  • We want to develop tools and resources to strengthen response and recovery capabilities, reduce risk to people living in settings that put them at higher risk of exposure, and strengthen community resilience. (cdc.gov)
  • The exciting thing about addressing extreme heat is that you can do something about it," Kathy Baughman McLeod, director of the Atlantic Council's Adrienne Arsht Rockefeller Foundation Resilience Center (Arsht-Rock), said in an interview. (scientificamerican.com)
  • The pilot program in Seville is a collaboration between the city government and Arsht-Rock's Extreme Heat Resilience Alliance, an initiative designed to combat deadly urban heat. (scientificamerican.com)
  • The Extreme Heat Resilience Alliance encourages local governments and weather agencies around the world to set up heat wave naming and ranking systems. (scientificamerican.com)
  • ORLANDO, Fla.-Florida's oversight of the state's fragile natural resources has improved under Gov. Ron DeSantis but remains far behind where it was a decade ago, according to a new report by a nonprofit advocacy group supporting current and former government employees involved in environmental protection. (wmfe.org)
  • First day of the stay-at-home order that was issued by Gov. Ron DeSantis late Tuesday. (firstcoastnews.com)
  • The eleventh tropical cyclone, eighth named storm, sixth hurricane, and second major hurricane of the 1989 Atlantic hurricane season, Hugo arose from a cluster of thunderstorms near Cape Verde on September 10, 1989. (wikipedia.org)
  • Important resources, links, phone numbers and terms you should know for Atlantic hurricane season in Central Florida. (wmfe.org)
  • The conference call highlighted the need for people in Florida to plan year-round for the six-month hurricane season and for people who live outside flood zones to consider flood insurance. (flaglerlive.com)
  • The scale of Hugo's impacts led to the retirement of the name Hugo from Atlantic hurricane names. (wikipedia.org)
  • Locals interviewed by the geological teams said they heard no noises associated with the impacts, nor did anyone witness the crash-landings themselves. (zetatalk3.com)
  • A group of local fishermen watch the Cape Fear River as they stage for potential water rescues while additional flooding remains a threat from Florence, in Fayetteville, N.C., Sunday, September 16, 2018. (vox.com)
  • My regular readers know that I have been fussing about the threat of hurricanes destroying proposed Atlantic coast offshore wind arrays. (baconsrebellion.com)
  • On September 13, Hugo became a hurricane and continued to intensify until its winds topped out at Category 5 strength with speeds of 160 mph (260 km/h). (wikipedia.org)
  • A more recent article comes to similar conclusions - "Hurricane eyewall winds and structural response of wind turbines. (baconsrebellion.com)
  • That is worrisome for Craig Fugate, a former director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the Florida Division of Emergency Management, including during the state's devastating 2004 and 2005 hurricane seasons. (flaglerlive.com)
  • On August 8, in response to the Congressional stalemate on passing a coronavirus relief package and their failure to renew benefits to individuals who have lost wages due to the COVID-19 economic crisis, the President signed an executive order bypassing Congress. (ucsusa.org)
  • ATSDR's Emergency Management serves as a central coordination point for CDC's National Center for Environmental Health (NCEH) and ATSDR-led emergency responses and manages environmental health issues during CDC Emergency Operations Center-led emergency responses. (cdc.gov)
  • The PR says this: "The study, which was conducted in collaboration with the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, and the U.S. Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colorado, highlights the limitations of current turbine design and could provide guidance for manufacturers and engineers looking to build more hurricane-resilient turbines in the future. (baconsrebellion.com)
  • 2) have cost us billions of dollars and that these costs are on the rise, and 3) this year's hurricane and wildfire seasons will be active ones. (ucsusa.org)
  • The Bahamas does not offer export subsidies, engage in trade-distorting practices, or maintain a local content requirement. (state.gov)
  • And so New Orleans grew in lowlands that relied on significant government subsidies to stay dry. (harvard.edu)
  • the federal government is exposed to the growing risk. (vox.com)
  • Background Paper prepared by the Asian Disaster Reduction and Response Network (ADRRN) and for the 2011 Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction . (preventionweb.net)
  • the Asian Disaster Reduction and Response (ADRRN)-SEEDS background paper to the 2011 Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction . (preventionweb.net)
  • Exposure to these chemicals is linked to a range of health effects including respiratory and gastrointestinal problems, skin and eye irritation, organ damage, reproductive harm, and increased cancer risk. (dailyclimate.org)
  • I have yet to see any sort of hurricane risk assessment from any of the proposed East Coast wind projects, most of which involve many billions of dollars. (baconsrebellion.com)
  • Such a Reliability Standard would lay out the kind of hurricane risk assessment that must be done as part of the facility design process. (baconsrebellion.com)
  • and technology is rapidly changing all of which affect our risk of exposure to the infectious agents with which we share our environment. (cdc.gov)
  • Complicating the increased risk people suffer in these countries because of higher lightning density, poor housing, and greater everyday exposure are the superstitions that may prevent adequate prevention and mitigation. (medscape.com)
  • Many cleanup crews have experienced hydrogen sulfide poisoning from exposure to large amounts of decaying Sargassum with flu-like symptoms: nausea, headaches, and eye and skin irritation. (geiworks.com)
  • This action is necessary to prevent maritime traffic from interfering with spilled oil recovery operations, removal of sunken recreational vessels, debris, and cargo containers, and to ensure the safety of the response crews on scene. (nacocharters.org)
  • In the months since, a group of state lawmakers have called on Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf to take action in response to our findings, and we've asked many other politicians to share their perspective on the study. (dailyclimate.org)
  • The findings could be used to help wind farm developers improve design standards as well as to help stakeholders make informed decisions about the costs, benefits and risks of placing turbines in hurricane-prone areas. (baconsrebellion.com)
  • In a response from the City of Hampton, officials say they were "never notified" of what occurred. (wavy.com)
  • And they want to make sure that state and local officials have the resources and support they need under the emergency declaration. (850wftl.com)
  • While digging at an ancient Indian burial ground near Cedar Key, Sassaman found that the burial ground was actually a re-burial, and early inhabitants had relocated the graves in response to rising seas. (constantcontact.com)
  • Our study included children and found evidence that they were being exposed to harmful chemicals at levels up to 91 times as high as exposure levels seen in the average American. (dailyclimate.org)
  • The Excessive Heat in North Carolina report found a link between extreme heat exposure in four major industries and avoidable costs to employers, including increased worker compensation for missed wages. (iww.org)
  • Simply put, they found that hurricane wind gusts can hit an incredible 200 miles per hour, while wind towers are only designed to withstand 160 mph. (baconsrebellion.com)
  • On July 18, 2023, a judge ruled that a health clinic in Libby is liable to the government for almost $6 million in penalties and damages after submitting hundreds of false asbestos claims. (wdtn.com)
  • The damage wrought by the storm was more costly than any Atlantic hurricane preceding it. (wikipedia.org)
  • Check with your local health department for proper disposal methods. (buildings.com)
  • Dr. Hall currently serves as the Chief Health Equity Officer for CDC's COVID-19 response. (cdc.gov)
  • Dr. Leandris Liburd is CDC's First Response Chief Health Equity Officer. (cdc.gov)
  • AP) - A health clinic in a Montana town plagued by deadly asbestos contamination has filed for bankruptcy protection after a judge ordered it to pay the government almost $6 million in penalties and damages for submitting hundreds of false claims for benefits. (wdtn.com)
  • EHN's investigation was the first study to measure exposure to these types of chemicals in people living near fracking wells in Pennsylvania. (dailyclimate.org)
  • Horowitz chronicles an endless hustle in which governments and wealthy developers seize landscapes and mold them without regard to long-term consequences, and in which white people and moneyed interests have fixed advantages…A sadly predictable, distinctly American story. (harvard.edu)
  • It epitomizes the shifting ideologies of Spain and Britain in their quest to develop the ideal sugar plantation plan, and illustrates how the characteristics of the local people and ecology significantly affected that ideal. (unesco.org)
  • During this 24 hour special event, Amateur Radio operators, working together with their local NWS offices, will activate Amateur Radio stations and work as a team to contact other hams across the world. (arrl.org)
  • The report makes clear that the avoidable costs of workplace heat exposure, such as missed work time and emergency room visits, are considerable in four of the most heat-exposed industries in North Carolina. (iww.org)
  • We should be doing everything we can to avoid preventable injuries at work like those caused by exposure to high temperatures," said Clermont Fraser Ripley, Workers' Rights Project Co-Director at the North Carolina Justice Center. (iww.org)
  • We should be doing everything we can to avoid preventable injuries at work like those caused by exposure to high temperatures. (iww.org)
  • Hurricane Florence caused severe property damage. (vox.com)
  • In typical SKYWARN operations during severe weather, direct communication between mobile spotters and local NWS offices provides critical 'ground truth' information for forecasters. (arrl.org)
  • Barrier islands in tropical regions are prone to coastal flooding and erosion during hurricane events. (copernicus.org)
  • Inner shelf, coastal, and inland observations were acquired simultaneously near a coastal community (Sisal, Yucatán) located within 150 km of the hurricanes' tracks. (copernicus.org)
  • Two different modeling systems, aimed at providing coastal flooding early warning and coastal hazard assessment, presented difficulties in forecasting the coastal hydrodynamic response during these seaward-traveling events, regardless of the grid resolution, which might be ascribed to a lack of terrestrial processes and uncertainties in the bathymetry and boundary conditions. (copernicus.org)
  • Hurricane Hugo was a powerful Cape Verde tropical cyclone that inflicted widespread damage across the northeastern Caribbean and the Southeastern United States in September 1989. (wikipedia.org)
  • Hugo was the strongest hurricane to strike the northeastern Caribbean since 1979. (wikipedia.org)
  • Sargassum seaweed is an important ecosystem in the Atlantic Ocean, but it can be devastating to Caribbean beaches. (geiworks.com)
  • In January, 2018, researchers detected an abnormal amount of Sargassum in the Caribbean and Western Atlantic, predicting that 2018 would be a major year for Sargassum blooms. (geiworks.com)
  • The French government is planning an intervention , allocating £3.5 million to supply some of its islands in the Caribbean with tractors, gas masks, and other equipment. (geiworks.com)
  • Fugate, who addressed reporters during a conference call hosted by the National Hurricane Survival Initiative about a new website and year-round awareness campaign titled "Get Ready, Florida! (flaglerlive.com)
  • Over the course of five days, Hugo made landfalls on Guadeloupe, Saint Croix, Puerto Rico, and South Carolina, bringing major hurricane conditions to these and surrounding areas. (wikipedia.org)
  • After the city weathered a major hurricane in 1915, its Sewerage and Water Board believed that developers could safely build housing away from the high ground near the Mississippi. (harvard.edu)
  • Throughout September, CDC and more than 3000 organizations-national, regional, and local governments, as well as private and public organizations-will support emergency preparedness efforts and encourage Americans to take action. (cdc.gov)
  • These data can help inform response planning and the updating of communication resources such as websites, fact sheets, and other materials to reach a wide audience of disaster epidemiologists, emergency managers, and the public. (cdc.gov)
  • Doing so, it argues, can raise public awareness about the dangers of extreme heat and help communities implement better emergency response plans. (scientificamerican.com)
  • Last week, the president approved an emergency declaration in Florida and ordered federal assistance to supplement state and local response efforts in the wake of the partial building collapse. (850wftl.com)
  • The Commonwealth of The Bahamas is a 100,000 square mile archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean just 50 miles from Florida's east coast. (state.gov)
  • The Yucatán coast, characterized by karstic geology and the presence of barrier islands, was impacted by Hurricane Gamma and Hurricane Delta in October 2020. (copernicus.org)
  • Curry also said local hospitals around the First Coast have informed him they are in "good shape" and not at capacity. (firstcoastnews.com)
  • My focus has been Dominion's massive project off Virginia, but the whole East Coast is hurricane alley. (baconsrebellion.com)
  • Before we build tens or hundreds of billions of dollars worth of massive offshore wind facilities off the East Coast we need to be sure that they will withstand strong hurricanes. (baconsrebellion.com)
  • [ 8 ] Lightning strikes in the United States are most common in Florida, the Atlantic coast, and along the southeastern coast of the Gulf of Mexico. (medscape.com)
  • Nearly 400 U.S. workers died of heat exposure over a decade. (iww.org)
  • You can't stop a tropical storm or hurricane, but you can take steps now to protect you and your family. (cdc.gov)
  • At its peak strength east of the Lesser Antilles, Hugo was classified as a Category 5 hurricane-the highest rating on the Saffir-Simpson scale. (wikipedia.org)
  • At the time, Hugo was the easternmost Category 5 on record in the Atlantic. (wikipedia.org)
  • The 2017 press release is succinctly titled, "Offshore wind turbines vulnerable to Category 5 hurricane gusts. (baconsrebellion.com)
  • It may well be that even Category 4 hurricanes will exceed today's design standards. (baconsrebellion.com)
  • As we grapple with the aftermath of Hurricane Florence in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast, it's clear that our development choices contributed to the staggering damages - estimated to be between $17 billion to 22 billion - of this extreme weather event. (vox.com)
  • He notes that the HWN, organized in 1965 during Hurricane Betsy, started out as an informal group of amateurs but has since developed a formal relationship with the National Hurricane Center (NHC) in Miami via its Amateur Radio station WX4NHC. (arrl.org)
  • School exposures accounted for 15.8% of exposures in children ages 6-12years and 37.7% in adolescents. (cdc.gov)
  • Descriptive analyses were performed to examine demographic characteristics, geographic distribution, product types and medical outcomes associated with lacrimator exposures. (cdc.gov)
  • It made me sick again to see the levels of exposure that my son has been subjected to. (dailyclimate.org)
  • Long-term exposure to high levels of benzene in the air can cause leukemia. (dailyclimate.org)
  • Jane Worthington, whose grandchildren also had high levels of exposure to harmful chemicals, said she had mixed feelings when the stories came out. (dailyclimate.org)
  • Public safety interventions such as education about safe storage and use of lacrimators, improved product design, or regulatory changes may prevent unintentional exposures. (cdc.gov)
  • Columbia County government offices are closing to the public beginning Thursday, through April 10. (firstcoastnews.com)
  • In the Sargasso Sea, an area in the Atlantic Ocean covering 2 million square miles, massive floating rafts of Sargassum provide food and shelter for many species of fish, shrimp, turtle, and crabs-some of them endangered species. (geiworks.com)
  • The federally-funded clinic has been at the forefront of the medical response to deadly pollution from mining near Libby that left the town and the surrounding area contaminated with toxic asbestos dust. (wdtn.com)
  • In fact, no government official interviewed recognized Guayape as a 'colonization area' in the recent past. (unu.edu)
  • The crucial factor was that the eruption was almost continuous for over 8 months which lead to significantly elevated sulphate concentrations for that whole time over much of the Atlantic and European regions, even though stratospheric concentrations were likely not particularly exceptional. (realclimate.org)