At the start of 2021, just as the world was getting to be a little more normal in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic and with the Olympics back on schedule for the coming summer, Ana Perez was preparing for Tokyo after helping Spain qualify its first full team to the Games since 2004.
Had she made the team, as she was expected to do, it would have been the second Olympics for the then 23-year-old after making her debut in Rio five years earlier. But one day during practice, a freak accident caused her to break both of her ankles, leaving her confined to a hospital bed and unable to walk on her own, and leaving her in a state of uncertainty about whether she’d ever be able to do gymnastics again.
It’s been a long road back for Perez, who returned to competition for the first time in more than two years this February, competing bars for her club in the Spanish League series in an emotional performance that left her in the happiest tears. A couple of months later, she returned to the all-around at the City of Jesolo Trophy, scoring a 49.533 with a downgraded vault but otherwise strong routines, and her major international comeback came at Euros in April, where she contributed routines on bars, beam, and floor.
After winning the silver medal on beam at the Tel Aviv Challenge Cup and leading her team to bronze with the top all-around and bars scores at the Spanish League finals, the biggest test for Perez would come at national championships, which kicked off on July 19. If there were any doubts as to whether she could once again be back on top for Spain, especially with so many young competitors climbing the ranks and having major international success over the past couple of years, Perez showed us that there was no need to worry.
Perez, now 25, won the fifth senior all-around title of her career and her first since 2019 by more than a point, scoring a 52.750 with her routines on bars, beam, and floor all hitting above a 13. While her vault still isn’t quite where it used to be, the rest of her work is so strong and confident, she doesn’t need to throw major difficulty there when she’s capable of such brilliance on her other three. Her beam score of 13.6 was the highest in the competition, and she also put up the second-best score on bars with a 13.35 and the third-best on floor with a 13.05, proving herself as a lock for the upcoming world championships.
Taking the silver medal was Alba Petisco, the national champion in 2020 and again in 2022 who’s been a rising star in her own right after making her Olympics debut in 2021 and qualifying to multiple Euros finals over the past couple of years, finishing 6th on beam in 2022, and 11th in the all-around this year. Petisco showed mostly great work to score a 51.500, including putting up the top floor score of 13.5 in addition to winning silver on vault with a 12.975 average, and like Perez, she’ll almost certainly snag a sport on the worlds team this fall.
The battle for bronze ended up being an exciting one, but ultimately it was first-year senior Laia Font who landed on the podium with a 51.300 after debuting a Yurchenko double on vault to win the title with a 13.250 average. Font also showed great work on beam to put up the third-best score of 13.05, and while she’s been a bit inconsistent this season, with Spain hoping to again qualify a full team to the Olympics, her newfound vault prowess could be exactly what the program is looking for, though I do think she’ll need to fine-tune it a bit.
Lorena Medina in fourth with a 50.800 was a bit of a surprise, especially as she managed to get an upset over 2022 worlds all-around finalist and 2023 Euros all-around and floor finalist Laura Casabuena, who ended up fifth with a 50.450. Casabuena was a favorite for the podium – and potentially even the title – here, though a miss on beam held her back considerably. She won bars with a 13.55, put up the second-best floor score of 13.2, and averaged a 12.85 on vault to win the bronze there, but she couldn’t fight her way back from her beam struggles, giving the well-balanced and solid Medina, who won the silver medal on beam with a 13.1, a chance to take advantage of her mistakes.
Rounding out the top eight were first-year senior Sara Pinilla in sixth with a 49.700, Maia Llacer in seventh with a 49.650, and Irene Calle in eighth with a 48.050. Nearly all of the apparatus medals went to the gymnasts who ranked among the top five, with one exception – Sainza Garcia, who competed only on bars, won the bronze on that event with a 12.25.
In the junior competition, Leire Escauriaza, who had a breakout competition at junior worlds this year, won the all-around title with a 46.600. Escauriaza missed out on landing a medal in her first junior season last year, so this marked a big improvement for the 14-year-old, who also won the bars title with 12.0 and the silver medal on vault with a 12.6 average.
Also on the podium were Claudia Torrent with a 45.400 to take the silver and Marina Escudero with a 45.050 for bronze. Rounding out the top eight were Leire Vicente in fourth with a 44.550, Aitana Pacheco in fifth with a 44.000, Ines Muñoz in sixth with a 43.800, Abril Sayavera in seventh with a 43.650, and Jana Fernandez in eighth with a 43.550. Escudero won the vault title with a 12.725 average, while Sayavera won beam with an 11.95, and Pacheco won floor with a 12.0.
The men’s competition saw an incredible battle between 2020 Olympians Thierno Diallo and Nestor Abad, with Diallo ultimately prevailing with an 83.467 to Abad’s 82.834 after Abad struggled on pommel horse. In addition to his all-around gold, Diallo won the gold on pommels with a 14.367 while also taking the silvers on floor, rings, and parallel bars and capping off his haul with the bronze on high bar, and Abad picked up a handful of apparatus golds, including floor with a 14.267, rings with a 14.6, and parallel bars with a 14.767 (and despite not looking a hundred percent on pommels, he still managed to snag the bronze with a 12.667).
Pau Jimenez, the 20-year-old who made his senior international debut this year with a couple of world cup appearances and a spot on the Euros team, did a fantastic job to get the bronze, earning a 78.766. There were a few mistakes throughout his competition, but he really impressed on his top events, winning the vault title with a 14.217 average, and also getting a pair of bronze medals on floor and rings.
Rounding out the top eight were Dietmar Reinhardt in fourth with a 77.967, Joshua Jack Williams in fifth with a 77.667 (he also won silver on high bar with a 13.0 and bronze on parallel bars with a 13.933), 2020 Olympian Nicolau Mir in sixth with a 77.666, Daniel Carrión in seventh with a 77.265 (and the second-best pommels score with a 13.2), and Adria Vera in eighth with a 76.632.
Sergio Kovacs dominated in the junior men’s field, winning the all-around with a 78.516 in addition to getting golds on floor (13.7), vault (14.125 average), and parallel bars (13.533), and the silver on high bar (12.733). He was followed by Marco Bencomo with a 76.749 for the silver, and Alvaro Giraldez with a 76.717 for the bronze, with Giraldez capturing gold on rings (12.667) and on high bar (12.867), though he fell a bit short on floor and pommels, leaving him a bit below what he’s capable of.
Rounding out the top eight were Alberto Lopez in fourth with a 74.750 (he also won the pommel horse title with a 12.3), Gabriel Barris in fifth with a 74.034, Aitor Gomez in sixth with a 73.167, Pau Sucias in seventh with a 70.165, and Anthony Diaz in eighth with a 68.317.
Sadly missing from the senior competition was last year’s national champion Joel Plata, who suffered a leg injury and had to undergo surgery following a car accident in Portugal shortly before Euros. A number of his teammates were in the car with him, including Olympic medalist Rayderley Zapata, who also sat out this weekend, but Plata was the only one with a serious prognosis. The good news is that he’s training again, and while he’s not yet competition-ready and may not be for some time, I hope seeing what Perez managed to do here after two years of pain and setbacks and recovery can inspire him to return better than ever when he’s ready.
Complete results from the competition are available in our coverage guide.
Officer Schiefer with the Plymouth Police Department arrested a Plymouth teen on Saturday, July 22nd for Operating Without a License. At about 10 p.m. the officer conducted a traffic stop in River Park Square. During the officer’s investigation, the driver was identified as John Pacheco-Mendoza, 18, of French Street in Plymouth. Mendoza was also found
Enough water for 11 million households went into California aquifers this year. Why it’s only a start
“State water authorities estimated that 3.8 million acre-feet of water went into depleted underground reservoirs this year after a record winter of rain and snow. That’s about how much water more than 11 million California households will use annually. The figure released Wednesday was praised by officials as a boon to depleted groundwater basins after decades of overpumping during drought. But it’s going to take years of rain and effort from local water agencies to reach sustainability, said experts and advocates. “We took a pretty creative approach on how to deal with atmospheric rivers,” said Paul Gosselin, deputy director of the Department of Water Resources’ sustainable groundwater management office. “This one year is going to improve conditions but it’s also not the end of the story, and it may only scratch the surface.” … ” Read more from the Sacramento Bee.
DWR captures and stores water from record-breaking snowpack
“2023 has demonstrated how quickly California can move from one extreme to another — as severe drought conditions gave way to flooding and one of the largest snowpacks in 70 years. Because of this extreme variability, and in an effort to always be climate ready, DWR and partners proactively worked to take advantage of this year’s record-breaking precipitation and prepare for the next drought. Governor Newsom’s Executive Orders this year allowed DWR to quickly manage snowmelt runoff and leverage it for increased storage in reservoirs, groundwater recharge, and water transfers. … ” Read more from DWR News.
How is demand management developing in SGMA groundwater sustainability plans?
“Demand management will play a critical role in both reaching groundwater sustainability under SGMA and determining the economic costs of groundwater regulation. Here, we provide an update on the approval process of 116 submitted groundwater sustainability plans. We detail demand management proposals and compare how these differ between plans that have been approved and those deemed incomplete or inadequate.” Click here to read article from the Giannini Foundation of Agricultural Economics.
From drought to deluge: designing groundwater pricing policies to cope with California’s water woes
“Groundwater pricing presents a promising tool for managing groundwater demand under California’s Sustainable Groundwater Management Act. We use data from an agricultural region on the Central Coast to examine how farmers respond to an increase in price over a five-year period. We find that farmers are increasingly responsive to price over time.” Read article from Agricultural and Resource Economics Update.
Funding for water projects takes $200 million bite
“The state’s money problems are taking a $200 million bite out of funding for drinking and wastewater projects. The state Water Resources Control Board voted Tuesday to approve the cuts as part of a statewide belt tightening effort. The state was flush with surplus cash back in 2021 which led to $1.3 billion allocated to drinking water and wastewater. But this year, revenues fell short and the state is in deficit by about $32 billion. That means some of the original money allocated in 2021 needs to be scaled back. … ” Read more from SJV Water.
Cal Cities Board adopts positions on water rights bills; vows to keep fighting for homelessness and affordable housing funding
“Proposed changes to California’s water rights system and new leadership in the state Assembly were front and center at the League of California Cities Board of Directors meeting last week in Newport Beach. The Board also approved recommendations from the Nominating Committee for the 2023-24 Board of Directors. The Board voted to take a watch position on two key water bills, AB 460 (Bauer-Kahan) and AB 1337 (Wicks). Both measures faltered in the Legislature amidst fierce opposition from water utilities, agricultural interests, and business groups. Shortly before lawmakers went on recess last week, the two bills were pulled, essentially ending — for now — what would have been significant changes to the way water is allocated and regulated in the state. … ” Read more from the League of California Cities.
Historic Sierra runoff will make for a fantastic fly fishing season on California’s rivers
“It’s not just whitewater rafters and kayakers who are enjoying the historic snowmelt runoff tumbling down Sierra Nevada rivers this summer. Anglers are benefiting from nature’s generosity thanks to the high water flows. The influx of water flushes out streams large and small, creating fresh habitats and uncovering cobble and gravel beds trout use to build their spawning nests. The season is somewhat delayed as the snowpack continues to melt, and authorities are advising caution around rivers and lakes as numerous drownings have been reported this year. These circumstances indicate that the fishing season in the Sierra Nevada will extend later than usual this year, said Peter Tira, a spokesman for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife. … ” Read more from SF Gate.
Fox Rothschild LLP secures novel IRS ruling on water rights as ‘real property’
“A Fox Rothschild team secured a favorable private letter ruling, PLR 202309007, from the Internal Revenue Service, which held that certain water rights are “real property,” and therefore qualify for a tax-deferred exchange under Internal Revenue Code Section 1031. Gregory A. Novotny, Co-Chair of the Taxation and Wealth Planning Department, who with Chantal C. Renta, requested the private letter ruling, said the recently released ruling was the first of its kind and could provide greater comfort and clarity to other taxpayers seeking to enter into similar water rights transactions. “This provides some critical guidance in an area where there’s not very much guidance. It could help people who want to exchange all or a portion of their water rights for real property and gives them some comfort that they have the option to utilize a Section 1031 exchange,” Novotny said. … ” Read more from the Northern California Record.
What to expect from wildfire season in California this year
“Compared with recent years, the 2023 fire season in California is off to a slow start. Roughly 22,000 acres have burned in the state so far this year, compared with an average of 120,000 acres by this point in each of the previous five years, according to CalFire, the state’s fire agency. An extraordinarily wet winter and an unusually cool spring and early summer are to thank. But that picture is starting to shift. Several wildfires have recently erupted in California amid a heat wave, including the Rabbit fire, which has consumed more than 8,000 acres and prompted evacuations in Riverside County last weekend. As of last night, it was 55 percent contained. … ” Read more from the New York Times.
Delta Lead Scientist creates unprecedented conflicts of interest with multi-million dollar UC research grants
Deirdre Des Jardins with California Water Research writes, “The Delta Lead Scientist, Dr. Laurel Larsen, is a hydroecologist at the University of California’s Berkeley campus. She is the first mid-career scientist to hold the position of Delta Lead Scientist, having received tenure in 2018. The Lead Scientist position and the Delta Science Program were first created under the 2000 CALFED Record of Decision, and were continued under the Delta Reform Act of 2009. The Lead Scientist is responsible for “leading, overseeing, and guiding” the state and federally funded Delta Science Program. Dr. Larsen applied for the Delta Lead Scientist position in 2019, when a $1.85 million, five year grant to her UC Berkeley research group was ending. … ” Read more from California Water Research.
Today’s featured article …
SoCAL WATER DIALOG: SGMA implementation in the San Joaquin Valley
Groundwater is a critical resource, supplying nearly 40% of the state with water to support cities and farms. With droughts increasing in severity and frequency and climate change putting stress on local communities across the state, it has become increasingly clear that California can no longer manage groundwater resources as we have in the past. This recognition led to the passage of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) in 2014 – a law designed to provide statewide guidance for managing California’s precious groundwater resources sustainably. Eight years in, how is the implementation of SGMA going?
In a presentation to the Southern California Water Dialog, Ellen Hanak, vice president and director of the Water Policy Center and a senior fellow at the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC), gave a status check on SGMA implementation with a focus on the San Joaquin Valley, which is ground zero for SGMA implementation.
In the San Joaquin Valley, bringing groundwater basins in to balance will necessitate significant amount of irrigated lands to come out of production. Ann Hayden, Interim Vice President of Climate Resilient Water Systems for the Environmental Defense Fund, discussed how the state’s Multibenefit Land Repurposing Program hopes to help with the transition.
Grasshoppers infest lower Klamath area
“A high number of grasshoppers are infesting the lower Klamath area. Some are even calling it a ‘grasshopper plague.’ The Klamath Water Users association have been receiving reports of lost crops. And the organization said grasshoppers are to blame. Roads and farmland are covered in these grasshoppers. … ” Read more from KOBI 5.
McKinleyville new water storage tank set to be critical in firefighting use for the city
“The town of McKinleyville is breaking ground on a new water storage tank on Wednesday, July 19. The new 4.5-million-gallon tank is planned to be a critical hazard mitigation tool for the town and around Humboldt County. The extra water storage is dedicated for consumption and firefighting on a daily basis, as well as in the event of a large earthquake or wildfire. Coordination between Humboldt Bay Municipal water district and the City of Arcata will additionally allow this tank to back feed the City of Arcata water system if needed. … ” Read more from KRCR.
MOUNTAIN COUNTIES
Clarity, changing food web detailed in annual Lake Tahoe report
“The Tahoe Environmental Research Center, or TERC, at the University of California, Davis, released its annual Tahoe: State of the Lake Report, describing the past year as one of rapid biological change. The 2023 report presents data collected during 2022 and puts it in context with historical records. It also serves as an important resource for restoration, management and monitoring decisions. UC Davis researchers have been monitoring the second deepest lake in the United States continuously since 1968, and the report provides an update for nonscientists on a variety of factors affecting the health of Lake Tahoe. The report details changes in lake clarity and the possible links to a sudden decline in the Mysis shrimp population. Extensive algal blooms in the nearshore of the lake and new data on microplastics are also detailed. Other topics include new monitoring and modeling efforts, lowered nitrogen and phosphorus levels and research into the efficacy of no-wake zones. … ” Continue reading at UC Davis.
High levels of toxic lead found in Lake Tahoe’s Emerald Bay
“A recent investigation by The Wall Street Journal has revealed concerning findings regarding high levels of lead in Lake Tahoe, specifically near areas where AT&T buried underwater lead cables. The testing conducted in Emerald Bay, a popular location within the lake, unveiled a sample containing lead levels that exceeded the Environmental Protection Agency’s limit for drinking water by a staggering 2,533 times. Despite these findings, AT&T has no immediate plans to remove lead cables from Lake Tahoe, as mentioned in a court filing this week. In the filing, the company argued that the testing conducted by the Wall Street Journal was funded by the Environmental Defense Fund and targeted specific sites to obtain the desired result of high lead levels. … ” Read more from Active NorCal.
Man behind plan to reopen Grass Valley gold mine faced charges. Here are the verdicts
“Ben Mossman, the man behind a controversial plan to reopen a shuttered gold mine in Grass Valley, has been found guilty of 13 environmental crimes but was exonerated on another 10 counts in connection with another mine project in British Columbia. The court ruling involves a failed gold mine on an island off the coast of British Columbia that turned into a toxic site due to mine waste leaks. Ben Mossman is due to be sentenced on Sept. 26 in Prince Rupert Laws Court, said Ann Seymour, a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Attorney General, British Columbia Prosecution Services in an email. Under the environmental statues, he was found guilty of penalties including fines and jail time or a combination of both. British Columbia law enforcement officials have not discussed what penalties they would seek. … ” Read more from the Sacramento Bee.
SACRAMENTO VALLEY
Groundwater political group protests Tuscan Water District
“A proposed special district in Butte County that would carry out groundwater recharge projects, known as the Tuscan Water District, has met controversy in its formation process. Political group Groundwater for Butte began a public campaign Tuesday in a ballot-ripping protest at Durham Community Park held in opposition to the district’s formation for many reasons, one being a lack of public information and input on the matter. The district has gone through Butte County’s agency formation process, and it is said county supervisors are set to vote as soon as Tuesday on whether or not to place the district’s formation on an official election ballot. According to its website, the formation of the Tuscan Water District attempts to fill a water-management void in the area of the Vina subbasin and a portion of the Butte subbasin. … ” Read more from the Chico Enterprise-Record.
Council OKs contract for well project: Yuba City water tower improvements underway
“In order to provide additional water resources and store available surface water, the Yuba City City Council unanimously approved a professional services agreement on Tuesday to develop an environmental analysis, bid service and permitting documents for the Aquifer Storage and Recovery Well Project. This project originally came to fruition after the city was awarded a $6.3 million grant from the California Department of Water Resources in 2022 for the construction of a new municipal well with aquifer storage and recovery capabilities, which would allow for both groundwater extraction and insertion for future use. The city previously said that this well will “allow the city to treat and store surplus water from existing water rights in an underground aquifer, especially during normal or wet years, and allow recovery of that water when needed.” … ” Read more from the Appeal Democrat.
Marysville council approves plan for Ellis Lake solutions
“Considered one of the jewels of the city, Marysville’s Ellis Lake has seen better days. The idea of improving the water quality of the lake has come up several times over the years with various plans discussed and attempted – including recently when the city removed large amounts of carp and added a phosphorous agent that temporarily brought renewed life to the murky waters. However, because those solutions were not permanent and city leaders now have grandiose ideas for a revitalization of Ellis Lake, a proper fix is being considered once again: moving water from the Yuba River into the lake. … ” Read more from the Appeal Democrat.
BAY AREA
Why a mouse matters: A reporter tags along on an ‘epic slog’ to survey the salt marsh harvest mouse
“It was late August, and a briny breeze tugged at my hair and notebook. I stepped out onto an expanse of pickleweed at San Pablo Bay’s American Canyon. This was the salt marsh, the buffer between land and sea. The salt-tolerant pickleweed, a succulent, was like a cross between coral and a leftover Christmas tree that formed a thick, springy, porous carpet under my boots. Black-necked stilts called over the wind. Raccoon prints dotted the mud. Rats, deer mice, house mice, mink, river otters, beavers, black rails, and Ridgway’s rails lived here, too. We were there for the salt marsh harvest mice. But the mice had hidden themselves well. That morning, some 60 biologists and volunteers were sloshing their way across a handful of sites around the San Francisco Bay Area, all hoping to find these mice in the live traps they’d set. … ” Read more from Bay Nature.
‘Stop the bleeding’: Pleasanton proposes big rate increases to keep water program afloat
“Water rates in Pleasanton could go up 30% this year under a proposed plan that would also raise rates and additional 20% in 2025 and another 12% in 2026. The proposed increases — the first of which would be effective Nov. 1 — address what officials have described as the dire state of the city’s water enterprise fund, which is meant to be sustained by ratepayers but hasn’t kept up with water delivery and maintenance costs. The fund is at risk of becoming insolvent by 2025 as reserves are drawn down, according to the city. “It really is designed to stop the bleeding,” Pleasanton City Manager Gerry Beaudin told the City Council at its meeting Tuesday. “We have a systemic issue that we need to address.” … ” Read more from the San Jose Mercury News.
CENTRAL COAST
Local and state agencies are wrestling with how to make Highway 1 in Moss Landing resilient to sea level rise.
“When the sea rises due to climate change, what does that look like on the ground? At Moss Landing and Elkhorn Slough, we can now look into the future – or rather, different choices for the future. In 2021, Caltrans, in partnership with the Association of Monterey Bay Area Governments and The Nature Conservancy, issued a press release announcing its first-ever use of a virtual reality app, Sea Level Rise Explorer, in order to better understand how sea level rise will impact eight miles of Highway 1 west of Elkhorn Slough and five miles of railroad track that cuts across it. The simulation, which is viewable online, shows seawater lapping on the shoulder of the highway and the rail line inundated. That is with two feet of sea level rise, a projection expected to be reached around 2050. With five feet of sea level rise – projected to happen around 2100 – the entire stretch is underwater, as is the Moss Landing State Wildlife Area, a vital salt marsh wildlife habitat. … ” Read more from Monterey Weekly.
SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY
Officials investigate after dead fish turn up in Stockton lake
“The California Department of Fish and Wildlife is stepping in to investigate after dozens of dead fish turned up in the waters of a lake in Stockton’s Brookside neighborhood. According to a spokesperson for the agency, the Department of Fish and Wildlife is part of an interagency Harmful Algal Bloom illness tracking team. On July 10, officials with the department responded to the lake, along March Lane and Riverbrook Drive, to collect data and determine if the fish died because of causes related to a harmful algal bloom. Findings from the data will be reported to the CDC’s One Health Harmful Algal Bloom System. … ” Read more from Channel 10.
Huge decision on Fresno’s future: County extends mining operation
“Saying the mining company should have started its environmental process earlier, Fresno County supervisors gave CEMEX three years to finish its EIR instead of four. Supervisor Brian Pacheco said at Tuesday’s packed board meeting that given the multi-billion-dollar company’s size and resources, CEMEX should have known to start the process sooner for securing an extension for its quarry along the San Joaquin River. Rocks, gravel, and sand from the site go into homes and roads throughout Fresno and Madera counties. Reducing the deadline by a year was intended to “hold them to the fire,” Pacheco said of CEMEX. … ” Read more from GV Wire.
Two dams near Fresno are spilling as designed. No reason to get freaked out
Columnist Marek Warszawski writes, “When dam operators of the foothill reservoirs outside Fresno have no choice but to release water through their spillways, some folks get a little nervous. No reason to, really. As long as those spillways are structurally sound — which admittedly in California is no longer a given — everything is operating as designed. Last week, water spilled from the top of 319-foot tall Friant Dam for the first time since July 2017 and second since 2011 as the state endured two multiyear droughts. The man-made waterfall is visible for miles whether you drive north from Fresno along Friant Road or climb atop a bluff with a clear view of the dam. Watching the waters of Millerton Lake cascade down its concrete face is an unusual sight, but no reason for alarm. … ” Read more from the Fresno Bee. | Read via Yahoo News.
Months after floods, Kern River still causing problems on county roads
“A road to nowhere. That’s what Sierra Way in the Kern River Valley has become. The road, which connects Weldon to Kernville, has been closed for months due to damage from flooding, and that damage has only gotten worse. Now, a portion of the road has collapsed entirely. “Why don’t they just build the bridge back real quick?” asked Kern River Valley resident Dion Agnew, adding, “Though yeah, this is worse than I’ve ever seen it here.” The answer to Agnew’s question is that Kern County is looking for ways to fix it, but those fixes could cost around $40 million dollars. … ” Read more from Channel 23.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
State presents $80 million check to advance development of Pure Water Southern California
“State officials presented an $80 million check today to help advance Pure Water Southern California, a large-scale, regional water recycling program that will create a new source of water to benefit 19 million people amid a changing climate and weather whiplash. State Assemblymember Lisa Calderon (D-Whittier), E. Joaquin Esquivel, State Water Resources Control Board chair, and Carson Mayor Pro Tem Jawane Hilton joined representatives from the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California and Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts during the event at the Pure Water demonstration facility. Metropolitan and the Sanitation Districts are partnering on work to accelerate the project’s design and construction, with the potential to begin construction as early as 2025 and water deliveries to start in 2032. … ” Read more from the Metropolitan Water District.
SAN DIEGO
Valley Center has grown with its water district
“Making the desert bloom. That’s what our local water district has accomplished in the nearly 70 years of its existence. Although settlers first came to Valley Center in the 1860s, the town’s population stayed at just a few hundred people throughout the first part of the 20th Century. On the eve of the formation of the district, the population was about 900, according to the Valley Center History Museum. But in 1954 the voters of the community voted overwhelmingly to create the Valley Center Municipal Water District (VCMWD). From then on, the town has grown with the water district, which made it possible to grow to the population it is today, around 22,000 (VCMWD’s total service area population is 29,700.) What made that all possible was the creation of the San Diego County Water Authority (SDCWA) in 1944 and the completion of the 1st San Diego Aqueduct in the later 1940s’s. … ” Read more from Valley Center.
“An unrelenting heat wave that has blanketed the the Southwestern U.S. continued to break records Wednesday, inflicting misery in major cities and offering what experts described as a disturbing glimpse into the future as human-caused climate change increases the frequency and duration of extreme heat events. Places such as Las Vegas and Phoenix have always endured broiling summers. But the scale and duration of this heat wave has brought new levels of suffering, from sizzling sidewalks to broken-down cars and passed-out airline passengers. Here in Phoenix, the mercury inched to 119 degrees Wednesday, a daily record. It was the 20th consecutive day that the temperature topped 110 degrees — two days more than the city’s previous record, 18 consecutive days over 110 degrees, set in 1974. … ” Read more from the LA Times.
Countless dead trees, plants seen in Las Vegas neighborhood amid new water fees
“Take a short walk through the historic Artesian Heights Neighborhood near W. Oakey Boulevard and Hinson Street, and you’ll notice countless dead trees and plants. … The Las Vegas Valley Water District states that a surcharge of $9 is added to every thousand gallons of water used beyond the set water threshold. The fee, implemented in January, aims to curtail the biggest water users and conserve Southern Nevada’s small share of the Colorado River. “I reduced my consumption by about 30% from last year, and I still have a bill that is over $800,” said Yvette Williams, a resident. … ” Read more from Channel 3.
Arizona cities offering money incentives to residents in bid to reduce water use: Here’s what to know
“From $800 to $1,000, and even $5,000, some Valley cities are dangling money incentives to residents, in the hope they will cut their water use amid the state’s ongoing crisis. The programs are a direct result of cities grappling with a future of less water from the Colorado River. According to the Arizona Department of Water Resources, the Colorado River provides water to over 40 million people and more than four million acres of farmland in seven so-called “basin states,” which includes Arizona. However, the Associated Press has noted that the Colorado River cannot provide the water they were promised a century ago because of less snow, warmer temperatures and water lost to evaporation. … ” Read more from Fox 10.
Column: Queen Creek got the Colorado River water it wanted. What’s next?
Columnist Joanna Allhands writes, “Queen Creek has begun receiving fourth-priority Colorado River water, the product of a bitter, five-year battle over whether cities hundreds of miles away could lay claim to it. It’s not a lot of water — only 2,033 acre-feet a year. Enough to serve just a portion of the Phoenix suburb’s homes. But Queen Creek desperately wanted the water to help wean itself off groundwater — which if you ask the town, is nothing less than a bid for its future sustainability. Queen Creek also has purchased land in the Harquahala Valley, one of three groundwater transportation basins the state set aside for cities to pump, as part of this effort. … ” Read more from the Arizona Republic.
Queen Creek to receive Colorado River water from Cibola farm in controversial transfer
“For the first time, Queen Creek is getting water from a property owner in the small town of Cibola, Arizona, in La Paz County. In some ways, experts say it’s a first-of-its-kind transaction in Arizona, and the sale did not come without controversy. After years of court proceedings and getting approval from state and federal officials, the Queen Creek mayor, councilmembers and other city leaders met on Wednesday morning to celebrate the deal. For the first time, it was publicly used to water the grass at Desert Mountain Park. For Queen Creek officials, this was the right move to ensure renewable water for their community’s future. After a groundwater model was released in June, the town says it needs to find a water supply for about 10,000 lots that have yet to be built. … ” Read more from Arizona Family.
In national water news today …
Michael Brain Named Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Water and Science with the Department of Interior
“The Department of the Interior today announced that Deputy Commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation Michael Brain has been named Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Water and Science. Michael succeeds Tanya Trujillo who was sworn in as Assistant Secretary for Water and Science on June 25, 2021, and announced her resignation, effective July 17, 2023. “We welcome Michael, who brings more than a decade of experience in water resource development and management issues, as Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Water and Science,” said Chief of Staff Rachael Taylor. “Michael will play a key role as Interior continues to implement President Biden’s Investing in America agenda that is delivering historic resources to communities, helping advance drought resilience and strengthening local economies.” … ” Read more from the Department of Interior.
Detections of ‘forever chemicals’ in water coast to coast strengthen call for stringent EPA regulations
“New laboratory tests commissioned by the Environmental Working Group have found the toxic “forever chemicals” known as PFAS in the drinking water of dozens of U.S. cities, including major metropolitan areas. This new round of test results – based on samples of water from the homes of residents in 18 states, from California to Connecticut – shows the widespread presence of PFAS in our tap water. “For decades, Americans have unknowingly consumed water tainted with PFAS,” said Sydney Evans, a senior science analyst at EWG. “PFAS have been used and discharged all across the country for years.” … ” Read more from the Environmental Working Group.
Workers needed to fulfill America’s infrastructure goals
“Down the hole a new connection is muscled into place. Bright-vested workers join pipe to pipe, one of many such couplings that will result in a new 8-inch water line for Traverse City. The construction scene in northern Michigan is being repeated across the Great Lakes region and throughout the country as public works begin to reap the benefits of a federal spending splurge to enhance the nation’s water, energy, communications, and transportation systems while also boosting manufacturing capacity. Local and corporate dollars will pay for some of these projects. But the infrastructure push is catalyzed by federal action. In the last two years Congress passed the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, the Inflation Reduction Act, and the CHIPS Act. Combined, the three bills offer about $1.3 trillion in infrastructure loans, grants, subsidies, and tax credits over the next five to 10 years. … ” Read more from the Circle of Blue.
About the Daily Digest: The Daily Digest is a collection of selected news articles, commentaries and editorials appearing in the mainstream press. Items are generally selected to follow the focus of the Notebook blog. The Daily Digest is published every weekday with a weekend edition posting on Sundays.
BRONX BOROUGH PRESIDENT Vanessa Gibson and Janiera Moore, holding her son, pose for a photo, alongside representatives of Stop & Shop, the Children’s Hospital at Montefiore, and About Fresh at the launch of the Fresh Connect program at the Stop & Shop store in the Bay Plaza Mall in Co-op City, at 2136 Bartow Avenue. Photo by Ariel Pacheco
Healthcare professionals will now get the opportunity to prescribe healthy fresh foods to select families in The Bronx through a new pilot program. Retail chain, Stop & Shop, The Children’s Hospital at Montefiore (CHAM), About Fresh nonprofit, and Bronx Borough President Vanessa Gibson announced the launch of a new program on July 12.
As previously reported, The Bronx has consistently ranked as the unhealthiest of New York State’s 62 counties, with high levels of obesity and diabetes prevalent across its neighborhoods. Meanwhile, food insecurity has long plagued the borough, a problem that was exacerbated during the COVID-19 pandemic.
About Fresh is a Boston-based nonprofit, the aim of which is to allow healthcare professionals connect patients to healthy food. Their Fresh Connect program provides prepaid debit cards to families to buy fresh fruit and vegetables at local Stop & Shop stores.
The pilot program aims to ensure Bronx families have access to well-balanced, nutritional meals, and is being made possible through a $75,000 grant from Stop & Shop, the first major retailer in the country to partner with About Fresh.
During the announcement of the new program at the Stop & Shop store, located in the Bay Plaza Mall in Co-op City at 2136 Bartow Avenue, Gibson said, “Today we take a bold step in our overall efforts to address food insecurity across The Bronx and the City of New York.”
She added, “For too long our borough has been associated with everything bad: highest rates of asthma, heart disease, obesity, so many preventable diseases that our residents and families live with today.”
Through the program, one hundred Bronx families will be provided with fresh produce for six months. The families will receive a $100 pre-paid, debit card for each month the pilot program lasts. The debit card can only be used to purchase fresh fruit and vegetables at any Stop & Shop location.
2022 COUNTY HEALTH RANKINGS for New York’s 62 Counties Source: 2022 State Report New York published by the University of Winconsin Population Health Institute with support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Jennifer Barr is director of external communication and community relations at Stop & Shop and said, “Stop & Shop is particularly focused on the issue of childhood hunger because we know that lack of food is very closely tied to lack of opportunity.”
The families participating in the initiative were identified by pediatricians and community health workers through Montefiore’s social needs screening. CHAM is the first hospital in the New York area to partner with Stop & Shop and offer the program to families in The Bronx. Stop & Shop has also donated $10,000 to the hospital to renovate a playroom for children with cancer.
Janira Moore who, along with her 15-month-old son, is a participant in the program, said, “There’s a lot of children with food insecurity that I personally know who have to rely on free lunch from the school system and bring that home sometimes in order to have their next meal.”
Moore added, “Fresh Connect allows people to have the opportunity to not have to choose between different foods or have to trade-off between different foods.”
JANIRA, TOGETHER WITH her son, Josiah, shop for healthy groceries at the Stop & Shop store at Bay Plaza in Co-op City on July 12, 2023, using a Fresh Connect debit card. Photo courtesy of The Children’s Hospital at Montefiore
A year ago, Stop & Shop successfully implemented the program in Massachusetts. Stop & Shop then expanded the program to all its 400-plus chain stores across New Jersey, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and New York.
Josh Trautwein, co-founder and CEO of Fresh Connect, said, “This program is going to be so powerful from the standpoint of health equity. We know food is essential to our health from a healthcare transformation and pain innovation standpoint.” He added, “We know that it is driving an exorbitant amount of avoidable costs.”
Meanwhile, Gibson summed up the event, saying, “Every investment that we make in this grant is an investment in our children and when we invest in our children, we invest in their future.”
Joseph Roh holte sich das Bracelet beim $600 Ultra Stack No Limit Hold’em der World Series of Poker (WSOP) 2023 im Horseshoe & Paris Las Vegas, Min-Sung Lee belegte Rang 7.
Mit noch neun Spielern war es ins Finale beim Ultra Stack gegangen, als deutschsprachiger Vertreter mit koreanischer Fahne war Min-Sung Lee dabei. Schuyler Thornton hatte gleich wieder Schluss, Min Sung Lee musste mit gegen Denny Lee mit den Kings Chips lassen. Joseph Roh setzte sich an die Spitze und eliminierte mit den Deuces dann auch min Sung Lee mit auf Rang 7, das Board . Min Sung Lee nahm $62.450 für Rang 7 mit.
John Fagg schickte mit den Jacks Logan moon mit hinterher und sicherte sich die Führung. Joseph Roh legte aber gleich nach, mit den Kings verabschiedete er William fisher mit und holte sich den Chiplead wieder.
Es sollte noch ein actionreicher Kampf ums Bracelet werden, am Ende aber war es doch Joseph Roh, der sich im Heads-up gegen Denny Lee behaupten konnte. Mit war Lee all-in gegen .Ac: von Roh, das Board und Joseph Roh jubelte über das Bracelet und $401.250.
Event #81: $600 Ultra Stack – No-limit Hold’em
Buy-in: $600
Entries: 7.207
Preisgeld: $3.675.570
Berichte: Tag 1A – Tag 1B – Tag 2
Booking a professional magician sure takes a load off when it’s time for a kiddie birthday party. Kids love magic for its ability to defy perception and expand the imagination. But what happens when the day doesn’t go as planned? When your magician cancels last minute, it can be frustrating, especially when you have a roomful of children who need entertaining. However, there are several steps you can take to handle the situation and find a suitable alternative:
Check the Cancellation Policy
When it comes to delivering quality service, our policy regarding last minute cancellations is simple – it’s just not done. By signing up to our platform, our entertainers agree to fulfill all the bookings they accept and to do so with excellence. But our entertainers are humans too, which is why it’s important to know the reason behind the cancellation.
Check the cancellation policy
Leave a review
Consider alternatives
Request a Refund
When booking with Yombu, you are entitled to a refund if your entertainer doesn’t show up or cancels at the last minute, but this doesn’t happen unless there are extenuating circumstances. We send multiple reminders in-app, by SMS and email to the entertainers and we get the notifications when they are on their way to the event. However, if it does happen we will investigate the matter thoroughly and unless the cancellation was due to emergency circumstances, such as an accident, family emergency or illness, we have a hearing with the entertainer.
Leave a Review
If your magician cancels at the last minute for reasons not constituting an emergency, leave a review on our platform. It’s important to us that our entertainers deliver quality service and keep their commitments. We encourage clients to leave reviews, whether good or bad, so that we can evaluate the entertainer’s service.
Find Alternatives
Thankfully, efficient booking is what Yombu is all about! Our marketplace connects parents and party planners with professional entertainers quickly and easily. If your magician cancels last minute, definitely try to find another one. If none are available, we also have other amazing entertainers for balloon twisting, face painting and princess or superhero party characters that children also love.
Still Have an Awesome Party
As much as it sucks, try not to let it get you down. Children are incredibly resilient and can have fun regardless of whether a magician shows up or not. Remember to encourage your birthday child to enjoy themselves with their friends with dancing, taking photos and eating cake, which are all things that don’t require an entertainer and can take up time until an alternative shows up.
Quality Kids Party Entertainment
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Bells & Whistles
We hope that when you booked your magician, you booked it with us! However, these points can be applied anywhere. Be sure to know where you stand in terms of what you’re entitled to and gather all the necessary information you need to take informed action. And above all, have an awesome party! The children won’t be too minded about the entertainer whom they didn’t know, but rather all those who came to celebrate with them.
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A great thing about our platform is that the entertainers with the highest ratings are moved to the top of the list, so you can be sure that if they’re there, they’ve delivered great service. That’s why leaving ratings are so important – you help other parents and party planners book with peace of mind.
LOS ANGELES — Before Ivan Cantor gets ready to play a gig, he always makes sure to put on his multi-colored mask, a symbol that represents his hometown of Chinantla in the Mexican state of Puebla.
“That mask represents my town, that’s my image when I play,” he told Latino Rebels during a recent interview. With the stage name Ivan Cantor Su Mero Estilo, or “His Own Style,” the DJ uses his mix of cumbias to emanate a New York sound.
His approach to the genre of cumbia is part of an emerging culture across the country, with cumbia appearing in different variations in cities like Los Angeles, New York and Chicago. Just this month Brooklyn had its first cumbia fest, hosted by One Whale’s Tale, a multidisciplinary production company, marking the first gathering of its kind in the New York City borough.
Total retail revenues generated by Latin recorded music in the U.S. surpassed $1 billion in 2022, according to data from the Recording Industry Association of America. And Latino music continues to dominate the mainstream, cumbia is one genre that embraces its tradition while exploring new interpretations.
Though the guacharaca-driven rhythms of cumbia find their origins in Colombia, the versatile genre has dominated Latin America since the 1800s, evolving in countries like Mexico, Argentina and Peru, with each developing its own style.
“We noticed with each different group of people who play cumbia, if you say cumbia, it means something very specific to them,” said Ellpetha Tsivicos, one of the organizers of the Brooklyn Cumbia Fest.
Chicago Scene: ‘It’s Not Monolithic, It’s Complex’
Sandra Treviño, a music journalist and DJ in Chicago, says there are more DJs playing cumbia now than there were five to 10 years ago, and attributes the rise of the genre to a general acceptance of it.
“I think the notion that it isn’t just an underground music scene,” she explained, “people are no longer ashamed of it. Cumbia was not played at parties. Cumbia was not played at any shows. Even ska bands that had a little cumbia were shunned.”
Treviño says that, in Chicago, you can now find all types of cumbia—from dark cumbia to electronic cumbia to cumbia rebajada and more.
Chicago-based acts like Dos Santos embrace the evolving nature of the genre along with other influences. With its members hailing from Puerto Rico, Mexico, Panama and Texas, the band’s psychedelic folk sound is largely informed by these places.
Multi-instrumentalist, singer and lyricist Alex Chavez says their music is largely influenced by their multicultural identity as Latinos from Chicago. “It’s also not just a testament to us, I think it’s very much a testament also to Chicago as a global city. It’s very much a Latino city,” Chavez said.
For Chavez, it’s important to acknowledge the history behind this type of music, often noting its complexities. “This isn’t just party music,” he said. “I think we always sort of present what we do with a certain kind of level of intention and care.”
Welcome to Puebla York
New York, nicknamed “Puebla York” for its vast population from Puebla, has become a mecca for cumbia, with DJs like El Hijo de Puebla York, Marvelito and Soniderablues at the forefront of a new generation of artists. Moreover, other key players like DJ Chihuahua and Ivan Cantor Su Mero Estilo, who produced tracks like “Carnaval en Nueva York,” demonstrate a commitment to this emerging music scene.
Ivan, for example, wants to bring a new type of cumbia to the dancefloor, noting the use of English lyrics in some of his mixes. For him, it’s a unique way to share his Mexican-American identity.
“I want people to know that I come from Brooklyn. So I put the intro of ‘Empire State’—you know, with Jay Z and Alicia Keys. I put that intro, but just acapella. And then I start with the cumbias,” he recalled about playing a show in California. “People were like, wow, you know? They were so amazed.”
DJ Chihuahua, real name Christian Simon, got his start in cumbia around 2005, becoming fascinated by cumbia rebajada, a “slowed-down” form of cumbia. He started looking into how the tracks were made, eventually becoming a DJ and producer himself. He too has roots in Chinantla, Puebla like Ivan Cantor.
Reflecting on the rise of cumbia in the last few years, he says cumbia is now being embraced in spaces outside sonidero venues, the main spaces where one might find cumbia.
“The types of places where cumbias are being played, that’s changed too—cumbias being played in bars and restaurants,” he said.
The cumbia culture in New York also extends beyond music. Cartoonists like Draizy dedicate themselves to amplifying a visual narrative of the community. With DJs like El Hijo de Puebla York repping “cumbias mezcladas como nunca antes” —“mixed cumbias like never before”— the rising scene illustrates a new character of cumbia and mexicanos in New York City.
Wanting to celebrate the rise and legacy of the genre, the organizers of this year’s first annual Brooklyn Cumbia Fest focused on the idea of presenting traditional cumbia from its origins in Colombia, while also allowing the opportunity to bring groups that embrace its modern forms across the U.S. and Latin America.
“We wanted to just create a festival where we could celebrate the diversity of it from Columbia to Mexico, to the US to Peru, and everywhere that it exists,” said Camilo Quiroz-Vázquez, one of the organizers.
As a Mexican American who grew up in Los Angeles, Camilo moved to New York 14 years ago and never really heard cumbia. He says there’s been an explosion of the genre across the city in the last five years.
Tsivicos says there are all kinds of styles being played by all kinds of DJs in Brooklyn. As a first-generation American from Cyprus, Tsivicos felt she could identify with cumbia growing up, especially the story of Tejana singer Selena.
The multi-day festival brought together acts like the Afro-Caribbean soul band Afro Dominicano and the Afro-Indigenous Colombian community drum circle Rueda de Oro. Most important for Camilo and Tsivicos, the festival is about building awareness surrounding the growth of cumbia.
“This is not on the sidelines of American culture. If that’s what you think, you’re blind,” Tsivicos said. “There are venues all over Brooklyn every night packed with people dancing until very, very late listening to cumbia music.”
West Coast Cumbia
For David and Rene Pacheco of Tropa Magica, their early exposure to cumbia had a crucial impact on the music they make.
“I rediscovered it as a young adult, like going to college,” Rene recalled, “It was very easy to grab onto because we were like, hey, this is like very nostalgic of what we grew up with.”
The East Los Angeles group also counts on influences like Kumbia Queers from Argentina or La Chamba, a band from City Terrace in L.A. Tropa Magica strikes a balance between a psychedelic punk sound and the cumbia arrangements they’ve heard since they were little kids.
When asked about how the city’s scene can differ from other places the band has played, Rene said: “New York’s cumbia scene has more of a traditional feel. Out here in L.A. we’re just really taking it apart and putting it together with whatever interests we have at the time.”
Other groups like Spaghetti Cumbia, who also played at the Brooklyn Cumbia Fest, follow a similar philosophy.
“They play like punk, psychedelic, Western cumbia and have a way more contemporary, way more West Coast kind of Chicano style of playing,” said Quiroz-Vázquez.
Reflecting on the future of the cumbia, Tsivicos shared that the festival is only the beginning of a growing community.
“For all of these bands, introducing them to new audiences is also really important as they develop their style,” she said. “They’re so dedicated and they’re so talented, that it’s exciting for both them and the audience.”
Mariana Martínez Barba is a summer correspondent at Futuro Media and is currently studying at the Craig Newmark Graduate School of Journalism at the City University of New York. Twitter: @marianamtzbarba
During the last 3 weeks Murcia has seen one of its greatest periods, in terms of musical events, that can be remembered in the region.
The highly popular group Iron Maiden and top-level artists such as Joaquín Sabina, Alejandro Sanz and Rod Stewart, among many others, delighted audiences totalling 131,567people, who brought with them an economic impact of more than 12 million euros for the area. This was announced by the Councillor for Tourism, Commerce and Consumption of the City Council, Jesús Pacheco, on Tuesday.
In addition to the bands and singers above, David Bisbal, Morat, Tini, Antonio Orozco, Manuel Carrasco, Romeo Santos, Bad Gyal, Café Quijano, Jorge Drexler and Feid also performed in the region.
The Iron Maiden concert on July 20 generated an income of 7.1 million and created more than 60 jobs, according to data from a study carried out by the University of Murcia on the impact that this event had.
25,667 attendees travelled to the Enrique Roca stadium in Murcia, with the audience coming from 48 different countries including UK, Afghanistan, the Philippines, Malaysia, Canada, Argentina, Brazil, the United States, Singapore, Saudi Arabia and Australia, among others.
Up until July 22, Murcia hosted a further 11 concerts by top-level artists . These brought together 95,900 people, leading to an economic impact of more than 1.7 million, with an average cost of 150 euros per person.
The Rod Stewart, David Bisbal and Alejandro Sanz concerts each brought together some 9,000 people.
These concerts also had a positive impact on hotel occupancy in Murcia, most of which had to disply ‘no vacancy’ signs, with an average cost of 98 euros, an unprecedented peak in this summer season.
The promoter Juan Antonio Muñoz, promoter of Madness Live! and organiser of the Iron Maiden concert, said that he was proud to have held one of the most important concerts in the Region, despite the many challenges, such as logistics and high temperatures. “We have shown that Murcia is very able and willing to attract high-calibre artists,” said Muñoz, who said that he will continue to try to attract top-level groups. “It’s a privilege to have brough Iron Maiden to the city.”
US Obstetrician and Maternal Fetal Medicine expert with 44 years experience Dr.James Thorp and I have been raising alarms about the extreme dangers of COVID-19 mRNA vaccination in pregnancy.
COVID-19 vaccines ARE NOT SAFE IN PREGNANCY. They were never studied for safety in pregnancy.
COVID-19 vaccines significantly increase risks to the pregnant mother, especially during labor and shortly after giving birth. Some of the outcomes are catastrophic.
In many such cases, these risks are from blood clots – pulmonary embolism, but also cardiac arrests, strokes and infections since COVID-19 vaccines severely damage the immune system of the mother, increasing risks of various infections that could lead to sepsis and septic shock.
These sudden deaths of new mothers are being covered up right now as health authorities continue to lie to pregnant women about COVID-19 vaccines being “safe” at all stages of pregnancy.
July 22, 2023 – Perth, Australia – 24 year old Krystal Pitt collapsed while lining up at a local post office just 10 days after giving birth to her 2nd child, and died in hospital a few days later (click here).
Translation:
Krystal is presumed to have been COVID-19 vaccinated.
She went into premature labor and had a baby 4 weeks before due date (first red flag – vaccinated women have a higher risk of going into premature labor)
She then developed pulmonary embolism (blood clots in her lungs) which caused her cardiac arrest 10 days after delivery (second red flag – too many vaccinated women are developing blood clots after delivery)
In the hospital, she was put on blood thinners and placed into an induced coma (third red flag – the cardiac arrest appears to have been unusually severe)
During her hospital stay, “while her prognosis was initially positive, her health quickly deteriorated before she died in hospital…from blood clots that had formed in her lungs and triggered the cardiac arrest” (fourth red flag – the blood thinners doctors were treating her with didn’t work and she died from the blood clots in the lungs – vaccinated patients have treatment resistant blood clots).
Another news story confirms that doctors were trying to stabilize her and treat her blood clots but were unsuccessful (click here).
Other CasesJuly 14, 2023 – Lubbock, TX – 19 year old Ariana Nicole Sanchez gave birth to a baby girl who weighed 10 pounds 6 ounces and died suddenly during delivery. No explanation. (click here)
May 15, 2023 – Perth, Australia – 36 year old Monika Mann died 7 days after giving birth to twins. She arrived at ER “unresponsive” and was declared dead (click here).
May 2, 2023 – 32 yo Olympic sprinter Tori Bowie was found dead alone in bed after wellness check, was 8 months pregnant and was “undergoing labor” when she was found deceased. (click here)
March 25, 2023 – New York, 28 year old Samantha Dannecker died unexpectedly while giving birth to her first child, a baby girl (click here).
Jan. 10, 2023 – 31 year old April Valentine had an emergency c-section for her daughter on Jan. 9, complained of pain the following day and died suddenly, while her boyfriend performed CPR on her (click here)(click here).
Nov. 8, 2022 – Newtown, PA – 30 year old teacher Jennifer Krasna died suddenly only days after giving birth to her second son (click here).
Oct. 24, 2022 – Texas – 29 year old Krystina Pacheco suffered septic shock. Two days after giving birth to a girl, she developed shortness of breath, vomiting, stomach pains, was hospitalized with septic shock. Sedated for 2 weeks she nearly died and had to have her hands and feet amputated (click here).
Feb. 1, 2022 – UK – 41 year old Amber Pendlebury delivered a baby boy, then cried out “I can’t breathe”, had two cardiac arrests and died shortly after (click here).
“She was supposed to go in for a c-section in the morning, and when she got there, she decided she wanted to do a natural birth.
“So they induced her, but she’d been on the drip for the inducement for at least ten hours, and she was only 4cm dilated, which is not good. They later said they’d have to do a caesarian section, but said they’d have to put her to sleep while they did it.”
Doctors were bringing the mum round when she had a series of sudden heart attacks and never caught a glimpse of her baby before she collapsed.
Vida added: “Doctors delivered the little baby, who was 6 pounds, 2 ounces. But she never saw him, as when she woke up, she said, ‘I can’t breathe, I can’t breathe! My chest is on fire, my chest is on fire!”
“That’s all her partner heard her say, and then she was whisked away.”
On January 26, the family received the news that Amber was on a life support machine.
Aug. 6, 2021 – Florida – 30 year old Kristen McMullen had an emergency C-section on July 27 and was transferred to ICU. Because she had tested positive for COVID she was placed on ventilator on Aug. 6, 2021 and died the SAME DAY. Killed by hospital protocols? (click here)
I have written two substack articles already on COVID-19 vaccinated women dying shortly after delivery:
It’s good to be back. 158 songs waiting for me. Here are my best 6, including a trip to Oz and a new one by Nancy Sanchez
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158 songs submitted this week so far.
Hi, sorry I missed you last week. I had to go to California for a memorial service for a friend from my music community who died recently. But HHD is back now.
Yo Espararé, single/videos by Daniel, Me Estás Matando. A “boleroglam” – a love song with illusion and pathos and pain, and a bit nostalgia. Swoon and sway to this. From the forthcoming album Cómo Ruinarte La Vida. Stream on Spotify. Video on YouTube. Spanish
Dame una señal, single by Lika Nova. The second single from what will be their third studio album. Funk guitars, vintage synthesizer sounds and catchy riffs on top of a groovy base for happy dancing. Bouncy, fun, but with a bit of seriousness in the lyrics. On all major music platforms. Spanish.
Blue Collar Blues, single by 3LH. Plain old funky blues – but not quite. With a bit of echo, a lot of low-end surf guitar and even little “Ghost Riders in the Sky” sound this is so much fun. These SoCal Latino garage surf punks have a winner. Stream on major music platforms.
It’s easy, single by NinaSophia Pacheco. Pacheco blends her Dominican heritage and natural talent into a neo-soul ballad that showcases her honey smooth voice and feel for unique composition. Just pure pleasure to listen to. Nina currently serves in the Air National Guard Band of the South. Stream on Spotify. Catch her on the streaming video service Artisan Air. https://www.aflive.tv/series/artisan-air-207020
Tornado, single/video by Havana Winter. LA-based, Norwegian 17-year old singer, actress and TikTok influencer takes us to Oz with this happy, bouncy take off on Dorothy’s travel in a tornado Fun and a great way to forget her toxic boyfriend. Stream on all major platforms. Video on YouTube.
Alma Perdida, single by Nancy Sanchez. A powerful song that pushes Sanchez’s musical envelope while it makes us feel close and at home with her voice. Ama Perdido (Lost Soul) is urgent, filled with pathos, and yet is framed in music that is familiar – a simple Mexican guitar strum and piano is rich with feeling. Whether you understand Spanish or not, this song will go right to your heart and make you cry. Stream on Spotify.
BONUS. Evenings at the Village Gate: John Coltrane with Eric Dolphy. 1961 live recording of their residency at the Village Gate just released by Impulse! Amateur recording but if you are a Coltrane fan…