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#treatment center Santa Rosa
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At Pura Vida Recovery Services, we understand that embarking on the journey to recovery requires courage and support. Our outpatient rehab in Santa Rosa is designed to provide the essential tools and resources needed for those striving to overcome addiction while maintaining their daily commitments. We offer a flexible and supportive environment where clients can receive high-quality care without the need for residential treatment.
Pura Vida Recovery Services 130 Stony Point Rd. Suite J, Santa Rosa, CA 95401 (707) 879–8432
My Official Website: https://pvrecovery.com/ Google Plus Listing: https://www.google.com/maps?cid=9951017675001321166
Our Other Links:
Sober Living Santa Rosa: https://pvrecovery.com/sober-living/ Santa Rosa drug rehab center: https://pvrecovery.com/treatment/alcohol-drug-rehab-in-santa-rosa/ Alcohol detox Santa Rosa: https://pvrecovery.com/treatment/detox-rehab-santa-rosa/
Service We Offer:
Addiction Treatment Drug Treatment Alcohol Treatment Outpatient Treatment Inpatient Treatment Sober Living
Follow Us On:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/puravida_sle/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/puravidasle Twitter: https://twitter.com/VidaRecovery Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/PuraVidaRecoveryServices/
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channelislandsrehab · 12 days
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At Channel Islands Rehab, we provide comprehensive detox programs in Oxnard designed to help individuals overcome substance abuse and start their journey to recovery. Our detox Oxnard program includes medical supervision, therapeutic support, and holistic treatments to ensure a safe and comfortable detoxification process. We understand the challenges of addiction and are committed to helping our clients achieve lasting sobriety.
Channel Islands Rehab 145 Santa Rosa Ave, Oxnard, CA 93035 (800) 675–7963
My Official Website : https://channelislandsrehab.com/ Google Plus Listing: https://www.google.com/maps?cid=5442303054992537158
Our Other Links:
alcohol rehab Oxnard: https://channelislandsrehab.com/alcohol-rehab/ drug rehab Oxnard: https://channelislandsrehab.com/drug-rehab/ drug detox Oxnard: https://channelislandsrehab.com/drug-detox-oxnard/ alcohol detox Oxnard: https://channelislandsrehab.com/alcohol-detox-oxnard/ addiction treatment Oxnard: https://channelislandsrehab.com/addiction-treatment-oxnard/ recovery center Oxnard: https://channelislandsrehab.com/recovery-center-oxnard/ Alcohol Detox in Ventura: https://channelislandsrehab.com/alcohol-detox-ventura/ alcohol rehab Ventura: https://channelislandsrehab.com/alcohol-rehab-ventura/ detox treatment Ventura: https://channelislandsrehab.com/detox-treatment-ventura/ detox Ventura: https://channelislandsrehab.com/detox-ventura/ drug detox Ventura: https://channelislandsrehab.com/drug-detox-ventura/ rehab Ventura: https://channelislandsrehab.com/rehab-ventura-county/
Service We Offer:
Addiction Treatment Drug Treatment Alcohol Treatment Detox Treatment Residential Treatment
Follow Us On:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/channelislandsrehab/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChannelRehab Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/channel-islands-rehab/ Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/ChannelIslandsRehabOxnard/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/channelislandsrehabca/
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taalvistahotel · 3 years
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photo from google
ABOUT TAAL VISTA HOTEL
Taal Vista Hotel is a place that will leave you floating in nostalgia with treasured past times and countless generations. Away from the ordinary city life, our cozy rooms and excellent service will bring people closer together.
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photo from google
HOW TO GET THERE?
From the South Luzon Expressway (SLEX), take either the Santa Rosa Exit, or exit to Eton Greenfield. Drive straight to Tagaytay via the Aguinaldo Highway. Travel time is approximately 1.5 hours from Manila
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photos from google
SERVICES THEY OFFERED
Taal Vista Hotel stands out above the rest among other properties in Tagaytay. Hotel facilities include a large outdoor swimming pool hidden from view to provide privacy. To help you give an energy boost or complete your fitness regimen, there’s an onsite gym. Looking for some entertainment? Tagaytay Hotel Vista has its own kid’s corner and games room. For complete relaxation, Asmara spa offers rejuvenating body treatments. Before leaving Tagaytay, check the hotel Cake Shop or Kultura Butik for some souvenirs. Taal Vista Hotel has hotel facilities other Tagaytay properties don’t have.
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photos from google
THE CAKE SHOP
For a taste of sweetness and delightful snacks, stop by the hotel’s pastry shop. From Pan de Coco to Ensaymadas and other tasteful desserts, you can also try our famous Mallari Lambanog coffee as one of our specialty drinks.
Operating hours:
Daily (10:00 AM to 8:00 PM)
KIDS’ CORNER AND GAME ROOM
Happy place your kids will love - with colorful toys, mini ball pit and slide plus kiddie art activities.
Operating hours:
Temporarily Closed
ASMARA SPA
Relieve tension and stress with our rejuvenating spa packages that will leave you fresh and revitalized. Receive a complimentary tea when you avail one of our spa treatments.
Operating hours:
Friday-Sunday 2:00PM - 11PM
SPA MENU
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FITNESS CENTER
A variety of exercise equipment is available for complimentary use.
Operating hours:
Daily (6:00 AM to 10:00 PM)
SWIMMING POOL
Take a dip or swim some laps in our pool located in the Mountain Wings of Taal Vista Hotel in Tagaytay City. Nothing feels better than a cool morning or afternoon swim.
Operating hours:
Daily (7:00 AM to 6:00 PM)
KULTURA BUTIK
Bring a bit of Tagaytay to your loved ones back home by stopping by the Kultura Butik shop for some unique Filipino souvenirs that represent your travels and your stay in Taal Vista Hotel.
Operating hours:
Daily (8:00 AM to 6:00 PM)
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photo from pinterest
Reasons Why This Iconic Tagaytay Landmark Hotel is Worth Visiting
1. It’s ideal for a romantic getaway.
You can never go wrong with spending the night at one of the Windy Ridge’s best hotels. The Superior Mountain Wing Room’s classy and elegant interiors will instantly welcome you. A comfy king-sized bed, a daybed to lounge around in, cable TV and Wi-Fi access to keep you connected, and all other premium necessities are there for an ultra-comfortable stay.
2. There’s room for the whole family.
On the other hand, the 2-BR Taal Suite promises a homey sanctuary perfect for the entire family. Your spacious home for the night is well-equipped with modern comforts like 2 king beds fitted with plush sheets, cable TV, Wi-Fi, and other amenities you need for a restful slumber.
3. A feast here is one for all the senses.
A buffet at Taal Vist Hotel's Veranda is the culinary experience you wouldn’t want to miss out on! Truly a feast for the senses, it serves you with unlimited eats to sate cravings you didn’t even know you had, while letting you take advantage of the beauty of a panoramic Taal Lake and Volcano view.
4. Catch-ups are made a little more special.
Great conversations are made better with great drinks and delicious meals. It's even more special when you have a gorgeous view of Taal as your backdrop. Whether you’re sipping on an expertly mixed cocktail at the Tudor-style Lobby Lounge or snacking on freshly baked treats from The Cakeshop, Taal Vista Hotel is a fine place to unwind with good company.
5. The food is local and fresh.
Breathtaking views of landscaped gardens coupled with delicious farm-to-table food make for a refreshingly delicious meal. Located on a quiet side of Taal Vista Hotel, this charming garden-inspired restaurant with floor-to-ceiling glass windows boasts a magnificent 180-degree view.
6. Great memories are made here.
Savor a special moment with family and friends amidst Tagaytay's cool and crisp breeze. Situated on the Windy Ridge, this Tudor Mansion-style hotel is the right balance of elegance and warmth—an ideal and timeless choice whatever the occasion.
You can visit this link to check their room rates:
https://taalvistahotel.com/accommodations
FOR MORE INQUIRIES AND RESERVATION PLEASE CALL TAAL VISTA HOTEL
☎️Telephone No.:
+63 (2) 7917 8225
+63 (46) 413 1000
📱Mobile No.:
+63 (917) 809 1254
(For Room Reservations)
📠Fax No.:
+63 (46) 413 1225
LORENZO, NICOLE R.
3BSTM6B
DISCLAIMER:
Everything that is written here is for educational purposes only.
REFERENCES:
https://taalvistahotel.com/
https://dealgrocer.com/dgtraveler/articles/6-reasons-why-this-iconic-tagaytay-landmark-hotel-is-worth-visiting-5ab19cc52a48186e7d00014f#:~:text=Its%20timeless%20charm%2C%20excellent%20location,is%20always%20a%20top%20choice.
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elderperfect · 4 years
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2020 Best Nursing Homes - California
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ElderPerfect a leading publisher on senior healthcare across the United States, today announced the recipients of the Best Nursing Homes in California for 2020. These awards are designed to recognize providers based on their ability to consistently deliver excellence in the areas of Health Inspections, Quality of Residence Care, Penalties and Staffing. We’ve evaluated over 1,194 facilities, of which 324 (29%) met our top rating. This report marks the Gold Standard in terms of care for seniors. 0 Ranked Best Facilities  5/5
US Standard vs. Best Facilities
Average Number of Beds: 106 vs 95 Average Occupancy: 81% vs 83% Average Health Inspection Rating: 2.82 / 5.00 vs. 3.90 / 5.00 Average Government Rating: 3.01 / 5.00 vs. 4.49 / 5.00
Rating Methodology
Health Inspections Every year, the government assigns inspectors to conduct a formal review of nursing homes for regulatory purposes to meet the mandates outlined for Medicare and Medicaid, this aims to measure and improve the safety of residents across providers. Facilities may also be inspected when complaints are submitted or based on a reported incident. When noncompliance is identified, the facility is served a citation that indicates which regulation that was identified, along with the severity of the incident. Nursing homes are subsequently required to execute a program of resolution in order to meet compliance. Some scenarios require enforcement actions to be applied, such as a civil monetary penalty or withholding of payment(s), to incentivize resolution in a timely manner. Penalties Facilities are applied 2 types of penalties due to non-compliance / accumulation of incidents. Civil penalties are monetary fines that may be applied to a facility based on citations / infractions identified during a review. The severity of a penalty is defined primarily by the size and frequency of the infraction. Quality of Residence Care There are 3 types of resident care ratings, but for this exercise, we primarily focused on the overall quality measure rating. The quality measures (QMs) include 17 data points that are derived from clinical information reported by the respective nursing home and also from Medicare claims data submitted for payment. Ratings are calculated for the QM domain using the 4 most recent quarters for which data are available. A nursing home receives points contingent on performance on each measure (weighting distribution is not equal). Staffing Staffing research is submitted regularly by the facility and is adjusted for the requirement of the facilities residents. For each of registered nurse staff and total staffing, a 1 - 5 rating is applied according to definitions established for each category. These ratings are subsequently combined to assign an overall staffing rating. As an example, to get an overall staffing rating of 5 stars, nursing homes must earn a rating of 5 stars for both registered nurses and total staffing. Nursing homes could also be assigned a 1 star rating should they not have a registered nurse on-site daily, and do not submit staffing data, or which the data cannot be verified.
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Best Nursing Homes in California
REDLANDS HEALTHCARE CENTER COUNTRY MANOR HEALTHCARE EDGEMOOR HOSPITAL FAIRFIELD POST-ACUTE REHAB MOUNT SAN ANTONIO GARDENS MARY HEALTH OF THE SICK CONVALESCENT & NURSING HOS MOTION PICTURE AND T.V. HOSP D/P SNF GOOD SAMARITAN REHAB AND CARE CENTER PLEASANT HILL POST ACUTE PALOMAR VISTA HEALTHCARE CENTER VILLA CORONADO D/P SNF MISSION VIEW HEALTH CENTER ARBOR HILLS NURSING CENTER LINDA MAR CARE CENTER BERKLEY WEST CONV HOSP COUNTRY VILLA PAVILION NURSING CENTER MONTEREY PARK CONV HOSP FOLSOM CARE CENTER HERITAGE GARDENS HEALTH CARE CENTER GREENFIELD CARE CENTER OF FAIRFIELD PROVIDENCE ST ELIZABETH CARE CENTER MARYCREST MANOR OAKLAND HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTER VICTORIA HEALTHCARE AND REHABILITATION CENTER EAST BAY POST-ACUTE WILLOW PASS HEALTHCARE CENTER FAIRMONT REHABILITATION HOSPITAL MERCED NURSING & REHABILITATION CTR LOMPOC VALLEY MEDICAL CTR COMP CARE CTR D/P SNF LOMITA POST-ACUTE CARE CENTER LA SIERRA CARE CENTER WINDSOR PARK CARE CENTER OF FREMONT KEARNY MESA CONVALESCENT AND NURSING HOME FALLBROOK SKILLED NURSING CANTERBURY WOODS GRANT CUESTA SUB-ACUTE AND REHABILITATION CENTER MOUNTAIN VIEW HEALTHCARE CENTER UNIVERSITY CARE CENTER LA PALOMA HEALTHCARE CENTER CULVER WEST HEALTH CENTER VISTA PACIFICA CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL SAN JOSE HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTER SAYLOR LANE HEALTHCARE CENTER WINDSOR GARDENS CARE CENTER OF HAYWARD ROCK CREEK CARE CENTER SEQUOIAS, THE THE CALIFORNIAN-PASADENA VIENNA NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER LA MESA HEALTHCARE CENTER ROCKY POINT CARE CENTER ARROYO VISTA NURSING CENTER REDDING POST ACUTE WOODLANDS HEALTHCARE CENTER NEWPORT NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER CRENSHAW NURSING HOME THE REUTLINGER COMMUNITY ARTESIA CHRISTIAN HOME INC. SANTA MONICA HEALTH CARE CENTER MISSION CARE CENTER HILLSIDE SENIOR CARE COASTAL VIEW HEALTHCARE CENTER GROSSMONT POST ACUTE CARE MISSION SKILLED NURSING & SUBACUTE CENTER PALO ALTO SUB-ACUTE AND REHABILITATION CENTER HIGHLAND CARE CENTER OF REDLANDS SOUTH COAST POST ACUTE BETHANY HOME SOCIETY SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY THE CALIFORNIAN MONTCLAIR MANOR CARE CENTER VENTURA POST ACUTE VALLE VERDE HEALTH FACILITY HARBOR VILLA CARE CENTER CLOVERDALE HEALTHCARE CENTER ENCINITAS NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER CHAPMAN CARE CENTER SAN LUIS CARE CENTER THE TERRACES AT SAN JOAQUIN GARDENS VILLAGE VICTORIAN POST ACUTE REDWOOD COVE HEALTHCARE CENTER HAYWARD HEALTHCARE & WELLNESS CENTER SAN TOMAS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL RIVER BEND NURSING CENTER BERKELEY PINES SKILLED NURSING CENTER ST JUDE CARE CENTER APPLE VALLEY POST-ACUTE REHAB COURTYARD HEALTH CARE CENTER FRIENDSHIP MANOR NURSING & REHAB CENTER ST. FRANCIS HEIGHTS CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL FRANCISCAN CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL COVENTRY COURT HEALTH CENTER HY-LOND HEALTH CARE CENTER-MERCED MISSION TERRACE CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL LA JOLLA NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER EMPRESS CARE CENTER, LLC COUNTRY VILLA BAY VISTA HCC PACIFIC COAST MANOR PETALUMA POST-ACUTE REHABILITATION SACRAMENTO POST-ACUTE TOPANGA TERRACE DEVONSHIRE CARE CENTER PIEDMONT GARDENS HEALTH FACILITY DYCORA TRANSITIONAL HEALTH - SANGER ROSEWOOD POST ACUTE REHABILITATION COMMUNITY CONVALESCENT CENTER OF SAN BERNARDINO WOODLAND SKILLED NURSING FACILITY AVALON HEALTH CARE - SAN ANDREAS STOLLWOOD CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL GREENFIELD CARE CENTER OF FULLERTON, LLC COLLEGE OAK NURSING & REHABILITATION CENTER EXTENDED CARE HOSPITAL OF RIVERSIDE GRANADA HILLS CONVALESCENT EXCELL HEALTH CARE CENTER MID-WILSHIRE HEALTH CARE CNTR LAKE BALBOA CARE CENTER TUNNELL SKILLED NURSING & REHABILITATION CENTER PACIFICA NURSING AND REHAB CENTER PACIFIC GARDENS NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER TAMPICO TERRACE CARE CENTER RAMONA REHABILITATION AND POST ACUTE CARE CENTER NORTHBROOK HEALTHCARE CENTER CALIFORNIA PACIFIC MEDICAL CTR- DAVIES CAMPUS HOSP RED BLUFF HEALTH CARE CENTER SIERRA VIEW HOMES DYCORA TRANSITIONAL HEALTH MEMORY CARE OF FRESNO BIXBY KNOLLS TOWERS HEALTH CARE & REHAB CENTER LOS GATOS MEADOWS GERIATRIC HOSPITAL ALCOTT REHABILITATION HOSPITAL REO VISTA HEALTHCARE CENTER SAN LEANDRO HEALTHCARE CENTER SUMMERFIELD HEALTH CARE CENTER BETHESDA HOME REGENCY OAKS POST ACUTE CARE CENTER PARADISE VALLEY HEALTH CARE VALE HEALTHCARE CENTER PLEASANTON NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER WHITNEY OAKS CARE CENTER DELANO REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER GEORGE L MEE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL D/P SNF COMMUNITY EXTENDED CARE HOSPITAL OF MONTCLAIR HILLTOP CARE CENTER CASA COLOMA HEALTH CARE CENTER CARLSBAD BY THE SEA PROVIDENCE LITTLE CO OF MARY TRANSITIONAL CARE CTR THE ROYAL HOME PORTERVILLE DEVELOPMENTAL CENTER SHANDIN HILLS BEHAVIOR THERAPY CENTER SONOMA DEVELOPMENTAL CENTER D/P SNF RIVERSIDE BEHAVIORAL HEALTHCARE CENTER VISTA PACIFICA CENTER DYCORA TRANSITIONAL HEALTH-SAN JOSE RADY CHILDREN'S CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL D/P SNF LITTLE SISTERS OF THE POOR CRESTWOOD MANOR - 104 DEPT OF STATE HOSPITALS - NAPA D/P SNF VILLA SIENA CRESTWOOD WELLNESS AND RECOVERY CENTER CRESTWOOD TREATMENT CENTER SAKURA INTERMEDIATE CARE FACILITY CRESTWOOD MANOR - FREMONT PARK MERRITT CARE CENTER TUSTIN CARE CENTER LONG BEACH POST ACUTE
  GOLDEN STATE COLONIAL HEALTHCARE CENTER ST JOHN KRONSTADT CONVALESCENT CENTER ORANGEGROVE REHABILITATION HOSPITAL BEACHSIDE NURSING CENTER LODI NURSING & REHABILITATION MCCLURE POST ACUTE PROVIDENCE HOLY CROSS MED CTR D/P SNF TRACY NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER DEL MAR CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL VALLEY POINTE NURSING & REHABILITATION CENTER KINGSLEY MANOR CARE CENTER PACIFIC COAST POST ACUTE VETERANS HOME OF CALIFORNIA - YOUNTVILLE - SNF ESKATON CARE CENTER GREENHAVEN SAN MIGUEL VILLA INLAND CHRISTIAN HOME MCKINLEY PARK CARE CENTER ARARAT CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL MOUNT MIGUEL COVENANT VILLAGE POWAY HEALTHCARE CENTER GRANCELL VILLAGE OF THE JEWISH HOMES FOR THE AGING THE BRADLEY COURT TOWN AND COUNTRY MANOR WESTLAND HOUSE REDWOOD TERRACE HEALTH CENTER SHORELINE CARE CENTER FRIENDS HOUSE NORTHPOINTE HEALTHCARE CENTRE LINCOLN SQUARE POST ACUTE CARE ENGLISH OAKS CONVALESCENT & REHABILITATION HOSPITA DEL ROSA VILLA SARATOGA PEDIATRIC SUBACUTE ADVENTIST HEALTH SONORA - D/P SNF EXTENDED CARE HOSP WESTMINSTER SHARP CHULA VISTA MED CTR SNF VINEYARD HILLS HEALTH CENTER TAHOE FOREST HOSPITAL D/P SNF SAINT FRANCIS MED CTR DP ACC CARE CENTER CASTLE MANOR CONVALESCENT CENTER UNIVERSITY POST-ACUTE REHAB SUN MAR NURSING CENTER SPRING LAKE VILLAGE DIAMOND RIDGE HEALTHCARE CENTER STANFORD COURT SKILLED NURSING & REHAB CENTER REGENTS POINT - WINDCREST REMINGTON CLUB HEALTH CENTER VILLA POMERADO D/P SNF VILLA RANCHO BERNARDO CARE CENTER AVIARA HEALTHCARE CENTER CARMEL MOUNTAIN REHABILITATION & HEALTHCARE CENTER LA PALMA NURSING CENTER VALENCIA GARDENS HEALTH CARE CENTER LINCOLN MEADOWS CARE CENTER VALLEY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL SNF MANORCARE HEALTH SERVICES (CITRUS HEIGHTS) REDWOOD CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL, INC SUNNY VIEW MANOR CASA DE LAS CAMPANAS SHIELDS NURSING CENTER BAYSIDE CARE CENTER DANVILLE POST-ACUTE REHAB ASISTENCIA VILLA REHABILITATION AND CARE CENTER ALAMEDA HOSPITAL D/P SNF CREEKSIDE CENTER CORONA REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER D/P SNF FREEDOM VILLAGE HEALTHCARE CENTER DESERT REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER D/P SNF ST FRANCIS EXTENDED CARE STONEBROOK HEALTHCARE CENTER THE DOROTHY & JOSEPH GOLDBERG HEALTHCARE CENTER LIFE CARE CENTER OF ESCONDIDO VILLA GARDENS HEALTH CARE UNIT EASTERN PLUMAS HOSPITAL- PORTOLA CAMPUS DP/SNF CAPITAL TRANSITIONAL CARE MANORCARE HEALTH SERVICES (SUNNYVALE) MANORCARE HEALTH SERVICES - ROSSMOOR GLENWOOD CARE CENTER MARINA GARDEN NURSING CENTER MOUNTAINS COMMUNITY HOSP DPSNF ALTA GARDENS CARE CENTER MARSHALL MEDICAL CENTER D/P SNF USC VERDUGO HILLS HOSPITAL DP/SNF MIRAVILLA CARE CENTER RIVERWOOD HEALTHCARE CENTER PALM VILLAGE RETIREMENT COMM. HERITAGE PARK NURSING CENTER COMM. HOSP. OF SAN BERNARDINO DP SNF HEALTH CARE CTR AT THE FORUM AT RANCHO SAN ANTONIO EDEN VALLEY CARE CENTER PIONEER HOUSE THE COVE AT LA JOLLA THE TERRACES OF LOS GATOS DANISH CARE CENTER ESKATON VILLAGE CARE CENTER OAKLAND HEIGHTS NURSING AND REHABILITATION GROSSMONT HOSPITAL D/P SNF ARARAT NURSING FACILITY TOTALLY KIDS REHABILITATION HOSPITAL - D/P SNF HEALDSBURG DISTRICT HOSPITAL DP/SNF SAN LUIS TRANSITIONAL CARE O'CONNOR HOSPITAL D/P SNF EMANATE HEALTH INTER-COMMUNITY HOSPITAL- D/P SNF WINDSOR MANOR ARROYO GRANDE CARE CENTER REDLANDS COMM HOSP D/P SNF ZUCKERBERG SAN FRANCISCO GENERAL HOSP & TRAUMA SNF GARDEN PARK CARE CENTER NORWALK SKILLED NURSING & WELLNESS CENTRE, LLC TERRACE VIEW CARE CENTER LEGACY NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER BARTON HOSPITAL D/P SNF SIMI VALLEY CARE CENTER CHAPMAN GLOBAL MEDICAL CENTER D/P SNF HILLVIEW CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL ROWNTREE GARDENS LAUREL CREEK HEALTH CENTER SAN FRANCISCO TOWERS CHILDREN'S RECOVERY CENTER OF NO CA D/P SNF SIENA SKILLED NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER BROOKDALE CARLSBAD COVENANT VILLAGE CARE CENTER SAMARKAND SKILLED NURSING FACILITY PALOMAR HEIGHTS POST ACUTE REHAB BELLAKEN SKILLED NURSING CENTER UNIVERSITY RETIREMENT COMMUNITY AT DAVIS CAMARILLO HEALTHCARE CENTER KAISER PERMANENTE POST-ACUTE CARE CENTER CEDAR CREST NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER VI AT LA JOLLA VILLAGE MISSION CARE CENTER BEL VISTA HEALTHCARE CENTER GLENBROOK PROVIDENCE ALL SAINT'S SUBACUTE LOMPOC SKILLED NURSING & REHABILITATION CENTER VI AT PALO ALTO JONES CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL ALHAMBRA HOSPITAL MED CTR DP/SNF BAY AREA HEALTHCARE CENTER VETERANS HOME OF CALIFORNIA - BARSTOW BAYWOOD COURT HEALTH CENTER OAKVIEW SKILLED NURSING KINDRED HOSPITAL BREA D/P SNF VILLA SCALABRINI SPECIAL CARE SIERRA VISTA HEALTHCARE FOREST HILL MANOR HEALTH CENTER LAUREL HEIGHTS COMMUNITY CARE BELLA VISTA HEALTH CENTER SOMERSET SUBACUTE AND CARE CHAPARRAL HOUSE BROOKDALE CAMARILLO ALL SAINT'S MAUBERT CLEAR VIEW CONVALESCENT CENTER CLEAR VIEW SANITARIUM LAKESIDE SPECIAL CARE CENTER MOUNTAIN MANOR SENIOR RESIDENCE VETERANS HOME OF CALIFORNIA - REDDING FOOTHILL HEIGHTS CARE CENTER CREEKVIEW SKILLED NURSING MOCHO PARK CARE CENTER VETERANS HOME OF CALIFORNIA - FRESNO ANBERRY TRANSITIONAL CARE
  Read the full article
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Heart to Heart Medical Center
Whether you’ve suffered an injury, are coping with a chronic or potentially life-threatening illness, or are struggling to understand your symptoms and find a diagnosis and cure – Dr. Shiroko Sokitch MD, Board Certified Medical Acupuncturist, and Certified Functional Medicine Doctor can help! At Heart to Heart Medical Center, in Santa Rosa, CA, her unique blend of Western and Chinese medicine accelerates healing and provides solutions for difficult or mysterious conditions. Areas of speciality: auto-immune disease, digestive disturbances, hormonal imbalances, headaches and migraines, depression, fatigue, stress, pain, and hypertension. Treatments include acupuncture, Chinese herbs and supplements, bio-identical hormones, Osteopathic and cranial manipulation, and lifestyle and diet recommendations. Call 707-524-9640 today to schedule a free 15 minute consultation with Dr. Shiroko! hearttoheartmedicalcenter.com bioidentical hormones santa rosa ca Our Social Pages: facebook twitter linkedin pinterest instagram
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stephenmccull · 3 years
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No Papers, No Care: Disabled Migrants Seek Help Through Lawsuit, Activism
Desperation led José Luis Hernández to ride atop a speeding train through northern Mexico with hopes of reaching the United States 13 years ago. But he didn’t make it. Slipping off a step above a train coupling, he slid under the steel wheels. In the aftermath, he lost his right arm and leg, and all but one finger on his left hand.
He had left his home village in Honduras for the U.S. “to help my family, because there were no jobs, no opportunities,” he said. Instead, he ended up undergoing a series of surgeries in Mexico before heading home “to the same miserable conditions in my country, but worse off.”
It would be years before he finally made it to the United States. Now, as a 35-year-old living in Los Angeles, Hernández has begun organizing fellow disabled immigrants to fight for the right to health care and other services.
No statistics are available on the number of undocumented disabled immigrants in the United States. But whether in detention, working without papers in the U.S. or awaiting asylum hearings on the Mexican side of the border, undocumented immigrants with disabling conditions are “left without any right to services,” said Monica Espinoza, the coordinator of Hernández’s group, Immigrants With Disabilities.
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People granted political or other types of asylum can buy private health insurance through the Affordable Care Act or get public assistance if they qualify. In addition, Medi-Cal, California’s Medicaid program, provides services to people under 26, regardless of immigration status. Those benefits will expand next spring to include income-eligible undocumented people age 50 and up.
“That’s a small victory for us,” said Blanca Angulo, a 60-year-old undocumented immigrant from Mexico now living in Riverside, California. She was a professional dancer and sketch comedian in Mexico City before emigrating to the United States in 1993. At age 46, Angulo was diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa, a rare genetic disorder that gradually left her blind.
“I was depressed for two years after my diagnosis,” she said — nearly sightless and unemployed, without documents, and struggling to pay for medical visits and expensive eye medication.
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The situation is particularly grim for undocumented immigrants with disabilities held in detention centers, said Pilar Gonzalez Morales, a lawyer for the Civil Rights Education and Enforcement Center in Los Angeles.
“They always suffer more because of the lack of care and the lack of accommodations,” she said. Furthermore, “covid has made it harder to get the medical attention that they need.”
Gonzalez Morales is one of the attorneys working on a nationwide class action lawsuit filed by people with disabilities who have been held in U.S. immigration detention facilities. The complaint accuses U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Department of Homeland Security of discriminating against the detainees by failing to provide them with adequate mental and physical health care. The 15 plaintiffs named in the lawsuit, which is set for trial in April, have conditions ranging from bipolar disorder to paralysis, as well as deafness or blindness. They are not seeking monetary damages but demand the U.S. government improve care for those in its custody, such as by providing wheelchairs or American Sign Language interpreters, and refraining from prolonged segregation of people with disabilities.
Most of the plaintiffs have been released or deported. José Baca Hernández, now living in Santa Ana, California, is one of them.
Brought to Orange County as a toddler, Baca has no memory of Cuernavaca, the Mexican city where he was born. But his lack of legal status in the U.S. has overshadowed his efforts to get the care he needs since being blinded by a gunshot six years ago. Baca declined to describe the circumstances of his injury but has filed for a special visa provided to crime victims.
ICE detained Baca shortly after his injury, and he spent five years in detention. An eye doctor saw Baca once during that time, he says; he relied on other detainees to read him information on his medical care and immigration case. Mostly, he was alone in a cell with little to do.
“I had a book on tape,” said Baca. “That was pretty much it.”
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According to the lawsuit, treatment and care for disabilities are practically nil in government detention centers, said Rosa Lee Bichell, a fellow with Disability Rights Advocates, one of the groups that filed the case.
Her clients say that “unless you are writhing or fainted on the floor, it’s nearly impossible to get any kind of medical care related to disabilities,” she said.
“There is kind of a void in the immigration advocacy landscape that doesn’t directly focus on addressing the needs of people with disabilities,” said Munmeeth Soni, litigation and advocacy director at the Immigrant Defenders Law Center in Los Angeles. “It’s a population that I think has really gone overlooked.”
ICE and Homeland Security did not respond to requests for comment on the lawsuit.
Covid-19 poses a particular threat to people with disabilities who are detained by ICE. On Aug. 25, for example, 1,089 of the 25,000-plus people in ICE facilities were under isolation or observation for the virus.
In an interim ruling, the federal judge hearing Baca’s class action lawsuit this summer ordered ICE to offer vaccination to all detained immigrants who have chronic medical conditions or disabilities or are 55 or older. The Biden administration appealed the order on Aug. 23.
Hernández, who lost his limbs in the train accident, was among the hundreds of thousands of Central American immigrants who annually ride north through Mexico atop the trains, known collectively as “La Bestia,” or “the Beast,” according to the Migration Policy Institute. Injuries are common on La Bestia. And more than 500 deaths have been reported in Mexico since 2014 among people seeking to enter the U.S.
Hernández, who finally made it to the U.S. in 2015, was granted humanitarian asylum after spending two months in a detention center in Texas but quickly realized there was little support for people with his disadvantages.
In 2019, with the help of a local church, he formed the Immigrants With Disabilities group, which tries to hold regular gatherings for its 40-plus members, though the pandemic has made meetups difficult. Hernández is the only person in the group with legal papers and health benefits, he said.
Angulo has found solace in connecting with others in the group. “We encourage each other,” she said. “We feel less alone.”
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She volunteers as a guide for people recently diagnosed with blindness at the Braille Institute, teaching them how to cook, shower and groom themselves in pursuit of self-sufficiency. Angulo would like to have a job but said she lacks opportunities.
“I want to work. I’m capable,” she said. “But people don’t want to take a chance on me. They see me as a risk.”
She’s also wary of any organization that offers medical or financial assistance to undocumented immigrants. “They ask for all my information and, in the end, they say I don’t qualify,” she said. “Being blind and without papers makes me feel especially vulnerable.”
This story was produced by KHN, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care Foundation.
KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.
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This story can be republished for free (details).
No Papers, No Care: Disabled Migrants Seek Help Through Lawsuit, Activism published first on https://smartdrinkingweb.weebly.com/
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channelislandsrehab · 27 days
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livingcorner · 3 years
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Mulch–a Gardener’s Best Friend
by Lyn Gannon, Master Gardener
Tired of pulling weeds? Wincing about rising water costs? Want to enrich the fertility of your soil? Then consider using mulch in your garden! Mulch, especially when plant-based, offers innumerable advantages to home gardeners including:
You're reading: Mulch–a Gardener’s Best Friend
Reducing maintenance
Minimizing water usage
Equalizing temperature
Improving soil quality and fertility
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What is mulch? It’s any material placed on the soil to cover and protect it. Many different materials can be used, ranging from straw to decorative gravel. But the hallmark of all effective mulches is 1) they allow air and water to penetrate the soil, and 2) they are long lasting and attractive. This article will focus on plant-based mulches, as they offer the most benefits to your garden.
Maybe you’re thinking: Hauling all that stuff is so much work! Is it really worth it? Yes! Mulch is one of most versatile tools available to gardeners. Specifically, mulch:
Controls Weeds
Mulch can reduce the many hours spent weeding your garden. Weeds rule the plant kingdom for 3 reasons: 1) Weed seeds germinate easily when exposed to light. 2) Garden soil is teeming with weed seeds; and 3) Weeds have adapted to survive under difficult conditions.
As a result, every time the soil is disturbed – even with the best intent – the germinating cycle begins again. Before long, your plants will be competing with weeds for water, sunlight and nutrients. And weeds are going to be the likely winners.
How to deal with those nasty weeds? Stop them from germinating in the first place! By blocking sunlight, you can stop them in their tracks, and give your plants a head start. Without a doubt, mulch is the most effective way to do this.
Later, once your bed is mulched, you’ll still have occasional weeds from airborne seeds. But the weeds will easily be removed, because their roots are less entrenched. If the mulch is damp, weeds will come out easily with the twist of a trowel or when pulled by hand.
Conserves moisture
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Mulch acts as a porous membrane which easily absorbs water, while simultaneously reducing evaporation from the soil. During daylight hours, plants are constantly using water. Absorbing it through their roots, they use it to process nutrients, and eventually evaporate it through their leaves.
Want to enjoy your garden while still practicing water conservation? Mulch it! Both your plants and environment will benefit. Most plants can survive when moisture levels in the ground fluctuate, but they thrive when water levels are more even. Unfortunately, weather conditions vary. Hot and windy conditions are particularly challenging because they increase plant evaporation.
Read more: How to Create a Gravel Garden – FineGardening
Bare soil loses moisture quickly. By adding mulch, you’ll have a buffer which keeps the water where you want it – in the soil. In the process, you’ll have healthy plants and minimize your water usage.
Moderates soil temperature
Like people, plants become stressed during extreme temperatures. Delicate plant tissue is easily damaged when exposed to intense heat and cold. During the summer, the sun can burn delicate roots hairs which lie close to the ground’s surface. Even trees are not immune – 90% of their roots lie in the top 3′ feet of soil. In the winter, the crown (base) of a plant can be easily damaged by frost. And, the longer temperatures are extreme, the more damage they cause.
Even during ordinary weather conditions, mulch can be a boon to your garden. The wear and tear of ordinary seasonal temperatures still affects the health of your plants. The key is to protect the crown and root, which form the core of most plants; the less they are stressed, the healthier your plants will be.
By acting as an insulating layer, mulch will minimize temperature fluctuations in the soil temperatures. Maintaining moderate soil temperatures, allows your plants to use their resources for growth rather than repair.
Enhances water absorption/prevents erosion
Bare ground is particularly vulnerable to the whims of nature. Wind can cause loss of valuable topsoil. Rain can cause erosion and add silt to waterways downstream. Heat and drought can kill valuable soil microbes. Severe frosts can kill plant tissue. A layer of mulch can’t solve all the world’s problems, but it can lessen the damage caused by all the above.
Unprotected soil sheds water easily. A thin layer of garden clippings on the same piece of ground will soften rainfall and help the ground absorb water. Branches stuffed into cracked earth can lessen erosion. Think twice about tossing ordinary garden cuttings and twigs in the re-cycle bin. They can contribute to the overall health of your garden soil by protecting it from the elements.
Enriches soil
Plant-based mulches have an added advantage over rock based mixes, because plant-based mulches can improve the fertility of your soil, which is the key to healthy plants.
Soil is made up of soil particles, air and water. Half the volume of ideal soil is pore space – the area between the particles, where air and water can penetrate. Because roots need air and water, pore space is essential to healthy soil. No amount of fertilizer will solve the problems created by dense, compacted soil. Organic matter promotes a crumb-like granular soil with better pore structure, improving your soil’s water holding capacity, water infiltration, and aeration. Plant-based mulch will decompose and add organic matter to your soil, while feeding both the visible and invisible organisms that keep your garden healthy: earthworms and microorganisms.
Earthworms enhance your garden’s aeration, drainage and nutrition by ingesting, grinding, and digesting large quantities of soil. Their castings (excretions) are richer in nutrients than the surrounding soil. By adding mulch to your garden, you’ll develop a healthy workforce. Provide worms with what they need, and let them do the work!
Microorganisms are an essential link between the nutrients in your soil and plant growth. They insure your plant’s health and development through sophisticated and symbiotic relationships with plants roots. And, like earthworms, they thrive in organic matter. They perform crucial tasks such as decomposing plant residues into the simpler forms needed by your plants. They also synthesize plant hormones, add nitrogen to the soil, and make soil minerals accessible to your plants. Your plants need these critters! By placing organic matter (mulch) on your soil, you create a virtual feast for microorganisms, which will increase the fertility of your soil.
Overall, using mulch will begin an increasing cycle of growth and productivity in your garden. It will foster a vast number of plant partnerships, encouraging diversity in the soil and its environment. This, in turn, will create unique niches which support a growing web of life. In short, mulch improves soil fertility, the cornerstone of all healthy and thriving gardens.
Types of mulches
Straw
Straw, commonly used in the vegetable garden, is one of the most effective mulches because:
It traps air easily, effectively moderating soil temperatures.
It is extremely porous.
A bale can be easily broken into “flakes” which can be easily moved.
A bale of straw is so compressed, that it covers a surprisingly large area.
It is relatively inexpensive.
It can serve as an undercoat beneath a more attractive and costly mulch.
Worms love it!
There are different kinds of straw. Rice straw, for example, is usually available in the late summer and early fall after rice is harvested in the Central Valley. Because it is weed free, it can be used immediately. But it deteriorates quickly.
Wheat and oat straw are alternatives. They last longer than rice straw and they have a better consistency. But, neither can be used until the seeds are killed. Soak the bales with water until they are covered with 1-2″ of sprouted grass, or leave the bales exposed to rain for a month during the winter. But use the straw quickly at that point, or the bales will rot completely, and remember to place the bales where you want them to be before they get wet – they’re hard to move when soaked.
Alfalfa Hay/Pellets
Though more expensive, alfalfa offers all the advantages of straw plus the added boost of more nutrition. Rich in nitrogen, alfalfa is used as animal feed. It can give your plants an added boost, too. It is seedless so can be used immediately, without the soaking treatment described above, and it has a longer life than rice straw.
Pellets are merely compressed alfalfa in small chunks. Sold in bags, they are more easily transportable if you don’t have a truck. Whether in bale or pellet form, alfalfa and the other straws are available at most feed stores.
Barks and hulls
Read more: Growing Fruit and Vegetables in Small Spaces
Barks and hulls can usually be purchased in bags. They are attractive, easy to transport, and they are useful for small areas. But a bag does not cover many square feet, and costs can quickly add up.
There are quite a few different types:
Cocoa bean hulls are appealing because initially they smell like chocolate. If applied too thickly, they can get gummy after a while. Consequently, they lose their porosity.
Barks have the advantage of being long lasting, attractive and allow water to pass easily to the soil. But they take many months, often years, to decompose. As a result, they protect soil, but they do not enrich as other mulches can.
Redwood “hair” works effectively, but can look artificial. Like bark, it takes a long time to decompose compared to other mulches.
Barks and hulls are available in bags at most hardware and garden centers and in bulk at landscaping materials suppliers such as Sonoma Materials in Sonoma, Wheeler Zamaroni in Santa Rosa or Grab N’ Grow near Sebastopol.
Yard Waste (including grass clippings, garden clippings and dried leaves)
There’s nothing as satisfying or cost effective as using materials that your own property (or a neighbor’s) generates. And this way, you are retaining all of the nutrients that those plants took out of your soil!
Fallen leaves are great! If you rake them on to your beds in the fall, they will soften the heavy rains’ effects on your soil, and they will protect your plants during freezing temperatures. Before using them, toss them in a shredder or a run a lawn mower over them, to prevent them from clumping. If they are dry even crumbling them with your hands as you spread them around is effective. While not as attractive as barks, they are porous and decompose quickly, enriching the soil.
Grass clippings are better consigned to the compost pile because they tend to clump unless they are spread very sparingly or mixed thoroughly with other materials.
Clippings from flower beds and shrubs, if chopped up, can be used to cover the back portions of beds. They are not attractive, but they can suppress weeds and they are an effective way of dealing with erosion.
Municipal garden waste/Chipped trees/Re-cycled wood
Our county has a number of sources which provide re-cycled materials, ground up and sorted according to size. These are worth their weight in gold. And they have the added advantage of blending easily with fallen leaves and other debris. Usually sold by the yard, they are relatively inexpensive, though sometimes transportation costs can equal the materials if you arrange for a large delivery.
Getting the right consistency of material is very important. Chunky is better than thready, to ensure good water absorption. Also, consider the source of the material and use it in your garden accordingly. Re-cycled lumber products are better used for pathways and ornamental areas than for vegetable gardens since they may be impregnated with unknown chemicals.
Sonoma Compost at the Sonoma County Landfill and the various local tree companies such as Atlas Tree are potential sources of this type of mulch. There are also companies such as Affordable Landscape Materials that sell attractive chipped and screened lumber mulches.
Remember, compost and mulch are not the same. Compost is made up of fully decomposed plant materials and is an asset when added to your soil, as the microorganisms can use it immediately. Mulch has not yet decomposed, and only becomes compost over time. Mulch should be used as a top-dressing only: never mix raw mulch in with your garden soil, as it will deplete the Nitrogen level in your soil as it decomposes, and rob the soil of a key ingredient for plant growth
APPLICATION OF PLANT-BASED MULCHES
For the most effective results, before applying any mulch to a bed for the 1st time, cover the ground with cardboard or thick layers of newspaper to block the light. Overlap your material, leaving no bare ground exposed. Coarse textured mulches can be applied up to 4″ deep; fine-textured mulches only need to be applied up to 2″, since they pack more closely.
You’ll need to replenish your mulch periodically because it will decompose over time. But once you have an established mulch layer, you won’t need to lay newspaper or cardboard again.
Here are a few tips:
When using drip irrigation, lay the newspaper or cardboard under the drip tubing, making it easily accessible.
If you want to add plants after carefully covering your garden with newspaper and cardboard, don’t despair! Push aside the mulch, expose the paper, and cut an “X” large enough to accommodate your plant. Fold back the flaps, dig a hole, and add your plant. When done, lay the flaps back in place and re-cover your plant with mulch.
One caution: when mulching plants with woody stems, especially trees, leave a couple of inches of bare earth around the trunks. Too much moisture around woody stems can rot them.
TIMING
In the case of plant-based mulches, you can use the seasons to your advantage by following these guidelines:
Many seeds require warmer soil temperatures in order to germinate. Therefore, start adding mulch to newly planted beds in the late spring after the ground has warmed up a little.
In established beds, you can add mulch earlier. By mulching as the winter rains taper, you can often delay watering plants for several weeks as the weather warms.
Early summer is prime time to maximize your use of mulch.
Over the summer months, your mulch will decompose and reduce in thickness, just in time to take advantage of the mid-fall rains.
Allow your mulch to continue to decompose as winter rains increase. Plants need good drainage during these months.
How to decide what type of mulch is best for your garden? As you visit local nurseries and gardens, take note of what types of mulch are used. Determine which look you prefer and which fits the style of your garden the best. Ask your favorite nursery which material they use in their demonstration gardens and why. Experiment with a few bags of different materials to see which effect is most pleasing. You may decide to use different materials in different places in your garden. Whichever type you decide upon, however, nothing will benefit your garden quite like mulch. No longer will you be a slave to weeds! You can have a beautiful garden while still practicing water conservation. And, you can be steward of your land, protecting the soil and increasing its fertility over time.
Source: https://livingcorner.com.au Category: Garden
source https://livingcorner.com.au/mulch-a-gardeners-best-friend/
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your-dietician · 3 years
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Wildfire smoke and your health: Do you need to worry?
New Post has been published on https://tattlepress.com/health/wildfire-smoke-and-your-health-do-you-need-to-worry/
Wildfire smoke and your health: Do you need to worry?
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Wildfires burning in the West
Firefighters look out over a burning hillside as they fight the Blue Ridge Fire in Yorba Linda, California, on Monday, October 26.
Wildfires burning in the West
A man evacuates his home as flames from the Blue Ridge Fire approach in Chino Hills, California, on Tuesday, October 27.
Wildfires burning in the West
Firefighters conduct a backfire operation in Chino Hills on October 27.
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A firefighter uses a hose as the Silverado Fire approaches near Irvine, California.
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Firefighter Raymond Vasquez battles the Silverado Fire in Irvine on Monday, October 26.
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Flames rise from mountain ridges near a farmstead as a wildfire burns near Granby, Colorado, on Thursday, October 22.
Wildfires burning in the West
Evacuees drive through a traffic jam exiting Big Thompson Canyon as the East Troublesome Fire forced residents out of Estes Park, Colorado, on October 22.
Wildfires burning in the West
Structures burned by the Cal-Wood Fire are seen in Boulder County, Colorado, on October 18.
Wildfires burning in the West
Flames from the Cameron Peak Fire, the largest wildfire in Colorado history, work their way along a ridge outside Estes Park on October 16.
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An airplane drops fire retardant on the Bruder Fire in Redlands, California, on October 15.
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Wildfires burning in the West
Vehicles burned in the Glass Fire sit outside of a home that survived in Calistoga on September 30.
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The remains of guest houses smolder at Calistoga Ranch after the Glass Fire passed through on September 30.
Wildfires burning in the West
Firefighter Abraham Garcia signals a water truck in Angwin, California, on September 29.
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Firefighters watch the Glass Fire slowly creep across a clearing near Calistoga on September 29.
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Damaged wine barrels sit stacked at the Fairwinds Estate Winery in Calistoga on September 29.
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The Glass Fire burns in the background as Josh Asbury, an employee of CableCom, installs fiber-optic cable in Calistoga on September 28.
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Residents of the Oakmont Gardens senior home are transported to safety as the Shady Fire approaches in Santa Rosa on September 28.
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Cellar worker Jose Juan Perez extinguishes hotspots at Castello di Amorosa, a Calistoga winery that was damaged in the Glass Fire.
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An officer with Napa County Animal Control rescues a cat after the Glass Fire passed through Napa Valley, California, on September 28.
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The Glass Fire burns on a Napa County mountainside on September 28.
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Flames from the Glass Fire consume the Black Rock Inn in St. Helena, California, on September 27.
Wildfires burning in the West
Embers fly from a tree as the Glass Fire burns in St. Helena on September 27.
Wildfires burning in the West
An air tanker drops fire retardant on the Glass Fire, which was burning near the Davis Estates winery in Calistoga on September 27.
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Cal Fire Capt. Jesse Campbell works to save the Louis Stralla Water Treatment Plant as the Glass Fire burns in St. Helena.
Wildfires burning in the West
A photograph of Charles Morton, a firefighter killed battling the El Dorado Fire, is displayed at a memorial service in San Bernardino, California, on September 25. Morton, 39, was a 14-year veteran of the US Forest Service and a squad boss with the Big Bear Hotshot Crew of the San Bernardino National Forest.
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An inmate firefighter takes a break while working to contain the Bear Fire in Oroville, California, on September 24.
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Inmate firefighters extinguish hot spots while working to contain the Bear Fire on September 24.
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The Bobcat Fire burns near Cedar Springs, California, on September 21.
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Wildfire smoke rises in Medicine Bow National Forest in southeastern Wyoming on September 21.
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A deer looks for food in an area burned by the Bobcat Fire in Pearblossom, California.
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A woman takes photos as the Bobcat Fire burns in Juniper Hills, California, on September 18.
Wildfires burning in the West
Wind whips embers from Joshua trees burned by the Bobcat Fire in Juniper Hills on September 18.
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Firefighter Kirk McDusky walks past smoke rising from the Brattain Fire in Paisley, Oregon, on September 18.
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A Juniper Hills home burns during the Bobcat Fire on September 18.
Wildfires burning in the West
A firefighter battles the Bobcat Fire while defending the Mount Wilson observatory in Los Angeles on September 17.
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Stacey Kahny fixes her hair inside her tent at the evacuation center at the Jackson County Fairgrounds in Central Point, Oregon, on September 16. Kahny lived with her parents at a trailer park in Phoenix, Oregon, that was destroyed by fire.
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A charred yearbook lies in the debris as Fred Skaff and his son Thomas clean up their home in Phoenix, Oregon, on September 16.
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In this aerial photo taken with a drone, red fire retardant sits on leveled homes in Talent, Oregon, on September 15.
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A firefighter works at the scene of the Bobcat Fire burning on hillsides near Monrovia, California, on September 15.
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President Donald Trump listens as California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks about the wildfires during a briefing on September 14.
Wildfires burning in the West
George Coble walks through his destroyed property in Mill City, Oregon, on September 12.
Wildfires burning in the West
The Bobcat Fire burns in Angeles National Forest, north of Monrovia, California, on September 11.
Wildfires burning in the West
Crystal Sparks kisses her 4-year-old twins, Chance and Ryder Sutton, as they escape the Obenchain Fire in Butte Falls, Oregon, on September 11.
Wildfires burning in the West
North Valley Disaster Group member Kari Zeitler and Butte County Animal Control officer Linda Newman bridle up two donkeys wandering along a roadside in Berry Creek, California, on September 11. The donkeys were displaced by the Bear Fire.
Wildfires burning in the West
A firefighter shoots an incendiary device during a back burn to help control the Dolan Fire in Big Sur, California, on September 11.
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Dora Negrete is consoled by her son Hector Rocha after seeing their destroyed mobile home in Talent, Oregon, on September 10.
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This aerial photo shows a destroyed mobile-home park in Phoenix, Oregon, on September 10.
Wildfires burning in the West
A street is shrouded by smoke from wildfires in West Linn, Oregon, on September 10.
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A tanker jet drops fire retardant to slow the Bobcat Fire in the Angeles National Forest north of Monrovia, California, on September 10.
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Looking up San Francisco’s Columbus Avenue, the Transamerica Pyramid and Salesforce Tower are covered with smoke from nearby wildfires on September 9. This photo was taken in the late morning.
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Wildfires burning in the West
Wildfire smoke hangs over the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge on September 9.
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Bejhan Razi, a senior building inspector in Mill Valley, California, checks out repairs on a lamp-post clock as the sky is illuminated by nearby wildfires.
Wildfires burning in the West
People stand in Alamo Square Park as smoke hangs over San Francisco on September 9.
Wildfires burning in the West
People stop to take pictures of the Golden Gate Bridge as it is affected from smoke by nearby wildfires on September 9.
Wildfires burning in the West
Firefighters cut defensive lines and light backfires to protect structures in Butte County, California, on September 9.
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Flames shoot from a home in Butte County.
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A Pacific Gas and Electric worker looks up at the advancing Creek Fire near Alder Springs, California, on September 8.
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Lisa Theis unloads the last of her 44 alpacas after she evacuated her ranch in North Fork, California.
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Flames burn at a home leveled by the Creek Fire in Fresno County, California.
Wildfires burning in the West
A slide is melted at a school playground in Fresno County.
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Wildfires burning in the West
Firefighter Nick Grinstead battles the Creek Fire in Shaver Lake, California, on September 7.
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A firefighter in Jamul, California, battles the Valley Fire on September 6.
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A fire encroaches Japatul Road in Jamul on September 6.
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Little League baseball players warm up for a game near Dehesa, California, as the Valley Fire burns on September 6.
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A firefighter watches the advancing Creek Fire in Shaver Lake.
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A business owner in Shaver Lake walks next to kayaks he rents as smoke from the Creek Fire fills the sky on September 6.
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Family members comfort each other as the El Dorado Fire moves closer to their home in Yucaipa, California, on September 6.
Wildfires burning in the West
A firefighter sets a controlled burn with a drip torch while fighting the Creek Fire in Shaver Lake.
Wildfires burning in the West
Dozens of evacuees are airlifted to safety on a California National Guard helicopter on September 5. The Creek Fire had left them stranded in a popular camping area in the Sierra National Forest.
Wildfires burning in the West
Firefighters walk in a line in Yucaipa on September 5.
Wildfires burning in the West
Haze and smoke blanket the sky near Naches, Washington, as the Evans Canyon Fire burns on September 3.
Wildfires burning in the West
California Gov. Gavin Newsom, right, listens as Santa Cruz State Park Superintendent Chris Spohrer talks about the fire damage to the Big Basin Redwoods State Park.
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Randy Hunt packs up his belongings, including his daughter Natasha’s first Pooh bear, left, in case he and his wife Sheli had to evacuate the home they rent in Middletown, California, on August 26.
Wildfires burning in the West
Firefighter Juan Chavarin pulls down a burning tree trunk in Guerneville, California, on August 25.
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A sign reading “Vaca Strong” adorns a charred hillside in Vacaville, California, on August 24.
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Austin Giannuzzi cries while embracing relatives at the burned remains of their Vacaville home on August 23.
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A firefighter looks out from a helicopter while battling the LNU Lightning Complex fires in Lake County, California.
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Flames from the LNU Lightning Complex fires leap above Butts Canyon Road in Lake County on August 23.
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Karol Markowski of the South Pasadena Fire Department hoses down hot spots while battling the CZU Lightning Complex fires in Boulder Creek, California, on August 22.
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A burned-out vehicle is left in front of a destroyed residence as smoke fills the sky in Boulder Creek on August 22.
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Smoke hangs low in the air at the Big Basin Redwoods State Park as some redwoods burn in Boulder Creek on August 22.
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A firefighter watches the LNU Lightning Complex fires spread through the Berryessa Estates neighborhood in Napa County on August 21.
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Veterinary technician Brianna Jeter comforts a llama injured by a fire in Vacaville on August 21. At right, animal control officer Dae Kim prepares to euthanize the llama.
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Smoke from nearby wildfires hangs over San Francisco on August 21.
Wildfires burning in the West
A firefighter monitors the advance of a fire in Boulder Creek on August 21.
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Members of the US Forest Service discuss their next moves to battle the Grizzly Creek Fire near Dotsero, Colorado, on August 21.
Wildfires burning in the West
People pack brown-bag lunches at an evacuation center in Santa Cruz, California, on August 21.
Wildfires burning in the West
A smoke plume from the LNU Lightning Complex fires billows over Healdsburg, California, on August 20.
Wildfires burning in the West
A firefighter battles flames in Santa Cruz County, California, on August 20.
Wildfires burning in the West
Only scorched homes and vehicles remain in the Spanish Flat Mobile Villa in Napa County, California, on August 20.
Wildfires burning in the West
Peter Koleckar reacts after seeing multiple homes burned in his neighborhood in Bonny Doon, California, on August 20.
Wildfires burning in the West
A forest burns in Bonny Doon on August 20.
Wildfires burning in the West
A man looks at a tree blocking his way after a fire ravaged Vacaville, California, on August 20.
Wildfires burning in the West
A melted plastic fence lies on the charred ground after fire swept through Vacaville on August 20.
Wildfires burning in the West
Sarah Hawkins searches through rubble after her Vacaville home was destroyed on August 20.
Wildfires burning in the West
Fire crews maintain a backburn to control the River Fire near the Las Palmas neighborhood in Salinas, California, on August 19.
Wildfires burning in the West
Gina Santos cries in her car after evacuating Vacaville on August 19.
Wildfires burning in the West
People herd cows down Pleasants Valley Road in Vacaville on August 19.
Wildfires burning in the West
Flames consume a home in Napa County, California, on August 19.
Wildfires burning in the West
Embers burn along a hillside above Lake Berryessa as the LNU Lightning Complex fires tear through Napa County on August 18. This image was taken with a long exposure.
Wildfires burning in the West
A resident runs into a home to save a dog while flames from the Hennessy Fire close in near Lake Berryessa on August 18.
Wildfires burning in the West
A home burns as the LNU Lightning Complex fires tear through the Spanish Flat community in Napa County on August 18.
Wildfires burning in the West
An air tanker drops retardant on fires in the Spanish Flat community of Napa County on August 18.
Wildfires burning in the West
Flames from the Hennessy Fire consume a cabin at the Nichelini Family Winery in Napa County on August 18.
Wildfires burning in the West
Tony Leonardini works on a spot fire as thunderstorm winds fan the Hennessy Fire in Napa County on August 17.
Wildfires burning in the West
Smoke from the Grizzly Creek Fire is thick in Glenwood Canyon, near Glenwood Springs, Colorado, on August 16.
Wildfires burning in the West
Kathy Mathison looks at the still-smoldering wildfire on August 16 that, just a day before, came within several feet of her home in Bend, Oregon.
Wildfires burning in the West
Firefighters look at smoke and flames rising from the Ranch2 Fire in the San Gabriel Mountains, east of Los Angeles, on August 14.
Wildfires burning in the West
A helicopter makes a water drop over the Ranch2 Fire in Azusa, California, on August 13.
Wildfires burning in the West
A car is charred by the Lake Fire near Lake Hughes, 60 miles north of Los Angeles, on August 13.
Wildfires burning in the West
A couple watches the Ranch2 Fire from a distance on August 13.
Wildfires burning in the West
A firefighter crew works in Lake Hughes on August 13.
Wildfires burning in the West
The Lake Fire burns a home in Angeles National Forest on August 13.
Wildfires burning in the West
Flames and smoke from the Lake Fire rise on Wednesday, August 12.
Wildfires burning in the West
A firefighter works against the Lake Fire on August 12.
Wildfires burning in the West
Firefighters make an escape plan as the Lake Fire burns a hillside on August 12.
Wildfires burning in the West
A tanker makes a drop on the Lake Fire on August 12.
Wildfires burning in the West
A plume of smoke rises from the Lake Fire on August 12.
Wildfires burning in the West
Fire crews battle the Grizzly Creek Fire near Glenwood Springs, Colorado, on August 11.
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readonline · 3 years
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In the back of my closet is a small cardboard chest with brass handles and latches that has followed me to every new address; it’s the first thing I find a place for as the moving truck pulls away. An old sticker on the bottom says it was purchased at Ross for $26.99. The only remaining contents are three wrapped presents marked in my mother’s tidy cursive: “Engagement,” “Wedding” and “First Baby.”
My mother, who put her business degree to use running a small nutritional beverage company with my father in Santa Rosa, Calif., while raising my older brother and me, was always prepared. By day she made marketing slogans, distribution strategies, five-year plans. By night: bubble baths, pillow forts, bedtime stories.
She and I had the same February birthday. Each year my parents arranged elaborate parties. She once spent a week making a school of origami fish to swim through tissue paper seaweed across the ceiling of our dining room.
When I was 3, she learned she had advanced breast cancer and immediately began to prepare by researching every available treatment: conventional, alternative, Hail Mary. She flooded her body with chemotherapy and carrot juice.
Each day, she would sit for hours at our long oval dining table, her straight dark hair tied back, surrounded by piles of paper, studying dense, technical paragraphs.
“Medical research,” my father said as he shepherded me from the room.
She was always looking for a way to survive.
When I was 7, the materials on the dining table began to change. Wrapping paper and ribbons took the place of her highlighted pages as her arms worked busily under the dark fuzz of her shorn head. Scissors swished through gift wrap. Paper creased under her fingers. Ribbon cut to length with one snip. Knots came together with a tiny creak. Swish, crease, snip, creak.
She had begun assembling two gift boxes: one for my brother and one for me.
There was a rhythm in the room. She bent closer and closer to write the labels as her vision began to fail, a result of the cancer having spread to her brain.
Inside, she packed presents and letters for the milestones of our lives she would miss — driver’s license, graduation and every birthday until the age of 30. When the boxes were full, my father carried them up to our rooms. She died 10 days before our shared birthday.
That morning, when I turned 12 and she would have turned 49, I woke up early. The box sat three steps from the foot of my bed. Just as my mother had shown me, I lifted the latches and opened it.
Neat rows of brightly wrapped presents glowed like the spring tulips that were just coming up in the front yard. I opened the package marked “12th Birthday” and found a little ring with an amethyst at its center. A white card curling around the present read: “I always wanted a birthstone ring when I was a little girl. Your Granny finally bought me one and I loved it more than I can say. I hope you like it, too. Happy birthday, darling girl! Love, your Mommy.”
I slid the ring on and traced her writing with my fingertip. Her words, written to bridge the gap between us, cut through space and time.
When I got my first period and couldn’t bring myself to talk to my father about it, a four-page letter from my mother (marked “First Period”) laid out practical advice: “Take time to make friends with yourself. Take time to learn what interests you, what your opinions and feelings are, find your own sense of the world and which values you hold most dear.”
As I read, I wanted to fall through the white, lightly textured page and into her arms.
“Please try not to lose yourself,” it continued. “These are challenging years. Call on me for help when you feel confused.”
On the morning of my high school graduation, a strand of pearls made a sound like a maraca as I drew them from the box. Her note read: “There seemed to be a tradition in my family that when girls graduated from high school, they received a string of pearls. Well, my string of pearls never arrived.”
That’s because my mother, bound for adventure, skipped her senior year, and bought herself these pearls when she finished business school. She wanted me to know there was more than one path to walk through the world, and that I deserved to be celebrated. I wore the pearls that afternoon as I crossed the football field to accept my diploma.
Year after year, my mother traveled forward in time to meet me, always in the guise of a little package with a pink ribbon and a little white notecard: “Happy 15th!” “Happy 16th!” “Congratulations on your driver’s license!” “You’re a college girl!” “Happy 21st!” “Happy birthday, darling girl! Love, your Mommy.”
Each time I opened the box, I could, for the briefest moment, inhabit a shared reality, something she imagined for us many years ago. It was like a half-remembered scent, the first notes of a familiar song, each time, a tiny glimpse of her.
When I was a child, opening the next package felt like a treasure hunt. As I grew older, it began to feel like something far more fundamental, like air or community, something like prayer. Her messages met me like guideposts in a dark forest; if her words couldn’t point the way, at least they offered the comfort of knowing someone had been there before.
A decade after I lost my mother, my father followed suddenly. She had spent years preparing her exit, but with him I blinked, and he was gone. The morning of his memorial, the box stared back at me with nothing to say. There was no letter for this.
I tried to conjure her voice but couldn’t. My father left no clues or letters. The only parenting I would have, from 22 on, was in the box.
When I hit 30, the nearly empty box sat in my Brooklyn apartment, clashing with the furniture. Only those three packages remained: Engagement, Wedding, First Baby. They sat in their shiny cardboard and pink ribbon, expectant, waiting.
The problem was, I didn’t know if any of those things would happen. I didn’t know if I would choose them.
I had been living with someone for three years. I didn’t know if I ever wanted to get married, but I was in a committed, loving relationship, and whatever advice my mother had about committed, loving relationships, I wanted it. Now.
I felt 12 again, and rebellious, as I pulled out the thick envelope marked “Engagement.” My fingertips felt cold as I opened it.
It read: “My dearest little girl, of course you aren’t so little anymore as you read this but, you are little as I write. You are only 7 and I am facing the terrible sadness that you will be growing up without me.”
With the smooth pages crinkled in my grip, I found her hopes for what my marriage might look like.
“A true marriage is a marriage of what is most sacred in both of you. One must have an ease about both giving and receiving, a capacity for forgiveness for oneself as well as for the other, a personal sense of balance that is not dependent on the balance of the other, a kind of loving detachment.”
I didn’t know if I was capable of loving detachment. There was no detachment in the love that made the box, and no detachment in the love that opened it.
“I’m so sorry to be leaving you. Please forgive me. I know a box of letters and tokens can’t begin to take my place, but I wanted so badly to do something to ease your way through the future. Love, your Mommy.”
For 20 years I have pulled mothering from the box, but I don’t know if the next 20 will include the milestones she planned for me. I often wish I could lift the latches, jump inside and ask her which path I should walk and how I will recognize it. I want to ask if the life I’m carving for myself looks anything like she would have hoped. But I know this time travel only works one way.
After I read the engagement letter, I put it back with its unopened package and closed the box. Those three final secrets will remain secrets, for now. Maybe I’ll open them tomorrow, or in 10 years, or 20.
There’s comfort in knowing there’s a little left in the box. My mother’s gifts, her letters, are a constant reminder that I have already been given what every child, what every human, needs: I have been fiercely, extravagantly, wildly loved.
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poeticpowers · 7 years
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Please boost!
For people in the Sanoma/Santa Rosa fires
For those displaced or know someone who is, please share this list of organizations offering the following for free.
FREE FOOD / WATER:
• Amy’s Drive Thru in Rohnert Park: Free meals to those evacuated.
• Nopalito: Free burritos from 11AM-3PM (1905 Bodega Avenue).
• McGuires: Free food.
• Mystic Theatre/McNears: Serving free breakfast 9AM-11AM, lunch (soup and sandwiches) from 12PM-3PM, and dinner from 5PM-8PM. They can deliver or make meals to go too. Contact them directly at 707-765-2121.
• Sauced BBQ Restaurant: Serving free food from 9AM-4PM and offering a place to rest.
• Quinua Restaurant: Serving free lunch.
• Lagunitas Tap Room: Giving away free water. Bring containers and they will fill them.
• Amy’s in Rohnert Park: Serving free food. All money donated there will be given to families in need.
• The Drawing Board: Offering food deliveries to those in need, plus a special menu for firefighters and victims.
FREE WIFI / COMPUTERS:
• Comcast FREE Internet/Comcast/Xfinity: Removed restrictions and opened their WiFi hotspots for all to use through Friday, 10/13. Log in as “Guest”.
• Copperfield’s Books Petaluma: Free wifi, allows dogs, water, stickers, and crayons for children.
• Mystic Theatre/McNears/The Roaring Donkey: Offering laptops to use if they need to get a hold of their financial institutions or family members. Ask for Sierra Bradley.
• Roaring Donkey: Has laptops with wifi and phone chargers.
FREE HEALTH / WELLNESS:
• Petaluma Swim Center: Offering free showers 8:30AM-10:30AM and 3:00PM-5:30PM. (Soap, shampoo, and towels provided.)
• Synergy Health Club: Offering free showers plus towels to those in need. As well as, indoor space away from the smoke.
FREE SPACE INDOORS:
• Adventure Recreation: Located at 2200 Petaluma Blvd. N. will be open until 6PM for kids to play indoor and away from all the smoke.
• Petaluma Bowling Alley: Offering a free space to be away from the smoke.
• California Academy of Sciences: Free, safe place for families during the day and indoors away from all the smoke.
PETS / ANIMAL BOARDING:
• Petaluma Animal Shelter Snuggle Shuttle @ Petaluma Community Center at Luchessi Park: Offering pet food, water, boarding, and lost and found pet information. (707-778-7387).
• Strong’s Second Chance Ranch: Offering to home horses. Can be reached via Messenger on Facebook.
• Chanslor Ranch Bodega Bay: Offering free beds and campsite. Kid and pet friendly. (707-875-2721).
• Sonoma Humane Society: Located at 5345 Highway 12 West, Santa Rosa. Taking in animals for boarding, lost and found animals. No cost vet treatment for burn victims, owned or stray animals affected by fires. Open 8AM-5PM.
• Unleashed Dog Training: Offering boarding. (707-763-9882).
• Marin Humane Society: Offering free boarding.
• Miscellaneous Animal Issues: Anyone encountering animal related issues can call 707-565-4406. This number will be available 24/7 until further notice. Donations can also be made through this line. Please be prepared to share information about the number of animals, type of animals, address and location for the animals, and any information about the families associated with the animals, if known.
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rgvcleaningcompany · 3 years
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watchonlinewds · 3 years
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In California: Newsom talks tough on reopening public schools; more details in Smart case
I'm Winston Gieseke, philanthropy and special sections editor for The Desert Sun in Palm Springs, bringing you the day's key headlines on this windy Wednesday.
In California brings you top Golden State stories and commentary from across the USA TODAY Network and beyond. Get it free, straight to your inbox.
Gov. Gavin Newsom said Wednesday that all California schools should reopen when the new academic year begins next fall. His frustration was evident: “Money is not an object now. It’s an excuse," he said. “I want all schools to reopen. I’ve been crystal clear about that.”
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Newsom spoke at an elementary school in Santa Rosa that began welcoming students back this week. But his wishes remain an expectation rather than a mandate in California’s decentralized education system, where 1,200 school districts negotiate separately with teachers unions and ultimately govern themselves.
Facing political pressure and a recall effort, Newsom has said he plans to lift most of California's coronavirus restrictions on June 15 as part of reopening the state to business as usual. Earlier this month, he made a similar pronouncement, but many districts and teachers remain reluctant.
Newsom has repeatedly said he sees no barriers to getting the state's 6.2 million public school students back into classrooms now, as California's COVID-19 infections continue to drop and more residents are being vaccinated.
"If current trends and best practices continue, the next school year can begin with offering full in-person instruction to all students," the California Department of Health said in a presentation Wednesday that focused on school reopening. It specified that schools should plan to offer full days of instruction, five days a week.
How is this OK?’: Meanwhile, frustrated parents throughout the state, say that while students may be permitted to return to school in person, more than half will stick with distance learning.
Associated Press reports that Kira Gaber said she’s been told to send her kindergartner back to his San Francisco classroom with a laptop and headphones — while his teacher works online from home. “How is this OK? This is completely not in-person learning,” said Gaber, who doesn’t plan to send her son to class with a computer. “I’m going to send him with worksheets and a coloring book.”
Frustrated parents in San Francisco have even coined a new phrase for their latest classroom reality: "Zoom in a Room."
As more California counties open up vaccines to younger adults — tomorrow the state opens eligibility to everyone 16 and up — California public health officials warned of decreases in supply, the result of a national reduction of the one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine.
The state has received about 2.4 million doses this week, and it expects 2 million next week and 1.9 million the week after. This is in addition to vaccines shipped directly to pharmacies and community health centers from the federal government.
This week, availability remains mixed, with some places reporting an excess of open appointments. Humboldt County in Northern California, for example, urged residents to make an appointment, saying that “hundreds of doses” were available through the weekend.
Similarly, a mass vaccination site at California State University, Los Angeles, announced it would take adults on a walk-up basis because of excess appointments. But by late Tuesday morning, the site was turning people away because of demand.
Paul Flores will face first-degree murder charges in the 1996 disappearance of Stockton college student Kristin Smart, authorities say.
Police said they believed that Flores, now 44, had been attempting to rape Smart, his fellow Cal Poly student, when she was killed inside his dorm room. His father, 80-year-old Ruben Flores, is charged with accessory to murder after the fact for helping to conceal Kristin’s body.
Both men were arrested Tuesday morning. The arraignment is set for Thursday.
“We’ve got physical evidence, we have witness statements, things that in our view in the totality bring us to the point where we believe we can go forward and prosecute Paul Flores for the murder of Kristin Smart,” San Luis Obispo County District Attorney Dan Dow said during a press conference Wednesday.
Smart's body has yet to be found, but authorities received evidence in the last month regarding a possible location where she was taken, Dow said. He also did not rule out a plea deal with Paul Flores in exchange for information leading to Smart’s remains.
A venomous snake bit an employee at the San Diego Zoo Monday, according to zoo officials. A spokesperson for the zoo said the wildlife care specialist was immediately transported to a hospital for evaluation and treatment.
“Although the San Diego Zoo cares for a number of venomous reptiles, incidents like this are very rare, and the snake was contained at all times with no risk of an escape,” the zoo said in a statement.
The snake involved is an African bush viper, also known as Atheris squamigera. Native to parts of western and central Africa, their venom can cause fever, hemorrhaging and possibly death in humans, according to the University of Michigan's Museum of Zoology website.
While there is no known antivenom for an African bush viper's venom, per the Seneca Park Zoo in Rochester, New York, patients can be treated for their bites using antivenom created for other snakes' venom.
And finally, if you're a fan of woodies — those vintage cars with their signature wooden frames that evoke images of surfers transporting their boards to and from the beach — you are in for a rare privilege.
The Central Valley Woodie Club will be sponsoring its 15th annual Woodies in the Valley, an all-woodies car show, Friday and Saturday in Visalia. A sampling of the vehicles from 1928 to 1951, including original, restored and full hot-rod woodies, will be on display.
For more information on the event, visit valleywoodies.com or contact Wayne Yada, president of the Central Valley Woodie Club, at (559) 967-1357 or [email protected].
In California is a roundup of news from across USA Today network newsrooms. Also contributing: Associated Press. We'll be back in your inbox tomorrow with the latest headlines.
As the philanthropy and special sections editor at The Desert Sun, Winston Gieseke writes about nonprofits, fundraising and people who give back in the Coachella Valley. Reach him at [email protected].
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gordonwilliamsweb · 3 years
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‘Go Ahead and Vote Me Out’: What Other Places Can Learn From Santa Rosa’s Tent City
SANTA ROSA, Calif. — They knew the neighborhood would revolt.
It was early May, and officials in this Northern California city known for its farm-to-table dining culture and pumped-up housing prices were frantically debating how to keep covid-19 from infiltrating the homeless camps proliferating in the region’s celebrated parks and trails. For years, the number of people living homeless in Santa Rosa and the verdant hills and valleys of broader Sonoma County had crept downward — and then surged, exacerbated by three punishing wildfire seasons that destroyed thousands of homes in four years.
Seemingly overnight, the city’s homeless crisis had burst into view. And with the onset of covid, it posed a devastating health threat to the hundreds of people living in shelters, tents and makeshift shanties, as well as the service providers and emergency responders trying to help them.
In the preceding weeks, as covid made its first advance through California, Gov. Gavin Newsom had called on cities and counties to persuade hotel operators to open their doors to people living on the streets whose age and health made them vulnerable. But in Santa Rosa, a town that thrives on tourist dollars, city leaders knew they would never find enough owners to volunteer their establishments. City Council member Tom Schwedhelm, then serving as mayor, settled on an idea to pitch dozens of tents in the parking lot of a gleaming community center in an affluent neighborhood known as Finley Park, a couple of miles west of Santa Rosa’s central business district.
Neighborhood residents weren’t keen on the idea of accepting homeless people into their enclave of tree-lined streets and sleepy cul-de-sacs. Yet in short order, thousands of residents and businesses received letters notifying them of the city’s plans to erect 70 tents that could shelter as many as 140 people at the Finley Community Center, a neighborhood jewel that draws scores of families and fitness enthusiasts to its manicured picnic grounds, sparkling pool and tennis courts.
The backlash was fierce. For three hours on a Thursday evening in mid-May, Santa Rosa officials defended their plans as hundreds of residents flooded the phone lines to register their discontent.
“Will there be a list of everybody who decided to do this to us and our park, in case we want to vote them out?” one resident barked.
“This is a family neighborhood,” another fumed.
“How can we feel safe using our park?” others pleaded.
In Santa Rosa, like so many other communities, strenuous neighborhood objections typically would drive a stake through a proposal for homeless housing and services. Not this time. Elected officials were not asking; they were telling. The project would move ahead.
“Go ahead and vote me out,” said Schwedhelm, recounting his mindset at the time. “You want to shout at me and get angry? Go ahead. It’s important for government to listen, but the reality is these are our neighbors, so let’s help them.”
Within days, the spacious parking lot at the Finley Community Center was cordoned off with green mesh fencing. Inside, spaced 12 feet apart, were 68 blue tents, each equipped with sleeping bags and storage bin. A neat row of portable toilets lined one side of the encampment, and it was fitted throughout with hand-washing stations and misters for the summer heat.
The city contracted with Catholic Charities of Santa Rosa to manage the camp, and social workers fanned out to the city shelters and unsanctioned encampments, where they found dozens of takers. The first dozen residents were in their tents four days after the site was approved, and the population quickly swelled to nearly 70. In exchange for shelter, showers and three daily meals, camp residents agreed to an 8 p.m. curfew and a contract pledging to honor mask and physical-distancing requirements and act as good neighbors.
Santa Rosa’s tent city opened May 18. And, not too long after, something remarkable happened. Finley Park residents stopped protesting and started dropping off donations of goods — food, clothing, hand sanitizer. The tennis and pickleball courts, an afternoon favorite for retirees, were bustling again. Parents and kids once more crowded the nearby playground.
And inside that towering green perimeter, people started getting their lives together.
From May to late November, Santa Rosa would spend $680,000 to supply and manage the site, a six-month experiment that would chart a new course for the city’s approach to homeless services. As cities across California wrestle with a crisis of homelessness that has drawn international condemnation, the Santa Rosa experience suggests a way forward. Rather than engage in months of paralyzing discussion with neighborhood opponents before committing to a housing or shelter project, city officials decided their role was to lead and inform. They would identify project sites and drive forward, using neighborhood feedback to tailor improvements to a plan — but not to kill it.
It was a watershed moment of action that would echo across Sonoma County.
“We know we’re pissing off a lot of people — they’re rising up and saying, ‘Hell, no!’” said county Supervisor James Gore, president of the California State Association of Counties. “But we can’t just keep saying no. That’s been the failed housing policy of the last 30 to 40 years. Everybody wants a solution, but they don’t want to see that solution in their neighborhoods.”
‘Death by a Thousand Cuts’
About a quarter of the nation’s homeless reside in California, nearly 160,000 people living in cars, on borrowed couches, in temporary shelters or on the streets. The pandemic has exacerbated the crisis for a host of reasons, including covid-related job loss and prison releases and new capacity limits at homeless shelters.
From Los Angeles to Fresno to San Francisco and Sacramento, homeless encampments have multiplied. And without toilets or trash bins, unsanctioned encampments have become magnets for neighborhood complaints about seedy, unsanitary conditions. That leads to regular law enforcement sweeps that raze an encampment only to see it rise elsewhere.
California’s capital city offers a telling example of the dynamic. An estimated 6,000 people are living homeless in Sacramento, a population that has grown more visible since covid brought office life to a standstill. Tents and tarps crowd freeway underpasses throughout the downtown grid, accompanied by wafting piles of trash and clutter.
The mayor, Darrell Steinberg, is known as a champion on homelessness issues. During his years in the state legislature, he pushed through measures that exponentially increased funding to address homelessness and mental illness. But in more than four years as mayor he has struggled to muscle through a cohesive policy for moving people off the streets and into supportive housing.
“The problem with our approach,” Steinberg said earlier this year, “is that every time we seek to build a project, there is a neighborhood controversy. Our own constituents say, ‘Solve it, but please don’t solve it here,’ and we end up experiencing death by a thousand cuts.”
With community uproar building, he is leading the charge on a new initiative to build a continuum of city-sanctioned housing, including triage shelters, sanctioned campgrounds and permanent housing with social services. The city has allocated up to $1 million in an initial outlay for tiny homes and safe camping, but as of March had gotten consensus on just one site: a parking lot beneath a busy freeway where the city will install toilets and hand-washing stations and allow up to 150 people to set up camp.
Donta Williams, homeless the past five years, shakes his head at how long it’s taken the city to sanction a campsite. Priced out of the South Sacramento neighborhood he considers home, Williams has subsisted in a series of squalid lots, regularly packing up and moving from one to the next in response to law enforcement sweeps.
“We’ve got nowhere to go,” said Williams, 40, who is a plaintiff in a legal battle with the city over encampment sweeps. “We need housing. We need services like bathrooms and hand-washing stations. Or how about just some dumpsters so we can pick up the trash?”
A Real Job, a New Beginning
Like Sacramento, Sonoma County has battled unruly homeless encampments for years. Before the fires, the crisis was more hidden, with people sheltering in creek beds and wooded glens abutting hiking and biking trails. The wildfires of 2017, 2019 and 2020 brought many out of the backcountry. And the 5,300 homes decimated by flames meant even more people displaced.
Politicians in Sonoma County described their soul-searching over how to cut through the community gridlock when it comes to finding locations to provide housing and services.
“It’s fear and anger that you’re going to take something away from me if you build this housing — that’s a big part of it, and I saw that anger directed at me, too,” said Shirlee Zane, a vocal backer of homeless services who lost her reelection bid last year after 12 years on the county board of supervisors. “It’s a psychology we see here too often, a sense of entitlement from white middle-class people.”
In creating the Finley Park model, Santa Rosa leaders drew on a few basic tenets. Neighbors were worried about crime and drug use, so the city deployed police officers and security guards for 24/7 patrols. Neighbors worried about trash and disease; the city brought in hand-washing stations, showers and toilets. Catholic Charities enrolled dozens of camp residents in neighborhood beautification projects, giving them gift cards to stores like Target and Starbucks in exchange for picking up trash — usually $50 for a couple of hours of work.
A few times a week, a mobile clinic serviced the camp, dispensing basic health care and medications. Residents had access to virtual mental health treatment and were screened regularly for covid symptoms; only one person tested positive for the coronavirus during the 256 days the site was in operation.
“We were serious about providing access to care,” said Jennifer Ammons, a nurse practitioner who led the mobile clinic. “You can get them inhalers, take care of their cellulitis with antibiotics, get rid of their pneumonia or skin infections.”
Rosa Newman was among those who turned their lives around. Newman, 56, said she had sunk into homelessness and addiction after leaving an abusive partner years before. She moved into her designated tent in September and in a matter of days was enrolled in California’s version of Medicaid, connected to a doctor and receiving treatment for a painful bladder infection. After two months in the camp, she was able to get into subsidized housing and landed a job at a Catholic Charities homeless drop-in center.
“Before, I was so sick I didn’t have any hope. I didn’t have to show up for anything,” she said. “But now I have a real job, and it’s just the beginning.”
James Carver, 50, who for years slept in the doorway of a downtown Santa Rosa business with his wife, said he felt happy just to have a tent over his head. Channeling his energy into cleanup projects and odd jobs around camp, Carver said, his morale began to improve.
“It’s such a comfort; I’m looking for work again,” Carver, an unemployed construction worker, said in November while cleaning stacks of storage totes handed out to camp residents. “I don’t have to sleep with one eye open.”
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Jennielynn Holmes, who runs Catholic Charities’ homeless services in Northern California, said the Finley Park experiment helped in ways she didn’t expect.
“This taught us valuable lessons on how to keep the unsheltered population safe, but also we were able to get people signed up for health care and ready for housing faster because we knew where they were,” Holmes said. Of the 208 people served at the site, she said, 12 were moved into permanent housing and nearly five dozen placed in shelters while they await openings.
When Santa Rosa officials conceived of the Finley site, they sold it to the community as temporary, believing covid would run its course by winter. And though covid still raged, they kept that promise and closed the site Nov. 30, then held a community meeting to get feedback. “Only three or four people called in, and they all had positive things to say,” said David Gouin, who has since retired as director of housing and community services.
Several area residents said they changed their mind about the project because of the way the site was managed.
“I was amazed I never saw anything negative at all,” said Boyd Edwards, who plays pickleball at the Finley Community Center a few times a week.
“I thought they were going to be noisy and have crap all over the place. Now, they can have it all year round for all I care,” said his friend Joseph Gernhardt.
Of the 108 calls for police service, almost all were in response to other homeless people wanting to sleep at the site when it was at capacity, records show. And there was no violent behavior, said Police Chief Rainer Navarro.
With the Finley encampment closed, Santa Rosa has expanded its primary shelter while drafting plans to set up year-round managed camps in several neighborhoods, this time with hardened structures. County supervisors, meanwhile, are using $16 million in state grants to purchase and convert two hotels into housing, and have stood their ground in pushing through two Finley Park-style managed encampments, one on county property, the other at a mountain retreat center.
The time has come, they said, to stop debating and embrace solutions.
“We have estates that sell for $20 million, and then you walk by people sleeping in tents with no access to hot food or running water,” said Lynda Hopkins, chair of the county board of supervisors. “These tiny villages — they’re not perfect, but we’re trying to provide some dignity.”
This story was produced by KHN, which publishes California Healthline, an editorially independent service of the California Health Care Foundation.
KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.
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