Absolutely Stunning Open Concept Tiny House for sale in Ramona, California
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California 'Bullet Button' Gun Registry Process Bogs Down as Deadline Looms - Duration: 4:46. For more infomation >> California 'Bullet Button' Gun Registry Process Bogs Down as Deadline Looms - Duration: 4:46.-------------------------------------------
VW T6 California - Duration: 1:14. For more infomation >> VW T6 California - Duration: 1:14.-------------------------------------------
California podría perder entre 19 y 41 metros de acantilados por el aumento del nivel del mar - Duration: 5:25.Peligran propiedades millonarias e infraestructura por el desgaste de los acantilados en California
Además de las playas, el mar que avanza sobre California está destruyendo los acantilados costeros
Una evaluación científica, dirigida por el Departamento Geológico de los Estados Unidos, advirtió que en el sur del estado se podrían desmoronar más de 40 metros de riscos —y de todo lo que hay sobre ellos: casas millonarias con vista al Pacífico, infraestructura pública básica—si las aguas continúan aumentando como hasta ahora
"Es una cifra bastante grande", dijo a Los Angeles Times Patrick Limber, un geomorfólogo costero y autor principal del estudio
"Esperamos que este modelo dará a los gobernantes de estas áreas una idea en gran escala de cómo podrían responder los acantilados al aumento del nivel del mar, así pueden comenzar a hacer planes para el futuro"
Estos apartamentos, en la ciudad de Pacifica, tenían bella vista. Pero quedaron al borde e inhabitables por el efecto del aumento del mar en los acantilados
(Noah Berger/Reuters) Las consecuencias de la erosión podrían afectar seriamente rutas principales en la península de Palos Verdes
Y en Malibu, Pacifica y otras ciudades costeras, conjuntos enteros de edificios, al igual que parques y otras instalaciones públicas, se podrían perder por la acción del mar
Ya se vio un ejemplo el año pasado, cuando los desprendimientos sobre la Ruta 1 la cortaron, y hubo que reconstruirla sobre los restos
El estudio utilizó un modelo sofisticado, que unió datos existentes y estimó el impacto posible desde San Diego a Santa Cruz
Analizó escenarios de aumento del nivel del mar desde 0,5 metros a 2 metros, y concluyó que los riscos se erosionarían en promedio entre 19 y 41 metros antes del fin del siglo XXI
Los caminos y otra infraestructura básica están en peligro en la costa sur de California
(Reuters) "Es una cantidad de erosión importante, y es algo para lo que nos tenemos que preparar ahora, no más adelante", dijo al periódico de Los Angeles Heather Cooley, del Instituto Pacífico, una fundación que estudia los efectos socioeconómicos del aumento del nivel del mar
"Estamos hablando de propiedad inmobiliaria de mucho valor, de infraestructura pública, de caminos, plantas de tratamiento de agua y desalinización
Todo estaría en peligro por la erosión". Limber advirtió que las proyecciones podrían ser conservadoras, dado que actualmente las autoridades de California consideran para sus modelos que el nivel del mar podría aumentar hasta 3 metros, en lugar de los 2 que fijó como máximo el estudio
La protección de los acantilados podría causar la desaparición de las playas sobre el Pacífico
Los propietarios de inmuebles con vista al mar han creado rompeolas o paredes de piedra temporarias, que hoy alcanzan a la quinta parte de la línea costera inferior del estado
Pero esas formas de protección impiden la natural creación de arena y, sobre todo, al sostener el risco permiten que el agua penetre de todos modos, lo cual sumerge las playas, que se podrían reducir a la tercera parte de lo que son hoy en California del sur
El estudio, que confirma la tendencia, advierte a las autoridades sobre la inminencia del daño, para que las decisiones no se limiten a salvar los riscos a costa de las playas o permitir que la naturaleza siga su curso y la población deba retirarse hacia el interior, con las costosas pérdidas que eso implicaría
MÁS SOBRE ESTE TEMA: Un glaciar gigante de la Antártida se derrite a más velocidad de lo que se creía California aprobó la ley de privacidad online más estricta de todo EEUU
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California Reluctantly Bans New Soda Taxes In Face Of Industry Threat - Duration: 4:37.California, the state that has passed more local sugary beverage taxes than any other, has reluctantly banned any new ones for the next 12 years after a shakedown from beverage lobbyists spooked lawmakers
The legislation Gov. Jerry Brown (D) signed Friday prevents new taxes on any groceries until 2031 but is squarely aimed at the so-called soda taxes currently under consideration in four California cities ― and at the likelihood that more cities would also take a cue from Berkeley, which sparked a trend when it passed the nation's first soda tax in 2014 to combat the health threats posed by sugary drinks
But the lawmakers who introduced the latest legislation weren't going after soda taxes; they were looking for a way to combat a ballot measure backed by beverage interest groups
In response to the soda taxes up for consideration, Brown explained in his decision Friday, "the beverage industry has circulated a far reaching initiative that would, if passed, raise the approval threshold from 50% to two-thirds on all measures, on all topics in all 482 cities" in California
The proposal alarmed mayors from "countless cities," Brown said, and forced his hand on the bill
The California Business Roundtable has since withdrawn that ballot measure, NBC News reported, State Sen
Scott Wiener (D), who voted against the tax ban legislation but said he respects his colleagues who supported it, didn't hold back in excoriating the beverage industry, whose political maneuvering over this amounts to holding the legislature hostage
In a truly vile move, the soda industry aimed a nuclear weapon at CA by funding a ballot measure to make it nearly impossible for cities to raise revenue
The ransom to withdraw the measure? Requiring the Legislature to pass a 12-year ban on new local soda taxes to protect health— Scott Wiener (@Scott_Wiener) June 28, 2018 To be very clear: The soda corporations - Coca Cola, Pepsi, Snapple, Red Bull - are now a rogue industry
They're willing to burn down the house to protect their bottom line & ability to sell dangerous products that give kids diabetes
#Karma— Scott Wiener (@Scott_Wiener) June 28, 2018 San Francisco, one of the cities Wiener represents, is one of a handful of California cities with soda taxes already in place
The legislation signed Friday will allow that taxation to continue. With the beverage industry's expensive campaigns against soda taxes in cities like San Francisco proving unreliable, techniques like the one used with this ballot measure may become more common as the soda tax trend spreads nationwide, The New York Times wrote this week
In an open letter to the governor on Tuesday, American Heart Association CEO Nancy Brown said she hoped he would prioritize the health consequences connected to soda consumption, which studies show may have a dangerous effect on the body unmatched by other sugary items
"These companies profit from sugary drinks ― the leading source of added sugar in the American diet ― and they spend millions of dollars marketing them to California kids," she wrote
"I have to tell you, I was shocked by reports that you would secretly negotiate such a deal to take away the ability of Californians to raise revenue that funds important community priorities and to help fight heart disease, stroke and diabetes
" RELATED COVERAGE Seattle Becomes the Latest City to Place a Tax on Soda Should You Vote For A Soda Tax? Science Says Yes Soda Taxes Win Big In California Download Do you have information you want to share with HuffPost? Here's how
Lydia O'ConnorReporter, HuffPost Suggest a correction MORE: Soda Tax California State Assembly Soda Industry
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Google weeps as its home state of California passes its own GDPR - Duration: 10:29.California has become the first state in the US to pass a data privacy law – with governor Jerry Brown signing the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 into law on Thursday
The legislation will give new rights to the state's 40 million inhabitants, including the ability to view the data that companies hold on them and, critically, request that it be deleted and not sold to third parties
It's not too far off Europe's GDPR. Any company that holds data on more than 50,000 people is subject to the law, and each violation carries a hefty $7,500 fine
Needless to say, the corporations that make a big chunk of their profits from selling their users' information are not overly excited about the new law
"We think there's a set of ramifications that's really difficult to understand," said a Google spokesperson, adding: "User privacy needs to be thoughtfully balanced against legitimate business needs
" Likewise tech industry association the Internet Association complained that "policymakers work to correct the inevitable, negative policy and compliance ramifications this last-minute deal will create
" So far no word from Facebook, which put 1.5 billion users on a boat to California back in April in order to avoid Europe's similar data privacy regulations
Don't worry if you are surprised by the sudden news that California, the home of Silicon Valley, has passed a new information privacy law – because everyone else is too
And this being the US political system there is, of course, an entirely depressing reason for that
Another part of the statement by the Internet Association put some light on the issue: "Data regulation policy is complex and impacts every sector of the economy, including the internet industry," it argues
"That makes the lack of public discussion and process surrounding this far-reaching bill even more concerning
The circumstances of this bill are specific to California." I see. So this bill was rushed through? Yes, it was
And what's more it was signed in law on Thursday by Governor Brown just hours after it was passed, unanimously, by both houses in Sacramento
What led lawmakers to push through privacy legislation at almost unheard-of speed? A ballot measure
That's right, since early 2016, a number of dedicated individuals with the funds and legislative know-how to make data privacy a reality worked together on a ballot initiative in order to give Californians the opportunity to give themselves their own privacy rights after every other effort in Sacramento and Washington DC has been shot down by the extremely well-funded lobbyists of Big Tech and Big Cable
Real estate developer Alastair Mactaggart put about $2m of his own money into the initiative following a chance conversation with a Google engineer in his home town of Oakland in which the engineer told him: "If people just understood how much we knew about them, they'd be really worried
" Mactaggart then spoke with a fellow dad at his kid's school, a finance guy called Rick Arney who had previously worked in the California State Senate, about it
And Arney walked him through California's unusual ballot measure system where anyone in the state can put forward an initiative and if it gets sufficient support will be put on the ballot paper at the next election
If a ballot initiative gets enough votes, it becomes law. There have been some good and some bad outcomes from this exercise in direct democracy over the years but given the fact that both Mactaggart and Arney felt that there was no way a data privacy law would make its way through the corridors of power in Sacramento in the normal way, given the enormous influence of Silicon Valley, they decided a ballot measure was the way to go
Beware the policy wonk One other individual is worth mentioning: Mary Stone Ross was a former CIA employee and had been legal counsel for the House of Representatives Intelligence Committee and she also lives in Oakland
Mactaggart persuaded her to join the team to craft the actual policy and make sure it could make it through the system
Together the three of them then spend the next year talking to relevant people, from lawyers to tech experts to academics to ordinary citizens to arrive at their overall approach and draft the initiative
And it is at that point that, to be put in bluntly, the shit hit the fan. Because the truth is that consumers – and especially Californians who tend to be more tech-savvy than the rest of the country given the concentration of tech companies in the state – understand the issues around data privacy rules and they want more rights over it
With the initiative well structured and the policy process run professionally, the ballot measure gained the required number of supporters to get it on the ballot
And thanks to the focus groups and polls the group carried out, they were confident that come November it would pass and data privacy become law through direct democracy
At which point, it is fair to say, Big Internet freaked out and made lots of visits to lawmakers in Sacramento who also freaked out
The following months have seen a scurry of activity but if you want to know why the bill became law in almost record time and was signed by Governor Brown on Thursday all you need to know is this single fact: the deadline for pulling the initiative from November's ballot as last night – Thursday evening – and Mactaggart said publicly that if the bill was signed, he would do exactly that and pull his ballot measure
Privy see You may be wondering why Sacramento was able to get it through unanimously without dozens of Google and Facebook-funded lawmakers continually derailing the effort, especially since it was still a ballot measure
After all, the tech giants could have spent millions campaigning against the measure in a bid to make sure people didn't vote for it
And the truth is that they had already lined up millions of dollars to do exactly that
Except they were going to lose because, thanks to massively increased public awareness of data privacy given the recent Facebook Russian election fake news scandal and the European GDPR legislation, it was going to be very hard to push back against the issue
And it has been structured extremely well – it was, frankly, good law. There is another critical component: laws passed through the ballot initiative are much, much harder for lawmakers to change, especially if they are well structured
So suddenly Big Tech and Sacramento were faced with a choice: pass data privacy legislation at record speed and persuade Mactaggart to pull his ballot initiative with the chance to change it later through normal legislative procedures; or play politics as usual and be faced with the same law but one that would be much harder to change in future
And, of course, they went with the law. And Mactaggart, to his eternal credit, agreed to pull his ballot measure in order to allow the "normal" legislative approach to achieve the same goal
And so the California Consumer Privacy Act of 2018 is now law and today is the first day that most Californians will have heard of it
Sausage making at its finest. Of course, Google, Facebook et al are going to spend the next decade doing everything they can trying to unravel it
And as we saw just last week, lawmakers are only too willing to do the bidding of large corporate donors
But it is much harder to put a genie back in the bottle than it is to stop it getting out
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