|
Post by Admin on Sept 24, 2019 15:57:24 GMT
Take Back Oregon!!!
Fire Them Now by Kicking The Bums Out of office for supporting the pollution of Coos Bay and/or ignoring obvious threats to the public's safety.
State Senator Arnie Roblan Champion of Bio-Sludge disposal into the Coos Bay watershed. State Representative Caddy McKeown for taking 5,000.00 from Jordan Cove money!!! State Representative Gary Lief thanks for failing to protect the public's right to engage in recreation safely. Coos County Commissioner Sweet. Oh! How sweet it is took 50,000.00 from Jordan Cove money!!!
|
|
|
Post by south on Sept 24, 2019 17:09:01 GMT
Mother Goose Revised 2019
"There was a crooked man," There was a crooked man, and he walked a crooked mile,
He found a crooked sixpence against a crooked stile;
He bought a crooked cat which caught a crooked mouse,
And they all lived together in a politicians house.
|
|
|
Post by south on Sept 24, 2019 17:22:26 GMT
Theme song for Arnie Carnie
|
|
|
Post by Admin on Sept 25, 2019 4:29:44 GMT
The reasons to take back Oregon are decisions based on bad science and corrupt decision making influenced by taking millions in campaign contributions!!! Coos County Commissioner Sweet accepted 50,000.00 dollars. Oh! how sweet it is too count on his biased vote after taking more money than most Oregonians earn in a year.
Since when is it OK! for public officials to take money and yet not vote to spend a dime to protect the Public's right to Safety by testing the water the State is encouraging you to frolic in with friends and loved ones!
Since when is identifying Blue/Green Algae left up to the lay person? What do you do when the pond scum is not evident but present? I guess Oregon State officials will leave it up to you. Good Luck with keeping your loved ones and pets safe. Bill
Reminder: Seasonal health advisory in effect for Lake Billy Chinook Oregon is a beautiful place to visit but don't go in the water or consume anything taken from the water!!! But if you must go into the water or consume fish taken from contaminated waters make sure you WILL is up to date and you have a current copy of your Prime Directive with you.
PORTLAND, Ore. — The Oregon Health Authority is reminding the public that a precautionary recreational use health advisory remains in effect for Lake Billy Chinook due to cyanobacterial blooms that routinely develop in the lake.
OHA has not received information to confirm there are any cyanobacterial blooms in the lake at this time. However, blooms can develop throughout the season and in areas that are not visually monitored by Jefferson County, Oregon State Parks or the U.S. Forest Service.
Lake Billy Chinook is located about 12 miles west of Madras in Jefferson County. The seasonal advisory, originally issued June 11, will remain in effect through Nov. 1.
Tests done at Lake Billy Chinook since 2015 show that blooms in the lake consistently produce cyanotoxins over OHA’s recreational use health guideline values for people and pets. In the past, OHA would issue and lift advisories on the lake as data were made available. Testing is costly, making it difficult for local water body managers to regularly test the lake during times when blooms occur. This makes it challenging to determine when cyanotoxins are being produced, and if an advisory is needed.
As a result, OHA and local partners determined that a 2019 seasonal advisory for the lake is appropriate. At this time, the OHA Public Health Division is reminding the public of the steps to take to reduce exposure to cyanobacterial blooms and the cyanotoxins that may be present throughout the season. OHA staff will evaluate the effectiveness of this advisory at the end of the 2019 season. Activities to avoid in areas affected by cyanobacterial blooms In areas of the lake where cyanobacterial blooms have been identified or where you believe water is affected by a bloom, avoid swimming, water-skiing, wake-boarding, tubing, and other high-speed water activities. Watch children and pets to be sure they are not swallowing water or coming in contact with cyanobacterial blooms washed up on the shore or dried on rocks. Do not use lake water for drinking as camping-style filters and boiling do not remove the toxins. Enjoy non-water-related activities at Lake Billy Chinook
In affected areas of the lake when there is a bloom, non-water-related activities such as camping, hiking, biking, picnicking and bird-watching can be enjoyed with very little possibility of exposure to cyanotoxins. Certain water-related activities can be safe. These include canoeing, fishing and boating, if boating speeds are kept low to avoid kicking up spray that could be inhaled.
What to look for
Cyanobacterial blooms are not unique to lakes in Oregon. Oregon health officials advise recreational visitors to any water body to always be alert to signs of cyanobacterial blooms because only a fraction of the many lakes and waterways in Oregon are tested by state, federal and local agencies.
Certain water body conditions can help people identify when a bloom may be present. People and their pets should avoid areas where the water is foamy, scummy, thick like paint, pea-green, blue-green or brownish red in color, a thick mat is present, or when bright green cells can be seen suspended in the water column, making the water a brighter shade of green. In areas where blooms are found, people should avoid swallowing water while swimming or inhaling water droplets made during high-speed water activities, such as water-skiing or power-boating. A good rule of thumb when encountering something in the water that doesn’t look familiar: “When in doubt, stay out.”
Symptoms
Exposure to cyanotoxins can be serious and result in a range of symptoms, from those similar to food poisoning such as stomach cramping, diarrhea, nausea and vomiting to more serious symptoms like numbness, tingling, dizziness and shortness of breath that may require medical attention. Although toxins are not absorbed through the skin, people who have skin sensitivities may experience a puffy, red rash at the affected area. Children are most vulnerable to exposure and illness due to their size and level of activity. If you or someone in your family develops any of these symptoms after your visit to an Oregon lake or waterway, contact OHA at 971-673-0440 for health information or to report the illness.
Pets are at risk, too
Over the past several years OHA has received many reports of dog illnesses and even deaths due to exposure to bloom-affected waters in Oregon. Dogs are more likely to have higher exposure to cyanotoxins than humans because they lick cyanobacteria off rocks and off their fur, eat the scum, or drink affected water.
Symptoms of exposure range from lethargy, no appetite and vomiting to drooling, twitching, inability to stand or walk, convulsions and paralysis. Symptoms develop within the first hour or two after exposure and can be deadly. If a pet develops any symptoms, it should be seen by a veterinarian as soon as possible. OHA also takes pet illness reports; call 971-673-0440 for more information.
Other concerns
Drinking water directly from areas of Lake Billy Chinook affected by a cyanobacterial bloom is especially dangerous when toxins are present. Toxins cannot be removed by boiling, filtering or treating water with camping-style filters. Drinking water at campgrounds and day use areas should not be affected, but if you have any questions or concerns, contact campground management or the local health department. Good luck getting information from Oregon's local health departments!!!
People who are not on a well or a public water system and draw in-home water directly from an affected area are advised to use an alternative water source because not all private treatment systems are proven effective in removing cyanotoxins. Oregon is a beautiful place to visit but don't go in the water or consume anything taken from the water!!! Also consider that tribal fish markets located along HWY 84 sell fish that are long lived and taken from highly contaminated State Waters of the Columbia River Basin...
Fish caught from areas where cyanobacterial blooms are present should have fat, skin and organs removed before cooking or freezing, as toxins are more likely to collect in these tissues. Fillets should also be rinsed with clean water.
OHA maintains an updated list of all health advisories on its website that is also available by phone. OHA will update information for Lake Billy Chinook when new data are available. To learn what water bodies are being sampled for the season and whether an advisory has been issued or lifted, visit the Cyanobacteria Blooms website and select “current cyanobacteria advisories,” or call the Oregon Public Health Division toll-free information line at 877-290-6767.
|
|
|
Post by Admin on Oct 3, 2019 23:14:16 GMT
MORE POLLUTION FOR THE SILETZ RIVER, SILETZ BAY and the PACIFIC OCEAN.
Judge Black Harted Bachart in our opinion the Moscow Mitch of the Circuit Court overturned county's aerial ban on spraying vial poisons in Lincoln County...
Lincoln County Circuit Court Judge Sheryl Black Harted Bachart has now ruled that Oregon’s Pesticide Control Act disallows local government regulation of pesticides, including aerial spraying.
“Since the ordinance seeks by its very terms to regulate pesticide use, the county is completely pre-empted under state law from adopting any ordinance regarding pesticide use,” the judge said.[ OREGON'S BAYS ARE DYING BECAUSE OF PEOPLE LIKE JUDGE SHERYL BLACK HEARTED BACHART. WE CAN NO LONGER RECOMMEND EATING CLAMS TAKEN FORM SILETZ BAY!!! If people die from ingesting herbicides and pesticides then Judge Bachart should be prosecuted and sent to prison. According to conversations with representatives of the Lincoln County Health Department consumers of Siletz River water have died from environmental source cancers. She is now our leading contender of Crash Test Dummy of the year award presented each year by, "Take Oregon Back"!!! Judge Bachart rules “close, but no legal grounds to live…’
Members of Lincoln County Community Rights were turned back in their efforts to join a nationwide movement to give the natural environment the status of being a living thing…similar, if not identical, to the rights of human beings.
A group called Lincoln County Community Rights, an offshoot of the group that convinced a majority of Lincoln County voters to ban pesticide spraying on local forest lands, claimed that the very life of the Siletz River watershed is threatened by timber companies that were clear cutting the forests whose waters flow into the Siletz River. The group contends that accelerated timber harvesting violates the very life-giving ecology of the watershed, thereby threatening wildlife on the ground and in the waters that flow from the watershed.
Judge Sheryl Black Harted Bachart admitted that the concept of a watershed having the status of a living organism was unusual, she none-the-less determined that such a finding would be better affixed to the efforts of the Community Rights organization. She then ruled that any personhood attributable to a given area of ground is unchartered legal territory. However such findings that the Earth is a person – a mechanism that creates life – has been adopted in Ecuador and a number of other countries around the world.
|
|
|
Post by Admin on Oct 3, 2019 23:46:38 GMT
|
|