Texas

Resilience System


Farmers Fight to Get River Flowing to Save Businesses

khou.com - July 26, 2013

MATAGORDA COUNTY, Texas --Rice farmers in Matagorda County said they will no longer be able to farm much rice if they don’t get any water within the next two years.

An estimated 200 farmers just southeast of Houston face the same fate.

A canal that was once filled with water is now bone dry. Farmers said it’s the worst drought they’ve ever seen.

12 Things You Should Have at Home in Case of a Hurricane

             

inhabitat.com - by Yuka Yoneda - July 12, 2013

It's already hurricane season - would you be ready if another Superstorm Sandy hit today? If you hesitated for a moment, you might be one of the many who meant to prepare for the next big storm but then just got sucked into the daily grind and forgot. The good news is that there's still time to gather up the essentials so that you'll be ahead of the game for the next hurricane instead of having to fight some lady for the last pack of batteries at Duane Reade. Read on for the 12 important items you should have at home in case of an emergency situation like a serious storm or other natural disaster. . .

Impending Dead Zone Looks to Be a Big One in the Gulf of Mexico

      

Less oxygen dissolved in the water is often referred to as a dead zone? (in red above) because most marine life either dies, or, if they are mobile such as fish, leave the area. / NOAA

marcoislandflorida.com - USA Today - by Dan Vergano - June 19, 2013

Environmental biologists foresee a record-size “dead zone” for the Gulf of Mexico this summer, a New Jersey-sized patch of water deadly to marine life, federal officials announced. 

Seen every year off the Texas and Louisiana coasts, the zone forms largely because of fertilizer runoff from the Corn Belt flowing down the Mississippi, where the nutrients spur the growth of the algal blooms that remove oxygen from the water in the Gulf. The especially large size this year of the predicted zone, perhaps 8,500 square miles, appears to be tied to Midwestern floods that washed more nutrients into the river.

(READ COMPLETE ARTICLE)

How Long Will It Take to Rebuild Hurricane-Impacted Areas? Who will Remain?

12 News KBMT and K-JAC. News, Weather and Sports for SE Texas

Following Hurricane Ike, many towns in Southeast Texas were destroyed or significantly damaged. Inhabitants that had been in these beach communities for generations no longer could afford to rebuild under the economic burdens of new federal and state guidelines. The homes that were rebuilt cost hundreds of thousands of dollars more than the homes that were there before.

Five years later, towns are beginning to re-emerge in Southeast Texas, but with different demographics and new cultures. The attached story and video hint at what is emerging in Southeast Texas, but say nothing about who was displaced, where they are, and how they are doing today.

Getting Serious About a Texas-Size Drought

      

nytimes.com - by Kate Galbraith - April 6, 2013

 . . . “Texas does not and will not have enough water” in a bad drought, the state’s water plan warned last year. More than two dozen communities could run out of water in 180 days, according to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. Looking ahead, the already-dry western half of the state is expected to be hit particularly hard by climate change. . .

. . . Wes Perry, an oilman who doubles as Midland’s mayor, put it this way recently: as valuable as oil and gas are, he said, “we are worthless without water.”

(READ COMPLETE ARTICLE)

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Video - Texas Emergency Medical Task Force Overview

The Emergency Medical Task Force concept in Texas is a mechanism to combine resources from numerous County and State entities to provide a coordinated, efficient, effective medical response in times of emergency.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MCzfsHaUXvI

Texas Emergency Medical Task Force Program

Texas Disaster Medical System

Transcanada Representative Says Pipeline is Benefiting Local Economies, but Cornell University Study Concludes Pipeline Could Cost More Jobs than It Creates

   

12newsnow.com - by Vanessa Holmes - March 13, 2013

A Transcanada representative spoke to more than one hundred Rotary Club members about the pipeline project and how it's benefiting the local economy.

However a Cornell University Study Concludes the pipeline could cost more jobs than it creates, and the economic damage caused by potential spills from the Keystone XL pipeline could far outweigh the benefits of jobs created by the project.

http://us.resiliencesystem.org/keystone-xl-pipeline-could-cost-more-jobs-it-creates#comment-633

http://us.resiliencesystem.org/keystone-xl-pipeline-could-cost-more-jobs-it-creates

http://www.12newsnow.com/story/21635251/local-economy-seeing-impact-from-keystone-xl-pipeline

Texas Prepares

Dr. David Lakey introduces the new video series Surviving Disasters: How Texans Prepare

texasprepares.org

Wildfires, hurricanes, tornadoes and flash floods – these are all common occurrences in Texas. Are you prepared? Watch Surviving Disaster: How Texans Prepare and learn from other Texans who have survived these types of disasters. Then make your plan. It happened to them. It could happen to you.

http://www.texasprepares.org/

MOLD Materials

(Please see attachments below for printed materials) 

Mold & Mildew

Cleaning Up Your Flood-Damaged Home

FEMA 606/July 2007

The Problem With Mold

Mildew and molds are fungi - simple microscopic organisms that thrive anywhere there is a moist environment. Molds are a necessary part of the environment; without them, leaves would not decay and aspects of soil enrichment could not take place. It is their ability to destroy organic materials that makes mold a problem for people.

Mildew (mold in its early stages) and molds grow on wood products, ceiling tiles, cardboard, wallpaper, carpets, drywall, fabric, plants, foods, insulation, decaying leaves and other organic materials. Mold colonies can start to grow on a damp surface within 24 to 48 hours. They reproduce via spores - tiny, lightweight ìseedsî- that travel through the air. Molds digest organic material, eventually destroying the material they grow on, and then spread to destroy adjacent organic material. In addition to the damage molds can cause in your home, they can also cause mild to severe health problems. See the Health Problems From Mold section to check for possible mold related health problems.

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