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Showing posts with label Communities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Communities. Show all posts

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Wildfires threaten Texas communities

A complex of wildfires 70 to 80 miles west of Fort Worth around and south of Possum Kingdom Reservoir had burned about 32,000 acres and destroyed an undetermined number of homes Sunday, said Texas Forest Service spokesman Marq Webb. Another 31 homes had been lost to the fires as of Saturday night. Subdivisions in the area were evacuated Sunday, as well as the 70 residents of the Caddo community and the 750 who live in Strawn, Webb said.

A grass fire in southwestern Austin damaged at least 10 homes and put as many as 10 others in imminent threat Sunday. The fire burned 30 to 40 acres in the Oak Hill section of the capital city before state helicopters lifting large buckets filled from nearby lakes dropped water on burning grass and homes.

Two four-engine C-130 aircraft later joined the effort, and the once-dense column of black smoke had lessened significantly as the contained fire burned close to the ground. Nearby major roads were reopened.

Austin Mayor Lee Leffingwell said the fire is contained but not yet under control. Fire Chief Rhoda Kerr said the conditions are still extremely favorable for more fires to occur, because it

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Monday, April 4, 2011

Communities work to unclog congested roads

By Scott Olson, Getty Images

Drivers navigate through morning rush hour in Chicago, one of the most congested cities in the U.S.

EnlargeCloseBy Scott Olson, Getty Images

Drivers navigate through morning rush hour in Chicago, one of the most congested cities in the U.S.

Many strategies focus not on increasing the capacity of streets and highways but on cutting the number of vehicles on the road.

"When you reduce the number of people on the roads, it's like adding a virtual lane," says Kevin Green, executive director of the non-profit Clean Air Campaign in Atlanta, which works to reduce congestion. "It doesn't cost anything, doesn't pollute your air, and it's immediate."

ALTERING HABITS: Workers deal with commute2010: Metro areas' traffic congestion up 11%Green's group helped spur a 20% increase in alternative forms of commuting, including a big jump in telecommuting. Among other strategies:

•Non-commercial car-sharing, which exploits the fact that most cars sit idle 90% of the time, is catching on in some communities. It's especially effective for older people who own a car but can't or prefer not to drive. Younger people use the car when they need it and make sure the seniors get to appointments.

•Microsoft's bus service for its employees, launched in the Seattle area in 2007, is the city's third-largest bus system, says Alan Pisarski, author of Commuting in America. "It seems to me that the employers, especially high-tech employers who are much more accustomed to accommodating their employees, that this would be a natural thing for them to jump into."

•High-Occupancy Toll (HOT) lanes, in which single-occupant vehicles pay a toll to use some lanes of expressways, are gaining popularity, says Jack Finn, senior vice president at HNTB, an engineering and construction firm based in Kansas City, Mo.

•Drivers are using in-vehicle GPS navigation systems to skirt logjams. Chicago, one of the most congested cities, is No. 1 for use, says service provider TeleNav. Rounding out the top five: Los Angeles, Dallas, Atlanta and Houston.

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Friday, April 1, 2011

Latino Communities Angered Obama Hasn't Stopped Deportations

Associated Press

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WASHINGTON -- Hispanic families and immigrant advocates criticized President Barack Obama Thursday for failing to keep campaign promises to change the U.S. immigration system.

The critics questioned Obama's recent comment that he could not use his executive order powers to suspend deportations because doing so "would not conform with my appropriate role as president." Obama made the comment at a town hall organized by Univision TV network.

The statement has received a lot of attention in immigrant and some Latino communities. Hispanics voted heavily for Obama in 2008 and some have felt he has let Latino supporters down by failing to move an immigration bill providing legal status to some illegal immigrants, while deporting record numbers of immigrants, many of them Hispanics.

Eva Millona, executive director of Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Coalition, cited Obama's campaign promise made on July 13, 2008 at a National Council of La Raza conference.

"When communities are terrorized by ICE immigration raids, when nursing mothers are torn from their babies, when children come home from school to find their parents missing, when people are detained without access to legal counsel, when all that is happening, the system just isn't working and we need to change it," Obama said in the speech at the 2008 NCLR conference which is captured in video on the YouTube page of his campaign arm, Organizing for America.

The administration argues that it has focused on arresting, detaining and deporting immigrants who are serious criminal and can't ignore people who are in the country illegally when Immigration and Customs Enforcement encounters them.

Cecilia Munoz, a White House deputy assistant to the president, said in a conference call with reporters that the White House does not believe the broken immigration system allows the president to choose not to enforce certain laws. There are always going to be unfortunate examples of families being separated and painful events in immigrant communities, but administrative solutions are not feasible or do-able on a large scale, she said.

"At end of day we feel the answer to this problem is a legislative answer and we are working every day to reach the day when the president can sign an immigration reform that can fix this problem," Munoz said.

On that call, Labor Secretary Hilda Solis announced her agency and the Homeland Security Department have signed an agreement that essentially says Immigration and Customs Enforcement will refrain from conducting raids or doing other immigration enforcement activities at most work places if there is an ongoing Labor Department investigation at the business.

The issue of children who are U.S. citizens being separated from parents has come into sharper focus in recent weeks after a young New York girl was forced to leave the country with her grandfather. They had been in Guatemala and were returning when the grandfather was detained at an airport and denied entry to the U.S. because of a decades-old violation on his record. Her parents were waiting for the 4-year-old in New York but she was made to leave rather than be united with her parents. She was recently reunited with her parents.

In a separate incident, Maria Bolanos said at the news conference she called Prince George's County, Md., law officers after a fight with her husband, hoping for help. Instead they turned her over to Immigration and Customs Enforcement and now she is fighting a deportation order.

"I don't want to be separated from my daughter," said Bolanos, who is from El Salvador.

Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill., said the president "is only looking at one aspect of the law" by choosing not to suspend deportations by directing his administration to find ways to postpone them.

"We are asking for balance and for consideration of immigrants with deep, long-term equities in this country and for temporary relief until we are able to get legislation passed and implemented," Gutierrez said.

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