From Fake Science
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
TOMORROW: Conservation Commission hosting a well water safety workshop
NOTE: Participants in the well water workshop must preregister with the URI Cooperative Extension Service at (401) 874-4918
Science helps us to understand Charlestown Town Council
Bad Decisions Arise
from Faulty Information, Not Faulty Brain Circuits
Making
decisions involves a gradual accumulation of facts that support one choice or
another. A person choosing a college might weigh factors such as course
selection, institutional reputation and the quality of future job prospects.
But
if the wrong choice is made, Princeton University researchers have found that
it might be the information rather than the brain's decision-making process
that is to blame. The researchers report in the journal Science that erroneous
decisions tend to arise from errors, or "noise," in the information
coming into the brain rather than errors in how the brain accumulates
information.
EDC awards grants for RI solar projects
PROVIDENCE — Rhode
Island may not be a national leader in renewable energy, but the Ocean State is
making progress. The Economic Development Corporation (EDC) recently approved
seven grants totaling $184,334 for several residential and smaller-scale
renewable energy projects.
The awards, announced
April 22, represent the first round of funding from a new program that assists
installers and developers working in the state’s struggling solar-energy
sector. According to the Solar Foundation, Rhode Island ranks fifth out of the six New
England states in solar jobs per capita.
State approves request to expand the amount of nuclear waste stored 20 miles west of Charlestown
Millstone Nuclear Power Plant gets green light to add more casks for
storing spent nuclear fuel.
The Connecticut Siting Council acted a few days early,
granting its tentative approval to Virginia-based Dominion Energy to
vastly expand its nuclear waste storage at its Millstone Nuclear Power Plant in
Waterford, CT, just outside New London.
The Council will make it official at its May 2 meeting, but the
commissioners have voted 7 to 0, with two abstentions, to grant approval.
The two abstaining members are both alternates; the members they stood
in for are expected to also vote “yes” when the formal vote is taken on May 2.
Monday, April 29, 2013
Follow the money
Editor's Note: under Treasurer Gina Raimondo, RI is investing 14% of RI's pension money in hedge funds - TEN TIMES the median of other states. Tom Sgouros' series attempts to explain the implications of Raimondo's risky decision.
What’s the purpose of investing in a hedge fund? Because “hedge fund manager” is almost synonymous with “fabulously wealthy” in the popular press, lots of people think hedge funds are all about high risk and high returns.
What’s the purpose of investing in a hedge fund? Because “hedge fund manager” is almost synonymous with “fabulously wealthy” in the popular press, lots of people think hedge funds are all about high risk and high returns.
Originally, though, hedge funds were thought to provide high
returns simply by being consistent, if dull. The idea was that by “hedging”
risk with investments whose value fluctuates independently from one another, a
good manager could deliver solid but unspectacular results, but do so year
after year.
Since the origination of these funds, more than 40 years ago,
the industry has transformed from a handful of conservative investor funds in a
relative backwater of the investor world to include funds that follow a much
wider variety of strategies, and have trillions of dollars under management. In
the process, the meaning of the term has changes, and these days, it just means
any unregulated investment fund.
Sweet Shallots!
I have a confession.
The caramelized shallots that accompanied my salad greens this week were so
good that I could have eaten them all myself. I love the sweetness of shallots
and they can be found at local farmers market at this time of year, along with
the greens.
Pros and Cons of flood insurance
By
TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI.org News staff
The
state is urging residents, especially those in flood zones, to buy flood
insurance. But is flood insurance good for the environment? Will it be so
expensive that it forces property owners to forgo coverage?
In
an era of more intense weather, heavy rains and violent storms are causing more
flooding and damage to property. Hurricane Sandy, tropical storm Irene and the
flood of 2010 are no longer considered anomalies.
There goes the neighborhood!
Imagine the loud parties this summer
By Will Collette
From the Westerly Tax Assessor database |
The property is located at 16 Bluff Avenue. The former owner, James
M. Benson, originally bought the 10,000 square foot home in May 1996 for $3.5
million.
The house has seven bedrooms and nine full baths. It sits on five and a quarter acres of prime ocean front in Watch Hill.
Sunday, April 28, 2013
Cutting Your Benefits Isn’t the ‘Middle’ Way
The rest of us are being left out of the "entitlement
reform" story.
The federal budget is,
according to many experts, a “political document.” It’s how our political
leaders convey their priorities to the people they serve.
So what’s the
political lesson of Barack Obama’s recent budget plan? He apparently thinks
older people could get by with less.
The Obama budget has
attracted a lot of attention — and controversy — because he’s making a rather
shocking opening offer to the Republican opposition: Let’s cut Social Security
benefits and Medicare spending in the name of shrinking the federal deficit.
Texan Turf War
In the land of prickly pears and scrappy people, Dallas
authorities are demanding that all homeowners plant "traditional"
grass in their yards.
Turf wars can be the silliest of all scuffles, and no place does silly with more zeal than Texas.
For example, the fine
people of Dallas recently fell into a doozy of a turf tussle between the
natives and foreigners — and the foreigners are winning. The out-of-staters,
hailing from such distant lands as Bermuda and St. Augustine, Florida, are not
people, but turf grasses.
Bad Signs
By WENLEY FERGUSON,
MARCI COLE EKBERG and MEG KERR/special to ecoRI.org News
Salt marshes are tidal areas that contain plants tolerant of salt water.
Rhode Island salt marshes are found along the shores of salt ponds, Narragansett Bay, estuarine rivers — such as the Narrow River estuary — and small embayments, such as Allin’s Cove in Barrington. Salt marshes provide nursery grounds and foraging habitat for hundreds of species of fish, shellfish, birds and mammals.
In addition to their habitat value, salt marshes filter out pollutants before they reach coastal waters, and provide a buffer to adjacent developed coastal communities during storms and flooding.
Salt marshes are tidal areas that contain plants tolerant of salt water.
Rhode Island salt marshes are found along the shores of salt ponds, Narragansett Bay, estuarine rivers — such as the Narrow River estuary — and small embayments, such as Allin’s Cove in Barrington. Salt marshes provide nursery grounds and foraging habitat for hundreds of species of fish, shellfish, birds and mammals.
In addition to their habitat value, salt marshes filter out pollutants before they reach coastal waters, and provide a buffer to adjacent developed coastal communities during storms and flooding.
Oh, my aching back!
Every year I see a spike in the number of patients as a result
of the spring season. This is mostly due to the naturally occurring
events of spring… grass growing, flowers emerging, leaves popping, and of
course yard work. It is inevitable; we work just as hard getting the yard
ready for warmer weather as Mother Nature. The only difference is that
Mother Nature has not been sitting on her couch all winter getting out of
shape!
Why is the risk of spinal injury so high in the spring?
For one, we are naturally less active in the winter months for obvious reasons
– less daylight and cold weather. This inactivity deconditions our very
important spinal stabilizers and the large muscles of the legs.
Rep. Walsh reconvenes South County taskforce
Work resumes on wastewater treatment alternatives
News release from Rep. Donna Walsh
One
year ago, representatives of South County town governments, DEM, CRMC and the
RI Builders Association resolved a long-standing impasse and worked out a plan
for new regulations to boost home improvement projects, open the door to new
wastewater treatment technologies and promote efforts to restore and protect
coastal ponds. DEM’s
new regulations took effect in July, 2012.
The
same taskforce that created this new regulatory approach met on April 8 to
review its effects and set out a course of action for the future. “We needed to
see what worked before we can decide what we need to do next,” said Rep. Walsh.
Saturday, April 27, 2013
Astronomy Picture of the Day
The Horsehead Nebula in
Infrared from Hubble
From
NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day
While drifting through
the cosmos, a magnificent interstellar dust cloud became sculpted by stellar winds and radiation to assume a recognizable shape.
Fittingly named
the Horsehead Nebula, it is embedded in the vast and complex Orion Nebula (M42). A
potentially rewarding but difficult object to view personally with a small telescope, the above gorgeously detailed
image was recently taken in infrared light by the orbiting Hubble Space Telescope in honor of the 23rd anniversary of Hubble's launch.
The dark molecular cloud, roughly 1,500 light years distant, is cataloged as Barnard 33 and is
seen above primarily because it is backlit by the nearby massive star Sigma Orionis.
The Horsehead Nebula will slowly shift its apparent shape over the next few
million years and will eventually be destroyed by the high energy starlight.
OMG PD
Drunk Dancing
As Seen on TV: Dancing Field Sobriety Test
A North Kingstown man doesn’t fancy himself much of a dancer,
according to reports. The 40-year-old man was pulled over for speeding and
suspected of driving under the influence, prompting officers to ask him to take
a field sobriety test.
During one of the test’s components, the man allegedly told
officers, “I don’t think I could ever do that dance. I’ve seen it done on TV.” The component in question really wasn’t
much of a dance, however. Known as the “walk and turn,” the component requires
a person to walk in a straight line and then turn.
Don’t get ripped off by Boston Marathon charity scams
Massachusetts Attorney General offers advice to help ensure your donations get to the right place
News release from the Office of Attorney General Martha Coakley
In response to the
Boston Marathon attack, Attorney General Martha Coakley and the Massachusetts
Office for Victim Assistance (MOVA) are providing information about the
resources, services and financial support available to victims of the marathon
bombing.
MOVA and the AG’s
Office have provided several links on their websites to the many services
available to those affected by this tragic event. Both are working
together to coordinate with federal, state, and local providers to ensure
consistent information about the growing resources that are available to
victims. Those resources can be found on their websites at www.mass.gov/mova and
at www.mass.gov/ago.
It could happen
Calculating Tsunami
Risk for the US East Coast
The
greatest threat of a tsunami for the U.S. east coast from a nearby offshore
earthquake stretches from the coast of New England to New Jersey, according to
John Ebel of Boston College, who presented his findings today at the
Seismological Society of America 2013 Annual Meeting.
The
potential for an East Coast tsunami has come under greater scrutiny after a
2012 earthquake swarm that occurred offshore about 280 kilometers (170 miles)
east of Boston. The largest earthquake in the 15-earthquake swarm, most of
which occurred on April 12, 2012, was magnitude (M) 4.0.
The Price of Our Fertilizer Addiction
Compared to the lifetime of grieving ahead for the people of
West, Texas, a few years of reduced crop yields is a small price to pay for
converting from "conventional" to organic farming.
Mushroom cloud from West, Texas fertilizer plant explosion |
My heart aches for the
people of West, Texas, the tiny town where a fertilizer plant recently blew up.
Many of the folks who perished in the blast were heroic volunteer firefighters
who ran into danger instead of away from it.
With 14 dead and 200 injured, and a nearby nursing home, school, and
apartment complex either badly damaged or destroyed, West’s brave citizens have
hard work ahead.
As a nation, we must
prevent a disaster like this from happening again. For starters, we can make
fertilizer plants safer and locate them away from schools and nursing homes from now on.
Short Takes
A round-up
of arcane facts and silly science
By Will
Collette
I save up pieces on odd science and facts that might have some bearing in some remote way on Charlestown. I enjoy them and you never know when you need a topic to meet a deadline for new content on Progressive Charlestown.
I save up pieces on odd science and facts that might have some bearing in some remote way on Charlestown. I enjoy them and you never know when you need a topic to meet a deadline for new content on Progressive Charlestown.
I’ve to
quite a backlog so it’s time to clear them out by sharing them with you.
Let’s
start with…
Make it STOP!!!
I learned a new term to describe one of life’s annoyances – “Earworm.” That’s a tune that gets stuck in your brain that you can’t get out. Among the all-time classics, “Feelings” and “Tie a Yellow Ribbon.”
Researchers at Western Washington State University worked on trying to solve the problem of getting David Bowie’s “Changes,” anything by Frankie Vallee, Abba, Barry Manilow or Celine Dion out of your head.
Friday, April 26, 2013
More Parks and Recreation Activities and Trips for You!
Where the Money Is
America's banks have always been shady.
As foreclosures
Trim our ranks,
The biggest scoundrels
Are still the banks.
Trim our ranks,
The biggest scoundrels
Are still the banks.
The nation’s big banks
are making big profits again. Whew! I was a little worried there for a minute.
During America’s recent financial meltdown we actually lost a few biggies, and plenty more nearly crashed on the rocks.
During America’s recent financial meltdown we actually lost a few biggies, and plenty more nearly crashed on the rocks.
Sandy rattled the entire U.S.
Superstorm Sandy Shook the U.S.,
Literally
When superstorm Sandy
turned and took aim at New York City and Long Island last October, ocean waves
hitting each other and the shore rattled the seafloor and much of the United
States -- shaking detected by seismometers across the country, University of
Utah researchers found.
"We detected
seismic waves created by the oceans waves both hitting the East Coast and
smashing into each other," with the most intense seismic activity recorded
when Sandy turned toward Long Island, New York and New Jersey, says Keith
Koper, director of the University of Utah Seismograph Stations.
"We were able to
track the hurricane by looking at the 'microseisms' [relatively small seismic
waves] generated by Sandy," says Oner Sufri, a University of Utah geology
and geophysics doctoral student and first author of the study with Koper.
"As the storm turned west-northwest, the seismometers lit up."
Our Biggest Terrorist Threat
Senate inaction on guns was inexcusable in the wake of the
Boston Marathon bombing.
By Marc Morial
Acts of terror like
the ones committed at the Boston Marathon are reprehensible and lack moral or
logical explanation. They rock us to our core.
They also unite us in
common purpose. Victims and their families seem to become our own loved ones.
We want to ease their pain. We want to do something to ensure that this doesn’t
happen again. Our togetherness as a nation is often most evident when something
happens that’s meant to break us.
Our local nuke is typical of problems in the nuclear energy industry
Nuclear safety is an oxymoron
By Will Collette
Just 20 miles to the west of
Charlestown sits the Millstone Nuclear Power plant. I have reported regularly on safety
breaches that have
occurred at that plant that were supposed to be corrected by the plant’s
operator, Virginia-based Dominion Resources.
It turns out that Dominion was not
so prompt in addressing problems after all. Plus, it's about to get approval for near permanent storage of 3.6 million pounds of high-level nuclear waste.
Waterford Patch Editor Paul Petrone reported that even though, according to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Millstone has taken longer than “the norm” to correct problems, it is dropping back its level of scrutiny over Millstone to regular levels.
Waterford Patch Editor Paul Petrone reported that even though, according to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Millstone has taken longer than “the norm” to correct problems, it is dropping back its level of scrutiny over Millstone to regular levels.
Thursday, April 25, 2013
Astronomy Picture of the Day
NGC 1788 and the Witch's
Whiskers
This skyscape finds an esthetic balance of interstellar dust
and gas residing in the suburbs of the nebula rich constellation of Orion.
Reflecting the light of
bright star Rigel, Beta Orionis, the jutting, bluish chin of the Witch Head Nebula is at the upper left. Whiskers tracing the
red glow of hydrogen gas ionized by ultraviolet starlight seem to connect
that infamous visage with smaller nebulae, like dusty reflection nebula NGC
1788 at the right.
Strong winds from
Orion's bright stars have also shaped NGC 1788, and likely triggered the
formation of the young stars within. Appropriate for its location, NGC 1788
looks to some like a cosmic bat. The scene spans about 3 degrees on the sky or
6 full Moons.
House Committee Passes Langevin Bill Protecting South County Rivers
Senate
Committee considering matching bill introduced by Senator Reed
WARWICK,
RI – Congressman
Jim Langevin (D-RI) applauded unanimous passage today by the House Committee on
Natural Resources of legislation that would make federal restoration and
conservation resources available to the Pawcatuck River, as well as other South
County and Southeast Connecticut streams.
The
Wood-Pawcatuck Watershed Protection Act, introduced by Langevin in the House
and Senator Jack Reed (D-RI) in the Senate, would pave the way for the rivers
to receive benefits under the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act, which currently does
not cover the South County waterways. This change would not increase federal
spending.
What do we get for our money?
Click to enlarge: RI tax revenue compared to tax breaks |
But nobody really
knows how this $1.7 billion investment is doing for the state because nobody is
paying attention to the money we aren’t getting.
A bill being considered by the House Finance
Committee would remedy that wrong. It’s sponsored by Rep. Teresa Tanzi of South
Kingstown and Reps. Walsh, O’Grady, Valencia and Ferri have each signed on.
Potential boon to Rhode Island’s fried calamari market
Researchers discover Giant Squid is essentially all the same
species, regardless of where they are found
By Will Collette
Scientists
at the University of Copenhagen have made the discovery that the elusive
giant squid, found in all the world’s oceans, is essentially the same creature
regardless of where it is found. Their findings are based on sampling the DNA
from 43 specimens gathered from oceans all over the planet.
Rhode Island is considering the merits of legislation declaring
Rhode Island-style fried calamari with yellow peppers as its Official State
Appetizer, partly to bring attention to the dish and to Rhode Island’s
position as the #1 source for squid on the East Coast.
I asked Rep. Teresa Tanzi (D, District 34-South Kingstown,
Narragansett) for an update on the status of the Fried Calamari bill, and her
answer was “floundering.”
Stopping the Senseless Carnage
Could we just cut back on warfare a little?
It was a confusing
week, dominated by the Boston Marathon bombing, the evil act of two young men
who had been welcomed into this country and had repaid the kindness with
unspeakable cruelty.
Then, for grim comic
relief, letters believed to contain the deadly poison ricin were sent to
President Barack Obama, a U.S. senator, and a local judge. The FBI immediately
arrested a serial letter-writer in Mississippi who is an Elvis Presley
impersonator.
Lawrence and Memorial completes final hurdle before buy-out of Westerly Hospital
Deal
to be closed on June 1
By
Will Collette
I
am happy to see that Westerly Hospital has been saved from imminent closure,
now that they have received all of the state agency approvals they need.
Lawrence & Memorial (L&M) Hospital of Stonington will sign
all the final paperwork to get the keys to Westerly Hospital on June 1.
That’s the same day that Westerly Hospital will close its obstetrics department, now that the RI Health Department has closed the door on retaining that service.
That’s the same day that Westerly Hospital will close its obstetrics department, now that the RI Health Department has closed the door on retaining that service.
While
this is a welcome bail-out, it does not mean that Westerly Hospital is out of
trouble. Under the terms of the deal, L&M is only pledged to keep clinical
services going for two years and to keep Westerly Hospital in operation as an
acute care hospital for five years.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Marriage Equality Wins in the Senate, 26 to 12
Thank you to local Senators Dennis Algiere, Cathie Rumsey,
Sue Sosnowski
By Will Collette
Only two more steps – and two relatively easy ones at that –
and Rhode Island will join the rest of New England in acknowledging the civil
rights of gay couples. The RI Senate passed its version of marriage equality
legislation by a vote of 26 to 12.
Up until the vote, no one really expected
such a wide margin. Indeed, until the small Republican Senate Caucus, led by
Sen. Dennis Algiere (R-Westerly, Charlestown, So. Kingstown) came out in
unanimous support of marriage equality, simple passage was far from a
certainty.
It took the Republicans to shame the on-the-fence Democrats
to join in this historic vote.
Since the Senate version of the bill is slightly different
than the one passed overwhelmingly by the House (51-19), the Senate bill now
goes back to the House for final legislative passage. I predict the victory
margin there will grow.
It will certainly grow by one vote, Donna Walsh’s, because Donna was out-of-state when the first vote took place. As a co-sponsor of the House bill and a long-time staunch marriage equality supporter, I know she will add to the affirmative count.
It will certainly grow by one vote, Donna Walsh’s, because Donna was out-of-state when the first vote took place. As a co-sponsor of the House bill and a long-time staunch marriage equality supporter, I know she will add to the affirmative count.
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