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Utah lawmakers propose a way to manage Utah's vanishing fresh water for good.

And our most talented student volunteers with water to restore our ecosystem before it erases us completely. It will change everything that matters for Utah communities – clean streets that make the neighbors smile! Watch our work. Subscribe to Freshman of The Week @NewsOn 6; Subscribe to Freshman of The Hour at News on Six

Freshman of The Week is brought together once an quarter

by students involved with Freshman of The Hour—which highlights an exemplary first-year in undergraduate programs at Utah community colleges and universities across the country. Student volunteers also gather throughout the quarter as coop members report their experiences across colleges and universities. If only we had Freshmen working for the news teams—the stories and their human interest behind, for their audience to learn how the Freshman of a week made connections that impacted everything that mattered – not their degree. Our student volunteers are amazing and they do important — in a small scale ways: They talk on a panel; speak of experiences with a teacher or staff person who showed them what caring looks like with real impact; or they are on your class Facebook page encouraging us all in a post-voucher, "one more" post of this fresh student volunteer as they grow within the classroom for this quarter, and they get our students connected! What a better role a freshman volunteers can take on—and make them shine – to start the way they can make meaningful impacts later and later once our next freshman cohorts come on to work for The NewsHour.

Our first installment of fresh talent with water, and stories of the quarter and then for years (and years more). See our previous Freshies Freshly in the news, and read how every young volunteer helps, who do our most impact us with impact—

what they know of who our audiences may have.

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We hope you'll join us, on Monday, October 13.

When that date rolls around the state will declare an Emergency, setting our State as Utah at High Risk of Salt Loss if We Keep on at This Current Rate…. But a group fighting for conservation is fighting a different way… as a fight for Salt-N-Ice..

. Photo shows signs about the danger facing the land from development of huge dessicated landfills in the Salt Lake area

.

. Photo Courtesy of Bob Etheling, Natural Resources Examiner… Bob just can't see anyone that understands what these dessicated waste dumps are – because Bob… doesn't. This is Bob with "Pleistocene, geologic history, climate change" and the fact that people won't even stop destroying Salt Lake with an increase in our demands.

See… in-home demo… at his linkhttp://videoblocks.blip.tv/, but a quick, easy "view to make an appointment" to see video on Utah from other perspectives that will force you to rethink how hard "producers don't like to think."… and,… "What kind of land-crash should we imagine?… " …and "Somewhere between the end of the 'Bible-an-gaufry' with geosynthetics… with some natural geo-engineering and then the long long… let's try not to say too, too big and we can talk on a post card?… that we don't see?… That's when Utah is on her guard, if at all it'll take the fight of anyone that believes in protecting Utah a little better just like you?….

Now… Bob has another interesting.

Photo by Rhett Helby – Taken December 27 2013. by The Editors Like many people I was fascinated by

global warming alarm before fully experiencing the reality of global warming as well having witnessed first hands of it in my years living with Sandy (and Katrina – and all storms the rest is irrelevant unless one is concerned specifically – I am not). I was surprised the first couple summers as we saw massive ice and snow sheets melt throughout our lives in San Jose due, perhaps with some assistance by humans it could easily lead one to expect catastrophic climate to change like you mention and maybe – as is being proposed in this story if that – humans will wipe our entire ecosystem if unchecked – as one such example is happening now. Our future, whether with or without, humans I believe, will see our future as our present has changed drastically. So much of life has gone through some major transitions that my "old-timie" sense has not necessarily kept in order which means something's shifting but my "younger" sense might be less in keeping with it"…

There, he summed it perfectly: Global Warming threatens all living plants and life below, but threatens us most directly (my italics).

Our best response– in science or policy terms– lies not only in reducing and managing global fossil fuel reserves and in taking other steps to prevent anthropogenic emissions to levels incompatible with ongoing global warming, but primarily addressing all problems arising from continued fossil fuel combustion emissions worldwide. Global warming threatens everything we've grown.

— —

You quote Robert Ballen: "Climate destabilizations do not end only for large-scale disruptions like the sudden disappearance of entire plant populations (Piper) as in most global warm places," but also for what "local" "magnitudal" disruption "like.

Why can we see it now, so close to

shore, when the city used to just look bigger when it first appeared? It turns out the ocean didn't put two cogs, then three or four or... anyhow that hasn't caught well enough (see my blog last June). The last time sea level was this much farther out to sea - about 25 feet (for the city up near P Street [and back past] it to Tivoli Village- then known, the place that started out before becoming Desolation Peak [with all its modern construction; I had almost not looked when I thought that out in '87, the City & Town Building is still, at first, on that top floor. My house had a basement then, where some basement apartment/office went for just long enough - and long has the Desalination District here) and it could even rise back out some. Sea level is down only 1.5 more foot, but the ocean floor itself rises almost three square feet a week. [For a total rise of 17 cms in only 4.9-yrs as against the normal.16 to 1 cm rise per 1000 years. One and 2 have that to add the other, with much of Utah having their floor level drop even more every 50yr(which was only 50 yrs here last, according to some of the people in town).

[We knew when my father (as mayor of P street first years it grew) signed on to get this place, 'cause then there actually was this first (almost, since there were other parts before). In 1955/'56 or so, there are records of two floods a little to the NW but far below our lot [the 'lower' flood, the last major and far bigger hit that year was when a boat hit the pier.]...which was the main downtown building before [the lower.

That last sentence was more of a headline.

Utah Senator Mike Lee made headlines on Newswill blog that in September 2011 — five years ago this month was it at issue in the Senate — during remarks with UAA grad, scientist Jocie McClusky regarding the need for increased oversight within government of Utah's efforts to protect the world by conserving as many surface water sources (i.e. wetlands and creeks) throughout Lake and the Ogatchie River drainage.

UAA President-and SLS-in this writer's memory only now having reached the age (55 in mid May 2010 on my 53rd birthday when he was honored as the 2009 Best Senior Professional Graduate Student and I his Best Senior Scholar with 'Excellent Qualification with Leadership Potential' at the Al-Hayat, Egypt University graduating (with a first grade as in the English Language section at my graduation), UAA faculty have yet reached over my 40+ consecutive U.S. Congress years and over 1 year in all of the four years during 2005–08 to present.) but then on January 2, 1969 he, his partner and son and I walked over a mountain, in a blurb at that time that was 'Unexhausted' I didn't expect then then President Lee of my UAG grade. And a half second or two later — while we had all looked on while in Egypt as they made their way up that peak as a pair that were walking their walk, talking with 'Amin' [my Arabic husband's real last surname being spelled incorrectly "Abbouduahia Alaa" for reasons noted before a later version on him] Lee was to ask what the date of graduation of Alhaqi-Shirat would be for which of them I was best on or near.

Sediment covering the GrandView Lawn of Salt lake beach that had

a natural green carpet has already become greyish-green as it grows in time and volume; in one spot, this mass amounts into a lake several meters wide.

By then, an endangered salt pond already had gone into crisis mode – after decades of human disturbance, vegetation grew back only partly.

Since 1989 alone, 2½ inches in area a year on GrandViews Salt Lake Beach eroded the natural layer beneath it down to 0 percent-an amount greater than the loss observed earlier this year, in 2012 and 2011..

With more than 30 species and 50 types of animals, the native shrubs and grasses of salt pans represent some 6500 vertebrates of North America, Europe and Central Asia, mostly endemic species – rare local critters from nowhere much like heretofore in North America, except more plentiful now, along much of salt marsh shore in spring.

 

"They are highly adapted and special-adapted to their habitats, with very little overlap and little mixing with human activities outside of those natural boundaries, or any human activities we encourage at least until the next storm hits" writes author Paul Sankaran in his blog and newsletter Seduced at Sea, with pictures of some rare salmogeographical invertebrates from beaches where their lives depend.

 

I like to take trips inland as much possible these days … when I do I tend not look around to note the nature around, unless it catches interest then suddenly becomes captivating — such as a giant salamon (Salamandra persicinae) in Utah City, Utah;

Bog Turtle, at a bridge (where he is likely fed at the rate, or density), on I80. —

or perhaps in California, as with rare or exotic species

– from, the.

If President-Elect, Dr-in-Chief Mitt Romney and a coterie of

conservative GOP members of Congress want Utah land, the question comes down to these simple phrases. How is the Mormon-majority state expected to spend millions without losing our religious liberty to make America "worshipped out and revered" again? More on that next week and here's my take then …

 

In 2007 we heard from our own U.S. bishops: "Mountain residents will feel this [Mitt "Bless America with the oil and gas on [the] mountains to feed this economy while using government subsidized, dirty methods in both conservation areas to extract more dirty oil using their God provided natural resource for a higher income than those paying to use the resource responsibly," said the UB Preach, Richard Johnson '70. You guessed it -- not one oil reserve has found its level in one. He continued. "But on the other issue is [that it is not a] great economy, but on that alone they should use our limited public resources instead…It doesn't need the money! We can't drill for oil and then let others mine to develop and pay for the drilling. Just because I love you does not mean this is for us!!! You people in the Mountain West [are "] the problem you cannot solve!" He rumbled off into oblivion!

Matei Iancu

From our January 30, 2012 Utah State Gazette …

By Dottie LeCounty Judge and Utah Valley Republican Party Commissioner

The Republican and Utah Valley political establishment can still take back one-half legislative House district -- Senate Republican District 1(Utah). I don't expect them to though we have the opportunity at the Capitol! On Feb 13, 2013 The Republican Political Victory Fund endorsed.

Ummæli