Folsom Dam Raise Project groundbreaking, at the Folsom Point Boat Launch near Dike 8, 21JAN2020. In a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers directed project the Folsom Dam is going to be raised as part of a plan to both increase water storage and prevent future flooding.
Washington National Guard’s Homeland Response Force toured the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Western Regional Center in Seattle: “The information provided by these resources is critical to anticipating weather’s effects on hazardous material incidents and our response operations during an incident.”-Sergeant First Class James Peters
Washington National Guard also showed-off its disaster response communications equipment, along with AT&T’s First Net.
15 personnel heading to operations with U.S. Africa Command (USAfriCom) went through humanitarian aid training at Kelley Barracks/Helenen-Kaserne: “We provide training to units like AfriCom to prepare them for when they might be called to provide humanitarian assistance to help the allies and partners that are within their area of operations as opposed to other military operations which are their main mission.”-Jenny Caruso, Humanitarian Assistance Response Training manager
It was revealed that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers held a training session on how to deal with a “hypothetical scenario” with Youghiogheny River Lake, in Pennsylvania.
Puerto Rico’s Air National Guard’s (PRANG) 156th Mission Support Group are the ‘gateway’ for all U.S. military support entering the territory for quake relief. The above pic shows PRANG personnel explaining the Joint Reception, Staging, Onward Movement and Integration process at Muñiz Air National Guard Base.
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) conducted ‘door-to-door’ wellness checks in Yauco, Puerto Rico, 19JAN2020.
Exercise ‘Sudden Response’, involving military units located at Killeen, Austin and Fort Hood, Texas. The exercise preps military responders for equipment deployment, life-saving operations and web-based command and control.
Between July and September 2019 the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, NASA, and other federal agencies, conducted studies of pyrocumulonimbus (PyroCbs) clouds. The PyroCbs (pyro means fire) are formed by intense wildfires, NASA calls them “the fire-breathing dragon of clouds.”
PyroCbs were first identified in the late 1990s, while scientists were trying to find out what was causing clouds in the upper atmosphere when the ‘natural’ weather conditions weren’t correct for such formations and there was no volcanic activity. Since then studies show such dragon clouds can pump as much particulates into the upper atmosphere as a volcano: “They act as giant chimneys, transporting smoke from the ground to high altitudes. Intense PyroCbs can inject smoke into the lower stratosphere, where it can persist for weeks or months.”-Dave Peterson, Naval Research Laboratory, one of the first meteorologists to notice the PryoCbs phenomenon in the late 1990s
The data collected from the 2019 FIREX-AQ missions is now being studied to see how cloud water droplets and ice particles change in the presence of smoke.
On 12JAN202, the USAF at Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama, evacuated personnel on at least five C-130 aircraft due to an impending storm. The operation is known as a Weather Evacuation (WX Evac).
Puerto Rico has deployed more than 650 of its own National Guard personnel, in response to the ongoing earthquakes, building tent cities that can house thousands of survivors.
Tent cities have been established in the municipalities of Yauco, Ponce, Peñuelas, Guanica and Guayanilla. Each can provide shelter for up to 1-thousand-5-hundred people, with showers, toilets and laundry facilities.
“Our Ohio Air National Guard Airmen at the 200th RED HORSE Squadron are ready and anxious to support earthquake relief efforts in Puerto Rico. This is what we do.”-Major General John C. Harris Jr., Ohio adjutant general
What Major General Harris said is true, but in the past each state’s National Guard took care of their own, deploying National Guard units across state lines might be unprecedented: “Being able to support another state for domestic response is exciting.”-Colonel Michael Hrynciw, commander 200th RED HORSE Squadron
Ohio is sending its Air National Guard’s 179th Airlift Wing and 200th RED HORSE Squadron to Puerto Rico.
They’re taking ‘beddown units’ which contain organic power and potable water (potable means you can use it in a cooking pot for consumption). Each beddown unit can hold 150 people.
In 2017, the 200th Red Horse deployed to the U.S. Virgin Islands in response to Hurricane Irma.
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Failed State: A state/country whose political/economic system has become so weak that the government is no longer in control.
The state of New York activated it’s National Guard, not in response to natural disasters in The Empire State, but to response to the recent earthquakes in Puerto Rico.
New York’s 105th Airlift Wing preps pallets of equipment for flight to Puerto Rico, 13JAN2020.
12JAN2020, New York’s 105th Airlift Wing personnel hitch a large generator to a dump-truck, to be flown to Puerto Rico.
According to Stars and Stripes, Puerto Rico has 650 of its own National Guard personnel working full time building tent cities for now homeless Puerto Ricans. As of 13JAN2020, they’ve distributed more than 72-thousand bottles of water and 30-thousand meals.
It should be a sign of failed state-ism when the governor of a state can spend his constituent’s state tax-dollars helping an area of the country that the national government should be dealing with.
Failed State: A state/country whose political/economic system has become so weak that the government is no longer in control.
In what I call Apocalypse according to NASA, the PBS Nova episode called The Planets: Inner Worlds reveals the true cause of climate change; our Sun, and we can’t stop it. “All of the planets are changing, including our own Earth and as it evolves life will have to change with it.”-Anjali Tripathi, Harvard University
“We have to realize that as stable as we think the Sun is and permanent we think the habitability of the Earth is, it’s not that way.”-Jonathan Lunine, Cassini-Huygens