Flood Waters Receding After Storm Batters Western Alaska

 

Floodwaters were starting to recede in some parts of western Alaska that were battered by the worst storm in a half century, leaving debris flung by the powerful Bering Sea waves on beaches and in seaside communities.

he storm, the remnant of Typhoon Merbok, was weakening Sunday as it moved north from the Bering Strait into the Chukchi Sea off Alaska’s northwest coast. But it remained a hazardous threat to smaller communities along Alaska’s northwest coast, said National Weather Service meteorologist Kaitlyn Lardeo.

“This guy is going to hang out in the Chukchi Sea for the next few days and just rapidly weaken because it’s so stationary,” she said.

The storm’s crashing waves caused widespread flooding and damage along 1,000 miles (1,609 kilometers) of the Alaska coastline, Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy said.


It was also massive system — big enough to cover the mainland U.S. from Nebraska west to the Pacific Ocean and from Canada to Texas — that has influenced weather systems as far away as California, where a rare late-summer storm was dropping rain on the northern part of the state.

There have been no reports of injuries or deaths in Alaska, the governor said during a Saturday evening news conference. However, roads have been damaged and state officials are assessing potential damage to seawalls, water and sewage systems, airports, and ports.

Several communities reported the force of the incoming water, often propelled by winds gusting near 70 mph (113 kph), knocked some homes off their foundations. One house in Nome floated down a river until it got caught under a bridge.

Many homes were flooded and about 450 residents on the western coast sought refuge in shelters, with more than half of them at a school in Hooper Bay, where they ate processed moose donated by village residents. Others rode out the storm on higher ground outside their communities.

The former typhoon caused the highest water level at Nome — 11.1 feet (3.38 meters) above the normal tide level — since a large storm in 1974, and other communities might have surpassed levels seen in 48 years ago.

“One of the big features of this storm was the wide swath of significant damage,” said Rick Thoman, a climate specialist with the International Arctic Research Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

“So, did it live up to the hype? I would say absolutely,” he said of the storm, which had officials urging people to prepare days before it hit.

Becca Luce and her family live about a half mile from the Bering Sea coast in Nome.

“We have a pretty good view of the ocean from our living room,” she said. “We could see the waves crashing from our window and going over the road.”

Nome itself was inundated, including Front Street, the city’s main business thoroughfare that also doubles as the finish line for the Iditarod Trail Sled-Dog Race. The city’s mini-convention center, which also serves as Iditarod headquarters for the end of the race each March, was surrounded by water.

One downtown restaurant, the Bering Sea Bar and Grill, was destroyed by fire Saturday night, but the cause and whether it was related to the storm is not yet known, said interim city manager Bryant Hammond.

The receding water revealed the detritus left in the streets and yards, including trash, organic debris, rocks and asphalt, Hammond said. Cleanup was to start immediately.

Part of a highway was washed out in Nome, forcing residents to use a bypass to reach the community of Council, adding up to 15 miles (24 kilometers) to the 72-mile (116-kilometer) trip, he said.

“Another major concern is that freeze-up is near, and all of this damage to the roads will need to be repaired before the month ends,” Luce said, using the local term for the onset of winter, which is in October in many parts of Alaska. “And it’s hard to say if that will be possible, especially for the remote village villages without as many resources as Nome has.”

Dunleavy, who issued a state disaster declaration Saturday and is considering seeking a federal disaster, said state officials intend to get communities up and running again as soon as possible.

“We just have to impress upon our federal friends that it’s not a Florida situation where we’ve got months to work on this,” he said. “We’ve got several weeks.”

The rain in Northern California helped firefighters increase containment on the biggest wildfire in the state so far this year. The Mosquito Fire in the Sierra Nevada foothills northeast of the capital of Sacramento was 34% contained after downpours early Sunday. More rain was expected, which fire spokesman Scott McLean called a mixed blessing.

“It did help a bit to stifle that aggressive fire,” McLean said. “But we’re going to have new safety issues now with all the mud that’s out there. And the ground moisture could cause some of those damaged trees to fall over.”

An average of a quarter inch (2 centimeters) of rain fell overnight across Marin, Napa and Sonoma counties north of San Francisco, with more than double that amount recorded in some mountain areas, the National Weather Service said.

Winds gusting up to 40 mph (64 kph) were forecast Sunday along Northern California coastal areas and at higher elevations in the Sierra Nevada. Gusts that strong can blow down branches and drought-stressed trees and cause power outages, warned weather service meteorologist Ryan Walbrun. He said thunderstorms were expected on and off until at least Monday, making for slick roads during the morning commute.

 

 

Source: Voice Of America

 

New Atlas of Bird Migration Shows Extraordinary Journeys.

 

A bay-breasted warbler weighs about the same as four pennies, but twice a year makes an extraordinary journey. The tiny songbird flies nearly 4,000 miles (6,437 kilometers) between Canada’s spruce forests and its wintering grounds in northern South America.

“Migratory birds are these little globetrotters,” said Jill Deppe, the senior director of the migratory bird initiative at the National Audubon Society.

A new online atlas of bird migration, published on Thursday, draws from an unprecedented number of scientific and community data sources to illustrate the routes of about 450 bird species in the Americas, including the warblers.

The Bird Migration Explorer mapping tool, available free to the public, is an ongoing collaboration between 11 groups that collect and analyze data on bird movements, including the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center, the U.S. Geological Survey, Georgetown University, Colorado State University, and the National Audubon Society.

For the first time, the site will bring together online data from hundreds of scientific studies that use GPS tags to track bird movements, as well as more than 100 years of bird-banding data collected by USGS, community science observations entered into Cornell’s eBird platform, genomic analysis of feathers to pinpoint bird origins, and other data.

“The past twenty years have seen a true renaissance in different technologies to track bird migrations around the world at scales that haven’t been possible before,” said Peter Marra, a bird migration expert at Georgetown University who collaborated on the project.

The site allows a user to enter a species — for instance, osprey — and watch movements over the course of a year. For example, data from 378 tracked ospreys show up as yellow dots that move between coastal North America and South America as a calendar bar scrolls through the months of the year.

Or users can enter the city where they live and click elsewhere on the map for a partial list of birds that migrate between the two locations. For example, ospreys, bobolinks and at least 12 other species migrate between Washington, D.C. and Fonte Boa, Brazil.

As new tracking data becomes available, the site will continue to expand. Melanie Smith, program director for the site, said the next phase of expansion will add more data about seabirds.

Washington, D.C. resident Michael Herrera started birdwatching about four months ago and was quickly hooked. “It’s almost like this hidden world that’s right in front of your eyes,” he said. “Once you start paying attention, all these details that were like background noise suddenly have meaning.”

Herrera said he’s eager to learn more about the migratory routes of waterbirds in the mid-Atlantic region, such as great blue herons and great egrets.

Georgetown’s Marra hopes that engaging the public will help spotlight some of the conservation challenges facing birds, including loss of habitat and climate change.
In the past 50 years, the population of birds in the U.S. and Canada has dropped nearly 30%, with migratory species facing some of the steepest declines.

 

 

Source: Voice Of America

 

President attends Mass in honour of 100th anniversary of Agostinho Neto

Luanda – Angolan head of State João Lourenço is participating in a Mass held in honour of the centenary of the first president of Angola, Agostinho Neto.

Also attending the Church service in Catete town, Luanda province, the Vice-President of Republic Esperança da Costa, National Assembly Speaker Carolina Cerqueira,  First Lady Ana Dias Lourenço, the widow of the founder of the Nation Maria Eugénia Neto.

Presided by Bishop Dom Afonso Nunes, leader of the Tocoista Church, the Sunday Mass is also being attended by the members of Executive, politicians and faithful from various religious congregations.

The programme is arranged by the Inter-Ecclesial Angola Commission.

Neto’s figure was exalted in recognition of his struggle for the independence of Angola and the oppressed peoples throughout the 60s until 1979, the time of his death.

Praises were made for the improvement of the lives of Angolans, peace, harmony and reconciliation of the whole nation.

In memory of the 100th anniversary of Neto, the Angolan Government has carried out various political and cultural activities in recognition of his achievements in favour of the development and well-being of the people.

António Agostinho Neto, born in Ícolo e Bengo, Luanda, on September 17, 1922, was a staunch defender of material and spiritual rights, dignity and freedom of the Angolan people, Africa and the world.

He died in Moscow, Former USSR, on September 10, 1979, victim of illness.

Physician and writer, he proclaimed national independence on November 11, 1975.

He was part of the generation of African students who would play a decisive role in the independence of their countries in what became known as the Portuguese Colonial War.

He was arrested by the International Police and Defence of the State (PIDE), of Portugal, and deported to Tarrafal, in Cabo Verde, after which he took up residence in Portugal, from where he fled into exile.

He took the helm of the Board of  MPLA, of which he has been honorary president since 1960.

On the 17th of September, Angola celebrates the Day of the National Hero and the Founder of the Nation, commemorating the day on which Agostinho Neto was born and his funeral ceremonies were held.

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

 

Official suggests review of Strategic Plan for Urban Waste Management

 

Luanda – The chairperson of Associação Nação Verde (Green Nation Association) Nuno Cruz recommended a review of the Strategic Plan for Urban Waste Management to ensure a better quality of life for society and environmental protection.

The strategic guidelines provided for in this plan are based on the projection of future waste production in Angola, which is estimated, for 2025, at 8.6 million tons/year, equivalent to a daily capture of 0.81 kilogrammes/inhabitant per day.

These values, according to the plan, will represent an increase of 150 percent, compared to 2012, which was estimated at 75.

Nuno Cruz was speaking in Kinanga commune, urban district of Ingombota, ahead of the world cleaning day, during which he recommended other waste management policies as the current plan is out of date due to the country’s reality.

According to Nuno Cruz, the problem of poor waste management deserves special attention because of malaria and other diseases that claim lives.

Nuno Cruz points to the need to put an end to the existence of open-air ditches due to the danger it poses.

To prevent the waste from ending up in the sea, Nuno Cruz says that the outlets of the drainage ditches should also be closed with metal nets and conduct periodic maintenance.

According to him, it is also necessary to adapt other waste disposal practices, reinforcing inspection actions in small and large commercial stores.

“The solution to waste management entails combined effort, with the integrated involvement of the whole society, such as churches, civil society associations, teachers and all other actors”, he said.

In his view, people should be constantly sensitized, alerted and informed about the useful life of a plastic to degrade and its harm, in order to prevent these practices that have nothing to do with people’s welfare.

In order to attack the problem from its root, Nuno Cruz called for the need to place garbage containers in every corner of the cities, coupled with education, awareness and therefore the improvement of infrastructure

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

 

Agostinho Neto honoured in ecumenical mass

 

Luanda – A mass in homage to the first President of Angola, António Agostinho Neto, was held this Sunday, in the town of Catete, Luanda.

Organized by the Inter-Church Commission, the event joined more than a thousand believers from different religious denominations recognized by the State and representatives of the civil society.

 

For a little over four hours, the participants sang songs of praise and honoured the character of the Founder of the Nation, who was born on 17 September 1922 and died of illness in the former Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) on 10 September 1979.

 

During her intervention in the act, Reverend Deolinda Dorcas Tecas highlighted the trajectory of António Agostinho Neto and his facets as politician, physician and poet.

 

She appealed to the Church to continue praying for the Angolan Nation, underlining that it is difficult to speak about Agostinho Neto’s works.

 

Bishop Gaspar João Domingos, of the United Methodist Church, presented a brief summary of the life and work of Angola’s first president.

 

He considered Neto the greatest character in the history of Angola in the 20th century, stressing that his life cannot be summarized in “small and trivial paragraphs”.

 

In his preaching, Tocoist Bishop Afonso Nunes appealed to Angolans to be generous and faithful to the principle of truth, and discouraged quarrels.

 

He recommended respect for the authorities and for elderly people, as well as the valuation of the ancestral culture and other values taught by António Agostinho Neto.

 

He asked the Angolan Church to continue working in partnership with the government, encouraging the construction of a new country.

 

Reverend Luís Nguimbi, Chairman of the Angolan Christian Forum (FCA), said on the occasion that the mass was aimed to praise the work of Agostinho Neto and to speak more about his career.

 

In accordance with Luís Nguimbi, the ecumenical mass also served to pray to God and to appeal to the new generation to follow the example of António Agostinho Neto “Manguxi”, who whoese achievements are stamped on the country’s history.

 

On his turn, the Luanda Province Chieftain, Francisco Simão Cândida, considered the mass an occasion for the Head of State, João Lourenço, to renew the confidence of the Angolans towards the improvement of the social conditions.

 

He recalled Neto´s thoughts “the most important thing is to solve people´s problems”, which should always be a pillar to be fully complied with.

 

The service was held under the motto “Angolans united hand in hand for the future”, with instrumental support from the bands of the Simon Toco (Tocoist) and Simon Kimbangu (Kimbanguist) churches.

 

The mass was attended by the Head of State, João Lourenço, the First Lady, Ana Dias Lourenço, the Vice-President of the Republic, Esperança Costa, the Parliament Speaker, Carolina Cerqueira, among other personalities.

 

António Agostinho Neto was physician, poet, the first President of Angola, who proclaimed the independence of Angola on 11 November 1975

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency

 

Kikuxi team dominate National Hero tennis tournament

Luanda – Players of the Kikuxi Villas Club dominated the tennis tournament organized by the Luanda Provincial Tennis Association (APTL) in both men and women category that ended Sunday, as part of the birth celebration of the first President of Angola, António Agostinho Neto.

In senior men’s category Fernando André (Kikuxi) beat his older brother Paixão André (Namibe)in  two sets, with partial double 6-4, while Mariana Costa (Kikuxi) in the women U-16, overcame her teammate Mirian Tuluca, who gave up the competition due to an injury, after winning the first set 3-6.

 

In women ‘s category the French resident Perrini Perni (CTL)beat Gabriela Martins (Kikuxi) by 6-0 and 6-1.

 

In the men Under-16 category, Emerson Pedro (CTL) defeated Daniel Domingos (Kikuxi), 6-2, 6-3.

 

The tournament, part of the commemorations of the National Hero’s Day, celebrated on September 17, involved more than 50 tennis players from clubs and individuals.

 

Born in the Village of Kaxicane, Icolo e Bengo Municiplaity, on September 17, 1922, Agostinho Neto proclaimed national independence on November 11, 1975.

 

Neto died in 1979, victim of a disease.

 

Source: Angola Press News Agency