Facebook banned Gavin Newsom recall organizer during 2020 crackdown
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Orrin Heatlie, the main organizer for the Recall of California Gov. Newsom campaign, records a radio program at KABC.Damian Dovarganes / Associated PressShow MoreShow Less
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Orrin Heatlie, the main organizer for the Recall of California Gov. Newsom campaign, poses with a banner before recording a radio program at the KABC radio station studio in Culver City (Los Angeles County) on March 27, 2021.Damian Dovarganes / Associated PressShow MoreShow Less
SACRAMENTO Orrin Heatlie, the primary leader of the effort to recall Gov. Gavin Newsom, was banned from Facebook last year after the company concluded that he had violated its community standards.
Comstock s Talks: Women in Leadership Roundtable comstocksmag.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from comstocksmag.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
President and managing partner, Axiom Advisors As a private-practice attorney at a large San Francisco law firm, Cassie Gilson felt, “It was the right table but the wrong seat at the table.” A client suggested she move to Sacramento and work for him as a lobbyist. “It was really a leap of faith to change careers, to go from practicing law to lobbying, and then moving to a city where you knew no one,” Gilson says of relocating in 2001. In January 2019, Gilson founded Axiom Advisors, making her one of the only women who are managing partners at the top lobbying
Environmentalists Object to California Desalination Plan
Critics of a controversial desalination project planned for Orange County claim Governor Newsom is pressuring officials to support the plant in spite of environmental concerns. March 1, 2021, 11am PST | Diana Ionescu |
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Poseidon Water, a proposed California desalination plant with ties to Governor Newsom, is close to obtaining the last permit it needs to break ground on its facility in Orange County, reports Bettina Boxall for the Los Angeles Times. The plant, to be constructed in Huntington Beach, promises to diversify California s water sources and produce 50 million gallons fresh water each day. Critics of the project claim that the governor is exerting pressure on officials to approve the plant in spite of questions about its necessity and its potential effects on the environment.