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DeSantis keeps $6 million for Jacksonville septic tank phaseout

Review: Meadow Festival 2021 delivers three glorious days of revelry and fun

Review: Meadow Festival 2021 delivers three glorious days of revelry and fun Image by Tom Parker We went along to Meadow 2021 and this is what went down. Comparisons can be enlightening but they can also be fickle, misdirecting attention and undermining achievements. When I departed Meadow Festival on its last day, the reflections came teeming in and the judgements accumulated. There will always be noise – prior festival experiences thwarting novelty; friends’ opinions clouding perceptions, yet, there isn’t a more authentic and organic way to lend your assessment to something than by judging it on its merits. That’s what I’ll be doing with this piece – removing likenesses and wandering narratives to give Meadow its own lane, for which it deserves.

Yurok, Karuk Tribes Join Coalition to Ask for Federal Aid Due to Extreme Drought Predictions

Posted By Iridian Casarez on Wed, Apr 21, 2021 at 11:21 AM Submitted The Klamath River at Hopkins Creek, close to Weitchpec. The Yurok and Karuk Tribes, along with the Klamath Tribes of Oregon, have united with Klamath Basin conservationists and commercial fishermen to jointly sign a letter asking the Biden administration for significant financial relief to all Klamath Basin communities in response to extreme drought predictions. The Karuk Tribe, the Yurok Tribe, the Klamath Tribes of Oregon, American Rivers, California Waterfowl, California Trout, Fly Fishers International Northern California Council, the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations (PCFFA), Sustainable Northwest, and Trout Unlimited sent the letter calling for $250 million in federal funding to invest in both short-term and lo

Jacksonville faces challenge in Legislature for septic tank money

Mayor Lenny Curry and some City Council members have said the city needs to finally tackle the steep cost of extending JEA sewer lines to neighborhoods that have relied for decades on septic tanks. Curry has spoken in favor of doing several hundred million dollars of sewer construction toward that end. City Council unanimously voted March 23 to put $14.4 million in new city funding plus $12.5 million from JEA into the sewer construction projects, whose cost has come in higher than the original estimates. The third leg of the funding stool would be $6 million from the state. JEA already is doing the work in the Biltmore neighborhood and would go next to Beverly Hills and then to Christob.

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