Plant therapy program teaches Allentown s Swain School students self-care, problem solving mcall.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mcall.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Another grim result of the winter weather: The community blood supply is dangerously low. Carter BloodCare urgently asks East Texans to give blood ASAP.
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ERCOT To End Emergency Conditions, Oncor Works To Restore Power
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas said it expects to come out of emergency conditions later this morning.
“There is enough generation on the electric system to allow us to begin to return to more normal operating conditions,” said Senior Director of System Operations Dan Woodfin in a statement.
No additional outages were needed overnight to keep power supply and electric demand in balance.
Oncor expects to have power restored to a substantial number of customers by this evening. About 27,000 outages remain.
As of 7 a.m., Oncor is reporting 11,594 Dallas County residents are without power, while Tarrant County has 9,320. In Collin County, 1,309 remain affected.
RARE-X Launches Diversity, Equality, and Inclusion Program
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New RARE-X DEI program assures the diversity of the rare disease community is represented in the first global patient-powered data collection, analysis, and sharing platform
“As a result of this project, we hope to expand the traditional definition of diversity. This project will catalyze future efforts on diversity for larger RARE-X initiatives, as well as for others who share an interest in rare disease,” said Teneasha Washington. ALISO VIEJO, Calif. (PRWEB) January 19, 2021
RARE-X, a collaborative platform for patient-controlled and structured data collection, global data sharing, and analysis that will accelerate treatments for rare diseases, announces the launch of its Diversity, Equality, and Inclusion Program (DEIP). The program is made possible through grant support from Genentech and Travere Therapeutics.
A GREAT SANKEY based water company is calling for Cheshire farmers and landowners to take part in ground-breaking energy research by growing crops in spring this year. United Utilities wants farmers and landowners in its groundwater safeguard zones, including north Warrington, to grow two biomass crops – willow and poplar – on a target 10 hectares of farmland, marginal land, reclaimed land or land prone to flooding. Biomass crops are crops which are grown specifically to be harvested and burnt in power stations, combined heat and power (CHP) units or heating systems. Catchment advisor, Veronika Moore, said: “Energy crops can promote net zero emissions, improve water quality, provide natural flood management benefits, boost local biodiversity and provide profitability.”