En los últimos días, en Oregón y California,
se han calcinado casi 200.000 hectáreas de acuerdo a las autoridades del Centro de Coordinación del Noroeste. El fuego avanza con una fuerza inusitada desde Bootleg y la parte sur del Estado de Oregón, al oeste de Estados Unidos, es un mar de llamas.
El efecto del fuego sobre la naturaleza y la tremenda dificultad para su control ha convertido a la firma leonesa Tecnosylva, especialista en soluciones avanzadas para incendios forestales, en la mejor arma para Estados Unidos.
Afincada en el
Parque Tecnológico de León su director general, Joaquín Ramírez, insiste en la necesidad de apostar por la innovación y la tecnología para que su ejemplo de internacionalización y éxito empresarial no sea un caso aislado sino una norma de comportamiento empresarial.
21st District legislators hosting Telephone Town Hall June 28
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Pledging to put Edmonds residents first, Distelhorst kicks off campaign to retain city council seat
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Washington bans for-profit jails, targeting Northwest Detention Center
Gov. Jay Inslee has approved a bill banning for-profit jails in Washington state. The Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma is the only one that faces being shut down
The Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma, which holds more than 1,500 people, is owned by Geo Group, a private company that contracts with the federal government to run the facility. Author: Associated Press Updated: 11:25 AM PDT April 15, 2021
The 1,575-bed Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma is operated by the GEO Group under a contract with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and it’s the only for-profit detention facility in the state.
Home » Foster Care » Washington lawmakers look to keep families together as part of foster care reform
Poverty, disability, homelessness wouldn’t qualify as sole reason to take kids away
With tears in her eyes, Karen Osborne recalled the day in 2014 when police showed up to take away her 6-week-old daughter. Osborne hadn’t been accused of abuse nor neglect. Instead, social workers were concerned about Osborne’s “mental capacity.” They had already removed seven of Osborne’s previous children and made plans to remove her new baby before she was even born.
Social workers and a doctor who examined the baby didn’t find any evidence that the child was maltreated, according to case notes obtained by Disability Rights Washington. Rather than actual observations of Osborne’s parenting skills, state officials deemed her unfit to parent based on IQ tests. They moved to terminate her parental rights 18 months after removing the child, before Osborne had even completed parent