CAMBRIDGE â âThis bathhouse probably has the best view of any in our whole country,â said Commissioner Sarah Stewart of the state Department of Natural and Cultural Resources during a ribbon-cutting on Thursday, July 15, at Lake Umbagog State Park.
The ceremony officially marked the completion of the new two-story structure overlooking the 7,850-acre shallow lake rimmed by forested mountains.
COVID-19 distancing and mask requirements prevented the state from marking the occasion in 2020 when the bathhouse was first opened to public use in the state-owned campground off Route 26.
The Division of Parks and Recreation calls the handsome shingled building a visitor services building because its facilities include both menâs and womenâs toilet rooms, a family bathroom, three showers, a laundry room, and pot-washing and dishwashing area.
Communauté de communes Terre D eau Des panneaux photovoltaïques rejoindront bientôt les éoliennes de la plaine
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Vosges Vittel : la rénovation d un sentier pédestre au programme du futur chantier jeunes
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Watch: Gov. Mike Dunleavy announces Alaska Native Veteran Allotments plan Maguire Maguire © Provided by Anchorage KTUU-TV Gov. Mike Dunleavy speaks on a proposal on May 5, 2021 at the Walter Soboleff Building in Juneau, Alaska.
JUNEAU, Alaska (KTUU) - Gov. Mike Dunleavy is proposing to allow Alaska Native Vietnam-era veterans to exchange an allotment of federal land for state land closer to their cultural homelands.
Under the governor’s proposal that would be limited to Native veterans who receive a parcel of federal land under the 2019 Dingell Act.
The battle to resolve the lands issue has gone on for almost 50 years.
While serving overseas, some Native Vietnam-era veterans missed out on an allotment owed to them of up to 160 acres. Over the decades, two programs have been set up to fix that but roughly 2,800 Native veterans have still not gotten their land.
Critics say Idaho bill would kill 90% of wolves. Hunters, wildlife experts have other worries Nicole Blanchard, The Idaho Statesman
Apr. 30 We need to talk about what s happening in Idaho, announces Wren Woodson, her face greenscreened over an image of a wolf in snow.
Woodson, who describes herself on TikTok as a Wisconsin-based journalist & wildlife enthusiast, has gone viral on the social media platform with a video posted earlier this week, captioned Idaho s Wolf Killing Bill. In the short video, which has been watched more than 250,000 times, Woodson points to headlines from The New York Times and The Associated Press as she tells viewers that Idaho plans to kill 90% of its wolf population.