https://www.yourobserver.com/article/sarasota-county-mental-health-district-funding-strategy
Read more “Sarasota County considers “mental health” funding strategy | Sarasota | Your Observer”
WATCH OUT
Mental Health Support Teams Are Coming After YOU
We will ALL be labeled mentally ill if we do not agree with the illusion . .
Armed with Grant Money, OUR MONEY, which is increasing city debt obligations, the cities will “hunt” for more revenue. Our pockets will be reached into (pick-pocket-like) for additional taxes. Our cost of living will go sky high and we will require mental treatment for being depressed and unable to survive. We are being asset stripped and if we crack up under the stress of the economic hit teams of the Rothschild Gang we will be restrained by mental health programs for our safety while being exploited and made homeless.
We must be resilient – and if we are not able to handle the continual loss we will be given mental support which will include data tracking, crisis intervention, mobile crisis and intervention teams assisted by law enforcement.
We MUST remain sane in this growing world of insanity or WE will be restrained for our safety!
County Receives $2.145 Million Grant to Support Public Safety Mental Health Co-Response
If you were the head of a drug company…
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FIRE MAKERS Set to Burn Us Up
Santa Ana Winds BLOW
FIRES to Burn ALL the Way to the OCEAN
California Fire Season Starts!
9-16-19
NOTE: FIRES are PLANNED “EVERYWHERE” Not Only in California
To Verify You Need to Look at the Climate Action Plan that has ALREADY been adopted in your town.
For More Information go to StopTheCrime.net and watch the
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https://www.insurancejournal.com/news/west/2019/09/16/540074.htm
Santa Ana Winds Return to California Bringing Wildfire DangerThe Santa Ana winds have returned to California, a signal to the state’s residents that the wildfire season has begun in earnest.
The winds are created by high pressure over Nevada’s Great Basin as cool weather starts to arrive in the Fall. Low pressure systems in warmer California pull them along, and as they flow through the Sierra Nevadas and other ranges, twisting their way through narrow passes and canyons, they heat up, lose moisture and gain speed.
Let’s be clear – this article omits the facts of weather weapons. We are heavily sprayed overhead with fresh accelerants aka geoengineering, aka chemtrails just prior to fires being intentionally set.
The article continues: Once they hit California, their low humidity and high heat can quickly turn the bushy chaparral into an explosive fuel source. It’s part of the reason that California accounted for 92% of all insured wildfire losses in the U.S. from 2008 to 2018, according to insurer Munich Re. Colorado was second with 3%.
Manipulated weather to induce high wind speeds:
“The high winds cause the fires to spread incredibly rapidly,” according to Mark Bove, a natural catastrophe solutions manager at Munich Re. In some cases, he said, they have burned at the equivalent of “one football field per minute,” driven by the wind.
They also “cause more severe types of fire behavior,” Bove said, spurring “fire tornadoes or whirls” where the blazes move speedily from the ground to the tree tops.
In 2018, this behavior helped feed 6,284 fires that destroyed 876,147 acres in the state, while the so-called Camp Fire alone killed 86 people, making it the deadliest wildfire in state history. In response, California has set aside $1 billion for fire-prevention, and set up a $21 billion insurance fund to pay for future blazes sparked by utility company equipment.
Long known as Santa Anna winds in Southern California, similar winds are called “diablos” in northern California. Whatever the name, the winds have haven’t been a good combination with California’s local utilities.
Utilities run by Rothschild LLC and associates.
A series of wind-driven fires sparked by PG&E Corp. equipment forced the utility to seek bankruptcy protection in January. The company said it faced liabilities of $30 billion or more from claims tied to the fires that destroyed tens of thousands of structures and killed more than 100 people.
So far this year, wildfires haven’t done the level of damage seen in previous years. Through Sept. 8, 3,993 fires have burned about 36,683 in the state, substantially below the 271,740 five-year average, according to the California Department of Forestry & Fire Protection.
But much is at stake: Across California, 240,580 homes remain at extreme risk from fires, according to a new study from CoreLogic, a property data company in Irvine, California.
“During the Santa Anas, the hottest temperatures can be right at the ocean,” said Eric Boldt, warning coordination meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Los Angeles. “That is why these fires can burn all the way to the ocean.”
Remember to watch the YouTube video “Coastlines Under Attack”.
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Read more “City council to discuss ordinance to phase out natural gas appliances in SLO”
http://campaign.r20.constantcontact.com/render?preview=true&m=1111839869613&ca=ef817d6f-d602-444d-bdd3-2d9b2d8206dc&id=preview
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Risks to Health and Well-Being From Radio-Frequency Radiation Emitted by Cell Phones and Other Wireless Devices
Miller Morgan et al. 2019 Risks to Health from RFR by Cellphones Other Wi…
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WARNING
Home Energy Scores to Rate Home Values
and REQUIRE Energy Upgrades Costing Thousands
NOW a REQUIREMENT – Soon for EVERYONE
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Everyone will “PAY”
Landlords and ALL Other Property Owners will be forced to retrofit all apartments and buildings Tenants may find code enforcement will NOT allow occupancy if owners do not have the funds to retrofit as required and tenants could be forced to relocate Retrofits include and are not limited to: If your property is considered to be in a flood plain, or in a low lying coastal area, in a fire zone, or other area where climate change destruction is increasing (which is everywhere) you will find it difficult to obtain insurance or worse unable to obtain insurance coverage at all. You will be unable to sell your property. Many people will become climate refugees and forced to relocate, or move into an RV, or tent city as many people are now experiencing – called This IS NO JOKE! STOP Being Manipulated by Politics THESE PLANS ARE ALREADY ADOPTED IN YOUR TOWN GO “NOW” to www.StopTheCrime.net to the You Tube Videos
You WILL LEARN ABOUT THE CLIMATE ACTION PLANS TO REDUCE YOUR ACCESS TO RESOURCES – AND MUCH MORE . . . We have attached a link below to OUR recent video series that WILL explain the larger agenda we all face |
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EXAMPLE in Portland – Home Energy Score
* Beginning Jan. 1, 2018, home seller’s in Portland, Oregon have been required to get a Home Energy Score, or a HERS home energy rating score. * Must be completed by licensed Home Energy Assessment contractor prior to listing home for sale
* Intended to help meet Portland’s goal of reducing carbon emissions 40% below 1990 levels and help buyers make more “knowledgeable decisions about the full costs of operating a home.
Enforcement
Any building owner or person who fails, omits, neglects, or refuses to comply with the provisions of this Chapter shall be subject to:
Upon the first violation, the Director may issue a written warning notice to the entity or person, describing the violation and steps required to comply.
If the violation is not remedied within 90 days after issue of written warning notice, the Director may assess a civil penalty of up to $500. For every subsequent 180-day period during which the violation continues, the Director may assess additional civil penalties of up to $500.
What Are You Required To Do With The Energy Score?
Provide a copy of the home energy performance report:
To all licensed real estate agents working on the seller’s behalf;
Have a printed copy available to prospective buyers who visit the home while it is listed publicly for sale; and
To the Director for quality assurance and evaluation of policy compliance; and
Include the Home Energy Performance Score in all real estate listings, including the Home Energy Performance Report
Exemptions
Only the Director of the Bureau of Planning and Sustainability or his or her authorized representative, designee or agent can exempt a property from the requirements.
Building Exemptions:
Vertically stacked units (condos) Insider Comment: This exemption allows the dense housing – smart city housing and excludes rural/country unsustainable and sprawl
Detached ADU’s
Mobile homes
Buildings used primarily for commercial purposes
Selling Exemptions:
A foreclosure sale,
A trustee’s sale,
A deed-in-lieu of foreclosure sale, or
Any pre-foreclosure sale in which seller has reached an agreement with the mortgage holder to sell the property for an amount less than the amount owed on the mortgage.
Undue Hardship Exemptions
The covered building qualifies for sale at public auction or acquisition by a public agency due to arrears for property taxes,
A court appointed receiver is in control of the covered building due to financial distress,
The senior mortgage on the covered building is subject to a notice of default
The low-income qualified seller demonstrates household income is at or below 60 percent of median household income for the Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, OR-WA Metropolitan Statistical Area
The Home Energy Score Report Contains
The home energy performance score and an explanation of the score;
An estimate of the total annual energy used in the home in retail units of energy, by fuel type;
An estimate of the total annual energy generated by on-site solar electric, wind electric, hydroelectric, and solar water heating systems in retail units of energy, by type of fuel displaced by the generation;
An estimate of the total monthly or annual cost of energy purchased for use in the covered building in dollars, by fuel type, based on the current average annual retail residential energy price of the utility serving the covered building at the time of the report and the average annual energy prices of non-regulated fuels, by fuel type, as provided by the Oregon Department of Energy;
The current average annual utility retail residential energy price in dollars, by fuel type, and the average annual energy prices of non-regulated fuels, by fuel type, provided by the Oregon Department of Energy and used to determine the costs described in this section;
At least one comparison home energy performance score that provides context for the range of possible scores. Examples of comparison homes include, but are not limited to, a similar home with Oregon’s average energy consumption, the same home built to Oregon energy code, and the same home with certain energy efficiency upgrades;
The name of the entity that assigned the home energy performance score and that entity’s Construction Contractors Board license number;
The date the building energy assessment was performed
Q. Does this policy harm vulnerable people, like elders on fixed incomes, who may need to sell a home they have lived in for decades?
A. The cost of getting a home energy score is low ($150-$250). The cost of doing an upgrade to increase the total value and selling price of the home, as well as giving the home a better home energy score, ranges from $5,000-$15,000 on average.
The policy will begin to help the market more correctly value homes by clearly recognizing energy costs as a component of the cost of owning a home. In a down market, homes that have below-average home energy scores may not compare as favorably to similar homes that have better energy scores
Q. Will this policy lead to more demolitions of older homes?
A. No. In analyzing all the scores delivered nationwide to date, the U.S. Department of Energy has found a very weak correlation between home vintage and low home energy scores. This means that smaller, older homes will not necessarily score lower than newer homes. DOE found a much stronger correlation between square footage and low home energy scores. This means that larger homes of any age are likely to score lower than smaller homes.
Q. Will this policy help Portland to reduce carbon emissions?
A. Yes. The City of Austin passed an energy audit report disclosure requirement in 2009. The City found that from 2009 to 2011, about 6 percent of homes undertook home energy retrofits as a result of disclosure. To accelerate consumer action in favor of energy upgrades, the City of Austin moved the time of disclosure earlier in the transaction to better inform consumer decision-making. Berkeley also moved its disclosure requirement earlier in the sale process for a similar reason. Portland has learned lessons from the experience in Austin and Berkeley and is thus specifically requiring disclosure at time of listing to maximize the positive benefits of the policy.
OPower (owned by Oracle) provides utility customers with information about their energy use in context to their neighbor’s energy use, similar to the type of comparison provided by the US DOE Home Energy Score. Evaluations of OPower’s business model have demonstrated reliable and persistent energy savings in the range of 1.5-2.5 percent, simply by providing consumers with information on energy use in comparison to their neighbors.
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AND……. THE CITY OF BERKELY, CA HAS AN “ENERGY AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT”, WHICH HAS WHAT ARE CALLED REGISTERED ENERGY ASSESSORS. THE PROGRAM BEGAN IN DECEMBER, 2015. ONLY ENERGY SERVICE PROVIDERS REGISTERED WITH THE CITY OF BERKELEY (REGISTERED ENERGY ASSESSORS) WILL BE ABLE TO CONDUCT BESO (Building Energy Saving Ordinance) ASSESSMENTS.
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WATCH Genocide Documents 1-5
YOUTUBES
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Inmate firefighters help protect SLO Co., but crews are diminished after justice reform – August 5, 2019
When large wildfires break out in California, including San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties, it’s all hands on deck to protect life and property.
Many of those hands have spent time in shackles but as recently passed criminal justice reform laws take full effect, the number of inmate firefighters is down.
“The reason most of them do it is to get a reduction in their sentence,” said CAL FIRE District Commander John Owens, who manages the San Luis Obispo County district inmate firefighter crews.
Every day of work inmates do as a firefighter counts as two days toward their sentence.
Putting inmates on the front lines also benefits California taxpayers. Inmate firefighters earn about $1 per hour to risk their lives, which is considerably less than firefighters employed with the state.
Despite the hard work, each fire call allows inmates Darren Smith and Jerry Garza to see the job in a different light.
“I’d like to continue doing this, not only from in here, but when I get out,” Garza said.
“I just love the thrill. It’s a joy now to go out there and fight fires, save the community, save houses,” Smith said.
For the second season in a row, Smith is fighting fires on the front lines.
“The first season, (I was) definitely timid, wasn’t really ready,” Smith said. “Now I’m all for it.”
Smith prefers to measure his time away from family in fire seasons, instead of days spent behind bars at the California Men’s Colony.
To qualify for a firefighting position, an inmate’s crime must be non-violent.
But with criminal justice reform efforts like Assembly Bill 109, which diverts low-level offenders away from prison, the pool of qualified candidates is shrinking.
“We have five crews normally. Right now we have four crews,” Owens said. “We’re short 25 inmate firefighters, but our system overall is short 1,300 firefighters in the entire state.”
While Owens supports restructuring the sentencing guidelines and thinning out the prison population, he knows that also means fewer boots on the ground.
“They’re like the infantry of CAL FIRE. They do a lot of hard work. They hike the hills and get in places where the bulldozers can’t and fire engines can’t and put hand-line in,” Owens said.
Inmate crews don’t just help with firefighting and prevention.
“We did that Bishop Peak rescue,” Garza said proudly.
Garza and his crew cut through thick brush to help emergency responders reach a woman who fell 50 feet while rappelling in June.
“It’s a rush. It’s something you don’t think you can do, you overcome it and feel good about yourself,” Garza said.
Though Garza and Smith excel in the program, Owens knows that once the two men are released, it’s unlikely he will see them again. That is, at least, not on the inmate squad.
“The majority of them, over 60 percent, don’t end up back in jail,” Owens said.
That means Owens is constantly recruiting and training new crew members for work that may just be a means to an end or, possibly, the start to a new beginning.
“Prior to me coming to jail, I was all for myself,” Smith said. “This has taught me a lot about team work. If I thought I’d be a firefighter, I’d be lying. Never in a million years. But now, I love it.”
To help bolster the decline in eligible inmate crew members, CAL FIRE SLO started a probation program. Through that Ventura-based program, probationers can serve out their court-ordered supervision as a firefighter on a pathway to a career.