Iowa’s Cayman Islands Classic bracket revealed | The Gazette – The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines

Jun 15, 2017 at 6:27 pm | Print View

IOWA CITY The Iowa mens basketball team knows its opening round opponent for the 2017 Cayman Islands Classic. The Hawkeyes will face Louisiana to start the non-conference tournament Nov. 20 at noon. Television information is yet to be announced.

Iowa and Louisiana are joined in the tournament by Cincinnati, UAB, Wyoming, South Dakota State, Richmond and Buffalo.

For the full news release on the tournament, and the full bracket see below:

Game matchups for the inaugural 2017 Cayman Islands Classic were announced Thursday by tournament officials.

Eight teams will compete in the tournament, including the University of Iowa, held Nov. 20-22, at in the brand new John Gray Gymnasium, just minutes away from world famous Seven Mile Beach. Television information will be announced at a later date.

The Hawkeyes will face Louisiana in the opening game at noon (EST) followed by South Dakota State meeting Wyoming at 2:30 p.m. This will be the first ever meeting between Iowa and Louisiana.

In the first game of the evening session, Richmond plays UAB at 5 p.m. Buffalo and Cincinnati will conclude opening-day action in the final matchup starting at 7:30 p.m.

Semifinal round games are slated for 2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. the following day, Tuesday, Nov. 21.

Losing teams will compete in their second game Nov. 21 with tip offs at noon and 5 p.m.

The seventh-place game will open the final day of competition on Wednesday, Nov. 22 starting at noon, followed by the fifth-place game (2:30 p.m.), third-place game (5 p.m.) and title game (7:30 p.m.) to crown the Cayman Islands Classic champion.

Each of the eight teams will play one preliminary home game prior to competing in tournament play.

The Cayman Islands Classic is being sponsored by the Mountain West Conference.

Five of the teams competed in postseason play in 2017 with Cincinnati, and South Dakota State advancing to the NCAA Tournament, while Iowa and Richmond participated in the NIT.

Wyoming went 23-15 last season en route to winning the College Basketball Invitational - the schools first major postseason title since winning the 1943 NCAA Championship.

Cincinnati was ranked No. 18 in the final 2017 Associated Press poll, posting a 30-6 record while making its seventh straight trip to the NCAA Tournament.

Iowa had a 19-15 record, advancing to the second round of the 2017 NIT. The Hawkeyes return four starters from last years squad, along with eight other letterwinners.

South Dakota State, which plays in the Summit League, made its fourth appearance in the last seven years (2012, 2013, 2016) in the 2017 NCAA Tournament facing eventual national runner-up Gonzaga. The Jackrabbits will feature the nations top returning scorer in 6-9 forward Mike Daum who averaged 25.1 points.

Richmond, a member of the Atlantic 10 Conference, posted a 22-12 record last season while advancing to the quarterfinal round of the 2017 NIT.

UAB owned a 17-16 mark last season. Louisiana Ragin Cajuns, which competes in the West Division of the Sun Belt Conference, had a 21-12 record last season.

Buffalo went 17-15 last year. The Bulls captured its first outright Mid-American Conference championship in 2015, while advancing to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in school history.

The remainder of Iowas 2017-18 schedule will be released later this summer.

l Comments: (319) 368-8884; jeremiah.davis@thegazette.com

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Iowa's Cayman Islands Classic bracket revealed | The Gazette - The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines

Despite Public Outcry, Egypt to Transfer Islands to Saudi Arabia – New York Times


New York Times
Despite Public Outcry, Egypt to Transfer Islands to Saudi Arabia
New York Times
Since Mr. Sisi announced a plan to hand the islands to Saudi Arabia last year, he has faced an unusually virulent backlash. A top court ruled against the transfer, there were rare public protests, and an opinion poll found that a large majority of ...
Egypt's parliament approves islands deal to Saudi ArabiaBBC News
Egypt's parliament approves Red Sea islands transfer to Saudi ArabiaReuters
Egypt okays transfer of Red Sea islands to SaudisThe Jerusalem Post
Aljazeera.com -Bloomberg
all 114 news articles »

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Despite Public Outcry, Egypt to Transfer Islands to Saudi Arabia - New York Times

How urban ‘heat islands’ threaten public health – Grist

This story was originally published by High Country News and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

If heat is the enemy, Marcela Herrera thought she was ready for battle last summer at her familys north Los Angeles apartment.

Old air conditioner units chugged away on windows in three rooms. Extension cords snaked into box fans on the floor, positioned along a hallway to push cooler air towards warmer spots. Bamboo shades, bent blinds, and curtains beat back the sun.

But none of that prevented her eldest son, Edwin Daz, from getting a nosebleed each time a heatwave crested over the familys dense working-class neighborhood. And as outdoor temperatures climbed into the 90s, the 17-year-old suffered painful, debilitating migraines. The family doctor recommended that he try to stay cooler for the sake of his health.

Western communities, including Los Angeles, are aware that urban heat is a serious and growing threat to public health, and the warming climate only increases the problem. Its not as visible as other catastrophes, but the implications can be far reaching, says Elizabeth Rhoades, who works on climate issues in Los Angeles Countys Department of Public Health.

Predictions are for longer, more frequent, and more severe heat events throughout the Southwest, especially in Los Angeles and Phoenix. Studies in the last decade suggest that heat especially impacts very old and very young city dwellers, poor neighborhoods, and those without central air conditioning: people like Edwin Daz and Marcela Herrera. But researchers are still learning about how people are affected by excessive heat in the places where they spend most of their time inside their homes. Few policies exist to protect the most vulnerable, and doctors say the conditions are poorly tracked.

Heat is sneaky. It worsens pre-existing conditions, such as heart and lung disease, kidney problems, diabetes, and asthma, more often than it kills directly. People end up going to the hospital because heat affects their health, makes their asthma worse, or something worse, says David Eisenman, a professor of medicine and public health at UCLA. But its not technically coded as that in the records. Its coded as worsening asthma. So we really undercount the number of cases where heat is a factor.

And urban heat is layered. Los Angeles is as much as 6 degrees F hotter than surrounding areas because of whats called the heat island effect. Sprawl defines not just heat islands but what some call an archipelago of high temperatures across modern urban areas. Geography, wind patterns, tree cover, and concrete all work to create hotspots where temperatures are higher and air pollution is worse. In fact, climate models suggest that Herreras San Fernando Valley neighborhood, far from ocean breezes, will warm 10 to 20 percent faster than the rest of Los Angeles.

Theres been this assumption that we can all cool off somehow. And in some ways that might have been true 100 years ago, Eisenman says. We dont have access to the natural cooling environment like we did before.

The landscapes cooling elements disappeared long before Edwin Daz and his mother arrived in the valley. Their Pacoima neighborhood derives its name from the Native Tongva word for a place of running water. (These days, the now concrete-locked Pacoima Wash, a flood-control channel, is often dry.) After World War II, the neighborhood boomed when developers marketed boxy homes to African Americans shut out of other parts of the valley by racial covenants.

Today, Pacoima is overwhelmingly Latino. And its single-family homes have produced a complex urban density, says Max Podemski, planning director for the community advocacy group Pacoima Beautiful. Lawns have given way to paved-over yards. Second-dwelling units, divisions within ranch homes, and modified garages can house several families together.

Thats just totally ubiquitous here, Podemski says. And these converted dwellings, uncounted and unpermitted, may or may not have insulation or air conditioners or windows to catch a breeze: The city just doesnt have data about it.

To understand more about how heat moves through Pacoima housing, last summer I built small electronic sensors to record dozens of heat and humidity measurements an hour, during parts of August, September, and October: the hottest months in Los Angeles. One sensor went in Edwins bedroom.

In early afternoon, that sensor recorded temperatures equal to those recorded outside, at the weather station at Van Nuys Airport. Evening temperatures in Edwins room were up to 9 degrees F higher than outside.

Those results tell a similar story to what a group of researchers, community activists, and scientists found in about 30 homes equipped with similar sensors in New Yorks Harlem last year. Buildings have a memory for heat, says Adam Glenn, the founder of AdaptNY and a member of the community climate change observation project, ISeeChange. In New York, old stone buildings hold onto thermal radiation, especially on higher floors, late into the night. So the danger to people continues even when the heatwave is over.

But the ways buildings respond to climate vary. In Herreras apartment, a lack of insulation, common in older California houses, may be the key factor. In the evening, she says, We can feel the warmth in the walls.

The blanket of heat smothering L.A. hasnt escaped City Halls notice. Mayor Eric Garcetti has set an ambitious goal to lower the citys overall temperature 3 degrees in 20 years. L.A.s Office of Sustainability is studying where and how to deploy landscape-level cooling strategies, such as planting trees and developing cooler pavements. But it will take years to even know whether the goal is achievable.

In the meantime, renters like Herreras family battle excessive heat mostly alone. According to the Census Bureaus National Housing Survey, half as many rental properties in Los Angeles have central air as do owner-occupied units. Coping costs money. In summer, Herreras power bill can be as high as $200 a month.

As temperatures rise in the Southwest, so do the stakes for city dwellers. In Phoenix, the Maricopa County Health Department has closely tracked heat-related death for more than a decade, producing an exhaustive report each year breaking down cases by age, ethnicity, economic background, and other risk factors.

Arizona State University researchers are working with Maricopa and Los Angeles counties to better understand how heat causes sickness and death, and how to counteract it.

Many of us believe that no one should die prematurely because of heat, and there are significant public costs associated with heat just in the health-care sector alone, says David Hondula, an ASU climatologist who studies heat impacts. Heat-associated deaths are climbing in Phoenix, but the reasons remain unclear. If we cant even answer that question, figuring out the best strategy to keep Phoenicians safe, or residents of Los Angeles safe, in a future that is expected to be warmer than it is today, would seem almost impossible, Hondula says.

With summer coming, the Daz-Herrera family has made some changes, insulating the ceiling of Edwins room and adding more air conditioners.

Paying for this has meant skimping elsewhere: fewer outings, no new clothes. Herrera worries that tight finances will force them to turn the air conditioners off. Still, all the changes weve made are helping us, she says. Its better to invest a bit more because health comes first.

This story was made possible with support from the Center for Health Journalism at The University of Southern California, while iSeeChange contributed heat sensor data.

The rest is here:

How urban 'heat islands' threaten public health - Grist

San Juan Islands archaeological dig postponed after islanders have their say – KUOW News and Information

The Bureau of Land Management will not allow an archaeological dig at Iceberg Point in the San Juan Islands this summer after officials got an earful from residents concerned about possible impacts to the popular area.

The federal agency announced Wednesday that it needs more time to evaluate the 80 or more substantive comments it received in May on a proposed archaeological field school at the southernmost point of Lopez Island.

For the past four years, Iceberg Point, a coastal hiking spot with sweeping views of Puget Sound, has been part of the San Juan Islands National Monument. The BLM has called it an Area of Critical Environmental Concern since 1990.

For centuries, theLummi andSamishtribes cultivated lilies and other edible plants there.

Federal officials awarded a contract to Central Washington University archaeologist Patrick McCutcheon in August to survey Iceberg Point for artifacts.

McCutcheon and up to 25 students would dig 100 or more small test pits scattered across the landscape during the three-week field school.

In May, BLM, a division of the Interior Department, concluded the project would have no significant environmental impact and asked for public input.

The proposal had the support of local tribes.

Critics of the project said students' digging and walking the area in the dry Northwest summer, when island plants and lichens are withered or brittle, could spread weeds and threaten rare species.

Tribes and other supporters said the impacts would be minimal, with a tiny fraction of the area to be dug up.

Surveys of the area for both rare plants and archaeological artifacts are required before any ecological restoration of its shrinking and increasingly weedy meadows can begin.

San Juan Islands National Monument manager Marcia deChadendes said in a note to the Lopez Island community that a decision on whether to allow the project at some future date has not been made, but "we have decided to not hold it this summer."

Its a great thing to have such an invested community, she said of the unexpected volume of comments on the proposal.

John Ryan loves getting tips and documents. He can be reached atjryan@kuow.orgor on the encryptedSignalorWhatsAppapps at 1-401-405-1206 (whistleblowers, never do so from a work or government device, account or location).For greatest security, useKUOW's SecureDrop portal. Snail mail is also a safe way to reach him confidentially:KUOW, 4518 University Way NE #310, Seattle, WA 98105. Don't put your return address on the outside.

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San Juan Islands archaeological dig postponed after islanders have their say - KUOW News and Information

Driver with life-threatening injuries after Islands Expressway crash … – WSAV-TV

SAVANNAH, Ga. (SCMPD): Savannah-Chatham Metropolitan Police officers responded to a report of a crash near the intersection of Islands Expressway and Causton Harbour Drive at approximately 9:10 p.m. on June 13.

Both drivers were traveling on Islands Expressway, one eastbound and the other westbound, in their respective lanes.

The eastbound driver reportedly attempted to make a U-turn at Causton Harbour Drive and was struck by the westbound driver. The westbound car then left the roadway and flipped and the driver was ejected from the car.

Michael Holmes,44, driving westbound sustained life-threatening injuries and is in critical, but stable, condition at this time.

The eastbound driver suffered minor injuries. Their name will be released upon next of kin.

The Traffic Investigation Unit (TIU) responded to the scene. This investigation is ongoing. At this time, investigators do believe speed to be a factor in this crash.

Savannah, GA (WSAV) Savannah-Chatham Metro Police tell us Westbound Islands Expressway is closed at Causton Harbour Drive after a 2-car crash.

One victim is suffering from serious injuries right now. Police ask that you seek an alternative route.

Go here to read the rest:

Driver with life-threatening injuries after Islands Expressway crash ... - WSAV-TV

UPDATE: Police investigate crash on Islands Expressway – Savannah Morning News

UPDATE: Police have identified the westbound driver as Michael Holmes, 44. Holmes is in critical but stable condition at this time.

FROM EARLIER:

Savannah-Chatham Metropolitan Police officers responded to a report of a crash near the intersection of Islands Expressway and Causton Harbour Drive, at approximately 9:10 p.m. on June 13.

Both drivers were traveling on Islands Expressway, one eastbound and the other westbound, in their respective lanes. The eastbound driver reportedly attempted to make a U-turn at Causton Harbour Drive, and was struck by the westbound driver, said Cpl. Hillary Nielsen. The westbound car then left the roadway and flipped. The driver was ejected from the car.

The westbound driver sustained life-threatening injuries and is in critical condition at this time. The name of the driver will be released upon notification of next of kin.

The eastbound driver suffered minor injuries.

This investigation is ongoing. At this time, investigators do believe speed to be a factor in this crash.

Original post:

UPDATE: Police investigate crash on Islands Expressway - Savannah Morning News

Possible whale sanctuary in the Vestman Islands – IceNews

The municipality of the Vestman Islands and Merlin Entertainment are looking into the possibility to establish a Whale sanctuary for captive whales by the islands.

Merlin Entertainment supports practical local projects to protect marine wildlife and their habitats, alongside working on conservation campaigns to effect long lasting change on a global scale. According to Eyjar.net, the idea for the sanctuary in the Vestmann Islands revolves around moving three Beluga whales that currently are held captive in a Chinese marine park. Merlin Entertainment bought the park where the Belugas are held. The company is firmly against wild animals performing in captivity and quickly started looking for a way to re introduce the animals into the wild or give them a more humane life in partial captivity under observation. They contacted the municipality of the Vestman Islands who are looking into the possibility of hosting the three whales and opening up a marine education center with conservational emphasis. The project is in its early stages but both the municipality is not apposed to the idea. They are looking into collaborating with parties in marine biology, universities and the tourist industry. One of the goal would be to educate the public about the welfare of marine life and respectfully portray the life story of those three animals and work towards the welfare of the species as a whole as well as for the greater good of captive marine life world wide.

Beluga whale at the Atlanta aquarium. Photo by Greg Hume

The islanders of the Vestman Islands, which are located south of Iceland,are no newbies when it comes to habituated marine life. Keiko the Orca was famously reared back into the wild off the Islands in 1998. Keiko, whose name means lucky one in Japanese was captured on the east coast of Iceland in 1979 and sold around between aquariums until he ended up in Marineland in Ontario where he first started performing for the public and developed skin lesions indicative of poor health. He was then sold to Reino Aventura, an amusement park in Mexico City, in 1985. Keiko was the star of the movie Free Willy in 1993 and in the wake of the film and the publicity afforded to the orca Warner Bros. Studio led an effort to find him a better home as his health, both physically and mentally, was deteriorating in Mexico.

Keiko the Orca and star of the film Free Willy as he swims around in his tank prior to being moved from Newport, Oregon to Westman Islands, Iceland.

In 1998, after much preparations and controversy, he was relocated to a pen just of the Vestman Islands in an effort to re introduce him to the wild. Keiko left his pen in 2001 and migrated to Norway under close observation of a team of caretakers and in 2003 Keiko died just of the shores of Norway. Films and documentaries have been made about the effort and since then there is much more awareness about the treatment of marine life in amusement parks.

(Featured image shows the municipality of the Vestman Islands and its harbor)

Read the rest here:

Possible whale sanctuary in the Vestman Islands - IceNews

Egypt’s parliament approves Red Sea islands transfer to Saudi Arabia – Reuters

CAIRO Egypt's parliament on Wednesday backed plans to hand over two uninhabited Red Sea islands to Saudi Arabia under an agreement that has attracted widespread public criticism.

House of Representatives Speaker Ali Abdelaal said the required majority of lawmakers had voted for the agreement, which the government signed last year, despite a court striking it down in March.

"I announce the House's final approval of the maritime demarcation agreement with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia signed on April 8, 2016," Abdelaal said before adjourning the session.

The treaty must now be ratified by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, which is a formality.

The vote came very swiftly. The House Committee on Defence and National Security unanimously backed the plan earlier on Wednesday and referred it to the House for a final vote.

A majority approved it less than four hours later. Those opposed to the measure stood up in protest and chanted "Egyptian, Egyptian" in reference to the islands.

"Today is a terrible day for the Egyptian people, one in which the nation has lost part of its land," said lawmaker Haitham al-Hariri.

Several legislators opposed to the deal threatened to hold an open-ended sit-in. Some said they were considering resigning in protest.

Sisi's government last year announced the maritime demarcation agreement with Saudi Arabia, which has given billions of dollars of aid to Egypt, ceding control of the islands of Tiran and Sanafir.

The plan triggered street protests last year from many Egyptians, who say their country's sovereignty over the islands dates back to a treaty from 1906, before Saudi Arabia was founded.

Dozens of protesters gathered in downtown Cairo outside the press union on Tuesday evening. Eight were arrested, including three journalists, and are being held for 24 hours to be questioned on accusations of illegally protesting and insulting the president, according to state news agency MENA.

The Egyptian and Saudi governments say the islands are Saudi but have been subject to Egyptian protection since 1950 at the request of Saudi Arabia.

JURISDICTION SPAT

The treaty has been referred to the courts, irritating Riyadh and raising tensions between two Arab allies.

Egypt's highest administrative court blocked the deal but parliament insisted the matter was constitutionally within its domain.

Parliamentary leaders and government lawyers say the House of Representatives is the only entity allowed to rule on matters of sovereignty while the Supreme Administrative Court insists it is within its jurisdiction to scrap the deal.

The Supreme Constitutional Court will rule on who has jurisdiction but has not set a date or even started discussing the issue. It was not immediately clear what the legal situation of the treaty was following Wednesday's vote.

A government report advising parliament on the terms of the agreement said Egypt would keep administrative control over the islands and Egyptians would not need visas to visit them if they were transferred to Saudi Arabia.

Opposition groups accuse Sisi of handing over the islands to please his Saudi backers and in return for continued aid.

Saudi Arabia was Sisi's biggest international supporter when he led the military in ousting an elected but unpopular Islamist president in 2013 following mass protests.

(Reporting by Nashat Hamdy and Mahmoud Mourad; Writing by Ahmed Aboulenein; Editing by Giles Elgood and Tom Heneghan, Larry King)

LONDON Iranian forces killed two members of a Sunni Muslim jihadist group in the city of Chabahar on Wednesday and arrested five others, the intelligence minister said, as security forces stepped up measures to prevent militant attacks.

ANKARA/DOHA Turkey sent its foreign minister to Qatar on Wednesday as part of a drive to repair Qatar's rift with fellow Gulf Arab states.

Originally posted here:

Egypt's parliament approves Red Sea islands transfer to Saudi Arabia - Reuters

Urban Heat Islands Can Be Deadly, and They’re Only Getting Hotter – WIRED

This storyoriginally appeared on High Country News and is part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

If heat is the enemy, Marcela Herrera thought she was ready for battle last summer at her familys north Los Angeles apartment.

Old air conditioner units chugged away on windows in three rooms. Extension cords snaked into box fans on the floor, positioned along a hallway to push cooler air towards warmer spots. Bamboo shades, bent blinds and curtains beat back the sun.

But none of that prevented her eldest son, Edwin Daz, from getting a nosebleed each time a heat wave crested over the familys dense working-class neighborhood. And as outdoor temperatures climbed into the 90s, the 17-year-old suffered painful, debilitating migraines. The family doctor recommended that he try to stay cooler for the sake of his health.

Western communities, including Los Angeles, are aware that urban heat is a serious and growing threat to public health, and the warming climate only increases the problem. Its not as visible as other catastrophes, but the implications can be far reaching, says Elizabeth Rhoades, who works on climate issues in Los Angeles Countys Department of Public Health.

Predictions are for longer, more frequent, and more severe heat events throughout the Southwest, especially in Los Angeles and Phoenix. Studies in the last decade suggest that heat especially impacts very old and very young city dwellers, poor neighborhoods, and those without central air conditioning: people like Edwin Daz and Marcela Herrera. But researchers are still learning about how people are affected by excessive heat in the places where they spend most of their timeinside their homes. Few policies exist to protect the most vulnerable, and doctors say the conditions are poorly tracked.

Heat is sneaky. It worsens pre-existing conditions, such as heart and lung disease, kidney problems, diabetes and asthma, more often than it kills directly. People end up going to the hospital because heat affects their health, makes their asthma worse or something worse, says David Eisenman, a professor of medicine and public health at UCLA. But its not technically coded as that in the records. Its coded as worsening asthma. So we really undercount the number of cases where heat is a factor.

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And urban heat is layered. Los Angeles is as much as 6 degrees hotter than surrounding areas because of whats called the heat island effect. Sprawl defines not just heat islands but what some call an archipelago of high temperatures across modern urban areas. Geography, wind patterns, tree cover and concrete all work to create hotspots where temperatures are higher and air pollution is worse. In fact, climate models suggest that Herreras San Fernando Valley neighborhood, far from ocean breezes, will warm 10 to 20 percent faster than the rest of Los Angeles.

Theres been this assumption that we can all cool off somehow. And in some ways that might have been true 100 years ago, Eisenman says. We dont have access to the natural cooling environment like we did before.

The landscapes cooling elements disappeared long before Edwin Daz and his mother arrived in the valley. Their Pacoima neighborhood derives its name from the Native Tongva word for a place of running water. (These days, the now concrete-locked Pacoima Wash, a flood-control channel, is often dry.) After World War II, the neighborhood boomed when developers marketed boxy homes to African-Americans shut out of other parts of the valley by racial covenants.

Today, Pacoima is overwhelmingly Latino. And its single-family homes have produced a complex urban density, says Max Podemski, planning director for the community advocacy group Pacoima Beautiful. Lawns have given way to paved-over yards. Second-dwelling units, divisions within ranch homes, and modified garages can house several families together.

Thats just totally ubiquitous here, Podemski says. And these converted dwellings, uncounted and unpermitted, may or may not have insulation or air conditioners or windows to catch a breeze: The city just doesnt have data about it.

To understand more about how heat moves through Pacoima housing, last summer I built small electronic sensors to record dozens of heat and humidity measurements an hour, during parts of August, September and October: the hottest months in Los Angeles. One sensor went in Edwins bedroom.

In early afternoon, that sensor recorded temperatures equal to those recorded outside, at the weather station at Van Nuys Airport. Evening temperatures in Edwins room were up to 9 degrees higher than outside.

Those results tell a similar story to what a group of researchers, community activists and scientists found in about 30 homes equipped with similar sensors in New Yorks Harlem last year. Buildings have a memory for heat, says Adam Glenn, the founder of AdaptNY and a member of the community climate change observation project, ISeeChange. In New York, old stone buildings hold onto thermal radiation, especially on higher floors, late into the night. So the danger to people continues even when the heat wave is over.

But the ways buildings respond to climate vary. In Herreras apartment, a lack of insulation, common in older California houses, may be the key factor. In the evening, she says, We can feel the warmth in the walls.

The blanket of heat smothering LA hasnt escaped City Halls notice. Mayor Eric Garcetti has set an ambitious goal to lower the citys overall temperature 3 degrees in 20 years. LAs Office of Sustainability is studying where and how to deploy landscape-level cooling strategies, such as planting trees and developing cooler pavements. But it will take years to even know whether the goal is achievable.

In the meantime, renters like Herreras family battle excessive heat mostly alone. According to the Census Bureaus National Housing Survey, half as many rental properties in Los Angeles have central air as do owner-occupied units. Coping costs money. In summer, Herreras power bill can be as high as $200 a month.

As temperatures rise in the Southwest, so do the stakes for city dwellers. In Phoenix, the Maricopa County Health Department has closely tracked heat-related death for more than a decade, producing an exhaustive report each year breaking down cases by age, ethnicity, economic background and other risk factors.

Arizona State University researchers are working with Maricopa and Los Angeles counties to better understand how heat causes sickness and death, and how to counteract it.

Many of us believe that no one should die prematurely because of heat, and there are significant public costs associated with heat just in the health-care sector alone, says David Hondula, an ASU climatologist who studies heat impacts. Heat-associated deaths are climbing in Phoenix, but the reasons remain unclear. If we cant even answer that question, figuring out the best strategy to keep Phoenicians safe, or residents of Los Angeles safe, in a future that is expected to be warmer than it is today, would seem almost impossible, Hondula says.

With summer coming, the Daz-Herrera family has made some changes, insulating the ceiling of Edwins room and adding more air conditioners.

Paying for this has meant skimping elsewhere: fewer outings, no new clothes. Herrera worries that tight finances will force them to turn the air conditioners off. Still, all the changes weve made are helping us, she says. Its better to invest a bit more because health comes first.

Molly Peterson has been covering the environment with a focus on water and climate change since 2002. Formerly with NPR and Southern California Public Radio, she now writes for all kinds of public media outlets, and contributes to Laws and Nature, which tracks environmental policy. Shes based in Los Angeles.

This story was made possible with support from the Center for Health Journalism at The University of Southern California, while iSeeChange contributed heat sensor data.

Continue reading here:

Urban Heat Islands Can Be Deadly, and They're Only Getting Hotter - WIRED

Egypt Parliament Cedes Islands to Saudi Arabia Risking Backlash – Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Egypt Parliament Cedes Islands to Saudi Arabia Risking Backlash
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
CAIROEgypt's parliament on Wednesday approved a controversial deal to cede two Red Sea islands to Saudi Arabia, an agreement backed by President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi but widely criticized by people in the North African country. After days of ...

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Egypt Parliament Cedes Islands to Saudi Arabia Risking Backlash - Wall Street Journal (subscription)

21 fascinating islands on the Thames you (probably) didn’t know about – Telegraph.co.uk

To mark 90 years since the death of Jerome K Jerome, author of Three Men in a Boat, we've unearthed 21 of the most fascinating islands and eyots on the Thames.

This estuary island - whose named means "Isle of Sheep" in ancient Saxon - has the distinction of being one of the few parts of Britain to have been occupied by an overseas power since the Norman invasion. A Dutch fleet captured it in 1667, before clearing off after a few days with supplies, ammunition and guns.

It played an important role in the early history of British aviation, being home to Lord Brabazon's Royal Aero Club and the Shellbeach Aerodrome, and possesses Britain's only established scorpion population, brought to the island on board a ship in the 19th century.

Inhabitants of the island (there's around 40,000) call themselves "Swampies".

Recognisable to regular viewers of the Boat Race, Chiswick Eyot is accessible by foot at low tide, almost fully submerged at high tide (tree branches excepted), and like many islands in the Thames was used in the 19th century for the growing of osiers, used by basket and furniture makers.

The island was in the headlines in 2010after a pensioner claimed he had been living a Robinson Crusoe lifestyle on the island for six months, while sleeping in a net to avoid the incoming tide.

Known as Strand Ayt until the English Civil War, this islands current name was inspired by the myth that Oliver Cromwell took refuge there. A secret tunnel supposedly linked the island to the Bulls Head pub in Chiswick, though no evidence of it has ever been found.

A tollbooth was set up on the island in 1777, and a smithy was built there in the 1865, surviving until the 1990s. The island's only inhabitants now are birds, such as herons, Canada geese and cormorants.

Now uninhabited, with no buildings, Brentford Ait was once home to the notorious Three Swans pub. Fred S. Thackers The Thames Highway Locks and Weirs, published in 1920, explains: In March 1811 one Robert Hunter of Kew Green described the island to the city as a great Nuisance to this parish and the Neighbourhood on both sides of the River. It contained a House of Entertainment, which has long been a Harbour for Men and women of the worst description, where riotous and indecent Scenes were often exhibited during the Summer Months on Sundays.

It is now covered with willows, planted to obscure the Brentford gasworks from the view of Kew Gardens. A gap in the middle of the island, apparent at low tide, is known as Hog Hole.

Once called Petersham Ait, this island made news way back in 1898 when its owner Joseph Glover considered selling it to Pears soap so the firm could erect an enormous advertising hoarding.

This Twickenham mudbanks louche heyday was in the 1960s, when the Eel Pie Island Hotel became a surprisingly popular music venue, hosting the likes of Rod Stewart, David Bowie, Pink Floyd and the Rolling Stones. The island developed into something of a hippie commune, and is now home to around 120 inhabitants, a couple of boatyards and a handful of artists' studios, which can be visited on occasional open days.

In 2005, the comedian and writer Danny Wallace attempted to invade it, declaring himself leader of Eel Pie Island, until the Metropolitan Police negotiated a peaceful handover of power back to the Queen.

Located above Molesey Lock, Taggs Island - previously known as Walnut Tree Ait - was once home to the Thames Hotel, a venue frequented by well-to-do Londoners including the future Edward VII. The hotel was rebuilt by Fred Karno a man credited with two great deeds: discovering Charlie Chaplin and inventing the custard-pie-in-the-face gag but was eventually demolished in 1971.

The island is now occupied by houseboat residents, including Pink Floyd guitarist David Gilmour.

Known as Folly Island until 1890, when the hotelier and opera impresario Richard D'Oyly Carte, founder of theSavoy, bought it and had a house built there. He intended to use it as a secluded annex of the luxury hotel, but was refused an alcohol license. Nevertheless, W.S. Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan were regular visitors. A footbridge was added in 1964, and there is a small marina.

In 1798, Horatio Nelson, still smarting from losing an arm the year before, foiled Napoleon's planned invasion of Egypt during the Battle of the Nile. His reward among other things was this 280-metre island near Shepperton Lock, which he used as a fishing retreat. It is now occupied by a couple of dozen houses, with Egyptian names such as The Sphinx and Memphis.

A few hundred metres downstream from Runnymede Bridge, and connected to the north bank of the Thames with a footbridge, Holm Island was once used as a romantic hideaway by Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson (they is the largest house on the island, known as 'The Nest').

One of several sites that lays claim to being where King John signed the Magna Carta in 1215,this 3.72-acre chunk of Berkshire was put up for sale in 2014(the asking price? 3.95million). The Telegraphs Christopher Middleton described it as the perfect chance to become a custodian of history.

Inside the islands main house there is a Charter Room and an octagonal piece of stone where the parchment itself was supposedly spread out. The island served as a meeting place for Henry III and the future Louis VIII of France two years later, while far more recently - in 1974 - Queen Elizabeth II paid a visit and planted a tree in the garden.

Located in Old Windsor, Friday Island is so called because its shape supposedly resembles the footprint of Man Friday from Daniel Defoes novel Robinson Crusoe. It was for 30 years, until his death in 1991 the home of forensics expert Dr Julius Grant, renowned for proving that the Hitler Diaries were forged.

Referenced in Jerome K Jeromes Three Men in a Boat (passing through the lock here was when they first spot Windsor Castle), Ham Island contains 37 luxurious homes, many of which were badly hit by flooding in 2014. It is also home to the Blueacre Horse Rescue Centre.

Owned by Eton College since 1923, and located just upstream of the Oakley Court (the location of Dr Frank N Furters residence in The Rocky Horror Picture Show),Queens Eyot contains a handsome clubhouse and can be hired out for functions and weddings.

Charles Spencer, 3rd Duke of Marlborough, acquiredthis islandnear the gastronomic enclave of Bray in 1738 for use as a fishing retreat. He hired architect Robert Morris to build a lodge and a temple, and commissioned Andieu de Clermont, a French artist, to fill the former with unusual depictions of monkeys involved in humanlike activities, such as shooting, rowing and smoking (a forerunner to the PG Tips ads?).

The lodge became a hotel in the 19th century, and over the years has welcomed Edward VII, Edward Elgar, Nellie Melba and H.G. Wells, among others. It is currently closed for major renovation and will reopen in late 2017.

Close to Maidenhead, Berkshire, Boulters Island was the home of Richard Dimbleby, the late BBC broadcaster and father of David and Jonathan.

Found just north of Henley-on-Thames, Temple Island lies at the start of the course for the towns annual regatta. Its main feature is James Wyatts folly, built in 1771 and with an interior based on recently discovered designs from Pompeii. It is now owned by the stewards of theHenley Royal Regatta, who have carried out restoration work to the temple, made it available for hire, and retained part of the island as a nature reserve.

An (almost) heart-shaped island, Sonning Eye is utterly idyllic, possessing an 18th-century watermill and 12 other Grade II-listed buildings. It has been a favoured location of many artists, including George Price Boyce, the Pre-Raphaelite painter, but more recently attracted the attention ofUS film starGeorge Clooneyand his new wife, the human rights lawyerAmal Alamuddin. They bought the island's Mill House for a cool 10m in 2014.

Located near Caversham Lock, close to Reading, View Island was once a boatyard but has been a public park since 1998 and is notable for the carved wooden sculptures found scattered on it. It can be reached from the Thames Path at Hills Meadow, to the east of Reading Bridge.

This island accessible only by boat is best known as the location of a duel in 1163 between Robert de Montfort and Henry of Essex, the standard bearer to Henry II. According to W.M. Childs's The Story of the Town of Reading (1905), the quarrel arose when during a battle with the Welsh Henry of Essex allegedly dropped the standard and cried out falsely that the King has been slain a cowards act, declared de Montford. Essex and Montfort were ferried to the island, where Robert of Montfort "thundered on him manfully with hard and frequent strokes." Henry fell, was presumed dead, and was taken away by the monks of Reading for burial. But the monks found that he was still very much alive, and under their care he recovered from his wounds, and became a monk himself.

The island is now home to a private residence, a boatyard and a bowling club.

A thickly-wooded island near Abingdon Lock, this was once according to D.S. MacColls The Thames from Source to Sea (1890) - a popular spot for picnickers. Visitors included Lewis Carroll and Alice Liddell, the inspiration for Carrolls Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.

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21 fascinating islands on the Thames you (probably) didn't know about - Telegraph.co.uk

Fossil-free islands: A blueprint for sustainable development? – GreenBiz

One is a 7,300-person tropical paradise. Another is a Danish territory roughly twice the size of Manhattan situated in the icy waters off Northern Europe. They might sound like polar opposites, but Molokai, Hawaii, and Samso, Denmark, have one very important thing in common: Both islands are at the forefront of a global push to use remote, energy-constrained territories as a petri dish for fossil-fuel-free societies.

From the European Union to Australia, Asia and the Caribbean, the number of islands targeting a transition to 100 percent renewable energy has swelled in recent years as climate change models forecast increasingly dire fallout for geographically vulnerable outlying areas.

"What we are looking to create is a proactive instead of a reactive model for how communities decide where they want to go," said Emillia Noordhoek, director of renewable resources for the seven-year-old nonprofit Sustinable Molokai. "Were at this perfect moment where we need to do this because of climate change, and we want to do this because of all the policies weve set in play."

As Hawaii targets a statewide 100 percent renewable energy goal by 2045, the 260-square-mile island of Molokai has been fast-tracked for a transition as soon as 2020. The island's challenge in going from ambitious goals to a vision of community-owned clean energy infrastructure and navigating thorny political, economic and social obstacles likely to arise in the process in many ways underscores broader sustainable development challenges both on islands and on "the mainland."

In this quest, Molokai also has joined with other islands with similar ambitions, including Samso, in a nascent knowledge-sharing effort called the Tentou Project. Also in Europe, dozens of islands in Croatia, France, Italy, Greece and Portugal have come together under the Smart Island Initiative to launch and study "living labs" for alternatives to incumbent oil and coal-powered infrastructure.

We are looking to create a proactive instead of a reactive model.

The case for focusing on islands first, as summed up by the Smart Islands Initiative, is, "They are among the first to experience the devastating impacts [climate change] has on local ecosystems and livelihoods. Meanwhile, insularity implies energy dependency on fossil fuels, high transportation costs, limited economic diversification and access to markets."

Still, asNoordhoek and her peers are learning, hammering out new models for ownership, funding and even neighborhood debates about aesthetics isn't easy. That's especially true, she said, when you add in utility providers who profit from existing systems and the mistrust of outsiders that can accompany life in remote corners of the world.

One very prominent outsider that has retained a very strong presence in places such as Hawaii and American Samoa is the U.S. military an increasingly strong force for expediting clean energy adoption in its own right.

In addition to harnessing the budgetary benefits of plentiful sun, wind and rain instead of expensive imported oil, Army Reservesenergy specialist Christina Vicari said military installations for the U.S. Air Force, Navy and other branches also increasingly look to renewable energy projects and energy efficiency upgrades for a more existential reason.

"Theyre starting to look at it from a broader perspective, which is mission security," said Vicari, officially an energy coordinator and environmental project specialist with military consulting firm Dawson Enterprises. "We dont have a back-up plan right now."

For Noordhoek, the economic case for changing Molokai's energy status quo became evident when she was working to build affordable housing on the island with Habitat for Humanity. Around 2010, when consumer energy rates hovered around 49 cents per kilowatt-hour, the nonprofit helped to build two of Molokai's first off-grid homes as a way to reduce the financial burden of utility bills.

"Its still the highest in the nation,"Noordhoek said, noting that current electricity rates are closer to 36 cents per kilowatt-hour. "The way that you use energy is a big part of what you need to look at in affordable housing, because its the hidden cost of housing."

That perspective has helped inform Sustinable Molokai's vision for focusing on social equity in the island's vision for renewable energy. Although Hawaii has struggled statewide with how best to balance the 100 percent renewable energy goal with the objectives of publicly traded power utility Hawaiian Electric, Noordhoek said Molokai aims to cultivate community-owned power.

In a state filing earlier this year, Hawaiian Electric officially stated a goal to transition Molokai to 100 percent renewable power by 2020 through a mix of solar, wind, battery storage and biofuels. Now, Noordhoek said she hopes the plan, which follows years of advocacy from groups such as Sustinable Molokai, will allow enough time to build community input into the process.

That would be a shift from the past, she said, when major proposals for wind developments and other large-scale energy projects have at times triggered sensitivities to outsiders imposing a top-down business plan.

"It was developers and development coming from the outside in and telling the community how they were going to develop renewable energy projects and who was going to benefit," Noordhoek said. You have to tread lightly."

More broadly, there's also the matter of extrapolating lessons learned from one island to others or even back to the mainland.

One recent report by European energy industry association Eurelectric, for instance, pinpointed the difficulty in tailoring solutions to individual islands while also establishing frameworks for legal or technical models that can be applied in multiple places.

"Designing innovative cooperation mechanisms and financing instruments should be part of this process," the report authors wrote.

While groups such as Sustinable Molokai work to shore up clean energy assets for island residents, the military is one institution working in parallel to scale renewable power for its own purposes.

With the Army Reserves, priorities include a 325-kW solar project underway in American Samoa and implementing several other net-zero road maps created for installations on the islands of Guam, Maui and Saipan.

"Theres a lot of momentum," Vicari said. "Day to day, its keeping up to date with the progress of projects. It takes so long for these projects to start moving forward."

From scoping out where to actually build new solar installations to adjusting metering systems, a range of logistical challenges can arise. And then there are tight budgets to keep in mind.

"Not just with energy but all construction projects youll hear, 'Oh, we need more money,'" Vicari said. "Its not as cost-effective as when you went into it."

Looking ahead, Vicari said the goal is to widen net-zero efforts to water conservation and waste reduction. (Across the board, Vicari said that her budget and mandate have not changed since U.S. President Donald Trump moved to withdraw the country from the Paris Climate Agreement.)

For Sustinable Molokai, too, ramping up renewable energy is a prospect with significance that extends beyond how islands are powered day to day.

"The goal is to create a sustainable island, not just with energy but with food and economic development and conservation," Noordhoek said.

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Chance of thunderstorms, heavy rainfall for the islands through Thursday – KHON2

Click here for a link to the KHON2 Weather Radar.

Our next weather maker is here, an unstable airmass is over the islands through Thursday, resulting in a chance of thunderstorms and the potential for heavy rainfall, according to the National Weather Service.

Although much of the clouds and showers will remain focused over windward and mauka areas, occasional showers will manage to spill over to leeward sections as well.

A few thunderstorms and locally heavy showers are possible Wednesday into Thursday as an upper low moves over the state.

The instability is associated with with swirl of clouds to the north. Higher up in the atmosphere the air is bitterly colder than usual and that can trigger heavy rain and thunderstorms which we already have seen Tuesday.

These types of disturbances are common during our winter months, but not unheard of in the late spring and early summer.

All in all, heavy rain and a chance of thunderstorms are possible through Thursday, with the worst being Wednesday afternoon.

Thunderstorms might not be widespread but spotty through Thursday and winds remain trades to 15 mph.

A drier more stable airmass will then build into the islands Friday through early next week, with showers favoring windward and mauka areas.

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Chance of thunderstorms, heavy rainfall for the islands through Thursday - KHON2

Earthquake rattles Greek islands, Turkey, killing woman on Lesbos – CBS News

A man walks among collapsed buildings at the village of Vrissa on the Greek island of Lesbos, Greece, after a strong earthquake shook the eastern Aegean Sea June 12, 2017.

Reuters/Giorgos Moutafis

Last Updated Jun 12, 2017 3:40 PM EDT

ATHENS, Greece -- An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.2 badly damaged scores of homes on the eastern Greek island of Lesbos Monday, killing one woman and injuring at least 10 people. It was also felt in western Turkey, including in Istanbul, and on neighboring islands.

Lesbos mayor Spyros Galinos and the fire service said the woman was found dead in the southern village of Vrisa, which was worst-hit by the quake, which had its epicenter under the Aegean Sea.

"Most houses in Vrisa have suffered severe damage," Galinos said, adding that afflicted residents were being relocated to temporary housing set up in a football field in a nearby village.

At least 10 people were injured in the village, where many of the roads were blocked by rubble.

People gather outside an office building following an earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 6.2 in the coastal city of Izmir, Turkey, June 12, 2017.

AP

Local authorities and the fire service said there were no reports of other people trapped or missing.

Earlier, rescuers pulled out an elderly couple alive from their damaged home in Vrisa.

According to Turkey's Disaster and Emergency Management, the epicenter was at a shallow depth of four miles. At least 25 aftershocks were recorded following the initial quake at 3:28 p.m.

The tremor was also felt in densely populated Istanbul and the western Turkish province of Izmir, but no injuries were reported there.

The governor of Greece's north Aegean region told state-run ERT television that "we're using all the resources we have to help the people in southern Lesbos."

"The army is also helping, and will provide tents for people remaining outside their homes," Christiana Kalogirou said. "They will be able to stay in sports facilities."

A woman clears her shop after an earthquake in the village of Plomari on the northeastern Greek island of Lesbos, June 12, 2017.

AP

Lesbos authorities said homes were also damaged in the village of Plomari and some roads were closed. No severe damage was reported on nearby islands.

"We are advising residents in affected areas of Lesbos to remain outdoors until buildings can be inspected," senior seismologist Efthimios Lekkas said.

Earthquakes are frequent in Greece and Turkey, which are on active fault lines. Two devastating earthquakes hit northwestern Turkey in 1999, killing around 18,000 people. Experts in both countries said more aftershocks are to be expected.

In Turkey, 61-year old Ayse Selvi felt the tremors in her summer home in Karaburun near the quake's epicenter.

"My God, all the picture frames fell on the ground and I have no idea how I ran out," she said. "I'm scared to go inside now."

There was no reported damage or injuries at refugee camps on Lesbos or the nearby island of Chios. Both islands saw a major influx of migrants leaving from Turkey in 2015, and about 8,000 remain in limbo in Lesbos and Chios as they await news on their asylum applications.

2017 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Lawyer Calls Egyptian President a ‘Traitor’ Over Islands – Voice of America

CAIRO

A leading Egyptian rights lawyer widely expected to run in next year's presidential election has called President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi a "traitor" over his government's decision to hand over two Red Sea islands to Saudi Arabia.

Khaled Ali made his comment during a meeting of opposition parties called Sunday to denounce an ongoing review by lawmakers of the April 2016 agreement that surrendered the islands to the Saudis. A video of his address before the meeting was posted on social media on Monday. He could now face legal consequences for publicly insulting the president.

Egypt's government maintains that the islands of Tiran and Sanafir at the mouth of the Gulf of Aqaba belong to Saudi Arabia but were placed under Egypt's protection in the 1950s in anticipation of Israeli attacks. El-Sissi has repeatedly emphasized that his government would never cede Egyptian territory or keep what belongs to others.

"The president is a traitor and the prime minister is a traitor," said Ali, who unsuccessfully ran in the 2012 presidential elections won by the Islamist Mohammed Morsi. "Whoever will be content to lower the Egyptian flag on Tiran and Sanafir and raise the Saudi flag in its place is a traitor," said Ali.

Already, there is a court case accusing Ali of making an obscene finger gesture on the street outside the courthouse where the transfer of the islands was annulled in January. If convicted in a final ruling, he could face up to six months in prison or a fine.

A conviction would take away Ali's eligibility to run for office, according to his lawyers. He is already seen as a long shot against el-Sissi, who has presided over a widespread crackdown on dissent.

Ali and other critics of the agreement argue that the January court ruling was final and should be respected by the 596-seat chamber, which is packed with el-Sissi supporters. He led a team of lawyers who challenged the agreement in court.

Parliament speaker Ali Abdel-Al, a staunch government supporter, has said the legislature has the constitutional right to ratify international agreements. Court rulings running contrary to this principle, he told lawmakers on Sunday, are only of concern to the judiciary.

Parliament's legislative and constitutional committee on Monday continued to review the agreement. At one point, lawmakers opposed to the pact chanted "Egyptian, Egyptian!," alluding to the islands, and screamed "illegitimate" when one lawmaker suggested that Gamal Abdel-Nasser, Egypt's nationalist leader of the 1950s and 1960s, acknowledged that the islands were Saudi.

The ratification of the agreement by the full house is a virtual foregone conclusion since government supporters enjoy an overwhelming majority, but such a move risks a repeat of the street protests that greeted the agreement last year. The protests, the largest since el-Sissi took office in 2014, were met by the arrest of hundreds of activists and demonstrators, most of them were later released. It could also leave the legislative branch of government in a potentially destabilizing legal battle with the judiciary.

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Windstar Cruises adds unusual itinerary to Shetland, Faroe Islands – USA TODAY

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Christened at a ceremony in Nice, France on May 6, 2015, the 212-passenger Star Breeze is Windstar Cruises' second new ship in a year.(Photo: Gene Sloan, USA TODAY)

Windstar Cruises is out with an unusual new itinerary that focuses on some of the most remote North Atlantic islands.

Dubbed Secrets of the Faroe, Shetland & Orkney Islands, the seven-night trip begins and ends in Edinburgh, Scotland and features visits to the Denmark-controlled Faroe Islands as well as Scotland's Shetland Islands and Orkney Islands.

Windstar is planning just a single departure of the itinerary for now, on Aug. 17, 2018. It'll take place on the line's 212-passenger Star Breeze.

The voyage includes two stops in the Faroe Islands, in the port towns of Torshavn and Tvoroyri. The ship also will spend part of a day cruising through some of the Faroe Islands' rugged fjords and past Cape Enniberg.

Windstar Cruises to add Asia sailings for 2017

The ship will make day visits to Lerwick in the Shetland Islands and Kirkwall in the Orkney Islands as well as the mainland Scottish town of Aberdeen. The ShetlandIslands are known for a windswept landscape that includes rugged cliffs and beaches, Iron Age ruins and Shetland ponies. The Orkney Islands harbor some of the oldest and best-preserved Neolithic sites in Europe as well as historic sites related to a significantnaval role in World War I and II.

Fares for the sailing start at $3,499 per person, based on double occupancy.

Cruise ship tours: Inside Windstar Cruises' Wind Spirit

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Historic islands bill introduced – Holyrood.com

Humza Yousaf: Picture credit - Scottish Government

An historic bill designed to meet the unique needs of Scotlands islands has been introduced to the Scottish Parliament.

The Scottish Government said the Islands (Scotland) Bill will help create the right environment for sustainable growth and empowered communities.

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Islands Minister Humza Yousaf said: This government is committed to promoting islands voices, to harnessing islands resources and enhancing their well-being. The measures in this bill underpin this ambition.

In particular, the provision to island-proof decision-making across the public sector will ensure the interests of islanders are reflected in future legislation and policy from the very outset.

The National Islands Plan will set out the strategic direction for supporting island communities, continuing the momentum generated by the Our Islands, Our Futurecampaign and the work of the islands strategic group.

This is the first ever bill for Scotlands islands, marking an historic milestone for our island communities. I am proud and privileged as Islands Minister to be guiding the bill through Scotlands Parliament.

Measures in the bill will include:

Leader of Orkney Islands Council, James Stockan, welcomed the publication of the bill.

He said: The Our Islands, Our Future campaign specifically asked for an act for the islands in 2013 and it is gratifying to see this objective being realised.

Island proofing is particularly important as evidenced by Orkney Islands Councils substantive response to the Scottish Governments consultation.

We were able to amply demonstrate numerous cases where legislation had been detrimental to Orkney and which could have been avoided if island proofing had taken place.

Councillor Stockan added: But our work is not complete. We will be working tirelessly with Scottish Government to ensure that there is an objective standard by which decisions over whether to conduct an Islands Communities Assessment are made and also how the legislation will be interpreted.

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Wooden boats at Channel Islands Harbor for Father’s Day – Ventura County Star

Alicia Doyle, Special to The Star Published 4:28 p.m. PT June 12, 2017 | Updated 9 hours ago

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Scott Harrison steps aboard the Cheerio ll, a 1931 Fellows & Stewart yawl owned by Dick McNish that will be on display at the Channel Islands Maritime Museum for this year's wooden boat show.(Photo: CHUCK KIRMAN/THE STAR)Buy Photo

Like classic cars, wooden boats have a style, craftsmanship and romance unique to their time period. Their aficionados say that's what makes them far-distant cousins to today's mass-produced boats made of metal or plastic.

They have a certain feel thats quite different from aluminum or fiberglass boats, said Scott Harrison, who is organizing Sunday's vintage wooden boat show at the Channel Islands Maritime Museum in Oxnard's Channel Islands Harbor.

Now in its second year on Father's Day, Sunday's display, called "From the Tree to the Sea," will featureearly- to mid-20th-century wooden boats that belong to members of the Pacific Corinthian Yacht Club.

Among them will be Cheerio II, a California Historical Vessel owned by Dick McNish. Built by Fellows & Stewart of San Pedro in 1931, Cheerio II is a yawl, 56 feet long and 12 feet wide, with a draft of six feet.

It gives me a lot of pride to own Cheerio, McNish said.

Wooden boats are popular in places like Port Townsend, Washington, which is considered the wooden boat capital of the West Coast, he said.

But in our area of Ventura and Santa Barbara, there are primarily fiberglass or plastic boats, McNish said.

He describes boats made of wood as living, breathing vessels.

Their history should be kept alive because they are a living thing, McNish said.

Wooden boats are more distinctive than modern-day boats, agreed Sugar Flanagan, McNishs son-in-law. The Port Townsend residenthas sailed Cheerio several times to Australia and New Zealand.

Fiberglass boats look like theyre made of frozen snot because when you look at them, its this really hard plastic substance that was man-made, Flanagan said. If this was chopped up on the beach, youd consider it pollution.

Flanagan praised his father-in-law for giving Cheerio constant TLC.

He does the restoration of keeping her alive for future generations, Flanagan said. If people like Dick werent around to restore them, their history would be gone because there are fewer of them. Wooden boats are like an animal going extinct. There are people out there to protect them.

Other wooden vessels that will be on display include Muggs, a powerboat built in 1930 thats 37 feet long and nine feet wide with a two-foot draft; and Elusive II, a 40-foot Kettenberg sailboat built in 1961.

Those who visit the museum Sundaywill also have the opportunity to view Allura II, a powerboat built in 1929 thats also a California Historic Vesseland a restored 19-foot Chris-Craft Holiday boat built in 1952.

Well also have a floating tiki hut and bar, Harrison said. Its this fun round thing that this couple owns with a bar and seats.

In addition to the wooden boat display at the Channel Islands Maritime Museum, a classic car show will take place the same day right next door, and nautical treasures will be for sale on the patio in front of the museum. There also will be activities for children, including making paper whale hats and competing in miniature boat races.

They are little Styrofoam sailing boats, and thewind is provided by the contestant through an environmentally-friendly straw, said Peter Crabbe, executive director of the Channel Islands Maritime Museum. In addition, we will possibly have a ship in a bottle demonstration by one of our resident model makers.

Continuing the wooden boat theme, the documentary The Boatmaker will be screened 7 p.m. on June 22at the Santa Barbara Maritime Museum. The film is about Santa Barbara architect Ken Minor, who spent 25 years hand-building a 30-foot Bristol Channel Cutter wooden sailboat in a barn with the dream of sailing around the world.

Not to be forgotten or overlooked is our museum, where we have an amazing collection of world-class original maritime paintings and models of ships from the Golden Age of Sail, Crabbe said. The museum will be open, and visitors may browse at their leisure or enjoy a guided tour led by one of the museum's knowledgeable volunteer docents.

What:"From the Tree to the Sea," the second annual Father's Day Wooden Boat Show When:10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday Where: Channel Islands Maritime Museum, 3900 Bluefin Circle, Oxnard Admission: $7 for adults, $5 seniors and active military with ID, $3 children ages 6-17, free for members and children younger than 6 Information:cimmvc.org; 984-6260

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Wooden boats at Channel Islands Harbor for Father's Day - Ventura County Star

Maine island school holds first graduation ceremony in 17 years – Bangor Daily News

CRANBERRY ISLES, Maine On Saturday, three students celebrated completing 8th grade in the first graduation ceremony on Great Cranberry Island in 17 years. One of them was a homeschooled student who didnt attend classes at the school.

The Cranberry Islands are a cluster of five offshore islands south of Mount Desert Island. Only two of them, Great Cranberry Island and Little Cranberry Island have year round populations totalling about 100 residents between the two.

Seventeen years ago Great Cranberry celebrated its most recent graduation at Longfellow School, the islands tiny two-room schoolhouse.

Keith and Heath Wedge were the only students to attend Longfellow in 1999 and 2000, keeping the schoolhouse open in the face of a steadily declining enrollment. But with Keiths graduation, Heath moved on to Pemetic School in Southwest Harbor, leaving Great Cranberrys school empty for the first time since it was established in the mid-1800s.

Its been something thats been missing from the community since then, said Lindsay Eysnogle, principal of the Cranberry Island schools. Theres a feeling of loss in such a small community when the school isnt open.

Since the Wedges left, students from both Cranberries have attended the Ashley Bryan School on Little Cranberry Island. But Great Cranberry residents hoped that one day their old schoolhouse would be revived, and the town continued to maintain the building in the event that more students arrived.

It finally happened this past school year, when the town renovated the Great Cranberry school building and its school board decided that the two islands would take turns hosting students, Eysnogle said. After next school year at Longfellow, classes will be held on Little Cranberry for two years, before returning to Great Cranberry to repeat the cycle.

This year two Longfellow students graduated and were joined by one homeschooled student who finished 8th grade. Another homeschooled student on the islands graduated as well, but didnt attend the ceremony.

Eleven island students attended classes at Longfellow school this year. Next year, thats expected to swell to as many as 14 students, according to Eysnogle. Students who have to travel between islands for school take a 10-minute ferry ride and then hop into a van that takes them to the schoolhouse.

The schools are expected to have a pretty stable population in coming years, with several families with 3- and 4-year-olds living on the island. Eysnogle said she expects the population to hover between 11 and 20 students for at least the next five years.

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Maine island school holds first graduation ceremony in 17 years - Bangor Daily News

Why Canada will pay to help places like the Solomon Islands fight climate change – CBC.ca

"Nice name," said the president of the United States, perhaps deviating from his prepared text.

While announcing his determination to withdraw the United States from the Paris agreement on climate change, Donald Trump was lamentingthat American funds had been committed to help developing countriesmitigate and adapt to the impacts of a warming planet.

"Beyond the severe energy restrictions inflicted by the Paris Accord, it includes yet another scheme to redistribute wealth out of the United States through the so-called Green Climate Fund nice name which calls for developed countries to send $100 billion to developing countries all on top of America's existing and massive foreign aid payments," he explained.

The recent U.S. commitment to international climate financing has been approximately $2.7 billion US per year. To the Green Climate Fund specifically,BarackObama'sadministration had promised $3 billion.(Trump was conflating a general commitment by developed nationsto raise $100 billion US and the Green Climate Fund, which is a specific initiative within that commitment.)

Trump's Paris decision draws global criticism2:15

Canada's pledge to climate financestands at $2.65 billion Cdn over the next five years. And though Conservative MPs voted last week to endorse the Paris Accord, Conservatives have similarly grumbled about the expense.

"The bottom line is the government is nickel-and-diming Canadians to death to pay for the prime minister's out-of-control spending on his own vanity projects, like the $2.65 billion he spent on environmental projects outside of our country when the money could and should have stayed in Canada," Ed Fast, the Conservative environment critic, told the House of Commons in May.

Fast has repeatedly questioned the $2.65-billion commitment. Maxime Bernier criticized it during his leadership campaign as part of a promise to reevaluate all foreign aid.

Butto paraphrase one analyst, however much that money might flatter the prime minister's sense of self-worth, there is a decent case to be made for the spending.

The $100-billion goal a compromise from suggestions that developing nations required or deserved much more emerged during negotiationofthe Copenhagen Accord in 2009.

That amount can be justified as a matter of fairness and moral responsibility.

"If all we say to these countries is that they cannot copy what we have done ourselves when our development history has given us great prosperity while giving them many of its environmental costs there can be no reasonable dialogue on which to build a shared future," former British prime minister Gordon Brown said in pitching the $100-billion target.

Canada to fight climate change without U.S.2:08

Over the last two centuries, the world'srichest nations powered their economic growth by burning fossil fuels, producing the vast majority of historic emissions that are now contributing to climate change. As Dale Marshall of Environmental Defence puts it, the developed countries filled up more than their fair share of the planet's atmospheric space.

Meanwhile, the poorer developing nations, whilebeing asked to forgo those energy sources, are now expected to suffer disproportionately from the droughts, flooding and otherimpacts of global warming.

"Developed countries are ... morally obliged to pay partial compensation to poor and vulnerable countries," Meles Zenawi, the former prime minister of Ethiopia, argued in 2009.

But when the U.S. Treasury department asked Congress to continue supporting the Green Climate Fund this year, it offered practical arguments.

Such funding, the department reported, "advances U.S. interests" in several key areas.

By improving the resilience of vulnerable nations, funding would reduce the likelihood of civil unrest and strife, thus contributingto national and international security. And, in addition to helping to reduce global emissions, financial assistance can develop new markets, reduce the risk of economic shocks from extreme weather and change, and support the expansion of American businesses.

In an analysis published by the Brookings Institution in February, Timmons Roberts and Caroline Jones argued that withdrawing funding could reduce U.S. influence internationally. "To renege on our commitments to climate finance made in support of the Paris Agreement would weaken America's ability to muster enthusiastic support on important international policies we might care about," the two researcherswrote.

Key player in securing the Paris Climate Agreement says the costs of inaction on climate change are enormous for the U.S.5:49

The $100 billion in annual funding is to be provided by both governments and the private sector and can come in the form of loans, grants or insurance. The current Canadian commitment is being divvied up across a number of initiatives, including $300 million for the Green Climate Fund.

But Canada was involved in such aid long before Justin Trudeau was anywhere near the Prime Minister's Office.

Between 2010 and 2012, Canada contributed $1.2 billion in financing, as detailed in a 2013 report. And the commitment of $300 million to the Green Climate Fund was actually made by Stephen Harper's government in 2014.

Fast, a minister in that government, has worried that there will not be enough accountability for how the Trudeau government's commitment will be used, though officials tried to reassure him during committee hearings earlier this year. Canada's current commitments are broadly defined, but the federal government has mapped and detailed previous recipients.

Trump ventured that "nobody even knows where the money is going to," but the Green Climate Fund's websitedetails each of the 43 initiatives that have so far been funded. A project to deal with groundwater and irrigation in a tribal area of India received $166 million. A hydropower facility was installed in the Solomon Islands for $233 million.

Environmentalists also have questions about how the money will be usedand other analystshave argued that the tracking of funds needs to improve, but without saying that climate financing is an unworthy pursuit.

Of course, transparency and accountability are expectedwhenever public funds are spent.

But the main argument for climate financing is that it's justified and has an important purpose and critics have to reckon with that.

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Why Canada will pay to help places like the Solomon Islands fight climate change - CBC.ca