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Beach Hazards Statement issued December 31 at 8:10AM PST until January 4 at 1:00PM PST by NWS Los Angeles/Oxnard CA

Kraig Pakulski 0 34 Article rating: No rating

* WHAT…Dangerous rip currents and breaking waves due to
elevated surf expected. Minor coastal overflows possible due to
abnormally high tides between 6.7 and 7.5 feet and gusty
southerly winds.

* WHERE…Catalina and Santa Barbara Islands, Santa Barbara
County Southwestern Coast, Santa Barbara County Southeastern
Coast, Ventura County Beaches, Malibu Coast and Los Angeles
County Beaches.

* WHEN…From late tonight through Sunday afternoon.

* IMPACTS…Pooling of sea water is possible around high tide at
beach and harbor areas that is uncommon with normal tidal
ranges. Enhanced beach erosion is also possible. No
significant damage is expected. There is an increased risk of
ocean drowning. Rip currents can pull swimmers and surfers out
to sea. Waves can wash people off beaches and rocks, and
capsize small boats nearshore.

* ADDITIONAL DETAILS…Peak high tides are expected between 5 am
and 9 am on New Years Day, shifting to between 7 am and 11 am by
Sunday. There is a moderate chance for Coastal Flood Advisories
to be issued for this weekend focused on west facing beaches
due to an incoming west swell on top of high tides.
Remain out of the water due to hazardous swimming conditions, or
stay near occupied lifeguard towers. Rock jetties can be deadly
in such conditions, stay off the rocks.

The post Beach Hazards Statement issued December 31 at 8:10AM PST until January 4 at 1:00PM PST by NWS Los Angeles/Oxnard CA appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

A multistate salmonella outbreak may be linked to oysters. What people should know

Kraig Pakulski 0 49 Article rating: No rating

By Katia Hetter, CNN

(CNN) — A multistate outbreak of salmonella infections likely linked to raw oysters has sickened more than 60 people across 22 states, according to a US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention health advisory.

Health officials are working to identify the source of those contaminated raw oysters, the advisory issued December 23 said.

What is salmonella, and how does it make people sick? How do oysters become contaminated, and is it ever safe to eat them? What should you know if oysters are on the menu for upcoming social gatherings? Which groups of people are most vulnerable to severe illness? What other types of seafood can carry similar risks, and how can you reduce your chances of getting sick?

To help with these questions, I turned to CNN wellness expert Dr. Leana Wen. Wen is an emergency physician and clinical associate professor at George Washington University. She previously was Baltimore’s health commissioner, with responsibilities that included overseeing food safety.

CNN: What is salmonella, and how does it make people sick?

Dr. Leana Wen: Salmonella is a group of bacteria that causes one of the most common foodborne infections in the United States. People usually become infected after eating food contaminated with the bacteria. Once inside the body, salmonella triggers inflammation that leads to gastrointestinal illness.

Salmonella is often associated with undercooked poultry, eggs and contaminated produce, but it can also be found in seafood, including oysters. Because the bacteria are invisible and do not change the smell or taste of food, people typically have no warning that what they are eating may make them sick.

CNN: What kind of symptoms do people experience, and how is the illness treated?

Wen: Symptoms of salmonella infection usually begin within six hours to several days after exposure. Common symptoms include diarrhea, stomach cramps, fever, nausea and vomiting. Many people also feel fatigued and dehydrated. In most healthy adults, symptoms last four to seven days and resolve on their own without specific treatment.

Care is primarily supportive in nature. The most important step is staying well-hydrated, especially if diarrhea is frequent. Oral rehydration solutions can help replace lost fluids and electrolytes. Over-the-counter fever

Word of the Week: ‘Redact’ resurfaces with the Epstein files

Kraig Pakulski 0 66 Article rating: No rating

By Harmeet Kaur, CNN

(CNN) — On November 30, 2019, according to documents released by the Department of Justice, the lawyer Joe Nascimento, apparently representing an unnamed employee of the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, sent an email to investigators.

“Good morning,” Nascimento wrote. “Just wanted to check-in as” — and then the rest of that paragraph disappears into nearly two full lines’ worth of solid black rectangles.

If the missing words were a mystery, the word for what happened to them was not. Along with other major swaths of the documents collectively known as the Epstein files, they had been redacted.

Two hundred years ago, redact — from the Latin redigere, meaning to drive or send back — meant to edit, to put into writing or to organize a number of ideas or writings into a coherent form. But around the middle of the 20th century, it began to refer to one particular kind of editing. Instead of coherence, the point was concealment: to remove certain information from a document before its release, especially “for legal, security, or confidentiality purposes,” per the Oxford English Dictionary.

One of the earliest examples of “redact” as we know it today appears in a 1957 New York appellate court opinion, which stated that “feasible means should have been adopted to redact” a defendant’s confession and admissions before they were introduced into evidence. Stephen Voyce, an English professor at the University of Iowa who has studied classified documents, traces this usage to the US national security bureaucracy that emerged during the Cold War and the resulting glut of information it produced.

As the advent of photocopying made it easier to disseminate material, and as the 1966 Freedom of Information Act gave the public the right to access government records, federal agencies used the solid black rectangle as a tool to control sensitive information.

What exactly constitutes as sensitive seems to be up to the discretion of individual government officials, said Voyce. The US government over the years has frequently redacted information from documents that were already public, or blacked out different parts of files at different periods, as George Washington University’s National Security Archive has detailed. Similar contradictions have plagued the Epstein files rollout — Trump’s name was redacted in one version of a document released by the DOJ and visible in another.

“There seems to be very little rhyme or reason to what’s being redacted beyond the motivations of the person doing the redaction — in this case, the DOJ,” Voyce added.

What’s redacted in the Epstein files — and what isn’t — has become a point of contention. Both Democratic and Republican lawmakers, as well as many of the financier’s victims, have criticized the Justice Department for over-redaction and under-redaction. Entire pages have been blacked out in some instances, with flimsy justification from the DOJ. Meanwhile, survivors who sought to remain anonymous saw their names published, and attempts to obscure other information within the records could be undone with a simple copy and paste.

As with the Epstein files, botched redactions are a common occurrence.<

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