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With Fins Off the Menu, A Glimmer of Hope for Sharks

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For decades, the decline of sharks – sought for their fins and meat – has been staggering. But bans on finning and new attitudes in Asia toward eating shark fin soup are leading to optimism about the future for these iconic ocean predators.

Along with the economic boom in China and other Asian countries came the ability for millions to afford shark fin soup. As more sharks were harvested to feed that appetite, it became clear to scientists how vital these top-predators were for the entire ocean ecosystem – from algae to sea-grass, turtles to tuna.

In the last year, there’s been some good news leading conservationists to believe that the tide for struggling sharks, at last, may be turning.pelican-grabbed-for-rescue-YouTube

Man Expertly Grabs Pelican to Save it From Almost Certain Death (WATCH)

Global fin trade is declining. The U.S., European Union, and India, along with close to 100 other nations from the Mideast to the Caribbean, have banned finning — the practice of catching sharks solely to harvest fins. Some of those countries, like New Zealand, were huge exporters.

China, Hong Kong and Malaysia have all banned the soup at government functions, five hotel chains have taken it off their menus and 26 airlines have refused to transport shark fins. On a recent survey in China 85% of respondents said they no longer ate shark fin soup. In fact, so many people have lost their appetite for shark, that the fins are as cheap as squid — essentially destroying the market for them in some parts of China.white-lions-DotOrg

Transforming Lion Killers into ‘Lion Guardians’ in Africa

A preeminent marine biologist praised a turnaround in US fisheries management in the last decade, saying officials have basically altered their direction on shark management 180 degrees, calling new policies “among the best in the world.” Sharks are also bolstered by pledges from 205 marinas and 103 other businesses around the globe to forbid or discourage the offloading of dead sharks.

Even as sharks recover in some waters they’re getting hammered when they migrate to countries that don’t manage them, so nations and conservationists need to continue pushing for tough regulations to make sure the tide keeps turning for these crucial top-level predators.

(Source: Yale 360, March 2015, from a feature by Ted Williams) – Photo by Travel Bag Ltd (travelbag.co.uk), CC license

Touching the Mona Lisa: Now the Blind Can Enjoy Art Masterpieces Too

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Blind and other visually impaired people are finally getting to enjoy some of the world’s greatest paintings in a first of it’s kind exhibition. “Touching the Prado” turned six great master works into three-dimensional, textured reliefs that people can touch and feel at the Prado Museum in Madrid.

The paintings, including the Mona Lisa, were reproduced using a process it’s creators at Dureo Studios call “Didu.” It’s a relief printing technique that turns high resolution photos of the paintings into layered textures, defining faces, clothing, plants and other subjects in the paintings into something the blind can touch and feel.

“For me, Didu is another way to see, a way of connecting with the world of images,” a blind man named Ruben said in a video about the exhibit and process.

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“My fingers are my eyes,” Ruben said. “Everything I perceive with my fingers, all the information they gather, helps me to learn, to compose the image that up to now I couldn’t grasp.”

It takes 40 hours to create a Didu painting, layering special inks and chemically treating parts of the panels to create raised, 3-D textures. The final step requires matching the colors of the originals to give the reproductions the same look as the originals. Braille and audio descriptions accompany the works to guide visitors through the exhibit.

“The Prado Museum is (now) within everyone’s reach,” said Ruben.

(READ more, w/ photos, from Web Urbanist)

Fatal Crashes for Teen Drivers Down 55 Percent in the US

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The number of drivers between the ages of 16–19 involved in fatal automobile crashes in the United States has plummeted by 55% over the ten year period, 2004-2013.

The report released this month by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention credits several factors for cutting the number from 5,724 annually to 2,568.

The reasons cited:

– graduated driver licensing programs, which can limit teen driving at night or restrict teenage passengers
– safer vehicles
– teens waiting until they are older to drive (crash risks are highest for the youngest teen drivers)
– teens driving less overall

(Read the details from the CDC)

Photo credit: Sylvar (CC)

In Indonesia People Can Trade Trash for Free Health Care

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Patients in Indonesia can trade recyclable trash for doctor visits in a clever plan to get affordable medical care to people in rural villages.

Three in every five Indonesians have no health insurance and with no money to pay for doctors, they put off medical care allowing easily treated illnesses to turn into major problems. Dr. Gamal Albinsaid looked for a substitute for money– something people already had that they could trade for health care. He didn’t have to look much farther than Indonesia’s trash-strewn streets.

“There’s garbage everywhere on the ground,” he said, according to Fast Company. “So we decided to use garbage as a financial resource.” Only about half the trash produced in Indonesia is collected, which creates health problems and allows tons of valuable recyclables to go to waste.

Albinsaid created Garbage Clinical Insurance to take in trash, sell it to recyclers and use the money to pay for health care. Four pounds of plastic or 11 pounds of cardboard will sell for less than a dollar, but that’s enough to buy a basic health insurance policy that pays for two visits to a doctor a month.dog-food-recycling-dispenser

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Albinsaid has set up his own clinic and his company has helped 3,500 people buy health coverage. For his innovative service, the young doctor won a prize of €50,000 and mentoring support from Cambridge University in the 2013 Prince of Wales Young Sustainability Entrepreneur Awards.

(WATCH the video below or READ more in Fast Company)

Little Girl With No Birthday Party Guests is Surprised by 300 Strangers

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A little girl named Mackenzie Moretter who had a tenth birthday celebration planned for Saturday, might have been plenty disappointed because nobody planned to show up to her party, and there were last-minute cancellations.

Mackenzie has a genetic disorder called Sotos Syndrome that causes developmental delays and makes her grow a lot faster than other kids, which has made socialization tough.

Well, Mackenzie ended up having a bigger, bolder party than if her friends would have come.

Her mother, Jenny, posted a message on Facebook asking people to come. Thanks to four friends who, in two days, organized the event, and raised money – and to Twin Cities businesses who donated – Mackenzie had a tenth birthday party that no one will forget.JimmyKimmel-AprilFools-car-giveaway-youtube-cropped

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“I’m overwhelmed with emotions, my heart has been touched by so many stories similar to mine,” Mrs. Moretter wrote on FB. “I will never be able to thank you all enough for your kindness.”

Minnesota Vikings player Charles Johnson and his family showed up, along with hundreds of strangers, someone dressed as Elsa from Frozen, and the fire department, which offered kids tours of the truck.

The Mayor of Shakopee, Brad Tabke, even proclaimed Saturday as “Mackenzie Moretter Day”– and thanked her for “reminding us how we should treat each other every day.”

“I have a hard time making friends in school, but thanks to all of you … my voice was heard,” Mackenzie told the crowd. “I love you all.”

(WATCH the video from KARE-11 News)  – Photo credit: Keighla’s Fresh Face Photography, FB

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Man Creates ‘Shoes That Grow’ So Poor Kids Don’t Outgrow Them

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If you were making a list of things that someone needed to survive and succeed in the world, well-fitting shoes wouldn’t be at the top. But Kenton Lee was working with barefooted kids in Kenya and realized the importance of making this a priority.

“Wouldn’t it be great,” he pondered, “if there was a shoe that could adjust and expand — so that kids always had a pair of shoes that fit?”

Kenton Lee was working with barefooted kids in Kenya and realized the importance of well-fitting shoes. His incredible innovation? A Shoe That Grows.adjustable-sandal-poor-children-the-shoe-that-grows-kenton-lee-2

Although kids may own shoes, it’s hard when living in poverty to keep up with constant growth spurts. The Shoe That Grows can now accommodate children’s ever-growing feet by expanding five sizes, making them last up to ten years.Kenguru-car-wheelchair-entry

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Determined to get started, Kenton became the Founder and Executive Director of Because International, a nonprofit organization headquartered in Nampa, Idaho. The company completed the prototype for their wonder shoe in 2013, and reached out to the world for crowdfunding of their invention. After hand delivering their first shipment of 100 shoes to little ones in Nairobi, Kenya, Kenton is eager to continue production.

Thanks to these shoes, children won’t be so susceptible to soil-based diseases and infections, and they can always be ready to race wherever their legs may lead them.

Inspired to walk in Kenton’s shoes? The donate button to protect children’s feet is just a click away.

(WATCH his video below)

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New Baby Bison: First One Born in Nearly Two Centuries in Eastern US

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The last time a bison was born in a wild habitat east of the Mississippi River was in the 1830s. This month, 95 miles west of Chicago, history was reset on a patch of restored prairie grass.

The historic birth is thrilling news for the Nature Conservancy working in Illinois since the 1980s to restore the Nachusa Grasslands. They finally reintroduced the vital last piece of the puzzle, a wild bison herd, last October.

Commenting on the bison birth, Cody Considine, a restoration ecologist at Nachusa said, “From a historical standpoint, this hasn’t happened in Illinois in about 200 years.”elephant-mom-and-baby-ENP

After Years Apart, Watch This Mother Elephant Reunite With Her Baby

 

Cody says the mother and calf “looked great” but no one’s tried to get close to them. So far, they’ve only monitored the baby’s progress through binoculars–and camera lenses, with the Conservancy releasing high resolution photos last week.

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“The goal is to allow the bison to be bison.” Cody explained. “Between our two bison units they have 1,500 acres of prairie to roam, and aside from the annual round up and veterinary check, they will breed, birth, and care for themselves 364 days a year.”

The newest addition, along with other baby bison expected later this spring, will further the prairie restoration work to come. Through their natural grazing behavior, they help keep grasses in check while creating a mosaic of habitats that allow a wide range of wild flowers, birds, mammals, plants, insects and amphibians to flourish

For more info, visit www.nature.org/nachusabison or watch their video here. (Photos by Charles Larry, courtesy of Nature Conservancy)

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The 5 Best Ways To Show Your Kids Love: How Many Do You Do?

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We know that the single most beneficial thing we can do for our kids is to love them. Kids thrive when they feel loved.

It seems straightforward, doesn’t it? We all know how to love our kids, don’t we? But I’m not sure that love is that straightforward.

I know my husband and I show our love for our kids in different ways. My husband is much more expressive in telling the kids he loves them, and giving them lots of cuddles. Whereas, I’m more likely to help my kids, and teach them how to be a decent person.

Despite our best intentions, things can easily get in the way of showing our love – busyness, competing demands, stress, lack of sleep, and the list goes on.kids playing, photo by Sun Star

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But it’s worthwhile to remember these five ways to show our kids love. And recognize when we do them.

1. Being warm and affection
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Being warm and affectionate is one of the more obvious ways we can show our kids love. It could be morning cuddles, snuggling up with a book at night, or randomly saying ‘I love you’.

2. Doing activities together

Kids get a lot of value and enjoyment out of doing fun activities with us whether it’s sitting on the floor with a puzzle, finger painting or going for a bike ride. Even if it doesn’t seem fun for us (and there are a million others things that need to get done), getting involved in our child’s fun can be infectious.

3. Paying attention

One of the more powerful ways to validate our children and help them feel loved is to pay attention to them. They want us to notice when they do something new or fun or funny! If we’re too distracted, we can miss moments to share in their world. We can’t pay undivided attention to our kids every minute of every day (and we wouldn’t really want to because that doesn’t necessarily help our kids). But taking a little time every day helps show our love.

4. Saying no

I think one of our most important jobs as parents is to help teach our kids what’s appropriate and acceptable behavior. Kids learn this when we set some boundaries and stick to them. That involves saying no when we need to, even if our kids don’t like it. To me, that is another very important aspect of loving our children.

5. Focusing on strengths

I think everyone, including kids, really thrive when we reinforce and encourage their strengths. Sometimes we can be so focused on stamping out the negative behaviour that we forget to highlight and encourage the good behaviour. All of our kids have amazing strengths that we can cultivate and delight in everyday.

There are probably so many other ways to express our love, but I think these five are most important. What do you do to show your kids you love them? Tell us in the comments below…Jodie Benveniste-Author photo

Jodie Benveniste is a psychologist, parenting author, TEDx speaker, and author of four parenting books, including Intuitive Parenting: Unlocking the secrets to raising incredible kids. Visit her website at jodiebenveniste.com.

Like the article? Share it, and show US some Love! – Photo by Philippe Put, CC

China Fights Water Pollution, Bans Paper Mills and Oil Refineries

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China will ban water-polluting paper mills, oil refineries, pesticide producers and other industrial plants by the end of 2016, as it moves to tackle severe pollution of the country’s water supply.

The long-awaited plan comes as the central government steps up its “war on pollution” after years of industrial development that have left one-third of China’s major river basins contaminated.

(READ the full story from Reuters)

Photo: Guangzhou river by sanfamedia.com, via CC

Sacrificing to Help Brother Go To School, Selfless Sister Is Rewarded With Tuition

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Sometimes, good things happen to good people.

Young Lauren Burgos had always planned to go to college, possibly even to become a lawyer. But when her father died while she was still in high school, she took a job to help her family, eventually working 40-60 hours a week at a Manhattan hotel so her brother could attend college, while she helped pay the rent. Dreams of higher education became a distant memory for the 22-year-old, but her family never forgot.

When her brother, Matt, learned that Strayer University was looking to award scholarships to people whose obstacles had forced them to take a detour in life, instead of pursuing college, he submitted Lauren’s story of selflessness.graduation-teens-commencement-Girard-College-photo

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At a surprise birthday party last month, Lauren Burgos stood aghast when her family in Brooklyn broke the news that she was one of three people chosen to receive a full scholarship– and money for books, too.

“You sacrificed… you kept me going,” her brother Matt told her.

“I’m getting a full ride to school,” Lauren told a camera crew that was recording the surprise for Strayer. Laughing and wiping away tears, she dared finally to dream again.

“In five to ten years, I will be a self-confident, independent woman traveling the world.”

(WATCH the heartwarming video below)

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Her Student Debt Was Paid in Full After A Bank Heard Her Family Story

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After a former college student shared her heartbreaking family story on CNN last month, her student loans totaling $54,000 were completely wiped off the bank’s ledger within hours.

Rhea Shannon, 26, a graduate of Howard University in Washington, DC, was left without a parent to help repay the debt after her father died serving in Afghanistan. Her soldier dad had been a huge advocate for continuing education, so he cosigned on her loan before reenlisting to help pay them off.

Shannon could not keep up with the payments, was grieving, and having to face collectors alone, when she told CNN Money her story. Within two hours of the broadcast, she received a call from the Tragedy Assistance Program (TAPS) who informed her she no longer owed a cent because the nonprofit organization, which supports families after the death of a service member, has a partnership with JP Morgan Chase.debt eraser-Alan Cleaver-flickr-CC

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The debt was forgiven through the mega-bank’s Military Survivor Program, which is always on the lookout for cases like Shannon’s. Since the program started in 2013, JPMorgan has forgiven $4.3 million in student loans, car loans, mortgages, and credit card debt held by fallen service members.

And, while the heavy burden was being lifted from Shannon’s shoulders, she also learned about a TAPS scholarship that will cover her Master’s degree.

“Thank you God, and thank you Dad,” she told CNN.

(WATCH video below from CNN Money)

CORRECTION: GNN incorrectly identified the woman’s father as a Marine. The story has been corrected.

Innovative Crowdsourcing of Tweets, Phones Can Give Early Warnings of Quakes, Floods

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Your smartphone could save your life before disaster strikes. Researchers are turning smartphones and social media into early warning systems for earthquakes and floods.

In two separate developments, researchers have found a way to use smartphone GPS sensors to detect earthquakes and Twitter to track major flooding in real-time.

In the first case, NASA helped scientists to crowdsource the GPS in smartphones and tablets to measure sudden shaking in the ground. The phones then sent warnings to other phones farther and farther away. The early warning reached people several seconds before the quake’s tremors got to them.

“The speed of an electronic warning travels faster than the earthquake shaking does,” explained Craig Glennie, a report author and professor at the University of Houston in Texas.Kenguru-car-wheelchair-entry

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The system only works with major quakes, magnitude seven or higher, but if as few as 5,000 phones and tablets in a major city sense a tremor, that’s enough to send out an early warning — and buy people valuable time to take cover.

“Most of the world does not receive earthquake warnings mainly due to the cost of building the necessary scientific monitoring networks,” said U.S. Geological Survey geophysicist and project lead Benjamin Brooks, who published their findings in the journal Science Advances.

At the same time, researchers are using smartphones with a Twitter app to track major floods.

Disaster planners used tweets from two years of flooding in Indonesia to create real-time flood maps that could warn people of rising water and help them determine where to send rescuers and resources.ocean

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This speedy method can produce a map within around a minute of messages being posted, Deltares flood expert Dirk Eilander told Reuters.

People in Jakarta were posting 900 tweets per minute during February’s floods. Researchers used those pictures and descriptions to recreate what people were seeing, then plotted it onto a map. The amateur observations weren’t as accurate as professional gauges, but the descriptions matched professional measurements in two-thirds of the cases.

Disaster responders can use the maps to spot areas with the greatest need for response and to speed up recovery efforts.

Both the earthquake and flood warning systems are relatively inexpensive and put important parts of disaster preparedness in the hands — or pockets — of everyone with a smartphone.

Photo credit: Ed Yourdon, CC

Monkey Presumed Extinct is Photographed in Congo Forest

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A rare monkey not seen for nearly half a century and thought to be extinct has been spotted by two primatologists working in a Congo forest. Their expedition yielded the first-ever photograph of the elusive Bouvier’s red colobus monkey.

The Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) reported the good news this week after researchers Lieven Devreese and Gaël Elie Gnondo Gobolo returned from the Ntokou-Pikounda National Park, a protected area that safeguard gorillas, chimpanzees, elephants, and other species.

Guided by local people familiar with the area, the team found a group of red colobus in the swamp forests and confirmed that the species is not extinct.baby Orcas w mom-CenterforWhaleResearch-released-byJeanne_Hyde

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“We’re very pleased indeed that Lieven and Gaël were able to achieve their objective of not only confirming that Bouvier’s red colobus still exists, but also managing to get a very clear close-up picture of a mother and infant,” said WCS’s Dr. Fiona Maisels. “Thankfully, these colobus monkeys live in the recently gazetted national park and are protected from threats such as logging, agriculture, and roads, all of which can lead to increased hunting.”

Bouvier’s red colobus (Piliocolobus bouvieri) is a species of monkey endemic to the Republic of Congo, about which virtually nothing is known. First described in 1887, it is only known from a couple of museum specimens collected from three localities over 100 years ago. The authors of a book written in 1949 mention that the species lives in the swamp forests of the region, but the last unverified sightings of Bouvier’s red colobus monkey occurred in the 1970s.jedrons-babbler-myanmar_Robert Tizard-WildlifeConservationSociety

Bird Thought to Be Extinct Re-emerges in Myanmar

 

Red colobus monkeys (there are several species) typically do not flee from humans but look down at them from the trees, an unfortunate behavioral characteristic that has led to them becoming very rare wherever hunters are active. Hunting and logging decimated its population, leading some scientists to suggest the monkey was extinct.

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One of the Most Polluted Lakes in U.S. Welcomes Swimmers After 75 Years

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Once among the most polluted lakes in America, a 4.5 mile long lake in Upstate New York is considered by some to be clean enough for swimming –for the first time in 75 years.

Swimming has been banned on Onondaga lake since 1940 because of industrial pollution and sewage, but with hundreds of millions of dollars spent on water treatment over the past two decades, the pollution has dropped dramatically.

There still is no public beach, and officials warn people not to swim after big rains, because sewage runoff into the lake remains dangerous.

(READ the story from Syracuse.com)

UPDATE, August, 2015: New article about swimming demonstrates  mixed reviews.

Nasal Spray Helps Alzheimer’s Patients Regain Some Mental Function

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An insulin nasal spray has shown it can boost memory and other mental functions for people with Alzheimer’s. Patients in the early stages of the disease who used the spray saw as much as a 25% improvement on tests of their mental manipulation and memory.

“Our team was surprised at the level of improvement for the participants with the gene that raises Alzheimer’s risk, as very few types of therapies have been shown to benefit these patients,” Dr. Suzanne Craft, professor of gerontology and geriatric medicine at Wake Forest Baptist, told Fox News.

Craft is part of the team behind the Study of Nasal Insulin in the Fight against Forgetfulness, or “SNIFF.”

Insulin, which became available for medical use 92 years ago this week, is essential for managing blood sugar in the body, but it also plays a key role in brain function — allowing receptors to process memory.

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“If you have Alzheimer’s disease, you see specific areas of the brain that are not utilizing the sugar the way they should. That has to do with the insulin receptors,” a Rush University Medical Center cognitive neurologist, Dr. Neelum Aggarwal, explained for KSFN News. “These areas of the brain now are not working.”

The spray delivers insulin directly to the brain, letting those receptors start working again. And the man-made insulin used in the spray causes no side effects.

The first study only looked at 60 patients over 21 days. The SNIFF team is now looking for 250 patients from across the country for much longer trials in 29 centers across the country.

To see if you qualify for the trials, you can go to the SNIFF website.

(WATCH the video below from KSFN, or READ more from Fox.com)

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Picasso Police Horse Paints in His Spare Time

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Well, this is a horse of a different color.

Jacob the police horse uses orange, greens, and blues to paint his abstract art while relaxing in a Florida pasture before his night job with the St. Petersburg Police Department.

Officer Jason Hughes, his trainer for six years, noticed how the horse, a mix of Percheron and thoroughbred, always liked to grab things with his mouth.cave-digger

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“I was like, ‘You know, I bet if I gave him a paint brush, and put a canvas in front of it, he’d paint on it,'” Hughes says in a video posted on the police department’s YouTube page. “And, sure enough, he did. He took to it pretty easy.”

Hughes thinks the paintings are actually pretty good. The cooperative activity–with Jason loading the brushes and Jacob swiping the paint across the canvas– helps build trust between the two. In the evening, the partners saddle up downtown for patrols through congested areas of the city.Horse_Saved_By_Boy_FamilyPhotoMJAllen

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Hughes has developed custom brushes that are easier for Jacob to hold with this teeth and after just a few months training, each canvas improves–paintings that Officer Hughes hopes be sell to raise money for charities.

(WATCH video below)

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Social Worker Finally Adopts Boy Who Begged Church For A Forever Family in 2013

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It was her all along.

After a heartfelt plea to his church in 2013, a 16-year-old Florida boy’s prayers were answered by the very woman who was was by his side all along, helping the foster teen look for a home.

Good News Network first covered the story when Davion Navar Henry Only stood in front of a church congregation publicly asking someone, anyone, to love him. Touched by his plight, following widespread media coverage, more than 10,000 families came forward asking for information about adopting the teen.

Eventually, he moved in with a Reverend’s family, but was later rejected and sent back to foster care, after numerous fights broke out in the home.mingo-orphans-stick-together-familyphoto

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After months of feeling totally dispirited, Davion telephoned his social worker, Connie Bell Going, known to him as “Miss Connie”, and asked the same question that he’d posed several times since the age of seven.

“How do you feel about adopting me…?”

As a single mother of three, she had always wanted to take him in, but held out hope for finding a family with a father. But she decided it was time and by the next month, Davion was spending weekends with her daughters, Sydney, 21, Carley, 17 and adopted son Taylor, 14.Maid-surprised with home-PrankItForward-YouTube

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In December, Davion moved in, and the legal adoption process began.

The two celebrated his adoption on their shared birthday in February by signing the papers together, and on April 22 it will become official.

Indeed, they have the same birth date, further evidence that this family was meant to be.

(WATCH Davion’s 2013 church plea below) Photo from Connie Going FB Page

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Lonely Veteran Finds New Friend in a Four-Legged “Battle Buddy”

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Since leaving the army, Chris’s days have been–well, lonely. Like many veterans, Chris missed the camaraderie and closeness of his fellow soldiers.

Chris thought perhaps a cat would be the solution, so he took a trip with his girlfriend–who lived in another state, at the time–to the Humane Society of Tampa Bay “just to browse.”

A little Puggle (Pug and Beagle mix) had other plans for Chris.

“When we passed through the kennel with the small dogs, we absolutely fell in love with Darla when she yelped at us to come see her,” he said. “She was adorable and was very distressed about being in there. I set up a meeting with her in their yard and she was extremely affectionate and friendly. We knew just then that we were going to take her home.”Prank_It_Forward_Homeless_Man_with_pet_dog-640px

Terminally Ill Homeless Man and Dog Gifted With Apartment, Pet Food

 

Darla, then five years old, had been surrendered by her previous family because they were unable to support her financially.

Chris and Veronica wouldn’t have to worry about that, thanks to a partnership between the shelter and a nonprofit called Pets for Patriots, an organization that helps veterans and military personnel adopt adult and special needs pets. By providing veterans with a range of benefits, pet parenthood is instantly more affordable–on an ongoing basis. Pets for Patriots has active partnerships with shelters, rescues, and animal control facilities nationwide, offering veterans discounted adoption fees, “welcome home” packages of food and collars, and continued veterinary discounts for the men and women who have served our country.

unnamed-1“There’s a mistaken impression that everyone will qualify for a service animal,” said Beth Zimmerman, Founder and Executive Director of Pets for Patriots. “But for most veterans, a companion pet can be just as therapeutic, and even life-saving.”

Darla quickly became a four-legged battle buddy for the decorated veteran. For her part, the little dog has taken well to her new life, including ditching her own bed to sleep under the blankets with Chris.

No longer lonely, Chris takes Darla to the dog park to stretch her legs every morning, and the two spend the rest of the day together until Veronica gets home. A typical day consists of sniffing absolutely everything, giving dirty looks to skateboarders, and keeping an eye out for the local pet store, which she recognizes instantly as one of her favorite places to go. Darla refuses to be left alone in any room, ever, and thus has become great at helping out with the laundry.

Chris one day hopes to open his own bar and grill, with uniforms that sport Darla’s picture, but whatever the young Army veteran decides to do, Darla will have his back.Bernese mountain dog in ocean-KTLAvideo

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“The loyalty and affection she gives me can make any day so much better,” he says. “It doesn’t matter how mad, irritated or stressed out I am, because once I walk through that door she makes everything go away and helps me to relax. She helps me keep my head up.”

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$70K Minimum Wage: CEO Takes Huge Pay Cut to Raise Pay For Loyal Workers

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You may not be able to put a price on happiness, but a $70,000 a year minimum wage might take your mind off your problems.

A Seattle CEO is willing to give it a try — and he’s cutting his own salary to pay for it.

“You might be making $35,000 a year right now,” Price told 70 employees during the announcement. “But every one of you will definitely be making $70,000 a year and I’m super excited about that.”

Price got the idea after reading a research paper on happiness which showed extra money makes a big difference in the lives of people earning less than $70,000 a year.

Gravity Payments is a small company, so he couldn’t help but overhear people talking about their struggles with rent increases and unexpected bills.

The company, founded in Price’s college dorm room when he was only 19 years old, has since handled nearly 6.5 billion in payment transactions for 12,000 businesses.

He managed to make it through the 2008 recession without laying off any employees or raising prices, despite losing 20% of his business. Most of those young workers stuck with him through the hard times and he sees the wage increases as a way of returning that loyalty.

“I think this is just what everyone deserves,” Price told KING-TV. “Seeing people grow here has been amazing. And so, I just wanted to, just like, pass that along to the next generation of team members.”

Price will pay for the raises partly by digging into his company’s expected $2.2 million profits this year, and the rest will come from cutting his own $1 million annual salary. For the time being, Price will earn $70,000 a year — just like everyone else at his company.

“To hear those numbers is just — Wow!” Alyssa O’Neal told KING. She’s one of 30 employees who’ll see their salaries actually double. “I have this goal of being a 21-year-old home owner and I’m going to reach that now, and I am stoked.”

(WATCH the video below or READ more from the NY Times)

Restaurant Owner Leaves Note For Dumpster Diver Promising Free Meal

dumpster-diving-note

Just like any good mom, this Oklahoma restaurant owner wants to make sure everyone is well fed.

When Ashley Jiron, owner of sandwich shop P.B. Jams in Warr Acres realized someone was sifting through her trash for food she posted fliers promising a free meal with no questions asked. The fliers told the anonymous person, “You’re a human being and worth more than a meal from a dumpster.” Her sentiment went viral after she also posted the notice on Facebook.

“I am a mother of two little girls and I’ve struggled like a lot of single parents out there, and I’ve had to ask for state assistance, food stamps, and such,” Jiron told ABC News, adding, “Sometimes as simple as even just a peanut butter and jelly sandwich is very comforting to somebody and maybe even offer them a few words.”

thumbs-up-PBJams-owner-FBTo date the person has not taken Jiron up on her offer, but she has vowed to leave the notes up until he or she does.

Her peanut butter and jelly shop has gained worldwide attention thanks to her humanity. Jiron plans to put the new celebrity status to good use. This past Sunday she launched the #ShareTheNuts program, which allows patrons to pay for the less fortunate.

(WATCH the video below, or READ the story from KFOR-TV)

Multiply the Good by Sharing (below)…