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Manatees Displaced by Hurricane Are Rescued From Golf Course Pond (LOOK)

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U.S. residents are still recovering from the widespread effects of Hurricane Hermine – including these poor displaced manatees found floundering in a muddy golf course pond.

The mammals were first sighted in the pond on September 2nd after washing up with the muddy tides flooding Crystal River, Florida.

MOREManatee Population Has Rebounded 500 Percent, No Longer Endangered

Luckily, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission were able to rescue the creatures using kayaks and nets for transportation.

Among the rescued animals was a mother and calf.

The manatees are receiving health evaluations since the ocean-dwelling mammals are still considered a threatened species. Once they are declared unharmed, they will be released back into the wild.

 

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These New Alternatives For the EpiPen Will Cost Less Than $100

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Following Mylan’s controversial business choice to hike the price of the EpiPen up 400% to over $600, medical trailblazers are finding ways to challenge the greedy company with cheaper alternatives.

Mark Baum is the CEO of Imprimis Pharmaceuticals renowned for offering a $1 version of Daraprim, the AIDS medication that Martin Shkreli made 5,000% more expensive than its original cost.

Now, the pharmaceutical hero is taking on EpiPen by developing a customizable and compoundable alternative to Mylan’s product for less than $100.

Baum has expressed shame over the company’s decision to gouge the public on such an important medical expense considering the main ingredient, epinephrine, costs only a few dollars without the auto-injector.

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Baum’s developers hope to have the allergy treatment ready by the end of the year.

Meanwhile, Dr. Douglas McMahon from the Allergy and Asthma Center of Eagan, Minnesota has started crowdfunding a $50 version of the EpiPen on Indiegogo with a $200,000 goal to complete quality testing and gain FDA approval.

The alternative he calls AllergyStop is a product he’s been tinkering with for several years now.

Not only does he want to make the medication cheaper and more available to allergic patients in need, but he wants to make it smaller and easier to handle as well.

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“I’ve been working on this for many years,” McMahon told WCCO. “I actually have severe food allergies myself, so I’ve needed to carry an Epinephrine device for many years. Throughout that process I’ve realized the current device is really big and cumbersome, to the point where I hardly ever carried it.”

Though the campaign has only raised about 2% of its goal, it still has one more month for backers to contribute.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Need a Smile? Watch This Baby Elephant Play in a Kiddie Pool

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Nothing cheers people up faster than watching videos of baby animals having a good time.

So here’s 3-week-old Baby Belle and her mother Rasha playing in a kitty pool at the Fort Worth Zoo in Fort Worth Texas.

VIDEOBear Literally Can’t Stop Jumping For Joy After Being Rescued

It may be an oldie from 2013, but it’s still a goodie.

(WATCH the video below)

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Dying Man’s Last Wish Fulfilled 45 Minutes Before He Passes Away

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73-year-old Paddy Lawler has always been a lifelong Manchester United fan – and after a four year battle with prostate cancer, he only held on long enough to meet some of his heroes.

Before he passed away, the senior’s granddaughter Kayleigh asked the dying man what his final wish would be. Paddy responded that he has always wanted to meet some players from his favorite English football team.

Kayleigh wasted no time in taking to social media with a plea for help in checking off the old man’s bucket list wish.

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Sure enough, Marcus Rashford, Jesse Lingard, Ashley Young, and Timothy Fosu-Mensah arrived at the little house in luxury cars on a Tuesday afternoon so they could chat with Paddy on his deathbed.

“I put an appeal on Facebook just to see how I could even start organizing something like that and it just went mad from there,” Kayleigh told the Sun. “We couldn’t believe they took the time to make a dying man’s wish come true. They were here for half an hour and were more than happy to take as many photos and sign as many shirts as we wanted.”

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Paddy was overwhelmed with joy – and forty-five minutes after the players left his house, he quietly passed away.

Paddy’s family feels eternally grateful for the young champions taking time out of their busy schedules to fulfill a man’s dying wish and they believe the elderly fan held on just so he could say hello – and goodbye – to the soccer players.

Score Some Positivity With Your Friends: Click To SharePhoto by Kayleigh Lawler Carson

Huge Solar Facility to Give Power to 1M African People

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Morocco is responding to increasing energy demands by setting up one of the largest solar plants in the world.

The Noor solar power station is located in the city of Ouarzazate and, once completed, will generate 580 megawatts of electricity. The World Bank estimates it will serve 1.1 million people. It’s scheduled to be completed in 2018.

Morocco’s current energy sources come mostly from imports. The nation hopes to source 50 percent of its energy from renewable sources by 2030. With demand for energy rising at an annual rate of 7 percent, the new solar plant could be a crucial part of that goal.

“This makes Morocco a big pioneer in the field of solar energy in the Arab region and the African continent. It could also be a pioneer for many other countries in the world that depend on foreign imports of energy,” said Ali Hajji, a solar energy specialist and engineering professor.

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Experts believe that the Middle East and North Africa have huge potential for solar energy projects, partly because of adequate sunlight and partly because technology has become more affordable in the region.

“The last few years have seen a realization of just how competitive solar technologies can be,” said Michael Taylor, a senior analyst at the International Renewable Energy Agency (Brooke Anderson, Wall Street Journal, Sept. 13).

Reprinted with permission from E&E Publishing

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Heartwarming Global Bob Marley Singalong Breaks Monday Monotony (WATCH)

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With thousands of commuters going about their everyday routine, subways tend to feel a bit glum on the average weekday.

These passengers’ trips were brightened, however, when a group of performance artists roused them into a singalong of Bob Marley’s “Three Little Birds”.

Orchestrated by the same organization that instigated a “Somewhere Over The Rainbow” flash mob on a morning train last summer, this irresistible tune was sung in 25 cities across 18 countries.

The group, known as The Liberators International because of their love of free artistic expression in public, performed the tune on subways from Australia, to Malaysia, to Puerto Rico, to England, and many others. Passengers were handed lyric sheets and flowers to encourage participation.

VIDEOVon Trapp Singers Delight With ‘Sound of Music’ Flash Mob on Train

The results are magical.

“With news of terrorism and war dominating headlines around the world, The Liberators International want to remind humanity that we are stronger together than we are apart,” says the organization’s website. “Singing has been proven to break down barriers between people, as well as improve mental health and general wellbeing.”

The group is also responsible for the world’s biggest eye contact experiment in 2015 in which 100,000 people from 156 different cities participated.

(WATCH the beautiful video below)

 

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School Bus Driver Calmly Rescues 20 Children From Flaming Vehicle

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If it hadn’t been for the quick reflexes of this school bus driver, this rescue story may have ended in tragedy when her vehicle went up in flames with 20 children inside.

Reneita Smith was en route from Glenarden Woods Elementary School in College Park, Maryland when a fire started under the rear wheel of the bus.

Without pause, the driver pulled each and every one of the kids off of the bus, even going so far as to reenter the smoking structure to make sure no one had been left behind.

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The mother of two is being praised for her heroism in the face of danger.

“A big THANK YOU to our school bus driver Reneita Smith who just saved 20 elementary school kids from a bus fire that completely destroyed the bus,” Fazlul Kabir posted on Facebook. “Reneita [not only] took each one of the 20 kids from the bus one by one, but also went into the empty bus again to check if everyone was out, while it was still burning.”

“I am a mom of two kids,” KTLA reported Smith saying. “It’s my job to save them.”

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Reclusive Neighbor Facing $3K in Code Violations Rescued by Next-Door Couple

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Anne Glancey didn’t have the money to repair her deteriorating house, nor did she have the family or friends to help her do it – until one day her neighbors decided to fix it themselves.

The retired school teacher’s home wasn’t exactly easy on the eyes – Hamilton Township, New Jersey told her that if she didn’t remove the rusting car in her yard, chip and peel the paint of her house, and fix the shrubbery in her yard, she would face up to $3,000 in code violations per day.

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Anne’s neighbors, Adam and Kristin Polhemus, were the first people in the community to reach out to the hermit. When they learned of her financial dilemma, they took matters into their own hands.

Every summer weekend, Kristin and Adam would recruit their family, friends, and neighbors to join them in fixing Anne’s house.

In lieu of the constant stream of helpers, Anne even came out of her shell to serve orange juice and homemade carrot cake to the volunteers.

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By the end of the August, the home was completely transformed and the code violations were dropped.

“To see the joy on our neighbor’s face, I think the biggest thing is Anne’s happiness and her kind of restored life,” Adam told People. “Her outgoingness to other neighbors is based on her house being improved.”

Don’t Be Shy: Click To SharePhoto by Kristin Polhemus

Palestinians and Israelis Unite to Spread Peace Through Backgammon

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On a warm weekend in August, Israelis and Palestinians were once again found on opposing sides of a table – but this time, it was with the absence of violence or disagreement.

Men, women, and children from both sides of a divided Jerusalem gathered in the ottoman-era Train Station Restaurant to engage in the age old pastime of backgammon.

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“I can’t see any borders here,” Jewish citizen Linda Menhuin Abdel Aziz told CBC. “Everyone is together and I just love it”

The event was organized by peace group Kulna Yerushalayim, which means “We are all Jerusalem.” For many, this was a rare moment that would only take place a few times in a lifespan. Political and religious differences were set aside in order to facilitate an atmospheric mutual respect.

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Inside the building, the dimly lit halls emitted an inviting energy devoid of political confrontation and vibrant colors of attendee’s wares and decorations. Diners shared alcohol, watermelon, and cigarettes while the walls reverberated with the competing sounds of children’s laughter and arabic music – a stage had been set for a night the Palestinians and Israelis would not forget.

As the games took place, converted Jewish men revisited the arabic diction they once spoke, and Muslims adapted to the Israeli game rules, both acting in an effort to preserve the peace necessary for participation in this culturally shared game.

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Mahmud al-Rifai, a Palestinian organizer of the event told the Times of Israel, “The situation is not what the politicians try to sell to us – look at how much Jerusalem residents want something like this.”

Though the event only lasted a period of 4 days, it was a functioning model for the potential unification that could be worked towards in the future.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Scotland Tests Battery That Could Revolutionize Renewables

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The U.K. government has funded an energy storage trial on a wind farm using an electrical innovation: a battery. The new device, a vanadium redox flow battery, is believed to be able to revolutionize the global renewables sector by its supporters.

Renewable sources of power such as solar and wind are often intermittent, which creates a huge need to store the power generated in peak hours to supply the shortage in troughs.

The redox flow devices will be tested on Gigha, the first community-owned grid-connected wind farm in Scotland. The wind farm has had to limit output because of a shortage of grid capacity and has had no way of storing the excess until now. The batteries will allow the community to store electricity for sale and help stabilize supply.

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The battery trial in Scotland has drawn attention from renewable developers and policymakers, including the Scottish government’s energy minister, who inspected the battery devices earlier this month.

Timothy Cornelius, chief of tidal power developer Atlantis Resources Ltd., said the Gigha trial is “of extreme interest” and his company will “fully subscribe to the idea that storage is the revolution.”

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Scott McGregor, chief executive of the device’s developer, redT, said the technology is “ready to scale.” Vanadium flow batteries have already been put in use or commercialized in countries like Japan and Germany (Mure Dickie, Financial Times, Sept. 13).

Reprinted with permission from E&E Publishing

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Sri Lanka Has Been Declared Malaria-Free

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In a remarkable public health achievement, Sri Lanka was today certified by the World Health Organization on having eliminated malaria, a life-threatening disease which long affected the island country.

“Sri Lanka’s achievement is truly remarkable. In the mid-20th century it was among the most malaria-affected countries, but now it is malaria-free. This is testament to the courage and vision of its leaders, and signifies the great leaps that can be made when targeted action is taken. It also demonstrates the importance of grass-roots community engagement and a whole-of-society approach when it comes to making dramatic public health gains,” WHO Regional Director, Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, said here.

Sri Lanka’s road to elimination was tough, and demanded well-calibrated, responsive policies. After malaria cases soared in the 1970s and 80s, in the 1990s the country’s anti-malaria campaign adjusted its strategy to intensively target the parasite in addition to targeting the mosquito.

The change in strategy was unorthodox, but highly effective. Mobile malaria clinics in high transmission areas meant that prompt and effective treatment could reduce the parasite reservoir and the possibility of further transmission. Effective surveillance, community engagement and health education, meanwhile, enhanced the ability of authorities to respond, and mobilized popular support for the campaign.

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The adaptation/ flexibility of strategies and support from key partners such as WHO and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria fast-tracked success. By 2006, the country recorded less than 1 000 cases of malaria per year, and since October 2012, the indigenous cases were down to zero. For the past three-and-a-half years, no locally transmitted cases have been recorded.

To maintain elimination and ensure the parasite is not reintroduced to the country, the anti-malaria campaign is working closely with local authorities and international partners to maintain surveillance and response capacity and to screen high-risk populations entering the country.

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Sri Lanka is the second country in the WHO South-East Asia Region to eliminate malaria after Maldives. The announcement of Sri Lanka’s victory over malaria was made at the WHO South-East Asia Region’s annual Regional Committee meeting in the presence of health ministers and senior health officials from all 11 Member States.

The Regional Director said WHO will continue to support the efforts of Sri Lanka’s health authorities as they relate to malaria, as well as the country’s wider public health mission. This outstanding achievement should be a springboard to further public health gains in the country and the South-East Asia Region as a whole.

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Have You Ever Wanted to Rapel Down a Skyscraper? Now is Your Chance

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For the 7th and once-per-year opportunity, thrill-seekers and high-flyers from across North Carolina will converge for an adventure of a lifetime, rappelling Raleigh’s 30-story Wells Fargo Capitol Center.

Hosted by Special Olympics North Carolina, Over the Edge returns Friday, Sept. 30, and Saturday, Oct. 1, 2016. Registration for Over the Edge is now open with prime-time slots selected by the quickest fundraisers.

“You get a great view, and it’s not as scary as you might think,” says Phil Gruber, annual participant and Special Olympics NC board member. “The hardest part for me is the waiting, the anticipation. Once I step off the edge, I have a tremendous amount of fun. Over the Edge is a blast.”

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According to Keith Fishburne, president and CEO of Special Olympics North Carolina, about 200 individuals are expected to rappel this year. No climbing or rappelling experience is required and each person raises $1,000 or more from family, friends, customers, co-workers, or companies.

Over the Edge funds will benefit Special Olympics North Carolina programs offering year-round sports training and competition for nearly 40,000 children and adults with intellectual disabilities. Athletes train and compete on local and state levels in 19 sports, providing motivation, building self-esteem, and creating opportunities for success.

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“I’ve looked at dozens of non-profits over the years, and Special Olympics North Carolina is one of the best-run organizations I’ve been associated with,” said Gruber, founder and CEO of RPG Solutions, a division of HUB International. “They’re extremely good custodians of donor money and do an amazing job. You can see the difference your time and money are making. It’s very tangible and immediate. You really feel good about it.”

“We thank the many people and sponsoring companies for making Over the Edge such a great success each year,” said Fishburne, who has gone Over the Edge four times.

Over the Edge raised $177,000 in 2015. Raleigh sponsors included Spectrum Properties, Sport Clips, Café Carolina and Bakery, and HUB International/RPG Solutions. 2016’s top fundraiser will receive an extended weekend mini-vacation from Blockade Runner in Wrightsville Beach.

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Losing Cyclist Pulls Off Stunning Wall Ride to Win Race (WATCH)

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During a JBC 4X Revelations race, Michael Marosi had overtaken the three other bicyclists during the initial thirty seconds.

But after a sudden wipeout, Marosi took last place and things looked dire.

VIDEOGymnast Falling on Her Head Saved By Coach With Ninja Moves

That is, until he pulled an astounding stunt on one of the course walls in order to surge into the lead once more.

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Airplane Passenger’s Kind Gesture Brings Mom to Tears

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Moms have a hard enough time with their children at home, let alone in busy airport atmospheres – that’s why Monica Nelson couldn’t help but get misty-eyed when a kind stranger offered to assist her.

The pregnant mother was on a Southwest flight from Minneapolis to Atlanta last week when her 20-month-old son Luke started to get fussy.

Since Monica was traveling without her husband and has anxiety over airplane travel, she broke into tears of gratitude when a man seated nearby approached her and offered to help sooth the infant so she could get some rest.

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The man known as Reid said that he was also a dad with a son named Luke, and spent most of the voyage pacing the aisles with the child.

A nearby passenger named Andrea Byrd couldn’t resist snapping a picture of the father in appreciation of his kind gesture.

 

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On Roald Dahl’s 100th Birthday, Learn How His Genius Made Him a Medical Pioneer

100 years ago today, the Welsh-born author Roald Dahl was born. Renown for such children’s classics as Matilda, his popular books, like The Witches, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, James and the Giant Peach, BFG, and Fantastic Mr. Fox, have even been made into feature films.

You might know that he was a fighter pilot in the Royal Air Force, but, did you know about Dahl’s self-motivated medical advancements–problems with solutions he invented after family health issues arose?

When his first wife of 30 years, Oscar-winning actress Patricia Neal, suffered from debilitating paralysis and loss of speech following a stroke, medical experts limited her therapy to one hour a day because they thought any more work would be overwhelming, Dahl took control of her rehabilitation, saying, “What in the world are you going to teach a child if she only goes to school for an hour a day? That is what Pat was like then – a child. She didn’t even know her ABC.”

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He set up an intensive 6-hours-a-day regimen with relentless coaching. Her “miraculous” recovery, which allowed her to resume acting and even earn another Oscar nomination, led to Dahl’s publishing a book of methods that were taken up widely, inspiring a whole new movement and the formation of The Stroke Association.

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When his baby son developed hydrocephalus on the brain after being hit by a car, Dahl sought out a designer to help him invent a better valve for his neurosurgeon, which was later used to treat thousands of children around the world. When his daughter died after contracting the worst form of measles, Dahl championed the new vaccine some years later, writing a famous letter that supported its advancement and badgering the government to do more.

ALSO: New Beatrix Potter Story Being Published 100 Yrs After it was Lost

Roald Dahl passed away in 1990 at the age of 74. His family gave him a Viking funeral, placing chocolates, a power saw, pencils, and his snooker cues in his coffin.

(Read more at Ireland’s Own)
1988 photo by Bogaerts / Anefo, CC license, Wikimedia

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Listen to This Musician Play Beethoven on 5 Guitars at Once

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There are plenty of Youtube guitarists wowing internet audiences with their dexterity, but this particular artist is taking a different approach to musical fame.

‘SamuraiGuitarist’, also known as Steve Onotera, posted a video of himself plucking out Beethoven’s “Für Elise” on five different guitars.

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The Winnipeg musician has the haunting rendition for sale on iTunes.

“‘Why?’ some might ask,” Steve said on his video page. “Playing five guitars is a ridiculous idea that really offers no benefit. I thought it might be cool though and I wanted to see if it was possible. This is the outcome.”

(WATCH the video below)

 

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Airbnb Hosts Give Free Refuge to Those Escaping Dark Night of Wildfires

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Ordinary… that’s how the evacuation day started for Patrick Diamond—yet, imminently, he would experience an extraordinary generosity among strangers in the AirBnb community who were gearing up to be angels in any emergency.

He was performing some menial tasks around his B&B inn when he came upon a Facebook post that reported the Blue Cut Wildfire was approaching the mountain town of Wrightwood, California

Within minutes he gauged that the fire was alarmingly close and began gathering files and items to carry, in case they needed to evacuate. He shot photos as the fire loomed closer, while fire trucks and emergency vehicles sped by at an increasingly ominous pace and a smoke cloud grew in the sky.

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He and the inn’s owner, Loretta, planned to evacuate to her daughter’s home in San Diego, but they soon realized the freeways had already been closed, along with all the feeder routes. At 3:30 in the afternoon, with the car packed for a fast escape, they received the emergency notification system to evacuate, but there was no way to travel southbound.

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Photos courtesy of Patrick Diamond

“With our routes blocked and options limited, we fled, with the fire looming ominously in the rearview mirror,” Diamond told Good News Network. “We were very unsure of what would happen to the business and our home, as we watched what looked like a volcano opening up on the nearby mountain.”

Coincidentally, just two weeks earlier, Patrick and Loretta had signed up their B&B, Rhinestone Rose, with Airbnb’s Disaster Response Program, opening it to people fleeing a nearby fire. They had no clue, at the time, that they would be refugees in need of the same program.

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They contacted Airbnb through their online disaster response system, and were provided with a list of 14 homes in the surrounding area that had been made available for free to wildfire evacuees–and with a quick telephone call, the service secured a home for them courtesy of Arrowhead Retreats, which rents several vacation properties in nearby Lake Arrowhead.

The relief of being able to escape to a welcoming community was felt immediately as they began to ascend the mountain.

“It was great to know that we had somewhere to go and regroup… it made a very stressful situation much less so,” Patrick recalls. “Our hosts Jeanette and Grant Dunning made us feel even better.“

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Grant exuded compassion and understanding as he welcomed five different groups of people who were evacuating the fires that day–and he made sure they didn’t feel like they were imposing.

“The home we were given was beautiful. It had space for us to spread out and contact insurance companies, take care of business with canceling guest stays, and just plain relax without the fire looming over us. We had enough space that we were able to have other neighbors with nowhere to go come and stay with us too, so it helped more people than just us. Grant even was able to relocate us as we needed to stay longer than expected waiting for the evacuation orders to be lifted.”

Because he works in the industry, Patrick knew how much income was sacrificed by Grant and the other owners of homes who volunteered relief– likely thousands of dollars.

“It really had a massive impact on me,” he said. “I even went to local business owners as we shopped and told them what an amazing thing Arrowhead Retreats had done, in hopes they’d refer tourists who were looking for a place.

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Patrick had also forgotten to bring his bag of clothing, so he visited a thrift store in Lake Arrowhead. After realizing he was a fire evacuee, the shopkeepers went above and beyond offering discounts on everything he needed.

“The community really rallied around us, and it was touching.” said Patrick, who would later learn the fire had come to within 1,900 feet of the Rhinestone Rose Wellness Retreat, thanks to bulldozers pushing dirt into the fire and hotshot workers putting the fire out with hoses.

“All in all, the fire ended up being a great experience… The stress and drama was hard, not knowing whether or not our home and business would be destroyed, but the value of the experience came from the people I encountered and the compassionate, support, and empathy people showed.”

“Every disaster brings good, and I was glad to experience that first-hand!”

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89-yo Man Surprised with $150K After Stranger Sees Him Pushing Popsicle Cart to Make Ends Meet

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Little old Fidencio Sanchez may have been pushing his Mexican popsicle cart until the end of his days if it hadn’t been for the kindness of internet strangers.

Joel Cervantes was driving through the Little Village district of Chicago, Illinois when he saw the 89-year-old man pushing his paletas stand with stooped shoulders.

Heartbroken by the man’s exhausted demeanor from pushing the heavy box when he should have been enjoying retirement, Joel bought 20 popsicles for $50, snapped a photo of the man, and wished him good luck with his endeavors.

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By the time he got home, however, Cervantes wanted to do something more.

Joel and his friend Joe Loera set up a Go Fund Me page for the elderly man with a goal of $3,000 to ease his financial struggles – which is why they were shocked when over 7,000 people donated $154,000 in just two days.

The hard-working senior was overwhelmed – his daughter, who had been financially supporting him and his wife, had passed away only a month previously, leaving the economic burden to him. His wife had been assisting in the paletas sales until she fell ill and became unable to work.

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“The Sanchez family really appreciates all the love and support that they are receiving from people from all around the world,” said Joel on the Go Fund Me page. “Thank you from the bottom of my heart. Thank you to all the people who tag me and have nice things to say. I wish I can respond to every single one of you. GOD IS GOOD!”

Multiply The Good: Click To SharePhoto by Joel Cervantes

Solar Panel Construction Expands at ‘Eye-Popping’ Pace

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U.S. solar firms installed more than 2 gigawatts of photovoltaic capacity between April and June, a 43 percent increase over the same period in 2015 and the fifth largest quarterly growth in the industry’s history, according to data released this morning by GTM Research and the Solar Energy Industries Association.

The latest figures, rolled out at the annual Solar Power International conference in Las Vegas, reflect solar’s surging popularity outside its traditional markets. They also add credence to the notion that sunlight is a cost-competitive fuel for electricity generation against nearly every other resource, including natural gas.

But the 2,051 megawatts of new PV capacity, coupled with the 1,986 MW of solar completions recorded from January to March, is a mere appetizer on the full 2016 menu of solar projects expected to be completed by year’s end, experts say.

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Industry data on solar arrays under construction or expected to be finished by December show solar PV will add 13.9 GW of new power generation this year, a 90 percent increase over 2015’s figure of 7.3 GW (ClimateWire, Feb. 22).

“There’s no question. It’s an eye-popping figure,” said Cory Honeyman, associate director of U.S. solar research for GTM, which compiles industry performance data in conjunction with SEIA. “We’re seeing the beginning of an unprecedented wave of growth that will occur throughout the remainder of 2016, specifically within the utility PV segment.”

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Moreover, 2017 and 2018 could be equally robust years for solar PV as many projects that were initially slated for a 2016 completion have been extended to 2017 and beyond, Honeyman said. Many of those projects are large solar farms being pursued by electric utilities or independent developers that will sell output from the projects under power purchase agreements.

The primary drivers behind solar’s continued growth are falling costs — collectively, solar prices are 63 percent lower than they were five years ago — and continued bullishness on the part of utilities, businesses and home owners in on-site power generation, net metering and cleaner energy alternatives to grid-delivered power.

According to the new report, utility-scale solar installations accounted for 53 percent of all PV installed during the first half of this year. But residential solar is also breaking records and passing milestones, with the 1 millionth residential rooftop solar system installed earlier this year, GTM said.

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And while some traditionally strong solar markets like California have experienced slower growth in recent years, that trend has been offset by rising investment and development activity in other states such as Utah, Texas and North Carolina, officials said.

“Solar works in all 50 states, and this report proves that what many would consider nontraditional markets are now firmly a part of the clean energy movement,” said Tom Kimbis, SEIA’s interim president.

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“While it took us 40 years to hit 1 million U.S. solar installations, we’re expected to hit 2 million within the next two years,” Kimbis added.

By 2021, 20 states are expected to host at least 1 GW of total operating solar PV, officials said, while 30 states will add more than 100 MW of annual solar capacity.

The second-quarter performance report, combined with the robust projections for 2017 and 2018, reflects the solar industry’s phenomenal success at capturing a bigger share of the power generation market during a period of profound upheaval due to pressing economic and environmental concerns, most notably the decline in coal-fired power generation.

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But the industry is not without its growing pains, some of which have been laid bare in Nevada, where up to 15,000 industry leaders, solar enthusiasts and other observers are gathering this week.

Among the key issues being discussed is the very future of SEIA, the nation’s largest solar trade organization. Just days before the SPI conference, a group of SEIA members released a letter criticizing the group’s board for being too Washington-centric and for being over-represented by utility solar interests (EnergyWire, Sept. 8).

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Senior SEIA representatives rebutted those criticisms, noting that the organization works to represent all interests within the solar industry, including utilities, developers, manufacturers and installers.

“As the fastest growing new source of energy, which will double its installations in the next two years, solar has moved from being a niche energy technology to a mainstream one,” SEIA board Chairman Nat Kreamer wrote in an open letter to the group’s members. “This transition brings new policy opportunities and challenges for the U.S. solar industry and its national association.”

Muslim Community Holds Annual Blood Drive in Honor of 9/11 Victims

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For the sixth year in a row since the 10th anniversary of the September 11th attacks, this Islamic community has been saving lives one needle at a time.

The Ahmadiyya Muslim Community gathered at the Bethlehem Township Community Center on Sunday afternoon in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania to donate blood in the Muslims For Life Blood Drive.

Since its debut in 2011, the events have raised over 40,000 pints of blood, which have saved an estimated 100,000 people to date.

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The 127-year-old organization’s message has been preaching the abolishment of violent jihadi beliefs. They hope that in donating blood, they can help show the love that they feel for America and their unity with its people.

“We all condemn the attacks and remember that day,” Asad Chaudhry, president of the Lehigh Valley chapter of the community tied The Morning Call. “[So] we want to do something more than words.”

(WATCH the video of last year’s blood drive below)

 

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