First Look at Catherine Curtin and Sharon Lawrence in the Off Broadway run of Pen Pals. Click the link in our bio to get your tickets. 📸: @russrowland
First Look at Catherine Curtin and Sharon Lawrence in the Off Broadway run of Pen Pals. Click the link in our bio to get your tickets. 📸: @russrowland
First Look at Catherine Curtin and Sharon Lawrence in the Off Broadway run of Pen Pals. Click the link in our bio to get your tickets. 📸: @russrowland
First Look at Catherine Curtin and Sharon Lawrence in the Off Broadway run of Pen Pals. Click the link in our bio to get your tickets. 📸: @russrowland
First Look at Catherine Curtin and Sharon Lawrence in the Off Broadway run of Pen Pals. Click the link in our bio to get your tickets. 📸: @russrowland
This is why we need what @healthebay offers , science, advocacy and local action. Repost from @latimes • L.A.’s devastating fires are only the latest episode in which the ocean has served as an unappreciated receptacle for trash and hazards originating on land. The smoke from the fires, the debris piled up along decimated streets, the charred and toxic remnants of thousands of destroyed homes, businesses, cars and electronics — nearly all of it, eventually, will come to rest in the ocean. Unlike the smoke that emanates from rural wildfires, the charred material now entering the ocean is the stuff of “people’s homes: their cars, their batteries, their electronics,” said Rasmus Swalethorp, a biological oceanographer at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography. “It’s certainly going to contain a lot of things that we ideally don’t want to see in our oceans — and in our soils, for that matter, and our water streams, and certainly not on our dinner plates.” Among scientists’ most immediate concerns is ocean water contamination. In addition to the already-massive footprint of ash offshore, Gold noted that runoff from the first few rainstorms is a huge concern. He’s had a flurry of conversations with city, county and state officials, who have been trying to proactively limit the amount of fire pollution going into the ocean. The rain this week was the first significant precipitation in the region since May. In addition to the fires’ ash and chemical residue, it was also the first flush of nine months’ worth of daily pollution into the sea. Read more at the link in bio. ✍ @corinnepurtill_lat @rosanna.xia 📷 Wally Skalij; Rasmus Swalethorp/Scripps Institution of Oceanography; Robert Gauthier
This is why we need what @healthebay offers , science, advocacy and local action. Repost from @latimes • L.A.’s devastating fires are only the latest episode in which the ocean has served as an unappreciated receptacle for trash and hazards originating on land. The smoke from the fires, the debris piled up along decimated streets, the charred and toxic remnants of thousands of destroyed homes, businesses, cars and electronics — nearly all of it, eventually, will come to rest in the ocean. Unlike the smoke that emanates from rural wildfires, the charred material now entering the ocean is the stuff of “people’s homes: their cars, their batteries, their electronics,” said Rasmus Swalethorp, a biological oceanographer at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography. “It’s certainly going to contain a lot of things that we ideally don’t want to see in our oceans — and in our soils, for that matter, and our water streams, and certainly not on our dinner plates.” Among scientists’ most immediate concerns is ocean water contamination. In addition to the already-massive footprint of ash offshore, Gold noted that runoff from the first few rainstorms is a huge concern. He’s had a flurry of conversations with city, county and state officials, who have been trying to proactively limit the amount of fire pollution going into the ocean. The rain this week was the first significant precipitation in the region since May. In addition to the fires’ ash and chemical residue, it was also the first flush of nine months’ worth of daily pollution into the sea. Read more at the link in bio. ✍ @corinnepurtill_lat @rosanna.xia 📷 Wally Skalij; Rasmus Swalethorp/Scripps Institution of Oceanography; Robert Gauthier
This is why we need what @healthebay offers , science, advocacy and local action. Repost from @latimes • L.A.’s devastating fires are only the latest episode in which the ocean has served as an unappreciated receptacle for trash and hazards originating on land. The smoke from the fires, the debris piled up along decimated streets, the charred and toxic remnants of thousands of destroyed homes, businesses, cars and electronics — nearly all of it, eventually, will come to rest in the ocean. Unlike the smoke that emanates from rural wildfires, the charred material now entering the ocean is the stuff of “people’s homes: their cars, their batteries, their electronics,” said Rasmus Swalethorp, a biological oceanographer at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography. “It’s certainly going to contain a lot of things that we ideally don’t want to see in our oceans — and in our soils, for that matter, and our water streams, and certainly not on our dinner plates.” Among scientists’ most immediate concerns is ocean water contamination. In addition to the already-massive footprint of ash offshore, Gold noted that runoff from the first few rainstorms is a huge concern. He’s had a flurry of conversations with city, county and state officials, who have been trying to proactively limit the amount of fire pollution going into the ocean. The rain this week was the first significant precipitation in the region since May. In addition to the fires’ ash and chemical residue, it was also the first flush of nine months’ worth of daily pollution into the sea. Read more at the link in bio. ✍ @corinnepurtill_lat @rosanna.xia 📷 Wally Skalij; Rasmus Swalethorp/Scripps Institution of Oceanography; Robert Gauthier
This is why we need what @healthebay offers , science, advocacy and local action. Repost from @latimes • L.A.’s devastating fires are only the latest episode in which the ocean has served as an unappreciated receptacle for trash and hazards originating on land. The smoke from the fires, the debris piled up along decimated streets, the charred and toxic remnants of thousands of destroyed homes, businesses, cars and electronics — nearly all of it, eventually, will come to rest in the ocean. Unlike the smoke that emanates from rural wildfires, the charred material now entering the ocean is the stuff of “people’s homes: their cars, their batteries, their electronics,” said Rasmus Swalethorp, a biological oceanographer at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography. “It’s certainly going to contain a lot of things that we ideally don’t want to see in our oceans — and in our soils, for that matter, and our water streams, and certainly not on our dinner plates.” Among scientists’ most immediate concerns is ocean water contamination. In addition to the already-massive footprint of ash offshore, Gold noted that runoff from the first few rainstorms is a huge concern. He’s had a flurry of conversations with city, county and state officials, who have been trying to proactively limit the amount of fire pollution going into the ocean. The rain this week was the first significant precipitation in the region since May. In addition to the fires’ ash and chemical residue, it was also the first flush of nine months’ worth of daily pollution into the sea. Read more at the link in bio. ✍ @corinnepurtill_lat @rosanna.xia 📷 Wally Skalij; Rasmus Swalethorp/Scripps Institution of Oceanography; Robert Gauthier
This is why we need what @healthebay offers , science, advocacy and local action. Repost from @latimes • L.A.’s devastating fires are only the latest episode in which the ocean has served as an unappreciated receptacle for trash and hazards originating on land. The smoke from the fires, the debris piled up along decimated streets, the charred and toxic remnants of thousands of destroyed homes, businesses, cars and electronics — nearly all of it, eventually, will come to rest in the ocean. Unlike the smoke that emanates from rural wildfires, the charred material now entering the ocean is the stuff of “people’s homes: their cars, their batteries, their electronics,” said Rasmus Swalethorp, a biological oceanographer at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography. “It’s certainly going to contain a lot of things that we ideally don’t want to see in our oceans — and in our soils, for that matter, and our water streams, and certainly not on our dinner plates.” Among scientists’ most immediate concerns is ocean water contamination. In addition to the already-massive footprint of ash offshore, Gold noted that runoff from the first few rainstorms is a huge concern. He’s had a flurry of conversations with city, county and state officials, who have been trying to proactively limit the amount of fire pollution going into the ocean. The rain this week was the first significant precipitation in the region since May. In addition to the fires’ ash and chemical residue, it was also the first flush of nine months’ worth of daily pollution into the sea. Read more at the link in bio. ✍ @corinnepurtill_lat @rosanna.xia 📷 Wally Skalij; Rasmus Swalethorp/Scripps Institution of Oceanography; Robert Gauthier
This is why we need what @healthebay offers , science, advocacy and local action. Repost from @latimes • L.A.’s devastating fires are only the latest episode in which the ocean has served as an unappreciated receptacle for trash and hazards originating on land. The smoke from the fires, the debris piled up along decimated streets, the charred and toxic remnants of thousands of destroyed homes, businesses, cars and electronics — nearly all of it, eventually, will come to rest in the ocean. Unlike the smoke that emanates from rural wildfires, the charred material now entering the ocean is the stuff of “people’s homes: their cars, their batteries, their electronics,” said Rasmus Swalethorp, a biological oceanographer at UC San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography. “It’s certainly going to contain a lot of things that we ideally don’t want to see in our oceans — and in our soils, for that matter, and our water streams, and certainly not on our dinner plates.” Among scientists’ most immediate concerns is ocean water contamination. In addition to the already-massive footprint of ash offshore, Gold noted that runoff from the first few rainstorms is a huge concern. He’s had a flurry of conversations with city, county and state officials, who have been trying to proactively limit the amount of fire pollution going into the ocean. The rain this week was the first significant precipitation in the region since May. In addition to the fires’ ash and chemical residue, it was also the first flush of nine months’ worth of daily pollution into the sea. Read more at the link in bio. ✍ @corinnepurtill_lat @rosanna.xia 📷 Wally Skalij; Rasmus Swalethorp/Scripps Institution of Oceanography; Robert Gauthier
POV: You get production photos back and your Gen Z Social Media Intern goes rogue. Do you have your tickets to see Catherine Curtin and Sharon Lawrence in Pen Pals Off Broadway yet? There are only FOUR chances left to see this talented cast. 📸: @russrowland
POV: You get production photos back and your Gen Z Social Media Intern goes rogue. Do you have your tickets to see Catherine Curtin and Sharon Lawrence in Pen Pals Off Broadway yet? There are only FOUR chances left to see this talented cast. 📸: @russrowland
POV: You get production photos back and your Gen Z Social Media Intern goes rogue. Do you have your tickets to see Catherine Curtin and Sharon Lawrence in Pen Pals Off Broadway yet? There are only FOUR chances left to see this talented cast. 📸: @russrowland
People are saying it’s the perfect time to drop this prescient series #CommonSideEffects on MAX and Adult Swim about the Big Pharma by Exec Producers Gregg Daniels and Mike Judge, the guys that made THE OFFICE and BEAVIS AND BUTT HEAD😏 It’s also a perfect time to let you know I’m in it. Can I be cured? 🤷🏼♀️ Repost: Common Side Effects premieres Feb 2 on Adult Swim | Next Day on @streamonmax . Created by @joe_bennett_animation @helytimes #commonsideeffects #adultswim
Repost from @lrknost • I love this. Music is the universal language.💕 -L.R. Reel via @plumesofficiel ________________________ 📚Peaceful Parenting Resources: Link in BIO📚 ________________________ Please respect the work of authors, photographers, and artists. You are welcome to share provided you include appropriate credit and do not crop out author’s names from quote memes. Thank you. 🙂 #thegentleparent #peacefulparenting #parenting #children #life #kindness #faith #feminism #socialjustice #equality #globalresponsibility #humanity #peace #sexualassaultsurvivor #cancer #cancerwarrior #books #quote #LRKnost www.LRKnost.com Fighting a rare, incurable cancer, but I’m still here!💞 L.R.
Thank you to our @healthebay scientists, policy experts, advocates, leadership and community members for the focused and commitment to monitoring and accountability around this challenge to our coastline. #protectwhatyoulove Repost from @healthebay • Heal the Bay STRONGLY DISAGREES with the selection of State land in close proximity to Topanga Creek and Lagoon as the US EPA’s Palisades Fire hazardous material staging area. At this site, materials are sorted and repackaged before being sent to permitted waste collection facilities. The site chosen is an area of cultural and ecological significance, and we stand with the surfers, swimmers, and local communities concerned about the potential for harm to this precious ecosystem. The most harmful place for hazardous waste is in the burn zone, exposed to the elements, and we must remove it quickly. There are no good places to handle hazardous waste in a community, but we hope the EPA considers moving to a site that is further from creeks, the ocean, and families. READ OUR FULL STATEMENT ABOVE and go to healthebay.org/faq-epa-topanga (linkinbio) to get answers to your frequently asked questions about this site and Heal the Bay’s BIGGEST takeaways from our recent meeting with the EPA.
Thank you to our @healthebay scientists, policy experts, advocates, leadership and community members for the focused and commitment to monitoring and accountability around this challenge to our coastline. #protectwhatyoulove Repost from @healthebay • Heal the Bay STRONGLY DISAGREES with the selection of State land in close proximity to Topanga Creek and Lagoon as the US EPA’s Palisades Fire hazardous material staging area. At this site, materials are sorted and repackaged before being sent to permitted waste collection facilities. The site chosen is an area of cultural and ecological significance, and we stand with the surfers, swimmers, and local communities concerned about the potential for harm to this precious ecosystem. The most harmful place for hazardous waste is in the burn zone, exposed to the elements, and we must remove it quickly. There are no good places to handle hazardous waste in a community, but we hope the EPA considers moving to a site that is further from creeks, the ocean, and families. READ OUR FULL STATEMENT ABOVE and go to healthebay.org/faq-epa-topanga (linkinbio) to get answers to your frequently asked questions about this site and Heal the Bay’s BIGGEST takeaways from our recent meeting with the EPA.
Thank you to our @healthebay scientists, policy experts, advocates, leadership and community members for the focused and commitment to monitoring and accountability around this challenge to our coastline. #protectwhatyoulove Repost from @healthebay • Heal the Bay STRONGLY DISAGREES with the selection of State land in close proximity to Topanga Creek and Lagoon as the US EPA’s Palisades Fire hazardous material staging area. At this site, materials are sorted and repackaged before being sent to permitted waste collection facilities. The site chosen is an area of cultural and ecological significance, and we stand with the surfers, swimmers, and local communities concerned about the potential for harm to this precious ecosystem. The most harmful place for hazardous waste is in the burn zone, exposed to the elements, and we must remove it quickly. There are no good places to handle hazardous waste in a community, but we hope the EPA considers moving to a site that is further from creeks, the ocean, and families. READ OUR FULL STATEMENT ABOVE and go to healthebay.org/faq-epa-topanga (linkinbio) to get answers to your frequently asked questions about this site and Heal the Bay’s BIGGEST takeaways from our recent meeting with the EPA.
Thank you to our @healthebay scientists, policy experts, advocates, leadership and community members for the focused and commitment to monitoring and accountability around this challenge to our coastline. #protectwhatyoulove Repost from @healthebay • Heal the Bay STRONGLY DISAGREES with the selection of State land in close proximity to Topanga Creek and Lagoon as the US EPA’s Palisades Fire hazardous material staging area. At this site, materials are sorted and repackaged before being sent to permitted waste collection facilities. The site chosen is an area of cultural and ecological significance, and we stand with the surfers, swimmers, and local communities concerned about the potential for harm to this precious ecosystem. The most harmful place for hazardous waste is in the burn zone, exposed to the elements, and we must remove it quickly. There are no good places to handle hazardous waste in a community, but we hope the EPA considers moving to a site that is further from creeks, the ocean, and families. READ OUR FULL STATEMENT ABOVE and go to healthebay.org/faq-epa-topanga (linkinbio) to get answers to your frequently asked questions about this site and Heal the Bay’s BIGGEST takeaways from our recent meeting with the EPA.
Thank you to our @healthebay scientists, policy experts, advocates, leadership and community members for the focused and commitment to monitoring and accountability around this challenge to our coastline. #protectwhatyoulove Repost from @healthebay • Heal the Bay STRONGLY DISAGREES with the selection of State land in close proximity to Topanga Creek and Lagoon as the US EPA’s Palisades Fire hazardous material staging area. At this site, materials are sorted and repackaged before being sent to permitted waste collection facilities. The site chosen is an area of cultural and ecological significance, and we stand with the surfers, swimmers, and local communities concerned about the potential for harm to this precious ecosystem. The most harmful place for hazardous waste is in the burn zone, exposed to the elements, and we must remove it quickly. There are no good places to handle hazardous waste in a community, but we hope the EPA considers moving to a site that is further from creeks, the ocean, and families. READ OUR FULL STATEMENT ABOVE and go to healthebay.org/faq-epa-topanga (linkinbio) to get answers to your frequently asked questions about this site and Heal the Bay’s BIGGEST takeaways from our recent meeting with the EPA.
Thank you to our @healthebay scientists, policy experts, advocates, leadership and community members for the focused and commitment to monitoring and accountability around this challenge to our coastline. #protectwhatyoulove Repost from @healthebay • Heal the Bay STRONGLY DISAGREES with the selection of State land in close proximity to Topanga Creek and Lagoon as the US EPA’s Palisades Fire hazardous material staging area. At this site, materials are sorted and repackaged before being sent to permitted waste collection facilities. The site chosen is an area of cultural and ecological significance, and we stand with the surfers, swimmers, and local communities concerned about the potential for harm to this precious ecosystem. The most harmful place for hazardous waste is in the burn zone, exposed to the elements, and we must remove it quickly. There are no good places to handle hazardous waste in a community, but we hope the EPA considers moving to a site that is further from creeks, the ocean, and families. READ OUR FULL STATEMENT ABOVE and go to healthebay.org/faq-epa-topanga (linkinbio) to get answers to your frequently asked questions about this site and Heal the Bay’s BIGGEST takeaways from our recent meeting with the EPA.
Thank you to our @healthebay scientists, policy experts, advocates, leadership and community members for the focused and commitment to monitoring and accountability around this challenge to our coastline. #protectwhatyoulove Repost from @healthebay • Heal the Bay STRONGLY DISAGREES with the selection of State land in close proximity to Topanga Creek and Lagoon as the US EPA’s Palisades Fire hazardous material staging area. At this site, materials are sorted and repackaged before being sent to permitted waste collection facilities. The site chosen is an area of cultural and ecological significance, and we stand with the surfers, swimmers, and local communities concerned about the potential for harm to this precious ecosystem. The most harmful place for hazardous waste is in the burn zone, exposed to the elements, and we must remove it quickly. There are no good places to handle hazardous waste in a community, but we hope the EPA considers moving to a site that is further from creeks, the ocean, and families. READ OUR FULL STATEMENT ABOVE and go to healthebay.org/faq-epa-topanga (linkinbio) to get answers to your frequently asked questions about this site and Heal the Bay’s BIGGEST takeaways from our recent meeting with the EPA.