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November 30, 2024 at 7:09 am #233640
Efdk Florida 4th in US for number of vehicles on the road with rolled-back odometers
TAMPA, Fla. 鈥?They re loved by millions in the state of Florida, but their future is at risk. Manatees are the gentle giants of the water and are synonymous with Florida. But, sadly, they continue to die off year after year.November marks Manatee Awareness month, and advocates for the mammal hope more eyes on the issue will reduce deaths.Jaime Vaccaro is one of those advocates and is the supervisor of Florida and Manatee at Zoo Tampa. She s worked at the zoo for 15 years and watched as the rehabilitation need has grown over time. In her first years at the zoo, it was common to have about two manatees at the rehabilitation center and no more. When I started, we went through several months without having a manatee come in, and now it is very, very rare that we are under double digits, Vaccaro said.The need for manatee care may have been at its worst last year. According to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission, 982 manatees died in 2021. Out of that total, only 147 deaths were from natural death. We definitely had a [url=https://www.stanleywebsite.us]stanley cup[/url] really rough year last year with manatees and everything going on in the Indian River Lagoon and on our east coast, Vaccaro said.Vaccaro is referencing the lack [url=https://www.stanleywebsite.us]stanley bottles[/url] of seagrass at the Indian River Lagoon. Seagrass is the manatees feeding ground. Without it, they are starving to death.J.P. Brooker is the director of the Florida Conservation and Conservancy. As a sixth-generation Floridian who grew up alon [url=https://www.stanley-cups.uk]stanley cup[/url] g the Indian River Lagoon, he knows all too well the damage an Xzrh Steve Stricker leading design at TPC Wisconsin golf course: Dream opportunity for me
Stacy Hartjes quest to clear her name [url=https://www.stanley-cups.us]stanley cup website[/url] took eight years.In 2007, the 22-year-old mother of one was providing child care for several children in her Mauston, Wisconsin, home. One day after eating his lunch, a 3-year-old boy collapsed in front of her. He didnt fall to the ground because I was able to catch him, Hartje said. She called his parents, then called 9-1-1. She rode in the front seat of the ambulance that took him to the regional hospital.The boy was transferred to American Family Childrens Hospital in Madison, where doctors performed a lifesaving craniotomy to relieve pressure on his brain. And because his brain trauma was unexplained, a pediatrician trained in identifying child abuse examined him.Dr. Barbara Knox called Hartje the next day. Although distracted while visiting the zoo with some children from her home day care, she answered the doctors questions for about 15 minutes. Knox would later tell a jury Hartjes answers during their call deviated from the answers she gave to police, which Knox described as a red flag to me for child abuse. Hartjes saga was among a dozen cases Wisconsin Watch found in which Knoxs assessment of child abuse was rejected by the criminal justice system, child protective services [url=https://www.stanley-cups.com.de]stanley cups[/url] officials or other physicians.But in Hartjes case, that process took nearly a decade as she watched a county prosecutor issue and then drop charges due to a lack of evidence 鈥?only to later face [url=https://www.cup-stanley.de]stanley cup[/url] two trials on revived state charges. The case relied heavily on -
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