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Pandemic Wipes Create Sewer-Clogging Fatbergs – Bloomberg
Even before the pandemic, Americans were already flushing far too many wipes into the sewer system. After a year of staying at home, the pipe-clogging problem has gotten worse.
Just ask Larry Hare, who says he immediately observed the change from his vantage point as the manager at a wastewater reclamation facility in Des Moines, Iowa.
Sewer backups are up 50%, and he attributes this to the flushing of wipes, which don’t break down in water like toilet paper. “We’ve always had the problem, but it just hasn’t been as big a problem as it is currently,” Hare said.
I’ve been noticing hints of life returning back normal, for good or bad
I’ve been noticing hints of life returning back normal, for good or bad … 🚘 🚔 🏭 ⛽ 🚌💉
- Traffic volumes have significantly increased on local roads. Last spring you could sit out back in the evening and not see many cars if any at all during the strictest of lockdown when most businesses were closed and working remotely. Likewise, I find crossing Elm Avenue has gotten more difficult and much more traffic queuing at the morning and evening rush hour.
- Gas prices are noticeably up now. Summer is coming, but also it has to be all those very hungry cars looking for fuel and many people planning summer vacations and travel once they get vaccinated.
- When I was downtown I noticed several buses with “Training” on their displays. It looks like CDTA must be very actively hiring additional employees in preparation of service restorations when state offices re-opens downtown, probably sometime after May 1st. It looks like Elm Avenue Park and Ride is ready to go whenever service is restored, but certainly commuting will be difficult if they don’t restore the rush hour service and express buses when the pandemic is over.
- A lot of people I know, including myself are getting vaccinated. For a while it seemed like only the elderly folk and those really in the inside were eligible for vaccination, but now it seems like many people I know have gotten the shots or will be getting them soon.
Goats and Soda : NPR
The pandemic has been responsible for an outbreak of violence and hate directed against Asians around the world, blaming them for the spread of COVID-19. During this surge in attacks, the perpetrators have made their motives clear, taunting their victims with declarations like, "You have the Chinese Virus, go back to China!" and assaulting them and spitting on them.
The numbers over the past year in the U.S. alone are alarming. As NPR has reported, nearly 3,800 instances of discrimination against Asians have been reported just in the past year to Stop AAPI Hate, a coalition that tracks incidents of violence and harassment against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in the U.S.