Tag Archives: hazards

Helldivers 2 update raises level cap, adds planetary hazards – Polygon

  1. Helldivers 2 update raises level cap, adds planetary hazards Polygon
  2. Helldivers 2 Patch 01.000.200 Makes Significant Balance Changes, Adds More Planetary Hazards IGN
  3. New Helldivers 2 patch unleashes blizzards and sandstorms, and quietly increases the level cap to help you manage democracy even harder Gamesradar
  4. Huge ‘Helldivers 2’ Patch: New Level Cap, Massive Nerfs And Buffs Forbes
  5. Helldivers 2’s new balance update softens those annoying civilian defences and stratagem cooldown modifiers, buffs heavy armour, and increases the level cap to 150 PC Gamer

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Helldivers 2 Patch 1.000.103 Nerfs Planet Hazards, Patrols Spawning on Players, and More – IGN

  1. Helldivers 2 Patch 1.000.103 Nerfs Planet Hazards, Patrols Spawning on Players, and More IGN
  2. Helldivers 2 patch tackles patrols appearing out of thin air, over-the-top meteor swarms, and accidentally blowing yourself up with your own mech PC Gamer
  3. Oh No, Helldivers 2 Has Flying Bugs To Deal With Now GameSpot
  4. Recent Helldivers 2 Termicide Update Has Serious Implications For The Soldiers Of Super Earth Screen Rant
  5. This is getting out of hand: Helldivers 2 players role-played the bugs so hard that people are making impressive animations of Terminids posting on Reddit Gamesradar

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Thomas & Friends Wooden Railway Troublesome Truck & Crates and Troublesome Truck & Paint Recalled by Fisher-Price Due to Choking and Magnet Ingestion Hazards – Consumer Product Safety Commission

  1. Thomas & Friends Wooden Railway Troublesome Truck & Crates and Troublesome Truck & Paint Recalled by Fisher-Price Due to Choking and Magnet Ingestion Hazards Consumer Product Safety Commission
  2. Fisher-Price recalls about 21,000 Thomas & Friends truck toys ABC News
  3. Thousands of ‘Thomas & Friends’ toys recalled due to choking risk Eyewitness News ABC7NY
  4. Fisher-Price recalls ‘Thomas the Tank Engine’ toy for choking hazard USA TODAY
  5. Fisher-Price recalling ‘Thomas & Friends’ wooden train cars due to choking hazard KOTA
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Department of Labor announces corporate-wide settlement agreement with Dollar Tree, Family Dollar to address hazards at thousands of US stores – US Department of Labor

  1. Department of Labor announces corporate-wide settlement agreement with Dollar Tree, Family Dollar to address hazards at thousands of US stores US Department of Labor
  2. Dollar Tree, Family Dollar Agree To Fix Store Hazards After Slew Of Fines HuffPost
  3. Dollar Tree, Family Dollar must improve worker safety after settlement, Labor Department says WAVY TV 10
  4. Dollar Tree and Family Dollar agree to take steps to improve worker safety at the bargain stores The Associated Press
  5. Dollar Tree, Family Dollar to pay $1.34 million in OSHA settlement Fox Business
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Flooding, hazards, road closures remain

Clear skies over a Bay Area that was mopping up on Sunday revealed the scale of damage from near-record rainfall that hit San Francisco particularly hard. The deluge left ongoing hazards across the region, and residents of Wilton in the Sacramento Valley were told to shelter in place in the face of widespread flooding that sprawled from a levee breach.

From Wine Country to the Central Valley, the storm brought flooded homes and businesses, mudslides and closed freeways, evacuations and rescues. Many motorists who ventured out onto the roads drove through patches of standing water, with some getting stuck and forced to abandon their ruined vehicles. Thousands in the Bay Area remained without power on Sunday.

Water streams through a car’s wheel as muddy waters flood down Folsom Street in Bernal Heights in San Francisco, Calif. on Saturday, December 31, 2022.Adam Pardee/Special to The Chronicle

At least one person died: At Lighthouse Field State Beach in Santa Cruz, a tree fell on a 72-year-old victim early Saturday afternoon, authorities said. The person was not immediately identified.

The National Weather Service reported Sunday that most streams and creeks had crested were slowly receding, but many remained above flood stage.

In the Sacramento Valley, a levee was breached in three places in rural Wilton, 15 minutes south of Sacramento on I-5. The Sacramento County Office of Emergency Services advised Wilton’s 5,000 or so residents to shelter in place with floodwaters rising in Consumnes River. Highway 99 was closed in both directions Sunday.

“We had a lot of people who abandoned their vehicles, Matt Robinson, spokesperson for the Office of Emergency Services, said Sunday. “There are rescue missions going on right now.”

Under a bright sun in San Francisco, washing machines and refrigerators were stacked on the sidewalk where Jose Gomez sat Sunday in a pickup truck outside his family’s appliance shop, King’s Refrigeration, on 16th Street,

“The water was up to my knees,” Gomez said, describing how his father called him to the shop late Saturday morning, when the ruthless storm had brought about three feet of rainwater into the shop, and refrigerators began floating down the sidewalk.

A family prepared for rain walks along the Embarcadero in San Francisco, Calif. on Saturday, December 31, 2022.

Adam Pardee, Freelance / Special to The Chronicle

“We had to chase after them,” Gomez said.

Storm drains were clogged and water had pooled on the roads from Folsom to Treat Street, Gomez said.

In the Mission, store manager Holt Manchester at Gus’s Community Market recounted the hours of continuous Saturday mopping as passing cars had sent waves of rainwater flowing onto floors of the market and through doorways of other businesses. Manchester said he had worried about getting electrocuted using the store’s cash registers.

“We were squeegeeing the water out and it was coming right back in,” he said. Manchester also sopped water from his nearby apartment building’s entrance, but towels and sandbags did little to keep it out.

Pedestrians walk along a road as a snow plow works in South Lake Tahoe, Calif., Saturday, Dec. 31, 2022. A winter storm warning has been issued for the greater Lake Tahoe area until Sunday.Stephen Lam/The Chronicle

“The Muni buses coming down 17th Street were causing waves that were halfway up the doors to all the businesses, he said. “Children could have surfed these waves. I was up to my high thighs in water,” he said.

Elsewhere in the Bay Area, rising waters were reported spilling over the banks of San Francisquito Creek with flooding in the Palo Alto and Menlo Creek area, including in low-lying East Palo Alto.

Many area roads remained closed due to flooding, with dangerous conditions that prompted officials to warn residents not to drive around barricades due to water flowing deeper and faster than it appeared.

PG&E reported Sunday that nearly 15,000 Bay Area residents were without power due to storm activity. Half of these were in the East Bay, with 7,000 outages but the South Bay had 3,400 outages and the Peninsula 2,600. In San Francisco, 849 customers were without power.

In the Tahoe region, I-80 was reported open again on Sunday with chain restrictions, following Saturday night closure due to heavy snows. Caltrans warned motorists that “roads are extremely slick” and cautioned motorists to drive slowly so the road can stay open. Caltrans, the CHP and tow operators spent New Year’s Eve pulling dozens of stranded vehicles from the snow.

Tahoe-area ski resorts on Sunday morning reported snowfall of up to 35 inches over the previous 24 hours. Palisades Tahoe and Kirkwood both reported that some lifts were closed, with windy conditions on the mountains.

In San Mateo County, Highway 84 remained closed in multiple locations Sunday morning, the county sheriff’s office said. Among other roads still closed wasNiles Canyon Road near Mission Boulevard, a key route between Fremont and Sunol in the East Bay. Officials did not provide an estimate for re-opening the road.

Highway 101 near South San Francisco had reopened by Sunday, after heavy flooding shut it down Saturday, and Highway 92 in Half Moon Bay also was reopened.

If Sunday’s break in the weather offered a respite, it was to be short-lived. The National Weather Service forecast light rains Monday and Tuesday before the arrival of an even stronger atmospheric river on Wednesday.

Mud and water stream down the road at the Bernal Heights Park along Bernal Heights Boulevard in Bernal Heights in San Francisco, Calif. on Saturday, December 31, 2022.Adam Pardee/Special to The Chronicle

The weekend storm, attributed to an atmospheric river that plowed over the region, nearly broke San Francisco’s one-day precipitation record. The National Weather Service reported the second wettest day in more than 170 years of record-keeping — just 8 hundredths of an inch shy of the all-time mark of 5.54 inches set in 1994.

Oakland recorded its wettest day on record since 1970, with 4.75 inches of rain, beating out the previous record set in 1982. It was the third wettest day on record for Redwood City going back to 1906, and beating out a previous record set in 1962.

But there will be heavy work ahead for many residents and business owners swamped by flood waters. In San Francisco, owners of restaurants, gyms and grocery stores were sweeping up and assessing the damage.

The Wooden Nickel bar in the Mission District was among the inundated. Instagram posts showed a person wading through water up to their knees. Another person sloshed through a layer of water that seeped into the bar’s backroom. It also appeared that a parklet near the bar had been swept away by the surging water.

In Alameda County, sheriff’s deputies said they rescued 19 older adults from a long-term care facility in Castro Valley that apparently flooded.

Attractions closed on Saturday, too, including Muir Woods, the Point Bonita Lighthouse, Tennessee Valley Beach and the Golden Gate Bridge overlook at the upper end of Conzelman Road. Officials said they were responding to reports of flooding and downed trees at the Marin County sites. Alcatraz closed as well.

Southern portions of Sonoma County, from Forest Hills down to Petaluma, appeared to have some of the most flooding in the North Bay, with several creeks overflowing.

Sam Whiting and Nora Mishanec are San Francisco Chronicle staff writers. swhiting@sfchronicle.com, Nora.Mishanec@sfchronicle.com



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Are long nails health hazards? Experts weigh in on bacteria, fungi

Long nails are a major trend these days, seen on the hands of superstars like Cardi B and Billie Eilish. But a biologist warns this new trend may come with health hazards when considering what may be growing underneath. 

Jeffrey Kaplan, a biology professor at American University, told USA TODAY that the area under the fingernail in the crevice is where most of the bacteria live.

“The longer the nail, the more surface area there is for microorganisms to adhere,” he said. “Studies have found 32 different bacteria and 28 different fungi underneath fingernails.”

Kaplan said it doesn’t matter if you have long artificial nails, long natural nails, gel nails, acrylic nails or nail polish, because there is an increased probability of carrying microorganisms which makes it more difficult to decontaminate with handwashing or scrubbing.

Studies find MRSA, staph underneath

One study found MRSA, an antibiotic-resistant bacteria that causes serious infections in hospitalized patients, underneath half of the fingernail samples collected, according to Kaplan.

Also, some of the bacteria under nails can be found on the skin like staphylococcus which can lead to an infection.

“You can transmit fingernail bacteria to your system by scratching, nail-biting, nose-picking and finger-sucking,” Kaplan said. 

He said the worst thing that could happen from the bacteria and fungi is a nail infection, which would not be life-threatening, but could leave your fingernails disfigured. 

Infant deaths linked to long fingernails

That is why most, if not all healthcare workers, are required to wear short nails due to being at risk for transmitting disease, according to Kaplan..

Two nurses at an Oklahoma City hospital may have contributed to the deaths of 16 babies in 1997 and 1998 because of bacteria found underneath their long nails, The New York Times reported. 

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Epidemiologists found a link between the deaths of the infants in the neonatal unit and the bacteria under the nails but did not prove it was the definite cause. 

“When surgeons scrub for surgery and then they test their hands, there’s always bacteria under the fingernail and you can’t get rid of it,” Kaplan said. 

Long nails trend on social media

Kayla Newman, a nail tech based in North Carolina, told USA TODAY that none of her clientele has had infections or “nasty nails” in her eight years of service.

“Generally people who have long nails know how to maneuver with them and keep them clean,” she said. “If you’re spending upwards of $60 to get your nails done and you don’t keep them clean, that doesn’t make sense.”

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Newman has seen the trend for long nails grow over the last couple of years, and social media platforms like Instagram and TikTok showcase artistic designs on nails that can be over 2 inches long. 

She said the most common complaint she gets from clients who have long nails are broken nails, especially if they are new to the trend.

Newman suggests for people with long nails to regularly make appointments with their nail tech because the strength of nails can shift when they grow out. 

“Nails are an awesome luxury to have,” she said. “I encourage people to get them done because when you look at your hands and see them nice and done whether they are long or short, it makes you feel amazing.”

Follow reporter Asha Gilbert @Coastalasha. Email: agilbert@usatoday.com.

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How to Recognize the Stages of Frostbite, and When to Get Help

Photo: Vika-Viktoria (Shutterstock)

When the temperatures are low and you’re outdoors, it doesn’t take long for your fingers to start feeling cold and stiff. Depending on the weather and how long they’re exposed, they may start to feel numb, or turn red. But is this a normal reaction to the cold, or the beginning of frostbite?

That’s a great question—and one that isn’t necessarily answered (at least very clearly) by many of the safety guidelines on frostbite. That’s because they often only mention skin color and appearance, like turning pale (yellow or white) and becoming waxy and shiny.

But what if your skin is always kind of pale and waxy-looking? Or you aren’t sure what counts as “pale” in relation to your usual skin color? That’s when you look for the other signs of frostbite, which are broken down by stages. Here’s what to know.

What is frostbite?

Frostbite is more than simply feeling cold: It’s an injury that could permanently damage body tissues—especially in the nose, ears, cheeks, chin, fingers, or toes.

According to the Cleveland Clinic, temperatures in the single digits (Fahrenheit) are low enough to cause frostbite, and the colder it is outside, the faster frostbite can set in. For example, when the wind chill is -15F or lower, it could take less than a half an hour.

The stages of frostbite

There are three stages of frostbite: Frostnip, superficial frostbite, and deep frostbite, and each has their own signs and symptoms.

Frostnip

The tricky part about frostnip is that you may not notice any signs at all—or just assume that it’s to be expected in cold weather. The symptoms of frostnip can include skin turning red or a pale white, and/or feeling cold, numb, or tingly. These are warning signs from your body to get somewhere warm.

After rewarming frostnipped skin, small red bumps called “chilblains” may form, but typically go away on their own. Frostnip doesn’t cause permanent damage.

Superficial frostbite

Superficial frostbite includes all the symptoms above, except instead of feeling cold, your skin may begin to feel warm. That may appear to be a good sign, but it’s actually the water in your skin gradually freezing and transforming into ice crystals. Your skin may get hard, waxy, and/or shiny; you may also have difficulty moving because of stiff muscles and joints, and experience clumsiness and/or a loss of coordination.

After rewarming skin with superficial frostbite, parts may turn purple or blue and painful (like a bruise) as well as burn. Or, if areas of the skin are still red, they may start to peel and feel like a sunburn. This is a sign to get immediate medical attention. Lastly, fluid-filled blisters may appear 12 to 36 hours later.

Deep frostbite

At this point, total numbness usually sets in, and a person’s movement and coordination are significantly impacted. Skin may turn white or bluish-gray.

Large blisters will likely appear a day or two after the skin has been rewarmed. Finally, the frostbitten skin turns hard and black and either falls off itself, or needs to be surgically removed.

When to get help

Anything beyond frostnip—meaning superficial or deep frostbite—need professional medical attention, especially if any of these symptoms are present, according to the Mayo Clinic:

  • Hard, cold, blotchy skin
  • Increased pain, swelling, inflammation or discharge in the area that was frostbitten
  • Fever
  • Symptoms of hypothermia (intense shivering, slurred speech, drowsiness and loss of coordination)
  • New, unexplained symptoms

But this isn’t a situation where you can wait around for medical help and hope for the best. Instead, follow these directions for treating frostbite until you’re able to see a professional.

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There’s Been Yet Another Oil Spill In The US

A pump failure at the Marathon Galveston Bay Refinery caused the spill

Crude oil poured from the Marathon Galveston Bay Refinery in Texas this morning after a pump failed on one of its storage tanks.

The refinery, which processes 593,000 barrels of oil each day, began leaking oil on Wednesday morning, reported ABC News. The leak was isolated to a storage tank containing crude oil at the refinery.

As a result of the leak, one road has been closed in the area but no injuries were reported.

The report said:

“The leak was isolated to the refinery complex and was blamed on the failure of a pump seal at the facility, according to Bruce Clawson, interim director of Homeland Security for Texas City.”

ABC News added that “it wasn’t clear” how much oil had spilled from the tank.

According to the report from ABC News, the Texas oil spill is now under control. Officials from the refinery added that a cleanup operation is now underway.

A statement from Marathon Petroleum, which operates the refinery, said that cleanup is ongoing and that it is monitoring the impact of the spill.

“The refinery has deployed air monitoring in the community as a precaution, and there is no indication of risk to the community,” Jamal Kheiry, Marathon Petroleum Corporation communications manager, said in a statement.

“Cleanup is underway, and regulatory notifications have been made.”

Officials from Texas City, where the facility is located, added that they were monitoring the situation and that affected roads could be closed for up to eight hours.

The spill is the second US oil leak in the space of a week, after an oil spill off southern California caused massive damage to wetland environments.

The leak on Sunday was caused by a breach connected to the Elly oil rig. The incident saw 126,000 gallons, or 3,000 barrels, of crude oil spill into the ocean. The leak quickly spread to cover 13 square miles of the Pacific Ocean.

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California hiking trail where family was mysteriously found dead is shut down due to ‘unknown hazards’

A hiking trail in the Sierra National Forest where a family of three and their dog were found dead two weeks ago was shut down on Aug. 28 due to “unknown hazards found in and near the Savage Lundy Trail.”

John Gerrish and Ellen Chunt went hiking with their 1-year-old daughter, Miju, and their dog, Oski, on the Savage Lundy trail early in the morning on Aug. 15, a sweltering Sunday when temperatures reached as high as 109 degrees, according to the Mariposa County Sheriff’s Office. 

When Gerrish didn’t show up to his job as a software engineer on Monday, a friend reported them missing. The family was then found deceased on the trail about 1.5 miles from their vehicle on Tuesday, Aug. 17. 

There is no clear cause of death for the family and autopsies have failed to turn up any clues, though toxicology reports are still pending. 

Authorities have ruled out weapons and chemical hazards along the Savage Lundy trail as potentially causing their deaths, and a spokesperson for the sheriff’s office said homicide is not being considered. 

“Initially, yes, when we come across a family with no apparent cause of death, there’s no smoking gun, there’s no suicide note, there’s nothing like that, we have to consider all options,” Kristie Mitchell, a spokeswoman for the Mariposa County Sheriff, previously told Fox News. “Now that we’re five days in, no, we’re no longer considering homicide as a cause of death.”

CALIFORNIA AUTHORITIES TURN TO CELLPHONE DATA, OTHER FORENSICS FOR ANSWERS IN FAMILY’S MYSTERIOUS DEATHS

The closure order will be in effect through Sept. 26, or until “conditions change” at the trail. 

“As a precaution and to protect the public from unknown hazards in the area, The SNF decided to close several recreation sites, roads, and trails along the Merced River and its South Fork, until deemed safe for public use,” the U.S. Forest Service said in an advisory. 

The Savage Lundy trail leads into the South Fork Merced River, which the Sierra National Forest has warned people against drinking from or swimming in due to potentially harmful algal blooms. 
(Google Maps)

The Savage Lundy hiking trail where the family was found ends at the South Fork Merced River. 

The Sierra National Forest noted in its closure order that potentially harmful algal blooms (HABs) have been identified in the South Fork of the Merced River, and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife warned hikers in mid-July “not to swim, wade or allow their pets to enjoy the water” due to the toxic HABs. 

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The U.S. Forest Service announced on Aug. 30 that all National Forests in California will be shut down through Sept. 17 in order “to better provide public and firefighter safety due to the ongoing California wildfire crisis.”

The area is the site of mid-19th century gold mines that are now abandoned and have the potential to emit toxic gases like carbon monoxide, but the sheriff’s office told Fox News last week that it has ruled out carbon monoxide poisoning. 

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Trails and campgrounds near Yosemite where a family and their dog were found dead have been closed because of ‘unknown hazards,’ officials say

The bodies of Jonathan Gerrish, Ellen Chung, their 1-year-old daughter, Miju, and the family dog, Oksi, were found by search and rescue workers on August 17 in a remote area of the Sierra National Forest near the south fork of the Merced River, according to the Mariposa County Sheriff’s Office. They were found on the Savage Lundy Trail.

The Sierra National Forest said it closed the area where the family was found as a precaution due to “unknown hazards found in and around the Savage Lundy Trail.”

“Designated recreation sites, roads, and trails in proximity and/or leading to this location will be off limits to public,” the national forest said in a statement Saturday. The closures are effective until September 26.
Since the closure was announced, the US Forest Service temporarily closed all national forests in California due to multiple wildfires burning in the state.

Investigators have not yet determined what led to the mysterious deaths. Autopsies on the family and a necropsy on the dog were inconclusive while toxicology results remain pending. Some results could come as early as Wednesday, Kristie Mitchell, spokesperson for the sheriff’s office, told CNN.

The only potential causes of death that have been ruled out include gunshots, or any other type of weapon, and chemical hazards specifically along the Savage Lundy Trail. Detectives have not ruled out possible toxins in areas near the trail.

Signs warning of a toxic algae bloom have been posted since mid-July along the south fork of the Merced River, in the vicinity of where the family was found. Water samples from the area — along with samples of the drinking water the family packed — have been sent to labs for testing.

Search warrants for the family’s home and cars turned up no significant evidence. Their phones have been collected and are undergoing data extraction by the FBI.

“We know the family and friends of John and Ellen are desperate for answers, our team of Detectives are working round the clock,” Mariposa County Sheriff Jeremy Briese said in a statement. “Cases like this require us to be methodical and thorough while also reaching out to every resource we can find to help us bring those answers to them as quickly as we can.”

Family was generous, amazing, friend says

Steve Jeffe said he met the couple in San Francisco years ago, and they grew very close after each relocated to the Mariposa area.

“They were amazing people, very generous,” Jeffe told CNN. “They love their daughter very much.”

Gerrish worked for Google and had recently started a job at Snapchat, according to Jeffe, who was alerted by friends after the family didn’t return home from a day hike last month.

The family’s nanny found no one home when she arrived the following Monday morning, and after Gerrish failed to show for work, “alarm bells went off,” Jeffe said.

“They were an amazingly loving and doting family,” said Jeffe, describing the couple as beloved with a very large group of friends.

“It’s a bewildering event. There’s something so disconcerting about what happened,” said Jeffe. “Whether it was environmental or man made, it was obviously something they encountered,” Jeffe added, speculating about what may have led to their deaths.

Mitchell said the area where the family was found is popular in the spring because of its colorful wildflower blooms and is very hot at this time of year and there is little shade.

She said the family was well prepared for a day hike.

CNN’s David Williams contributed to this report.

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