SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 24, 2014
08/14
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SFGTV
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that had or used to operate a processing plant that produced bio solids and we now operate a power plant that happens to use the solids to generate energy and to the point where they now, and outside of the daily processing, they truck in 30 percent of the bio solids from other facilities just to process for the generate energy. >> that does not include green. >> yeah. >> sorry. and so the waste currently, that we generate, in san francisco, that we would process at the treatment facility, you said that it would be closed loop and so it will be able to sustain itself. >> yeah. >> from the steam. >> and do you know how much currently there will be extra and if it could power the entire facility? >> or... >> we don't know that yet, but we do not think that there will be enough energy to actually take the facility off of the grid 100 percent. but we are looking at numbers in the neighborhood of 50 percent reduction in the electricity requirement but we have not gotten to that level of analysis, but, on that vein, in that vein, the thp process we are recommending is the one that does g
that had or used to operate a processing plant that produced bio solids and we now operate a power plant that happens to use the solids to generate energy and to the point where they now, and outside of the daily processing, they truck in 30 percent of the bio solids from other facilities just to process for the generate energy. >> that does not include green. >> yeah. >> sorry. and so the waste currently, that we generate, in san francisco, that we would process at the...
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Aug 10, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN3
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hundreds -- plants and had hundreds of people over this country electing plants and sending them back here to fort myers to find aource of plant material that could use rubber commercially. the lab was put here because of that reason because they could grow the plants on-site and to the preliminary research on site . all three of the men had an interest in using robert in their industries -- rubber and their industries. about thisting thing laboratory is edison was a very early proponent of the factory system. each one of the tables would've had a different operation going on and the team of scientists around the table would be working on that particular process. edison would be moving for the processes happening at each table. his work was as the director, the man who took what everyone was working on, take that process and move it to the next step. if you were here, he would be the thoughtful overseer. he had a very talented group of people working with him. in addition to himself, he had a full-time glassblower. a lot of the work used some very different beakers, test tubes and he soon learned that in order to
hundreds -- plants and had hundreds of people over this country electing plants and sending them back here to fort myers to find aource of plant material that could use rubber commercially. the lab was put here because of that reason because they could grow the plants on-site and to the preliminary research on site . all three of the men had an interest in using robert in their industries -- rubber and their industries. about thisting thing laboratory is edison was a very early proponent of the...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 17, 2014
08/14
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SFGTV
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which is a food waste only plant. and it is a plant that was built to take all of the food waste for the entire city of oslow commercial and residential and generates energy, that is then turned into cng and fuels and the public fleet. food waste, definitely produces a lot more energy, by virtue
which is a food waste only plant. and it is a plant that was built to take all of the food waste for the entire city of oslow commercial and residential and generates energy, that is then turned into cng and fuels and the public fleet. food waste, definitely produces a lot more energy, by virtue
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i'd not convinced about the massive ecological damage my view is that you should never attack a chemical plant anyway well if you know what we will discuss it a little a later but i'd like to go back now to the risks that you were talking about you know just judging by what you told us it's pretty serious you know that the health problems that all of those chemicals can produce but the question here is if the risks are so serious how well protected are the storage areas yes absolutely i mean this is a chemical that is essentially a solid it doesn't burn very easily and unless you direct last specifically at the chemical much of it should remain intact but in my view you shouldn't. never attack a chemical plant with the possibility of releasing chemicals into the environment we saw that many years ago that the consequences of that when there were attacks on belgrade and chemical complexes outside it and so really chemical plants i think ought to be a no go zones for either side in any kind of conflict because of the risk of chemicals being spread far and wide well that there are fears that area
i'd not convinced about the massive ecological damage my view is that you should never attack a chemical plant anyway well if you know what we will discuss it a little a later but i'd like to go back now to the risks that you were talking about you know just judging by what you told us it's pretty serious you know that the health problems that all of those chemicals can produce but the question here is if the risks are so serious how well protected are the storage areas yes absolutely i mean...
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Aug 5, 2014
08/14
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WHYY
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that's 15 percent efficient or do we burn it in a power plant that's 30 percent efficient and get the same amount of energy but at half the fuel use that would cut our carbon footprint significantly and you have a transportation alternatives program at sustainable jersey which advocates? both ev adoption by and consumers as well ev would you... can't stop... [laughter] electric... i'm sorry electrical vehicle adoption electric vehicle adoption okay [laughter] i'm sorry i interrupted what's changed is woah hold on electric vehicle adoption what? electric vehicle adoption by you know commuters primarily as well as but they're not accessible to us right now right? well they are quickly becoming accessible they're actually one of the fastest growing segments within the automobile industry will they be more accessible to us? they will be but it takes time it's a chicken in the head i don't put in an electric vehicle recharging station unless enough people drive an electric vehicle and whether the demand is there exactly the demand's not gonna be there well unless what? you need to figure o
that's 15 percent efficient or do we burn it in a power plant that's 30 percent efficient and get the same amount of energy but at half the fuel use that would cut our carbon footprint significantly and you have a transportation alternatives program at sustainable jersey which advocates? both ev adoption by and consumers as well ev would you... can't stop... [laughter] electric... i'm sorry electrical vehicle adoption electric vehicle adoption okay [laughter] i'm sorry i interrupted what's...
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implications obviously for people for the environment for any crops that are grown so really a chemical plant ought to be a no go zone in any conflict. ukraine's avoiding the red cross now to organize aid for people in lugansk that's what president petro poroshenko told the u.s. secretary of state the eastern help of resistance declared a humanitarian disaster last week reflections in the devastated city for us. the ganske made luke abandoned but the rusting people here. those who didn't flee have a daily struggle to survive the city has been without electricity for more than a week now but it's the shortage of water which poses the biggest humanitarian challenge this woman is called. in russian her name means home but she has little of that left logical but bummed out is even your fault not be double up with one beach well you did it doesn't look good you can show it's a need be insinuate what you cheer war got numb she got most of what's going to get that out but you know what you chill my little you know mom you're discussing it because of q.'s form early in the morning because people are
implications obviously for people for the environment for any crops that are grown so really a chemical plant ought to be a no go zone in any conflict. ukraine's avoiding the red cross now to organize aid for people in lugansk that's what president petro poroshenko told the u.s. secretary of state the eastern help of resistance declared a humanitarian disaster last week reflections in the devastated city for us. the ganske made luke abandoned but the rusting people here. those who didn't flee...
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Aug 23, 2014
08/14
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most dang ruz jobs in the u.s., working in a slaughter plant. some workers blame the chemicals for which they bathe the mete for a host of severe problems. the film makers behind "mississippi chicken," the shocking discover they made after talking to low-wage workers inside poultry plants. ♪ >> i stand sglufrnling i was standing there in paging pain. and i was really, really hurt. body had shut down. i was standing there in tears hurting until somebody came to carry me off of that line to take me to the nurse's station. >> welcome back. that was a former poultry plant worker. hers is a low-wage job. i want to point out, we reached out to the largest poultry leaders and their lobbying associations to come on the show. the national chicken association declined saying: the nationaltie federation said we are addressing the modernized inspection. it will be 90 days before the government agency writes the regulations that will guide how the process goes forward. we also reached out to the california poultry federation, tyson, pilgrim's pride but did no
most dang ruz jobs in the u.s., working in a slaughter plant. some workers blame the chemicals for which they bathe the mete for a host of severe problems. the film makers behind "mississippi chicken," the shocking discover they made after talking to low-wage workers inside poultry plants. ♪ >> i stand sglufrnling i was standing there in paging pain. and i was really, really hurt. body had shut down. i was standing there in tears hurting until somebody came to carry me off of...
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concentrations that can lead to blindness lung damage and death as we heard just a moment but from a plant spokesperson a potential leak thing could affect an area of over three hundred kilometers in radius that would reach as far as russia's real stuff region and the waters of the as of black sea the fact which is one of many located in and around thirteen cities in the donetsk region which is now a war zone overall there are one hundred forty five plants that house potential biohazards that are considered to be at risk. a professor of environmental toxicology told us more about the potential dangers looming here. if it is vaporized in some way and that would possibly be by tourette hits with explosives or very intense fire chemical gas that's a date once it's in the air for a very long time. degrades in the atmosphere very very slowly if it lands on soil or water it is also there for quite a long time it doesn't degrade it to all easily that has implications obviously for people for the environment for any crops that are grow so really a chemical plant ought to be a no go zone in any con
concentrations that can lead to blindness lung damage and death as we heard just a moment but from a plant spokesperson a potential leak thing could affect an area of over three hundred kilometers in radius that would reach as far as russia's real stuff region and the waters of the as of black sea the fact which is one of many located in and around thirteen cities in the donetsk region which is now a war zone overall there are one hundred forty five plants that house potential biohazards that...
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Aug 22, 2014
08/14
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LINKTV
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plant. three reactors suffered a meltdown. >> the japanese government has raised the crisis level at the fukushima daiichi nuclear power plant from 5 to 7. >> the confirmed death toll continues to climb. >> hundreds of thousands fled the radiation. many are still unable to return home. property damages and cleanup costs may run over $250 billion. >> the operator of the disabled fukushima daiichi nuclear power plant has agreed to make provisional damage payments to residents living around the plant. >> what if it happened in the united states? who would pay? a catastrophe like fukushima could erase all existing insurance protection under federal law. it makes the u.s. liability compensation system look grossly inadequate. there are 104 nuclear power plants in the u.s. spread across 31 states. they produce 20% of our electrical power. they all carry some insurance against a nuclear accident, but the combined total coverage is only $12.6 billion. beyond that, americans would be uninsured... or as the insurance industry puts it, naked. >> if you have to evacuate a very large city, or tens or hundreds
plant. three reactors suffered a meltdown. >> the japanese government has raised the crisis level at the fukushima daiichi nuclear power plant from 5 to 7. >> the confirmed death toll continues to climb. >> hundreds of thousands fled the radiation. many are still unable to return home. property damages and cleanup costs may run over $250 billion. >> the operator of the disabled fukushima daiichi nuclear power plant has agreed to make provisional damage payments to...
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Aug 18, 2014
08/14
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ALJAZAM
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you have talked a number of people and you have to footage from inside of the plant and what were some of the biggest findings? >> so, i actually worked as a worker and advocate over six years in a half dozen states for the poultry workers and worked on the film with john, and we found a number of complaints that the workers have, ranging from a hasment by the supervisor ises and denial of pay for all hours worked and the most common complaint were work place injuries and the line speed was the primary issue instigating the injuries. >> phyllis, talk a little bit about what your experience was in terms of working in the plant, what did you see, were there cases of health issues because of the things going on in the plant? >> yes, ma'am, i'm coughing right now because of the chemicals in the plant. i have a fellow inspector retiring due to living on oxygen and pills because of the acid. >> go ahead, please. >> highly allergic to it. we had an inspector retiring because of the tsp. i have seen the little migrant workers and come and so scared of the jobs and their arms are swollen, they
you have talked a number of people and you have to footage from inside of the plant and what were some of the biggest findings? >> so, i actually worked as a worker and advocate over six years in a half dozen states for the poultry workers and worked on the film with john, and we found a number of complaints that the workers have, ranging from a hasment by the supervisor ises and denial of pay for all hours worked and the most common complaint were work place injuries and the line speed...
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Aug 6, 2014
08/14
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CNNW
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, in a tobacco plant. e two concepts and explain in lay person's english how that works? >> well, monochloe antibodies are living system. you can't do it chemically in a test tube. we decided we want something that works faster and at a more cost efficient way. and so we've been working with tobacco plants for the last 15 years. what was done was taking the gene sequence for the monocunal antibody, fusing it to a gene sequence for a plant virus. now you've got a long piece of dna. you simply dip the tobacco plants into this genetic solution, and it invades the cells of the tobacco plant, and begins a viral infection. and as the virus replicates, every time its genome turns over, it produces the monoconal antibody we're interested in. >> fast forward 12 years to today. that is your two former colleagues, larry sitland and kevin wally who you mentioned are now behind this company, zmaz zmapp and are able to provide the doses to help these two americans. i believe they're getting three dose s apiece. do you ha
, in a tobacco plant. e two concepts and explain in lay person's english how that works? >> well, monochloe antibodies are living system. you can't do it chemically in a test tube. we decided we want something that works faster and at a more cost efficient way. and so we've been working with tobacco plants for the last 15 years. what was done was taking the gene sequence for the monocunal antibody, fusing it to a gene sequence for a plant virus. now you've got a long piece of dna. you...
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Aug 8, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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a coal plant as an emission. if i plug into a power plug, i would have 20% of my co2 reinvented at some distance power plant if iran against windmills of course. that much wouldn't happen. here is a small demonstration. you have these little filters and the air is pushed around inside the box and you can watch the co2 in the box going. then you can put wetlands in and they will refill it with co2 and later on we have, look it up on the internet, we have plans in there and they grow happily with co2 we can get off those things when they're wet and the whip with the outside. what we did is we made the air do our work. the air carries kinetic energy and has plenty to it through the filters. we can't run fast but we can run thick. if you measure carefully you'll notice the air coming out of the back of her filters is a little cooler than the air coming in. that's where we paid our energy penalty. it is technically a very large energy penalty kick somebody pointed this out to me but i'm not paying it. if you hang a tow
a coal plant as an emission. if i plug into a power plug, i would have 20% of my co2 reinvented at some distance power plant if iran against windmills of course. that much wouldn't happen. here is a small demonstration. you have these little filters and the air is pushed around inside the box and you can watch the co2 in the box going. then you can put wetlands in and they will refill it with co2 and later on we have, look it up on the internet, we have plans in there and they grow happily with...
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and as we heard just a moment back from the plant spokesperson a potential leak could affect an area of over three hundred kilometers in radius and that would reach as far as russia's rostov region and the waters of the out soft and black sea factory is just one of one hundred forty five with potential buyer hazards located across that ananth scrooge and which is now worth zone at least thirteen cities in the area have chemical plants that are considered to be at risk alice or have a professor bar mal toxicology tell me more about the potential dangers it is vaporized in some way and that would possibly be by direct haste with explosives was very intense fire the chemical does that's a very once it's in the air for a very long time. degrades in the atmosphere very very slowly but it lives on sort of water it is also there for quite a long time it doesn't degrade it told easily that has implications obviously for people for the environment for any crops that are grown so really a chemical plant or to be a no go is that i am in any conflict ukraine's abiding the red cross to organize a
and as we heard just a moment back from the plant spokesperson a potential leak could affect an area of over three hundred kilometers in radius and that would reach as far as russia's rostov region and the waters of the out soft and black sea factory is just one of one hundred forty five with potential buyer hazards located across that ananth scrooge and which is now worth zone at least thirteen cities in the area have chemical plants that are considered to be at risk alice or have a professor...
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implications obviously for people for the environment for any crops that are grow so really a chemical plant ought to be a no go zone in any conflict. other developments tonight russia says it will supply the threatened regions with humanitarian help a move that's now been approved by kiev earlier the ukrainian authorities have been opposed to any help from moscow the red cross has also been invited to provide aid for the people of new gun specifically to after that city declared a humanitarian disaster last week rif notion is there for us. the ganske may luke abandoned but there are still people here. those who didn't have a daily struggle to survive the city has been without electricity for more than a week now but it's the shortage of water which poses the biggest humanitarian challenge this woman is called. in russian her name means home but she has little of that left but should be back when god is unique in your heart not of one couple bumpy but we did go to the blue did you concho it's a new being sinew we've got new cheer war got mum she got not much of what's going to get shut out b
implications obviously for people for the environment for any crops that are grow so really a chemical plant ought to be a no go zone in any conflict. other developments tonight russia says it will supply the threatened regions with humanitarian help a move that's now been approved by kiev earlier the ukrainian authorities have been opposed to any help from moscow the red cross has also been invited to provide aid for the people of new gun specifically to after that city declared a humanitarian...
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this our city always had an emergency plan in case of a fire or an accident at the plant every year we had special drills in case there's a fire at a plant i think it's the central government and the focus shima briffa care authorities now bear the brunt of responsibility for what happened and as for thomas mayor and it was my responsibility to take care of the people of my city i had no time to get any advice i tried talking to professor authorities but there was absolutely chaos because it was impossible to hold a meeting with an organ donor here so i chose to act on my own and i decided to start with evacuating people as far from radiation as possible missed. your town has moved to a new location to the neighboring city of. is it safe there and do you see this as a new start for these people. what they. consider i'd like to show you a table with radiation levels around chernobyl really levels around fukushima are four times higher than in chernobyl your so i think it's too early for people to come back to focus. to us here you can see radiation levels in our region. this is the epic
this our city always had an emergency plan in case of a fire or an accident at the plant every year we had special drills in case there's a fire at a plant i think it's the central government and the focus shima briffa care authorities now bear the brunt of responsibility for what happened and as for thomas mayor and it was my responsibility to take care of the people of my city i had no time to get any advice i tried talking to professor authorities but there was absolutely chaos because it...
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implications obviously for people for the environment for any crops that are grown so really a chemical plant or to be a no go zone in any conflict. ukraine's inviting the red cross to organize aid for people in lugansk and that's what president petro poroshenko has told the u.s. secretary of state the eastern hub of resistance declared a humanitarian disaster last week and russia has tried to send in emergency aid but the offer was turned down by key of money for national is in the devastated city forests. the guns to made luke abandoned but the rusting people here. those who didn't flee have a daily struggle to survive. the city has been without electricity for more than a week now but it's the shortage of water which poses the biggest humanitarian challenge this woman is called middle aged in russian her name means hope but she has little of that left that should be back when god is unique in your heart not of one couple between but we did go to the blue did you can chose a new prince in you we've got new cheer war got mum she got most of what's good for you and shut out the window for you
implications obviously for people for the environment for any crops that are grown so really a chemical plant or to be a no go zone in any conflict. ukraine's inviting the red cross to organize aid for people in lugansk and that's what president petro poroshenko has told the u.s. secretary of state the eastern hub of resistance declared a humanitarian disaster last week and russia has tried to send in emergency aid but the offer was turned down by key of money for national is in the devastated...
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Aug 11, 2014
08/14
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BLOOMBERG
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it is actually a plant where toyota worked earlier in his career at toyota. ith elon musk. they met at elon musk's house. they took a test drive in a roadster, the sports car that preceded the model asked -- model s. very quickly, they decided in addition to selling this plant to tesla, toyota was going to make a small investment in tesla and put together a deal where tesla would provide the battery and some of the power for the electric vehicle. that turned out to be the toyota rav4 ev. early on rav4 that elon musk was very high on. he thought there was a great chance that the project would be expanded, that the two companies said they would build about 2600 and initially, and here we are today where they actually haven't reached 2000 deliveries of this car. just last year, tesla sold more than 20,000 of the model asked s.model it is a car that didn't really live up to the hopes that either company had going in. these two guys, they like each other, but i guess it was the differences when it came down to their employees. tell us a little bit about that. >> th
it is actually a plant where toyota worked earlier in his career at toyota. ith elon musk. they met at elon musk's house. they took a test drive in a roadster, the sports car that preceded the model asked -- model s. very quickly, they decided in addition to selling this plant to tesla, toyota was going to make a small investment in tesla and put together a deal where tesla would provide the battery and some of the power for the electric vehicle. that turned out to be the toyota rav4 ev. early...
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a tree. >> reporter: that wasn't enough for laura. she wanted to plant a million trees. >> i've always loved trees. i've always been very passionate about the environment. >> what seemed like, you know, a reasonable idea, plant a million trees. >> reporter: so they began with the help of her 4h club. laura formed the million tree project. this picture shows the first tree. today she returned to visit. >> it's amazing to see how much it's grown. >> reporter: both the tree and the project. >> we thought that it was going to be possible to plant all the trees in the u.s. in about six months. we didn't realize that 1 million is a big number. >> reporter: but they have learned. to reach laura's goal more than 140,000 kids from around the world got involved. saplings now span 45 states and 15 countries. >> toys taken six years to get to this point but next week laura will plant the 1 millionth tree. to actually reach 1 million, to be honest it hasn't totally set in >> reporter: project helped shape laura's life. she was selected to carry the olympic torch in h
a tree. >> reporter: that wasn't enough for laura. she wanted to plant a million trees. >> i've always loved trees. i've always been very passionate about the environment. >> what seemed like, you know, a reasonable idea, plant a million trees. >> reporter: so they began with the help of her 4h club. laura formed the million tree project. this picture shows the first tree. today she returned to visit. >> it's amazing to see how much it's grown. >> reporter:...
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321
Aug 30, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN3
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a train hauled this raw material to an aggregate plant across the river a few miles above the dam sitethe sand and gravel passed through various process of screening, grading and washing until it emerged as unexcelled aggregate. then it was stock piled according to sizes to await its trip to the dam site. this process aggregate moved as called for in a steady flow over the railroad to two mixing plants one in the canyon bottom and the other on the nevada rim. there sand and gravel were blended with cement into a uniform mix, meeting rigid specific occasions for the 4.5 million cubic yards of concrete to be placed in the dam structures. from the mixing plants, concrete was dispatched to all points of construction. nine anchored aerial cable ways spanning the canyon from rim to rim lowered the concrete into the forms and handled other supplies and equipment as well. as the first bucket of concrete settled into its foundation on june 6th, 1933, hoover dam began its rise from the depts of black canyon. as concrete was dumped in the forms the dam reached its full 660 thickness at its base,
a train hauled this raw material to an aggregate plant across the river a few miles above the dam sitethe sand and gravel passed through various process of screening, grading and washing until it emerged as unexcelled aggregate. then it was stock piled according to sizes to await its trip to the dam site. this process aggregate moved as called for in a steady flow over the railroad to two mixing plants one in the canyon bottom and the other on the nevada rim. there sand and gravel were blended...
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Aug 23, 2014
08/14
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KTVU
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but there is a big huge pile of metal, this is a metal recycling plant. a big metal pile. 50 feet tall and an acre wide that has been on fire this whole time. and i asked in this metal recycling plant what could possibly be on fire like this. here is what he said. >> that's the insulation. it's the material that are on the metal. it's washers, it's dryers, it's wire with insulation on it. that's what is burning. >> reporter: and so this is video that we shot just a couple minutes ago by the fire. you see the firefighters are hitting it hard. firefighters did tell me that this is something that they expect ting doing now for probably a couple of days. because this is the kind of fire where the material is piled up so high that it's hard to get down into it. so they will actually have to physically turn everything over and put out the fire at the bottom of the piles. this could take a while. as far as a cause, firefighters would not say what it is. they don't know yet. but they do say that -- they did tell me that one of the things that they do at a plant li
but there is a big huge pile of metal, this is a metal recycling plant. a big metal pile. 50 feet tall and an acre wide that has been on fire this whole time. and i asked in this metal recycling plant what could possibly be on fire like this. here is what he said. >> that's the insulation. it's the material that are on the metal. it's washers, it's dryers, it's wire with insulation on it. that's what is burning. >> reporter: and so this is video that we shot just a couple minutes...
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implications obviously for people for the environment for any crops that are grown so really a chemical plant ought to be a no go zone in any conflict. other developments ukraine's inviting the red cross to organize aid for people in lugansk that's what president petro poroshenko told the u.s. secretary of state the eastern harbor resistance declared a humanitarian disaster last week rif an ocean is in the devastated city for us. the ganske made that can bend but the rusty people here. those who didn't have a daily struggle to survive. the city has been without electricity for more than a week now but it's the shortage of water which poses the biggest humanitarian challenge. this woman is called middle aged and russian her name means home but she has little of that left dozens of the buckboard got busy keeping your feet nonstop on the job that we did go to the blue did you can chose a newbie insinuate what nicci a warm up mum she got not much of what is going to shut out the window bored you to my life or your usual storm i'm sure it's getting a bit of queues form early in the morning because
implications obviously for people for the environment for any crops that are grown so really a chemical plant ought to be a no go zone in any conflict. other developments ukraine's inviting the red cross to organize aid for people in lugansk that's what president petro poroshenko told the u.s. secretary of state the eastern harbor resistance declared a humanitarian disaster last week rif an ocean is in the devastated city for us. the ganske made that can bend but the rusty people here. those...
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Aug 31, 2014
08/14
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ALJAZAM
tv
eye 71
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natural gas prices, a third in europe and asia, a great place to build a plant. if they look at it and say the price disparity is going to go away or we go back to a period of volatility, which we saw a lot of, that will scare them away and mean a lose of jobs. from a commodity perspective, it's weird. oil is the aim price at the price per barrel. natural gas isn't, we don't move it around as easily. >> to move it around, you need to build a pipe line, and we don't have a pipeline under the atlantic or put it into a giant ship, take it down to negative 236 degrees. the shin ear plant, the price tag is sa-20 billion. these are expensive facilities. >> let's talk about the situation in europe, they could use the natural gas, it's cheaper than russia's, and you could have sanctions that you wanted. you could put the screws to russia to stop expanding across eastern europe. they can't. we don't export it and they don't have enough ports to bring it in. >> building the ports is simple. to build the export terminal, it's so expensive you need long term contract. all the
natural gas prices, a third in europe and asia, a great place to build a plant. if they look at it and say the price disparity is going to go away or we go back to a period of volatility, which we saw a lot of, that will scare them away and mean a lose of jobs. from a commodity perspective, it's weird. oil is the aim price at the price per barrel. natural gas isn't, we don't move it around as easily. >> to move it around, you need to build a pipe line, and we don't have a pipeline under...
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Aug 17, 2014
08/14
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CNNW
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>>> and a cheap nuclear power plant that uses nuclear waste as its fuel. sounds like a pipe dream? well, i will introduce you to a woman named one of time's 30 under 30 who says she can make it a reality. >>> then in the workplace, germans will unabashedly tell you that your work is terrible while americans will say nice things before they criticize you. a cultural map of the world and how to navigate those differences. >>> but first here's my take. hillary clinton expressed what has become washington's new conventional wisdom when she implied in her recent interview with jeffrey goldberg in "the atlantic" that supporting moderates in the region might have prevented the rise of the islamic state in iraq and syria. in fact, america has provided massive and sustained aid to the moderates in the region. remember, isis was created in iraq and grew out of that country's internal dynamics and went into syria later. over the last decade the united states helped organize iraq's moderates, the shiite dominated government, gave them tens of billions of dollars in aid and supplied and trained
>>> and a cheap nuclear power plant that uses nuclear waste as its fuel. sounds like a pipe dream? well, i will introduce you to a woman named one of time's 30 under 30 who says she can make it a reality. >>> then in the workplace, germans will unabashedly tell you that your work is terrible while americans will say nice things before they criticize you. a cultural map of the world and how to navigate those differences. >>> but first here's my take. hillary clinton...
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72
Aug 3, 2014
08/14
by
WJLA
tv
eye 72
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vin diesel as a plant. guardians of the galaxy puts the comic back in comic book movies. also opening "get on up." a thrilling biography of james brown and his music. 3 and a half stars. both best bets along with boyhood and snow piercer. >> have a nice weekend,
vin diesel as a plant. guardians of the galaxy puts the comic back in comic book movies. also opening "get on up." a thrilling biography of james brown and his music. 3 and a half stars. both best bets along with boyhood and snow piercer. >> have a nice weekend,
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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41
Aug 11, 2014
08/14
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SFGTV
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. >> where the retaining wall stops, there could be a curb that could delen ate the planting. >> well, rather than this..., and do it..., yeah, and on the straight. there is a tree there. >> well it could go here, though. >> and i don't know how close we can get to the tree. >> that is not on there. >> >> you have to go out further. >> yes, you have speaker cards? >> yes. >> not there yet. >> commissioner johnk? >> yeah, well, i sort of process and technical issue here. so, the project proponent is saying that they have a issue with the staff recommendation, you want to expand the width of the driveway. okay? and then the staff is saying, no, and well, no, and you brought this up duriright. >> okay. >> what you are and what you are talking about right now curb issue, does that help with this issue? >> i think that the one issue. >> yeah. >> that is the drive width. and the driveway width is one issue. >> yes. >> but the fact that the stair jogs in the man their it does is kind of odd. and so if it shifted and then was straight. >> down and then is shifted the width. >> only shifted on
. >> where the retaining wall stops, there could be a curb that could delen ate the planting. >> well, rather than this..., and do it..., yeah, and on the straight. there is a tree there. >> well it could go here, though. >> and i don't know how close we can get to the tree. >> that is not on there. >> >> you have to go out further. >> yes, you have speaker cards? >> yes. >> not there yet. >> commissioner johnk? >> yeah,...
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Aug 9, 2014
08/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 44
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from cancer it turned into multiple sclerosis, it turned into diabetes. >> soon a lest known plant compoundaught the brothers attention. cannabidiol. they decided to are breed a strain >> people call it the hippie disappointment. you could smoke it all day, and you wouldn't become high. but we still grew it. so much, that it hurt our other crops. >> it wasn't until the stanleys met charlotte fiji that they were convinced that it could help children. charlotte severs from gervais syndrome. charlotte just up to five at the time, was having up to 500 grand grand mal seizures in a month. >> joel says hey, there is a woman who wants to treat her daughter with cannabis. i said you're crazy. that's going to end up landing us in jairl. we'll be in orange -- jail, in orange jump suits. >> during an epileptic seizure neurons are firing electrical impulses all at the same time. almost like an electrical storm. >> once we started it, first day, seizure free, no seizures. a week went by still no seizures, and then we were on to something. >> renaming their plant plant ncbd extract, charlotte's web. word
from cancer it turned into multiple sclerosis, it turned into diabetes. >> soon a lest known plant compoundaught the brothers attention. cannabidiol. they decided to are breed a strain >> people call it the hippie disappointment. you could smoke it all day, and you wouldn't become high. but we still grew it. so much, that it hurt our other crops. >> it wasn't until the stanleys met charlotte fiji that they were convinced that it could help children. charlotte severs from...
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44
Aug 21, 2014
08/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 44
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have a look around and notice that there are no car manufacturing plants, no steel mills anymore? i couldn't even auto my truck in boston at a rest area because it was polluting. but if they just look around and see that we have nothing going on like we used to, mexico city, look at that place. we cannot control them. i said i guess that stuff is floating over the tray, i don't know but i think the epa is an entity of the government that's really gone wild, you know? it's putting a burden on everybody. all the citizens of the united states. that's my comment. thank you. >> guest: that's certainly a viewpoint. there are others who would disagree and say it's okay if we're spending a little more for our energy. it's okay if we're spending a little more for our products. it's important to me that my kids have clean air to breathe and are able to go outside in a way that may not have been true in some areas in the past. we don't have killer smog's anymore. we have made a lot of progress. just make this point early on. we have made a great deal of progress. in the last 40 years on clean
have a look around and notice that there are no car manufacturing plants, no steel mills anymore? i couldn't even auto my truck in boston at a rest area because it was polluting. but if they just look around and see that we have nothing going on like we used to, mexico city, look at that place. we cannot control them. i said i guess that stuff is floating over the tray, i don't know but i think the epa is an entity of the government that's really gone wild, you know? it's putting a burden on...
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
by
KCSM
tv
eye 53
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several active volcanos lie within 100 kilometers of a plant in japan. regulators have approve a plan to restart two reactors there. they met with experts to discuss how to come up with standards for predicting eruptions. one said there's advance warning of major eruptions but it takes years to remove nuclear fuel. the regulators said they would consider what the experts had to say. they said they may require the operator of the plant to undertake additional measures before restarting the reactors. >>> it's time to check on the markets. >> the nuclear plant entered the critical phase in march 11, 2011. officials at the plant noticed that the emergency cooling system was not working. but yoshida wasn't informed until late that night and the reactors had already started melting down. >> i'm very regretful about this. we failed to establish a system to receive warnings from the employees on time. >> the former chief of the plant condemned tepco's head office for mishandling the crisis. the following day, yoshida decided to inject sea water into the crippled
several active volcanos lie within 100 kilometers of a plant in japan. regulators have approve a plan to restart two reactors there. they met with experts to discuss how to come up with standards for predicting eruptions. one said there's advance warning of major eruptions but it takes years to remove nuclear fuel. the regulators said they would consider what the experts had to say. they said they may require the operator of the plant to undertake additional measures before restarting the...
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46
Aug 7, 2014
08/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 46
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a study in the late 90s. he wanted to see what there was to plant. he visited the depository and it was an indiana jones scene of a warehouse. he pried open a box and a couple of open baggies of rotted seed. this industry is so valuable important we have to start from scratch when it comes to research. people in this room veronica among them are starting that research now. but we can take the seed industry from canada, the fiber knowledge of china and europe. this is european dutch factory that makes the fiber that goes in to bmws or mercedes and this third energy component and make them all first generation. this was really fun. mercedes does not put hemp fiber and open store panels because they are wearing tight eyes. it is because it's an easily accessible reliable inexpensive source of strong light material. that's the age we live in now. so it was really silky stuff. this is the actual fiber and the company complex that provides this hemp they have been at it for 20 years. the world leaders in fiber and even they have to jury rig their harvesters
a study in the late 90s. he wanted to see what there was to plant. he visited the depository and it was an indiana jones scene of a warehouse. he pried open a box and a couple of open baggies of rotted seed. this industry is so valuable important we have to start from scratch when it comes to research. people in this room veronica among them are starting that research now. but we can take the seed industry from canada, the fiber knowledge of china and europe. this is european dutch factory that...
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a plant which makes prepared meals in western france. this morning fraud control teams make a surprise inspection. mr emerick head of the social protection department hello welcome. joe michel and if he came to inspect the stocks of this famous brand food processing company and this cotton potato pie he wants to check its composition. so. this is the list of ingredients you have for water cod twenty three percent made up exclusively of cod and salt so the professionals job is to determine if there is indeed twenty three percent of the pure product in this municipal jury. to determine just how much your product in a manner of speaking when a prepared meal is labeled for example made with cod without adding the words fish the way it is usually made with pulp. but. when you cut off the edges and you take sample pieces from the middle. only shell emily wants to check that the composition of the pulp block corresponds to what is indicated on the label on. the shell before so here we have a block of fish fish suitable you're just going to compr
a plant which makes prepared meals in western france. this morning fraud control teams make a surprise inspection. mr emerick head of the social protection department hello welcome. joe michel and if he came to inspect the stocks of this famous brand food processing company and this cotton potato pie he wants to check its composition. so. this is the list of ingredients you have for water cod twenty three percent made up exclusively of cod and salt so the professionals job is to determine if...
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97
Aug 25, 2014
08/14
by
KTVU
tv
eye 97
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>> it's a plant, absolutely real. >> i think this is real. >> somebody took the time to smoke a frenchry but i think it is real. >> he is still smoking it. >> what he was trying to do in this video was somehow try to explain why french fries are bad for you by smoking one. i think we already knew french fries aren't the best thing for you. smoking anything is bad, also. so it's real. >> we all agreed on one. >> nice. >> very nice. >>> last video. >> i mean, some people scare really easily. >> a lot of videos online of people doing this to other people. >> i think this is real. >> i say real, too, for sure. it is funny. >> it is funny and real. >> you don't think he is putting that on? >> i think he is probably more on edge. he has this room mate who scares him. >> i can watch this all day. >> it is real and i really think he needs to get a new room mate if it bothers him. >> i think it is fake. anybody can do that. >> watch this one. >> that is fake. >> this is real. >> maybe you guys convinced me. it is harder than it looks. >> one more. >> can't do it. [ laughter ] >>> it's videos li
>> it's a plant, absolutely real. >> i think this is real. >> somebody took the time to smoke a frenchry but i think it is real. >> he is still smoking it. >> what he was trying to do in this video was somehow try to explain why french fries are bad for you by smoking one. i think we already knew french fries aren't the best thing for you. smoking anything is bad, also. so it's real. >> we all agreed on one. >> nice. >> very nice. >>>...