Atlanta total rainfall this year & so far this month On this page, you will find a real-time tally of rainfall so far this year, and also for the current month. Below those data, are the current 30-year averages ("normals") for Atlanta, Georgia. Atlanta Rainfall This Month and Year-to-Date
đ„: i really didn't want to age. i used to not be curious, but now i'm curious about what we'll look like in 10 years. i'm not scared at all, i think i'll be so happy in the future. i believe what we've done so far is just a taste.. we should keep going.. 30, 40, 70 years!
The piles of books that arrive months before the rest of the world gets to see them. The year may only be a few months old, but we have been reading far beyond to give you a taste of the best
23 of the new species discovered so far this year From a millipede named after Taylor Swift and a tree named after Leonardo DiCaprio to a bamboo-dwelling tarantula and a leafhopper with a metallic sheen, discover some of the new species around the world that have been described by scientists in 2022. By Megan Shersby
The number of forest fires in the Brazilian Amazon so far this year has already surpassed that for all of 2021, according to official figures released Monday that triggered new alarm for the world
fBFDC. If you want to use so far this year you would have to rephrase the sentence a bit, since so far refers to the past, and not something you're currently doing. Change I am not making to I have not made, and it would be correct to use the second option. I have not made much money so far this year. However when changing to past tense, you can not use these days anymore, since these days refer to something right now. I am not making much money these days
Janeen Jones, Center for Public Integrity; Getty Fight disinformation Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily newsletter and follow the news that story is published in partnership with the Center for Public Integrity, a nonprofit investigative reporting newsroom. Hundreds of anti-transgender bills proposed in state legislatures are sold as measures to protect minorsâsuch as Idahoâs Vulnerable Child Protection Act and Montanaâs Youth Health Protection Actâbut advocacy groups and doctors warn that the effect is exactly the opposite. So far this year, legislators in nearly every state have introduced over 550 anti-transgender billsâmore than in the past eight years combined. Nearly 30 such bills have been introduced in Congress. The onslaught includes limits on healthcare access, removing LGBTQ+ materials from schools, and banning trans athletes from sports teams. Seventy-two measures are now law. âYoung people are being harmed, regardless of whether bills pass or not,â said Casey Pick, director of law and policy at the Trevor Project, a nonprofit that provides crisis support to LGBTQ+ youth. In a nationwide survey of LGBTQ+ teens and young adults in late 2022, the Trevor Project found that 86% of transgender and nonbinary youth said anti-trans bills negatively impacted their mental health. âItâs a constant debate on my existence and it just makes me exhausted and frustrated that I have to legitimately just live,â one trans individual responded. Others said they feared for their life, safety, and future. The survey found other impacts from the legislation, including 45% of transgender respondents experienced online harassment 24% were bullied at school 42% stopped speaking to a family member âLGBTQ young people are watching, and internalizing the anti-LGBTQ messages they see in the media and from their elected officials,â Kasey Suffredini, vice president of advocacy and government affairs at the Trevor Project, said in a statement. âAnd so are those that would do our community harm.â A participant holds a sign at the Reclaim Pride Coalitionâs third annual Queer Liberation March in Manhattan in June 2021. Erik McGregor/LightRocket/Getty In 20 states, those younger than 18 have lost or will soon lose access to the health care necessary to transition to the gender with which they identify. Legislatures in seven other states are considering similar policies, according to the Human Rights Campaign. Gender-affirming care encompasses a range of social, medical, behavioral, and psychological services to support and affirm a personâs gender identity when in conflict with the one they were assigned at birth. Treatment plans vary depending on the needs of the individual. It can include puberty blockers, which pause development to give an individual time to decide whether to continue transitioning. They are completely reversible. Puberty blockers also have been used for decades on cisgender children experiencing early-onset puberty. In later adolescence, a transgender teenager might undergo hormone therapy. The medication can help align a personâs body with their gender identity, including regulating hair growth and vocal pitch. It is partially reversible. Despite rhetoric used by prominent Republican politicians like Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, gender-affirming surgeries are uncommon in patients under 18. Current medical guidelines say minors should not undergo genital surgery. Chest surgery is recommended only in specific casesâand after a teen has lived as their desired gender for ample time and undergone hormone therapy for at least a year. More than a dozen studies of trans youth show that access to gender-affirming care is associated with better mental health outcomes. It has also been recognized as a medical necessity by more than 25 major medical organizations. But new policies in some states eliminate options for those wishing to transition. âWhen you have legislation that works to require people to hide or not be in their own identities, it will likely cause substantial damage to their health and wellness,â said Christopher AhnAllen, a clinical psychologist who developed the Gender Diversity Clinic at Brigham and Womenâs Hospital in Massachusetts. AhnAllen said some of his own patients have expressed concerns about the recent anti-trans legislation and debates. While most legislation applies only to new patients, proposals in some statesâincluding South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and Kentuckyârequire youth currently receiving care to stop, effectively forcing them to de-transition.âDetransitioning is going to exacerbate gender dysphoria and collectively lead to poor health outcomes,â AhnAllen said. A protestor holds a sign during a rally at the capitol in St. Paul to support trans kids in Minnesota, Texas and around the country. Michael Siluk/UCG/Universal Images Group/Getty In 2020, the Idaho legislature passed the countryâs first statewide law banning transgender student-athletes from playing on sports teams that match their gender identity. Floridaâs 2022 âDonât Say Gayâ law was the first enacted in the country in 20 years, restricting school employees from discussing gender identity and sexual orientation. Similar proposals in over a dozen states followed. The American Civil Liberties Union tallied over 200 anti-LGBTQ+ bills relating to schools and education proposed by state legislators this year. âFollowing a year of unprecedented book bans and classroom gag orders, this state legislation is not surprising,â said LGBTQ+ youth activist Cameron Samuels. Now a freshman at Brandeis University, they led a successful effort, along with the ACLU, to reverse book bans and internet censorship at their high school in Katy, Texas. Cameron Samuels Cindy Ord/Getty For years, the Katy Independent School District had blocked online resources like the Trevor Project, the Human Rights Campaign and other LGBTQ+ advocacy groups with a âhuman sexualityâ filter, according to the Houston Chronicle. The school also removed âbooks upon booksâ touching on topics like LGBTQ+ identities and race, Samuels said. Classroom censorship bills proposed across the country aim to do the sameâbut at a statewide level. âThese policies are not just political statements but affect our very lives each and every day,â Samuels said. âIt could be a matter of life and death whether a student can access a suicide prevention lifeline like the Trevor Project.â LGBTQ+ studentsâ need for these resources could rise as advocacy groups track an increase in hostile educational environments. A 2021 study by the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network also found negative impacts on trans youth as a result of anti-trans legislation. Its recent research on school climates suggests the nationwide debates over trans rights have created more hostile attitudes toward LGBTQ+ students. âTrans and nonbinary young people in schools who have been targeted by these athletic bans and medical bans have reported higher rates of things like bullying and harassment,â said Aaron Ridings, GLSEN chief of staff and deputy executive director for public policy and research. Ridings said GLSEN research shows that four supports are critical for LGBTQ+ students. These include curriculum that represents all students, youth leadership clubs like Gay-Straight Alliances, comprehensive anti-discrimination policies, and a network of supportive adults. âThese four supports improve school climate, student health, and academic achievement,â Ridings said. But those supports would be restricted under numerous bills proposed in state legislatures. Some have already passed this year. Arkansas, Idaho, Iowa, and Kentucky enacted so-called âbathroom bans,â which prohibit trans students from using restrooms that align with their gender identities. Wyoming and Kentucky banned trans girls from participating in interscholastic girlsâ sports. New laws in Utah and Arkansas prevent schools from acknowledging trans studentsâ gender identities, including preferred name, and pronouns, without written parental permission. An Indiana bill would require school staffâincluding school psychologistsâto notify a parent if their student requests to use a different name or pronoun. In late March, the Kentucky General Assembly overrode Gov. Andy Beshearâs veto of an omnibus anti-trans bill, which included prohibiting schools from requiring the use of preferred pronouns. The policy also bans lessons âstudying or exploring gender identity, gender expression, or sexual orientation.â Samuels, who is studying politics, said the students being affected by these anti-LGBTQ+ policies do not have an equal voice on school boards and in state legislatures. This has led to policy decisions being made âat the expense of students.â âIf we are proposing legislation that will harm a certain group of people, no matter how large or how small, itâs an attack on all of us, because this could happen to any community,â Samuels said.
TV Series2018ĂąâŹâ TV-PG3mPlay full episode329Watch What We Know About 'Wonder Woman 1984' ... So FarA series that catches you up on all the news and on-set stories from the upcoming movies and shows you need to know about, all before that first trailer series that catches you up on all the news and on-set stories from the upcoming movies and shows you need to know about, all before that first trailer series that catches you up on all the news and on-set stories from the upcoming movies and shows you need to know about, all before that first trailer production, box office & company infoEpisodes69Videos73More like Great mini show on IMDbLove watching every episode, great to learn about what's going on in pop culture whether relating to movies or shows, well edited too & well narrated!Please stop disliking this I have Asperger's syndrome disorder I do the best I can with my 21, 2019Contribute to this pageSuggest an edit or add missing contentBy what name was So Far 2018 officially released in Canada in English?AnswerEdit pageAdd episodeMore to exploreRecently viewedYou have no recently viewed pages
CNN â There have been more shootings than days so far this year and more shootings than at this point in any year since at least 2013. CNN is tracking mass shootings in the US using data from the Gun Violence Archive, a non-profit group formed in 2013 to track gun-related violence. Both CNN and GVA define a âmass shootingâ as a shooting that injured or killed four or more people, not including the shooter. Hereâs how 2023 compares with previous years CORRECTION An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated when the Gun Violence Archive was established. It was in 2013.
Department of Natural Resources and Renewables firefighter Kalen MacMullin of Sydney, works on a fire in Shelburne in 2023, there have been 2,214 wildfires that have burned more than three million hectaresAs large swaths of the country burn during an unprecedentedly active spring wildfire season, Canadians are being warned there may be much worse on the fires continue to burn as they have, by the end of the season in August, the country could be looking at more scorched forest than has ever been recorded, officials from Natural Resources Canada said the result of a convergence of factors, including climate change delivering conditions conducive to more frequent and severe wildfires, and a couple of large-scale weather patterns literally fanning the now, there are significant fires burning in every single province and territory â barring Prince Edward Island and Nunavut â enough to make Natural Resources Canadaâs fire map look like a multicoloured crime scene blood spatter this year, there have been 2,214 wildfires that have blackened more than million hectares of Canadian wildland â more than five million football fieldsâ worth. To put that into perspective, the 10-year average for this time of year is 1,624 fires and 254,429 hectares burned â about 13 times less than this in 2023 are equal to 71 per cent of the total burn for the 2014 season â the worst in the past 20 years â with three months still to go in the 2023 obviously a human cost as well. So far this year, fires have prompted some 120,000 people to evacuate in six provinces and territories. Of those, approximately 26,000 are still unable to return not just the burned hectarage thatâs extraordinary, but its distribution, too, say experts. Typically, in the spring fire season, the majority of Canadaâs fires are skewed toward the western provinces. Seeing fires coast-to-coast as we see this year, say officials, is simply small wonder that that word â âunprecedentedâ â pops up with near monotonous regularity when politicians and experts speak on the countryâs fire season.âOver the last 20 years, we have never seen such a large area burned so early in the season,â said Yon Boulanger, a researcher for Natural Resources Canada. âThis is partially because of climate change. Weâre seeing trends toward increasing this burned area throughout Canada.âAnd there are indications that this early tinder box-like trend could continue through the for June project the warm and dry conditions that have made the spring so flammable will continue through the month â and through most of the summer â creating a higher-than-normal potential for wildfires through most of the fact, said Richard Carr, Natural Resources Canadaâs fire danger forecasting expert, weâre looking at similar weather conditions to 1989, the worst year for wildfires in the past six decades, when million hectares burned.âWeâve actually been getting the worst of both a La Niña and an incoming El Nino, which is starting to develop over the summer,â he said. Notably, researchers earlier this month held Australiaâs 2019-20 wildfires to blame for the strong La Niña weather patterns, the effects of which are just now beginning to abate.âWeâve had a bit more heat than weâve had during a typical La Niña spring, but it does tend to favour very windy, dry conditions. Previously the most area burned was in 1989 and the El Nino did very much the same thing that year. So, I wouldnât be surprised if weather conditions are very similar to what we had in 1989.âThough conditions will be ripe for a busy fire season, itâs important to note those forecasts predict risk levels for wildfires and not actually the fires themselves, said Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson.âWith good fortune it is possible that the full extent of the risk does not materialize. But with preparation we must be ready for whatever happens this year and into the future. Every province and territory will need to be on high alert throughout this wildfire season,â he a Monday morning briefing, Wilkinson, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Public Safety Minister Bill Blair took turns touting measures the government â in addition to training and deploying some 500 Canadian Armed Forces troops to wildfire hot spots â is making to mitigate the upcoming and future fire among those is the WildFireSat, a dedicated wildfire observation satellite system â the first of its kind â expected to launch in 2029 at a cost of $170 also made note of a government investment of $284 million over five years for a Wildfire Resilient Futures Initiative designed to develop and promote wildfire prevention and mitigation protocols â such as FireSmart Canada â and research gaps in wildland fire $489 million is earmarked for the Disaster Mitigation and Adaptation Fund, to help communities improve their resilience to wildfires.âOur modelling shows that this may be an especially severe wildfire season throughout the summer,â said Trudeau. âWeâre going to get through this together and our government will keep being there with whatever it takes to keep people safe.âWith 18 of the countryâs wildfires directly affecting First Nations communities, Trudeau pointed to Ottawaâs efforts to train more community-based STORIESLast week, the federal government announced a Wildfire Training Fund, dedicated to the hiring and training of 300 Indigenous firefighters and 125 Indigenous fire also highlighted working with First Nations to train 130 wildland firefighters in Yukon and northern British Columbia, and working with Innu Nation in Newfoundland and Labrador to train community members also lauded the arrival of firefighters from other countries with whom Canada has reciprocal firefighting aid has sent 522 firefighters so far to help with wildfires here. South Africa, Australia and New Zealand have sent 215, 195 and 25, respectively. Those southern hemisphere countries have their fire seasons during Canadaâs winter months. Ottawa is still in discussions on firefighting aid with Costa Rica â they could potentially send up to 60 â nearing the end of its own fire season â has no spare capacity to send firefighters at the moment, but those governments are in contact and Mexico may be able to send some firefighters in the coming weeks, said a Natural Resources Canada spokesperson. And French President Emmanuel Macron announced that country would be sending 100 firefighters to Quebec.âWildland fires are inevitable in Canada, but climate change is making that challenge more serious,â said Canadian Forest Service director-general Michael Norton. âWe must take proactive steps to prepare for wildfires and to reduce risks before they occur.âJOIN THE CONVERSATION Anyone can read Conversations, but to contribute, you should be a registered Torstar account holder. If you do not yet have a Torstar account, you can create one now it is freeSign InRegisterConversations are opinions of our readers and are subject to the Code of Conduct. The Star does not endorse these opinions.
so far this year