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Environmental Protection

‘No Smoke and Mirrors’: New Baler Helps Flagler Beach Recycle 4 Tons of Cardboard a Week

September 26, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

Flagler Beach's Sanitation Department is now in the cardboard baling business: it placed 18 tons of cardboard, or 24 bales, on a truck last month when the new system kicked off. (Rob Smith)

Flagler Beach’s Sanitation Department acquired a $6,000 carboard baler and since mid-August has been baling some 4 tons of carboard a week. The city was previously trucking the loose cardboard to ELS Environmental in Bunnell, and losing on the revenue.

Flagler County Bans Beach Bonfires in Turtle-Nesting Season, Joining Prohibitions Long in Place in 3 Towns

September 7, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

bonfires banned

Thirteen years ago, after much controversy, the Flagler Beach City Commission banned bonfires on the beach during turtle season. Beverly Beach and Marineland have similar bans. But it was only on Monday that the ban extended to the rest of the county’s beaches–18 miles of shoreline in all–as the County Commission voted 5-0 to approve an ordinance.

The GOP’s Death Cult Is Holding Us Hostage to Climate Ignorance

August 13, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 12 Comments

The planet is angry. The GOP is indifferent. (NOAA)

The Earth is being held hostage by the party of ignorance, “conservatives” who no longer want to conserve anything other than white privilege. They’ve become a death cult, denying what’s obvious to rational, literate people. Who cares if the seas are boiling? As long as they “own the libs.”

Florida 101: A Unique Educational Opportunity for Flagler Residents

August 11, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

The wonders of Pellicer Creek. (© FlaglerLive)

The UF/IFAS Extension Office of Flagler County is offering a new course, entitled Florida 101, beginning September 26, 2023. Florida 101 is a four week course designed for both new and seasoned residents of Flagler County who are interested in learning about the ecology of Florida and how to best take advantage of our unique climate, flora and fauna.

The Heroic Effort to Save Florida’s Coral Reef from Devastating Record Heat

August 10, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

Elkhorn coral fragments rescued from overheating ocean nurseries sit in cooler water at Keys Marine Laboratory. (NOAA)

As water temperatures spiked in the Florida Keys, scientists from universities, coral reef restoration groups and government agencies launched a heroic effort to save the corals. Divers have been in the water every day, collecting thousands of corals from ocean nurseries along the Florida Keys reef tract and moving them to cooler water and into giant tanks on land.

Army Corps Issues Permit Notice for New, 828-ft Flagler Beach Pier, Detailing Construction and Seeking Public Input

August 3, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 13 Comments

The old Flagler Beach pier may soon be a construction zone. (© FlaglerLive)

In what one of the designers of Flagler Beach’s new pier described as “a big milestone in the federal regulatory process,” the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has issued notice that it is reviewing the permit application for the new pier, and soliciting public comment about detailed construction plans that had not been disclosed until now.

Excessive Heat Warning for Flagler and Palm Coast Today as Heat Index Will Reach 113

July 21, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 11 Comments

Palm Coast is broiling. (© FlaglerLive)

The National Weather Service in Jacksonville has issued a rare excessive heat warning for Flagler County and Northeast Florida. Near record heat will combine with summertime humidity today to produce dangerous heat index values. The heat index is expected to reach 113 in the Palm Coast-Flagler area today, and 112 Saturday, before falling to 106 on Sunday and 100 on Monday.

A Reminder to Anglers: Release Reef Fish with the Right Tools

July 16, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZqBEPBdbqJg&list=PLX8u6-d-95F0L34TJWAskd8wjnaopxg2o&index=2

Florida requires a descending device and/or venting tool be rigged and ready for use when fishing for reef fish from a vessel in state waters (within 3 nautical miles on the Atlantic and 9 nautical miles on the Gulf).

The Colorado River Wins a Reprieve. Now the Hard Part.

May 27, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

An irrigation canal moves Colorado River water through farm fields in California’s Imperial Valley.

Arizona, California and Nevada have narrowly averted a regional water crisis by agreeing to reduce their use of Colorado River water over the next three years. This deal represents a temporary solution to a long-term crisis. Nonetheless, it’s an important win for the region.

The Supreme Court Just Plundered Wetlands Protection

May 26, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

Many ecologically important wetlands, like these in Kulm, N.D., lack surface connections to navigable waterways. (USFWS Mountain-Prairie/Flickr, CC BY)

The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled in Sackett v. EPA that federal protection of wetlands encompasses only those wetlands that directly adjoin rivers, lakes and other bodies of water. This is an extremely narrow interpretation of the Clean Water Act that could expose many wetlands across the U.S. to filling and development.

Flagler Beach Re-Launching Limited Plastic Recycling Starting May 15

April 25, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

Sanitation Director, Rob Smith with a Trex receptacle. (Flagler Beach)

Beginning on May 15, Flagler Beach residents and businesses may recycle plastic bags and plastic film into several receptacles that will be placed around Flagler Beach. It’s not curbside recycling just yet. But it is City Sanitation Director Rob Smith’s latest effort gradually to bring back recycling of most materials the city had suspended in 2021.

A1A Protection Plan in Flagler Will Rely on Beach Renourishment, and a Sea Wall at South End

March 21, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

Much of the responsibility for the protection of Flagler County's beaches and State Road A1A will fall back on the county and the U.S. Army Coros of Engineers. County Engineer Faith al-Khatib, left, and the Army Corps' Jason Harrah, third from left, were at a public meeting Tuesday evening where the state Department of Transportation presented its latest plans for A1A protection. (© FlaglerLive)

The state Department of Transportation’s much-anticipated plan to protect State Road A1A will mostly rely on existing plans by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to rebuild 2.6 miles of beach and dunes south of the pier, plans by Flagler County to rebuild beaches north and south of that stretch, and a DOT secant wall along the shore straddling the Flagler-Volusia county line.

Florida Crock: Say ‘Resiliency.’ Don’t Say ‘Climate Change.’

January 29, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 24 Comments

The ugliness of "resiliency" laid bare: the sea wall in Flagler Beach. The state is preparing to build many more, while doing nothing about the causes of sea rise. (© FlaglerLive)

Resiliency in Florida is at best an illusion, and at worst a suicide pact between state and local governments. It’s wasted money and a scam on a catastrophic scale, because the state is in denial about global warming, refusing to do its part as one of the world’s leading polluters.

Florida Senate Approves $100 Million in Beach Erosion Aid, Part of $750 Million Disaster Relief Bill

December 13, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

The bill includes $100 million for beach-erosion recovery, an amount certain to help boost Flagler County’s prospects for tapping many of those millions as it faces vast challenges on 18 miles of its eroded coast.

State Wildlife Crews Will Again Feed Lettuce to Manatees as Pollution and Algae Blooms Deplete Seagrass

December 1, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Looking for seagrass. (FWC)

During the 2021-2022 winter, 202,000 pounds of lettuce were fed to manatees, with nearly $117,000 spent on the project. Wildlife officials say the public should not feed manatees.

Florida Voters Are Willing to Save Environmental Lands. Politicians? Not So Much.

November 27, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 5 Comments

The wonders of Pellicer Creek. (© FlaglerLive)

In Florida, our politicians are constantly promising more tax cuts. Yet these voters opted to tax themselves more. And they did it because they wanted to save some greenery in an ever-increasing sea of gray asphalt. Politicians aren’t getting the message.

Sea Turtles Hatching on Florida Beaches Are Feeling the Heat from Warming Climate

November 20, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

Professor Jeanette Wyneken of Florida Atlantic University shows off a newly hatched sea turtle. (FAU)

Florida plays an outsize role in the reproduction of loggerheads. Scientists estimate 90 percent of all the Atlantic Ocean’s loggerheads lay their eggs on Florida beaches. Then the ones that hatch here come back years later to lay their own eggs. But something funky is happening on those beaches: male turtles are disappearing.

State Emergency Management Chief Kevin Guthrie Calls for ‘Holistic’ Re-Engineering of Florida Coast

November 16, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 19 Comments

State Emergency Management Director Kevin Guthrie at Tiger bay Club today. It was his third visit to Flagler in four weeks. (© FlaglerLive)

Speaking at Flagler Tiger Bay Club, Kevin Guthrie, the state emergency management director, never used the words “climate change,” but nevertheless addressed needed changes in how Florida manages and re-engineers its coastline in words that would intrigue even Greenpeace activists.

Development on Florida’s Barrier Islands Made Ian Evacuation Virtually Impossible

October 15, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 15 Comments

On the edge. Flagler County's barrier island was also battered by Hurricane Ian's passage, leaving it defenseless before the next storm. (© FlaglerLive)

Builders trying to exploit a hot housing market for big profits ran roughshod over common-sense regulations intended to protect the public. Meanwhile, our elected officials went along with whatever the developers wanted. Hurricane Ian did the rest.

Gopher Tortoises Are ‘Not in Danger of Extinction,’ and U.S. Denies Increased Protection

October 11, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 5 Comments

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service denied a request to list Florida gopher tortoises as endangered or threatened species. Craig ONeal / Wikimedia Commons

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service released a 113-page decision that said gopher tortoises would continue to be considered a threatened species in parts of southwest Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana under the Endangered Species Act, but not in Florida and elsewhere.

Catastrophic Loss: Dunes All But Gone Along Flagler’s 18-Mile Shore, Leaving A1A and Properties Dangerously Exposed

October 3, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 64 Comments

The beach at Jungle Hut Park, as in most spots along the 18 miles of shore, was remade by Hurricane Ian, which entirely carved out the dunes the county had rebuilt in 2018 and 2019, and advanced further inland, carving out older sands. (© FlaglerLive)

While Flagler County was spared the brunt of Hurricane Ian’s fury, its shoreline was ravaged, and what remained of its already battered dunes and rock revetments sacrificed themselves to protect A1A and properties. There is no more protection should another storm strike. The disappearance of the dunes is stunning in Flagler Beach north of the pier, and in many other places along the 18 miles of beach.

A Non-Existent Eagle’s Nest in Palm Coast Plantation Leads County to Improvise Risky Rule-Making

September 14, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 39 Comments

A bald eagle with Florida citizenship. (FWC)

A couple wants to build a home in Palm Coast Plantation that would partly violate an existing eagle-protection zone. The Flagler County Planning Board on Tuesday gave it the go-ahead, reasoning that the eagles haven’t been seen in the area for years, and that the protection zone should be scrapped anyway. But that’s not the planning board’s call.

The Tragedy of Turning Florida’s Rural Lands Into Urban Sprawl

September 10, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 13 Comments

unrelenting florida sprawl over rural lands pittman

Lately, it seems Florida’s big-money developers, aided by politicians from the governor on down, have put a target on every rural spot that’s left on the map of Florida. From the Panhandle to the Keys, they want to change everything that’s now slow-paced and softly green to match the cookie-cutter concrete sprawl found everywhere else.

Exorbitant Costs to Save Beaches, and Doing Nothing is Not an Option, Flagler Commissioners Are Told

August 15, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 22 Comments

A beach carved out: the area just north of the Flagler Beach pier on Sunday, after it had lost even more sand over the past week. (© FlaglerLive)

The county commission this morning heard the results of the $250,000 beach management study it commissioned last year, and was left with two certainties: doing nothing is not an option. Starting to do something is unaffordable for now, even with six options presented by Olsen Associates, the Tampa-based consultants the county hired for the study.

Massive Erosion Strikes North and South of Pier; Flagler Beach Commission Calls Emergency Meeting

August 8, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 26 Comments

The beach north of the Flagler Beach pier has been carved out, without so much as a major storm. (© FlaglerLive)

Erosion north of the Flagler Beach pier and around 13th Street South has left portions of the shore without beach, with sheer cliffs of sand instead, as was the case along much of the Flagler shore following Hurricane Matthew. Yet there’s been no major storms. County and Flagler Beach officials are concerned, and examining options.

Paul Renner’s Stunning Attack on Green Energy Is Bad News for Florida’s Climate Change Challenges

July 28, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 35 Comments

It's a sunny day in Miami, and another day for tidal flooding downtown. (Wikimedia Commons)

Sea level rise is just the most obvious manifestation of our climate change peril. Yet Speaker-designate Renner has barely even mentioned that when talking about Florida’s future as he keeps raking in campaign cash from power and coal companies.

In Silver Lining for Flagler Beach, $25,000 Not Spent on Fireworks Redirected to Dodge Dunes Campaign

July 20, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

The message can be lost on visitors. A revitalized Dodge the Dunes campaign may help. (© FlaglerLive)

At the behest of Flagler Beach Commissioner Ken Bryan, Flagler’s Tourist Development Council this morning agreed by consensus to award some or all of the $25,000 that the city did not spend on its ill-fated July 4 fireworks show back to efforts focused on the Dodge the Dunes campaign, primarily in Flagler Beach.

By Focusing Only on ‘Resilience,’ Florida’s Governor Ignores Climate Change’s Deadly Heat

July 10, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 11 Comments

Gov. Ron DeSantis distributed an infrastructure resilience grant to Bonita Springs on Jan. 12, 2022. (DeSantis Facebook page)

“Resilience” is the word politicians use when they mean “climate change is an opportunity for me to hand out lots of big government contracts for construction work that will try to cope with rising sea levels.” But resiliency does nothing to reverse dangerous courses.

How Mud Muckers in West Flagler Bogged Down in Its Own Lawsuit and Wetlands Violations, and Lost

June 7, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

The old Mud Muckers office in 2012. (© FlaglerLive)

Mud Muckers for many years operated as a huge ATV park southwest of Bunnell, until it was found to be violating wetlands rules and required to move. Mud Muckers sued its landlord, and today lost its final appeal, four years after it said–inaccurately–that it had been unceremoniously shut down.

Three Conservation Groups Sue EPA Over Water Quality and Manatee Deaths

May 12, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

A manatee calf nursing. (FWC)

The Center for Biological Diversity, Defenders of Wildlife and the Save the Manatee Club filed the lawsuit Tuesday in federal court in Orlando. The groups are seeking to require the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to re-engage in talks with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine Fisheries Service about water quality in the Indian River Lagoon, which has been the site of numerous manatee deaths in 2021 and this year.

Marineland Dolphin Adventure Earns American Humane Recognition Exceptional Animal Welfare

May 9, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

marineland humane

American Humane, the country’s first national humane organization and the world’s largest certifier of animal welfare practices, today announced that Marineland Dolphin Adventure earned the American Humane Certified seal, demonstrating the exceptional welfare and treatment provided to animals in its care.

East Flagler Mosquito Control Offers Free Tire and Bromeliad Plant Disposal Day May 22

April 21, 2022 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

tire recycling

The East Flagler Mosquito Control District will be accepting waste tires and bromeliad plants for disposal at our District Headquarters (210 Fin WAY, Palm Coast) on Sunday May 22 from 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM. This event is free to all Flagler County residents.

State Environmental Agency Recycles Same Old Rule Harming Florida’s Springs

March 24, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

Crystal River Three Sisters Spring. (FWC)

The Florida Department of Environmental Protection was ordered in 2016 to fix a rule that’s enabled natural springs to be harmed by the same nutrient pollution that’s been fueling algae blooms in the estuaries, and by all the people and businesses sucking water out of the aquifer to irrigate lawns and golf courses. The new rule is a near-replica of the old one.

District Plugs 62 Artesian Wells, Saving 10.4 Million Gallons of Water Per Day

March 12, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Left: The District recently plugged a flowing artesian well on the banks of the Wekiva River. Middle: contractor plugging the well. Right: The well casing was cut off below the surface of the land and all flow has ceased.

Since October, the St. Johns River Water Management District has plugged 62 free-flowing wells saving 10.4 million gallons of water a day. With about six months left in this fiscal year, the District is on track to plug more wells than any other year over the District’s 50-year history.

Cost to Save Beaches and Properties in Flagler from Rising Seas: $6.3 Million a Year, Year After Year

February 7, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 14 Comments

What Flagler County is hoping to prevent with a beach management plan yet to be written, or paid for. Above, Hurricane Matthew's demolition of the southern part of A1A in Flagler Beach. The state transportation department rebuilt the road at costs exceeding $30 million, including a temporary fix. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is set to rebuild the dunes along that way, at costs exceeding $25 million (including a state and local match). But there's no start date. (© FlaglerLive)

Flagler County commissioners and other local officials heard the sobering conclusions of a seminal beach management study today, and the large costs ahead that will fall on all local governments and residents if the beaches are to be preserved. That money is nowhere in place for now, nor is a management plan.

Florida’s Black Snow: How the Sugar Industry Makes Political Friends and Influences Elections

February 6, 2022 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

You might love sugar less if you knew more about its origins, especially in Florida. (© FlaglerLive)

Florida produces more than half of America’s cane sugar and relies heavily on cane burning, a harvesting method in which the sugar industry burns crops to rid the plants of their outer leaves, producing pollution. Residents in the largely Black and Hispanic communities nearby claim the resulting smoke and ash harms their health. A city commissioner race provides a window into how the industry cultivates political allies, who help protect its interests.

After 1,000 Manatee Deaths in a Year, Groups Sue to Upgrade Federal Protections

February 1, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

manatee protections

The Center for Biological Diversity, Defenders of Wildlife and the Save the Manatee Club filed the lawsuit in federal district court in Washington, D.C., against the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

New Flood Maps Show US Damage Rising 26% in Next 30 Years

January 31, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

Coastal cities like Port Arthur, Texas, are at increasing risk from flooding during storms.

Despite recent devastating floods, people are still building in high-risk areas. With population growth factored in, the increase in U.S. flood losses will be four times higher than the climate-only effect. Deep inequities define who has to endure America’s crippling flood problem.

Florida Legislators Are Stealing Money from Environmentally-Sensitive Lands Pot, Without Consequences

January 15, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 11 Comments

Still from an ad advocating for 2014’s Amendment 1, reserving real estate taxes for an environmental land-buying program.

In 2014, 75 percent of Florida voters approved an amendment to the state Constitution that said the Legislature had to spend a certain amount of money buying environmentally sensitive land. Legislators have been illegally appropriating hundreds of millions of dollars away from the intended purpose of the amendment.

The Paris Agreement is Working, But…

January 8, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

The new ruins. (Torsten Dederichs on Unsplash)

The Paris Agreement agreement alone can’t save us. The global response to climate change is not generating transformation at the pace or scale we need to avoid the worst impacts of climate change.

Eulogy for Nature: Edward Abbey’s Desert Solitaire

January 1, 2022 | Pierre Tristam | 4 Comments

Edward Abbey, who died in 1989, published Desert Solitaire in 1968.

Edward Abbey’s “Desert Solitaire,” published in January 1968, worthy of any top-100 list of the best books of the last hundred years and an essential read–and re-read-today, is a meditation, a polemic, a manifesto, a provocation, a valentine and an elegy to the red desert and to American wilderness.

Time to Treat Environmental Crime as a Crime Against Humanity

January 1, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

Florida legislators have pre-empted local government ordinances banning certain plastics. (Dustan Woodhouse on Unsplash)

Environmental crime is still regarded a “white collar crime,” subject mostly to civil charges and accompanied by fines, when the reality on the state of the planet mandates that environmental destruction be conceptualized as a crime against humanity.

Why E.O. Wilson Was One of the Greatest Minds of the Last 100 Years

December 27, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

e.o. wilson

Each of Edward O. Wilson’s seminal contributions fundamentally changed the way scientists approached these disciplines, and explained why E.O. – as he was fondly known – was an academic god for many young scientists. This astonishing record of achievement may have been due to his phenomenal ability to piece together new ideas using information garnered from disparate fields of study.

Environmentalists Threaten EPA with Lawsuit Over Pollution Killing Manatees in Mass Numbers

December 20, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 13 Comments

Manatees gather in waters within the Jupiter Inlet Lighthouse Outstanding Natural Area, managed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management. Credit: BLM Southeastern States

An environmentalist coalition has served notice of its intent to sue the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency unless it intervenes with state regulators to halt the release of pollutants into the Indian River Lagoon, where endangered Florida manatees are undergoing an historic die-off.

DeSantis Wants to Deal With Florida’s Sea Level Rise Without ‘Left-Wing Stuff’

December 19, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 23 Comments

Water encroachment on the barrier island and surrounding areas if seas were to rise 3 feet. See NOAA's simulator here.

At his press conference in Oldsmar last week, DeSantis emphasized how much of the taxpayers’ millions the state was going to spend on “resilience.” That’s a politician code word for coping with the symptoms of climate change, but not doing anything about what’s causing it.

Facing Record Exceeding 1,000 Manatee Deaths This Year, Wildlife Officials Seek Permanent, Effective Solutions

December 15, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

A manatee at the Santa Fe River. (FWC)

In 2017, manatees were upgraded from an “endangered” designation to “threatened” under the federal Endangered Species Act, with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service pointing to an increase in the manatee population and habitat improvements because of conservation efforts. That trend appears not to have lasted. The number of deaths this year is estimated to be about one-sixth of the population of manatees in the waters of the southeastern United States and Puerto Rico.

Plastics Trashing Oceans Have Their Biggest Source in US

December 3, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 8 Comments

only a small fraction of plastic in U.S. household waste streams is recycled. The study calls current U.S. recycling systems “grossly insufficient to manage the diversity, complexity and quantity of plastic waste.”

On a per capita basis, the U.S. produces an order of magnitude more plastic waste than China – a nation often vilified over pollution-related issues.And only a small fraction of plastic in U.S. household waste streams is recycled.

Climate Change: What Big Oil Knew and When It Knew It

October 28, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

oil climate change

The oil industry’s own words show companies knew about the climate change risk fossil fuels posed long before most of the rest of the world. Here’s what corporate documents from the past six decades show.

Are Wind Turbines About to Whirl Off Florida’s Shore?

October 24, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 13 Comments

An offshore wind turbine farm in Britain.

The Biden administration is turning its back on offshore drilling rigs such as Deepwater Horizon. Instead, it’s planning for wind farms along the entire coastline. When it comes to wind, though, Florida is known more for its balmy breezes than any steady gusts that would make wind turbines an energetic proposition.

Biden Restores Protection for National Monuments Trump Shrank

October 8, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

Toadstools Grand Staircase Escalante

On Oct. 7, 2021, the Interior Department announced that President Biden was restoring protection for three U.S. national monuments that the Trump administration sought to shrink drastically: Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante in Utah, and Northeast Canyons and Seamounts in the Atlantic Ocean. President Trump’s 2017 orders downsizing these monuments, originally created by previous administrations, ignited debate over whether such action was legal.

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