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A panel discussion with Fountain Creek Watershed District Executive Director Alli Schuch and Jim O'Donnell, author of Fountain Creek: Big Lessons from a Little River, followed by a dynamic community conversation.Alli provides an overview of watershed basics and shares insights on the current state of Fountain Creek. She highlights future opportunities and challenges facing the watershed.Jim dives into key themes from his new book. Together, they explore environmental issues, community engagement, and the economic and cultural dimensions of the watershed—while offering a forward-looking perspective.Mary Barber of Peak Alliance for a Sustainable Future hosts, while Allen Beauchamp of Trails and Open Space Coalition moderates. Melody Daugherty delivers the land acknowledgment and blessing.Presenters' Slides: https://studio809podcasts.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Complete-Presenters-Slides-SIP-March-19-2025.pdfThanks to These Hosts & Sponsors:Peak Alliance for a Sustainable Future: https://peakallianceco.org/Fountain Creek Watershed District: https://www.fountain-crk.org/El Paso County Parks and Recreation: https://communityservices.elpasoco.com/parks-and-recreation/Fountain Creek Nature Center: https://communityservices.elpasoco.com/nature-centers/fountain-creek-nature-center/Peak Environment podcast: https://studio809podcasts.com/podcasts/peak-environment/ Thanks to These Participating Community Organizations:Colorado Springs Stormwater: https://coloradosprings.gov/stormwater-enterpriseCOS Creek Plan: https://coscreekplan.org/Trails and Open Space Coalition: https://www.trailsandopenspaces.org/Pikes Peak Chapter of Trout Unlimited: https://www.ppctu.org/ Jim O'Donnell, MCRP, CPDFreelance Writer/PhotographerFountain Creek: Big Lessons from a Little River https://www.aroundtheworldineightyyears.com/books/fountain-creek/http://aroundtheworldineightyyears.comhttp://www.jimodonnellphotography.com/This episode was recorded at the Sustainability in Progress (SIP) virtual event on March 19, 2025. Sustainability in Progress is a monthly program of the Peak Alliance for a Sustainable Future. Join us (free) the third Wednesday of every month. The next event is:Fountain Creek Water Quality – What the Data Tells UsHow fire, flood, drought, and human development are shaping the watershed—and how partnerships and science are helping to protect
Global health systems have long been shaped by Western frameworks that separate health from land, environment, and community. But for Indigenous communities worldwide, health is holistic—deeply rooted in ancestral knowledge, cultural traditions, and reciprocal relationships with nature.Yet, Indigenous ways of knowing have been overlooked and undervalued within research, policymaking, and health interventions. How can we shift this paradigm and centre Indigenous-led approaches in global health?In this episode, we speak with Dr. Walter Flores, Dr. Rebecca Rae, and Dr. Lorenda Belone about Indigenous communities in health research, examining systemic barriers, the importance of Indigenous knowledge in health equity, navigating differences between Indigenous and Western research approaches, and how policy shifts impact Indigenous communities. We also discuss the connection between research, activism, and advocacy.Our guests:Dr. Walter Flores - Research Professor, Accountability Research Center, American University, Washington DC, USADr. Walter Flores is a social scientist and human rights advocate with over 25 years of professional experience. He holds a PhD and a Masters of Community Health from the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, UK. Dr Flores' professional work has been carried out in more than 30 countries from Latin America, Africa, Asia and Europe. His areas of expertise are health systems and policy, right to health and indigenous populations, democratic governance, social accountability, legal empowerment and community participation. Currently, Dr Flores is research professor at the Accountability Research Center, American University, Washington DC and a research associate at the Center for the Study of Equity and Governance in Health Systems.Dr. Lorenda Belone – Professor, University of New Mexico College of Population Health / Center for Participatory ResearchDr. Belone (Diné/Navajo) is from Naakaii Bito' located on the Navajo Nation and has been engaged in community-based participatory research (CBPR) with an Indigenous paradigm focused on health disparities with southwest tribal nations. Her research includes partnerships with Tribal Research Teams (Apache, Navajo & Pueblo) on an Indigenous family prevention program called the Family Listening Program (FLP). As an Indigenous CBPR researcher, Dr. Belone integrates her own cultural and tribal knowledge to overcome historical negative research experiences and tribal community members' perceptions of research exploitation.Rebecca Rae, MCRP, MWR - Research Lecturer III, University of New Mexico College of Population HealthRebecca Rae (Jicarilla Apache), MCRP, MWR, is a Research Lecturer III at the University of New Mexico's College of Population Health. She is an Indigenous scholar, with eighteen years of implementing community-based participatory research (CBPR) projects and Indigenous participatory evaluation in partnership with Tribal communities. She works closely with multiple tribal community partners to mentor, strengthen, and enhance community members' skills in program development, implementation, data collection, data analysis, grant writing, research, and evaluation. Useful links: Want to hear more podcasts like this?Follow Connecting Citizens to Science on your usual podcast platform or YouTube to hear more about current research and debates within global health.The podcast cuts across disciplines, including health systems strengthening, gender and intersectionality, tropical diseases (NTDs, TB, Malaria), maternal and child healthcare (antenatal and postnatal care), mental health and wellbeing, vector-borne diseases, climate change and co-production approaches. If you would like your project or programme to feature in an episode or...
This week on EJB Talks, Dean Stuart Shapiro speaks with Bloustein School alumna and Bloustein Advisory Board member, Leah Furey Bruder, MCRP '06 about her journey into urban planning and her experiences working in municipal and redevelopment planning. Leah explains how her background in international studies shifted to local planning after working on community development in Camden, NJ. She discusses her work in Cherry Hill, her time as an in-house municipal planner in Evesham Township, and her decision to start her own firm to focus on impactful projects. She highlights two key projects: the redevelopment of aging shopping centers into vibrant mixed-use spaces, and the successful opposition to a large-scale development that threatened New Jersey's agricultural land. She emphasizes the complexity of planning, balancing economic, environmental, and housing needs, and the importance of working with community stakeholders. She concludes by advising students to gain diverse experience, acknowledge their knowledge gaps, and navigate the complexities of competing interests in planning.
Stuart Shapiro returns for our 10th season of EJB Talks with alumnus Brandon McKoy MCRP '13, who was recently named the president of The Fund for New Jersey. An alumnus of the Bloustein School's urban planning program, Brandon talks about his recent career advancement, including an overview of previous role at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and his earlier time at The Fund for New Jersey. Brandon and Stuart discuss priorities for the Fund, such as supporting inclusive policymaking and strengthening democracy through improvements to electoral processes, legislative transparency, and civic engagement in New Jersey. They wrap up with Brandon sharing the message he tries to convey to Bloustein students in the classroom, encouraging them to understand the historical context of the issues they are looking at. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ejbtalks/message
Michaela Paulette Shirley (Diné), MCRP, is Water Edge clan, born for Bitter Water clan, her maternal grandpa is Salt clan, and her paternal grandpa is Coyote Pass clan. She is a program manager for the Indigenous Design and Planning Institute at University of New Mexico. Michaela is a PhD student in the UNM American Studies Department. Her areas of expertise include urban planning, community development, and Indigenous planning, with research interests in community-school relationships, biographies of landscape, Diné studies, critical Indigenous studies, critical regional studies, and hemispheric Indigenous comparative studies. Michaela presents at conferences offering keynotes, leading workshops/community engagement activities, conducting content analysis of community engagement work, and serves on conference committees as needed. She has published about Indigenous planning, creative placemaking/PlaceKnowing, and Diné-centered arts management. Michaela's served 5 years as a School Board Member with the Dził Ditł'ooí School of Empowerment, Action, and Perseverance, a steering committee member of the Planners Network, committee member of the National Tribal Brownfields Networking Group, and co-founder of an artist giving circle, Vital Little Plans. Links: http://idpi.unm.edu/about/people/michaela-shirley.html LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaela-shirley-872760b3
Its a start of another NFL/Fantasy Football season. Are you as excited as I am?? The first game is this Thursday with two 1st round fantasy draft picks already out. Who do you pick up if you didn't get a proven backup because you drafted the best at his position? We will discuss this kind of information in our Holi Handicapper MCRP (Maintain Correct Rebuild Possibilities). Our MCRP sounds ridiculous since you just drafted your team and have not even played a game yet. You definitely won't win or lose your season by the outcome of your first game but you can lose the season by not realistically evaluating your team every week and even as soon as after your draft. Know your teams strengths, weakness and just where you may need to do some tweaking or improving. If you drafted well you need to have a maintenance plan, if you had an average draft you want to have a correction plan, if you had a bad draft for whatever reason you will need a rebuild plan. Has your life been changed by Gods Grace? Hear about a life that did get changed and how you can be changed by God's grace. All in this one podcast!! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/holihandicapper/message
In today's episode I am joined by my new co-host Josh in discussion whether or not console or PC is better, whether or not mods should be allowed on console, and our answer and reasoning on whether or not we should buy an Nvidia 40 series GPU now or wait. Today is Josh's first episode and he is still getting used to podcasting so please show him your love and support. If you have not donated to the podcast yet, please consider doing so, using the link down below if you wish to donate. Also, if you're interested in joining MCRP, use this Discord link: https://discord.gg/ckDm2QNT. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/tlis/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/tlis/support
Get some help for the Fantasy Football Oppo World we are playing in right now. Updated NFL News and Injuries. Hear the Holihandicapper's Best Available Players by Position and MCRP (Maintain, Correct, and Rebuild Possibilities). This weeks Life Line is an observation and commentary on the events surrounding the Queens Passing. Time Stamps: --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/holihandicapper/message
Reset Life-Line on Listening to your Team Mates and how selfless teams win. NFL Injuries and news. Holihandicapper Maintain, Correct and Rebuild Possibilities for waiver and free agent assistance. We all now are starting to get a feel of how are drafts actually graded out. We may already be faced with tough decisions on some key players we drafted. What do we do if we drafted Tom Brady, Russell Wilson, Joe Burrow, A. Rodgers, Dak Prescott, Trey Lance? How about RB's; Najee Harris, A.Kamara, JK Dobbins, C. Akers? Or WR's; CD Lamb, D. Johnson, DJ Moore, M. Evans, DK Metcalf, D.Mooney, A. Robinson? How about TE's; K. Pitts and C. Kmet? Listen and get some advice. Time Stamps: 00:00 Theme Song, 00:45 Introduction, 04:50 Reset Life-Line, 11:24 Life Question, 12:48 NFL Injuries, 16:57 NFL News, MCRP QB: 17:48, RB: 21:14, WR: 25:18, TE: 31:02, K-DST 33:43. 34:43 Wrap-up --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/holihandicapper/message
IT IS ALMOST GO TIME ! ! Did you draft a winning team?? Hear in our Reset-Life-Line how Jesus recruits people for His team today. Latest NFL Injuries/News/Notes. Catch the Holihandicapper's Post Draft MCRP (Maintain, Correct, Rebuild Possibilities). Time Stamps: Theme Song 00:00, Introduction 00:45, Reset Life-Line 05:11, Life Question 12:27, Injuries 12:55, News & Notes 16:55, Holihandicapper MCRP 18:20, Wrap-up 35:45, Outro 37:23 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/holihandicapper/message
There is one number that may determine how healthy you are and how long you will live. It's your address. In communities with parks and playgrounds, grocery stores, and other assets, you are more likely to thrive. And where those things are missing, the opposite is true. Today we join Desiree D. Powell, MCRP, Urban Planner and Designer to discuss the relationship between healthy places and healthy people, how environments are designed, and how we can be better anti-racist planners. Desiree's Instagram: @TheDee_P Desiree's Twitter: @DRTBSPlanning Visit Desiree's website Do Right By the Streets here. Listen & Subscribe to Equity Matters Podcast: Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Podbean, and Spotify Follow us on Twitter & Instagram Like us on Facebook Subscribe to the Equity Matters E-Zine
Aging-US published a Special Collection on Eye Disease which included "Activation of C-reactive protein proinflammatory phenotype in the blood retinal barrier in vitro: implications for age-related macular degeneration" which reported that the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) is considered one of the main targets of age-related macular degeneration (AMD), the leading cause of irreversible vision loss among the ageing population worldwide. Increased levels of circulating pentameric C-reactive protein (pCRP) are associated with higher risk of AMD. Monomeric form of pCRP has been detected in drusen, the hallmark deposits associated with AMD, and we have found that mCRP induces oBRB disruption Dr. Blanca Molins from The IDIBAPS, Hospital Clínic de Barcelona said, "Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the primary cause of irreversible vision loss among the ageing population worldwide." AMD presents RPE cell abnormalities, disruption of the outer blood-retinal-barrier (oBRB), and degeneration of photoreceptors. Altered immune responses are thought to contribute to the dry AMD phenotype. Loss of parainflammation control contributes to AMD by invoking a chronic, heightened immune response that causes tissue destruction. mCRP has been identified in ocular drusen and other subepithelial deposits, as well as in the choroid, and contributes to oBRB disruption in vitro. The "non-risk" Factor H (FH) variant can effectively bind to mCRP to dampen its proinflammatory activity. MCRP levels are elevated in individuals with the high-risk CFH genotype [29, 30] - this is because there is no CRP transcription in retinal tissue. The Molins Research Team concluded in their https://www.aging-us.com/article/103655/">Aging-US Research Output, "our findings further support mCRP direct contribution to progression of AMD, at least at the RPE level. The topological experiments elicit that mCRP is proinflammatory when present on the apical side of the RPE. However, mCRP is likely to only reach the apical side of the RPE in compromised RPE health and where barrier functions are compromised. Thus, a plausible scenario would infer that, in the presence of an already aged/damaged RPE, mCRP reaches the apical side of the RPE to amplify the proinflammatory microenvironment and enhance barrier disruption. With respect to previous findings, this pathologic mechanism will be more prevalent in patients carrying the FH risk polymorphism for AMD, where mCRP proinflammatory effects remain unrestrained." Full Text - https://www.aging-us.com/article/103655/text Correspondence to: Blanca Molins email: bmolins@clinic.cat Keywords: age-related macular degeneration, retinal pigment epithelium, inflammation, C-reactive protein About Aging-US Launched in 2009, Aging-US publishes papers of general interest and biological significance in all fields of aging research as well as topics beyond traditional gerontology, including, but not limited to, cellular and molecular biology, human age-related diseases, pathology in model organisms, cancer, signal transduction pathways (e.g., p53, sirtuins, and PI-3K/AKT/mTOR among others), and approaches to modulating these signaling pathways. To learn more about Aging-US, please visit http://www.Aging-US.com or connect with @AgingJrnl Aging-US is published by Impact Journals, LLC please visit http://www.ImpactJournals.com or connect with @ImpactJrnls Media Contact 18009220957x105 MEDIA@IMPACTJOURNALS.COM
In my 7th episode, I spoke with Autumn Glover, MCRP, MPA, Senior Director of Community Health Partnerships at OhioHealth. Autumn is a leader in community health outreach, clinical programming and strategy, and local government relations to build collaborative partnerships that advance health equity. We talked about her career in community engagement and healthcare, thoughts on the response to COVID-19 and ways to prioritize and address the longstanding health disparities that have been exacerbated, the importance of trust in local leaders and organizations in today's climate, the social determinants of health, and how healthcare organizations should engage with surrounding communities to improve health outcomes.
Aging-US published a Special Collection on Eye Disease which included "Activation of C-reactive protein proinflammatory phenotype in the blood retinal barrier in vitro: implications for age-related macular degeneration" which reported that the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) is considered one of the main targets of age-related macular degeneration (AMD), the leading cause of irreversible vision loss among the ageing population worldwide. Increased levels of circulating pentameric C-reactive protein (pCRP) are associated with higher risk of AMD. Monomeric form of pCRP has been detected in drusen, the hallmark deposits associated with AMD, and we have found that mCRP induces oBRB disruption Dr. Blanca Molins from The IDIBAPS, Hospital Clínic de Barcelona said, "Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the primary cause of irreversible vision loss among the ageing population worldwide." AMD presents RPE cell abnormalities, disruption of the outer blood-retinal-barrier (oBRB), and degeneration of photoreceptors. Altered immune responses are thought to contribute to the dry AMD phenotype. Loss of parainflammation control contributes to AMD by invoking a chronic, heightened immune response that causes tissue destruction. mCRP has been identified in ocular drusen and other subepithelial deposits, as well as in the choroid, and contributes to oBRB disruption in vitro. The "non-risk" Factor H (FH) variant can effectively bind to mCRP to dampen its proinflammatory activity. MCRP levels are elevated in individuals with the high-risk CFH genotype [29, 30] - this is because there is no CRP transcription in retinal tissue. The Molins Research Team concluded in their https://www.aging-us.com/article/103655/ Aging-US Research Output, "our findings further support mCRP direct contribution to progression of AMD, at least at the RPE level. The topological experiments elicit that mCRP is proinflammatory when present on the apical side of the RPE. However, mCRP is likely to only reach the apical side of the RPE in compromised RPE health and where barrier functions are compromised. Thus, a plausible scenario would infer that, in the presence of an already aged/damaged RPE, mCRP reaches the apical side of the RPE to amplify the proinflammatory microenvironment and enhance barrier disruption. With respect to previous findings, this pathologic mechanism will be more prevalent in patients carrying the FH risk polymorphism for AMD, where mCRP proinflammatory effects remain unrestrained." Full Text - https://www.aging-us.com/article/103655/text Correspondence to: Blanca Molins email: bmolins@clinic.cat Keywords: age-related macular degeneration, retinal pigment epithelium, inflammation, C-reactive protein About Aging-US Launched in 2009, Aging-US publishes papers of general interest and biological significance in all fields of aging research as well as topics beyond traditional gerontology, including, but not limited to, cellular and molecular biology, human age-related diseases, pathology in model organisms, cancer, signal transduction pathways (e.g., p53, sirtuins, and PI-3K/AKT/mTOR among others), and approaches to modulating these signaling pathways. To learn more about Aging-US, please visit http://www.Aging-US.com or connect with @AgingJrnl Aging-US is published by Impact Journals, LLC please visit http://www.ImpactJournals.com or connect with @ImpactJrnls Media Contact 18009220957x105 MEDIA@IMPACTJOURNALS.COM
In the age of rapid economic development and changing workforce demands, noncognitive skills are “master skills” which serve as a foundation for and amplify cognitive and technical skills. Communication, integrity, and organizational soft skills are in top demand by employers, and building and strengthening these characteristics is an essential part of preparing a strong workforce for the future. This episode of https://www.aei.org/tag/hardly-working-podcast/?mkt_tok=NDc1LVBCUS05NzEAAAF9KfTfNiRkR7JCXOsJvRbevxCO3nMl-XtXSqF54YBAEANboiUHrALvJArF5D8iy0z5tTXHNqErpnP_a2ax6Fc ("Hardly Working") is a rebroadcast of an https://www.aei.org/events/minding-our-workforce-the-importance-of-noncognitive-skills-in-employment/ (event) surrounding the publication of AEI's recently released edited volume “https://www.aei.org/research-products/report/minding-our-workforce-the-role-of-noncognitive-skills-in-career-success/ (Minding our workforce: The role of noncognitive skills in career success.)” This is Part II of a two-part podcast series of this event. You will hear from Harry J. Holzer of Georgetown University on the application of noncognitive skills to the labor market and the limitations of what we know about noncognitive skills and noncognitive skill development. Then, Elisabeth Babcock of Economic Mobility Pathways will discuss noncognitive skills, mentoring, and coaching for low-income, welfare-dependent families. https://www.aei.org/podcast/minding-our-workforce-the-importance-of-noncognitive-skills-in-employment/ (Part I) featured Albert Cheng of the University of Arkansas and Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach of Northwestern University. Mentioned During the Episode https://www.aei.org/research-products/report/minding-our-workforce-the-role-of-noncognitive-skills-in-career-success/ (Minding our workforce: The role of noncongnitive skills in career success) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-vGyskAoW8Q (Minding our workforce live event at AEI) https://www.aei.org/podcast/minding-our-workforce-the-importance-of-noncognitive-skills-in-employment/ (Episode 54- Minding Our Workforce, Part 1) https://www.brookings.edu/experts/harry-j-holzer/ (Harry Holzer) https://www.empathways.org/meet/our-team/elisabeth-babcock (Elizabeth Babcock, MCRP) https://www.brookings.edu/podcast-episode/noncognitive-skills-in-education-what-we-know-and-why-they-matter/ (Diane Schanzenback on Noncognitive Skills) https://www.youth-guidance.org/bam/ (Becoming a Man Chicago) https://www.empathways.org/global-network (EMPath Leadership Network)
HUGE week for Maintaining, Improving and Correcting your team!!! Join us on the season long Journey. Time Stamps: Introduction:0.00, Reset Life-Line 08.40.05, Fantasy Football Talk 15.22.05 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/holihandicapper/message
It's finally here, WEEK-1 of the NFL and Fantasy Football Season!!!!!!!! Do you like the team you drafted? Did the premature season ending injury bug already bite your team? Are you weak at any positions or need some depth? Are you wanting to make sure your star studded team remains dominant? Tune in every week for the HoliHandicapper MCRP (Maintain-Correct-Rebuild-Possibilities) along with the latest NFL news, injury updates. We kick every podcast off with our Rest Life-Line in which we share one of Pastor Jeremy's 5-7 minute Reset podcast messages directly out of scripture for application to your life. Time Stamps: 0.00 Theme Song, 0.45 Introduction, 6:00 Reset Life-Line, 12:55 Fantasy Football Talk --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/holihandicapper/message
In this episode of ASTCT Talks, we sit down with Parameswaran Hari, MD, MCRP to discuss the role of minimal residual disease in multiple myeloma. Hari, the Armand J. Quick/William F. Stapp Professor of Hematology and the Chief of the Division of Hematology/Oncology at the Medical College of Wisconsin, said advances in MRD testing signals improvement in progression-free survival in multiple myeloma. While this is good news for clinicians, there's still a ways to go to ensure MRD testing is being understood correctly.
When social justice planner Monique López, AICP, MCRP, MA, talks about her anti-racist, values-driven participatory planning and design firm called Pueblo Planning, she describes its work in no uncertain terms: “I still very much see this as an experiment in love … an experiment in justice. … And coming in with that particular mindset allows me to be flexible, allows me to be open-minded and open-hearted when I am held accountable by community members, when I am held accountable by, by social-justice movements that maybe say, You know, that planning process that we engaged in? It should have been done this way.” Pueblo Planning has done work with people who are unhoused, earn lower incomes, do not claim English as their first language, are senior, and are part of the LGBTQ community. Monique tells host Courtney Kashima, AICP, stories from some of Pueblo’s projects, merging anecdotes with the wisdom they brought her to create poignant takeaways for listeners. From divulging her planning “origin story” (in her early twenties, fighting a sewage sludge treatment plant that was threatening to come into her neighborhood), to musing on why Sherry Arnstein’s 1969 JAPA article on citizen participation is still relevant today, to revealing why Pueblo Planning couldn’t run headlong to the Zoom platform when the pandemic hit, Monique displays a passion for social justice that will inspire planners working in every sector.
On this episode of EJB Talks, Stuart Shapiro welcomes Bloustein Alumnus and Advisory Board Member, Jason Redd, Esq. BS (Public Health) ‘01, MCRP '04. They discuss how public health, urban planning, and policy can interact to improve people's lives, as well as how all three disciplines have impacted Jason's career. Jason also shares his experience as a volunteer observing the 2020 general election absentee ballot canvas in Blair County, PA as well as and his thoughts on the controversies that have followed the election. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ejbtalks/message
Some practical advice on how to deal with Covid postponed games and players in those games along with an EAREST PLEA for suggestions and Fantasy Web-site Hosts who are actually doing something to help the Fantasy community!! New Life-Line format for digging into Gods word in a short amount of time. New and updated fantasy relevant injuries. The Holihandicapper MCRP. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/holihandicapper/message
Did you have to take a disappointing loss because your League Commissioners lack of foresight, or the inconvenience of making changes, I feel your pain. Remember though there is light at the end of the fantasy football tunnel. You can still Maintain, Correct or rebuild your teams with various possibilities. Take a listen and you can commiserate with me about various Commissioners inaction due to Covid-19 changes and gain insight on how you can improve you can improve your team with the Holihandicapper MCRP. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/holihandicapper/message
On this episode, we are joined by Autumn Glover, MCRP, MPA, Government Affairs and Community Relations Consultant in the office of Government Affairs at Wexner Medical Center at The Ohio State University. She received her BA, Master of City and Regional Planning, and MPA from The Ohio State University. Ms. Glover is an urban planner passionate about the intersection of race, place, and health. Her work seeks to build healthy communities. She speaks to us today about her journey to urban planning, how your zip code affects your health, and opportunities to elevate our communities. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/reede-scholars/support
So the typical best three weeks for waiver impact players are behind us, what do we do now? Is our season over if our draft didn’t turn out as planned, or if we were bit by the injury bug? How can we improve our under performing teams or strengthen positions where we are weak? Hang in there, its a long season. It usually isn’t as bad or as good as you think. You got to love the challenge. No matter how your team is built you are either Maintaining, Correcting or Rebuilding your teams with various possibilities. Let me open up some of those possibilities for you. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/holihandicapper/message
NFL Week One is in the books, for better or for worse concerning our Fantasy Football Teams. Get this weeks HH-MCRP tips and analysis along with HH-waiver advice and fantasy pertinent injury news. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/holihandicapper/message
Your draft weather you drafted well or poorly is not the end of your Fantasy Football season, it is just the start. To remain competitive you have to Maintain, Correct, or Rebuild your team with all of the Possibilities out there all season long. Join me on the start of a championship journey ! ! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/holihandicapper/message
This episode’s guest is a man we’ll call “Brandon” and he joins me to discuss his recent experience at the Maury County Republican Party’s (MCRP), annual “Ronald Reagan” dinner. From the lack of basic health protocols to the insane conspiracy theories being peddled by the keynote speaker and others, this one is a howler from … Continue reading S04E09: Credulity, Conspiracy, and Rabid Tribalism: Meet the Maury County Republican Party.
The World Bank has approved $346m for two projects aimed at strengthening resilience and livelihoods in the Lake Chad region. A statement from the World Bank on Wednesday explained that the projects, to be financed through the International Development Association, would be shared by Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria. The Multi-Sectoral Crisis Recovery Project for North Eastern Nigeria, Additional Financing will help the Federal Government to improve access to basic services and livelihood opportunities for crisis-affected communities in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states. The project will also enhance coordination among the states and other Lake Chad countries. The project, according to the World Bank, expands the ongoing $200m MCRP project and puts an emphasis on support for agricultural livelihoods and investments. --- This episode is sponsored by · Afrolit Podcast: Hosted by Ekua PM, Afrolit shares the stories of multi-faceted Africans one episode at a time. https://open.spotify.com/show/2nJxiiYRyfMQlDEXXpzlZS?si=mmgODX3NQ-yfQvR0JRH-WA Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/newscast-africa/support
With the guarded hope that we are on a downward trend of coronavirus activity, the discussion has turned to the reopening of the state. EJB Talks host Stuart Shapiro broaches the topic with Bloustein alumnus Brandon McKoy, MCRP '13, president of New Jersey Policy Perspective, and a member of New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy's commission to reopen the state. Brandon touches on some of the issues the state (and the country) must face in determining how to reopen, what the CARES Act is helping (and what it isn't), and how not investing in the future has hurt the state. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ejbtalks/message
This episode my friend and colleague Tobi Otulana chats with me about the field of planning and her path to sustainable planning. Tobi and I have known each other since spring semester, when we took a sustainable transportation class together. I recognized that Tobi is a super talented and passionate individual and I've been hoping our paths would cross again to allow that. Lucky for me, after graduating her MCRP program, she stayed local and has been with the Mid Ohio Regional Planning Commission for about half year now. I was super curious about her opinion on Ohio State's MCRP program and how she expects her career trajectory to change.Disclaimer: All views and opinions expressed in this episode are strictly those of myself and my guest. We in no way represent any organizations or agencies which we are currently or have previously been associated with. Links:Tobi's Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tobiotulana/MORPC: http://www.morpc.orgCredits for Album Art and Theme Music: https://stemsandleaves.com/credits/
MCRP stands for Maintenance, Correction or Rebuilding Potential for your Fantasy Team. We at Faith-Family-Fantasy Football are still seeking to find our niche and get in a rhythm for pertinent Fantasy Football content weekly that we believe will help the average owner with not a lot of time to spare. We are trying not to just give you exactly what everyone else is putting out there which is tons of information with no practical application. We don't do all the work but lead you to sources who do and give you nuggets of information to succeed. We really need you to follow and interact with us on social media, log onto our website and contact us so we know how best to meet your needs. For right now I am a one man show so please be patient God isn't finished with us yet. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/holihandicapper/message
Bush Interview MCRP by william.brenza@gmail.com
In today’s espisode, we discuss the latest developments in the dispute over the MCRP bylaws and control of the Republican Party. Specifically we talk about the 8K Rule filing against Dr. Wally, whether such a ruling has teeth, and that the SREC is partially to blame for getting us here. We also talk about the … Continue reading #AllTheFomentz →
In our inaugural podcast, we discuss the division of the Montgomery County Republican Party into two entities driven by the adoption of new bylaws on June 26, 2018 by the County Executive Committee (CEC). We discuss the validity of their implementation and things about them that you might want to know when considering the role … Continue reading The Splintering of the MCRP →
Prior to March 2015, lines (https://llllllll.co, the online community this podcast explores) didn’t exist. In its place simply stood the monome forum. As you’ll hear in the episode, it held much of the same energy in those early days as lines does now. One of the hallmarks of this spirit was MCRP, a project rooted in musical collaboration between these original members. A loose process was formed: users would submit samples which formed the only raw material able to be used in the final songs. Over the course of 18 volumes -- including two holiday iterations, an Earthquake Disaster relief compilation and a memorial for user VGAForest who passed away from complications related to leukemia -- the unique care and respect these strangers on the internet had for each other found manifestation. After the lines migration, it took little time before this project was rebranded as LCRP, the lines community remix project. The latest, titled ‘New Noise’, is one of the most packed community remix project albums in a long time — its contributors range from decade-old members to lurkers who joined just to participate. This episode of SOUND + PROCESS features reflections from many of the creators, discussing their unique approaches to working with the same samples. Every piece of music featured is from the resulting album, which can be freely downloaded or affordably purchased at https://lcrp.bandcamp.com Featuring: Simeon Smith (http://www.awonderfulkindofimpossible.co.uk/) Thorsten Vieth ermina Duncan (GoneCaving) Evan Hartzell / abalone (http://sidromusic.net/) Michael Hetrick (http://mhetrick.com/) Anton Hörnquist / jah pauk glia (https://soundcloud.com/zunaito + https://soundcloud.com/sound-and-process/glia-sound-and-process-1) SteveOath Alessandro Bonino (http://soundcloud.com/alessandrobonino) Zedkah
Larry McDonald is a Jamaican percussionist, born in Port Maria in Jamaica in 1939. Larry first started to play congas with #Carlos Malcolm band in the 1960s and also with Toots Hibbert of the Grammy Award winning band Toots and the Maytals as well as the Count Ossie Band. He plays a wide variety of traditional percussion instruments.McDonald has a nearly 50 year history of recording and performing with a wide variety of artists, such as #GilScott-Heron, and Taj Mahal. In 2009, McDonald released his first solo album "Drumquestra" on which he united many of his former band mates from across his career, in an orchestra of drummers, including Sly DunbarUziah Thompson a.k.a. "Sticky" of Bob Marley and the Wailers and the former Count Ossie drummers under their later mantle "Mystic Revelation Of Rastafari" drummers. Drumquestra also featured former frontmen from bands Larry performed and recorded with, including Toots Hibbert, Bob Andy, #Mutabaruka, Stranger Cole and Dollarman. The album was recorded at a live session at Harry J Studios in Kingston Jamaica by Steel Pulse producer Sidney Mills for Malik Al Nasir's MCPR label in the UAE, who released the album in 2009. MCRP also released two singles off the album the same year, "Head Over Heels" Featuring Dollarman and Sly Dunbar and "Set The Children Free" Featuring Toots Hibbert, the latter of which was subsequently re-mixed for dance-floors by Lenny B. Shortly after the album was released, Larry was honoured in July 2011, at the 14th annual 'Tributes to the Greats' award ceremony in Jamaica, with a lifetime achievement award for his 50 year contribution to Jamaican music. On Friday 22 March 2013 Larry took to the stage at The UN General Assembly in NYC with Steel Pulse as part of the UNESCO's International Slavery
Larry McDonald is a Jamaican percussionist, born in Port Maria in Jamaica in 1939. Larry first started to play congas with #Carlos Malcolm band in the 1960s and also with Toots Hibbert of the Grammy Award winning band Toots and the Maytals as well as the Count Ossie Band. He plays a wide variety of traditional percussion instruments.McDonald has a nearly 50 year history of recording and performing with a wide variety of artists, such as #GilScott-Heron, and Taj Mahal. In 2009, McDonald released his first solo album "Drumquestra" on which he united many of his former band mates from across his career, in an orchestra of drummers, including Sly DunbarUziah Thompson a.k.a. "Sticky" of Bob Marley and the Wailers and the former Count Ossie drummers under their later mantle "Mystic Revelation Of Rastafari" drummers. Drumquestra also featured former frontmen from bands Larry performed and recorded with, including Toots Hibbert, Bob Andy, #Mutabaruka, Stranger Cole and Dollarman. The album was recorded at a live session at Harry J Studios in Kingston Jamaica by Steel Pulse producer Sidney Mills for Malik Al Nasir's MCPR label in the UAE, who released the album in 2009. MCRP also released two singles off the album the same year, "Head Over Heels" Featuring Dollarman and Sly Dunbar and "Set The Children Free" Featuring Toots Hibbert, the latter of which was subsequently re-mixed for dance-floors by Lenny B. Shortly after the album was released, Larry was honoured in July 2011, at the 14th annual 'Tributes to the Greats' award ceremony in Jamaica, with a lifetime achievement award for his 50 year contribution to Jamaican music. On Friday 22 March 2013 Larry took to the stage at The UN General Assembly in NYC with Steel Pulse as part of the UNESCO's International Slavery