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About this episode: People come to the emergency department seeking all kinds of urgent care. What if they could also get treatment for opioid addiction? In this episode: a look at how one rural hospital started prescribing buprenorphine to ER patients, and how scaling up treatment while reducing stigma at hospitals across the US is now helping thousands of patients every year. Guest: Arianna Campbell is an emergency department and addiction medicine PA at Marshall Medical Center in Placerville, California. Host: Dr. Josh Sharfstein is vice dean for public health practice and community engagement at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, a faculty member in health policy, a pediatrician, and former secretary of Maryland's Health Department. Show links and related content: USACS Physician Assistant, Ariana Campbell, PA-C, Aims to Eliminate the Stigma of Substance Use Through Education and Intervention—The Shift Blog The New Federal Regulations Aimed At Making Methadone More Accessible—And Less Stigmatizingcvb x—Public Health On Call (April 2024) A New Type of Overdose Response—Public Health On Call (March 2023) Transcript information: Looking for episode transcripts? Open our podcast on the Apple Podcasts app (desktop or mobile) or the Spotify mobile app to access an auto-generated transcript of any episode. Closed captioning is also available for every episode on our YouTube channel. Contact us: Have a question about something you heard? Looking for a transcript? Want to suggest a topic or guest? Contact us via email or visit our website. Follow us: @PublicHealthPod on Bluesky @JohnsHopkinsSPH on Instagram @JohnsHopkinsSPH on Facebook @PublicHealthOnCall on YouTube Here's our RSS feed Note: These podcasts are a conversation between the participants, and do not represent the position of Johns Hopkins University.
Sarah Peyton is a Certified Trainer of Nonviolent Communication. She teaches people how language changes relationship and the brain. She works with audiences internationally to create a compassionate understanding of the effects of relational trauma on the brain, and writes about and teaches people how words change and heal us.Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer is a poet. She has 13 collections of poetry, and her work has appeared in O Magazine, A Prairie Home Companion, PBS News Hour, American Life in Poetry, on fences, in back alleys, on Carnegie Hall Stage and on hundreds of river rocks she leaves around her town of Placerville, Colorado. Her most recent collection, Hush, won the Halcyon prize. Devoted to helping others explore creative practice, Rosemerry is also co-host of Emerging Form, a podcast on creative process; co-founder of Secret Agents of Change (a surreptitious kindness cabal); and co-leader of Soul Writers Circle.In This Episode:Sarah's WebsiteYour Resonant Self: Guided Meditations and Exercises to Engage Your Brain's Capacity for Healing, by Sarah PeytonRosemerry's websiteThe Unfolding: Poems, by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer---If you'd like to support The Trauma Therapist Podcast and the work I do you can do that here with a monthly donation of $5, $7, or $10: Donate to The Trauma Therapist Podcast.Click here to join my email list and receive podcast updates and other news.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-trauma-therapist--5739761/support.
One by one, the bodies of 3 girls were found in the El Dorado National Forest outside Placerville, CA. One man was the common denominator for all three.For bonus content join our Patreon!patreon.com/CrimeOfftheGridFor a one time donation:https://www.buymeacoffee.com/cotgFor more information about the podcast, check outhttps://crimeoffthegrid.com/Check out our Merch!! https://in-wild-places.square.site/s/shopFollow us on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/crimeoffthegridpodcast/ and (1) FacebookSources:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Cox_(serial_killer) https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-12-18/three-dead-girls-and-a-man-on-death-row-did-lies-put-him-there?_gl=1*1jzo8jb*_gcl_au*NDE2MTE4MTUzLjE3MzUyNTMyMjU.
Send us a textAt a recent fundraiser, I produced a show for a sold out 400 seat room in Placerville CA. The headliner was Dennis Blair; a comic/musician who has toured with Rodney Dangerfield, Joan Rivers, Barry Manilow, and for over 18 years with George Carlin.A very funny standup comic who you will hear here, is funny and a talented musician.Listen, Enjoy, & Share!Dennis Blair, a seasoned comedian with over four decades in the entertainment industry, has made a significant mark with his stand-up performances and writing talents. Known for co-writing the Rodney Dangerfield movie "Easy Money" and spending 18 years opening for George Carlin, Blair has proven his comedic prowess time and again. His recent stand-up comedy special in Placerville garnered high praise from host R. Scott Edwards, who emphasized Blair's impressive career and ability to connect with audiences. The sold-out show, which featured material on diverse topics such as song lyrics, reggae music, and Elvis Presley, left a lasting impression, reaffirming Blair's status as a seasoned and engaging performer.(00:00:21) "Dennis Blair's Stand-Up Comedy Showcase"(00:00:21) Blair's Hilarious Performance at Sold-out FundraiserSupport the showWebsite: Standup Comedy Podcast Network.com www.StandupComedyPodcastNetwork.com Free APP on all Apple & Android phones....check it out, podcast, jokes, blogs, and More!"NEW" Video Podcast: Tag Team Talent Podcast on Spotify & YouTube See your favorite comics and other performers...Fun!Please Write a Review: in-depth walk-through for leaving a review.Interested in Standup Comedy? Check out my books on Amazon..."20 Questions Answered about Being a Standup Comic""Be a Standup Comic...or just look like one"
What does Mississippi have to do with getting to the Moon? What are the laws concerning the Moon? We'll find out with the help of our guest Michelle L.D. Hanlon, Executive Director, Center for Air and Space Law at the University of Mississippi School of Law and Co-Founder, President & CEO of For All Moonkind In 1971, Apollo 14 was the third Moon mission of the U.S. Apollo space program, but the flight was unique in one way: tree seeds were taken on the flight to later germinate “Moon Trees”! When selected for the Apollo 14 mission, Astronaut Stuart Roosa was allowed to carry approximately 500 tree seeds with him into space. The species selected were sycamore, loblolly pine, sweetgum, redwood, and Douglas fir, taken from lots of seeds collected at two U.S.F.S. Institute of Forest Genetics (I.F.G.) stations, the southern station in Gulfport, Mississippi, and the western station in Placerville, California. Mississippi State University proudly displays its Sycamore Moon Tree on campus near the Davis Wade Stadium at Scott Field, the home playing venue for the Mississippi State Bulldogs football team. A Sycamore was planted at Camp Iti Kana, a Girl Scout camp near Wiggins, Mississippi. There's is located near the camp flagpole.A “Moon Tree” was planted on the grounds of Bayou Academy in Cleveland, Mississippi in late May 2024. As a seed, the Sweetgum traveled 270,000 miles around the moon aboard the Orion spacecraft in 2022.NASA Stennis Space Center near Bay St. Louis, Mississippi is contributing directly to the agency's effort to land the first woman, the first person of color, and its first international partner astronaut on the Moon – for the benefit of all humanity. Work at the nation's largest – and premier – propulsion test site will help power SLS (Space Launch System) rockets on future Artemis missions to enable long-term lunar exploration and prepare for the next giant leap of sending the first astronauts to Mars.Michelle's inspiration: Star TrekLiz's thoughts about items left on the moon: Salvage OneAdam remembered The Expanse (tv show and book series) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Sarah Peyton is a Certified Trainer of Nonviolent Communication. She teaches people how language changes relationship and the brain. She works with audiences internationally to create a compassionate understanding of the effects of relational trauma on the brain, and writes about and teaches people how words change and heal us.Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer is a poet. She has 13 collections of poetry, and her work has appeared in O Magazine, A Prairie Home Companion, PBS News Hour, American Life in Poetry, on fences, in back alleys, on Carnegie Hall Stage and on hundreds of river rocks she leaves around her town of Placerville, Colorado. Her most recent collection, Hush, won the Halcyon prize. Devoted to helping others explore creative practice, Rosemerry is also co-host of Emerging Form, a podcast on creative process; co-founder of Secret Agents of Change (a surreptitious kindness cabal); and co-leader of Soul Writers Circle.In This Episode:Sarah's WebsiteYour Resonant Self: Guided Meditations and Exercises to Engage Your Brain's Capacity for Healing, by Sarah PeytonRosemerry's websiteThe Unfolding: Poems, by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer---If you'd like to support The Trauma Therapist Podcast and the work I do you can do that here with a monthly donation of $5, $7, or $10: Donate to The Trauma Therapist Podcast.Click here to join my email list and receive podcast updates and other news.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-trauma-therapist--5739761/support.
The audio companion to the PhotowalksTV episode about California's Gold Country, with narration about the places visited on the show, where we stayed and ate, and some of our favorites along the way. Also features extended interviews with folks we met during the filming of this episode, including Bronte Wilhelm from the Angel's Camp Museum, Erica Cookson from Franny's Farm Table in Placerville, Rebecca Stoddard from Boeger Winery and journalist Odin Rasco. If you enjoyed this episode, let me know, and I'll do more audio companions in the future. And ICYMI:The episode:The blog post:https://photowalkstv.com/california-gold-country-photo-road-trip/ Get full access to Jefferson Graham's PhotowalksTV newsletter - Tech & Travel at www.jeffersongraham.com/subscribe
Ben Gay III's Remarkable Journey: From One Nickel to Sales Legendary StatusWe were planning on opening up The Closers Pt 2 again this week when Ben floored me by telling a tiny bit of a very important story in his history and I am calling that the Down To My Last Nickle but Never Down and Out story.According to the story shared during our podcast last week, he arrived in Placerville, California with an incredibly humble beginning - driving a loaned vehicle and possessing literally just one nickel in his pocket. This moment represented the absolute worst of his financial circumstances.From this incredibly challenging starting over point, Ben Gay III would go on to become:- A globally famous sales expert- Author of "The Closers" book series AKA The Sales Bibles- An internationally recognized sales training authority- An author whose books have sold over 10 million copiesConnect with us: Buy The Closers Books | Denise Griffitts | Ben Gay III We appreciate you tuning in to this episode of Your Partner In Success Radio with Host Denise Griffitts. If you enjoyed what you heard, please consider subscribing, rating, and leaving a review on your favorite podcast platform. Your support helps us reach more listeners and create even better content!Stay ConnectedWebsite: Your Partner In Success RadioEmail: mail@yourofficeontheweb.com
On this episode, Tony Brueski digs into the enigmatic history of Placerville's Cary House Hotel, exploring its origins during the Gold Rush era and its transformation into a reputedly haunted landmark. Delving into accounts of spectral bellhops and lingering guests, Tony examines the stories and theories that surround this historic establishment. Join us as we navigate the intersection of history and the supernatural, seeking to understand whether the Cary House Hotel's past continues to echo through its hallways today.
On this episode, Tony Brueski digs into the enigmatic history of Placerville's Cary House Hotel, exploring its origins during the Gold Rush era and its transformation into a reputedly haunted landmark. Delving into accounts of spectral bellhops and lingering guests, Tony examines the stories and theories that surround this historic establishment. Join us as we navigate the intersection of history and the supernatural, seeking to understand whether the Cary House Hotel's past continues to echo through its hallways today.
-Bluegrass anuncia la programación inicial de 2025 -La comunidad de Placerville se expresa -Un error mecánico obliga a evacuar un lift de esquiar
- Placerville community speaks up - Mountain Village debriefs on Meadowlark and VCA housing -Celebrating 10 years of The Downlow
Welcome to Season 4, Episode 51! Wakamatsu Tea and Silk Farm Colony was the first Japanese settlement in America, but it's so much more than that. Their story is a slice of American history that highlights the struggles immigrants often faced when trying to establish themselves in a new culture without much support. In this episode we talk about the socio-political environment in Japan that led a small group of Japanese (and one German) to move to American and begin the first Japanese settlement. We share some of their struggles and lasting impact. A lot of their history would have remained hidden without the efforts of the American River Conservancy who now manage the Wakamatsu Farm and work tirelessly to preserve the farm and the surrounding area. That's not all ARC does, of course, so we urge you to learn more about their programs and Donate to ARC in general or Donate to Wakamatsu Farm specifically. In our opening, we celebrate the opening of the T&T Supermarket in Bellevue, Washington. If you like what we do, please share, follow, and like us in your podcast directory of choice or on Instagram @AAHistory101. For previous episodes and resources, please visit our site at https://asianamericanhistory101.libsyn.com or social media links at http://castpie.com/AAHistory101. If you have any questions, comments or suggestions, email us at info@aahistory101.com. Segments 00:25 Current Events: T&T Supermarket Comes to the U.S. 03:45 The History of Wakamatsu Farm 20:47 Organizations to Support: The American River Conservancy
Pull up any social media feed on big line skiing and there's a good chance you'll see Molly Armanino stomping a serious cliff drop. There's also a good chance you'll see her tomahawking. In her rookie year on the 2023 Freeride World Tour, Molly's checkers or wreckers approach – skiing lines no other woman dare ski – landed her a 2nd place finish. Perfecting her art of the send at Kirkwood amidst its treacherous volcanic “death rocks”, Molly's fearless approach has inspired all skiers, regardless of gender. Equally inspiring is Molly's perseverance in the face of unimaginable loss, opening up about the accident that took her brother Sam's life just as she was finding closure after losing her best friend in a car accident. Molly talks about the therapeutic healing the outdoors brings her and also shares the story of losing her big toe to frostbite while skiing in Montana. Lots of laughs mixed with heavy emotion in this episode. See an advance screening of her first feature film, “Slopes of Change”, at 8PM on December 19 at Alibi Ale Works in Truckee! 2:30 – Recording this week at Gear Lab in South Lake Tahoe amidst dry weather and no snow.5:30 – Riding brown pow on Harmony Ridge and Hoot Trail in Nevada City. Shared use trails versus segregated use trails.8:00 – Dope or Derp? Collectibles like baseball cards, Garbage Pail Kids and wine.20:45 – Print magazines to subscribe to – Nicholas on Insta – Mountain Gazette.21:50 – Dope or Derp? Giving up on skiing in the winter when weather isn't delivering.25:10 – Introducing Molly Armanino – South Lake Tahoe core lord skier and her film Slopes of Change.31:15 – Molly Armanino talks about her new hat, turkey feathers found on the family property and feeding wild animals.35:15 – Molly's upbringing in Sutter Creek and Placerville and hated skiing as a kid.38:00 – Skiing at Kirkwood, its “death rocks” and the core underground vibe it's kept despite being a Vail-owned resort. Home of Squid and Friends, Sam Armanino's creation.47:30 – Being good at tomahawking and training to tomahawk down the mountain.48:40 – Getting into backcountry skiing after always being a resort skier.50:30 – Missing the shot on the big line when being filmed.54:05 – What's more pressure – skiing for a film shoot or Freeride World Tour?56:30 – Molly's backcountry mentor McKenna Peterson and developing a close relationship.1:03:45 – Pushing yourself and pushing the sport even if you risk serious injury and getting hurt.1:11:30 – Getting into the Freeride World Tour.1:14:00 – Molly losing her big toe to frostbite during an excursion in Cooke City, Montana and then getting 2ndin her rookie year on the Freeride World Tour.1:22:50 – She seems to have Raynaud's Syndrome now after getting frostbite, using boot warmers and glove warmers and dressing the core warmer to prevent Raynaud's.1:30:00 – Exploring and skiing the Eastern Sierra Nevada.1:36:10 – PowBot and Molly going on a big backcountry mission in Desolation Wilderness during the early days of COVID after the loss of PowBot's dad and how big missions help with coping.1:42:30 – Being distracted by being hyper focused on a mission as a tool for coping with loss.1:45:30 – Molly opening up about the loss of her brother Sam and a tragic car accident she was involved in with one of her best friends who didn't survive.1:53:10 – What does Mind the Track mean to you?1:55:00 – December 19 in Truckee at Alibi Aleworks – Go see Slopes of Change!
Introduction or Abstract Nancy Ross Gooch was a Black woman whose family—the Gooch-Monroes, owned most of Coloma, specifically the area around Main Street. Coloma, a small city in El Dorado County, is where James Marshall discovered gold at Sutter's Mill in 1848. If it weren't for her family's stewardship of the land, this town might not exist, yet Californians do not know her name. Children in Coloma and residents in the nearby towns of Placerville nor Sacramento know this important history. It is time to change this. September 9, 1860, is California Admission Day. 2025 marks its 175th Anniversary. It is a perfect time to remember the life and legacy of this powerful Black woman who symbolized industry, intelligence, faith and forgiveness, Mrs. Nancy Ross Gooch (Aug. 1811-Sept. 17, 1901). The way people live in the minds and hearts of future generations is by naming institutions after them, by erecting monuments, by continuing their work, by calling their names. In a state the size of a country, California should have more public art honoring its citizens, especially this women, California pioneer and citizen, Nancy Ross Gooch. Join the campaign. #sayhername #nancyrossgooch #californiapioneer If you are interested in the campaign to have a statue erected to honor Nancy Ross Gooch contact the author: Ms. Wanda Sabir walibatinsabir@mymail.ciis.edu or 510-397-9705. To read the proposal: https://wandasabir.blogspot.com/2024/12/nancy-ross-gooch-ca-pioneer-presente.html
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Best of 2024: Guy Fieri's latest Food Network show “Best Bite in Town” profiles Davis and Placerville restaurants. Finally, Sacramento musician The Philharmonik wins NPR's “Tiny Desk” contest. Guy Fieri Show Profiles Davis Restaurants
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What does Mississippi have to do with getting to the Moon? What are the laws concerning the Moon? We'll find out with the help of our guest Michelle L.D. Hanlon, Executive Director, Center for Air and Space Law at the University of Mississippi School of Law and Co-Founder, President & CEO of For All Moonkind In 1971, Apollo 14 was the third Moon mission of the U.S. Apollo space program, but the flight was unique in one way: tree seeds were taken on the flight to later germinate “Moon Trees”! When selected for the Apollo 14 mission, Astronaut Stuart Roosa was allowed to carry approximately 500 tree seeds with him into space. The species selected were sycamore, loblolly pine, sweetgum, redwood, and Douglas fir, taken from lots of seeds collected at two U.S.F.S. Institute of Forest Genetics (I.F.G.) stations, the southern station in Gulfport, Mississippi, and the western station in Placerville, California. Mississippi State University proudly displays its Sycamore Moon Tree on campus near the Davis Wade Stadium at Scott Field, the home playing venue for the Mississippi State Bulldogs football team. A Sycamore was planted at Camp Iti Kana, a Girl Scout camp near Wiggins, Mississippi. There's is located near the camp flagpole.A “Moon Tree” was planted on the grounds of Bayou Academy in Cleveland, Mississippi in late May 2024. As a seed, the Sweetgum traveled 270,000 miles around the moon aboard the Orion spacecraft in 2022.NASA Stennis Space Center near Bay St. Louis, Mississippi is contributing directly to the agency's effort to land the first woman, the first person of color, and its first international partner astronaut on the Moon – for the benefit of all humanity. Work at the nation's largest – and premier – propulsion test site will help power SLS (Space Launch System) rockets on future Artemis missions to enable long-term lunar exploration and prepare for the next giant leap of sending the first astronauts to Mars.Michelle's inspiration: Star TrekLiz's thoughts about items left on the moon: Salvage OneAdam remembered The Expanse (tv show and book series) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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- Placerville community hopes for traffic solutions - Paid parking returns to Mountain Village - Looking back on 2 decades of environmental health
Some animals plod across roads without hesitation. Others dart across quickly, while still more freeze at the sight of an oncoming car. A final group avoids roads altogether. Four distinct approaches, yet roads can have devastating impacts on animals regardless of their type of response. Thankfully, wildlife crossings can help. Join me and award-winning author Ben Goldfarb as we explore a fragment of old growth oak woodland, discussing how roads impact the environment and imagining a future that's safer and more connected for humans and wildlife alike. Make sure to check out Ben's book, Crossings: How Road Ecology is Shaping the Future of Our Planet, available just about everywhere books are sold. If you'd like to buy Crossings from The Bookery in Placerville, you can reach out to Heather and Darin via DM on Instagram @bookeryplacerville or give them a call at (530) 626-6454. If you're quick, you may even get a signed copy! They also carry Ben's first book, Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why they Matter. Helpful Links: Ben's Website California Crossings Map by the Wildlands Network Report roadkill hotspots with CROS (California Roadkill Observation System) Support Golden State Naturalist on Patreon and get perks starting at $4/month. Follow me on Instagram. My website is goldenstatenaturalist.com. Bird song recordings are from Xeno-Canto. The western bluebird recording, XC237281, is by Denise Wright, and the Creative Commons license can be found here. The wrentit recording, XC408459, is by Frank Lambert, and the Creative Commons license can be found here. by John Carrel License. The theme song is called “i dunno” by grapes and can be found here.