Showing posts with label 2011 tsunami in Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2011 tsunami in Japan. Show all posts

Sunday, September 1, 2013

First Asian-American judge in Illinois retires

First Asian-American judge in Illinois retires
Editor's note: Obviously, the families of  Alice R. Gore, a 99 year old disabled ward of the Probate Court of Cook County, who had her wealth, health and gold teeth taken from her and Mrs. Cefalu who had her golden years stolen  would differ from the glowing kudos by Judge Kawamoto's fellow conspirators. This Shark would be negligent not mentioning the many complaints made concerning the conduct of Judge Kawamoto to the FEDs.   Lucius Verenus, Schoolmaster, ProbateSharks.com


August 26, 2013

First Asian-American judge in Illinois retires


kawamoto-08-26-13,ph02
Lynne Kawamoto
By Mary Kate Malone 
Law Bulletin staff writer



The first Asian-American judge to serve in an Illinois state court has retired after a 22-year career on the bench.
Lynne Kawamoto was appointed as a Cook County associate judge in 1991, after the Asian American Bar Association conducted a study that found there were no Asian-American judges in state court.
Kawamoto submitted her name to be considered for an associate judge position, and the circuit judges selected her.
“I felt it was a responsibility, not only to all the citizens of Cook County and the state, in a general sense, but also (to be) a role model in the Asian-American community, to show that these positions are available and open to everyone,” said Kawamoto, 63.
The circuit judges reappointed Kawamoto five times to four-year terms, most recently in 2011. Her last day was Aug. 7.
Kawamoto retired on her late mother’s birthday. Her first day as a judge was Feb. 1, 1991 — her late father’s birthday.
Kawamoto’s parents met each other in an Arizona internment camp during World War II and both moved to Chicago afterward. They eventually married and had three children.
“They came from nothing — just what they had in their suitcase from the camps,” said Kawamoto, the oldest of those three children.
Kawamoto attended North Park University, graduating in 1972, and worked as a teacher in Chicago Public Schools. In 1977, she enrolled at DePaul University College of Law, taking classes at night while teaching during the day.
She graduated in 1981 and started working in the Cook County state’s attorney’s office, handling cases in a variety of divisions, including working as one of the first female gang-crimes prosecutors.
After being appointed to the bench at age 40, she worked briefly in the 1st Municipal District, handling traffic cases, before spending eight years on juvenile cases.
She was then assigned to the Probate Division, where she remained until her retirement.
“She worked so hard, she made us look bad,” said Circuit Judge James G. Riley, supervising judge of the division. “There’s not a lazy bone in the woman’s body.”
Kawamoto handled adult guardianship cases, which concern adults with developmental disabilities who need a guardian to help manage their money and affairs and protect them from exploitation.
“Handling an adult guardianship call is, in some respects, like being a social worker,” said Circuit JudgeMary Ellen Coghlan, who also works in the Probate Division. “She has that compassionate part of her personality that she really took to it.”
Kawamoto said she worked hard to be fully prepared for every hearing, refreshing herself on the cases to avoid having to “rehash” previous developments in the case with the lawyers.
Riley would frequently see Kawamoto walk from her office to her courtroom in the mornings “and she literally would have 5 to 6 inches of material in her hands,” he said.
The cases in Kawamoto’s courtroom presented unique challenges because of the litigants’ vulnerability, said Ray J. Koenig III, managing member of Clark, Hill PLC’s Chicago office, who frequently appeared before Kawamoto.
“It was wonderful to watch her develop a real, genuine fondness and care for these adult disabled individuals who she considered her wards, and go above and beyond to work with the attorneys to figure out what was best for them,” Koenig said.
He recalled one case when Kawamoto had to tell a woman with disabilities that she could not return home because she needed to be placed somewhere with supervision.
“The look of pain on Judge Kawamoto’s face was so real, because she knew what this meant to this woman,” Koenig said.
Kawamoto plans to move to Texas with her husband at the end of this month to spend more time with their daughter and her family.
“I’ve just been very fortunate and humbled by my appointment and the ability to serve as an associate judge … It was a great honor to serve all those years,” she said.
 

KawamotoDragon.com
 

Fukushima's Radioactive Ocean Plume to Reach US Waters by 2014

Fukushima's Radioactive Ocean Plume to Reach US Waters by 2014

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Fukushima's Radioactive Ocean Plume to Reach US Waters by 2014
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The Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in Japan.
A radioactive plume of water in the Pacific Ocean from Japan's Fukushima nuclear plant, which was crippled in the 2011 earthquake and tsunami, will likely reach U.S. coastal waters starting in 2014, according to a new study. The long journey of the radioactive particles could help researchers better understand how the ocean’s currents circulate around the world.
Ocean simulations showed that the plume of radioactive cesium-137 released by the Fukushima disaster in 2011 could begin flowing into U.S. coastal waters starting in early 2014 and peak in 2016. Luckily, two ocean currents off the eastern coast of Japan — the Kuroshio Current and the Kuroshio Extension — would have diluted the radioactive material so that its concentration fell well below the World Health Organization’s safety levels within four months of the Fukushima incident. But it could have been a different story if nuclear disaster struck on the other side of Japan.
“The environmental impact could have been worse if the contaminated water would have been released in another oceanic environment in which the circulation was less energetic and turbulent,” said Vincent Rossi, an oceanographer and postdoctoral research fellow at the Institute for Cross-Disciplinary Physics and Complex Systems in Spain.
Fukushima’s radioactive water release has taken its time journeying across the Pacific. By comparison, atmospheric radiation from the Fukushima plant began reaching the U.S. West Coast within just days of the disaster back in 2011. [Fukushima Radiation Leak: 5 Things You Should Know]
Tracking radioactivity’s path
The radioactive plume has three different sources: radioactive particles falling out from the atmosphere into the ocean, contaminated water directly released from the plant, and water that became contaminated by leaching radioactive particles from tainted soil.
The release of cesium-137 from Fukushima in Japan’s more turbulent eastern currents means the radioactive material is diluted to the point of posing little threat to humans by the time it leaves Japan’s coastal waters. Rossi worked with former colleagues at the Climate Change Research Centre at the University of New South Wales in Australia to simulate the spread of Fukushima’s radioactivity in the oceans — a study detailed in the October issue of the journal Deep-Sea Research Part 1.
Researchers averaged 27 experimental runs of their model — each run starting in a different year — to ensure that the simulated spread of the cesium-137 as a "tracer" was not unusually affected by initial ocean conditions. Many oceanographers studying the ocean’s currents prefer using cesium-137 to track the ocean currents because it acts as a passive tracer in seawater, meaning it doesn't interact much with other things, and decays slowly with a long half-life of 30 years.
“One advantage of this tracer is its long half-life and our ability to measure it quite accurately, so that it can be used in the future to test our models of ocean circulation and see how well they represent reality over time,” Rossi told LiveScience. “In 20 years' time, we could go out, grab measurements everywhere in the Pacific and compare them to our model.”
Journey across the Pacific Rim
The team focused on predicting the path of the radioactivity until it reached the continental shelf waters stretching from the U.S. coastline to about 180 miles (300 kilometers) offshore. About 10 to 30 becquerels (units of radioactivity representing decay per second) per cubic meter of cesium-137 could reach U.S. and Canadian coastal waters north of Oregon between 2014 and 2020. (Such levels are far below the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s limits for drinking water.)
By comparison, California’s coast may receive just 10 to 20 becquerels per cubic meter from 2016 to 2025. That slower, lesser impact comes from Pacific currents taking part of the radioactive plume down below the ocean surface on a slower journey toward the Californian coast, Rossi explained.
A large proportion of the radioactive plume from the initial Fukushima release won't even reach U.S. coastal waters anytime soon. Instead, the majority of the cesium-137 will remain in the North Pacific gyre — a region of ocean that circulates slowly clockwise and has trapped debris in its center to form the “Great Pacific Garbage Patch” — and continue to be diluted for approximately a decade following the initial Fukushima release in 2011. (The water from the current power plant leak would be expected to take a similar long-term path to the initial plume released, Rossi said.)
But the plume will eventually begin to escape the North Pacific gyre in an even more diluted form. About 25 percent of the radioactivity initially released will travel to the Indian Ocean and South Pacific over two to three decades after the Fukushima disaster, the model showed.
You can follow Jeremy Hsu on Twitter @jeremyhsu. Follow us @livescienceFacebook Google+. Original article on LiveScience.
KawamotoDragon.com

Friday, August 30, 2013

First Asian-American judge in Illinois retires

Editor's note: Obviously, the families of  Alice R. Gore, a 99 year old disabled ward of the Probate Court of Cook County, who had her wealth, health and gold teeth taken from her and Mrs. Cefalu who had her golden years stolen  would differ from the glowing kudos by Judge Kawamoto's fellow conspirators. This Shark would be negligent not mentioning the many complaints made concerning the conduct of Judge Kawamoto to the FEDs.   Lucius Verenus, Schoolmaster, ProbateSharks.com


August 26, 2013

First Asian-American judge in Illinois retires


kawamoto-08-26-13,ph02
Lynne Kawamoto
By Mary Kate Malone 
Law Bulletin staff writer

The first Asian-American judge to serve in an Illinois state court has retired after a 22-year career on the bench.
Lynne Kawamoto was appointed as a Cook County associate judge in 1991, after the Asian American Bar Association conducted a study that found there were no Asian-American judges in state court.
Kawamoto submitted her name to be considered for an associate judge position, and the circuit judges selected her.
“I felt it was a responsibility, not only to all the citizens of Cook County and the state, in a general sense, but also (to be) a role model in the Asian-American community, to show that these positions are available and open to everyone,” said Kawamoto, 63.
The circuit judges reappointed Kawamoto five times to four-year terms, most recently in 2011. Her last day was Aug. 7.
Kawamoto retired on her late mother’s birthday. Her first day as a judge was Feb. 1, 1991 — her late father’s birthday.
Kawamoto’s parents met each other in an Arizona internment camp during World War II and both moved to Chicago afterward. They eventually married and had three children.
“They came from nothing — just what they had in their suitcase from the camps,” said Kawamoto, the oldest of those three children.
Kawamoto attended North Park University, graduating in 1972, and worked as a teacher in Chicago Public Schools. In 1977, she enrolled at DePaul University College of Law, taking classes at night while teaching during the day.
She graduated in 1981 and started working in the Cook County state’s attorney’s office, handling cases in a variety of divisions, including working as one of the first female gang-crimes prosecutors.
After being appointed to the bench at age 40, she worked briefly in the 1st Municipal District, handling traffic cases, before spending eight years on juvenile cases.
She was then assigned to the Probate Division, where she remained until her retirement.
“She worked so hard, she made us look bad,” said Circuit Judge James G. Riley, supervising judge of the division. “There’s not a lazy bone in the woman’s body.”
Kawamoto handled adult guardianship cases, which concern adults with developmental disabilities who need a guardian to help manage their money and affairs and protect them from exploitation.
“Handling an adult guardianship call is, in some respects, like being a social worker,” said Circuit JudgeMary Ellen Coghlan, who also works in the Probate Division. “She has that compassionate part of her personality that she really took to it.”
Kawamoto said she worked hard to be fully prepared for every hearing, refreshing herself on the cases to avoid having to “rehash” previous developments in the case with the lawyers.
Riley would frequently see Kawamoto walk from her office to her courtroom in the mornings “and she literally would have 5 to 6 inches of material in her hands,” he said.
The cases in Kawamoto’s courtroom presented unique challenges because of the litigants’ vulnerability, said Ray J. Koenig III, managing member of Clark, Hill PLC’s Chicago office, who frequently appeared before Kawamoto.
“It was wonderful to watch her develop a real, genuine fondness and care for these adult disabled individuals who she considered her wards, and go above and beyond to work with the attorneys to figure out what was best for them,” Koenig said.
He recalled one case when Kawamoto had to tell a woman with disabilities that she could not return home because she needed to be placed somewhere with supervision.
“The look of pain on Judge Kawamoto’s face was so real, because she knew what this meant to this woman,” Koenig said.
Kawamoto plans to move to Texas with her husband at the end of this month to spend more time with their daughter and her family.
“I’ve just been very fortunate and humbled by my appointment and the ability to serve as an associate judge … It was a great honor to serve all those years,” she said.
 

KawamotoDragon.com
 

Saturday, May 18, 2013

States to get initial money from Japanese gift

May 17, 7:59 PM EDT

States to get initial money from Japanese gift

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JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) -- The five West Coast states affected by debris from the 2011 tsunami in Japan are about to receive an initial $250,000 each from a $5 million gift from Japan for cleanup.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is distributing the money to Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington and will allocate the remainder as additional needs arise. It's unclear how far the money will stretch for what some state officials and beach-cleaning groups expect to be a yearslong problem.
Alaska is preparing to ask NOAA for up to $750,000 in additional funds to help with cleanup this year.
Unlike other states where beaches are accessible year-round, many of the beaches targeted for cleanup in Alaska are remote or hard-to-reach, sometimes requiring that debris be hauled out by boat or even helicopter. There also is a narrow window for conducting the work, generally running into September. While some crews already have been out this year, poor weather has delayed the start of cleanup or surveillance in other parts of the state.
Even $1 million isn't sufficient to meet Alaska's needs, said Janna Stewart, a temporary employee with the state Department of Environmental Conservation assigned to the tsunami debris issue. Chris Pallister, president of the beach-cleaning group Gulf of Alaska Keeper, estimated based on what he saw last summer that cleaning 74 miles of shoreline on Montague Island in the Gulf of Alaska would cost in the "$10 million range."
In anticipation of receiving the $250,000, the state has been working on solicitations for debris removal and disposal and help in updating aerial surveys done last year. Stewart is hopeful the first of that funding can be awarded to contractors by late June.
The Japanese gift announced last fall was greater than NOAA's overall marine debris budget in fiscal year 2012, though $6 million has been requested as part of the president's 2014 budget proposal. And the pool of gift funds already has taken a hit with NOAA using $478,000 toward the cost of removing a dock that washed ashore on a remote beach on Washington's Olympic Peninsula.
Some states, including Hawaii and Washington, have earmarked funding of their own to aid in the cleanup and response. The Alaska Legislature provided $1 million to Gulf of Alaska Keeper, but the governor - who has seen tsunami debris cleanup as a federal responsibility - has not yet announced whether he will keep that in the budget. The group has about $375,000 in grant funds, Pallister said.
It's unclear how much debris is still floating and what might arrive on U.S. shores. Pallister said there are indications the worst of the Styrofoam that washed up on parts of Alaska's shores is over. He and others have raised concerns about the material's effect on fish, birds or other wildlife.
William Aila Jr., chairman of Hawaii's Department of Land and Natural Resources, said his state continues to see run-of-the-mill marine debris, a longstanding problem for coastal areas, along with things he attributes to the tsunami, such as oyster floats and boats. A large dock, similar to those that washed ashore in Oregon and Washington, moved through the island chain without reaching shore, he said.
One of his biggest concerns is the potential spread of invasive species that hitchhike on some of the debris. Aila said states will incur additional monitoring costs for this and would like to see federal assistance.
Of the more than 1,700 reports of possible tsunami debris along the western coast of North America and the open Pacific, just 29 have been definitively linked to the disaster, NOAA spokeswoman Keeley Belva said.
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Follow Becky Bohrer on Twitter at http://twitter.com/beckybohrerap .
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Online:
NOAA's Japan tsunami debris site: http://marinedebris.noaa.gov/tsunamidebris/
 
KawamotoDragon.com