With Italy Under Quarantine, Dolphins Return to Venice Canals: WATCH

With Italy Under Quarantine, Dolphins Return to Venice Canals: WATCH

While Italy is under quarantine due to major coronavirus outbreaks and less boat traffic is clogging Venice’s famous canals, wildlife has been spotted, specifically, dolphins and swans. But while the water looks clearer, it isn’t necessarily less polluted.

Without the traffic of ships and ferries, dolphins have reappeared.

Sardinia, Italy 🌎❤🇮🇹pic.twitter.com/9HrpyDJnAU

— Rex Chapman🏇🏼 (@RexChapman) March 18, 2020

ABC News reports: “However, the transparent water isn’t so much a sign of better water quality as it is the result of the lack of boat traffic, which typically kicks sediment to the surface, Pierpaolo Campostrini, the managing director for the Consortium for Managing Scientific Research on Venice Lagoon System, told ABC News via email. The cold temperature of the water also plays a part, Campostrini said. At about 57 degrees Fahrenheit, there is little synthesis of organic compounds from carbon dioxide, which doesn’t begin until about 62 degrees Fahrenheit.”

Thought I’d spread abit of positivity for you guys. Since the lockdown of Venice without the pollution from boats the water has been begun to clear up and a dolphin has been spotted in the canal for the first time in nearly 60 years! #venice pic.twitter.com/dbq4mGhfnp

— Jack (@NotLacazette) March 17, 2020

RECENTLY: Man Filmed Swimming Across Venice’s St. Mark’s Square Amid Historic Flooding: WATCH

Mother Earth is slowly recovering from us. Snapshot of #Venice pic.twitter.com/X6S5MzkbdX

— Jacob Schot (@Schot_Capital) March 17, 2020

😳😳😳#venice
An unexpected side effect of the pandemic: 💧Water’s flowing through the canals of Venice is clear for the first time in forever.
🐟🦢 The fish are visible, the swans returned pic.twitter.com/crWf4kdZ1M

— Aurel Boriçi (@AurelBoriciBT) March 18, 2020

Following the measures taken in #Italy to contain the #coronavirus , the water of #Venice city is so clean ! 😁pic.twitter.com/8Al5rW5EXL

— 𝕋𝕙𝕚𝕖𝕣𝕣𝕪 𝕁. 𝔽. 𝕋𝕙𝕠𝕟𝕟𝕒𝕥𝕥𝕖 (@ThierryJFT) March 17, 2020

As Italians self quarantine in their homes and boats cease to Operate in Venice ,
Dolphins returns & reclaim #venice waters …. Italians pls don’t let them disappear again .
This is what we are doing to mother nature . #coronavirusitaly #covid19italy #COVID2019 pic.twitter.com/du1acMc1nR

— MOHIT BARMAN (@mohit_b) March 18, 2020

Said one resident: “Venice hasn’t seen clear canal water in a very long time. Dolphins showing up too. Nature just hit the reset button on us.”

Venice hasn’t seen clear canal water in a very long time. Dolphins showing up too. Nature just hit the reset button on us pic.twitter.com/RzqOq8ftCj

— Gianluca De Santis (@b8taFPS) March 17, 2020

The post With Italy Under Quarantine, Dolphins Return to Venice Canals: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


With Italy Under Quarantine, Dolphins Return to Venice Canals: WATCH

GLAAD joins AIDS United and over 90 organizations in calling on Congress to recognize the increased vulnerability of people living with HIV to COVID-19

GLAAD joins AIDS United and over 90 organizations in calling on Congress to recognize the increased vulnerability of people living with HIV to COVID-19

Credit: CTV

On Wednesday, GLAAD joined AIDS United and over 90 leading HIV and LGBTQ organizations in an open letter calling on members of Congress to acknowledge the increased risk of many people living with HIV to novel coronavirus, also known as COVID-19. The letter, organized by AIDS United, calls on these decisionmakers to craft a relief package that takes the unique needs of this population into account.

Read the full letter here.

As concerns over the spread of COVID-19 continue to grow, the letter outlines how “given that only 53% of people living with HIV in the United States have an undetectable viral load and that 60% of the people living with HIV in the United States are age 50 or older, a large swath of the U.S. population living with HIV is at great risk during the rapid spread of COVID-19.”

The letter also details that Congress’ relief package in response to COVID-19 must consider “the unique needs of people living with HIV to ensure their continued safety, health, and well-being.” As outlined, the signatories of the letter support the current relief package proposed in the U.S. House of Representatives, H.R. 6201, the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, but argue that it must be more comprehensive.

The letter suggests 15 additional relief considerations, including:

  • Mandated public, daily reporting on COVID-19 testing, incidence, prevalence, and related death;
  • Accessible and scaled testing measures in order to provide sufficient surveillance; explicit, universal protocols for presumptive positives awaiting confirmatory tests; and reporting on the number of presumptive positives;
  • Waivers of refill limits on maintenance drugs, inclusive of antiretrovirals, for people with chronic conditions like HIV and hepatitis;
  • Explicit authorization for and coverage of telemedicine for COVID-19 care;
  • Flexibility with funds and associated deliverables for recipient organizations of federal grants, cooperative agreements, and other awards;
  • Rental and mortgage assistance for workers whose income streams are diminished or eliminated by mandatory closures
  • Suspensions on utility disconnections and eviction and foreclosure proceedings;
  • Suspension of student loan debt payments
  • Prevention of overcrowding in public institutions, including the release of all individuals currently in jails, prisons, pretrial holding facilities, and immigration detention who have not been convicted of a crime involving physical or sexual violence
  • Moratorium on implementation of the public charge rule so immigrant communities aren’t discouraged from accessing COVID-19 testing and care
  • Incentives for banks, debt collectors, and other financial institutions to cease collections activity and interest accrual until epidemic control is achieved
  • Use of the National Disaster Medical System to cover uninsured people with Medicare for any recommended care
  • Temporary increase of the Federal Medicaid Assistance Percentage
  • Additional and accelerated funding for treatment and vaccine research; and
  • Commitment to free access to treatment and vaccination, once identified

AIDS United also started a petition to tell Congress that the health and safety of the entire nation, but particularly those of us living with HIV, rests in the hands of a comprehensive response to COVID-19. Sign the petition here.

Tell Congress that the health and safety of the entire nation, but particularly those of us living with HIV, rests in the hands of a comprehensive response to the coronavirus #COVID_19 epidemic.

. t.co/wxo9MZzrRF pic.twitter.com/bwMRXlJva4

— AIDS United (@AIDS_United) March 18, 2020

March 18, 2020

www.glaad.org/blog/glaad-joins-aids-united-and-over-90-organizations-calling-congress-recognize-increased

#queeractsofresistance

#queeractsofresistance

ciaran-frame posted a photo:

#queeractsofresistance

#queeractsofresistance – “Resistance is very much the appropriate word in my case. I spent most of my youth resisting who i was. I used to go to bed wishing so hard that i could be like everyone else, fantasising about waking up in the morning and being “cured.” Thankfully Im so much happier in my skin these days but im still Unpicking what it means to be a young gay person of colour in 2020. I think its something like this.. Being queer is like being a superhero, you have all these powers and strengths you don’t understand, and in the beginning it feel like a curse ,But once you learn how to use them, and overcome all the deamons you realise its actually a precious gift given to you at birth. The ability to spread love light and laughter on even the darkest of days.
I think the world needs a few more superhero’s right now. So just be yourself. It’s the only person you’ll ever be.” – Elander Moore

www.flickr.com/photos/ciaranframe/49673951508/