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Saul Degraw on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25Randy Fine wins FL-6 according to the Times with 53.9 percent of the vote to Weil getting 45.4 perce…
Marchmaine in reply to InMD on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25It's not the very best Jon Stewart clip... but as far as digesting a pretty boring speaker (Cass), i…
Saul Degraw on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25Cory Booker has exceeded Thurmond’s speaking record and he is still going. Schiff, Gallego, and Schu…
Marchmaine in reply to InMD on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25I think JB is wrong about McCain/Romney and I don't think he's GHWB... so let me see if I can break…
InMD in reply to Jaybird on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25My read of Cass is he's trying to grope towards a new synthesis of the right of center. From the ess…
InMD in reply to Marchmaine on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25Maybe I need to read him more to get that. I read the substack post on the 3 demands that seemed to…
Dark Matter in reply to David TC on Trump’s Most Insidious Scheme (So Far)I put down only facts. I gave no personal evaluation at all. However since you asked: I am strongly…
Marchmaine in reply to InMD on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25I think the premise that someone like Cass is working with is that Trump and Musk *aren't* on-board.…
Jaybird in reply to InMD on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25Musk seems to have flipped from Grey to Red (though who knows how long that will last). Cass is an o…
InMD in reply to Jaybird on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25Eh maybe...? I mean admittedly I am not the closest Musk follower but my take on him is that his two…

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Dark Matter in reply to Chris on A Grudging Concession About Something Trump Did
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InMD in reply to Marchmaine on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
David TC in reply to Dark Matter on Trump’s Most Insidious Scheme (So Far)
Jaybird on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
Marchmaine on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
Chris in reply to Brandon Berg on A Grudging Concession About Something Trump Did
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Dark Matter in reply to David TC on Trump’s Most Insidious Scheme (So Far)
Brandon Berg on A Grudging Concession About Something Trump Did
DavidTC on A Grudging Concession About Something Trump Did
David TC on Trump’s Most Insidious Scheme (So Far)
David TC in reply to David TC on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
David TC in reply to Saul Degraw on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
Saul Degraw in reply to David TC on Open Mic for the week of 3/31/25
It’s surprising how much of the first problem still exists almost a hundred years later. There are >750 combined sanitary/storm sewer systems in the country, concentrated mostly in the northeast quarter (north and east of the center of Kansas) plus a cluster in Oregon and Washington, that periodically dump raw sewage into nearby surface water. The models suggest climate change will increase the frequency by increasing the number of extreme precipitation events. The price tag to fix the problem will run to something over a trillion dollars.Report
We’ve got that problem here – in the old parts of town, the storm water drains and sewage outlets from buildings go into one sewer system. Most of the time, it all goes to the sewage plant, but when it rains too heavily for the connections to the sewage plant to route all the water (which it does several times a year) the overflow goes directly into the river.
Greywater systems are not allowed, so that avenue of limiting demands on the sewage system isn’t available. If it were, I might not be feeling so wasteful watering the yard with drinking water all the time.Report
Milwaukee is sort of the poster child for fixing things. Over 25 years they dug almost 30 miles of deep tunnel (300 feet or so down), 17-30 feet in diameter, lined with concrete. Excess sewer flow gets dumped there, to be pumped out and treated later. Overflow incidents were cut from about 50 per year to two. The price tag was almost $3B, much of it paid for by federal grants. The grant program has been replaced with loans. Detroit has a similarly-scaled problem, and not a prayer of being able to pay for a fix.
Separated systems aren’t problem-free, of course. Front Range Colorado had a huge rain event in 2013 and water ingress into the sanitary sewers came worryingly close to exceeding the treatment plant’s limit in my suburban city (pop >115,000). The city recently finished a five-year project that put cured-in-place liners in all the sewer mains that weren’t PVC. The liners have, for practical purposes, eliminated storm water ingress.Report