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Black Lives Matter protestors and public artworks around the Statehouse & Capitol Square - downtown Columbus,OH.
With the youth on your side, you have the future in your hands. BLM demonstration 2020.
Takumar 135mm F2.5
By: Larry Moore; BLM
The 2015 Soda Fire burned nearly 280,000 acres in southwest Idaho and southeast Oregon, including nearly 200,000 acres of sage-grouse habitat, portions of 41 grazing allotments, three wild horse management areas, and a popular motorized and non-motorized recreation area. Due to the location of the fire and its effect on federal, state and private lands, a collaborative approach was taken to assess values at risk within the entire burned area. The Soda Fire Emergency Stabilization and Rehabilitation (ESR) plan was the first large scale fire to be planned and implemented following the release of Secretarial Order 3336 – Rangeland Fire Prevention, Management and Restoration.
The collaborative concept was carried forward with the development and implementation of the ESR effort. This level of collaboration which involved US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), Idaho Department of Lands (IDL), Idaho Department of Fish & Game (IDFG) and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is not typical of ESR efforts, but has been successful and supported. The Record of Decision was issued by the Boise and Vale Districts on October 21. The plan identified treatments to begin stabilizing the burned area, promote the recovery of native communities, increase perennial grasses, reduce invasive annual species, and restore shrubs and forbs to take the first steps toward the recovery of habitat for the greater sage-grouse. BLM continues to work with our partners through monitoring,
the development of grazing rest and resumption decisions, and adaptive management.
Mural entitled "Storytime (BLM)" by Lacy “Lacerrrr” Talley, Michelle Suells, Aldonte Flonnoy, and Niquo Braxton. seen on the side of the Moodie Building at 410 E. 156th Street in Cleveland, Ohio.
The mural shows a young Black child under a tree, reading a story about his ethnicity and his family, the mural is reminiscent of the 1994 McCauley Calkin live-action animated film “Pagemaster.” In the mural, seven pages of the book are open, and each of the four artists were free to interpret their own pages in whatever way they wanted.
Photo by James aka Urbanmuralhunter on that other photo site.
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