Time for Black Bears…

ImageApril showers may bring May flowers but, in the foothills of Southern California, you can also expect bears.

From May 1 to June 21, as grills fire up and tasty smells waft through the neighborhood, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife considers it “second bear season.”

The department spokesman, Andrew Hughan, told ABC News that he expects at least one bear a week for the next month.

So far, the bears have already been living up to his predictions. All around Southern California, news reports have shown bears climbing fences, spooking horses and roaming streets all in search of their next meal.

One woman in Duarte, Calif., came downstairs thinking there was a burglar in her home. Instead, she found a cub halfway through her kitchen window.

“You must have had something that smelled good in that kitchen,” the 911 operator told the woman, who had barricaded herself in her bedroom bathroom, according to the 911 recording obtained by ABC N

And that’s the problem.

As bears eat more human food or garbage, or even the fish out of the koi pond, they become habituated to a human food source and less frightened of people, according to the California Department of Fish and Wild Life website. This could lead to a more tenacious and even aggressive bear.

“Once a bear’s habituated, they cannot unlearn,” Hughan told ABC News. “It’s a death sentence.”

That’s because bears that stubbornly return time and again to scour the same neighborhood can be put down, according to the “black bear depredation policy” in California.

“We’ve moved bears 100 miles away and they’ll come back … following the scent trails.” Hughan said.

He added that one bear even came back to the very same trash can.

A bear’s sense of smell is 100 times better than a bloodhound’s and 1,000 times better than a human’s. So residents need to be smart.

Bottom line: If we don’t set the plate, bears will not come. Don’t leave food outside, secure your trash bins, and even clean barbecue grills.

There are ways to live with the bear population that is both safe for us and safe for them. Perhaps it could even evolve into a mutually beneficial relationship.

The Living With Wildlife Foundation (LWWF) in Montana works with bears at the Grizzly & Wolf Discovery Center wildlife park that can no longer live in the wild because they were orphaned young or habituated.

Patti Sowka, director of the LWWF, told ABC News that the bears can assist companies by testing “bear-proof” products filled with anything from huckleberry jam to muskrat castor oil to see if the items can live up to the product guarantee — a real-world take on quality control.

powerball2The estimated jackpot for Saturday’s Powerball drawing has swelled to a record $600 million for the popular lottery game, but one official estimated today that if it goes unclaimed the prize would zoom to nearly $1 billion.

The biggest lottery jackpot ever was $656 million for the Mega Millions drawing on March 30, 2012. The previous record for a Powerball jackpot was $587.5 million on Nov. 28, 2012.

The jackpot soared to $600 million after no one won Wednesday’s drawing. That would translate into a lump sum payment of $376.9 milliion.

The pot is expected to keep growing tonight and Saturday as the bonanza attracts even more people to take a chance. Tickets for Saturday’s drawing can be purchased until 9 p.m. ET Saturday.

If no one matches all five numbers plus the Powerball on Saturday, the jackpot will continue to grow. Kelly Cripe, media director for the Texas Lottery, which is one of the states in the Powerball lottery, said the next drawing would be May 22 and estimated the pot would be at least an astonishing $925 million. The frenzy of such a massive jackpot would likely push it even higher.

Carolyn Hapeman, spokeswoman for the New York lottery said as of mid-day on Friday, the Empire State was selling over 600,000 tickets an hour.

Part of the boost in ticket sales is the addition of California in April to the list of states that participate in the Powerball game. The lottery game is now played in 43 states, Washington, D.C. and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

“Now you have another 11 million people with the addition of California. You’ve got all these players, maybe some for the first time because of the extreme nature of the jackpot, the largest ever for this particular game,” Hapeman said.

Read more: Seven States That Won’t Cash In On Powerball

This current jackpot began rolling on April 3 with a mere $40 million jackpot, but has grown as no winner has emerged in several drawings.

Hapeman also attributes the growing popularity of the game to its makeover last year in celebration of its 20th anniversary. That’s when the jackpot increased to $40 million from $20 million and the second prize, which requires just five matching numbers, jumped to $1 million from $250,000.

The odds of winning the grand prize are one in 175,223,510, according to the Powerball website. The odds of winning the second prize are one in 5,153,632.65.

With the “brisk sales,” Hapeman encouraged New Yorkers not to wait until the last minute if they choose to participate.

For the $578.5 million jackpot last November, lines formed around the block in New York City.

“Don’t be one of those last people. Or if there’s an office pool, don’t be the guy that doesn’t get in,” she said.

Because Hapeman works for the state lottery, she isn’t eligible to participate.

“I want to, but I can’t,” she said

Newlywed Dies in Devistating Limo Fire………Such Tragedy…

limo fire

Overnight Bride dies in Limo fire that killed several in the wedding party.  Inside the limo was nine women only four survived out of the wedding party one of which was not the bride.  The flames reportedly spread so fast that the others just didn’t have time to escape.  Tragedy again strikes America and a newly wed couple never make it to there honeymoon.

The husband was at the motel with the rest of the wedding party where his bride never made it.  My question now turns to the inspection of such transportation vehicles.

Does Limos and other transportation services have to undergo inspections as a public transportation vehicles? Or, are they like many other businesses in America not monitored at all?  Today my prayers go out to the family and all those families involved with this terrible fire.  I do really wander, what type of inspections these vehicles undergo?

As we all know it is the time for proms and graduations things every teen wants a limo for.  Hopefully, each owner will take the time to inspect there cars before they put unsuspecting party goers, whom are already usually intoxicated, in the back of limos that doors don’t readily open.  Below I have added an opinion poll to get your comments and yes or no on the controversy over public vehicles.  Is this public transportation or not?

Alyssa Newcomb with ABC news wrote the following article concerning the matter…

Investigators hope that the four people who escaped a limousine fire, in which a newlywed and four other women died, will offer key information about what started the weekend blaze as they crossed a San Francisco-area bridge.

Nine women were in the limo, along with a male driver, when it caught fire in the westbound lane of the San Mateo-Hayward Bridge late Saturday, California Highway Patrol said.

The bride was identified as 31-year-old Neriza Fojas. Fojas, a registered nurse, was recently married in the United States and was planning a second ceremony in the Philippines next month. Fojas and her friends were on their way to the Crowne Plaza Hotel for her bridal shower, where her husband was waiting, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

The driver, who was not hurt, told investigators he was driving the women over the bridge when one of them complained of smoke inside the passenger compartment, San Mateo County Coroner Robert Foucrault said, according to The Associated Press.

By the time the driver pulled over and exited the 1999 Lincoln Town car, the back of the limo was fully engulfed in flames. Four passengers escaped the blaze, with one squeezing thought the partition behind the driver.

Firefighters rushed to the scene and put out the fire before finding five badly burned bodies huddled near the partition.

PHOTO: Nine women were in a limo, along with a male driver, when it caught fire on the San Mateo-Hayward Bridge, California Highway Patrol said.
ABC
Nine women were in a limo, along with a male… View Full Size

“My guess would be they were trying to get away from the fire and use that window opening as an escape route,” Foucrault said.

The San Mateo County Coroner’s Office has not officially released the names of the women killed in the fire.

The owner of the limousine company, Limo Stop, told ABC News in a statement that he’s deeply saddened and will do everything possible to investigate and assist authorities.

Police say it is unclear how the fire started and will be counting on surviving victims to give their accounts leading up to the inferno. The flames reportedly spread so fast that the rest of the women sitting in the back of the limo had no time to escape.

Other drivers stopped to assist, California Highway Patrol Officer Amelia Jack told ABC News.

“The driver was able to get out, some good Samaritans did stop and assist and try and pull people from the fire,” Jack said.

Russell McGillicuddy, owner of Air One Limousine Service in San Jose, Calif., said the 1999 Lincoln Town car only had two doors in the back.

“It was an aged piece of equipment and I don’t believe it had the extra door and they would have to climb over each other and exit through the rear doors,” said McGillicuddy, who has no connection to the limo in question.

Friends fondly remembered Fojas as likeable and active.

“She was nice person, quiet and friendly,” Roy Talagon said.

Ivy Savero said, “I always saw her in her Facebook that she’s riding a bike … sometimes, I think, mountain climbing.”

California Highway Patrol identified the surviving passengers as Mary Grace Guardiano, 42, of Alameda; Nelia Rafael Arellano, 36, of Oakland; Amalia P. Loyola, 48, of San Leandro; and Jasmine Desguia, 34, of San Jose.

Desguia and Loyola were listed in critical condition, a spokeswoman for Valley Medical Center told the AP. The condition of Arrellano, who was taken to another hospital, was unknown. Guardiano’s condition is unclear.

The driver’s name is Orville F. Brown, 46, of San Jose from Limo Stop Inc., according to California Highway Patrol.