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Tag: river

  • As a Colorado River deadline passes, reservoirs keep declining

    The leaders of seven states failed to negotiate a deal to share the diminishing waters of the Colorado River by a Trump administration deadline on Saturday, leaving the Southwest in a quagmire with uncertain repercussions while the river’s depleted reservoirs continue to decline.

    Former U.S. Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt said in an interview with The Times that the impasse now appears so intractable that Trump administration officials should take a step back, abandon the current effort and begin all over again.

    Babbitt said he believes it would be a mistake for Interior Secretary Doug Burgum to “try to impose a long-term solution” by ordering major water cuts across the Southwest — which would likely set off a lengthy court battle.

    “We need a fresh start,” Babbitt said. “I believe that in the absence of a unanimous agreement, [the Interior Department] should renew the existing agreements for five years, and then we should start all over. We should scrap the entire process and invent a new one.”

    Officials for the seven states have tried to boost reservoir levels via voluntary water cutbacks and federal payments to farmers who agree to leave fields dry part of the year. But after more than two years of trying to hash out new long-term rules for sharing water, they remain deadlocked; the existing rules are set to expire at the end of this year.

    The states similarly blew past an earlier federal deadline in November.

    Interior Department officials have not said how they will respond. The agency is considering four options for imposing cutbacks starting next year, as well as the option of taking no action.

    Babbitt, who was Interior secretary under President Clinton from 1993 to 2001, said he thinks the Trump administration’s options are too narrow and inadequate. They would place the burden of water cuts on Arizona, California and Nevada while not requiring any for the four other upriver states — Colorado, Utah, Wyoming and New Mexico.

    Without a consensus, the only reasonable approach is to extend existing water-saving agreements for a few years while making a new push for solutions, Babbitt said.

    Federal officials have “missed the opportunity” to take a strong leadership role, he said, and it’s time to reimagine the effort as a “much more inclusive, public, broad” process.

    The river provides for about 35 million people and 5 million acres of farmland, from the Rocky Mountains to northern Mexico. California uses more water than any other state but has cut back substantially in recent years.

    Since 2000, relentless drought intensified by climate change has sapped the river’s flow and left reservoirs depleted. This winter’s record warmth and lack of storms has left the Rockies with very little snow.

    Lake Mead, the river’s largest reservoir, is now 34% full, while Lake Powell is at 26%.

    “Our states have conserved large volumes of water in recent years,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a joint statement with Arizona’s Katie Hobbs and Nevada’s Joe Lombardo. “Our stance remains firm and fair: all seven basin states must share in the responsibility of conservation.”

    The states’ positions haven’t changed much in the last two years, said JB Hamby, California’s lead negotiator, and moving toward an agreement will require firm commitments for cuts by all.

    Officials representing the four Upper Basin states said they’ve offered compromises and are prepared to continue negotiating. In a written statement, they stressed they are already dealing with substantial water cuts, and said their downstream neighbors are trying to secure water “that simply does not exist.”

    The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation’s latest forecast shows the amount of runoff flowing into Lake Powell will decrease so dramatically this year that the dropping reservoir levels could render Glen Canyon Dam unable to continue generating electricity.

    The Interior Department said in a written statement Saturday that it will finalize new rules by Oct. 1, and it “cannot delay action.” The agency is accepting comments from the public as part of its review of options until March 2.

    “Negotiation efforts have been productive,” Burgum said. “We believe that a fair compromise with shared responsibility remains within reach.”

    Ian James

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  • News We Love: ‘Banks,’ a dog pulled from a muddy Iowa river, may soon have a new home

    A Great Pyrenees dubbed “Banks” was rescued Wednesday after getting stuck in mud along a river in Iowa, prompting a boat response from the Marshalltown Fire Department because the heavily wooded area prevented police from reaching the dog on foot.”They tried to reach him by foot, and they couldn’t, so they asked us to take our boat out,” said Deputy Fire Chief Curt Raue.Firefighters freed the dog quickly. “This one was as textbook as it could be,” said Raue.Banks was turned over to the Marshalltown Animal Rescue League, where veterinarians cleared him. “Vets gave us a clear bill of health,” said Austin Gillis, the executive director of the Animal Rescue League of Marshalltown.Gillis says the positive outcome was helped by the dog’s thick coat and the fact that he was in mud, not water. “If the animal is dry, we’ve got time to make this as safe as possible,” Gillis said.Less than a day after his rescue, Banks was energetic, though still caked with mud, and expected to be cleaned up after grooming. No information has been released about possible owners or how he ended up there. For the time being, “Banks” will be cared for by the Animal Rescue League of Marshalltown.It is likely he will not be there very long.Deputy Chief Raue says a firefighter who played a role in the rescue has filed paperwork to adopt him, saying Banks “made an impression on a lot of the people who rescued him.”

    A Great Pyrenees dubbed “Banks” was rescued Wednesday after getting stuck in mud along a river in Iowa, prompting a boat response from the Marshalltown Fire Department because the heavily wooded area prevented police from reaching the dog on foot.

    “They tried to reach him by foot, and they couldn’t, so they asked us to take our boat out,” said Deputy Fire Chief Curt Raue.

    Firefighters freed the dog quickly.

    “This one was as textbook as it could be,” said Raue.

    Banks was turned over to the Marshalltown Animal Rescue League, where veterinarians cleared him.

    “Vets gave us a clear bill of health,” said Austin Gillis, the executive director of the Animal Rescue League of Marshalltown.

    Gillis says the positive outcome was helped by the dog’s thick coat and the fact that he was in mud, not water.

    “If the animal is dry, we’ve got time to make this as safe as possible,” Gillis said.

    Less than a day after his rescue, Banks was energetic, though still caked with mud, and expected to be cleaned up after grooming.

    No information has been released about possible owners or how he ended up there.

    For the time being, “Banks” will be cared for by the Animal Rescue League of Marshalltown.

    It is likely he will not be there very long.

    Deputy Chief Raue says a firefighter who played a role in the rescue has filed paperwork to adopt him, saying Banks “made an impression on a lot of the people who rescued him.”

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  • Woman whose body was pulled from Santa Ana River is identified as a mother of two

    A woman whose body was pulled from the Santa Ana River in Orange County on New Year’s Day has been identified as 39-year-old Alejandra Ramirez Torres, coroner’s officials said. Her body had been carried by the river’s current from Santa Ana to Fountain Valley before it could be retrieved by fire crews.

    Ramirez Torres was the mother of two daughters, ages 11 and 16, according to a GoFundMe page created by her relatives.

    Orange County fire officials said crews responded to 911 calls before noon Thursday after bystanders reported seeing a body in the river near Warner Avenue and Harbor Boulevard.

    Some 60 firefighters responded to the scene, including swift-water rescue teams. They found Ramirez Torres’ body south of the river’s juncture with the 405 Freeway, north of the Gisler Avenue river trail in Costa Mesa, about 1.5 miles from where witnesses first saw the woman.

    A ladder truck was used to lower a rescuer to the water and retrieve Ramirez Torres, who was pronounced dead at the scene, officials said.

    “This sudden and heartbreaking loss has deeply affected our family. We are doing everything we can to support Alejandra’s girls as they face an uncertain future without their mother,” states the GoFundMe page, which relatives said was set up to cover the costs of Ramirez Torres’ funeral and provide support for her daughters.

    The woman was a possible transient at the time of her death, Orange County Sheriff’s Department spokesperson Sgt. Lizbeth Gwisdalla confirmed Friday to the Daily Pilot.

    How and why she entered the river was not known.

    Cardine writes for The Times’ sister publication the Daily Pilot.

    Stacy Perman, Sara Cardine

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  • California’s 1st snow survey of the season to measure snowpack so far after recent storms

    California officials on Tuesday are set to conduct their first measurement of the state’s snowpack so far this season.The California Department of Water Resources (DWR) will be at the Phillips Station along Highway 50 in the Sierra to see how much snow the mountains have picked up after recent snowstorms. The water year, which began in October, had a dismal start until recently, when ski resorts reported several feet of fresh powder.| VIDEO PLAYER ABOVE | The snow survey begins at 11 a.m. Watch above when it beginsSnow is a major contributor to California’s water supply, so DWR’s monthly snow surveys serve a vital role in gauging how much water the state will receive from snow when it all melts into rivers and lakes.That includes Folsom Lake. Data from DWR show that the lake is currently at 136% of its average for this time of year and at 56% of its overall capacity.Across the Sierra, snowpack amounts as of Dec. 30 vary. DWR’s website indicates that the Northern Region is at 51% of average for this time of year. Meanwhile, the Central Region is at 72%, while the Southern Region is at 94%.The survey begins at 11 a.m. Tuesday.Years can vary for the state’s snowpack by the end of the season. Some years have had strong starts but finish below average if the weeks or months that follow stay dry. There have also been dry starts to the season that are balanced out by stronger storms later on.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    California officials on Tuesday are set to conduct their first measurement of the state’s snowpack so far this season.

    The California Department of Water Resources (DWR) will be at the Phillips Station along Highway 50 in the Sierra to see how much snow the mountains have picked up after recent snowstorms. The water year, which began in October, had a dismal start until recently, when ski resorts reported several feet of fresh powder.

    | VIDEO PLAYER ABOVE | The snow survey begins at 11 a.m. Watch above when it begins

    Snow is a major contributor to California’s water supply, so DWR’s monthly snow surveys serve a vital role in gauging how much water the state will receive from snow when it all melts into rivers and lakes.

    That includes Folsom Lake. Data from DWR show that the lake is currently at 136% of its average for this time of year and at 56% of its overall capacity.

    Across the Sierra, snowpack amounts as of Dec. 30 vary. DWR’s website indicates that the Northern Region is at 51% of average for this time of year. Meanwhile, the Central Region is at 72%, while the Southern Region is at 94%.

    The survey begins at 11 a.m. Tuesday.

    Years can vary for the state’s snowpack by the end of the season. Some years have had strong starts but finish below average if the weeks or months that follow stay dry. There have also been dry starts to the season that are balanced out by stronger storms later on.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

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  • Violent conflict over water hit a record last year

    In Algeria, water shortages left faucets dry, prompting protesters to riot and set tires ablaze.

    In Gaza, as people waited for water at a community tap, an Israeli drone fired on them, killing eight.

    In Ukraine, Russian rockets slammed into the country’s largest dam, unleashing a plume of fire over the hydroelectric plant and causing widespread blackouts.

    These are some of the 420 water-related conflicts researchers documented for 2024 in the latest update of the Pacific Institute’s Water Conflict Chronology, a global database of water-related violence.

    The year featured a record number of violent incidents over water around the world, far surpassing the 355 in 2023, continuing a steeply rising trend. The violence more than quadrupled in the last five years.

    The new data from the Oakland-based water think tank show also that drinking water wells, pipes and dams are increasingly coming under attack.

    “In almost every region of the world, there is more and more violence being reported over water,” said Peter Gleick, the Pacific Institute’s co-founder and senior fellow, and it “underscores the urgent need for international attention.”

    The researchers collect information from news reports and other sources and accounts. They classify it into three categories: instances in which water was a trigger of violence, water systems were targeted and water was a “casualty” of violence, for example when shell fragments hit a water tank.

    Not every case involves injuries or deaths but many do.

    The region with the most violent incidents was the Middle East, with 138 reported. That included 66 in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, both in Gaza and the West Bank.

    In the West Bank there were numerous reports of Israeli settlers destroying water pipelines and tanks and attacking Palestinian farmers.

    In Gaza the Israeli military destroyed more than 30 wells in the southern towns of Rafah and Khan Younis.

    Gleick noted that when the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli and Hamas leaders last year, accusing them of crimes against humanity, the charges mentioned Israeli military attacks on Gaza water systems.

    “It is an acknowledgment that these attacks are violations of international law,” he said. “There ought to be more enforcement of international laws protecting water systems from attacks.”

    Water systems also were targeted frequently in the Russia-Ukraine war, in which the researchers tallied 51 violent incidents.

    People fill water in bottles.

    Residents collect water in bottles in Pokrovsk, Ukraine, where repeated Russian shelling has left civilians without functioning infrastructure.

    (George Ivanchenko / Associated Press)

    Russian strikes disrupted water service in Ukrainian cities, and oil spilled into a river after Russian forces attacked an oil depot.

    “These aren’t water wars. These are wars in which water is being used as a weapon or is a casualty of the conflict,” Gleick said.

    The researchers also found water scarcity and drought are prompting a growing number of violent conflicts.

    “Climate change is making those problems worse,” Gleick said.

    Many conflicts were in South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa.

    In India, residents angry about water shortages assaulted a city worker.

    In India, a woman carries a container of drinking water filled from leaking water pipes.

    In Jammu, India, a woman carries a container of drinking water filled from leaking water pipes in March.

    (Channi Anand / Associated Press)

    In Cameroon, rice farmers clashed with fishers, leaving one dead and three injured.

    At a refugee camp in Kenya, three people died in a fight over drinking water.

    There’s an increase in conflicts over irrigation, disputes pitting farmers against cities, and violence arising in places where only some water is safe to drink.

    A man carries jugs to fetch water from a hole in the sandy riverbed.

    A man carries jugs to fetch water from a hole in the sandy riverbed in Makueni County, Kenya in February 2024.

    (Brian Inganga / Associated Press)

    Gleick, who has been studying water-related violence for more than three decades, said the purpose of the list is to raise awareness and encourage policymakers to act to reduce fighting, bloodshed and turmoil.

    The United Nations, in its Sustainable Development Goals, says every person should have access to water and sanitation.

    “The failure to do that is inexcusable and it contributes to a lot of misery,” Gleick said. “It contributes to ill health, cholera, dysentery, typhoid, water-related diseases, and it contributes to conflicts over water.”

    In Latin America, there were dozens of violent incidents involving water last year.

    In the Mexican state of Veracruz, protesters were blocking a road to denounce a pork processing plant, which they accused of using too much water and spewing pollution, when police opened fire, killing two men.

    In Honduras, environmental activist Juan López, who had spoken up to protect rivers from mining, was gunned down as he left church. He was the fourth member of his group to be murdered.

    A man fills containers with water due to the shortage caused by high temperatures.

    A man fills containers with water because of a shortage caused by high temperatures and drought in Veracruz, Mexico in June 2024.

    (Felix Marquez / Associated Press)

    “There needs to be more attention on this issue, especially at the international level, but at the national level as well,” said Morgan Shimabuku, a senior researcher with the Pacific Institute. “It is getting worse, and we need to turn that tide.”

    For 2024, there were few events in the U.S., but among them were cyberattacks on water utilities in Texas and Indiana.

    In one, Russian hackers claimed responsibility for tampering with an Indiana wastewater treatment plant. Authorities said the attack caused minimal disruption. In another, a pro-Russian hacktivist group manipulated systems at water facilities in small Texas towns, causing water to overflow.

    The Pacific Institute’s database now lists more than 2,750 conflicts. Most have occurred since 2000. The researchers are adding incidents from 2025 as well as previous years.

    During extreme drought in Iran worsened by climate change, farmers were desperate enough to go up against security forces, demanding access to river water. Iran’s water crisis, compounded by decades of excessive groundwater pumping, has grown so severe that the president said Tehran no longer can remain the capital and the government will have to move it to another city.

    Tensions also have been growing between Iran and Afghanistan over the Helmand River, with Iranian leaders accusing their upstream neighbor of not letting enough water flow into the country.

    Gleick said if the drought persists and the Iranian government doesn’t improve how it manages water, “I would expect to see more violence.”

    Ian James

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  • Melanie Winter, who fought for embracing nature along the Los Angeles River, dies

    Melanie Winter, who dedicated much of her life to reimagining the Los Angeles River as a natural asset, has died. She was 67.

    Winter worked persistently for nearly three decades to spread her alternative vision for the river and its watershed, calling for “unbuilding” where feasible, removing concrete and reactivating stretches of natural floodplains where the river could spread out.

    Leading her nonprofit group the River Project, she championed efforts to embrace nature along the river, saying that allowing space for a meandering waterway lined with riparian forests would help recharge groundwater, reduce flood risks and allow a green oasis to flourish in the heart of Los Angeles.

    She developed ambitious plans for rewilding parts of the river channel and nearby areas, and helped spearhead new riverfront parks as well as neighborhood “urban acupuncture” projects that replaced asphalt with permeable paving, allowing rainwater to percolate underground instead of running in concrete channels to the ocean.

    Melanie Winter and her dog, Maisie, look over the L.A. River near the Sepulveda Basin.

    “She was a voice for nature and a voice for the river,” said Rita Kampalath, L.A. County’s chief sustainability officer and a longtime friend of Winter’s. “She had such strength of her convictions, and she was so clear-eyed in the vision that she wanted to push forward. And I think that inspired a lot of people.”

    Winter had lung cancer but continued working and attending local water meetings even as her health declined. She died Tuesday night at a Los Angeles hospital where friends had been visiting to spend a little last time together.

    “I think what always drove her was the sense of, it was a river that had been contained in concrete … and that nature-based solutions could do a better job,” said Conner Everts, a friend and leader of the Southern California Watershed Alliance. “Her goal was to re-create a natural meandering river, with the ability to recharge into the [San Fernando] Valley and restore nature, as much as possible.”

    Winter was born in 1958 and grew up in the Valley.

    She was a talented dancer, and at 17 moved to New York City to start a career as a dancer and actor. She performed in Broadway shows and several Hollywood films, and also found work as a photographer, making black-and-white portraits of actors including Bruce Willis, Helen Hunt and Val Kilmer.

    She left the city in 1991 and moved back to L.A., where she gravitated toward other art forms and social activism.

    In 1993, to raise awareness about breast cancer, she made plaster casts of hundreds of women’s torsos and placed them in a cemetery-like installation on a lawn.

    Melanie Winter admires the lush surroundings during a canoe trip on the L.A. River in the Sepulveda Basin in 2024.

    Melanie Winter admires the lush surroundings during a canoe trip on the L.A. River in the Sepulveda Basin in 2024.

    She organized a river cleanup for the group Friends of the Los Angeles River, and then a pivotal moment came in 1996 when she attended a meeting where she heard activist Dorothy Green eloquently describe how concrete channels had starved the life from waterways, and how the city could make room for the river once again. Green became her mentor.

    Winter worked for a time as executive director of Friends of the Los Angeles River, then left to start the River Project in 2001.

    She sued developers and the city to challenge a planned development by the river, and organized a community coalition to push for a new state park. In 2007, she and others celebrated the opening of Rio de Los Angeles State Park.

    Winter spoke passionately about the need for a network of parks “along the backbone system of our waterways,” saying this can boost ecosystems, improve air quality and protect public health. The lush, shady vegetation along restored stretches of river, she said, can provide natural cooling, helping the city become more resilient to climate change.

    “I want to reverse-engineer us to a better future,” Winter said in an interview in 2024. “It would be a living river instead of a concrete river.”

    Melanie Winter at Rio de Los Angeles State Park, on a bench designed by local artists commemorating its founding

    At Rio de Los Angeles State Park, Melanie Winter sits on a bench designed by local artists to commemorate the park’s founding.

    Winter was steadfast and uncompromising as she faced resistance from engineers and local officials who preferred traditional hard-infrastructure approaches.

    “Engineers just can’t wrap their heads around the idea that nature can do it cheaper, better, easier than they can,” she said. “If you want a livable Los Angeles, then I fully believe that flipping the script on how we treat our waterways is central to it all.”

    Three years ago, her group published a study outlining a proposal to restore the river and its tributaries in the Sepulveda Basin and transform the area into the “green heart” of the Valley, reducing the size of three golf courses and opening wide corridors where the river and creeks would spread out in the floodplains.

    Winter was disappointed when the city released a plan for the area that she said failed to prioritize restoration.

    “Even though she met with so much resistance over the years, she didn’t lose her optimism and her strong desire to make positive change,” said Melissa von Mayrhauser, a doctoral student at UC Berkeley who interviewed Winter for her research and became a friend. “I’m inspired by her vision, and I have brought that into my research, and I plan to continue working on a career in river restoration.”

    She said Winter’s legacy includes not only the parks and neighborhood projects she completed, but also vital plans and concepts that can still be adopted throughout the watershed, and along other rivers.

    “Thanks to Melanie, there are so many more people imagining a living L.A. River than ever before,” she said.

    Melanie Winter leaves the site of a shuttered quarry with her dog.

    Melanie Winter leaves the site of a shuttered quarry with her dog, Maisie, in 2024. She supported a proposal to convert two old gravel quarry pits into giant reservoirs where storm runoff could be routed to recharge the aquifer and reduce flood dangers downstream.

    Near Winter’s home in Studio City sits a small riverside park shaded by cottonwood trees, where the native plants attract hummingbirds. There is a bench shaped like a butterfly, a retaining wall with a snake sculpture, and a green metal gate with an arch in the form of a giant toad.

    In the early 2000s, Winter started envisioning the park, called Valleyheart Greenway, and invited a group of fourth- and fifth-grade students to design the garden landscape.

    When the park opened in 2004, Winter said it wasn’t just about planting the garden, but also about instilling in the children a connection to their river.

    Learning about the river, she said, created a group of “children with a fierce sense of place and a fierce determination to protect what’s left and to bring back as much as we can.”

    Ian James

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  • Body Parts Found in Tualatin River Identified – KXL

    Since August 8th, 2025, Detectives with the Washington County Sheriff’s Office Major Crimes Team (MCT) have investigated the discovery of human remains found in the Tualatin River.  A kayaker found one body part on August 8th near the boat ramp of Rood Bridge Park.  A second body part was located approximately 1 mile downriver from the first body part on August 9th.

    Detectives believed that both body parts belonged to the same person but needed DNA analysis to confirm the identity.  Detectives worked in conjunction with the Oregon State Medical Examiner’s Office and the Oregon State Police Crime Lab to confirm the identity of the unidentified human remains.

    The victim has been identified as 34-year-old Ezequiel Avila-Ruiz. Avila Ruiz was known to camp in multiple areas, including around Rood Bridge Park. The Oregon State Police Crime Lab was able to confirm his identity using familial DNA comparison with living relatives. Avila-Ruiz’s family has been notified and is requesting privacy at this time.

    Detectives believe Avila-Ruiz was the victim of homicide and would like to speak with anyone who has information about Avila-Ruiz’s whereabouts after he was last seen on July 31st, 2025, near SE Baseline St and South First Ave in Hillsboro at approximately 5:40 p.m.

    Please contact detectives at the Sheriff’s Office by calling the Investigations Division at (503) 846-2500, referencing Avila-Ruiz and case number 50-25-11037.

    Original Media Release: Detectives Investigate Body Parts Found in Tualatin River

    On Friday, August 8, 2025, at 5:09 p.m., Washington County Sheriff’s Office deputies responded to Rood Bridge Park in Hillsboro after a recreational kayaker discovered a body part in the Tualatin River.

    Detectives from the Washington County Major Crimes Team (MCT) were dispatched to assist with the investigation, aided by searchers from several supporting teams. On August 9th, searchers discovered a second body part in the river but are not disclosing additional information at this time.

    The investigation is ongoing, and the identity of the victim has not been determined. The Medical Examiner’s office determines any information regarding the cause or manner of death.

    The Sheriff’s Office was supported by marine units, K9, a dive team, and ground searchers from the Clackamas and Columbia County Sheriff’s Offices. Searchers are continuing their efforts as additional information is discovered.

    If you have information about this incident and have not spoken to detectives, please contact the Sheriff’s Office Investigations Division at 503-846-2500, referencing case number 50-25-11037.

    Brett Reckamp

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  • Driver Identified In Deadly Columbia River Crash – KXL

    PORTLAND, Ore. – The driver killed in a single-vehicle crash Saturday has been identified as 43-year-old Guillermo Soto Briceno of Portland, authorities confirmed.

    Briceno’s body was recovered from the Columbia River following the crash near Northeast Marine Drive and Northeast 122nd Avenue. The Multnomah County Medical Examiner’s Office made the identification, and his family has been notified.

    Emergency crews responded around 8:01 a.m. on Aug. 2 after reports of a damaged guardrail and a vehicle overturned in a shallow part of the river. When officers arrived, the vehicle was found empty.

    Portland Fire & Rescue, the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office River Patrol and the U.S. Coast Guard assisted in the search for the missing driver. The Major Crash Team with the Portland Police Bureau later joined the investigation due to the likelihood of a fatality.

    The vehicle was eventually removed from the water. No other occupants were found.

    Anyone with information about the crash is asked to contact the Portland Police Bureau’s Traffic Investigations Unit at [email protected] and reference case number 25-207638.

    Traffic in the area was temporarily restricted but has since reopened.

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    Grant McHill

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  • Should L.A. look to ‘sponge cities’ to solve its flooding problem?

    In 2019, when the Thai government announced plans to turn an abandoned tobacco factory in the nation’s smoggy capital into a public park, Bangkok-based landscape architect Chatchanin Sung saw an opportunity to address another of the city’s chronic problems: flooding.

    For Bangkok, a city of 11 million sitting on low-lying swampland, the management of its water has increasingly become a matter of survival. With the capital facing more frequent and extreme rainfall as well as rising sea levels due to climate change, experts have warned that entire swaths of the city may be underwater within the next few decades.

    Los Angeles knows how to weather a crisis — or two or three. Angelenos are tapping into that resilience, striving to build a city for everyone.

    Like Los Angeles, where intensifying droughts and floods have revealed limitations of conventional flood control systems like the L.A. River, Chatchanin felt that Bangkok’s own stormwater infrastructure had reached its tipping point.

    An aerial view shows pathways through the Benjakitti Park in Bangkok.

    An aerial view shows pathways through the Benjakitti Park in Bangkok.

    (Krit Phromsakla Na Sakolnakorn / Associated Press)

    Decades of rapid urban development have encased the city with impermeable concrete surfaces that hinder the natural drainage of water. As a result, the city’s network of over 1,600 urban canals, which were once used for transporting goods and people but now primarily act as stormwater channels, are regularly overwhelmed.

    “Because the canal water mixes with public sewage, the water quality is really bad,” Chatchanin said. “The park project was an opportunity to absorb and clean this water.”

    To design the new space, a 102-acre expansion to the pre-existing Benjakitti Park, Chatchanin partnered with Kongjian Yu, a Beijing-based landscape architect who has long advocated what is known as a “sponge city” model of urban water management.

    The idea is that, unlike “gray” infrastructure, which is designed to flush water away as quickly as possible, cities like Bangkok can mitigate flood risk simply by making its surfaces more absorbent like a sponge, capturing stormwater before it can turn into runoff that pollutes streets and strains drainage systems.

    Their winning design, which was opened to the public three years ago, was realized in just 18 months and reflects the idea that such urban water management systems can also provide valuable aesthetic and recreational benefits to communities.

    Today, the former brownfield is a popular bird-watching spot. It features forested walkways alongside badminton and pickleball courts built in repurposed cigarette warehouses, all the while capturing and cleaning water.

    People take a rest at Benjakitti Park, which is now a popular bird-watching spot.

    People take a rest at Benjakitti Park in Bangkok.

    (Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press)

    Fed by a nearby canal, a long system of wetlands containing thickets of aquatic plants removes pollutants from the water as it winds around the park’s perimeter, releasing what’s left into a large pond dotted with small islets.

    This, alongside the park’s porous landscape and additional retention ponds, enable it to capture 23 million gallons of stormwater during Bangkok’s rainiest months. The water that’s entering permeable earth instead of being blocked by concrete is helping to replenish natural underground reservoirs that benefit humans and the environment.

    “Last year we had really heavy rains,” Chatchanin said. “The park also flooded but eventually absorbed it much more quickly.”

    The park's long system of wetlands contains thickets of aquatic plants that remove pollutants from the water.

    The park’s long system of wetlands contains thickets of aquatic plants that remove pollutants from the water.

    (Sakchai Lalit / Associated Press)

    She pointed to the pond, which no longer had the foul odor or the oily sheen of the canal despite being just a few steps away. Dragonflies buzzed overhead — a common sign, she noted, that the water is clean.

    Chatchanin acknowledged that one park alone can’t fix Bangkok’s water issues. But its modest success might, at the very least, encourage cities to rethink their relationship to water.

    “People want fast answers,” Chatchanin said. “But hiding the problem is no solution. You can’t just raise your house on stilts, or flush out the water. It all comes back in the end.”

    The idea that cities need to adapt to — not outrun — their floods has been a lifelong preoccupation of Kongjian Yu, whose work with sponge cities has earned him the prestigious Oberlander International Landscape Architecture Prize and comparisons to Frederick Law Olmsted, the designer of New York’s Central Park.

    Yu traces its beginnings to a near-death experience he had as a child growing up in rural China.

    At the time just 10 years old, Yu had been playing on the banks of his village’s river, which was more voluminous than usual due to heavy monsoon rains, when he suddenly found himself being swept away by the powerful currents.

    What saved him were the river’s reeds and willows, which slowed the water and gave him a chance to pull himself out.

    Kongjian Yu's work has earned him comparisons to Frederick Law Olmsted, the designer of New York’s Central Park.

    Kongjian Yu’s work has earned him comparisons to Frederick Law Olmsted, the designer of New York’s Central Park.

    (Gilles Sabrié / For The Times)

    “My experience in these villages, my experience with the river and the creek, taught me how to live with nature,” he said.

    Later, Yu earned a landscape ecology degree from Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design and spent two years in Los Angeles working for SWA Group before returning to China in 1997.

    Dismayed that the rapidly modernizing country had lined its cities with concrete dams and channelized waterways, Yu began writing to local mayors, warning of the risks of this approach and advocating instead for “rewilding natural water systems.”

    “Sponge cities follow three principles: retain, slow down and embrace water,” Yu said. “That means removing all unnecessary concrete and pavement.”

    At first, his ideas found few sympathetic ears. Some people, he recalled, sent letters to the Communist Party claiming he was “a spy from the U.S. sent to demolish Chinese infrastructure.”

    But things changed in 2012, when severe flooding in Beijing destroyed thousands of homes and killed 79 people, some of whom were caught off-guard in the street.

    A man uses a signboard to signal motorists driving through a flooded street in China.

    A man uses a signboard to signal motorists driving through flooded streets following a heavy rain in Beijing. Flooding prompted Chinese leader Xi Jinping to adopt Yu’s “sponge city” philosophy as a national agenda.

    (Associated Press)

    “Every sort of paradigm shift, you need a crisis,” Yu said. “People dying in the street — that was the critical point.”

    The floods prompted Chinese leader Xi Jinping to adopt Yu’s sponge city philosophy as a national agenda in 2015. Since then, the government has pledged more than $28 billion to help fund over 33,000 sponge city projects in 90 cities, aiming to have them capture and reuse at least 70% of their rainwater by 2030.

    By 2020, over 40,000 sponge city projects were completed nationwide, contributing to around 3.8 trillion gallons of rainwater being recycled that year, according to the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development. The ministry noted that this amount was equal to about one-fifth of China’s annual urban water supply.

    Many, like Bangkok’s Benjakitti Park, are wetlands designed to address urban flooding. Others, like a mangrove forest built on the banks of a river in the tropical southern city of Sanya on Hainan Island, act as a natural buffer against saltwater intrusion and coastal erosion from rising sea levels.

    “The idea is to not build too close to the water in order to create a buffer zone,” Yu said. “Instead of building a wall, we allow the water to come in.”

    Women near ponds and water plants at the "Fish Tail" sponge park in Nanchang, China.

    Women stop near ponds and water plants at the “Fish Tail” sponge park that’s built on a former coal ash dump site in Nanchang in north-central China’s Jiangxi province.

    (Ng Han Guan / Associated Press)

    This approach, said Yu, has made sponge city projects uncomplicated and low-cost compared with conventional solutions, deployable just about anywhere.

    Benjakitti Park, for example, cost $20 million and was built by the Thai army, which had little experience in environmental landscaping. Yu scribbled the design on a napkin during his flight to Bangkok to meet Chatchanin, keeping it simple enough to be achievable — at least in theory — with only a single excavator.

    Still, the program hasn’t been without challenges.

    Wetlands are often breeding grounds for mosquitoes. And with local governments expected to foot up to 80% of the cost for their projects, much-needed investments from the private sector have been slow to materialize. Meanwhile, critics have pointed out that some of China’s most touted sponge cities, like Zhengzhou in Henan province, have still experienced devastating floods.

    “If a city can’t handle a flood, that means it’s not spongy enough,” Yu said.

    “Ultimately, it’s not about getting rid of every piece of concrete. It’s about combining gray and green — upgrading the current model.”

    Since 2006, Singapore has been turning its own waterways and reservoirs into public parks that also absorb stormwater, an initiative known as the Active, Beautiful, Clean Waters (ABC Waters) Programme.

    In the Netherlands, a flood-prone country famous for mastering the art of keeping water out with techniques like land reclamation, the government has also experimented with a softer approach, strategically allowing its rivers to flood in certain areas in order to spare others.

    In L.A., too, there has been a growing awareness that the area’s city’s own impermeable flood control system, which discards billions of gallons of rainwater that might otherwise be stored and reused, is overdue for change.

    With around 490,000 acre-feet of stormwater available to be captured a year in an area that includes Long Beach and Anaheim, the L.A. area ranks first in the West in stormwater runoff potential and, 19th out of 2,645 urban areas nationwide, according to a Pacific Institute report last year.

    Pedestrians use the Los Angeles River Bikeway.

    Pedestrians use the Los Angeles River Bikeway.

    (Juliana Yamada / Los Angeles Times)

    Among the efforts to make the city spongier — and therefore less dependent on imported water — is the Safe Clean Water Program, which L.A. County voters approved in 2018 as ballot Measure W.

    The program levies a property tax on impermeable surfaces to provide around $300 million a year in grants for municipal stormwater capture projects.

    The aim of the program is to capture 98 billion gallons annually. Experts have said that projects like this in the upper L.A. watershed could simultaneously help prevent flooding downstream.

    Yet officials have estimated that it will take decades to achieve this goal, and progress has been slow.

    Just 30 acres of green space were added to the county in its first three years, according to a report by Los Angeles Waterkeeper, a local watchdog.

    And although the program has recently begun to pick up pace, with around $1 billion allocated across 130 projects, Bruce Reznik, the group’s executive director and a member of the Measure W scoring committee, pointed out there are a host of challenges not present in China’s centralized model.

    Among them are scant federal support and the slow, costly bureaucratic processes involved with the program, such as cleaning up contaminated project sites and getting permits. He estimated that the projects the county needs will cost around $50 billion, 10 times what Measure W funding can provide over the next 20 years.

    “In terms of expenses, that’s a question a lot of us are asking: Why are these projects so expensive?” Reznik said. “I get that there’s inflation, but man, projects we thought were going to be $10 million are now $25 million. I think we’ve got to figure out ways that we can streamline some of this stuff.”

    Special correspondents Chalida Ekvitthayavechnukul and Xin-yun Wu contributed reporting from Bangkok and Taipei, respectively.

    Max Kim

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  • A River North Bar Wants to Lure Younger Drinkers With Quality, Affordable Cocktails

    Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises’ overhaul of the Hub 51 space in River North starts with the unveiling of a wallet-friendly cocktail bar. Gus’ Sip and Dip aims to prove that downtown bars can pour quality cocktails at affordable prices at all times of the day, not just happy hour.

    The menu will consist of classic cocktails all priced at $12. A bar program with housemade ingredients, — including juices and syrups — as well as in-house ice making will help keep prices low.

    Costs are a worry, but Kevin Beary also cites hard seltzers and ready-to-drink canned cocktails as reasons the next generation of drinkers has shifted away from cocktails that are mixed in front of them by bartenders. “It’s a concerning sign when we see folks of the younger age groups gravitating towards those,” says Beary.

    “I’m so concerned for the future of cocktails that I feel like I need to expose as many people to great classic cocktails as possible,” he adds.

    Gus’, which should debut next month at 51 W. Hubbard Street, is Beary’s brainchild — he’s the beverage director of Three Dots and a Dash, the Bamboo Room, and the Omakase Room at Sushi-san. For the 30 cocktails, Beary promises ingredients, techniques, and presentations that guests are familiar with and a curated selection of premium spirits. “Instead of offering a 200-bottle back bar where I have a ton of inventory, I’m focusing solely on the spirits we use to make the cocktails,” he says.

    Complementing the cocktail list — ranging from a “killer White Russian” and amaretto sour to a traditional martini — will be an ambiance that channels classic taverns. “It’s supposed to feel like a bar that could have been there for the past 50 years,” Beary says. “Classic in nature, very approachable, and somewhat familiar.”

    Glassware also went through a careful selection process, especially since the various glasses will be stored in freezers under the bar. “I wanted to have every piece of glassware come chilled,” he says.

    Taking over one-third of the former Hub 51 space, Gus’ Sip and Dip will seat about 75 guests. Located in the center of the room, the 25-seat U-shaped bar will feature leather-wrapped arm rails. Leather booths surround the room with a few high-tops near the bar.

    In addition to cocktails, a light and a dark beer have been custom brewed for Gus’. Beary says McSorley’s Old Ale House in New York, which has been open for two centuries, inspired the move. He declined to say which two breweries were making the beer. There’ll be cider, too. Wine offerings will be limited to a red and white burgundy.

    The food menu, headed up by RPM Restaurants chef Bob Broskey, will feature classic tavern favorites, including a wagyu French dip, Caesar salad, shrimp cocktail, and a burger.

    “I’m trying to create a bar that is going to be very appealing to your seasoned cocktail drinker but can also be a really good introduction to this classic style of drinks for the next generation,” says Beary.

    Hub 51 had a 16-year run before it closed in June. Sharing the Hub 51 space with Gus’ will be Crying Tiger from HaiSous chef Thai Dang, opening next year.

    Gus’ Sip and Dip, 51 W. Hubbard Street, opening in December

    Lisa Shames

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  • Explore Celebrities Jimmy Butler, Chase Rice, and Roquan Smith’s New Chicago Club

    Explore Celebrities Jimmy Butler, Chase Rice, and Roquan Smith’s New Chicago Club

    River North, especially the area surrounding Hubbard Street, is one of Downtown Chicago’s busiest neighborhoods at night. Tourists and locals alike fill the bars, clubs, and restaurants with herds weaving in and out of traffic crawling to their next destination.

    The neighborhood’s latest addition is a joint venture between former Chicago Bulls star Jimmy Butler, country singer-songwriter Chase Rice, and former Chicago Bear Roquan Smith. The trio has opened the third location of Welcome to the Farm, a country music venue and club with locations in St. Petersburg, Florida and Cleveland. The celebrities are backed by Forward Hospitality Group, a Cleveland outfit that owns Good Night John Boy in West Loop. Fans of Barstool Sports may know one of the principals at Forward, Dante Deiana. Deiana’s a DJ and writer for the infamous media company.

    The Bears might actually be worth watching in 2024. Probably.

    A barbecue platter with meats, ribs, and cornbread, plus metal dipping cups with sauce.

    Spare ribs, pulled turkey, brisket, and short ribs are on the menu.

    A nachos platter with slice jalaepeno

    Smoked brisket nachos

    A skylight with a sliding roof over a lounge.

    The space’s retractable roof remains.

    They’ve remodeled the former Fremont, keeping the retractable roof and modernizing the space which has a stage for small concerts and room for 300. They’ll offer bottle service late into the night. But for folks into food, country music often goes well with smoked meats, and on the restaurant side they’ll serve brisket nachos, smoked chicken wings, pulled pork sandwiches (a Cuban served Miami style also uses the pork), plus spare ribs, short ribs, turkey, and sausage. Fried chicken and tenders are on the menu, as well. Forward Executive Chef Raheem Sealey debuted the menu in Florida at Drinking Pig BBQ, and now he brings his meats and treats up north.

    Does this follow U.S. Flag Code? Well, the DQ sign doesn’t object.

    Bowls, like this one with crispy cauliflower, are also available as lighter options.

    The buttermilk-brined fried chicken sandwich.

    Butler, a perennial All-Star, also played in Minnesota and Philadelphia before finding at home with the Miami Heat. He his own coffee company. He launched BIGFACE in 2020 during the pandemic, when the NBA brought all its playoff teams to Orlando, Florida to limit travel and the spread of COVID. The Bubble and its restrictions made it hard for players and coaches to find a good cup of coffee, so Butler seized the opportunity. For the first time ever, customers will be able to taste BIGFACE drinks in a restaurant setting. A news release touts “new specialty coffee products from Butler’s coffee brand BIGFACE that are available to consume while taking in the scene.”

    Check out the space and some of the menu items below.

    Welcome to the Farm, 15 W. Illinois Street, (312) 833-2080, open noon on weekdays, and 11 a.m. on Saturday and Sunday; kitchen open until 1 a.m.

    There are plenty of screens on the side.

    Feast upon the meats, bowls, and more.

    Watch out for drinks in coffee cups.

    Negronis are nice.

    The straw is a nice touch.

    Ashok Selvam

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  • A French Bistro Will Debut Across the Street From Holy Name Cathedral

    A French Bistro Will Debut Across the Street From Holy Name Cathedral

    In the urban-suburban trajectory, restaurants typically start in the city before making their way to smaller towns around it. Opening in early September, Petit Pomeroy reverse engineers that story as the smaller sibling to Winnetka’s Pomeroy, which opened in September 2021 on the North Shore.

    “Pomeroy is the highest-grossing restaurant we have in Ballyhoo,” says Ryan O’Donnell, Ballyhoo founder and CEO. “The suburbs have been very good to us.”

    Above Ballyhoo’s Gemini Grill, which opened earlier this year at upscale residences One Chicago in River North, Petit Pomeroy is one of four restaurants Ballyhoo Hospitality (Coda di Volpe, Old Pueblo Cantina, DeNucci’s, and Gemini among others) will be opening in the next seven months. The other three will be in suburban Highland Park and Glenview.

    “When we were doing Gemini Grill, we retrofitted the second floor to be a restaurant, but we didn’t know what exactly,” O’Donnell says. “We wanted to see what was happening in the local dining scene and the landscape and figure out what would be best suited there.”

    Classic French fare like roasted chicken are on the menu.
    Ballyhoo Hospitality

    With the success of Pomeroy and the recent growth of French restaurants in Chicago (Obelix, La Serre, Bistro Monadnock, etc.), the circumstances felt right to bring that concept to the city.

    “Sometimes people can be intimidated by French food as they think it’s fine dining or heavy with lots of sauces,” O’Donnell says. “But bistro food is comfort food at its heart and core.”

    While Pomeroy leans more into brasserie territory, Petit Pomeroy will be more of a classic French bistro. Petit Pomeroy is smaller in size (90 seats versus 280) and O’Donnell says the second-floor kitchen is about a quarter the size of Winnetka’s.

    “We couldn’t do the big, expansive menu,” says O’Donnell. “We had to pare it down, which allowed us to focus on the greatest hits. It’s not a complete rinse and repeat, but we’re not going to change a lot of the stuff we do really well.”

    The warm tomato tart with dried heirloom tomatoes, fromage blanc, and herbes de Provence inside a puff pastry shell made the move. “It might not be the most classic French thing in the world, but it’s been a big mover in Winnetka,” says O’Donnell.

    Winnetka’s popular plats du jour are making the journey too, including top-seller short rib Bourguignon with pommes purée. “Last night we sold 48 in Winnetka,” says O’Donnell. Look for other French bistro classics, such as bouillabaisse and escargots.

    Profiteroles Glacées with vanilla bean gelato and warm chocolate.
    Ballyhoo Hospitality

    Beverages will follow a similar Gallic route with an emphasis on French wines, including sparking and Champagne, with cocktails such as the French 75, Le Spritz, and Le Pamplemousse.

    For the interior, red leather banquettes and booths are paired with bistro-style chairs. Touches include brass railings, vintage posters, and wood paneling. A bar will seat eight. From its second-floor perch, views of Holy Name Cathedral across the street will be front and center.

    “The drama of the room’s setting will surprise people,” says O’Donnell. “People don’t know what’s up on that second floor so I think that will be the big wow factor.”

    Petit Pomeroy, 748 N. State Street, scheduled for a mid-September opening.

    Lisa Shames

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  • Rowing on the river: Scullers savor the challenges, beauty of the Merrimack

    Rowing on the river: Scullers savor the challenges, beauty of the Merrimack

    Splash, whoosh, click.

    Splash, whoosh, click.

    Two rowers slide back and forth in the middle of their long skinny boats, gliding over the Merrimack River.

    It’s an eye-catching scene.

    Iconic, too, in that it’s immortalized by American artist Thomas Eakins in his 1871 oil painting “Max Schmitt in a Single Scull,” which depicts his friend on the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia.

    Rowing the single scull, a pleasant and lonely endeavor deeply rooted in this region, endures in competitions and as a niche activity on the Merrimack.

    Here, on a late spring afternoon, each rower works a pair of oars spread wide in oarlocks suspended off the gunwales by riggers.

    The scullers propel themselves upriver on the surface’s broken image of reflected clouds and blue sky.

    They ride over the tidal river, pushing and pulling, Paul Geoghegan, 67, of Merrimac in a blue scull, and Rick Bayko, 76, of West Newbury in a white one.

    They belong to the Merrimack Tidal Rowing Association, a small group that stows its boats, known as sculls or shells, in garage-like bays at Marianna’s Marina in Haverhill.

    It’s downriver from Haverhill’s Basiliere Bridge and upriver from West Newbury. The Groveland Pines Recreation Area lay on a rise directly across the water.

    Years ago, race cars roared there at the Pines Speedway on Saturday nights. If the wind was right, people downriver in West Newbury could hear the engines.

    Geoghegan and Bayko, former track athletes, row together once or twice a week.

    Both like the exercise, peace and solitude that rowing brings.

    “What’s really neat is when you come here on an early Sunday morning and it is completely flat,” Geoghegan said. “There is a little bit of fog on the water and it starts to lift a little bit.”

    Bayko, who was a fine-tuned distance runner for much of his life, recalls trying his hand at rowing once when he was in college in Boston.

    He climbed in a training wherry (a light rowboat) on the Charles River and couldn’t keep the boat straight.

    Storrow Drive was on one side and Memorial Drive in Cambridge on the other. Despite all the Boston traffic and noise, and the frustration built from not keeping the boat steady, he was impressed and surprised by how peaceful it was on the water.

    Association members row when they please, each with a key to the storage bays where the lightweight sculls rest on racks.

    A main draw for the single scull rowers, as well kayakers and canoeists, is getting away for a few hours, retreating to the river.

    “Rowers are solitary,” Geoghegan said. “They like to get together — then go apart.”

    He and Bayko share a few words before they head to the boat launch – a few more at the turnaround spot on the river.

    Right now, as they row, each of them likely has a distinct interior experience.

    Bayko is counting his strokes, checking his time, engaged in a challenge.

    “I enjoy going real fast and hard and feeling that this is well within me,” he said.

    He will feel a sense of accomplishment when he’s done.

    Geoghegan likes to get in a workout and look around.

    Moments after he arrived at the marina this afternoon, he saw a bald eagle flying upriver.

    Osprey and kingfishers are regulars on the Merrimack.

    One day, an endangered species almost joined him in his scull.

    “I pull a stroke,” he said. “I look over my shoulder and I see a sturgeon in the air.”

    The big, prehistoric-looking fish splashed down so close to the boat that Geoghegan got wet. The short-nose sturgeon spawns in Haverhill.

    Rowing has a storied history, the sport evolving from warfare, fishing and transportation.

    The first modern races stem from water taxis ferrying customers, the rowers striving to be first across the Thames River in London, England, Bayko said.

    Some of the first interhigh school and intercollegiate athletic events in the 19th century involved rowing.

    Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter, New Hampshire, and Phillips Academy Andover in Andover competed, as did Harvard and Yale crew teams.

    The upcoming Olympics Games Paris 2024, which will run from July 26 to Aug. 11, will include single, double and quadruple sculling (a rower operates two oars), and pair, four and eight sweeping (the rowers hand a single oar) events, all at 2,000 meters (1.2 miles).

    Rowing remains popular with youth who compete on high school and college teams, but they typically drift away from it in young adulthood.

    Now, with an aging population — some 20% of Americans are 65 and older — some of the erstwhile rowers return to rowing, men and women.

    Other rowers, Geoghegan and Bayko among them, discover and take up the activity later in life.

    Sculling engages all the muscle groups and is a fluid continuous movement, a strength and cardio exercise without abrupt stops and starts, putting less stress on knees and ankles.

    Geoghegan and Bayko started with indoor rowing on machines about 20 years ago.

    Geoghegan, a longtime skier, was tired of being sore after teaching skiing.

    He started indoor rowing to get in shape for skiing. Then, he discovered outdoor rowing.

    Bayko’s body had taken a pounding from running thousands of miles.

    He fell in love with cross-country running at Newburyport High, Class of 1965. After serving in the U.S. Army, he ran competitively in college, qualifying for the Olympic trials twice. He finished in the top 20 at the Boston Marathon four years in a row in the 1970s.

    Besieged by injuries, he took up indoor rowing at age 52 and held the world record for his age group at 57.

    Upriver, another rowing organization in Lowell named the Merrimac River Rowing Association, hosts the Textile River Regatta in the fall.

    The Head of the Charles Regatta in Boston draws thousands of competitors from around the world over three days in October, where rowers race for the best time.

    Meanwhile, the Haverhill rowers get on the water throughout the year.

    “The river is always different, a different light,” Geoghegan said.

    For more information on the club, contact Paul Geoghegan at merrimackrowers@gmail.com.

    By Terry Date | Staff Writer

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  • Where to Eat and Drink Along the Chicago River

    Where to Eat and Drink Along the Chicago River

    With a dock conveniently located behind the building, Lawrence’s is an ideal pit stop when boating or kayaking down the river. The 24-hour fried seafood specialist has been in operation since 1971, selling an array of crispy shrimp, fish, frog legs, oysters, chicken, and more. The signature crustaceans are sourced from the Gulf and boast a thick breading, though diners can opt for lighter batter. Either way, make sure to give it a dunk in the hot sauce.

    aimee.levitt

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  • Body found in San Joaquin River nearly two weeks after boater went missing

    Body found in San Joaquin River nearly two weeks after boater went missing

    (FOX40.COM) — A body was found near River Islands in Lathrop on Saturday, according to the San Joaquin County Sheriff’s Office.
    • Video Above: Search continues for missing boater in San Joaquin River

    The body was found by volunteer diver Juan Heredia around 4:30 p.m. and comes nearly two weeks after a boater, Tommy Clark, went missing. Clark was fishing with a friend in the San Joaquin River on May 23 when their boat capsized. He went into the water and never resurfaced.

    “I’m not following in the what-ifs,” said Clark’s sister, Barbara Ritter, on May 26. “He’s gone. The sooner we accept it, we’ll be able to go through the process and accept it.”

    SCSO has not confirmed if the body found is Clark, but said the medical examiner’s office will provide the identity after an autopsy.

    Veronica Catlin

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  • Celeste Teams Up With Rockit Cofounder in River North

    Celeste Teams Up With Rockit Cofounder in River North

    The owners of Celeste, the celebrated River North nightclub, have teamed up with the co-founder of another neighborhood lynchpin (Rockit Bar & Grill, which closed in 2019), to open a new restaurant and bar with upscale Mexican food later this summer.

    It’s called Vela — it’s replacing Hogsalt’s 3 Greens Market at 352 W. Hubbard Street, in the shadow of East Bank Club — and will feature dishes like pork belly with mole, a pibil made with Iberican pork collar, and a tlacoyo stuffed with mushrooms and salsa. Tortillas will be made with corn imported from Mexico, according to a news release. A rep says Vela’s menu will showcase Mexico City’s street food and more classic elegant dishes with creative regional dishes.

    The space has room for 120 and has been redecorated with lime wash and stucco walls, plus natural wood herringbone flooring. Customers will see handmade Venetian chandeliers near the entrance and glass-beaded chandeliers in the private dining room. Celeste has a particular decadent style for its bar program. There’s a marble-topped bar shaped like an oval with an illuminated carousel displaying bottles of agave.

    Arturo Gomez, who co-founded (along with Billy Dec and Brad Young) of Rockit Ranch Productions, joined brothers Nader, Fadi, and Rafid Hindo in July 2023 and formed Celeste Group. Their venues are Whiskey Bar, Deco Supper Club, and DISCO (and the rooftop Garden). A rep says more concepts are upcoming. They’ve brought on chef Jorge Angulo as executive chef of the new company.

    They’re hoping for a summer opening. Check back for more details.

    Vela, 352 W. Hubbard Street, planned for a July opening

    Ashok Selvam

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  • Billy Dec’s Closes Underground Chicago as Nashville Location Readies to Open

    Billy Dec’s Closes Underground Chicago as Nashville Location Readies to Open

    It’s the end of an era in River North as the Underground, where locals would text their friends late at night with photos of Justin Bieber, Chance the Rapper, or Katy Perry has closed. Opened in 2007, along with Rockit Bar & Grill, located around the corner on Hubbard Street, the two venues helped further co-owner Billy Dec as a household name in Chicago.

    But after Dec split with partners, Brad Young and Arturo Gomez, Rockit closed in 2019 ending a 15-year run. That was before the pandemic, which hurt the world of music venues and bars with folks focusing on social distancing. Even in a post-vaccine world where Chicago’s tourists are returning, some businesses may have endured too much to survive. Last week, Dec announced the Underground, 56 W. Illinois Street, would close and convert into a private event space. That’s a move Chicago is bound to see more of, with the biggest example being in October 2023 when Boka Restaurant Group closed its French restaurant, the 10-month-old Le Select — led by acclaimed chef Daniel Rose — turning that River North space into the Wellsley.

    The Underground, at 17 years old, has a more storied history versus Le Select. Dec, a Chicago native and graduate of the Latin School of Chicago, moved to Nashville where in 2018 he opened a location of his River North restaurant, Sunda. He also opened a Sunda in Tampa, Florida. Along those lines, he’s bringing the Underground brand to Tennessee, opening the Underground Cocktail Club at the end of the month or early June: “We are so humbled, honored, excited, and proud to be able to share a piece of our Chicago original in new markets to come,” a statement shared via social media from Dec reads. The project was announced in 2022.

    At one point, Dec also said he wanted to open Rockit locations in other cities. While that didn’t happen, Dec did win local Emmys and was an Obama appointee in 2014 to the President’s Advisory Commission on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

    Dec hasn’t abandoned Chicago — he opened the fourth outpost of Sunda in February, inside a new Fulton Market — but the once mighty Rockit Ranch Productions has shrunk. In 2017, as he geared up to leave Chicago, he said there would be an increased focus on moneymakers. That happened as Otto Mezzo (formerly Ay Chiwowa), his venture with chef Kevin Hickey, closed along Chicago Avenue in River North. Hickey has since brought James Beard attention to his South Side restaurant, the Duck Inn.

    But the two Sundas are all that remains of Dec’s once thriving empire in Chicago, one that included the Underground, and Le Passage, the latter of which closed in 2011. Gomez, who was roommates with Dec in a Wicker Park apartment, last year partnered with Nader, Fadi, and Rafid Hindo — the brothers behind Celeste. The quartet formed Celeste Group, which includes Whiskey Bar, Deco Supper Club, DISCO, and the rooftop Garden at 111. W. Hubbard Street). They’ll soon open Vela this summer at 352 W. Hubbard Street.

    Dec declined further comment to Block Club Chicago, which first reported the news. The story discusses the changing landscape of Chicago’s social scene. Celebrities and social media influencers are looking for something different, or perhaps newer. River North lost Paris Club in 2016 but survived. Chicago still has plenty of places for that — especially during music festival season.

    Ashok Selvam

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  • Douglas C-54 plane with 2 people on board crashes into river outside Fairbanks, Alaska

    Douglas C-54 plane with 2 people on board crashes into river outside Fairbanks, Alaska

    A Douglas C-54 Skymaster airplane carrying two people crashed into the Tanana River near Fairbanks on Tuesday and burst into flames, authorities said. No survivors have been found.The plane took off in the morning from Fairbanks International Airport. It crashed about 7 miles from there and “slid into a steep hill on the bank of the river where it caught fire,” according to Alaska State Troopers.Clint Johnson, chief of the National Transportation Safety Board’s Alaska regional office, said it remained unclear what happened in the time between the takeoff and the crash but the tower operator “saw a large plume of smoke.”Michaela Matherne was flying from the village of Galena to Fairbanks to catch a flight to New Orleans when her small plane was diverted to verify the coordinates of the crash site.“When we were in the air there was speculation that it was a cabin that caught fire, maybe a fish camp,” she told The Associated Press via Facebook Messenger.“We actually didn’t know what we were looking at until after we landed a few minutes later,” she said. “We were shocked and saddened to hear that.”The C-54 is a military version of the Douglas DC-4, which was a World War II-era airplane. The website www.airlines.net said standard passenger seating for a DC-4 was 44 during its heyday, but most have been converted to freighters.The Federal Aviation Administration described the plane as a Douglas C-54. Troopers identified it as a DC-4.The NTSB was sending investigators to the site, Johnson said.Further information such as the flight’s purpose and destination was not immediately available.

    A Douglas C-54 Skymaster airplane carrying two people crashed into the Tanana River near Fairbanks on Tuesday and burst into flames, authorities said. No survivors have been found.

    The plane took off in the morning from Fairbanks International Airport. It crashed about 7 miles from there and “slid into a steep hill on the bank of the river where it caught fire,” according to Alaska State Troopers.

    Clint Johnson, chief of the National Transportation Safety Board’s Alaska regional office, said it remained unclear what happened in the time between the takeoff and the crash but the tower operator “saw a large plume of smoke.”

    Michaela Matherne was flying from the village of Galena to Fairbanks to catch a flight to New Orleans when her small plane was diverted to verify the coordinates of the crash site.

    “When we were in the air there was speculation that it was a cabin that caught fire, maybe a fish camp,” she told The Associated Press via Facebook Messenger.

    “We actually didn’t know what we were looking at until after we landed a few minutes later,” she said. “We were shocked and saddened to hear that.”

    The C-54 is a military version of the Douglas DC-4, which was a World War II-era airplane. The website www.airlines.net said standard passenger seating for a DC-4 was 44 during its heyday, but most have been converted to freighters.

    The Federal Aviation Administration described the plane as a Douglas C-54. Troopers identified it as a DC-4.

    The NTSB was sending investigators to the site, Johnson said.

    Further information such as the flight’s purpose and destination was not immediately available.

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  • ‘Sounded very distraught’: Mother seeking help finding son last seen near Calumet River

    ‘Sounded very distraught’: Mother seeking help finding son last seen near Calumet River

    CHICAGO — A mother is devastated and asking for more help to find her 24-year-old son — who was last seen near the Calumet River two weeks ago.

    Jovon “JB” Nelson, 24, was seen by a bridge worker near the Ewing Avenue Bridge on April 9, according to his mother Tangela Nelson.

    Nelson was staying at a residence in the 3200 block of East 92nd Street and called his mother before running out of the home wearing a black t-shirt and gray sweatpants. He had no socks, no shoes, no ID and no phone.

    Family believes he was suffering from a mental health crisis.

    “He sounded very distraught, scared and anxious,” Tangela Nelson said.

    Tangela and JB

    Nelson and loved ones have been searching the area with dogs and drones since and a $3,000 reward is available. It originally started at $2,500 and $500 was recently added, according to Nelson.

    She said there’s been a lack of help from the authorities that’s frustrated her.

    Missing person flyer, made by family

    Nelson told WGN News the Coast Guard refused to deploy resources in the river and Chicago police are not looking as well.

    “They’re not helping,” she said. “Haven’t had any help since day one.”

    The Coast Guard discussed the circumstances of the incident with WGN News.

    A lieutenant said their office was notified by family on April 13. Prior to that, a CPD marine unit investigated and found there wasn’t a reason to believe he entered the water, according to the Coast Guard.

    Because of “no intelligence” that he entered the water, a search mission in the Calumet River has not been conducted by the Coast Guard, the lieutenant said.

    Nelson is 5’9″, 140 lbs., with brown eyes and dreadlocks.

    Anyone with information can call 911 or detectives at 312-747-8274. To join the family’s search party, you can text 773-938-2808.

    Andy Koval

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