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Un défrichement peut être interdit même sur une parcelle constructible

Dans cette affaire, la requérante est propriétaire d'une parcelle boisée. Elle a sollicité l'autorisation de procéder à son défrichement sur une surface […]

Congrès de l'UNCCAS : « dans l'après crise, les CCAS sont fondamentaux »

Le 93ème congrès de l'UNCCAS, au Havre ces 27, 28 et 29 mars 2024, a été l'occasion d'un retour d'expériences sur la gestion de crise. Lors d'une table ronde le 28 mars, Juliette Meadel, Laurent Cacciatore, Audrey Garino et Yves François, ont dressé un bilan de leurs gestions de crises et surtout de l'après urgence.

Jeux d'hiver 2030: la Région Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes tente de mobiliser

Le président de la Région Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, Laurent Wauquiez, organisait le 28 mars une soirée destinée à susciter une ferveur montagnarde pour la candidature des Alpes françaises à l'accueil des JOP d'hiver de 2030. Mais la valse-hésitation dans la sélection des stations qui accueilleront des épreuves et la question de la soutenabilité environnementale de l'événement alimentent les débats.

Gemapi : comment résoudre les difficultés assurantielles des syndicats ?

Réponse du ministère de l'Economie, des finances et de la souveraineté industrielle et numérique : Le Gouvernement est particulièrement attentif […]

Les habilitations et autorisations liées à la sécurité (2)

La fiche 10/114 recense les formations générales et celles en lien avec les équipements de travail que doivent suivre les agents des services techniques. La présente fiche concerne les formations relatives aux risques physiques.

Inondations par ruissellement, un risque méconnu à prendre au sérieux

Du Nord au Sud, les inondations s'intensifient. Parmi ces phénomènes, l'inondation par ruissellement est particulièrement mal connue.

Face à la crise climatique, comment anticiper les aléas

Le changement climatique va augmenter la fréquence, l'échelle et l'intensité de certains aléas climatiques, selon des proportions encore incertaines. Dans cette analyse, Gaëlle Cognet, avocate au cabinet Ashurst, explique que les outils de prévention des risques naturels devront être renouvelés pour anticiper l'évolution des aléas et l'avenir des secteurs les plus exposés.

Les habilitations et autorisations liées à la sécurité (1)

Le périmètre d'intervention des agents des services techniques peut être concerné par de nombreuses formations, obligatoires ou fortement conseillées, concernant la sécurité dans l'exercice de leurs missions. Il peut aussi être nécessaire de produire des autorisations particulières pour utiliser telle ou telle machine ou réaliser certaines tâches. Tout cela est bien complexe d'autant que la réglementation est mouvante et croise des éléments qui sont inscrits dans le code du travail et dans le statut de la fonction publique territoriale. Pour s'y retrouver dans cette réglementation, cette fiche dresse un état des principales mesures à prendre en compte. Elle précisera le public et le processus à mettre en oeuvre pour se mettre en conformité. Cette fiche pourra être remise à jour régulièrement.

« L'acceptation de la fin du modèle « neige » est l'étape la plus difficile »

Dans son rapport sur l'adaptation des stations de montagne au changement climatique, paru ce mois, la Cour des comptes estime “limitée” la diversification l'oeuvre dans de nombreuses collectivités. Que recouvre cette notion et comment la mettre en oeuvre ? L'avis d'Olivier Erard, qui a coordonné le plan d'adaptation de la station de Métabief (Haut-Doubs) pour le syndicat mixte du Mont d'Or (SMMO), qu'il quitte fin mars se pour devenir formateur consultant dans le domaine de l'eau et de l'adaptation au changement climatique.

Is That Polar Bear Getting Enough to Eat? Try a Collar With a Camera.

Scientists collected video from 20 bears during ice-free months to understand whether the animals can survive longer periods on land in a warming world.

A female polar bear and her cub on Hudson Bay, near Churchill, Manitoba, in 2022.

Forêt : le Conseil d'Etat valide le régime juridique des coupes rases

Le syndicat mixte d'un parc naturel régional a demandé au ministre de l'Agriculture et de l'alimentation de prendre toutes mesures utiles […]

Scientists Use Sea Sponges to Study Global Warming Back to 1700

Research on a long-lived but rarely seen species in the Caribbean is helping scientists piece together a revised history of climate change.

The Caribbean, seen from the International Space Station. Sponges collected deep below the surface carry chemical imprints that reflect historical water temperatures.

Monkey Who Escaped in Scotland is Captured

A Japanese macaque escaped from a wildlife park on Sunday. After five days of “living his best life,” he was back home on Thursday.

Where Groundwater Levels Are Falling, and Rising, Worldwide

Data from more than 1,000 aquifers reveal widespread decline, but improvement in some places shows the trend can be reversed.

Rare Earth Metals May Be Lurking in Your Junk Drawer

And that’s a good thing. They’re critical for renewable energy, and a new study says recovering them from old cellphones and other waste could help meet the demand.

Only about 1 percent of rare earth metals in old electronic products are currently reused or recycled, researchers estimate.

Greenland’s Ice Sheet May Be Losing 20% More Ice Than Previously Measured

The island is shedding 20 percent more than previously estimated, a study found, potentially threatening ocean currents that help to regulate global temperatures.

Icebergs calved from the Sermeq Kujalleq glacier in the Ilulissat Icefjord in Greenland in 2021.

Qui exerce les pouvoirs de police dans une commune située au coeur d'un parc national ?

Il existe actuellement onze parcs nationaux sur le territoire national. Au sein de ces parcs, une zone appelée " coeur de parc " est particulièrement protégée. Afin de garantir cette protection, des règles spécifiques ont été mises en place, affectant les pouvoirs de police spéciale des maires. Explications de notre juriste, Géraldine Bovi-Hosy.

Forêts : une proposition de loi pour s'adapter au changement climatique

Suite au rapport parlementaire Panonacle/Couturier, paru au printemps dernier, une proposition de loi relative à " l'adaptation de la politique forestières et des milieux forestiers face au changement climatique " a été déposée fin novembre, par Catherine Couturier, députée (LFI) de la Creuse.

Gestion de projets : utiliser la matrice des risques

Les services techniques gèrent de nombreux projets tous les jours. Ils sont souvent liés à des projets de construction ou d'aménagement mais peuvent aussi être d'ordre organisationnel, de process ou de relation aux habitants. Pour piloter ces projets, il existe tout un tas d'outils qui facilitent leur pilotage. L'un d'eux est essentiel puisqu'il permet d'améliorer la gestion des risques : la matrice des risques. À travers cette fiche, nous expliquerons comment elle fonctionne et comment l'utiliser concrètement. Nous illustrerons son utilisation avec le cas du remplacement d'une chaudière dans un bâtiment.

Géopolitique des abysses

L'activité minière va-t-elle s'étendre aux planchers océaniques ? Au-delà des difficultés techniques, la question provoque un imbroglio diplomatique. Le droit international garantit que les pays en développement profiteront prioritairement d'une telle exploitation, mais les Occidentaux mettent en (...) / , , , , , - 2023/12

Where Will the Whales Be? Ask the Climate Model.

Scientists can now use climate data to predict whale and sea turtle locations months in advance, helping fishing fleets avoid conflicts with wildlife.

As humpback whale populations recover from the now mostly banned whaling industry, they are increasingly sharing time and territory with fishermen.

Comment faire mieux pour respecter le droit des enfants aux loisirs

Par : rlazarova
Le Défenseur des droits consacre son rapport annuel sur les droits de l'enfant 2023 à l'accès aux loisirs, au sport et à la culture, un droit pas tout à fait respecté. Et émet trente recommandations.

Pesticides : le plan Ecophyto 2030 veut s'appuyer sur les territoires

Jusqu'à la fin du mois de novembre 2023, le gouvernement met en consultation son nouveau plan Ecophyto 2030. L'objectif est toujours le même, réduire de 50 % l'usage des pesticides. C'est la méthode qui change. Parmi les nouveautés, il souhaite " territorialiser la stratégie ". Qu'est-ce-que cela signifie exactement ? Qu'en pense les collectivités concernées ?

Branwyn Merino Wool Underwear Review: Comfortable, Natural, Quality

Plastics begone! These natural fibers are better for the environment, for workers, and for you.

Les stockages en centre technique (2)

Dans la précédente fiche (réf. 09/27 d'octobre 2023), nous avions détaillé les conditions de stockage dans les centres techniques en particulier pour les rayonnages, stockages de matériels, stockages en vrac dont le sel ainsi que les produits chimiques, en insistant en particulier sur les incompatibilités de produits. Cette fiche poursuit la première avec d'autres formes de stockage.

La réglementation des feux d'artifice

L'organisation d'un feu d'artifice dans une commune constitue toujours un moment fort de la vie municipale. Bien que festif, la mise en place et le tir d'un feu impliquent la manipulation de produits explosifs. À ce titre, les risques peuvent être importants et des accidents peuvent malheureusement se produire. C'est pourquoi, la réglementation impose des contraintes et des procédures à respecter impérativement. Il en va de la responsabilité de la commune et/ou de l'artificier.

Carbon Emissions Budget to Hit Paris Accord Goals Is Now Smaller

Limiting warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius would be harder than ever, new calculations show, but less ambitious targets are still in reach.

The most promising paths for avoiding 1.5 degrees of warming are clearly gone, said one climate scientist.

David Suzuki Warned Canada About Mistreating Nature, but Says, ‘We’ve Failed’

After cautioning about environmental damage on TV for decades, David Suzuki, 87, one of Canada’s most famous scientists, felt a sense of defeat as he watched forests burn and temperatures soar this summer.

David Suzuki, the science broadcaster, prolific author and perhaps Canada’s most prominent environmentalist, on Quadra Island, in British Columbia.

Scientists Use CRISPR to Make Chickens More Resistant to Bird Flu

A new study highlights both the promise and the limitations of gene editing, as a highly lethal form of avian influenza continues to spread around the world.

Avian flu has killed countless farmed and wild birds. Scientists worry that it could acquire mutations that help it spread more easily among humans, potentially setting off a pandemic.

Belgian Preserve Melds Farming and Conservation, and Fights Extreme Weather

Can Europe fight the effects of extreme weather while producing enough affordable food? A model combining conservation with agriculture may offer a solution.

Piet De Becker, the manager of the Doode Bemde nature preserve, walking in the sanctuary, which has helped prevent catastrophic flooding in nearby Leuven, Belgium.

Flood Threats Are Rising. Here’s Where People Are Moving Into Harm’s Way.

Rapid development along coasts and rivers has increased flood exposure worldwide, particularly in South and East Asia, a study found.

The scene in Nanxinfang, a village outside Beijing, after flooding in August.

A New Satellite Outshines Some of the Brightest Stars in the Sky

Astronomers warn that BlueWalker 3, a test spacecraft with a large array of antennas, could be the first of many larger satellites in low-Earth orbit that interfere with astronomical observations.

Still Man’s Best Friend

Culture

Still Man’s Best Friend

In answer to God’s call to subdue creation: Get a dog.

John Steinbeck’s success writing Dust Bowl fiction and California novels eventually drew the author out east. While living in New York, he continued writing his famous stories about life out west—the settler spirit and the culmination of manifest destiny that was California. Before he knew it, twenty-five years had gone by. 

“I, an American writer, writing about America, was working from memory, and the memory is at best a faulty, warpy reservoir. I had not heard the speech of America, smelled the grass and trees and sewage, seen its hills and water, its color and quality of light. I knew the changes only from books and newspapers,” Steinbeck wrote. “In short, I was writing of something I did not know about, and it seems to me that in a so-called writer this is criminal.”

So, Steinbeck set off “to try to rediscover this monster land,” in a large, modified truck with a cabin on the back. He brought one companion with him: his dog, a French poodle named Charley. The product of their grand adventure, a 10,000 mile road trip through thirty-eight states, became Steinbeck’s 1962 work, Travels with Charley.

We had to put our family dog down this week. He was a giant Siberian Husky with a stunning red coat and piercing ice blue eyes named Kona. He was the most beautiful dog I’d ever seen. 

Kona came to us as a rescue. For the first two years of Kona’s life, his previous owners kept him in a small cement dog run and fed him through a metal slat built into the side of his cage on account of the fact that they believed he was part wolf. We never fully confirmed this was the case, but with Kona’s size, especially his massive head—his muzzle length, the shape of his ears—as well as his giant paws, nearly as big as the palms of my hands, we couldn’t rule it out. 

If he had wolf blood coursing through his veins, his temperment never showed it. When my mom and I went to meet Kona for the first time to consider adopting him, I took him for a short walk. He didn’t pull, he stayed right on my heels, looking up at me the entire time with a giant, goofy grin plastered across his giant face as tongue hung out of the side of his mouth. Afterwards, we sat down in the grass. As I petted him, he slowly inched closer to me, eventually putting his massive head in my lap. He was my dog from that moment on.

The next ten years were spent doing exactly what we did on the first day we met. They went by too fast, I’m afraid. Between heading to college and starting off on my own on the opposite coast, I wasn’t there as much as I would have liked. Over the years, nothing made me more homesick than the thought of enjoying family dinners with Kona curled up at my feet.

We love our dogs, and rightfully so. But with the rise of the “dog mom,” conservatives have taken up saying that, sometimes, we love our dogs in the wrong way.

A recent Pew Research study found that of the 62 percent of Americans surveyed that do own a pet, a majority (51 percent) consider their pets equal to human members of their family. Another recent study conducted by Rover, an application-based dog walking and dog sitting network service, found that 22 percent of millennials and 23 percent of Gen Z pet owners have substituted pets for children for the time being or permanently. The pet food brand, I and Love and You, commissioned a similar study in 2021 and found that 42 percent of pet owners surveyed said they bought their pet as a “starter child.” They treat them accordingly: 29 percent throw their pets birthday parties, 24 percent dress themselves and their pets in matching outfits, and 41 percent have celebrated Mother’s or Father’s Day as pet owners.

“First comes love, then comes marriage, then comes Fido in the baby carriage,” TAC Contributing Editor Matthew Schmitz wrote in First Things back in 2017, justifiably mocking this phenomenon. 

Even Pope Francis has weighed in on this curiosity on multiple occasions, most recently in early 2022. “We see that people do not want to have children, or just one and no more. And many, many couples do not have children because they do not want to, or they have just one—but they have two dogs, two cats…. Yes, dogs and cats take the place of children,” the pope declared. “And this denial of fatherhood or motherhood diminishes us, it takes away our humanity. And in this way civilization becomes aged and without humanity, because it loses the richness of fatherhood and motherhood. And our homeland suffers, as it does not have children.”

I don’t think Schmitz, Pope Francis, or anyone else writing against the dog mom cult are saying you shouldn’t get a dog. And you absolutely should. For adults and children alike, owning a dog provides a deeper understanding of God’s first commandment of man: “Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it; and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the birds of the heavens, and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth.”

Justly subdue your dog. Engage in the process that is subduing nature and become its master. Mastering your dog is also an exercise in self-mastery. Training your dog takes patience and repetition. It teaches self-discipline and develops sound judgment in the discipline of others, animal or human. Punish them too harshly, and the dog will shy away from all instruction. Punish them too leniently, or reward bad behavior, and you breed chaos.

I was an underclassman in high school when we got Kona. We had previously owned one other dog, also a Siberian Husky, but I was mostly too young to participate in training her. Training Kona was the first time I engaged in this process with a dog that was truly mine. With the help of a trainer, my Mom and I slowly, over many months, domesticated a dog that had previously known only mealtime and the rules he made for himself in his small domain surrounded by a chain-link fence. We taught him the necessary behaviors: we housebroke him; kennel trained him; taught him to not crash doors that remained open, to sit, to lay down, to stay. And we taught him some unnecessary ones: shake, jump, howl, spin, and dance. All virtue is habituated in man, but also his best friend.

If you have a good dog, it will reveal to you something else. Your mastery over its nature is never complete. Your dog would cease to be a dog if it didn’t occasionally mistake your rug for its bathroom, eat something it shouldn’t, break out of the house, or chew something up. 

Siberian Huskies are working dogs. They require long walks or plenty of other kinds of physical activity. They are also more pack oriented than other dog species. Anyone who has seen mushing knows Huskies like to work in teams. Kona was no different. My mom is an avid walker and was his main source of exercise—with or without Kona, she will keep getting her 10,000 steps a day. And though it started out awkwardly given his previously solitary lifestyle, Kona loved going to this local doggy daycare that allowed him to socialize with other dogs. 

If we failed to give Kona the exercise and socialization he required, he wasn’t shy about letting us know. One time, after failing to walk Kona for two days or so, Kona snuck into my room and partially chewed up my favorite Angels’ ball cap and a few tchotchkes within his reach. (I still wear that hat, by the way—he chewed the left part of the brim as if he was purposefully making it appear worn). He’d express his occasional displeasure in other ways, too. One of his favorite ways to say, “take me for a walk,” was walking into the room where either my mom or I was, looking us dead in the eye, and just peeing on the floor—tile, carpet, rug, it didn’t matter to him.

We can subdue nature, but never fully overcome it. That is true whether we’re talking about flora and fauna, the climate and natural disasters, or our own human nature. Our mastery over nature will always be incomplete. Complete mastery of nature is reserved for its creator and abiding source: God.

Properly loving our pets makes us more fully human. The development of animal cruelty laws in the West, primarily in the British common law through the late 18th and early 19th centuries, often suggested crimes against animals were crimes against humanity, not because animals are human, but because it diminished one’s own humanity.

Owning a dog doesn’t teach us about being more fully human because, as the dog moms might say, they are like us, are “starter children,” or are equal to human members of our family. Instead, they teach us the distinction between man and beast. That man justly has authority over beasts, but when man claims authority over other men, a heightened, more attuned sense of justice is required than repetition and force—justice based on reason, and a shared sense of reason for that matter.

Our pets also teach us about death, though theirs are different from ours. We can’t keep what we master forever, our beasts or ourselves—no act of will can change nature’s final act. It is a fallen reality, but reality nonetheless, one with grieving and then accepting.

Get a dog (maybe two). Get a dog before your kids start begging for one. Treat it well, love it properly, and, yes, let it become part of your family life. Become its master and let mastering it help you master yourself. Grieve when your dog dies, but know that when your death comes, it can be the door to life eternal.

The post Still Man’s Best Friend appeared first on The American Conservative.

La guerre bouleverse la géopolitique des tubes et des méthaniers

Révision de la version parue dans le numéro de mai 2021 du mensuel. / Europe, Gaz naturel, Infrastructures, Énergie, Conflit russo-ukrainien 2022-, Russie - Energies / , , , , , - Energies

Minsk se rebiffe contre le grand frère russe

Depuis le changement de pouvoir en Ukraine, la Biélorussie tente d'échapper à la montée des tensions entre la Russie et l'Union européenne. En jouant les bons offices, Minsk espère diversifier ses échanges et affirmer son indépendance vis-à-vis de Moscou. Mais, soucieux de préserver son pouvoir et son (...) / , , , , , , - 2017/06

De nouvelles routes pour le pétrole et le gaz

Tokyo a accordé, le 13 avril 2005, des droits de forage à des compagnies pétrolières en mer de Chine, à proximité des îles appelées Senkaku par les Japonais et Diaoyu par les Chinois, qui en réclament la souveraineté. Cette querelle illustre la concurrence à laquelle se livrent les pays à forte (...) / , , , , , , , - 2005/05
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