Sea Thai Bistro Restaurant


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Sea Thai bistro Restaurant! it is a lovely place to have great food and a pleasant time. Most of the time, I go to this restaurant to eat with my husband. These pictures shown here are the dishes that most of the time I get because they are my favorites. They taste so delightful, and personally I believe that is what people want.

I am talking about this restaurant because this restaurant has impacted me so much that I have been there so many times and I do not get tired of the food, plus the service offers is so great and polite. This is what I want when I own my own restaurant. I would love to have appealing, amazing, and unique dishes so people would be so eager to go back again. Also, I would love to have a great staff in my restaurant. People who are very passionate about their job and responsible.

Definitely, this restaurant has inspired me to do my best when I start my own business.

California (New York Times)

California: Tentative Cleanup Deal Is Reached Over Salt-Tainted Water.

The nation’s largest irrigation district agreed to clean up contaminated water in California’s Central Valley in a tentative deal announced Tuesday that would settle a decades-old dispute with the federal government. The district, Westlands Water District, would clean up water tainted by salt that has accumulated in soil from years of irrigation, its general manager, Thomas Birmingham, said. The Department of the Interior said the deal would save taxpayers $3.5 billion. Westlands did not say how much it would spend on the cleanup, but district officials said they agreed to fix the problem, whatever it takes. But critics say the district and the Department of the Interior secretly forged the agreement that wipes away large amounts of the district’s debt and potentially gives it greater access to scarce water supplies. Mr. Birmingham said negotiations had been done in private but had not been secret. The tentative deal requires final approval by Congress. The settlement also would relieve Westlands of $350 million owed to taxpayers for its part in building the Central Valley Project, which delivers water as far south as San Diego. It would grant Westlands an indefinite water contract, rather than one that has to be renewed every two years. The water district agreed to retire 16 percent of its 614,000 acres of farmland under the deal, which would limit the amount of federal water it could receive. In the last two years, it has received none.

http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/i/interior_department/index.html?inline=nyt-org

Water Pollution (New York Times)

 

Toxic Algae Outbreak Overwhelms a Polluted Ohio River

The Ohio River, transformed by mining and industrial waste and sewage overflows into the nation’s most polluted major waterway, has a new and unexpected tormentor this fall: carpets of poisonous algae.

Pads of toxic blue-green algae have speckled nearly two-thirds of the 981-mile river in the last five weeks, experts say, in an outbreak that has curbed boating, put water utilities on alert and driven the river’s few hardy swimmers back to shore.

The river outbreak has produced few consequences beyond canceled boat races and warnings in five states to avoid contact with the river. But scientists say it is not to be taken lightly. The toxin, microcystin, causesdiarrhea, vomiting and liver damage, and it has been known to kill animals unlucky enough to drink water tainted with it. Last year’s Lake Erie bloom, an annual event, peaked over the municipal water intake for Toledo, forcing the city to shut down drinking water supplies to 400,000 residents for four days in August.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/01/us/toxic-algae-outbreak-overwhelms-a-polluted-ohio-river.html?ref=topics&_r=0