Homeless across country fall victim to synthetic marijuana ” Pot Zombies”

St. Louis, Missouri –

The nation’s homeless are proving to be especially susceptible to a new, dirt-cheap version of synthetic marijuana, which leaves users glassy-eyed, aimless, sprawled on streets and sidewalks oblivious to their surroundings or wandering into traffic.

Nearly 300 homeless people became ill last month in St. Louis due to the man-made hallucinogen that experts believe is far more dangerous and unpredictable than the real thing. Other outbreaks have occurred in New York City, Los Angeles and Austin, Texas.

“It was common for us to see reactions where they were violent, incoherent, sometimes catatonic on the ground,” Austin police Lt. Kurt Thomas said.

The homeless are easy targets in a confined area, experts say. The drug is cheap – as little as $1 or $2 for a joint – more difficult to detect in drug tests and is a fast escape from a harsh reality.

Things got so bad in St. Louis last month that the region’s largest provider of homeless services urged people to stop giving the homeless handouts, because they were worried the money would be used to buy the drug.

The Rev. Larry Rice saw the odd behaviors from several homeless people in the streets outside his New Life Evangelistic Center shelter in downtown St. Louis.

“They told me, ‘You get so low, you get such a sense of hopelessness. Somebody wants to sell this for a dollar and you take it,'” Rice said. “People are desperate out there.”

Synthetic marijuana has been around since the late 2000s, packaged under names like K2, Darkness and Mr. Happy. The Drug Enforcement Administration says it is usually a mixture of herbs and spices sprayed with a synthetic compound chemically similar to THC, the psychoactive ingredients in marijuana. It is typically manufactured in China and sold in places like head shops, but it’s also on the street and over the internet.

State legislatures have outlawed it based on its chemical makeup, but the makers tweak the formula enough that it escapes the provisions of the law. So far in St. Louis, only one charge has been filed – a homeless man accused of selling to others on the street.

“You factor in some of the despair or difficult circumstances that these folks are going through, and they often fall prey to the suppliers offering an outlet to deal with their unfortunate situation,” Thomas said.

The medical dangers are real with synthetic marijuana, which can be up to 100 times more potent than real marijuana, said Dr. Anthony Scalzo, director of toxicology for the Saint Louis University School of Medicine.

Users often experience rapid heartbeat, high blood pressure, anxiety and hallucinations, he said.

Research published last year in the New England Journal of Medicine indicated that 20 deaths from August 2011 through April 2015 were blamed on synthetic marijuana, though that doesn’t account for overdose deaths of undetermined or multiple causes. Scalzo said those who survive can suffer permanent kidney failure and brain damage.

“We have no idea how the body is going to react to the next wave of chemicals,” Scalzo said. “It’s like Russian roulette. You just don’t know what you’re getting.”

During one outbreak in Brooklyn in July, 130 people were hospitalized. Witnesses said many of users were shaking or leaning aimlessly against trees and fire hydrants.

In emergency room interviews, users said they would prefer to smoke real marijuana but took the synthetic drug to avoid detection in urine tests typically mandated for probation and parole issues and other reasons, according to Michelle Nolan of the New York City Health Department.

“For individuals still using a psychoactive substance, this afforded them, criminally speaking, fewer risks,” Nolan said.

The Skid Row area of downtown Los Angeles saw the scourge over a few days in August, when 36 people were treated for overdoses. Some had seizures, others staggered through traffic or collapsed on curbs.

Around 150 homeless people have overdosed on synthetic marijuana since August in Austin, and one death was blamed on the drug, Thomas said. Police and homeless advocates in Austin are warning those on the street to avoid the temptation to use, but know it’s an uphill battle.

“Being realistic, we’re always going to have a group of folks who are willing to engage in self-destructive behavior,” Thomas said.

© 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

https://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_SYNTHETIC_MARIJUANA_HOMELESS?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2016-12-17-10-30-58

Data analysis firm CoreLogic says that for every two homebuyers who moved to California from 2000 through 2015, five others sold their homes, packed up and moved out

Californians fleeing state’s high cost of housing

Nov. 14, 2016

California’s warm weather, sunny beaches and world-class schools have lured people to the Golden State for decades, but rising home prices are turning that equation around.

Data analysis firm CoreLogic says that for every two homebuyers who moved to California from 2000 through 2015, five others sold their homes, packed up and moved out.

Arizona and Texas were the top destinations for people moving out of California, CoreLogic reported. Only New Jersey had a higher ratio of fleeing homeowners during that period.

“California had the largest number of out-migrants in 2015,” CoreLogic Senior Economist Kristine Yao said in a blog post published Thursday.

The trend of out-migration was also noted in a separte trio of reports released earlier this year by Beacon Economics. Beacon noted that 625,000 more U.S. residents left California between 2007 and 2014 than moved into the state. The vast majority ended up in Texas, Oregon, Nevada, Arizona and Washington.

The search for more affordable housing is sending low- and middle-income workers out of the state, while higher-wage workers continue to move in, which argues against the theory that high taxes are driving people away.

“California has an employment boom with a housing problem,” said Beacon founding partner Christopher Thornberg. “The state continues to offer great employment opportunities for all kinds of workers, but housing affordability and supply represent a significant problem.”

Home prices and rents have been rising steadily for more than four years.

CoreLogic figures show Orange County’s median home price was up 42 percent in the four years ending in September. Prices were up 55 percent in Los Angeles County, 57 percent in Riverside County and 75 percent in San Bernardino County.

Although home sellers leaving California last year paid, on average, 36 percent less for their new homes out of state, they tended to end up in better neighborhoods, CoreLogic reported. Their purchase prices ranked in the 77th percentile for their new metro areas, while their sale prices ranked in the 62 percentile back home.

“Of the homeowners moving out of state, more of them sold in high appreciation, high cost areas and bought in lower appreciation, more affordable areas,” Yao wrote.

California home prices have risen in part because of a lack of inventory.

From 2005 to 2015, permits were filed for only 21.5 housing units per every 100 new residents in the state. That put the Golden State second to last behind Alaska, where only 16.2 housing permits were filed for every 100 new residents.

On the flip side, Michigan saw 166 permits filed for every 100 new residents.

Register staff writer Jeff Collins contributed to this report.

https://www.ocregister.com/articles/home-735151-prices-state.html

Scenes of wrecked and submerged neighborhoods in the aftermath of Sandy, the East Coast superstorm, are unlikely to be repeated in Orange County anytime soon

Editorial –

O.C. flooding – What could happen here – Could the District at Tustin Legacy be Under Water – Literally and Financially –

Scenes of wrecked and submerged neighborhoods in the aftermath of Sandy, the East Coast superstorm, are unlikely to be repeated in Orange County anytime soon.

But something very like it happened in 1938. Days of rain dropped more than 9 inches over Orange County, more farther inland, turning much of northern Orange County into a lake as the Santa Ana River overflowed its banks.

The flood claimed at least 19 lives, left 2,000 homeless and yielded memorable black-and-white photos of drowning cars and buildings in Anaheim.

Something very like it also happened in December 2010. More than 9 inches of rain fell over 12 days in Orange County – enough for a 1938-style catastrophe. But the widespread devastation didn’t happen this time.

The difference comes down to human engineering. The 1938 flood prompted construction of Prado Dam above Orange County on the Santa Ana River, and the concrete channelization of riverbeds across Southern California.

Sealing riverbanks in concrete speeds storm flow on its way to the ocean, depriving us of the chance to capture some water, perhaps, but preventing catastrophic flooding.

“As much as everybody complains about concreting rivers, if we hadn’t done that, we would have had 1938 déja vu all over again,” said Bill Patzert, an ocean and climate researcher at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena. “We’re somewhat immunized against floods.”

Somewhat, however, does not mean completely. More localized flooding remains a genuine threat in Orange County.

And while the chances of a city-swallowing deluge are far lower because of flood control, they aren’t completely out of the question.

A 190-year storm – one that would be expected statistically once every 190 years – could wreak similar havoc even with present flood control measures, said Tom Bucklew of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, project manager for the Santa Ana Mainstem Project.

With a total estimated pricetag of $2.1 billion, the project so far has included a variety of improvements along the Santa Ana River, the raising of Prado Dam and the building of the Seven Oaks Dam near the river’s headwaters in San Bernardino County.

The goal is to provide Orange County with 190-year flood protection. At the moment, we have 70-year flood protection.

“There are still hundreds of millions of dollars needed to complete the project,” said Kevin Onuma, manager of Orange County’s OC Flood section.

The remaining work includes improvements around Prado Dam.

“It wouldn’t be something we have to do tomorrow,” Bucklew said. “But within the next few years, we want to make sure we finish the project.”

In our case, the culprit behind a massive downpour is unlikely to be a hurricane. While we sometimes experience the backwash from weakened remnants of Pacific hurricanes, in the form of heavy rains, the chance of the hurricanes themselves reaching this far north are close to zero.

A churning hurricane must be powered by warm water.

“We have a very cold California current, called a hurricane vaccine,” Patzert said.

Instead, the big threat to Southern California would come in the form of an “atmospheric river,” sometimes called the Pineapple Express.

That is when a chain of storms, one behind another, flow over the region from the Pacific.

The 1938 deluge might have been one such atmospheric river; the downpour in 2010 definitely fit the bill.

“Two things allowed us to have 20 million people – headed for 30 million, by the way – in Southern California,” Patzert said. “One was water infrastructure, the other was flood control infrastructure. Without all that concrete and all those pumping stations, most of us wouldn’t be here.”

Contact the writer: 714-796-7865 or [email protected].

https://www.ocregister.com/articles/county-376599-flood-orange.html

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