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3Fun Users' Data Is Not Hacked or Disclosed – The Security Update Was Made On July 2nd

Security updates to 3Fun's API, servers and mobile application were made on July 2nd and a new, secure version of the app was released on July 8th. Users' data is not hacked or disclosed.




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Furr's Fresh Buffet® Announces Temporary Closure of All Restaurants in Response to COVID-19




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Beloved Midwest Confectionery Closes Mall Stores Due to COVID-19

Buddy Squirrel Pivots Business to Concentrate Online Shipped-to-Door Business




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Don't Dread The First Morning Mirror Closeup With Skin 2 Skin's Anti-Wrinkle Night Recovery. Not Just A Night Cream But A Multitasking Dry Sensitive Skin Changer Within The First Five Days

With advanced volumizing wrinkle reducing, firming, peptide ChroNoLine with more than 30 antioxidants (mostly from botanicals), 200 skin nutrients, the most intriguing is Euk-134 (Eukarinon-134), a superoxide dismutase that is a radical scavenger




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Women in Media Celebrates Catherine Hardwicke, Cynthia Pusheck, Kathryn Bostic, and Shawn Holden at Annual Holiday Brunch in Los Angeles

Toastmasters include John Simmons (Cinematographer), Allison Kelly (Cinematographer), Tamika Lamison (Producer / Director / Writer), and Starr Parodi (Composer).




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Songs for Sound #HEARtheMUSIC Project Supports America's Heroes Living with Hearing Loss at the 119th VFW National Convention

The #HEARtheMUSIC Project travels the nation to raise awareness and promote access and action around hearing loss, the number one service-related injury affecting veterans




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Prominent Florida Foreclosure Defense Firm Oppenheim Law Announces Deferred Payment Plan for U.S. Government Employees Affected by Historic Government Shutdown

Fort Lauderdale Foreclosure Defense Attorneys look to ease the government employees affected by the current shutdown by helping them with their foreclosure and housing needs, and deferring payment for such services until they return to work.




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Commercial Photographer Los Angeles, Los Angeles Photo Team, Prioritizes Quality Material

Commercial photographer Los Angeles, Los Angeles Photo Team, is a top quality photography company which strives to provide perfect visual representations of clients.




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Model Act Studios Schaumburg & Lemont Illinois Talent go to Los Angeles for IMTA

Model Act Studios Develops, Promotes, & Places Actors & Models in all markets. See Model Act Studios talent on TV Shows, Movies, Commercials, Print Ads & Runway.




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Product Photography Los Angeles Company, LA Photo Team, Always Produces High-Quality Photos

Product photography Los Angeles should always be at the top of your list when starting a business. Product photography is often overlooked when it shouldn't be.




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Professional Photographers Los Angeles, LA Photo Team, Produces Excellent Photography

Professional photographers Los Angeles such as LA Photo Team is the team to call if photography is required for any event or e-commerce site. Through means of using LA Photo Team, clients will receive the best service possible.




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Real Estate Photography and Videography Los Angeles Shines With LA Photo Team

Real estate photography Los Angeles shines with help from photography and videography company, LA Photo Team. LA Photo Team is a Los Angeles-based company which provides a numerous amount of services.




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Product Photography Los Angeles Services That Make Products Look More Appealing

Product photography Los Angeles is an essential part of any company's business ventures. This is due to the fact that product photography Los Angeles allows any e-commerce or physical stores to showcase their products.




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Photography Studio, Los Angeles Photo Team, Goes Above and Beyond During Photoshoots

Professional studio, Los Angeles Photo Team, does the job when it comes to photography. It is always important for every and any photography studio to be able to meet the demands of clients.




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Product Photography Los Angeles Can Exponentially Grow Your Business

Product photography Los Angeles is oftentimes overlooked by business owners. However, it can serve as one of the most essential marketing tools and LA Photo Team is well aware of this.




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Photography Studio Images By Los Angeles Photo Team Can Bring Products To Life

Photography studio scheduling can be a risky venture. Top talent is not always easy to come across, and some studios only excel on a single service, while they stagger on others.




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Photography Studio, Los Angeles Photo Team, Are Experts In Professional Headshots

Photography studio should be sought if you need photography. However, you may know the many struggles of searching for one.




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Maddox Gallery Los Angeles Presents: Pamela Anderson by David Yarrow, an Event to Benefit the Pamela Anderson Foundation

Maddox Gallery Los Angeles unveiled fine art photographer David Yarrow's latest portrait of Pamela Anderson at Friday night's exhibit.




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Is the City of Kennedale, TX Going to Lose an $800,000 Federal Grant Due to Lack of Cash?

Continued Financial Mismanagement, Even with Tax Increases, Leaves the City Short of Cash




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Can these 13 retailers survive coronavirus? Permanent store closings, bankruptcies coming

Retailers that were already ailing before the coronavirus are beginning to crumble as the crisis raises the threat of store closings and bankruptcy.





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Three Tips to Help CISOs Close the IT-OT Security Gap, Part 2

Thinking of Your OT Network as an Extension of Your IT Network Will Give You a Consolidated Picture of Your Technology Infrastructure

read more




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Los Angeles-Based American Eagle Auto Body Wins Coveted Spectrum Award For Customer Service Excellence

American Eagle Auto Body, a Los Angeles-based auto shop, is the winner of the City Beat News Spectrum Award for Excellence in Customer Service.




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This Is Social Media Week In Los Angeles!

It's Social Media Week here in Los Angeles.

This global platform for conversation, collaboration and learning connects hundreds of thousands of people in different cities around the world in hopes of raising consciousness about social media's role in society.

Participating cities this week include not only Los Angeles, but Bogota, Buenos Aires, Mexico City and Milan.

According to the organizers, programming and content are "designed to cover every emerging trend, technology area and industry sector." Events are primarily free to attend or significantly subsidized. By being both collaborative and co-curated, the event reflects the local market rather than one vision distributed throughout participating cities.

The programming on deck in Los Angeles this week includes a Cleantech Social Media Panel sponsored by CleanTech Los Angeles at 2:00pm Tuesday afternoon, September 21. "Panelists range from established social media cleantech groups to new cleantech initiatives seeking to capitalize on social media techniques."

Other events deal with How Geolocation Technology Is Changing The World, Listening And Engaging With The Public: Political Process In Social Media and the convergence of Search Engine Optimization And Social Media.

Back in February, Social Media Week rolled into Berlin, London, New York, San Francisco, Sao Paulo and Toronto. You can find more information on the Social Media Week website, as well as on Twitter, their Facebook page, and on YouTube.




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The 24-Hour City: 104 Years Of Owl Transit Service In Los Angeles

-- By Matt Barrett

Los Angeles has been a 24-hour city for much longer that most would imagine, and transit service has played an important role in keeping the city moving overnight for over 100 years.

(LAMTA Car 3022 trundles down the R Line tracks on owl service in 1963. Photo courtesy of Alan Weeks)


According to the September 11, 1906 edition of the Los Angeles Examiner newspaper, in a brief article entitled “Owl Cars Are Run on Principal Lines”:

The “owl” car service began last night. Cars on the principal lines left First and Spring streets at 1 and 2 o’clock. They were well patronized. The lines included are Boyle Heights, Grand Avenue, Vernon Avenue, University, Main Street, and Pico Heights.

At the time service began, these lines linked Downtown with what were then LA’s most populated neighborhoods around 6th and Rampart, Central and Slauson, Boyle Heights, 46th and Wesley, Vermont and 54th, and Pico and Wilton.

Owl service continued in operation as the fledgling network of streetcar lines, buses and interurban rail lines was purchased in 1911 and organized into two main transit companies: Pacific Electric, for long-distance interurban service, and Los Angeles Railway serving urban inner-city Los Angeles.

As Los Angeles grew outward, so did the length of the lines offering owl service. Special owl service guides were published and system maps included extensive owl service information for passengers.

Even as streetcar service slowly began the conversion to bus service, beginning as early as 1925 and continuing until the last rail line was shut down in 1963, owl service remained a part of the transit system – as it does today.

(This 1947 brochure advertised LAMTA's Owl Service)


Currently, Metro has 59 buses running on 26 lines during its overnight owl service, roughly midnight to 5 a.m., connecting Downtown to points north to the San Fernando Valley, south to Long Beach, east to El Monte and west to Santa Monica and Venice.






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Los Angeles In Maps & The Curious Case Of Miss Laura J. Whitlock

One the most exciting new books in a long time has been released this month: Glen Creason's Los Angeles In Maps (New York: Rizzoli, 2010).

Creason is the Map Libraran at Los Angeles Public Library and co-curated the landmark 2008-2009 exhibition L.A. Unfolded: Maps From The Los Angeles Public Library.

This new work guides the reader through the variety of maps created for Los Angeles, from the 1849 Plan De La Ciudad De Los Angeles ("Ord's Survey") to modern day interactive maps.

The book works on a number of levels: as history lesson, as a beautiful coffee table book with intriguing graphics, as a thought-provoking work showing how spatial depictions have changed over the past century and a half, and how Los Angeles can be viewed in historical context in ways other than chronological.

It is organized into chapters that tell the various stories of Los Angeles, such as Early Growth, Social Life, Water, Age of the Automobile, Tourism, etc.

Fortunately for us, there is a Transportation section, where we learn the story of Laura J. Whitlock, official mapmaker of Los Angeles County - and the only female map publisher in the United States when she was working in the early 20th century.

Pirated copies of her work were widely distributed without her consent, and she filed suit for copyright infringement. We'll leave it to you to discover what happened with this landmark case, but it did set a precedent for map copyright -- an important contribution to American map history made here in Los Angeles.

The rest of the transportation maps and information are equally interesting, as are the other subject areas covered, but you'll have to read the book yourself to find out more.


It suffices to say that the highly-readable nature of Los Angeles In Maps makes it an instant classic for those interested not just in maps, but the history and growth of the city as well.

We had hoped to find the same maps featured in the book on the Los Angeles Public Library website. Unfortunately, the L.A. Unfolded exhibit is not listed on the LAPL Past Exhibits webpage, but some of their 100,000 maps can be found in their digital collection online.

We, however, maintain an online map collection titled Past Visions Of L.A.'s Transportation Future: Mass Rapid Transit Concept Maps.

Here you will find an online gallery from 1925 to present-day, focusing on proposed rail and rapid transit plans over the years.

We are hoping to bring more map resources online as time permits.

(Above: 1925 Pacific Electric Route Map, click to enlarge. These old maps are full of intriguing tidbits, like Sunset Boulevard being the original Beverly Boulevard - as noted here).

Readers are also invited to explore our full-text digital collection of Los Angeles Transit And Transportation Studies, 1911-1957. These documents also include rare maps and other illustrative material from L.A.'s transit and transportation history.




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New And Notable: Los Angeles From The Air Then And Now, Makeshift Metropolis & Down The Asphalt Path

Avid readers of local history are usually intrigued by photos of historic sites juxtaposed against contemporary images. This format of visual history has a particularly strong impact when the subject is Los Angeles: a city that grew up -- and outward -- so quickly.

Those seeking pictorial overviews will likely have checked out aerial photography books as well.

Los Angeles From The Air: Then And Now (San Diego: Thunder Bay Press, 2010) is a hybrid of these two types of pictorial books. It presents decades-old photographs of both familiar and lesser-known landmarks along side more current ones.

This takes the reader on a trip through Los Angeles like never before, featuring inspiring, sky-high then-and-now images of some of LA's most famous locations.

Some of the landmarks' origins are well-known, but the authors provide context for both familiar and hidden pieces of Los Angeles history.

Many of the photos feature snow-capped peaks in the distance -- a testament to our clear Winter days being the best for photography.

Unfortunately, the work falls flat in its description of transportation in downtown Los Angeles. The authors write:

"Metrolink [sic] provides service to Union Station in the form of three rail lines -- Red, Purple, Gold..."

While Metro and Metrolink may sound similar to those outside of Los Angeles (the book is, after all, published in San Diego), it gives one pause that other information found here may not be entirely accurate. Ultimately, one can ignore the text entirely, as these beautiful photos speak for themselves.

In Makeshift Metropolis: Ideas About Cities (New York: Scribner, 2010), noted architecture writer Witold Rybczynski offers a glimpse of an urban future that might very well serve as a template for cities around the world.

Rybczynski integrates history and prediction of the development of the American city in a brisk look back that takes us from colonial town planning to the Garden City and City Beautiful initiatives of the early 20th century and on to the "Big Box Era."

He also examines how contemporary urban designers and planners are revisiting and refreshing older urban ideas, such as bringing gardens to a blighted Brooklyn waterfront.

Rybczynski's study is kept relevant by his focus on what the past can teach us about creating the "cities we want" and "cities we need."

The prose is instructive and always engaging, and the author's enthusiasm for the future of cities and his enduring love of urban settings of all kinds is evident.

He not only writes about what people want from their cities, he inspires the reader to imagine the possibilities.

In Down The Asphalt Path: The Automobile And The American City, author Clay McShane examines the uniquely American relationship between "automobility" and urbanization.

Writing at the cutting edge of urban and technological history, he depicts how new technology, namely the private automobile, and the modernization of the American city redefined each other.

The author motors us across the country -- from Boston to New York, from Milwaukee to Los Angeles and the suburbs in between -- chronicling the urban embrace of the automobile.

The New York Times calls this work "A treat to read, loaded with interesting facts...a notable book about urban transportation."

Barron's wrote that "this fascinating, well-researched history of the automobile industry...is written from a social and cultural perspective rarely included in traditional books about the business."

The Whole Earth Review claims "this fascinating treatise is the most credible look yet at how automobiles have changed American society for better or worse."




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New And Notable: Oil On The Brain, Transport Geographies & Early Downtown Los Angeles

Oil On The Brain: Petroleum's Long, Strange Trip To Your Tank is a smart, surprisingly funny account of the oil industry — the people, economies, and pipelines that bring us petroleum, brilliantly illuminating a world we encounter every day.

Americans buy ten thousand gallons of gasoline a second, without giving it much of a thought. Where does all this gas come from?

Author Lisa Margonelli’s desire to learn took her on a one-hundred thousand mile journey from her local gas station to oil fields half a world away.

In search of the truth behind the myths, she wriggled her way into some of the most off-limits places on earth: the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, the New York Mercantile Exchange’s crude oil market, oil fields from Venezuela, to Texas, to Chad, and even an Iranian oil platform where the United States fought a forgotten one-day battle.

In a story by turns surreal and alarming, Margonelli meets lonely workers on a Texas drilling rig, an oil analyst who almost gave birth on the NYMEX trading floor, Chadian villagers who are said to wander the oil fields in the guise of lions, a Nigerian warlord who changed the world price of oil with a single cell phone call, and Shanghai bureaucrats who dream of creating a new Detroit.

Deftly piecing together the mammoth economy of oil, Margonelli finds a series of stark warning signs for American drivers. Rave reviews for Oil On The Brain include:

“If you drive a car, you must read this book.” —Mary Roach, author of Stiff

“By giving voice to the people who are the links in the global oil chain, Margonelli invites us to leapfrog all the rhetoric, dry statistics, and dire pronouncements about oil in order to truly understand it.” —Fast Company

“Hugely enjoyable, compulsively readable, and brilliantly reported.” —Po Bronson, author of What Should I Do with My Life?

The PBS Newshour conducted an extensive interview with the author, which can be found here.

Transport Geographies: Mobilities, Flows And Spaces brings together a formidable range of expert insight to introduce the key ideas, concepts and themes of transport geography.

Using an issues-based, qualitative approach, the contributors feature a wide range of case-study material.

This work explores the relationship between transport geography and wider geographical concerns, as well as connections to other areas of study -- economics, engineering, environmental studies, political science, psychology, spatial planning, sociology and transport studies.

The book highlights the role of transport geography in globalization, and its interplay with economic, social and environmental geographies at a range of spatial scales. It reviews contemporary policy and the role transport geographers can play in policy debates.

Both empirically informed and theoretically robust, this compelling text shows the significance of transport in terms of the needs and demands of future travel.

Growing south from the plaza where the city of Los Angeles was founded as a tiny pueblo in 1781, the area now known as downtown L.A. was first developed in the late 1800s as a residential neighborhood, complete with churches and schools.

As the population surged at the turn of the 20th century, the downtown area was transformed into a busy business and entertainment center of shops, banks, hotels, and theaters.

The explosion of the postcard craze in the early 1900s coincided with this period of downtown's tremendous growth toward a formidable metropolis.

Early Downtown Los Angeles
is a collection of vintage postcard images offers a glimpse into the changing city through the 1940s. Transportation is afforded its own chapter.

It includes rarely seen images of La Grande Station, the passenger terminal constructed by the Santa Fe Railroad in 1893. Santa Fe and Southern Pacific's competitive rail pricing fueled the real estate boom and unprecedented population growth throughout the region in the late 1800s and early 1900s.

Early interior images of Union Station, Angels Flight, and other rail lines are of particular topical interest.




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Simple Closet Organizing Hacks to Get the Job Done


The following is a guest post with simple closet organizing hacks from regular contributor, Morgan from Morganize with Me. Well, with a little more time on my hands, or should I say a lot more time on my hands, I decided to tackle my son’s closet. This was a bit of a spring cleaning/reorganizing project […]

If you're seeing Simple Closet Organizing Hacks to Get the Job Done anywhere other than on I'm an Organizing Junkie (or via my email list or a feed reader) it is being used by someone else without my permission. Please let me know, thank you!




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Temporary Road Closure - Upper Coomera

Streets affected: Days Road (lane closure with traffic control – expect delays) between Williamson Road and Abraham Road

Region:

Category:

Date: 
Thursday, May 7, 2020 - 16:30 to Thursday, May 21, 2020 - 03:00
planned: 
1
Read more: 

Also affected: Williamson Road (lane closure with traffic control – expect delays) between Billinghurst Crescent and Days Road

Start date: 7 May 2020

End date: 20 May 2020

Duration: 6:30am – 5pm

Reason: Bus bay works




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Temporary Road Closure - Bundall

Streets affected: Slatyer Avenue (lane closure with traffic control – expect delays) between Ponciana Crescent and Richmond Avenue

Region:

Category:

Date: 
Thursday, May 7, 2020 - 19:00 to Monday, June 8, 2020 - 00:30
planned: 
1
Read more: 

Also affected: Racecourse Drive (lane closure with traffic control – expect delays) between Slatyer Avenue and Mentone Avenue

Start date: 7 May 2020

End date: 7 June 2020

Duration: 9am – 2:30pm

Reason: To facilitate installation of new signal footing and pole




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Temporary Road Closure - Main Beach

Streets affected: Breaker Street (full road closure local traffic access only) between Cronin Avenue and Tedder Avenue

Region:

Category:

Date: 
Monday, May 11, 2020 - 16:30 to Sunday, May 31, 2020 - 04:30
planned: 
1
Read more: 

Also affected: Tedder Avenue (full road closure local traffic access only) between Cronin Avenue and Gold Coast Highway

Start date: 11 May 2020

End date: 30 May 2020

Duration: 6:30am – 6:30pm

Reason: To facilitate road profiling and wearing course layering




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Temporary Road Closure - Surfers Paradise

Streets affected: Via Roma (lane closure with traffic control – expect delays) between Isle of Capri Bridge and Verona Avenue

Region:

Category:

Date: 
Wednesday, May 20, 2020 - 17:00 to Thursday, May 21, 2020 - 01:00
planned: 
1
Read more: 

Also affected: Amalfi Drive and Brindisi Avenue

Start date: 20 May 2020

End date: 20 May 2020

Duration: 7am – 3pm

Reason: ENERGEX works - to facilitate pole replacement for the Isle of Capri Decongestion Project




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Unplanned Temporary Road Closure - Arundel

Streets Affected: Captain Cook Drive (half road closure with traffic control - expect delays) between Captain Cook Close and Logistics Place

Start date: 8 May 2020

End date: 8 May 2020

Duration: 9am - 3pm

Reason: Emergency repair works on a 300mm recycled water main along Captain Cook Drive

Region:

Category:

Date: 
Friday, May 8, 2020 - 19:00 to Saturday, May 9, 2020 - 01:00
planned: 
0




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Temporary Road Closure - Surfers Paradise

Streets affected: Norfolk Avenue (half road closure with traffic control – expect delays) between Ferny Avenue and River Drive

Region:

Category:

Date: 
Thursday, May 7, 2020 - 17:00 to Saturday, May 30, 2020 - 03:00
planned: 
1
Read more: 

Also affected: Oak Avenue, Ferny Avenue and Pine Avenue

Start date: 7 May 2020

End date: 15 May 2020   (* verge/footpath closed until 29 May 2020)

Duration: 7am – 5pm

Reason: To facilitate restoration works and final water main replacement and connection




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Temporary Road Closure - Broadbeach Waters

Streets affected: Rudd Street (full road closure local traffic access only) between Rio Vista Boulevard and Bermuda Street

Region:

Category:

Date: 
Monday, May 25, 2020 - 05:00 to Wednesday, June 10, 2020 - 15:00
planned: 
1
Read more: 

Also affected: Rio Vista Boulevard (full road closure local traffic access only) between T E Peters Drive and Reef Court

Start date: 24 May 2020

End date: 10 June 2020

Duration: 7pm – 5am

Reason: To facilitate profiling of the road followed by wearing course layer to the roadway




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Temporary Road Closure - Stapylton

Streets affected: Quarry Road (half road closure with traffic control – expect delays) between Stapylton Jacobs Well Road and Rossmanns Road

Region:

Category:

Date: 
Tuesday, May 26, 2020 - 04:00 to Wednesday, June 10, 2020 - 16:00
planned: 
1
Read more: 

Also affected: Angel Road

Start date: 25 May 2020

End date: 10 June 2020

Duration: 6pm – 6am

Reason: Road profiling and asphalt works




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Temporary Road Closure - Pacific Pines

Streets affected: Pacific Pines Boulevard (lane closure with traffic control – expect delays) between Binstead Way and Capricorn Drive

Region:

Category:

Date: 
Friday, May 8, 2020 - 16:30 to Saturday, June 6, 2020 - 04:00
planned: 
1
Read more: 

Start date: 8 May 2020

End date: 5 June 2020

Duration: 6:30am – 6pm

Reason: Potholing




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Temporary Road Closure - Coolangatta

Streets affected: Lord Street (full road closure local traffic access only) between Musgrave Street and Winston Street

Region:

Category:

Date: 
Friday, May 15, 2020 - 15:00 to Thursday, May 21, 2020 - 04:30
planned: 
1
Read more: 

Start date: 15 May 2020 only

Contingency dates: 18 May 2020,  19 May 2020,  20 May 2020

Duration: 5am – 6:30pm

Reason: To facilitate large concrete pour - 1 day only between above dates




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Most beaches closed today

Most Gold Coast beaches are closed today due to heavy seas and dangerous inshore conditions.

Greenmount, Coolangatta, Kirra, North Kirra, Bilinga and 4th Ave Burleigh are open.

Lifeguards will continually monitor our beaches and advise beachgoers accordingly.

There is also a hazardous surf condition warning from the Bureau of Meteorology.

Region:

Date: 
Tuesday, July 2, 2019 - 16:03 to Wednesday, July 3, 2019 - 01:00
planned: 
0




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ALL BEACHES CLOSED THURSDAY 4 JULY

All Gold Coast beaches are closed today due to worsening inshore conditions and a rising swell.

Beachgoers are advised to avoid walking along the beach, especially with children as tidal surges are very strong and people may be swept off their feet.

The safest vantage points to view the surf are from dedicated pathways and  oceanways.

 

Region:

Date: 
Thursday, July 4, 2019 - 19:00 to Friday, July 5, 2019 - 16:00
planned: 
0




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ALL BEACHES CLOSED THURSDAY 5 JULY

All beaches will be closed today due to dangerous inshore conditions and heavy seas.

Beachgoers are advised to avoid walking along the beach, especially with children as tidal surges are very strong and people may be swept off their feet.

The safest vantage points to view the surf are from dedicated pathways and  oceanways.

 

 

 

Region:

Date: 
Friday, July 5, 2019 - 16:12 to Saturday, July 6, 2019 - 16:12
planned: 
0




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Beaches closed

All Gold Coast beaches are closed to swimming today following a hazardous surf warning for local waters due to powerful surf and swell conditions today and tomorrow.

City Lifeguards have closed all beaches to swimming and are advising people to stay out of the water and be careful in surf-exposed areas

 

Region:

Date: 
Thursday, February 13, 2020 - 18:00
planned: 
0




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All beaches closed

All Gold Coast beaches are closed to swimming today following a hazardous surf warning for local waters due to powerful surf and swell conditions today. 

City Lifeguards are advising people to stay out of the water and be careful in surf exposed areas.

 

 

 

Region:

Date: 
Friday, February 14, 2020 - 16:00 to Saturday, February 15, 2020 - 22:00
planned: 
0




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Three beaches closed

The Spit beach, Coolangatta Beach and Surfers Paradise Beach are closed until next Monday 20 April in an effort to help stop the spread of Covid19. The closure will be reviewed again on this date. 

Coolangatta Beach is closed from Greenmount Point to the Coolangatta Groyne.

Surfers Paradise is closed from Clifford St Tower 33 to South Narrowneck Tower 37 adjacent to Higman St.

The Spit, from Tower 42 adjacent to Seaworld, north to the Rock Wall adjacent to Tower 46 is closed. 

Please note, beach and oceanside car parks from Broadwater Parklands to Coolangatta are also closed.

Region:

Date: 
Wednesday, April 8, 2020 - 19:00 to Monday, April 20, 2020 - 20:00
planned: 
1




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Currumbin Rockpools closed for swimming

       The City is aware of a potential recreational water quality concern at the Currumbin Rock Pools. The swimming area is now closed to the public and signage has been erected on site.

        Daily water sampling will be carried out and the area will not be reopened until values return to acceptable levels. 

        The City’s Catchment Management Unit monitors the health of our recreational waters and provides management plans to support healthy waterways.​

        Community safety is our first priority and we apologise for any inconvenience, and thank you for your patience and assistance.

Region:

Date: 
Wednesday, April 15, 2020 - 19:00 to Tuesday, April 28, 2020 - 19:00
planned: 
0




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The Spit beach closed

The Spit beach, including the off leash dog area, is closed from Lifeguard Tower 42 Adjacent to Seaworld north to the Rock Wall adjacent to Tower 46.

The beach has been closed in an effort to stop the spread of Covid19. 

Region:

Date: 
Monday, April 20, 2020 - 22:00 to Monday, April 27, 2020 - 20:00
planned: 
1




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Carparks closed at The Spit


City of Gold Coast has this afternoon shut Council carparks at the Spit. 

Chair of the Local Disaster Management Group and Mayor, Tom Tate said he was left with no choice after people continued to gather in groups there today. 

"People are just not listening so we have taken this measure to discourage visitors," he said. 

"The message is clear. We can no longer be gathering in groups larger than two and we should only be out for essential activities and exercise. 

"A lazy day at the Spit should not be on the cards right now.

"Staying home is the best way to keep us all safe."

 

Feature video: 
Not featured




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Three beaches to be closed

Mayor Tom Tate has just announced that as of midnight Tuesday, the Spit, Surfers Paradise and Coolangatta beach will be closed.

"The beaches are proving to be magnets for day visitors from Brisbane," he said.

"The balance of beaches will remain open for our residents so they can continue to exercise.

"However, we will monitor that situation and if we see groups starting to gather at those beaches, we will have to close those as well.

"We are working through the finer details now including having parking officers redeployed to The Spit to monitor illegal parking up there

"We didn’t want to get to this, but the weekend showed me that a small number of people aren’t listening."

 

Coolangatta Beach will be closed from Greenmount Point to the Coolangatta Groyne

Surfers Paradise will be closed from Clifford St Tower 33 to South Narrowneck Tower 37 adjacent to Higman St.

The Spit from Tower 42 Adjacent to Seaworld to the Rock Wall adjacent to Tower 46

Feature video: 
Not featured




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The Spit, Surfers Paradise and Coolangatta remain closed.

Mayor Tom Tate today announced that beach and car park restrictions would remain in place until next Monday.

"I would like to congratulate Gold Coasters for their efforts over the long weekend with the vast majority of people doing the right thing

"However I have decided to keep the three beaches closed until next Monday. It is still school holidays and we are not in a position to relax just yet. 

"I will review it next Monday."

"It is tough love, but it is still school holidays and the closures are working."

The Spit beach, Coolangatta Beach and Surfers Paradise Beach were closed last week due to high numbers of people continuing to visit beaches despite the warnings from the State and Federal Governments.

The City has also shut car parks beach and oceanside from Broadwater Parklands to Coolangatta.

Feature video: 
Not featured




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Disclosing Climate Risk

Alyson Slater, director of strategy for the Global Reporting Initiative.