News of the Arroyo - 2002 Click on the title on the left for the full story: |
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Pasadena's Gems | December 29 -- In a nifty story to help tourists find the best spots in Pasadena, Maria Reyes lists the Arroyo Seco first and recommends that visitors connect with this website. |
Leaving His Mark | December 29 -- Here's a choice bit of Arroyo culture for you. As Pasadena gets ready for the 2003 Rose Bowl classic, Pasadena Star News reporter Mary Schubert tells the story of the design of the stadium and its creator, Myron Hunt. |
Save State's Adopted Trees | December 5 -- The Star News editorializes on the plight of those omnipresent invaders from Australia, the eucalyptus trees, that line our region. The paper calls for vigorous protection efforts in the face of a botanical plague. |
Expedite well cleanup effort | November 27 -- A Star News editorial calls for the setting of a proper standard for percholorate so that the cleanup of contaminated wells in the Arroyo Seco at JPL can proceed. |
Fires spur ecosystem educational program | November 25 -- Forest Service officials are putting together an educational program focusing on the scorched mountains above Azusa, Glendora, San Dimas and La Verne. |
It's Slow Track for the Rose Bowl | November 24 -- Charles Cherniss speculates on the future prospects for the Rose Bowl, including efforts to draw an NFL professional football to the aging stadium. |
Water Solution Sought | November 24 -- Perchlorate, a rocket fuel component, has contaminated local water wells in the Arroyo Seco. Efforts are now underway by Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Pasadena Water and Power to clean it up. |
Rose Bowl makes stand to save water | November 23 -- The Rose Bowl has installed flush-less urinals as part of a water conservation program. |
National park measures left out as session ends | November 23 -- Federal legislation to study the San Gabriel River watershed an to expand the Santa Monica Mountains Recreation Area was among many measures left untended to as Congress closed its special session. |
Innovative design cuts street runoff | November 21 -- There's a fascinating experiment going on in Seattle to reduce improve the water quality in Puget Sound. A street has been redesigned to use plantings to reduce stormwater runoff. Such a plan has fascinating potential for our area as well. By reducing runoff, local cities can produce water quality and conservation benefits and help restore the Arroyo Seco stream. |
Nature Waits on Fate of Dam | November 19 -- The Sacramento Bee presents a look at Matilija Dam in Ventura and similar efforts to deal with fish passage and the effects of aging, outmoded dams. |
Raymond Basin key to water storage | November 18 -- Additional water would be stored in the groundwater basin underneath Pasadena and surrounding communities in a joint plan between local water agencies and the Metropolitan Water District. |
Riders Take to Roads to Save Tree Species | November 17 -- Cara Mia DiMassa reports on the Arroyo Seco Foundation's Engelmann Oak Bike Ride and the campaign to save the stately oak. |
Judge Drops Frog Habitat Protections | November 13 -- Critical habitat designation for the red-legged frog has been lifted in a move that opens up millions of acres for development. |
Bicycle tour to visit rare Engelmann oak trees | November 12 -- Here is the announcement of the Arroyo Seco Foundation's Engelmann Oak Tree Bike Ride on Saturday, November 16. |
National forest rightfully reopened | November 10 -- The Star News applauds the US Forest Service for reopening the Angeles National Forest and calls for wide discussion about how to preserve and protect this resource. |
Volunteers Clean Up the Arroyo | November 3 - Volunteers cleaned up trash, bottles and plastic bags from the Arroyo Seco stream under the Colorado Street Bridge and also planted Engelmann oaks as part of a cleanup sponsored by Pasadena Beautiful. |
Stabilizing forest after fires will be costly | November 2 -- A stark story on the devastating effect of the recent fires in the San Gabriel Mountains. |
Melding of Past, Present at Kidspace | November 2 -- The Star News reports on construction progress at the Kidspace facility in Brookside Park. |
Rose Bowl aiming to be NFL-ready | November 1 -- More on the Rose Bow's bid for a Super Bowl and an NFL franchise. |
A Freeway Runs Through It | Fall -- Engineering & Science, a Caltech publication, features an article by Doug Smith on the unprecedented collaboration between Caltech, Occidental College and UCLA in presenting a joint course last Spring on "Re-Envisioning the Arroyo Seco Corridor: Watershed, Transportation, Ecological, and Community Building Issues.” |
Arroyo May Get Super Bowl | October 30 -- PSN reporter Gabe Lacques writes: "The Rose Bowl's effort to lure an NFL team to Pasadena is expected to gain steam this week when NFL owners will meet to discuss awarding the city a Super Bowl, possibly in 2008." |
Foundation preserving rare oaks | October 28 -- The Star News features the stately Engelmann oak and the efforts of the Arroyo Seco Foundation to preserve this grand tree. |
Naturalizing
the Arroyo Seco |
October 23 -- KPCC reporter Ilsa Setziol presents a great feature on Arroyo Seco restoration efforts: "This concretized streambed that runs from the San Gabriel mountains to the LA River is a strong candidate for natural restoration." You can hear the report here. |
Policing forests ravaged by fire | October 21 -- Here's the story of how the US Forest Services polices the closing of the Angeles National Forest due to fire threat. |
County cites lack of hiking, horse trails | October 3 -- A County audit exposes all the unfulfilled promises about the La Vina project, that massive scare in the foothills of Altadena on the eastern edge of the Arroyo Seco watershed. |
What Desert? NewTown exhibition mixes art with nature | September 29 -- The wondrous NewTown art extravaganza is profiled by the Star News. |
Angeles National Forest closure affects millions | September 29 -- The terrible fires that have ravaged through the San Gabriel have now led to the closure of the entire Angeles National Forest. |
Wet Revolution -- How a Different Way of Moving Water Can Change Our Lives | September 27 -- Jennifer Price in the LA Weekly discusses how watershed management can save Los Angeles. She notes: "If you want to see the first chunk of concrete fly, camp out on the banks of the Arroyo Seco, where the abundance of existing green space has given watershed management a head start." |
Arroyo Presentation Set | September 25 --- The monthly meeting of the Sierra Club will include a presentation on the Arroyo Seco Watershed Restoration Feasibility Study. |
Tongva Nation Welcomes Fall | September 23 -- The Gabrielino Tongva people celebrate the first day of Fall at the top of the Arroyo Seco. |
Impressed with meeting | September 16 -- Barbara Dahn reports with enthusiasm on the August 29 Pasadena Planning Commission on the Arroyo Seco Master Plan and EIR in a letter to the Star news. |
Poll the People on Rose Bowl | September 15 -- Pasadena Star News columnist Charles Cherniss advocates polling the people on the future of the Rose Bowl and whether a NFL team is appropriate in the historic stadium. |
The River Wild | August 29 -- The Pasadena Weekly reports on the controversy over Pasadena's Arroyo Seco Master Plan and EIR -- "City at odds with resident groups over plans to develop portions of the Arroyo Seco into recreational areas." |
Seeking A Renewal of Arroyo Seco | August 24 -- The LA Times reports on the release of the Arroyo Seco Watershed Restoration Feasibility Study and its ambitious plan to restore the Arroyo Seco steam and canyon to a more natural state. |
Study on Arroyo to be released | August 21 -- Lisa Faught presents an informative announcement and review of the Arroyo Seco Watershed Restoration Feasibility Study in the Pasadena Star News. |
Army Study May be Watershed for the Arroyo | August 14 -- Congressman Adam Schiff has obtained $100,000 for the US Army Corps of Engineers to explore ecosystem restoration programs as part of the Arroyo Seco Watershed Restoration Feasibility Study. |
Land Trust Formed to Build and Run Parks | August
14 -- "Citing statistics that Los Angeles ranks last
among major cities in per capita open space, a coalition of
private and public organizations announced plans Tuesday to form a
nonprofit urban land trust to develop and manage neighborhood
parks." |
Holding their horses | August 9 -- The Rose Bowl Riders are working hard to protect and preserve open space in the Arroyo Seco, especially in Hahamongna Watershed Park where they are based. This Star News story features Liz Blackwelder and highlights some current threats to open space. |
Study OK'd on Solis plan for parkland along river | July 25 -- The House Resources Committee has unanimously approved a $500,000 study of Representative Hilda Solis's proposal to designate the San Gabriel River a national park. The new boundaries for the study eliminate the lower Los Angeles River and the San Gabriel River south of Santa Fe Springs but include the mountain watershed and the San Gabriel Valley stretch of the river. |
Two Southland park proposals aired | July 19 --Proposals by Congress members Adam Schiff and Hilda Solis to extend national park status to the rivers and watersheds of our region received a hearing in Washington, DC this week. |
Skating Disaster | July 19 --Beatrice Simpson contributes a letter to the Star News decrying the controversial skate park located in the South Pasadena section of the Arroyo Seco. |
Canyon measure passes House | July 19 -- An appropriation of $1 million to clear slide debris from a wayward construction project in Rubio Canyon has now cleared the US House, thanks to the efforts of Congressman David Drier. |
Park at crux of traffic dispute | July 10 -- A plan to route La Canada High School traffic through Hahamongna Watershed Park has generated considerable controversy. The plan now winding its way through the Pasadena approval process would redirect traffic off Oak Grove Drive onto a service road that goes through the upper terrace of the spectacular Coast Live Oak grove that graces the west boundary of the Pasadena Park. |
Reclaiming a Lost River, Building a Community | July 10 -- The New York Times includes a feature on the Los Angeles River and the potential of restoration efforts to bring our communities together. |
Historic marker of Owen Brown has disappeared | July 10 -- A small citrus tree has displaced the historic headstone of local pioneer Owen Brown, son of the legendary John Brown, in the Altadena hills on the eastern edge of the Arroyo Seco watershed. Becky Oskin reports on the strange happenings and conveys some of the historical background. |
NF(Hell) Experience | June 27 -- Judy Seckler of the Pasadena Weekly covers the controversy over the use of the Rose Bowl for an NFL professional football team. |
Master plan for Arroyo blasted | June 27 - Today the Star News reports on the first public hearing on Pasadena's Arroyo Seco Master Plan: "Nature lovers, equestrians and anxious neighbors lambasted the city's plan for the Arroyo Seco at a Recreation and Parks Commission meeting this week. Most of the 50-plus people who attended the meeting Tuesday night at Victory Park were highly critical of the Arroyo Seco Master Plan. The multimillion-dollar plan calls for new sports fields, bike trails and several new parking areas in the city's largest open space." |
Kidspace sets its sights on a new space | June 24 -- Hundreds gather for an event to celebrate the construction phase at the new Kidspace facility in Brookside Park. The Star News discusses plans and recounts the Arroyo Seco Foundation lawsuit against the facility. |
Closure of El Prieto Fire Road | June 19 -- Attorney Paul Ayers has sent a letter to the neighbors who have closed El Prieto fire road. The letter outlines the fascinating history of the Brown brothers, sons of Civil War sparkplug John Brown, who were pioneer settlers in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains. The letter also details the legal basis for challenging the removal of barriers on the trail. |
Let's read the fine print on Hahamongna | June 13 -- Mary Barrie offers a critique of the Pasadena's Hahamongna Watershed Park Master Plan in the latest issues of the La Cañada Valley Sun. |
The Poles in the Arroyo | June 8 -- Star News Editor Larry Wilson puts down the poles lining Brookside golf course in the Arroyo Seco. Go take a loot if you don't know what Larry is talking about. And check out the new traffic sign poles too. |
At JPL It Is Rocket Science | June 8 -- The LA Times profiles Jet Propulsion Laboratory situated at the mouth of the Arroyo Seco. |
Pasadena extends comment period for Arroyo Master Plan | June 5 -- Pasadena announced Monday that it is extending the public comment period for the Master Environmental Impact Report for the Arroyo Seco Master Plan by 30 days. The public review period will now close on July 31. |
Charting future course of Valley's Arroyo Seco | June 3 -- Pasadena's Master Plan for the Arroyo Seco is examined by Elizabeth Lee in today's Star News. The article outlines the projects and issues surrounding the plan. |
Endangered toad has put stream widening on hold. | June 3 -- The fate of the Arroyo toad has forced a series of studies to determine how projects in the Upper Arroyo Seco near Hahamongna Watershed Park and above into the mountains can proceed. No toads have been spotted recently, but eight miles of the Arroyo have been designated critical habitat for the endangered species. |
Open space special district for San Gabriel Valley considered | June 1 -- The San Gabriel Valley Council of Governments is considering the formation of a special open space special district to protect the foothills going from Claremont to Altadena. While the proposed district would not cover the Arroyo Seco, it is an interesting governance model for the Arroyo Seco and other areas that need special care and protection. |
Let's schedule a bike path! | May 25 -- Steve Scauzillo, the editorial page editor of the San Gabriel Valley Newspaper Group, wades in on bikes in the Arroyo Seco. |
State chips in to save Monrovia foothills | May 24 --Monrovia has been awarded a $9 million grant from the California Wildlife Board to preserve and protect their foothills. |
Drought threatens southern steelhead | May 20 -- "Southern California's most severe drought on record is beginning to exact a toll on habitat and wildlife in a region with the greatest number of endangered species in the continental United States." Learn about the state of the southern steelhead in San Diego County. |
Arroyo Seco Plan: Boosting Nature and Amenities | May 19 -- The City of Pasadena has released the Master Plan and Environmental Impact Report for the Arroyo Seco, extending from the mouth of the canyon near JPL all the way to the South Pasadena city limits. Here is the LA Times report on the plan. |
Millard Canyon Preservation Effort | April 24 -- "The Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy authorized a grant this week to buy 13 acres in lower Millard Canyon for preservation. The Altadena Foothills Conservancy, which first brought the project to the SMMCs attention, has targeted the site for preservation since 1999, said Astrid Ellersieck, a Foothills Conservancy member." |
Ultimate Destination Opens in La Cañada | April 19 -- A spectacular trail has opened on the southern rim of the Arroyo Seco watershed in La Cañada Flintridge. It's aptly named the Ultimate Destination and is the result of the cooperation of the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy and the City of La Cañada Flintridge. But it wouldn't have happened at al if it hadn't been for activated citizens like Liz Blackwelde, Mary Barrie and the Friends of Cherry Canyon. |
Archers lose equipment, clubhouse in weekend fire | April 16 -- The clubhouse and equipment shack of the Pasadena Roving Archers was destroyed by fire over the weekend. The blaze, apparently intentionally set, destroyed the shack and all the equipment in it early Saturday morning. |
Council approves tree-protection amendments, 6-0 | April 16 -- The Pasadena City Council has approved a tree-protection ordinance which will restrict the pruning or removal of certain key species of trees on private property in Pasadena. |
Arroyo Seco selected for study of watersheds | April 13 -- More kudos for the Watershed Study being prepared by the Arroyo Seco Foundation and North East Trees. "The Arroyo Seco was among 10 watershed selected statewide for projects aimed at sustaining the natural systems, according to a key legislative report delivered Friday." |
Hahamongna may get soccer field | March 29 -- The Star News reports on the proposed joint La Cañada/Pasadena soccer complex at Hahamongna Watershed Park. |
Casting Club Salutes Steelhead |
March 24 -- The Pasadena Casting Club celebrated its 55th anniversary on Saturday, March 23 by unveiling a spectacular tribute to the steelhead that used to run in the Arroyo Seco stream near their pond. A bronze plaque featuring three steelhead trout now rests atop a new arroyo rock bench near the clubhouse in the Lower Arroyo. |
Hahamonga Park sports complex closer to reality | March 21 -- Plans for a joint use athletic field are revealed at a La Cañada City Council meeting. Pasadena and La Cañada will share the use and costs of the facility. |
L.A. to Sue Over State Trash Regulation | March 21 -- Los Angeles will file a lawsuit to challenge new water quality regulations that require cities to reduce the amount of trash flowing into local streams. |
Bush fires Army engineers official | March 6 -- President Bush fired Assistant Army Secretary Mike Parker on Wednesday after he criticized proposed spending cuts on Army Corps of Engineers water projects that he oversaw. Parker became Bush’s first high-level political appointee to be dismissed |
Soccer Is Kicking Into L.A.'s Future | March 3 -- Frank del Olmo of the LA Tims offers food for though to those promoting an NFL team in the Rose Bowl. |
Judge Overturns 'Critical Habitat' of 2 Species | February 26 -- A new analysis of the economic effects of setting aside more than 500,000 acres to protect the threatened gnatcatcher and fairy shrimp is ordered. |
Altadena Project Placed on Hold | |
Pasadena gadfly Roy Begley dies | February 18 -- Extraordinary Arroyo Seco activist Roy Begley has left us. We have all lost a good friend. |
Bush Officials Target Key Habitat Protections | February 16, 2002 - In an action that could affect the designation of critical habitat in the Arroyo Seco for the Arroyo Southwestern Toad, Bush administration officials have asked a federal judge to invalidate protection of several hundred thousand acres of land deemed essential for the survival of two other Southern California endangered species. |
Residents
give input on Angeles National Forest plans at workshop |
February 14 -- More than 150 people turned out for a workshop to discuss the future of the Angeles National Forest. The workshop at the Pasadena Conference Center was hosted by the US Forest Service as part of their work to develop a new master plant for the Angeles and the other forests of Southern California. |
Events set for Rose Bowl | February 13 -- The Mexican national soccer team and a pop music event dubbed "Wango Tango" will be coming to Rose Bowl under a package of events approved by the Pasadena City Council. |
Arroyo Seco Masterplan Touted | February 12 -- The project list for Pasadena's Arroyo Seco master plan were released Friday and are now available to download. Click here: Arroyo Seco Project Descriptions "The summary brings together items previously considered by the city council during the three-year planning period leading up to the final master plan and Environmental Impact Report." |
Rose Bowl May Need NFL Team to Stay Afloat | February 12 -- The LA Times reports on Pasadena City Council consideration of the three year business plan recommended by the Rose Bowl Operating Company. "Saying they need to ensure the Rose Bowl doesn't become an empty landmark, Pasadena City Council members on Monday voted unanimously to seek a major new tenant, possibly an NFL franchise." |
Pasadena Looks to Lure NFL Team | February 12 -- Here is the Associated Press account of the Pasadena City Council discussion about the future of the Rose Bowl. "It's in the best interests of the city and the Rose Bowl for us to at least make an effort to have that be on our terms," says Council member Paul Little. "The Rose Bowl Operating Co. told council members that a professional football franchise in a renovated stadium is the best way to ensure that the 80-year-old landmark remains viable." |
Arroyo Seco Master Plan Project Descriptions Released | February 9, 2002 -- The long-awaited project description for the Arroyo Seco Master Plan has now been released by the City of Pasadena. You can find out the background, view Pasadena's announcement and download the Summary Project Description by clicking on the title link. |
Group Approves Stadium Proposal | February 8 -- The Pasadena City Council Economic Development and Technology Committee voted to recommend approval of the Rose Bowl Operating Committee's three-year business plan on Wednesday night, bringing the RBOC closer to making a bid for an NFL franchise. |
Unmasking
a jewel |
February 6 -- You saw it here first! Now the Arroyo Brigade, that intrepid bunch of Arroyo volunteers who are discovering old treasures in the Arroyo and bringing them back to life, are featured on the front page of the Star News. Three cheers for Ray and Roy and Barbara and Gary! |
La Cañada Flintridge Opposes New Stormwater Cleanup Requirements | January 30 -- La Cañada Flintridge City Council Member Dave Spence thinks the new storm water requirements that mandate clean storm water are ridiculous. Not all water quality regulations are ridiculous, Spence believes, but 70% are. |
County
to investigate La Vina project |
January 30 -- After five years of complaints about trail access and other issues at the La Vina project in the San Gabriel Mountain foothills, County Supervisor Mike Antonovich has initiated a county audit of the project's compliance with planning and zoning requirements. |
Equestrians hoping for happy trails | January 27 -- Here is the Star News coverage of the equestrian event held on Saturday to advocate for access to the wonderful trails across the foothills of Altadena, access blocked by the La Vina development. These trails cover the eastern flank of the Arroyo Seco watershed and connect to trails across the front range of the San Gabriel Mountains. |
Trail Advocates Say 'Whoa' to Home Projects | January 27 -- Trail uses in the Altadena got together on Saturday reports the LA Tiems. "Theirs is a crusade that has become more urgent among conservationists along the San Gabriel Mountain foothills. From Claremont to Altadena, land conservancies recently have been born and new coalitions formed to preserve the mountain slopes from luxury housing tracts and other developments creeping deeper and deeper into forest land." |
Rose Bowl OK's plan to find tenant | January 25 -- "The Rose Bowl Operating Company on Thursday approved a three-year business plan that aims to lure a new tenant to its aging facility, possibly a relocated National Football League franchise." |
Students target L.A. River site upgrade | January 23 -- Harvard landscape architecture students sketched a vision of four miles of bike paths, parks and wetlands, even fishing piers for one of the Los Angeles River's bleakest stretches, the area from the Arroyo Seco confluence through downtown Los Angeles. Tim Brick highlights the potential of a confluence park at the end of the Arroyo, part of the new LA River State Park. |
South Pasadena Skate Park Receives Council Approval | January 18 -- By a 4-1 vote, the controversial skate park in South Pasadena's Lower Arroyo was approved. The facility will include 11,000 square feet of concrete and wooden ramps on the site of the former recycling center near where the freeway crosses the Arroyo stream |
More Paving and Lighting in the Arroyo? | January 15 -- A committee of the Rose Bowl Operating Company is proposing sidewalks down three major entrances into the Rose Bowl area of the Arroyo Seco: Seco Street, Salvia Canyon and West Drive. Lighting along Westgate and Palisades will be increased. The committee also recommends trash cans and other fixtures as environmental mitigation for the increased numbers of events Pasadena now plans to hold at the Rose Bowl |
Rustic Canyon, Urban Problems | January 13 -- Star News reporter Becky Oskin offers a description of scenic Millard Canyon and of the grafitti problems that plague to rustic canyon. "I think the big story is the fact that they're closing an awful lot of campgrounds," one observer notes. |
Unprecedented Academic Collaboration to Re-envision the Arroyo Seco Begins Today |
January 10 -- “Re-Envisioning the Arroyo Seco Corridor”, an unprecedented collaboration between three institutions of higher education, began today. Three courses focusing on the Arroyo Seco are being offered at Occidental College, UCLA and Caltech. These courses, which will examine watershed, transportation, ecological and community building issues affecting the neighborhoods along the Arroyo Seco, include a series of joint activities, discussions and reading materials. |
Cirque de Soleil Poll Results Announced | January 9 -- The final results of the poll on this website regarding Cirque de Soleil in the Rose Bowl Area of the Arroyo Seco were released today. The results were favorable to the idea: Yes - 12; No - 7; with 3 undecided. The comments of respondents are also included in the poll results. |
A River Runs Through It | January 6 - Here's some detail on the funding recently announced by Governor Davis to help restore the Arroyo Seco stream from . The grant goes to the city of Pasadena for cleanup, streambank stabilization and revegetation of the unchannelized segments of the Arroyo Seco between Devil's Gate Dam and the Colorado Street Bridge. |
Rose Bowl Goes Green | January 5 -- Here's the inside story on the recycling and clean-up efforts at the Rose Bowl and Brookside golf course following the football national championship game. |
Special LAT Rose Bowl Section for BCS Championship | January 3 - It's game day for the long-awaited national football championship in the Rose Bowl As the Cornhuskers of Nebraska prepare to square off against the Hurricanes of Miami, the Los Angeles Times presents a special section that highlights the Rose Bowl's history and traditions, including a timeline, anecdotes and how the stadium was built. |
Rose
Bowl -- Future of Aging Stadium Dependent
on Attracting New Business |
January 2 -- The LA Times examines the future prospects of the Rose Bowl and discusses management plans to develop a three year plan and a long term strategy for the future of the aging facility. |
Foul Smells Lead Police to Body in Arroyo | January 2 -- A badly decomposed body was discovered in the thick brush near Suicide Bridge. Fire Department personnel rappelled down a steep hillside and used chain saws to arrive at the source of a foul smell emanating from a transient camp on the east side of the Arroyo beneath the Colorado Street Bridge. |
Governor Davis Announces Arroyo Funding | January 1 - Eight grants totaling nearly $10 million for open space restoration and acquisition projects along the San Gabriel and Los Angeles Rivers were announced Monday by Gov. Gray Davis. Among the grants $1 million to the city of Pasadena to restore the stream corridor of the northern and southern Arroyo Seco Channel. |
Sunset Magazine: Spirit of the Arroyo | January -- Sunset, the magazine of Western living, starts the year off right with a spectacular feature devoted to the Arroyo Seco. Matthew Jaffe tells of the beauty, art and culture of the Arroyo. |
We encourage you to send news or announcements of Arroyo events to news@arroyoseco.org | |
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