Currently — March 15th, 2023

The weather, currently.

Major weather is hitting both US coasts today through the next several days.

Heavy snow, winds, and coastal flooding are impacting much of the Northeast while the first nor’easter of the season continues to effect millions. Meanwhile, rain, snow, and flooding is expected for parts of California, as yet another atmospheric river brings lots of moisture Tuesday.

Currently is offering a free trial of our text messaging service for those impacted by these severe weather systems. Stay informed and prepared without having to constantly monitor your phone with Currently’s text-a-meteorologist service.

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Currently Explains: Snowstorm Safety
How do you stay safe in a snowstorm? Currently meteorologist’s share their top tips to help you prepared for the next big freeze.
Currently Explains: Flash Flood Safety
Flash flooding contributes to roughly 90 deaths and $10 billion in property damage a year in the United States.

What you need to know, currently.

In honor of Women’s History Month, Currently is spotlighting the women and femmes who are—and continue to be—the backbone of the environmental and climate justice movement and pioneered the work to protect communities.

“I want to live, there are many things I still want to do in this world but I have never once considered giving up fighting for our territory, for a life with dignity, because our fight is legitimate.”

Berta Isabel Cáceres Flores was an environmental activist and co-founder and coordinator of the Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras.

A member of the Lenca people of Honduras herself, Cáceres dedicated her life to protecting the land and rights of Indigenous peoples. Her large-scale activism started in 1993, when Cáceres  was just a student and founded the Council of Popular and Indigenous Organizations of Honduras to fight against the environmental degradation caused by dams, plantations, and US military bases.

Throughout 2013, Cáceres led COPINH and members of her local community in a year-long protest at a DESA-backed dam’s construction site, preventing the companies from getting to the land. Despite multiple attacks, threats, and the Honduran military opening fire on the protestors, Cáceres persisted.

In 2015, her work with COPINH was recognized, and she won the Goldman Environmental Prize for “a grassroots campaign that successfully pressured the world’s largest dam builder to pull out of the Agua Zarca Dam.” The developers broke international law when they neglected to consult local tribes who were worried that the construction of the dam would interrupt Lenca communities’ access to water, food, and medicine materials.

In 2016, Cáceres was assassinated in her home by armed intruders, after many threats against her life. In the years leading up to her murder, several other land defenders were killed in Honduras, making the country one of the most dangerous places for activists protecting the country’s forests and rivers. After Cáceres’ murder, two more activists were killed within the same month.

Click here to read the statement that COPINH released on the seventh anniversary of her death.

—Aarohi Sheth


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