I discoered that I can't land on any planet. I always get orange sidewinder error when dropping from orbital cruise. I tried different planets, differnt ways of approach (angles, speed, distance I manually drop) and it always ends in an error.

The Airport Land Use Commission (ALUC) is governed by the Public Utilities Code Section 21670 and has a basic responsibility to assist local agencies in ensuring compatible land uses in the vicinity of all airports in the County. The ALUC reviews land use proposals near civilian and military airports and other land use issues which have a potential impact on airport operations. The ALUC strives to protect the public from adverse effects of aircraft noise, ensure that people and facilities are not concentrated in areas susceptible to aircraft incidents and to ensure that no structure or land use activities adversely affect the operational integrity of the airports or their navigable airspace.


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The County Surveyor maintains thousands of land and survey-related records within Orange County. Historically, these records have been accessed at the OC Survey public assistance counter in downtown Santa Ana.

In 1997, Janzen and Hallwachs presented an attractive deal to Del Oro, an orange juice manufacturer that had just begun production along the northern border of rea de Conservacin Guanacaste. If Del Oro would donate part of its forested land to the rea de Conservacin Guanacaste, the company could deposit its orange peel waste for biodegradation, at no cost, on degraded land within the park.

In addition to Choi, Hallwachs, Janzen, Shanks, Treuer and Wilcove, co-authors include Andrew Dobson, a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Princeton, and Daniel Perez Aviles, Jennifer Powers, and Leland K. Werden, all of the University of Minnesota.

In a new global theory of land-biome evolution, Princeton University researchers suggest that plants are not passive features of their environments, but may instead actively behave in ways that determine the productivity and composition of their ecosystems.

The list of Lands Available for Taxes are properties which were offered, but not purchased, at a Tax Deed sale. After 90 days, any person or governmental unit may purchase the land for the opening bid, plus omitted years taxes, as cited in section 197.542(1), Florida Statutes. View Statute.

Concurrently, the rapid growth of the Phoenix metropolitan area, driven by an expanding population and economic development, is pushing up land values. This trend is particularly pronounced in regions that were historically agricultural, including many areas where orange groves are located.

High land values increase the financial pressure on farmers, making it more difficult for them to maintain or expand their operations. In some cases, farmers may find it more profitable to sell their land for development than to continue farming, reducing the overall acreage dedicated to orange groves.

Similarly, zoning regulations and agricultural preservation programs can help protect farmland from urban development. Consumer demand for local, sustainably-grown produce can also support the industry, making it more financially viable for farmers to maintain their groves.

A4: Buying local, Arizona-grown oranges, particularly those grown using sustainable practices, can help support the industry. Consumers can also advocate for policies that protect farmland and promote sustainable agriculture.

During the 2021-2022 season, growers produced enough oranges to fill 40.95 million industry-standard 90-pound boxes and 3.3 million boxes with grapefruit, according to a season-ending report issued in July.

Growers in Polk County, with 66,969 acres, produced the most citrus during the past season, filling 7.77 million boxes. DeSoto County was next at 6.8 million boxes. Highlands County growers filled 6.65 million boxes, and Hendry County was at 5.5 million boxes.


The Palestinian town of Jaffa is famous for its delicious oranges. The peel is thick, and keeps the fruit fresh and juicy for a long time. Ghassan Kanafani used the orange symbol to reflect the features of the Palestinian personality in his outstanding collection of short stories, The Land of Sad Oranges, published for the first time in 1962.

Travelers crossing a land border into the United States may bring, for personal consumption, some (but not all) fresh fruits and vegetables that were grown on a commercial orchard/farm in Canada, if all of the conditions below are met and confirmed by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agriculture specialists at the border:

If a city within Orange County receives a notice of a Surplus Land Act violation from the California Department of Housing and Community Development from a planned sale of land, it would not be able to proceed with the sale without correcting the violation, according to the new legislation.

The Surplus Land Act requires priority be given to affordable housing and open space when a local government is selling excess property, including giving affordable developers first crack at negotiating for the land.

The Orange Creek Restoration Area is within the Orange Creek Basin, an area that has been hydrologically altered, with varying impacts to the water and natural resources, since the beginning of the 20th century. From the 1940s until the St. Johns River Water Management District purchased it in 1998, the land had been used for farming. The property now includes a combination of restored wetlands, timberlands, pastures, and wet prairies and other wetlands. Water from Orange Creek flows to the Ocklawaha River. Natural communities characteristic of the property include mesic flatwoods, floodplain swamp, floodplain marsh and depression marsh.

Jaffa oranges sold in European supermarkets labeled "Made in Israel" may have been grown and packaged in the occupied Palestinian West Bank, according to a report from the Boycott Divest Sanction (BDS) movement, an international coalition of Palestinian NGOs and activists.


"Farming Injustice" - published in February 2013 - profiles several companies including Mehadrin, Israel's largest grower and exporter of dates, citrus fruits and vegetables. The company sells "Jaffa" brand oranges to European countries, farm produce to Canada, Japan and the U.S. and also supplies water for Mekorot, Israel's national water company.



Water Wars


 Mehadrin's wells, drilled deep in the West Bank, have left Palestinian wells and springs dry, reports the Palestinian non-profit human rights group, Al-Haq. The Israeli government has taken over virtually all water resources in the West Bank, according to the United Nations Security Council. Eighty percent of that water is used by Israel and settlements. Many Palestinian farmers have no other option than to buy water from Mekorot. Mehadrin also provides loans to Israeli farmers, including those who live in settlements on land illegally seized from Palestinians during and since the 1967 war.


The same month 16 Palestinian agricultural and civil society groups signed a statement calling for governments and retailers to take action against companies like Mehadrin that source produce from occupied lands.


"As long as trade with Israeli settlement exporters such as Mehadrin and Hadiklaim is permitted, Palestinian farmers will continue to be forced from their land to make way for crops grown by illegal Israeli settlements for export to European supermarkets," said Dawood Hammoudeh of the Palestinian Farmers Union. "Trade with exporters operating in settlements encourages and rewards the expansion of illegal Israeli settlements, the exploitation of Palestinian workers, child labour and the theft of Palestinian water resources, all in violation of international law."


Mehadrin operates at least three orchards in the West Bank, according to a map on the company website. This disputed territory is home to 2.7 million Palestinians many of whom lost access to their land as a result of confiscations and demolitions over the years: some 520,000 Israeli settlers have moved into 250 settlements in the West Bank since 1967. This process accelerated when Israel began construction of a 440-mile long (700 kilometer), 24-foot (7.2 meter) high "separation barrier" a decade ago. 


According to the U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation, a human rights coalition, the Israeli settlements in the West Bank "are strategically located to disrupt territorial contiguity between Palestinian population centers, to control access to water aquifers, and to create enormous obstacles to the creation of a viable Palestinian state." Today, more than 60 percent of agricultural land in the West Bank is now effectively under Israeli military control, registered as "Area C" - "restricted military areas" or land earmarked for Israeli settlers.


Settlers are entitled to generous financial benefits including: grants covering up to 25 percent of the cost of establishing agricultural enterprises and tax reductions on profits of upto 30 percent, according to "Parallel Realities", a report by the Ma'an Development Center. Israeli companies are also exempted from paying the Value Added Tax for exports of fresh fruits and vegetables to the European Union. These companies, ironically, are one of the few sources of employment for Palestinian residents of the West Bank.


In 2010, researchers from Corporate Watch (a UK activist group separate from CorpWatch), saw grapes and dates grown in greenhouses and packaged for export in Beqa'ot (or Beka'ot) in the Jordan Valley, in the West Bank, loaded in Mehadrin boxes labeled "Product of Israel."


"As in all West Bank settlements, labour conditions for Palestinians working there are dismal," Therezia Cooper of Corporate Watch wrote at the time. "I interviewed four Beqa'ot workers on four different occasions, and they all told me that they have no contracts, get no health insurance and no payslips for their work."


Palestinian agricultural workers said that as contractors at Israeli settlements they make as little as $20 a day. On a return trip to the West Bank in 2013, Corporate Watch saw that Mehadrin was still mislabelling produce from Beqa'ot. 


At Masua - another Israeli agricultural settlement - Corporate Watch found and photographed a Mehadrin sign with the "Jaffa" logo on a fence. Masua settlers have attacked the Palestinians living across the highway from the settlement, in the al-Jiftik village, according to Jordan Valley Solidarity, a network of Palestinian groups and international supporters.


Since the early 2000s Masua settlers have taken land from the Abu Al Ajaj farming area of al-Jiftik by fencing off areas to keep the villagers out, according to the October 2010 issue of the "Humanitarian Monitor" - a newsletter published by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. The Israeli Civil Administration, which issued eviction and home demolition orders to Palestinian villagers at Abu Al Ajaj, claim that the land is categorized as Area C, ie owned by the state. The Masua settlers have since built greenhouses on that land and fenced off additional land that Palestinian farmers were using for farming and grazing livestock.


"By sourcing products from Massua [sic], Mehadrin is complicit in the annexation of Palestinian land by the settlers of Massua and in the policy of home demolitions which is aimed at the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians living in Abu al Ajaj," Corporate Watch wrote.


On February 12, in the West Bank and in Gaza, Palestinian farmers planted olive trees on farmland that had been bulldozed by Israeli troops as part of a demonstration to draw attention to the destruction of farmland. At the same time, in forty European cities, Palestinian activists and supporters held protests against Mehadrin outside supermarkets. 


"We reject any suggestion that the reality that Palestinians are sometimes left with no choice but to export fresh produce through Israeli companies or work in illegal settlements is a reason not to take action to end international complicity in human rights violations," a joint statement issued by the 16 Palestinian NGOs said. "Helping us to break the chains of dependency by holding Israeli companies to account and working with us to export to world markets via socially responsible and law-abiding companies is the most honest and effective way to contribute to our struggle and our sustainable development."


Mehadrin has not commented on the boycott or responded to allegations of wrongdoing. It declined to respond when it was contacted last year by Richard Falk, the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in the Palestinian Territories. Falk said he supported boycotting Mehadrin and other Israeli companies profiting from Israeli settlement enterprises.


Since 2009 stores in Britain have labeled products imported from the West Bank as either "Israeli" or "Palestinian." Last year, in response to pressure from its members, Co-op supermarkets - Britain's fifth-largest food retailer - stopped contracting with "any supplier of produce known to be sourcing from the Israeli settlements." In 2012, South Africa and Denmark also passed similar policies to deny "Made in Israel" labels to goods from the occupied territories.


On March 9, the Dutch government joined their ranks when it asked retail chains in the Netherlands to mark Israeli imports grown or made beyond the 1949 ceasefire line with labels reading "Product from Israeli settlement (West Bank/Golan Height /East Jerusalem)." The Netherlands is Israel's most important trading partner in the European Union.


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