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Readers have been asking about Walmart’s new layaway plan. The 2017 Walmart layaway will most likely begin in early September. Here is the Walmart layaway information from 2016 so you can get an idea of how it has worked in the past: Walmart layaway is available for electronics, automotive electronics, toys, select sporting goods, small appliances, and furniture. Excludes wireless phones that require contracts. Layaway is not available on November 26th (Thanksgiving). Here are some of the features: Only put down $10 or 10%, whichever is greater You have 90 days to pay for your layaway and must pick up your items and pay for them by 12/12. Items must be $10+ and the total purchase must be at least $50. Available in-store only, not online. Look for the layaway tag in stores on eligible items. See your local Walmart store service desk for more details. Using layaway wisely can help you to save money and time and take the guesswork out of holiday spending.




Walmart has a clearance outlet and you can take advantage of the deep discounts online. Walmart has hundreds of items on clearance right now with prices as low as $1.98. Right now there are clearance deals on electronics, home, clothing, baby, toys, sports, outdoors, and home improvement. Toys R Us and Babies R Us Layaway Kmart No Money Down LayawaySleep On It Guarantee If within 1 year you don’t love your mattress, you can exchange it for one you do love. Metro Mattress is first in class in selection, service and training, as rated by Tempur-Pedic® themselves. Metro Mattress has been a proud member of the New York community for over 40 years.Lennox Island is a small Mi'kmaq community of 450 people off the coast of P.E.I. It's also a kind of canary in the coal mine when it comes to climate change. Rising sea levels, storm surges and coastal erosion threaten its very existence; an estimated 300 football fields of land have already fallen into the sea.




In Canada, Lennox Island is a place where you can see the effects of climate change happening right now — and it's a community preparing for a changing world. Scientists agree that the world's climate has warmed over the past 120 years and that the warming is a result of human activities. The effects of this change in climate include melting ice caps, rising sea levels, drought in some parts of the world and extreme storms in other areas. Looking west from the shores of Lennox Island sits the shining waters of Malpeque Bay. Locals say they used to play baseball where boats now float. Gilbert Sark, 37, has skipped rocks on Lennox Island's beaches since he was a little kid. Today he's the comprehensive community planner for the island. ​​A generation ago, Sark says, Lennox Island measured 1,300 acres. Now it is down to 1,100. "We lose Lennox, we lose a lot," he says. "Honestly, I worry about Lennox Island not being here … In my son's and my daughter's generation, maybe my grandkids' generation, there may be no Lennox Island.




It will be eroding away if something is not done." "When I was younger, we used to make jokes that, sooner or later, when we were swimming down at the wharf, we are going to be swimming with some of the caskets that are going to fall out because of the way it is eroding," Sark says. "It's a little scary." The community has spent thousands to shore up the bank even though Sark admits it's likely only a temporary solution. "The burial site is safe for the time being," he says. "I am extremely happy on that part." The red sands of the island have always been vulnerable to erosion but things are getting worse, says Adam Fenech, a climatologist with the University of Prince Edward Island's climate lab. As the oceans warm up and the sea levels rise, the tides get stronger as well. Seasonal storm surges are also more powerful than before, he says. And with warmer winters, the banks don't stay frozen as long — so that natural protection is reduced as well. "When I came to the island about five years ago," says Fenech, "I thought I'd have to convince a lot of people about climate change.




"But people were coming up to me to share their stories about what they were seeing — increasing temperatures, drier conditions and especially coastal erosion. Everybody has a story in which they come back after a particularly bad winter, and they find metres of their shoreline just completely disappeared." During a storm surge, Fenech says he has seen the water come up and lick the edge of the sewage lagoon on Lennox Island. If the sewage lagoon is breached, it won't just pollute the fishery of Malpeque Bay, it could also contaminate the community's drinking water and make the island uninhabitable. "It's precarious," says Fenech. "And it's precarious right now." Then one of his undergraduate students suggested they create a video game to show the effects of climate change. Fenech called the invention "Coastal Impact Visualization Environment," or CLIVE for short. Fenech took CLIVE on the road and showed people how climate change could affect their land.




"It really touches people on not just an intellectual level, but on an emotional level," he says. "That causes them to cry once in a while when they see something they value, and love, being impacted by rising sea levels." Fenech based his animation on the one-metre sea level rise predicted by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to occur by the turn of the next century. He also added a storm surge of two metres. The Lennox Island sewage lagoon is in the foreground of the video. "The island itself is no longer recognizable," Fenech says. "And these are realistic impacts. These are conservative impacts, not ridiculously exaggerated impacts." Jamie Thomas is the cultural co-ordinator on Lennox Island. It's her job to make sure the island's cultural heritage doesn't wash away. The band has collected hundreds of artifacts, some of which are now on display at the Lennox Island Cultural Centre. "This is really who we are; this is where our people come from."

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