Category: Americas

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Deputy Prime Minister meets with U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen in New York

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    September 21, 2023 – New York City, New York – Department of Finance Canada

    Yesterday in New York City, the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance, Chrystia Freeland, met with the United States Secretary of the Treasury, Janet Yellen.

    The Deputy Prime Minister and the Secretary discussed Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, and agreed on the importance of continuing their resolute commitment to ensuring Ukraine has the support it needs to defend its people, democracy, and territorial integrity. 

    The Deputy Prime Minister and the Secretary discussed how Canada’s $120 billion clean economy plan and the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act can work together to maximize economic benefits and fight climate change on both sides of the border. By working together, Canada and the United States can strengthen our national economies to deliver more good middle class jobs and better paycheques for both Canadians and Americans for generations to come.

    The Deputy Prime Minister highlighted that Canada and the United States are natural partners, with highly integrated and competitive supply chains, and pointed to the capacity of Canadian steel and aluminum producers to supply the materials needed to grow the clean economy of the 21st century.

    They also discussed the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s (OECD) two-pillar plan on international tax reform. The Deputy Prime Minister reiterated Canada’s priority and preference remains a multilateral approach to digital taxation.

    The meeting reaffirmed the close ties and friendship between Canada and the United States. The Deputy Prime Minister and the Secretary discussed their respective work to tackle global macroeconomic challenges with modern supply side economic policies that grow the economy from the middle out, creating middle-class jobs and new opportunities for Canadians and Americans.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Defence Minister Bill Blair welcomes Ukraine’s Minister of Defence, Rustem Umerov to Canada

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    September 22, 2023 – Ottawa, Ontario – National Defence / Canadian Armed Forces

    Today, the Honourable Bill Blair, Minister of National Defence, welcomed Ukraine’s Minister of Defence, Rustem Umerov, to Ottawa. Minister Umerov was received by a Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) honour guard before participating in a bilateral meeting with Minister Blair.

    Minister Blair and Minister Umerov condemned Russia’s illegal and unjustifiable further invasion of Ukraine, which represents an attack on the rules-based international order that keeps all countries safe. Minister Blair congratulated Minister Umerov on his recent appointment and noted Canada’s unwavering support for Ukraine in its fight against Russian aggression.

    Minister Blair and Minister Umerov agreed that Canada and Ukraine are close partners with a long-standing defence relationship. Operation UNIFIER, the Canadian Armed Forces military training and capacity building mission, was launched in 2015 at the request of the Ukrainian government, and in 2023, was expanded and extended until March 2026. Since the start of Operation UNIFIER, the CAF has trained over 38,000 Ukrainian military and security personnel in battlefield tactics and advanced military skills. Minister Blair reflected on his recent visit to Operation UNIFIER training in the United Kingdom and committed that Canada would continue to ensure that Operation UNIFIER activities meet Ukraine’s most pressing defence needs.

    Minister Umerov provided a battlefield update and indicated Ukraine’s most pressing defence needs. Minister Blair highlighted the support Canada has committed to Ukraine since the beginning of 2022, which has now grown to over $9.5 billion in aid, including over $2.4 billion in military assistance.

    The Ministers look forward to working together and Minister Blair committed to stay in close contact with Ukrainian officials on a bilateral basis and through the Ukraine Defense Contact Group, so that Canada can continue to address Ukraine’s most pressing security needs. Minister Blair reiterated that Canada will continue to provide comprehensive military aid so that Ukraine can fight and win. 

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Minister Joly speaks with Minister Riad Malki of the Palestinian Authority

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    October 14, 2023 – Amman, Jordan – Global Affairs Canada

    The Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs, today spoke on the phone with His Excellency Dr. Riad Malki, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Expatriates of the Palestinian Authority.

    Minister Joly expressed Canada’s grave concern with the humanitarian situation in Gaza and its devastating impact on Palestinian civilians. She condemned Hamas, which does not represent the Palestinian people. She extended her condolences for the Palestinian civilians who have lost their lives and reiterated that all parties must respect international humanitarian law. The Minister highlighted Canada’s recent initial announcement of $10 million in humanitarian funding to help address the urgent needs of civilians.

    The ministers discussed the importance of establishing a humanitarian corridor in Gaza as soon as possible as well as the need for the international community to work together to address the dire humanitarian situation. They agreed that the protection of civilians is paramount.

    Minister Joly and Minister Malki committed to remain in close contact as the situation evolves.

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    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Minister Joly meets with United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    October 17, 2023 – Ottawa, Ontario – Global Affairs Canada

    The Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs, was pleased to meet yesterday with the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk, who is visiting Canada from October 16 to 17, 2023.

    Minister Joly and the High Commissioner discussed the overall state of human rights around the world and Canada’s role within the international human rights system. Minister Joly took this opportunity to raise several pressing human rights situations of concern to Canada.

    The Minister and the High Commissioner also discussed the issues of polarization and pushback on human rights, particularly those of women and girls and 2SLGBTQI+ people.

    Minister Joly reaffirmed Canada’s commitment to promoting and protecting human rights both at home and abroad, including continued engagement with the United Nations human rights system and support for the critical role of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. Minister Joly emphasized Canada’s continued commitment to the upcoming Universal Periodic Review of Canada, and to the human rights system at large, as demonstrated by Canada’s candidacy for a seat on the UN Human Rights Council for the 2028 to 2030 term.

    Minister Joly underscored Canada’s unequivocal condemnation of the brutal terrorist attacks perpetrated by Hamas against Israel. She also expressed deep concern about the humanitarian situation in Gaza and emphasized the necessity of immediate and unimpeded access of humanitarian assistance. Canada stands firmly with the Israeli and Palestinian peoples in their right to live in peace and security, with dignity and without fear.

    Minister Joly and the High Commissioner agreed to continue working together to address the increasingly challenging situation of human rights around the world.

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    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: NIH researchers develop eye drops that slow vision loss in animals

    Source: US Department of Health and Human Services – 2

    News Release
    Friday, March 21, 2025

    Treatment shows potential to slow the progression of human degenerative eye diseases, including retinitis pigmentosa.

    Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have developed eye drops that extend vision in animal models of a group of inherited diseases that lead to progressive vision loss in humans, known as retinitis pigmentosa. The eye drops contain a small fragment derived from a protein made by the body and found in the eye, known as pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF).  PEDF helps preserve cells in the eye’s retina. A report on the study is published in Communications Medicine.
    “While not a cure, this study shows that PEDF-based eye drops can slow progression of a variety of degenerative retinal diseases in animals, including various types of retinitis pigmentosa and dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD),” said Patricia Becerra, Ph.D., chief of NIH’s Section on Protein Structure and Function at the National Eye Institute and senior author of the study. “Given these results, we’re excited to begin trials of these eye drops in people.”
    All degenerative retinal diseases have cellular stress in common. While the source of the stress may vary—dozens of mutations and gene variants have been linked to retinitis pigmentosa, AMD, and other disorders—high levels of cellular stress cause retinal cells to gradually lose function and die. Progressive loss of photoreceptor cells leads to vision loss and eventually blindness.
    Previous research from Becerra’s lab revealed that, in a mouse model, the natural protein PEDF can help retinal cells stave off the effects of cellular stress. However, the full PEDF protein is too large to pass through the outer eye tissues to reach the retina, and the complete protein has multiple functions in retinal tissue, making it impractical as a treatment. To optimize the molecule’s ability to preserve retinal cells and to help the molecule reach the back of the eye, Becerra developed a series of short peptides derived from a region of PEDF that supports cell viability. These small peptides can move through eye tissues to bind with PEDF receptor proteins on the surface of the retina.
    In this new study, led by first author Alexandra Bernardo-Colón, Becerra’s team created two eye drop formulations, each containing a short peptide. The first peptide candidate, called “17-mer,” contains 17 amino acids found in the active region of PEDF. A second peptide, H105A, is similar but binds more strongly to the PEDF receptor. Peptides applied to mice as drops on the eye’s surface were found in high concentration in the retina within 60 minutes, slowly decreasing over the next 24 to 48 hours. Neither peptide caused toxicity or other side effects.
    When administered once daily to young mice with retinitis pigmentosa-like disease, H105A slowed photoreceptor degeneration and vision loss. To test the drops, the investigators used specially bred mice that lose their photoreceptors shortly after birth. Once cell loss begins, the majority of photoreceptors die in a week. When given peptide eye drops through that one-week period, mice retained up to 75% of photoreceptors and continued to have strong retinal responses to light, while those given a placebo had few remaining photoreceptors and little functional vision at the end of the week.
    “For the first time, we show that eye drops containing these short peptides can pass into the eye and have a therapeutic effect on the retina,” said Bernardo-Colón. “Animals given the H105A peptide have dramatically healthier-looking retinas, with no negative side effects.”
    A variety of gene-specific therapies are under development for many types of retinitis pigmentosa, which generally start in childhood and progress over many years. These PEDF-derived peptide eye drops could play a crucial role in preserving cells while waiting for these gene therapies to become clinically available.
    To test whether photoreceptors preserved through the eye drop treatment are healthy enough for gene therapy to work, collaborators Valeria Marigo, Ph.D. and Andrea Bighinati, Ph.D., University of Modena, Italy, treated mice with gene therapy at the end of the week-long eye drop regimen. The gene therapy successfully preserved vision for at least an additional six months.  
    To see whether the eye drops could work in humans – without actually testing in humans directly – the researchers worked with Natalia Vergara, Ph.D., University of Colorado Anschutz, Aurora, to test the peptides in a human retinal tissue model of retinal degeneration. Grown in a dish from human cells, the retina-like tissues were exposed to chemicals that induced high levels of cellular stress. Without the peptides, the cells of the tissue model died quickly, but with the peptides, the retinal tissues remained viable. These human tissue data provide a key first step supporting human trials of the eye drops.
    The research was funded by the NEI Intramural Research Program. Additional funding was provided by the Prevention of Blindness Society, Fondazione Telethon, HEAL-ITALIA Foundation, CellSight Development Fund, and Research to Prevent Blindness.
    Reference: Bernardo-Colón A, Bighinati A, Parween S, Debnath S, Piano I, Adani E, Corsi F, Gargini C, Vergara N, Marigo V, and Becerra SP. “H105A peptide eye drops promote photoreceptor survival in murine and human models of retinal degeneration.” Mar 21, 2025, Comms Med. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-025-00789-8
    NEI leads the federal government’s research on the visual system and eye diseases. NEI supports basic and clinical science programs to develop sight-saving treatments and address special needs of people with vision loss. For more information, visit https://www.nei.nih.gov.  
    About the National Institutes of Health (NIH): NIH, the nation’s medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov.
    NIH…Turning Discovery Into Health®
    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Two Eastern European Organized Crime Leaders Convicted of Murder for Hire Targeting U.S.-Based Journalist on Behalf of Iranian Government

    Source: US State of California

    Iranian Government Hired Polad Omarov and Rafat Amirov to Kill Masih Alinejad in Exchange for $500,000

    A federal jury returned guilty verdicts yesterday on all five counts in the superseding indictment against Rafat Amirov, also known as Farkhaddin Mirzoev, Pᴎᴍ, and Rome, 46, of Iran; and Polad Omarov, also known as Araz Aliyev, Polad Qaqa, and Haci Qaqa, 40, of Georgia. The defendants were convicted of murder-for-hire and attempted murder in aid of racketeering charges, in a trial before U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon. Amirov and Omarov are scheduled to be sentenced on Sept. 17.

    “The Iranian regime’s brazen plot to silence and murder Americans will not be tolerated,” said Sue J. Bai, head of the Justice Department’s National Security Division. “This verdict underscores the Department’s commitment to finding and holding accountable those who threaten our citizens and our freedoms. With the great work of our prosecutors and law enforcement partners, we are now one step closer to justice.”

    “For years, the Government of Iran has attempted to silence an outspoken Iranian journalist, author, activist and critic of their regime through any means necessary, including harassment, violence, intimidation, and even attempted murder,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Matthew Podolsky for the Southern District of New York. “Chillingly, the plot to murder this Iranian dissident culminated over 6,000 miles from Iran, on U.S. soil, right here in New York, when a hitman with an AK-47 camped outside her home to kill her. I commend the career prosecutors of this office, and our law enforcement partners at the FBI’s Counterintelligence Division for their tireless work in bringing these defendants to justice. This verdict should send a clear message around the world: if you target U.S. citizens, we will find you, no matter where you are, and bring you to justice.”

    “The defendants participated in a brazen plot to kill an Iranian American dissident in New York who criticized the regime in Iran,” said Acting Assistant Director Roman Rozhavsky of the FBI’s Counterintelligence Division. “Thanks to the good work of the FBI and our partners their plan failed. This verdict demonstrates the FBI will not tolerate Iran’s attempts to threaten, silence, or harm American citizens.”

    According to court documents, Amirov and Omarov were high-ranking members of an Eastern European organized crime group (the Organization) who worked with other members of the Organization to attempt to kill Masih Alinejad on instructions from high-ranking members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Alinejad has previously been the target of plots by the Government of Iran to intimidate, harass, and kidnap her for her work as a journalist, author, and human rights activist who has publicized the Government of Iran’s human rights abuses around the world. As recently as 2020 and 2021, Iranian intelligence officials and assets plotted to kidnap Alinejad from within the U.S. for rendition to Iran in an effort to silence her criticism of the Iranian regime.

    After these brazen efforts to kidnap Alinejad from the U.S. failed, the IRGC turned to Amirov and Omarov to locate, surveil, and murder her. Beginning in approximately July 2022, Amirov sent targeting information—which he had received directly from IRGC officials in Iran—about Alinejad to Omarov. In turn, Omarov communicated this information to Khalid Mehdiyev, another member of the Organization who had been residing in Yonkers, New York, so that Mehdiyev could surveil Alinejad and murder her. In turn, Mehdiyev sent photographs and videos of Alinejad’s residence to Omarov, who shared these materials with Amirov and the IRGC officials who orchestrated the plot in Iran. Amirov and Omarov then arranged for a $30,000 cash payment to Mehdiyev, who used a portion of this payment to buy an AK-47 style assault rifle, two magazines, and at least 66 rounds of ammunition; as Mehdiyev boasted in electronic communications, a “war machine” he could use to kill Alinejad.

    In late July 2022, Mehdiyev repeatedly traveled to Alinejad’s neighborhood to surveil her. Mehdiyev sent reports of his surveillance to Omarov, who passed them to Amirov. On July 24, 2022, Mehdiyev reported to Omarov from Alinejad’s residence that he was “at the crime scene.” On July 27, 2022, Omarov told Amirov that Mehdiyev was ready to kill Alinejad, writing “this matter will be over today. I told them to make a birthday present for me. I pressured them, they will sleep there this night.”  On July 28, 2022, Mehdiyev sent Omarov a video taken from inside the car that Mehdiyev was driving with the assault rifle and a message reading “we are ready.” Amirov sent an image of the interior of Alinejad’s home to Omarov to be forwarded to Mehdiyev, writing “this is the house where she stays.”  As Omarov continued to update Amirov about Mehdiyev’s readiness, Amirov cautioned Omarov “let him keep the car clean.”  When Mehdiyev subsequently drove from where he was surveilling the residence, he was stopped after a traffic violation and, during a subsequent search of the vehicle, police officers found the assault rifle, 66 rounds of ammunition, approximately $1,100 in cash, and a black ski mask.

    After Mehdiyev was arrested and placed into custody, Omarov contacted Mehdiyev’s mother and threatened to kill her and her other son if she did not locate Mehdiyev.

    Amirov and Omarov were convicted on five counts: murder-for-hire, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison (Count One); conspiracy to commit murder-for-hire, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison (Count Two); conspiracy to commit money laundering, which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison (Count Three); attempted murder in aid of racketeering, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison (Count Four); and possession and use of a firearm in connection with the attempted murder, which carries a maximum penalty of life in prison and a mandatory minimum penalty of five years in prison (Count Five).

    The FBI New York Field Office Counterintelligence-Cyber Division and the New York FBI Iran Threat Task Force are investigating the case, with assistance from the New York City Police Department (NYPD) and the NYPD Intelligence Bureau. The Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs provided valuable assistance. The Justice Department thanked the authorities in the Czech Republic for their assistance.

    Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michael D. Lockard, Jacob H. Gutwillig, and Matthew J.C. Hellman for the Southern District of New York are prosecuting the case with assistance from paralegal specialist Owen Foley and Trial Attorneys Christopher Rigali and Leslie Esbrook of the National Security Division’s Counterintelligence and Export Control Section.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Gov. Pillen Praises Stand With Women Committee Vote

    Source: US State of Nebraska

    . Pillen Praises Stand With Women Committee Vote

     

    LINCOLN, NE – Governor Jim Pillen released the following statement regarding LB89, the Stand With Women Act, introduced by Senator Kathleen Kauth at his request. Yesterday, the five Republicans on the Government, Military and Veterans Affairs Committee voted to pass the legislation out of committee.

    “This is common sense legislation that the majority of Nebraskans believe in,” said Gov. Pillen. “Biological males don’t need to be competing against biological females. It’s really an issue of safety and fairness. We must carve out spaces – bathrooms, locker rooms, and the field of play – for our girls. I’m grateful to the five Republican committee members who voted to pass this effort out of committee – senators Sanders, Andersen, Lonowski, McKeon, and Wordekemper – who wanted to pass this effort out of committee.”

    The Stand With Women Act would prohibit biological males from joining female sports teams. It would require group restrooms and locker rooms in schools as well as state agencies to be designated for use by either males or females, and it prohibits individuals of one biological sex from using the restroom or locker rook designated for use by the opposite biological sex.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Video: The Big Takeaway with Spokesperson Tammy Bruce

    Source: United States of America – Department of State (video statements)

    America is safer thanks to Secretary Rubio’s diplomacy in South and Central America. Find out how we are making America safe, secure, and prosperous in this week’s Big Takeaway. — Department Spokesperson Tammy Bruce

    ———-
    Under the leadership of the President and Secretary of State, the U.S. Department of State leads America’s foreign policy through diplomacy, advocacy, and assistance by advancing the interests of the American people, their safety and economic prosperity. On behalf of the American people we promote and demonstrate democratic values and advance a free, peaceful, and prosperous world.

    The Secretary of State, appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate, is the President’s chief foreign affairs adviser. The Secretary carries out the President’s foreign policies through the State Department, which includes the Foreign Service, Civil Service and U.S. Agency for International Development.

    Get updates from the U.S. Department of State at www.state.gov and on social media!
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    Subscribe to the State Department Blog: https://www.state.gov/blogs
    Watch on-demand State Department videos: https://video.state.gov/
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    #StateDepartment #DepartmentofState #Diplomacy

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-16IwPiOxmI

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI USA: Hickenlooper, Colleagues Introduce Bipartisan Bill to Help Small Businesses Hire More Military Spouses

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Colorado John Hickenlooper

    WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Senator John Hickenlooper and 14 of his Senate colleagues introduced the bipartisan Military Spouse Hiring Act to amend the U.S. tax code to incentivize small businesses to hire more military spouses.

    “Thousands of military spouses in Colorado struggle to balance frequent moves while growing their careers,” said Hickenlooper. “Our bipartisan bill creates more career opportunities for military spouses while helping small businesses at the same time.”

    Military spouses experience rates of unemployment and underemployment higher than the national average, and frequent moves often stall military spouses’ upward career progression and force them to find new jobs. The Military Spouse Hiring Act would expand the existing Work Opportunity Tax Credit (WOTC) program, which provides tax credits to employers who hire people facing unique barriers to employment, to include military spouses.

    The Military Spouse Hiring Act is supported by the Air & Space Forces Association (AFA), Air Force Sergeants Association (AFSA), Association of Military Surgeons of the United States (AMSUS), Chief Warrant Officers Association of the US Coast Guard (CWOA) Enlisted Association of the National Guard of the United States (EANGUS), Fleet Reserve Association (FRA), Jewish War Veterans (JWV), Marine Corps League (MCL), Military Chaplains Association (MCA), Military Family Advisory Network (MFAN), Military Officers

    Association of America (MOAA), Military Order of the Purple Heart (MOPH), Military Spouse Advocacy network (MSAN), National Defense Committee (NDC), National Military Family Association (NMFA), National Military Spouse Network (NMSN), Non Commissioned Officers Association (NCOA), Reserve Organization of America (ROA), Service Women’s Action Network (SWAN), The American Legion (TAL), The Retired Enlisted Association (TREA), Tragedy Assistance Program for Survivors (TAPS), United States Army Warrant Officers Association (USA WOA), Vietnam Veterans of America (VVA), and the Wounded Warrior Project (WWP).

    Companion legislation was introduced in the House of Representatives.

    A summary of the legislation is available HERE. Full text of the legislation is available HERE.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UK and Peru sign an agreement to promote infrastructure development through public-private collaboration

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    World news story

    UK and Peru sign an agreement to promote infrastructure development through public-private collaboration

    The Peruvian Private Investment Promotion Agency (ProInversión) and the British Embassy signed a Memorandum of Understanding to promote the development of sustainable social, logistics, and transport infrastructure in the country.

    Executive Director of ProInversion Peru and British Ambassador to Peru

    Lima, March 20, 2025.

    The Private Investment Promotion Agency (ProInversión) and the British Embassy signed a Memorandum of Understanding to promote the development of public-private partnerships for the operation and maintenance of infrastructure developed through Government-to-Government (G2G) Agreements.

    Likewise, other significant aspects of the collaboration include the promotion of standardized and collaborative NEC contracts in Public-Private Partnerships, the development of innovative strategies and mechanisms for infrastructure development in the country, and the sharing of best practices and lessons learned in public-private collaboration and infrastructure project management.

    The agreement was signed on Wednesday, March 19, 2025, by ProInversión’s Executive Director, Luis Del Carpio, and the British Ambassador to Peru, Gavin Cook.

    ProInversión is a specialized technical organization that promotes private investment through Public-Private Partnerships, Projects in Assets, and Works for Taxes. This agency has played a fundamental role in closing gaps in infrastructure and the provision of public services. In the last 22 years, ProInversión has awarded 243 projects for nearly $47 billion, generating public value for citizens by promoting private investment through various mechanisms. ProInversión Executive Director Luis Del Carpio stated:

    This agreement marks the beginning of a new era of cooperation between ProInversión and the British Embassy. We will share experiences in the development of infrastructure and public services and promote public-private collaboration.

    To implement this agreement, the British Ambassador announced the creation of the “UK-Peru Joint Technical Committee for the Promotion of Private Investment.” This forum will allow for the coordination, prioritization, and implementation of work agenda items.

    British Ambassador Gavin Cook emphasized:

    We are taking concrete actions to expand opportunities for collaboration and innovation where we not only contribute to infrastructure development but also to the delivery of quality services in the most efficient, transparent, and sustainable manner.

    Updates to this page

    Published 21 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Ensuring long-term predictable public transit funding for BC Transit with over $189 million through the Canada Public Transit Fund

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    Victoria, British Columbia, March 21, 2025 — By working closely with its partners across Canada, the federal government is ensuring that more Canadians will be able to live near public transit, connecting them to jobs, services, and their communities.

    Today, Patrick Weiler, Member of Parliament for West Vancouver—Sunshine Coast—Sea to Sky Country, and Erinn Pinkerton, President and Chief Executive Officer of BC Transit, announced a federal investment of more than $189 million in transit funding to support communities across British Columbia, providing predictable and long-term funding, tied to greater density near transit.

    Through the new Canada Public Transit Fund’s Baseline Funding stream, BC Transit will receive an annual funding allocation amounting to more than $189 million over ten years. Funding will upgrade, replace, or modernize public transit infrastructure for 33 transit systems serviced by BC Transit, and maintain them in a state of good repair.

    This investment, beginning in 2026 until 2036, will help increase the housing supply and affordability as part of complete, transit-oriented communities, while helping to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and mitigate the impacts of climate change.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Backgrounder: Ensuring long-term predictable public transit funding for BC Transit with over $189 million through the Canada Public Transit Fund

    Source: Government of Canada News

    Backgrounder

    Through the new Canada Public Transit Fund (CPTF ) Baseline Funding stream, the federal government is investing more than $189 million, allocated over ten years beginning in 2026. This annual, public transit funding will support 33 transit systems being serviced by BC Transit. Long-term, predictable funding will upgrade, replace, or modernize public transit infrastructure for 33 transit systems serviced by BC Transit, and maintain them in a state of good repair.

    List of transit systems benefitting from BC Transit’s CPTF Baseline Funding allocation:

    • Campbell River
    • Central Fraser Valley Regional
    • Chilliwack
    • Comox Valley Regional
    • Cowichan Valley Regional
    • Cranbrook
    • Dawson Creek
    • Fort St. John
    • Kamloops
    • Kelowna
    • Kitimat
    • Merritt
    • Mount Waddington
    • Nanaimo
    • Pemberton Valley
    • Penticton
    • Port Alberni
    • Powell River Regional
    • Prince George
    • Prince Rupert and Port Edward
    • Quesnel
    • Salt Spring Island
    • Shuswap Regional
    • Skeena Regional
    • South Okanagan-Similkameen Regional
    • Squamish
    • Sunshine Coast Regional
    • Terrace Regional
    • Vernon Regional
    • Victoria Regional
    • West Kootenay
    • Whistler
    • Williams Lake

    *Federal funding is conditional on the submission of a capital plan and the signing of a funding agreement between BC Transit and Canada.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: America’s Butterfly Populations Down 22% over Past Two Decades

    Source: US Geological Survey

    Butterfly populations are declining quickly across the United States, highlighting the urgent need for management strategies that protect these key pollinators, according to a new nationwide study funded in part by the Midwest CASC. 

    Between 2000 and 2020, the number of butterflies in the United States fell by 22%, according to a new study funded in part by the Midwest CASC. The researchers calculated this alarming decline from over 76,000 surveys and 12.6 million records of individual butterflies combined from 35 different monitoring programs across the country. There were enough records for the researchers to calculate population trends for 342 of the 554 total species in the dataset. 

    Butterflies are essential pollinators and, as caterpillars, are important food sources for many types of birds. They are also the most widely surveyed group of insects. Despite this, this study, published in the journal Science, is the first to pull together data from various monitoring programs to analyze nationwide trends. Many of these monitoring programs rely on citizen science efforts, so understanding the full scale of the butterfly decline wouldn’t have been possible without community involvement. The researchers found that about half of the species had populations that declined by more than 42% over the twenty-year period, while 107 species declined more than 50%, and four species more than 99%. Only nine species in the study experienced population increases.  

    Butterflies play a key role as pollinators for both wild and agricultural plants – including many flowers that bees don’t visit. Yet, habitat loss, climate change, and pesticides are driving their widespread declines. The study’s authors emphasize that, despite these challenges, butterflies have short life cycles which allows for rapid population growth and recovery – provided the right conditions and strategies are in place.  

    This research was funded in part by the Midwest CASC project: “Evaluating the Role of Climate on Midwestern Butterfly Trajectories, Monarch Declines, and the Broader ‘Insect Apocalypse.’” 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Small Business Administration Announces Agency-Wide Reorganization

    Source: United States Small Business Administration

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, pursuant to EO 14210, the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) announced its plans for an agency-wide reorganization. To return to its founding mission of empowering small businesses, and to restore accountability to taxpayers, the agency will reduce its workforce by 43% – ending the expansive social policy agenda of the prior Administration, eliminating non-essential roles, and returning to pre-pandemic staffing levels.

    The strategic reorganization will begin a turnaround for the agency by restoring the efficiency of the first Trump Administration, as well as its focus on promoting small businesses. Core services to the public, including the agency’s loan guarantee and disaster assistance programs, as well as its field and veteran operations, will not be impacted.

    The SBA’s reorganization will enable the agency to become a dynamic and efficient force for small businesses, manufacturing, and job creation in support of President Trump’s economic agenda. SBA will refocus its resources on the core missions of supplying capital, fostering innovation, supporting veteran small business owners, providing field support, and delivering timely disaster relief.

    Key features of SBA’s reorganization include:

    • Promoting business formation and growth by shifting resources to expand capital formation functions and personnel, removing the emphasis from partisan programs of the past.
    • Prioritizing risk management and fraud prevention by centralizing these functions within the Office of the Chief Financial Officer, in the effort to restore integrity to agency programs, audits, and financial statements.
    • Expanding disaster response support by transferring disaster loan servicing functions and additional personnel into the Office of Disaster Recovery and Resilience. Additionally, the agency will cross-train field office personnel to support disaster recovery efforts.
    • Eliminating redundant pandemic-era positions associated exclusively with processing pandemic-era loans within the Office of Capital Access.
    • Ensuring that 30% of the agency is located in the field, by decentralizing services and working to better serve Main Streets across America.
    • Promoting veteran businesses and American manufacturing by preserving existing staffing levels within the Office of Veterans Business Development and the Office of Manufacturing and Trade.
    • Exempting key accountability offices from reductions at this time including the Office of Advocacy and the Office of the Inspector General.

    Much of the reorganization is targeted to reverse the broad and costly expansion of the SBA under the Biden Administration. Since the pandemic, the agency has nearly doubled in size, in part to support a suite of new progressive programs like the Green Lender Initiative, the Community Navigator Pilot Program, and DEI activities. This partisan agenda, promoted at the expense of America’s small businesses, predictably led to the deterioration of SBA’s services and financial performance. An estimated $200 billion in Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) and Covid Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) fraud was ignored for four years. Meanwhile, irresponsible Biden-era changes to the 7(a) loan program generated rising defaults and delinquencies, as well as negative cash flow for the first time in over a decade – which will have future, multi-year consequences for the program.

    “The SBA was created to be a launchpad for America’s small businesses by offering access to capital, which in turn drives job creation, innovation, and a thriving Main Street. But in the last four years, the agency has veered off track – doubling in size and turning into a sprawling leviathan plagued by mission creep, financial mismanagement, and waste. Instead of serving small businesses, the SBA served a partisan political agenda – expanding in size, scope, and spending,” said SBA Administrator Kelly Loeffler.

    “Just like the small business owners we support, we must do more with less. We have therefore submitted plans to pursue a strategic restructuring that will realign the agency and its resources with our founding mission. By eliminating non-mission-critical positions and consolidating functions, we will revert to the staffing levels of the last Trump Administration, which supported a historic economic boom. We will return our focus to driving private sector growth and delivering disaster relief with accountability, efficiency, and results.”

    Under the reorganization plan, the agency will eliminate approximately 2,700 active positions out of a total active workforce of nearly 6,500 through voluntary resignations, the expiration of COVID-era and other term appointments, and a limited number of reductions in force (RIFs).

    The average salary of an SBA employee is over $132,000 – more than double the national average wage. The reduction in workforce will save taxpayers more than $435 million annually by FY26.

    SBA’s reorganization plan will provide for the preservation of public services through a strategic transfer of duties. It will be actioned in the coming weeks.

    ###

    About the U.S. Small Business Administration
    The U.S. Small Business Administration helps power the American dream of entrepreneurship. As the leading voice for small businesses within the federal government, the SBA empowers job creators with the resources and support they need to start, grow, and expand their businesses or recover from a declared disaster. It delivers services through an extensive network of SBA field offices and partnerships with public and private organizations. To learn more, visit www.sba.gov.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: OSCE demonstrates its impact in mitigating virtual asset risks

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: OSCE demonstrates its impact in mitigating virtual asset risks

    Vera Strobachova-Budway, Head of OCEEA’s Economic Governance Unit, presenting at an event in Riga, Latvia, 20 March 2025. (OSCE) Photo details

    The Office of the Co-ordinator of OSCE Economic and Environmental Activities (OCEEA) shared its experience in tackling the multifaceted challenges posed by virtual assets during an event organized by the British Embassy and the Serious and Organised Crime Network in Riga, Latvia, on 20 March.
    Participants discussed a wide range of virtual asset and cryptocurrency topics including digital asset seizure and confiscation, the 2025 Crypto Crime Report, and responses to virtual assets abuse. OCEEA presented the impact of its extra-budgetary project “Innovative policy solutions to mitigate money laundering risks of virtual assets” to an audience of practitioners, experts and policymakers from several OSCE participating States.
    “There are three main takeaways from the OSCE’s work on virtual assets”, said Vera Strobachova-Budway, Head of OCEEA’s Economic Governance Unit, in her closing remarks. “First, international co-operation is a must — what we do in one country will have an impact on another; second, we need to learn from each other; and third, awareness raising and education on the risks and benefits of virtual assets is key.”
    The OCEEA extra-budgetary project on virtual assets is financially supported by Germany, Italy, Poland, Romania, the United Kingdom and the United States of America.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Global: Chinese anger at sale of Panama Canal ports to US investor highlights tensions between the two superpowers

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Maria Ryan, Associate Professor in US History, University of Nottingham

    When Hong Kong-listed conglomerate CK Hutchison announced it was selling its two port concessions on the Panama Canal to a US consortium led by New York-based giant BlackRock, the Chinese government issued a strongly worded rebuke.

    Through government-backed newspaper Ta Kung Pao, Beijing accused the US of forcing the deal “through despicable means”, and claimed that if this was completed: “The United States will definitely use it for political purposes … China’s shipping and trade there will inevitably be subject to the United States.”

    CK Hutchison’s decision to sell its ports, which it has operated since 1997, to a US-led buyer came after the US president, Donald Trump, criticised Chinese influence over this strategically vital waterway. In his inaugural address, Trump claimed, falsely, that “China is operating the Panama Canal” and vowed “we’re taking it back”. In fact, data shows that the majority of traffic through the canal goes to or from the US.

    This has stoked fears in Beijing that US companies operating ports on the canal will do Washington’s bidding and potentially seek to restrict China’s access. Beijing’s angry response indicates the rivalry between the two great powers is deep and ongoing.

    While it is likely that this rivalry will continue to intensify under Trump, the president is unpredictable. Indeed, he sees unpredictability as a virtue – a way to keep advisers and foreign leaders on their toes.

    When asked last year whether he would support Taiwan in the event of a Chinese invasion, Trump gave his own twist on the longstanding US policy of “strategic ambiguity”, saying: “I don’t want to reveal my cards … I wouldn’t want to give away any negotiating abilities by giving information like that to any reporter.”

    This means there are multiple plausible outcomes for the US-China relationship in the second Trump administration.

    On the one hand, there is a very strong, bipartisan consensus in Washington that China poses a systemic, generational challenge to American power. Whereas Russia is viewed as a disruptor, China is a potential peer competitor that could build a new international order based on Beijing’s preferences and interests.

    Since Trump’s first term in office, the US has been aggressively waging a “tech war” on China to limit its technological and military development, by cutting off access to high-end semiconductors designed by US companies.

    This was intensified in the Biden years with new sanctions on Chinese tech companies, and the passage of the Chips and Science Act, designed to encourage the return of semiconductor manufacturing to the US. Defensive weapons sales to Taiwan had already been increased in Trump’s first term – and remained at high levels under Joe Biden.

    What Biden called “extreme competition” with China has become the main organising principle of US foreign policy. While Republican lawmakers have, so far, been willing to go along with Trump’s diplomacy when it comes to Russia, there is likely to be less tolerance of a similar approach to China.

    Unlike other US presidents, Trump does not seem to believe that alliances extend American power in the world – although he does still want the US to be the undisputed number one. In his second inaugural address, he vowed to “build the strongest military the world has ever seen”.

    Trump sees China as an economic adversary, one of the reasons for imposing punitive tariffs of 20% on all incoming goods. China has retaliated with tariffs of its own and and has proposed more restrictions on exports of rare earth minerals. These are vital components of semiconductors, electric batteries and many weapons – and the global market is dominated by China.

    Policy shift?

    The US State Department recently signalled a possible shift in policy towards Taiwan, removing the phrase “we do not support Taiwan independence” from its fact sheet on Taiwan in February. This irritated Beijing, which sees the island as an integral part of China.

    This subtle move away from the US’s longstanding “One China” policy – along with the tariffs and Trump’s hostility to alleged Chinese influence over the Panama Canal – suggests the continuation of a hostile, competitive approach to China.

    That said, as Trump’s recent diplomacy with Russia and his comments about absorbing Greenland showed, he is not afraid to upend the established norms of US foreign policy. He enjoys provoking the “globalist” foreign policy establishment. He lauds his own deal-making abilities, and would not want to fight a war with China over Taiwan.

    Trump is attracted to “strongman” leaders and claims to have “a great relationship with President Xi”. He achieves his goals by taking maximalist positions (for example, the punitive tariffs) which he uses to extract concessions. At a recent press conference, Trump stated: “I see so many things saying we don’t want China in this country. That’s not right. We want them to invest in the United States. That’s good. That’s a lot of money coming in.”

    Trump is well aware the US is heavily dependent on imported semiconductors from the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation (TSMC) – the world’s leading chip manufacturer – and has repeatedly accused Taiwan of “stealing” the US semiconductor industry. He recently took credit for TSMC’s announcement that it would invest a further US$100 billion (£77 billion) in three chip factories in Arizona, declaring that production of vital semiconductors inside the US was “a matter of national security”.

    But it will take years for TSMC’s investments to come to fruition in terms of aiding US self-sufficiency in chip manufacture. In the meantime, it is not out of the question that Trump could seek a deal with China that guarantees US access to imported chips from Taiwan, in return for China absorbing the island peacefully. Given the historic importance of Taiwan to Beijing, this could appeal.

    Avoiding war could also be popular with Trump voters who want to put “America first” without getting embroiled in foreign wars. Although the hawkish China consensus is firmly embedded in Washington, its continuation is not guaranteed while the mercurial Trump is at the helm.

    Maria Ryan has received funding from the British Academy.

    ref. Chinese anger at sale of Panama Canal ports to US investor highlights tensions between the two superpowers – https://theconversation.com/chinese-anger-at-sale-of-panama-canal-ports-to-us-investor-highlights-tensions-between-the-two-superpowers-252418

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: How AI can (and can’t) help lighten your load at work

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Akhil Bhardwaj, Associate Professor (Strategy and Organisation), School of Management, University of Bath

    SObeR 9426/Shutterstock

    Legend has it that William Tell shot an apple from his young son’s head. While there are many interpretations of the tale, from the perspective of the theory of technology, a few are especially salient.

    First, Tell was an expert marksman. Second, he knew his bow was reliable but understood it was just a tool with no independent agency. Third, Tell chose the target.

    What does all this have to do with artificial intelligence? Metaphorically, AI (think large language models or LLMs, such as ChatGPT) can be thought of as a bow, the user is the archer, and the apple represents the user’s goal. Viewed this way, it’s easier to work out how AI can be used effectively in the workplace.

    To that end, it’s helpful to consider what is known about the limitations of AI before working out where it can – and can’t – help with efficiency and productivity.

    First, LLMs tend to create outcomes that are not tethered in reality. A recent study showed that as much as 60% of their answers can be incorrect. Premium versions even incorrectly answer questions more confidently than their free counterparts.

    Second, some LLMs are closed systems – that is, they do not update their “beliefs”. In a mutable world that is constantly changing, the static nature of such LLMs can be misleading. In this sense, they drift away from reality and may not be reliable.

    What’s more, there is some evidence that interactions with users lead to a degradation in performance. For example, researchers have found that LLMs become more covertly racist over time. Consequently, their output is not predictable.

    Third, LLMs have no goals and are not capable of independently discovering the world. They are, at best, just tools to which a user can outsource their exploration of the world.

    Finally, LLMs do not – to borrow a term from the 1960s sci-fi novel Stranger in a Strange Land – “grok” (understand) the world they are embedded in. They are far more like jabbering parrots that give the impression of being smart.

    Think of the ability of LLMs to mine data and consider statistical associations between words, which they use to mimic human speech. The AI does not know what statistical association between words mean. It does not know that the crowing of the rooster does not lead to a sunrise, for example.

    Of course, an LLM’s ability to mimic speech is impressive. But the ability to mimic something does not mean it has the attributes of the original.

    Lightening the workload

    So how can you use AI more effectively? One thing it can be useful for is critiquing ideas. Very often, people prefer not to hear criticism and feel a loss of face when their ideas are criticised – especially when it happens in public.

    But LLM-generated critiques are private matters and can be useful. I have done so for a recent essay and found the critique reasonable. Pre-testing ideas can also help avoid blind spots and obvious errors.

    Second, you can use AI to crystallise your understanding of the world. What does this mean? Well, because AI does not understand the causes of events, asking it questions can force you to engage in sense-making. For example, I asked an LLM about whether my university (Bath) should widely adopt the use of AI.

    While the LLM pointed to efficiency advantages, it clearly did not understand how resource are allocated. For example, administrative staff who are freed up cannot be redeployed to make high-level strategic decisions or teach courses. AI has no experience in the world to understand that.

    Third, AI can be used to complement mundane tasks such as editing and writing emails. But here, of course, lies a danger – users will use LLMs to write emails at one end and summarise emails at the other.

    You should consider when a clumsily written personal email might be a better option (especially if you need to persuade someone about something). Authenticity is likely to start counting more as the use of LLMs becomes more widespread. A personal email that uses the right language and appeals to shared values is more likely to resonate.

    Fourth, AI is best used for low-stakes tasks where there is no liability. For example, it could be used to summarise a lengthy customer review, answer customer questions that are not related to policy or finance, generate social media posts, or help with employee inductions.

    Where decisions might have serious consequences, human input is better.
    M Stocker/Shutterstock

    Consider the opposite case. In 2022, an LLM used by Air Canada misinformed a passenger about a fee – and the passenger sued. The judge held the airline liable for the bad advice. So always think about liability issues.

    Fans of AI often advocate it for everything under the sun. Yet frequently, AI comes across as a solution looking for a problem. The trick is to consider very carefully if there is a case for using AI and what the costs involved might be.

    Chances are, the more creative your task is, or the more unique it is, and the more understanding it requires of how the world works, the less likely it is that AI will be useful. In fact, outsourcing creative work to AI can take away some of the “magic”. AI can mimic humans – but only humans “grok” what it is to be human.

    Akhil Bhardwaj does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. How AI can (and can’t) help lighten your load at work – https://theconversation.com/how-ai-can-and-cant-help-lighten-your-load-at-work-252663

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Premier’s, parliamentary secretary’s statements on the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Premier David Eby has issued the following statement marking the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination:

    “This day commemorates the March 21, 1960, Sharpeville massacre, when police killed 69 people at a peaceful anti-apartheid demonstration in Sharpeville, South Africa.

    “The International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination is a day for all of us to recommit to actively working against racism in all its forms.

    “For many Indigenous and racialized people in British Columbia, discrimination and injustice continue to have significant impacts.

    “Our government remains committed to addressing racial discrimination and continuing our ongoing anti-racism work, including anti-racism legislation and a racist incident helpline to support people who have experienced or witnessed an act of hate. As well, we are focused on keeping our schools safe and welcoming with the ongoing implementation of the K-12 Anti-Racism Action Plan.

    “Today and every day, our government stands against hate and discrimination in all its forms. There is still much work to do, but together with all British Columbians, we are building a more welcoming and inclusive province.”

    Jessie Sunner, parliamentary secretary for anti-racism initiatives, said:

    “The International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination is an opportunity to reflect on the progress we have made, but also to discuss ongoing challenges. We are witnessing a right-wing political backlash against diversity, equity and inclusion principles south of our border. While this trend is alarming, it has no bearing on all that we are doing to eliminate systemic racism from B.C., including work on the Anti-Racism Act’s Action Plan and the support services provided by the racist incident helpline. We remain just as committed today as ever before to upholding and advancing a province that is just, inclusive and equitable for all.”

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: The Prime Minister has appointed 6 new Trustees to the V&A

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    The Prime Minister has appointed 6 new Trustees to the V&A

    The Prime Minister has appointed Mariella Frostrup, Andrew Keith, Akshata Murty, Nigel Newton, Vick Hope and Pedro Pina as trustees of the Victoria and Albert Museum; their four year terms started on 10 March 2025.

    Mariella Frostrup

    Mariella is a journalist, broadcaster, author, and cultural commentator; in particular covering the worlds of arts, culture and societal issues. She promotes the intrinsic value of arts and culture to wider society and the importance that they connect with and are accessible to all. Mariella has presented the UK’s leading book programmes, cultural shows and judged its literary and arts awards, such as the Booker Prize, BAFTA Awards, RIBA and Turner Prize.

    She was the first non-elected member of the Royal Academy’s Council, and more recently she became a Trustee of the British Council. She was awarded a Doctor of Arts from Nottingham University in 2009 for her work and achievement in arts and culture. She’s a Royal Society of Literature fellow and a BAFTA member.

    Mariella co-founded the annual Women in Work Summit. She is the Government’s Menopause Employment Ambassador, Chairs the advocacy group Menopause Mandate, and is a Save the Children Ambassador.

    Andrew Keith

    Andrew is a luxury retail executive with over three decades of experience leading prominent international brands.

    Andrew spent 19 years with Lane Crawford Joyce Group, holding a number of key positions including President of Joyce and Lane Crawford. Under his leadership, the group greatly expanded its footprint, introducing innovative retail formats and establishing a significant presence in Greater China. He oversaw the opening of flagship stores and launched the group’s online platform. He then spent three years with Selfridges as Managing Director and later CEO, Andrew led Selfridges through the complexities of reopening post-COVID-19, implementing strategies to adapt to the new retail landscape. In early 2025, he took on the role of leading the transformation of Edinburgh’s historic Jenners building. This multi-million-pound project aims to revitalise the iconic site into a premier destination, blending retail and hospitality elements.

    Andrew has served as a co-opted Member of the V&A’s Commerce Committee, contributing his commercial expertise to enhance the museum’s engagement strategies.

    Born in Lagos, Nigeria, to Scottish parents, Andrew studied Fashion Design at Kingston University and maintains a deep connection to his Scottish heritage, often spending time at his home in the Highlands, reflecting his appreciation for nature and the environment.

    Akshata Murty

    Akshata is passionate about education and the power of creativity to have positive effects on young people. During her time living in Downing Street, she launched ‘Lessons at 10’. This initiative provided children from across the United Kingdom with a unique opportunity to go behind the famous black door of Number 10 to be inspired and discover their passions.

    With her husband, former Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, Akshata is a co-founder of The Richmond Project, a charity focused on enabling social mobility by breaking down barriers to numeracy. She is also a keen supporter of the UK’s veteran community.

    Akshata spent over a decade investing in early-stage consumer-focused British companies, providing funding and strategic advice. Previously, Akshata founded a fashion line that was inspired by Indian craftsmanship.

    Originally from Bangalore, Akshata obtained a B.A in Economics and French from Claremont McKenna College, an MBA from Stanford University’s Graduate School of Business as well as an Associate degree from the Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising Los Angeles. She is on the board of Claremont McKenna College. Akshata is also a Trustee of the Murty Trust in India and a supporter of the Murty Classical Library of India.

    Nigel Newton CBE

    Nigel is the founder and Chief Executive of Bloomsbury Publishing. He was born and raised in San Francisco. He read English at Selwyn College, Cambridge and after working at Macmillan Publishers, he joined Sidgwick & Jackson. He left Sidgwick in 1986 to start Bloomsbury Publishing. He was appointed as President of the Publishers Association in April 2022.

    He serves as a Member of the Advisory Committee of Cambridge University Library and President of Book Aid International. In 2020, he was awarded The London Book Fair (LBF) Lifetime Achievement Award and became an Honorary Fellow of Selwyn College, Cambridge. He has previously served as a member of the Booker Prize Advisory Committee, Chairman of the Charleston Trust, Chair of World Book Day, Board member of the US-UK Fulbright Commission, member of the Publishers Association Council, Trustee of the International Institute for Strategic Studies and Chair of the British Library Trust.

    In 2021 he was awarded a CBE for his services to the publishing industry. 

    Vick Hope

    Vick is an award-winning TV and radio presenter, journalist and author. She hosts BBC Radio One’s show Going Home, and was recently named the newest presenter of Countryfile. She also presents The One Show, Channel 4’s Paralympic Games coverage, CBBC’s Britain’s Best Young Artist, Glastonbury, and ITV’s Vick Hope’s Breakfast Show.

    Vick served on the Women’s Prize for Fiction (WPFF) judging panel in 2021 and curates their Young Adults’ Reading List. She hosts the WPFF podcast, Bookshelfie, interviewing female artists, writers, politicians, musicians, actors and sportspeople about the books by women that have shaped them. She is also the author of two children’s books which promote creativity in young children. 

    In 2020, Vick became an official Ambassador for Amnesty International. She volunteers at local charities Literacy Pirates and Just For Girls, which support children from disadvantaged backgrounds in her community. With the Duke Of Edinburgh Award, she mentors young people and delivers annual speeches at Buckingham Palace. Vick leads The Brit Awards’ campaign to tackle accessibility issues in the creative industries, and is Marks and Spencer’s Plan A Fashion Sustainability Ambassador. Vick was a judge on the ArtFund Museum Of The Year panel in 2024, which was awarded to Young V&A.

    Vick graduated from Emmanuel College, University of Cambridge in 2011, having read Modern Languages (French, Spanish and Portuguese).

    Pedro Pina

    Pedro is a senior executive with over three decades of experience in media, brand management, advertising, and all areas of the digital space. Pina has been at Google for over 12 years and currently serves as Head of YouTube, overseeing the platform’s business and strategic development within Europe, Middle East and Africa. His career includes roles at Google, McCann Worldgroup, PepsiCo, and Procter & Gamble having lived in the US, Brazil, Spain and Portugal. London has been home for Pedro and his family for more than 15 years. 

    Pina holds an MBA from INSEAD, Paris and previously served on the V&A Corporate Advisory Committee. His expertise includes digital transformation, audience engagement, and strategic partnerships. He serves on the Board of OutRight International and is an Ambassador of Stonewall as well as other organisations that advocate for LGBTQ+ human rights globally and in the UK.

    Remuneration and Governance Code

    Trustees of the V&A are not remunerated. These appointments have been made in accordance with the Governance Code on Public Appointments. The appointments process is regulated by the Commissioner for Public Appointments

    Under the Code, any significant political activity undertaken by an appointee in the last five years must be declared. This is defined as including holding office, public speaking, making a recordable donation, or candidature for election. Mariella Frostrup, Andrew Keith, Nigel Newton CBE, Victoria Nwosu-Hope and Pedro Pina have not declared any significant political activity. Akshata Murty has declared she has spoken on behalf of the Conservative Party, and their candidates and canvassed on behalf of the Conservative Party and helped at elections. 

    DCMS has around 400 regulated Public Appointment roles across 42 Public Bodies including Arts Council England, Theatres Trust, the National Gallery, UK Sport and the Gambling Commission. We encourage applications from talented individuals from all backgrounds and across the whole of the United Kingdom.  To find out more about Public Appointments or to apply to be a Trustee of a National Museum or Gallery visit the HM Government Public Appointments Website.

    Updates to this page

    Published 21 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Gov. Pillen Provides Update on Statewide Damage Assessment Following Blizzard

    Source: US State of Nebraska

    . Pillen Provides Update on Statewide Damage Assessment Following Blizzard

    LINCOLN, NE – Governor Jim Pillen is providing an update on the statewide damage assessment in the aftermath of Wednesday’s blizzard. Emergency managers continue to collect information to determine any local needs. Additionally, the Governor’s office has been in constant contact with leadership  from the Nebraska Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and continues to receive updates on needs and progress made toward storm restoration.

    Numerous crews from other states have provided personnel to assist in repairing downed powerlines and restoring power, through mutual aid agreements. Gov. Pillen expressed his gratitude for their quick response and support. He continues to receive updates from utility companies as progress is made in restoring electricity. 

    If any additional resources are required to help manage impacts from the storm, the Governor will  ensure they are acted  upon quickly. Gov. Pillen plans to issue an emergency declaration upon NEMA’s recommendation, after initial damage assessments are completed. 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Honoring New York’s Rich, Diverse History

    Source: US State of New York

    overnor Kathy Hochul today announced recommendations by the New York State Board for Historic Preservation to add 20 properties and districts to the State and National Registers of Historic Places. The nominations include Marcus Garvey Park in New York City, an octagon house in Columbiaville, a Jewish cemetery in Buffalo and the Colgate-Rochester Crozer Divinity School in Rochester.

    “New York’s historic places tell the stories of where people have authored the enduring legacy we cherish,” Governor Hochul said. “With these nominations, we commit ourselves to protecting that legacy and to sharing these wondrous monuments of human achievement with future generations. By recognizing these sites, we honor the diverse communities and rich history that make New York extraordinary.”

    State and National Register listing can assist owners in revitalizing properties, making them eligible for various public preservation programs and services, such as matching state grants and federal historic rehabilitation tax credits.

    New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation Commissioner Pro Tempore Randy Simons said, “In New York, we’re committed to recognizing our diverse history and expanding the official record of places of significance. With each slate of nominations, we increase our knowledge of our past and help ensure access to resources to preserve these places for the future. When properties are listed in the State and National Registers of Historic Places, they become eligible for various public preservation programs and incentives, such as matching state grants and federal and state historic rehabilitation tax credits. Our future is worth a strong investment in our past and we are proud to advance this work.”

    New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation Deputy Commissioner for Historic Preservation Daniel Mackay said, “At the Division for Historic Preservation, we are dedicated to researching and documenting complete histories, to expanding the State and National Registers of Historic Places, and to connecting communities with the resources they need to help preserve and promote these unique assets. Listing in the registers is the first step in connecting property owners with resources that will help them steward this shared history.”

    New York State continues to lead the nation in the use of historic tax credits, with $7.17 billion in total rehabilitation costs from 2018-2024. Since 2009, the historic tax credit program has stimulated over $16.4 billion in project expenditures in New York State, creating significant investment and new jobs. According to a report, between 2018-2022, the  credits in New York State generated 72,918 jobs and over $1.47 billion in local, state and federal taxes.

    The State and National Registers are the official lists of buildings, structures, districts, landscapes, objects and sites significant in the history, architecture, archaeology and culture of New York State and the nation. There are more than 128,000 historic properties throughout the state listed in the National Register of Historic Places, either individually or as components of historic districts. Property owners, municipalities and organizations from communities throughout the state sponsored the nominations.

    Once recommendations are approved by the Commissioner, who serves as the State Historic Preservation Officer, the properties are listed in the New York State Register of Historic Places and then nominated to the National Register of Historic Places, where they are reviewed by the National Park Service and, once approved, entered in the National Register.  More information, with photos of the nominations, is available on the Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation website.

    New York City

    Church of St. Edward the Martyr, New York County – The Church of St. Edward the Martyr is a complex of religious buildings that includes an 1887 church (with additions in 1902 and 1903), a parish house and rectory (housed in a 1902 row building) and a 1961 community center. The church is an example of Late Gothic Revival style religious architecture in East Harlem and New York City and is the earliest representative example in Harlem of the Anglo-Catholic architectural program adopted by some Episcopal congregations. The establishment of the church coincided with the rapid development of Harlem during the 1880s and was funded by prominent Manhattan Episcopalians, including John Jacob Astor and “Commodore” Elbridge T. Gerry. The rapid growth of the congregation and generous funding allowed the church to fully embrace Anglo-Catholic worship with the construction of a grand Gothic-inspired reredos and ornate woodwork designed by J. & R. Lamb, under the supervision of Charles Lamb, whose studio was among the most prominent decorating firms of the period. The church’s simple, steep-gabled façade, its stained-glass windows and its central entrance all typify a modest, yet carefully planned, Late Gothic Revival style religious building.

    Corsi Houses, New York County – Corsi Houses, a public housing complex in East Harlem constructed in 1973, is one of a group of mid-20th century government-funded senior housing complexes in Harlem developed by the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA). It represents the expansion of federal affordable housing programs to construct apartments specifically designed for seniors under the Housing Act of 1956 and later expanded under housing acts in 1961 and 1965. Corsi Houses is also one of a small set of public housing developments built in collaboration with a local settlement house, the LaGuardia Memorial House, which had served the neighborhood since 1898. LaGuardia Memorial House initiated Corsi Houses, thus ensuring direct community participation, and built on land formerly occupied by the settlement house as part of an attempt to integrate it into the surrounding neighborhood. The project was initiated in 1961, but numerous interruptions (including struggles over financing and design approval) delayed its opening to 1973. Although Corsi Houses continues to fulfill its purpose of combining affordable elderly housing with community support programs in East Harlem, the long struggle to complete construction reveals the tension between well-intentioned programs, community desires, politics and economic realities

    Marcus Garvey Park, New York County – For almost 200 years, the 20-acre public green space now called Marcus Garvey Park has been a place of refuge and cultural expression for Harlem residents. It’s among Manhattan’s oldest parks, predating Central Park by over twenty years. The relative scarcity of parks in this part of Manhattan heightened its importance as a community resource worth defending and advocating for, as local groups have done for decades. Marcus Garvey Park largely retains its 1930s landscape built by laborers employed through the Works Progress Administration and designed by Aymar Embury II and Gilmore Clarke, who worked under Parks Commissioner Robert Moses. The most defining feature of their plan, the massive terrace atop the mount, known as the Acropolis, is wholly intact. The park’s redevelopment in this period was more than an aesthetic change. It introduced equipment and facilities that supported child-centered play, reflecting changing trends in public recreation. The park is located on a physical and cultural nexus – at the historic dividing line between African American Central Harlem and Spanish East Harlem. This reality gave events held here deep symbolic meaning, especially the 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival. This multi-genre, multi-ethnic musical showcase was designed to celebrate Harlem but also directly addressed national issues of civil rights, social justice and Black identity. The 1970 recreation center and amphitheater complex and the 1971 pool represent the community’s crusade to bring more recreational facilities to their neighborhood. In 1973 the park was renamed in honor of the late Black Nationalist leader, Marcus Garvey, recognizing Black heritage and pride in Harlem as well as the importance of the park in the Black community. The Marcus Garvey Park National Register nomination was supported, in part, by an Underrepresented Communities grant from the Historic Preservation Fund administered by the National Park Service, Department of the Interior.

    Morris Park Senior Citizens Home, New York County – Built in in 1963, the Morris Park Senior Citizens Home is a remarkable example of a church-led senior housing project developed under the direct loan program of the Community Facilities Administration, a part of the US Housing and Home Finance Agency. This program targeted housing specifically for the elderly at below market rate; it also allowed faith-based communities to lead these developments. Churches had long been providers of social services, however, in response to the Civil Rights movement in the 1950s and 60s, religious organizations, particularly urban Black churches, were inspired to pursue housing, feeling it was their responsibility to impact the socio-political landscape of the city. The Abyssinian Baptist Church, one of the largest Black churches in New York City, welcomed the opportunity to develop housing for citizens in its community. Famed pastors Adam Clayton Powell Jr. and Oberia D. Dempsey established the Morris Park Senior Citizens Housing Council to lead the development. The partners undertook this project in reaction to the perceived shortfalls of the public housing produced by the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA), which was blamed for driving families out, demolishing tenements and brownstones and constructing high-rise towers and superblocks in their place. The Morris Park Senior Citizens Home provided ninety-seven housing units for senior citizens, most of whom were Black, in Harlem.

    Stuyvesant Gardens I, Kings County – Stuyvesant Gardens I is a public housing complex in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, which was one of New York City’s largest Black communities in the early 1900s. Many residents lived in former row houses and – in spite of racially motivated redlining practices – the neighborhood was characterized by a high rate of homeownership. Decades of disinvestment, however, led to the mounting perception of Bedford-Stuyvesant as an area in need of assistance. In the mid-1960s, the neighborhood’s network of community groups organized a coordinated opposition to the city’s proposals to clear the area via demolition. Stuyvesant Gardens I was the culmination of years of dialogue between the Bedford-Stuyvesant community and local government officials. Designed by E.N. Turano and completed in 1972 for the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA), it is an example of a public housing complex developed under the Model Cities program—a government initiative to improve the physical condition of urban neighborhoods that maximized community involvement in the planning process and minimized displacement of existing residents. The design of Stuyvesant Gardens I responded to the community’s wishes in a couple of notable ways: it has a “vest pocket” site plan, spread across portions of two city blocks; and it is low-rise, standing only four-stories tall and closely matching the scale of adjacent row houses. Its low-rise design was intended to address the criticisms of the tower-in-the-park model that was ubiquitous for public housing developments in post-war New York City.

    Long Island

    Lynbrook Public Library, Nassau County – Built in the village of Lynbrook in 1929, Lynbrook Public Library is an example of early twentieth century institutional architecture that reflects the ideals of the Public Library Movement. Designed by architect Hugh Tallant, a graduate of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts and well known for his work in theatre design, the library embodies the Neoclassical Revival style with its symmetrical design, monumental presence and classical details, including carved depictions of Pallas Athena, goddess of wisdom and war. Tallant, who partnered with Henry B. Herts to design major projects like the New Amsterdam Theatre and Lyceum Theatre, brought his experience designing grand, decorative architecture to the library. The building’s design, featuring a formal entrance, large windows and a bright and open reading room underscore its role as an enduring educational and cultural resource for the community.

    Mid-Hudson

    Charles D. & Elizabeth Lantry House, Ulster County – Located in the city of Kingston, the Charles D. & Elizabeth Lantry House is an excellent example of the Queen Anne-style. The rectangular, two-and-one-half-story wood frame building constructed ca. 1894 has asymmetrical gables, projecting bays, varied wall cladding and decorative woodwork. The historic interior of the Lantry House is defined by its original floor plan, original wood staircase with a carved floral newel post, historic windows and decorative woodwork. Charles D. and Elizabeth Lantry, the original homeowners, reflected the neighborhood’s historic middle-class homeownership and the use of architectural style to demonstrate social standing.

    Home for the Aged in Ulster County, Ulster County – The Home for the Aged in Ulster County was constructed in 1929 in response to the growing need for safe, comfortable accommodations for an increasing number of senior residents in the city of Kingston and the county at large. The Home is a strong example of Colonial Revival architecture – designed by local architect George E. Lowe – and is distinguished by its symmetrical design, prominent entrance pediment and use of cast stone ornamentation. Throughout much of its operation, the Home was at capacity – offering much needed housing that was supported through charitable donations, without direct financing from the city or state. It remained in operation in this capacity until 1974 when a new owner purchased the building and began operating it as a non-profit organization.

    Roosa House, Ulster County – The Roosa House in the hamlet of High Falls in the town of Marbletown dates to ca. 1790. It was first owned by Andries Roosa, a descendant of one of the region’s founding Dutch settlers, Aldert Heymans Roosa. The home is a notable example of late 1700s Dutch Colonial stone residence and exhibits the building materials and methods from the early development period of the Hudson River Valley. The house has additions from ca. 1810 and later, but its center block is a rare and well-preserved example of regional stone architecture in Marbletown during the late 1700s.

    Capital Region

    Hillsdale Hamlet Historic District Boundary Expansion, Columbia County – Originally listed in 2010, the Hillsdale Hamlet Historic District includes historic commercial and residential buildings in the town of Hillsdale dating from ca. 1790 to 1945. This boundary expansion adds the Hillsdale High House to the historic district, which was mistakenly left out of the original nomination. The Craftsman Bungalow style house was built in 1933 by local architect Roy Van Deusen and was made from materials salvaged from the nearby Hillsdale High School after it closed.

    Smith Octagon House, Columbia County – Constructed ca. 1860 and located in the hamlet of Columbiaville, the Smith Octagon House is a rare and early example of the octagon house-style promoted by phrenologist and reformer Orson S. Fowler. The home reflects the construction methods and styles described in Fowler’s 1849 book, A Home for All: or, A New, Cheap, Convenient, and Superior Mode of Building. Some of the designs espoused in Fowler’s book that were incorporated into the Smith Octagon House include ample natural light and ventilation from symmetrical fenestration and a cupola. The overall plan for the house aimed to reduce room corners, enhance circulation patterns and limit interior or exterior embellishments. The original Smith family who built and occupied the home until 1920 were millenarians and enthusiastic participants in the Spiritualist movement.

    St. George’s Lodge No 6, Masonic Temple and Club, Schenectady County –The oldest continuously operating masonic organization in Schenectady, St. George’s Lodge No. 6, Masonic Temple and Club traces its origins to the 1700s and was the largest and most prominent masonic order in the city during the 1900s. The Masonic Lodge and Club was located at 302 State Street from 1919 until the Masonic Association sold the building in 1992, spanning a time of significant change for masonic orders and traditions. The temple and “Masonic Club” hosted regular meetings of more than a dozen other masonic organizations, making the building a regional hub for the full range of masonic orders and traditions. The building is an excellent example of a sophisticated, high-style, designed masonic temple and lodge building type. After its extensive renovation in 1919, 302 State Street was transformed into a purpose-built masonic lodge of dramatic proportions and detail. The building retains excellent integrity and numerous features that link this resource strongly to the tradition and history of Freemasonry. Additionally, the design of the lodge room at the top level typifies the imagery and iconography of the masonic lodge tradition.

    Western New York

    Ahavas Achim Cemetery, Erie County – Ahavas Achim is a small congregational cemetery first established in 1917, which evolved over time to suit the needs of its multi-national membership. Its earliest graves commemorate Eastern and Central European Jews who immigrated to Buffalo from the 1890s through the 1920s who chose large, richly ornamented monuments to honor their ancestors and European heritage. These monuments also reflect the community’s economic success in the United States, in contrast to the political and social oppression they faced in Europe. This economic success is underscored by the cemetery’s impressive gateway and chapel, both designed in the Egyptian Revival style. Through the synthesis of national origin and customs, the movement of synagogues to progressively more affluent areas and the continual accretion of congregations, the Ahavas Achim Cemetery represents the oldest, extant, continuously used built resource associated with that congregation. As previous synagogue buildings were demolished or converted into churches, only the cemetery remains intact, representing the final resting place of Buffalo Jews for over a century. Its continual use creates a tangible connection to the congregation’s ancestors and represents the dynamics of immigration in the United States.

    Cattaraugus County Memorial and Historical Building, Cattaraugus County – In 1908, Cattaraugus County and a Citizens Committee commissioned the Memorial and Historical Building in Little Valley to commemorate the county’s centennial. It opened in 1914 to house “memorial relics and as a memorial to our soldiers and sailors who enlisted in the Civil War from this County.” The Historical Society operated the facility until the 1920s; then the building became the home to the Little Valley Library. In 1953, it opened to the public as the County Museum. Today the red brick building is the home of the Citizens Advocating Memorial Preservation.

    First Presbyterian Church, Chautauqua County – Designed by renowned architect Ralph Adams Cram, the First Presbyterian Church in Jamestown is one of only three of this master architect’s churches completed in the Neo-Byzantine-Romanesque style. Erected in 1926 this church is an outstanding example of traditional building techniques and craftsmanship. The three-aisle, brick and stone edifice features a five-story bell tower, polychromed roof trusses and stained-glass windows produced in the studios of Harry Wright Goodhue, Gabriel Loire and the firm of Otto Heinigke and Thorton Smith. The building is highly embellished with limestone details, including Classical moldings, dentils, cornices, scrolls and column capitals. Brick and limestone are used in combination to create decorative stripes and counterchange patterns on the surface of the walls. Blocks of limestone laid in an asymmetrical pattern and bas-reliefs of Christians symbols decorate the street-facing elevations.

    Central New York

    Syracuse Boys Club, Onondaga County – Born out of Progressive Era ideals about youth development and the rise of afterschool programs, the Boys Club of America established health services, technical skills and safe recreational space for the nation’s youth. In Syracuse, the need for community-based education and care was compounded by waves of immigration from Eastern Europe. After school programs often served the additional function of “Americanizing” new populations by offering a space to learn language and cultural values outside of the home. The Syracuse Boys Club is an excellent example of a Collegiate Gothic style building from the early 1900s. Designed by local architect Melvin King and built between 1922 and 1923, the architecture communicates the club’s dedication to its mission of education and social betterment and the high-style treatment and use of brick, stone and terra cotta on the façade conveys the building’s prominence within the community.

    Utica Mutual Insurance Company Office Building, Onondaga County –Designed by King & King, prominent local architects and the oldest architectural firm in New York State, the Utica Mutual Insurance Company Building in Syracuse is an exceptionally intact example of an International Style office building of the 1950s. Built as part of an expansion effort for the Utica Mutual Insurance Company in 1956, the building was modeled after the company’s modernist headquarters that was constructed outside of Utica only two years prior. King & King – who were also tenants of the building – demonstrated their fluency with the International Style and this was one of their earliest commissions in this style, which came to define their architectural practice in the midcentury. The building at 420 E. Genesee Street stands as a prototypical example of the firm’s early work in the style, as well as an example of the firm’s proficiency with the Corporate International Style. The firm constructed several prominent buildings in this style in Syracuse and was especially well-known for its dramatic curtain walls and impressive structural work.

    Finger Lakes

    Colgate-Rochester Crozer Divinity School, Monroe County – At the core of this hilltop campus in the city of Rochester sits an assembly of Collegiate Gothic buildings, complete with spires, oriel windows, leaded panes and ornate carvings. Nationally renowned architect James Gamble Rogers – best known for his designs for Yale University’s original residential colleges – conceived the campus’s original 1932 components and its pastoral setting was designed by local landscape architect, Alling DeForest. Another local architect Charles Carpenter added two Tudor Revival dormitories in 1936; final additions to the campus were two mid-century Modern dormitories. In 1928, the Colgate and Rochester seminaries merged and this campus became the center of local and national discourses around theology, social inclusion and civil rights for several decades. In response to increasing secularism after World War II, faculty and administration pioneered Christian ecumenism, as well as controversial new theologies, like the “death of God” ideas associated with Professor William Hamilton. They responded to 1960s social movements and sought to elevate the voices of groups traditionally marginalized by mainstream religious institutions by merging with the historically female Baptist Missionary Training Center in 1962; creating the Black Church Studies program in 1969; and merging with Crozer Theological Seminary – Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s alma mater – in 1970.

    Mohawk Valley

    Jefferson Historic District, Schoharie County – Located in the northern Catskills region in the town of Jefferson, the historic district consists of over one hundred resources at the intersection of historic travel routes. The district embodies a community settled mainly by people from New England, who brought with them a village plan set around a centralized green space with commercial, civic and religious buildings surrounding a square. The creamery trade – especially large-scale butter manufacturing around 1900 – led to a burst of economic prosperity for the area. The architectural styles and built environment in Jefferson represent its development from ca. 1805 through 1936, the year when the consolidated Jefferson Central School was built.

    Southern Tier

    Walter Coulter Homestead Farm, Delaware County – Located in the town of Bovina, the Walter Coulter Homestead Farm represents the development of a family farm over generations of descendants – starting with Water Coulter, the son of Lowland Scots who were forced to abandon their leased land in the Scottish Borders during the late 1700s. Four generations of the Coulter family operated and developed the farm until it was sold out of the family in 1948. The residence building is a highly intact wood frame house characteristic of the regional style in the early 1800s. A three-level barn and other outbuildings are representative of the move from several commodities produced on the farm to a focus on dairy by the early 1900s.

    The New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation oversees more than 250 parks, historic sites, recreational trails, golf courses, boat launches and more, and welcomes over 88 million visitors annually. For more information on any of these recreation areas, visit  parks.ny.gov, download the free  NY State Parks Explorer app  or call 518-474-0456. Connect with us on  Facebook,  Instagram,  X,  LinkedIn, the  OPRHP Blog  or via the  OPRHP Newsroom.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Gadyaces “Gady” Serralta Nominated to Key Post at United States Marshals Service

    Source: US State of Vermont

    WASHINGTON — The Department of Justice congratulates Gadyaces “Gady” Serralta on his nomination to be the next Director of the United States Marshals Service (USMS).

    Gady Serralta (USMS Director Nominee)

    Beginning his career as a Miami Patrol Officer in 1990, Mr. Serralta has dedicated over 34 years of his life to serving in law enforcement. Mr. Serralta has spent the last six years as the U.S. Marshal for the Southern District of Florida after being confirmed in 2018. As the U.S. Marshal for the Southern District of Florida, Mr. Serralta faithfully served millions of residents by managing operations across several counties and in multiple courthouses. Prior to becoming a U.S. Marshal, Mr. Serralta was a Major in the Miami-Dade Police Department and the Police Chief for Palmetto Bay, Florida. Mr. Serralta has extensive experience in handling criminal investigations and tackling organized crime.

    Mr. Serralta received a B.S. in Criminal Justice Studies from Florida International University and a M.S. in Leadership from Nova Southeastern University.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Waller, Statement by Governor Christopher J. Waller

    Source: US State of New York Federal Reserve

    .

    March 21, 2025
    Statement by Governor Christopher J. Waller
    Governor Christopher J. Waller

    At the most recent Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, I supported no change in the federal funds target range but preferred to continue the current pace of decline in securities holdings.
    Reducing the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet is an important part of normalizing monetary policy implementation and reducing unneeded reserves in the banking system. Slowing further or stopping redemptions of securities holdings will be appropriate as we get closer to an ample level of reserves. But in my view we are not there yet because reserve balances stand at over $3 trillion and this level is abundant. There is no evidence from money market indicators or my outreach conversations that the banking system is getting close to an ample level of reserves.
    The Committee slowed the pace of redemptions in June 2024 to help ensure a smooth transition to the appropriate level of securities holdings needed to implement monetary policy efficiently and effectively. I believe that pace continues to be the right one.
    If unanticipated disturbances to reserve demand emerge on the path to balance sheet normalization, the Federal Reserve System has a variety of tools to address such a development. Rather than changing our current pace of balance sheet reduction, the Federal Reserve should rely on those tools and develop a plan for how to respond to short-run strains if they emerge. Such a plan could be implemented swiftly in the event more reserves need to be injected into the banking system. Even with the decision to slow the pace of runoff at this meeting, a plan is still required should a disturbance occur in the future. While this is a procedural matter, good process leads to good outcomes, and good contingency planning helps avoid disruptions to markets and to the FOMC’s efforts to achieve our economic objectives.

    Last Update: March 21, 2025

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Canada Invests in Retrofits for Community Housing in St. John’s

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    March 21, 2025           St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador         Natural Resources Canada

    Canada’s buildings sector is the third-largest contributor to greenhouse gases across the country. Retrofits to existing buildings can improve energy efficiency and comfort for residents while reducing their pollution.

    Today, the Honourable Joanne Thompson, on behalf of the federal Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, announced that Natural Resources Canada’s (NRCan) Greener Neighbourhoods Pilot Program (GNPP) is investing $5.4 million toward deep energy retrofits for 101 municipally owned community housing units in St. John’s. The City of St. John’s is investing $4.4 million and has also received $1.66 million in funding through Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation’s (CMHC) Affordable Housing Fund to support the improvements of these 101 units and additional repairs of 65 units.

    These retrofits are expected to reduce energy use by more than 50 percent and greenhouse gas emissions from each unit by more than 80 percent. The project will retrofit the building exterior and improve the efficiency of lighting and heating systems.  

    Going forward, the project will allow the City of St. John’s to compare and validate the energy performance and cost of retrofitting various types of residential properties. This will help identify cost-effective retrofits for other projects in the future.

    The funding announced today will help improve the community housing on offer in St. John’s, increase energy efficiency for residential units and advance Canada’s commitment in the global fight against climate change.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Icebreaking near Midland, Ontario

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    March 21, 2025

    Sarnia, OntarioThe Canadian Coast Guard advises residents of Midland, Ontario that the CCGS Pierre Radisson will carry out icebreaking operations in the Georgian Bay area on or around March 24, 2025. The purpose of this operation is to break up the ice to allow commercial vessels safe and efficient movement.

    It is recommended that all traffic on the ice, including pedestrians, fishers, snowmobilers, and all-terrain vehicle operators, leave the ice during icebreaking operations. The ice may move, creating a real danger for anyone on it. Additionally, plan activities carefully and use extreme caution after operations are complete as the ice will remain unstable even once the icebreaker has left the area.

    Icebreaking on the Great Lakes and connecting waterways is delivered through close co-operation between the Canadian and United States Coast Guards. By working together, the two Coast Guards ensure scheduled vessel traffic can move through the shipping channels and in and out of community harbours. Vessels will be assigned as needed to provide this service.

    The date and assets are subject to change with no notice, as activities could begin before or after that period, depending on operational requirements or weather conditions.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Canadian fish and seafood highlighted at Seafood Expo North America

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    March 21, 2025 

    Ottawa, Ontario – Bounded by three oceans—the Pacific, Arctic and Atlantic—Canada is home to the longest coastline and some of the best quality fish and seafood products. We are known for our high standards for sustainability and food safety. Our premium fish and seafood continues to be prized around the world.

    Fisheries and Oceans Canada was part of Canada’s delegation to this year’s Seafood Expo North America. The Seafood Expo, which ran from March 16 to 18, 2025, in Boston, Massachusetts, is the largest trade exposition of its kind in North America. The Seafood Expo is an opportunity for Canada to promote our high-quality, sustainably sourced fish and seafood products. It provides a global platform to share our best practices when it comes to managing Canadian fisheries and protecting our marine ecosystems to ensure a healthy and sustainable industry.

    Fish and seafood are among the largest single food commodities exported by Canada. Canada exported fish and seafood to 118 countries in 2024. Lobster was Canada’s most valuable export species, worth $2.9 billion in 2024.

    In Canada, we have a well-regulated, scientifically monitored and legally enforced industry that’s economically prosperous, environmentally sustainable and socially responsible. It’s also an industry that benefits from a highly skilled workforce and constant innovation. Canada will continue to prioritize quality and working with global partners on shared interests, ensuring that our fisheries remain healthy for future generations.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Amplifying Acadian stories on Prince Edward Island

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    Federal support for upgrades to Village musical acadien will enhance visitor experience

    March 21, 2025 · Evangeline, Prince Edward Island · Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency (ACOA)

    Tourism plays a vital role in Atlantic Canada, driving local economies, creating jobs and strengthening communities. It also helps preserve and celebrate the region’s diverse cultural heritage. The Government of Canada is investing to help a Prince Edward Island community share the vibrant traditions, culture and stories of the Acadian people.

    Today, Bobby Morrissey, Member of Parliament for Egmont, announced a commitment of up to $284,200 to Village musical acadien in the Évangéline region, P.E.I. The announcement was made on behalf of the Honourable Anita Anand, Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry.

    Village musical acadien is a cultural hub that celebrates the region’s Acadian heritage through music, food and historic exhibitions. This contribution will help the village make upgrades to the interior and exterior of the property’s arrival area and install energy efficient lighting. These improvements will create a welcoming and memorable visitor experience.   

    Today’s announcement demonstrates the Government of Canada’s commitment to building a robust and sustainable tourism sector that showcases the diversity of Atlantic Canada. 

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Strengthening 2SLGBTQI+ communities to advance equality in Québec and across Canada

    Source: Government of Canada News

    March 21, 2025 – Gatineau, Quebec — Women and Gender Equality Canada

    Everyone deserves the freedom to be their authentic selves and have every opportunity to participate in Canada’s economic, social and political life. A society where people are safe, valued, and empowered to reach their full potential is one where everyone thrives.

    Today, the Honourable Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Canadian Culture and Identity, Parks Canada and Quebec Lieutenant, who is responsible for the Department for Women and Gender Equality, announced up to $718,000 for three Québec-based organizations. This funding will support their community-informed initiatives that address barriers and facilitate systemic change by developing knowledge, tools, and support for 2SLGBTQI+ communities in Québec and across Canada.

    • Groupe régional d’intervention sociale de l’Estrie (GRIS Estrie) is receiving $228,511 for their project Awareness and Engagement in Rural Communities that will address the barriers to equality faced by 2SLGBTQI+ communities in the Haut-Saint-François region by collaborating with frontline workers and gender-diverse individuals. Through tailored tools, training, and activities, the project will raise awareness and inspire similar initiatives in other rural areas.
    • With an investment of $241,743, the project Helping 2SLGBTQI+ Youth Thrive and Addressing HIV Through More Inclusive Sex Education by the Portail VIH/SIDA du Québec will use research, workshops, and practical tools to enhance public understanding, provide tailored resources, and recommend improvements to better support 2SLGBTQI+ youth in sexual health education.
    • Queer Tech is receiving up to $247,221 for the project 2SLGBTQI+ Tech Industry Census 2025-2026 to conduct an in-depth industry analysis of the status of 2SLGBTQI+ tech professionals in Canada via a national quantitative survey and qualitative interviews. It will provide critical data on the representation of 2SLGBTQI+ professionals in the tech ecosystem and their experience in the workplace. 

    This funding builds on the foundation of the 2SLGBTQI+ Federal Action Plan that was announced in August 2022. The Action Plan continues to advance the rights and equality of 2SLGBTQI+ communities in Canada. Through this 2SLGBTQI+ project funding, the Government of Canada is addressing persisting disparities faced by these communities and building a safer, more inclusive country.  

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Conserving the white oak: Critical for timber and distilling industries

    Source: US Government research organizations

    New genomic data aids in preventing the species from disease while advancing conservation efforts

    Credit: Donald Cameron

    Leaves of the white oak (Quercus alba)

    U.S. National Science Foundation-funded researchers at Indiana University and Penn State have collaborated with scientists from the U.S. Forest Service and others to produce the first complete genome for the white oak (Quercus alba). This tree provides large amounts of timber and is the primary species used in barrels for aging spirits.

    Data to complete the genome came from a range of academic sources, such as the Forest Service, state forests and industry. By combining those data into an unbiased annotation of the white oak’s genes, the researchers have created a resource to understand genetic diversity and population differentiation within the species, assess disease resistance and the evolution of genes that enhance it, and compare with other oak genomes to determine evolutionary relationships between species and how the genomes have evolved.

    “Plants, including trees, help meet society’s needs for food, fuel, fiber and, in this case, other key economic services. Having genomic data like this helps us address important biological questions, including those related to the economic and societal use of the species,” said Diane Jofuku Okamuro, a program officer in the NSF Directorate for Biological Sciences.

    The research included the use of the NSF-supported CAGEE (computational analysis of gene expression evolution) software. The tool enabled the researchers to study gene expression and the evolution thereof across the various oak species.

    “Often, the community needs new tools and methods to capture and analyze the data necessary for biological discoveries, and NSF has long supported investments in cyberinfrastructure like CAGEE that benefit a wide range of researchers,” said David Liberles, also a program officer in the NSF Directorate for Biological Sciences.

    The work was published in New Phytologist.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI China: Global South contributing to more equitable, inclusive int’l financial order

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    At a time when rising unilateralism and protectionism are combining to disrupt global economic governance, ever-closer ties among the Global South financial community are expected to inject fresh impetus into the forging of a new international financial order.

    This is the latest consensus reached by representatives of the Global South financial community at the 2025 Global South Financiers Forum in Beijing, which was hosted by Xinhua News Agency from March 19 to 21.

    Attendees of the forum included representatives from government departments, financial institutions, international organizations and scholars from more than 30 countries and regions.

    They called for the financial community of the Global South to make joint efforts to bridge the North-South financial gap and foster a new financial order that is more just, equitable and inclusive.

    Rising against headwinds

    As a bloc of developing countries, emerging economies and the least-developed nations, the Global South, as a whole, faces common development tasks and missions as it is home to about 85 percent of the world’s population, according to Jiao Jie, dean of Tsinghua University’s PBC School of Finance.

    Over the past few decades, Global South countries have posted remarkable economic growth, injecting stability and vitality into the world economy, said Jiao, who estimated that the share of the Global South in the world’s real GDP had surged from 26 percent in 2006 to 42 percent in 2024 — driven notably by emerging economies, including China and India.

    However, the forum’s attendees warned, the external environment has become more complex for the Global South, as the world economy is grappling with slowing growth, geopolitical tensions and resurgent protectionism.

    In 2023 alone, nearly 3,000 new trade-distorting measures had stifled cross-border flows of technology, capital and labor, Jiao told Xinhua, underlining that the latest round of protectionism, represented by additional tariff hikes, is posing even more challenges.

    Yamile Berra Cires, first vice president of the Central Bank of Cuba, said that a technological and economic blockade from certain developed countries, coupled with geopolitical tensions, climate change and accelerated digital transformation in the financial sector, have exposed greater vulnerabilities in Global South economies, such as that of Cuba.

    Despite accounting for more than 40 percent of the global economy and contributing 80 percent to world economic growth, Global South nations still face a disparity between their economic contribution and their influence in the current international financial system, according to Gu Shu, chairman of Agricultural Bank of China, one of the country’s major lenders.

    Vision for new financial order

    In releasing the Beijing Consensus document, representatives of the Global South financiers are calling for Global South countries to join hands to address common challenges, including sizable financing gaps, mis-allocation of resources and widening technological divides.

    “As we navigate a rapidly changing global economic landscape, nations in the Global South find themselves at a pivotal moment, gifted with unprecedented opportunities and facing notable challenges,” said Andre du Plessis, CEO of Standard Advisory (China) Ltd, who hailed the consensus as a milestone move.

    For Africa, as a major member of the Global South, a multilateral and inclusive approach is essential for economic development, Du Plessis said, while calling for greater collaboration in terms of inclusive financial cooperation.

    “When the Global South acts, its future development prospects appear even more promising,” he added.

    Notably, many countries in the Global South are struggling with unsustainable debt levels — which are significantly limiting their ability to invest in key areas such as health, education, social equity and other national priorities, said Shyam Prasad Bhandari, joint secretary of Nepal’s finance ministry.

    Bhandari suggested that Global South countries enhance coordination concerning green finance, as it’s a strategy that shapes resilience, drives innovation and ensures future prosperity.

    “The investment needs of the Global South are even larger if we consider challenges such as global warming, which would require countries to invest in new infrastructure, renewable energy and agricultural technology to improve their readiness,” said David Sumual, chief economist of Indonesia’s Bank Central Asia, who called for enhanced South-South cooperation.

    “While the road ahead is undoubtedly challenging, it is also full of opportunities,” said Jonathan Titus-Williams, deputy minister of planning and economic development of Sierra Leone.

    Through diverse and creative financing options, Global South countries can create a more equitable, sustainable and resilient financial governance order, Titus-Williams added. 

    MIL OSI China News