Category: Business

  • MIL-OSI Video: HHS Food is Medicine Briefing | September 2024

    Source: United States of America – Federal Government Departments (video statements)

    The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has worked collaboratively with federal partners and non-

    governmental organizations and communities to develop a Food Is Medicine (FIM) Virtual Toolkit populated with

    resources that can be used to advance FIM approaches across the country and help communities design and

    implement effective FIM interventions. The collection of resources helps enable communities – in any stage of

    programming – to become engaged in FIM, continue a FIM initiative, or start new FIM programs that meet the needs

    of the people in their communities. The Virtual Toolkit is available at https://health.gov/foodismedicine.

    U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) | http://www.hhs.gov

    http://www.Twitter.com/HHSGov | http://www.Facebook.com/HHS http://www.Instagram.com/HHSGov
    http://www.LinkedIn.com/company/us-department-of-health-and-human-services

    HHS Privacy Policy: http://www.hhs.gov/Privacy.html

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zu3A8Gn11jM

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Video: Industrial Decarbonization with Sunvapor

    Source: United States of America – Federal Government Departments (video statements)

    With funding from the U.S. Department of Energy Solar Energy Technologies Office, Sunvapor is developing technology that can concentrate sunlight to generate heat, producing steam. This steam can then be used for a variety of industrial processes, from food processing to chemical production to desalination. Learn more about how Sunvapor is partnering with other U.S. companies to decarbonize their operations with this innovative solar technology. https://www.energy.gov/eere/solar/concentrating-solar-thermal-power

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BZGOQ8M3Z1o

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI: Heritage Commerce Corp and Heritage Bank of Commerce Announce Appointment of New Chief Operating Officer Thomas A. Sa

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN JOSE, Calif., Oct. 02, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Heritage Commerce Corp (NASDAQ: HTBK) (“Company”), parent company of Heritage Bank of Commerce (“Bank”), today announced the appointment of Thomas A. Sa as the Chief Operating Officer (“COO”) of the Company and the Bank. As COO, Mr. Sa will report directly to Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”) Robertson “Clay” Jones and will have primary responsibility for banking operations, risk management, and information technology systems. Mr. Sa had previously served as President, Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer of California BanCorp and its subsidiary, California Bank of Commerce, which merged with Southern California Bancorp in July 2024. Mr. Sa has more than thirty years’ experience in a variety of increasingly responsible positions in California-based community and regional banks.

    “We are delighted to have Tom bring his immense talent and experience to Heritage Commerce Corp and Heritage Bank of Commerce,” said CEO Clay Jones. “We’re confident that Tom will play a pivotal role in our drive to be the community business bank of choice throughout our market areas. His personality and dedication to community business banking and demonstrated leadership ability position him well to lead our talented, motivated team.”

    Mr. Jones continued, “Tom’s diverse experience includes guiding strategy and oversight of business execution in addition to extensive knowledge of bank operations, lending, risk management, compliance, and finance, and we are confident that his skillset will allow us to continue our trend of consistent, profitable growth while managing today’s challenging environment.”

    Mr. Sa likewise expressed his enthusiasm for the Company and the Bank. “It’s rare to find such a tremendous blend of talent and commitment among such a small, close-knit team,” said Mr. Sa. “I’m looking forward to joining the Company and the Bank and I’m confident we are well-positioned to grow and improve investor returns, prudently manage the Bank’s assets, and promote compliance with an ever more complex system of laws and regulations that govern our business.”

    Heritage Commerce Corp, a bank holding company established in October 1997, is the parent company of Heritage Bank of Commerce, established in 1994 and headquartered in San Jose, CA with full-service branches in Danville, Fremont, Gilroy, Hollister, Livermore, Los Altos, Los Gatos, Morgan Hill, Oakland, Palo Alto, Pleasanton, Redwood City, San Francisco, San Jose, San Mateo, San Rafael, and Walnut Creek. Heritage Bank of Commerce is an SBA Preferred Lender. Bay View Funding, a subsidiary of Heritage Bank of Commerce, is based in San Jose, CA and provides business-essential working capital factoring financing to various industries throughout the United States. For more information, please visit http://www.heritagecommercecorp.com.

    Member FDIC

    For additional information, contact:
    Debbie Reuter
    EVP, Corporate Secretary
    Direct: (408) 494-4542
    Debbie.Reuter@herbank.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/1ee41931-2d17-41c8-9d30-b33cef4ebe7e

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Plains All American Pipeline and Plains GP Holdings Announce Quarterly Distributions and Timing of Third Quarter 2024 Earnings

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    HOUSTON, Oct. 02, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Plains All American Pipeline, L.P. (Nasdaq: PAA) and Plains GP Holdings (Nasdaq: PAGP) today announced their quarterly distributions with respect to the third quarter of 2024 and also announced timing of third quarter 2024 earnings.

    Third Quarter Distribution Declaration 

    PAA and PAGP announced the following quarterly cash distributions:

    • PAA Common Units – $0.3175 per Common Unit ($1.27 per unit on an annualized basis), which is unchanged from the distribution paid in August 2024.
    • PAGP Class A Shares – $0.3175 per Class A Share ($1.27 per Class A Share on an annualized basis), which is unchanged from the distribution paid in August 2024.
    • PAA Series A Preferred Units – $0.61524 per Series A Preferred Unit (approximately $2.46 per unit on an annualized basis).
    • PAA Series B Preferred Units – $24.25 per Series B Preferred Unit (based on the applicable quarterly floating rate).

    The distributions on the PAA Common Units, PAGP Class A Shares and PAA Series A Preferred Units are payable on November 14, 2024 to holders of each respective security as of October 31, 2024. The distribution on the PAA Series B Preferred Units is payable on November 15, 2024 to holders of such security as of November 1, 2024.

    Although equity holders should consult their own tax advisor regarding their particular circumstances, the PAGP cash distribution per Class A Share is expected to be a non-taxable return of capital to the extent of a Class A Shareholder’s tax basis in each PAGP Class A Share and a reduction in such tax basis. In addition, to the extent any cash distribution exceeds a Class A Shareholder’s tax basis, it should be taxable as a capital gain. Qualified Notices under Treasury Regulation Section 1.1446 with respect to the PAA Common Unit distribution and PAA Series B Preferred Unit distribution will be posted on the Plains website under “Investor Relations – Tax Information.”

    Third Quarter 2024 Earnings Timing

    PAA and PAGP also announced that they will release third quarter 2024 earnings before market open on Friday, November 8, 2024. Following the announcement, PAA and PAGP will host a conference call at 9:00 a.m. CT (10 a.m. ET) with analysts and investors to discuss earnings. The call will be webcast live on the internet and may be accessed through the “Investors Relations” section of the website at http://www.plains.com. An audio replay will be available on the website after the call.

    PAA is a publicly traded master limited partnership that owns and operates midstream energy infrastructure and provides logistics services for crude oil and natural gas liquids (NGL). PAA owns an extensive network of pipeline gathering and transportation systems, in addition to terminalling, storage, processing, fractionation and other infrastructure assets serving key producing basins, transportation corridors and major market hubs and export outlets in the United States and Canada. On average, PAA handles approximately eight million barrels per day of crude oil and NGL.

    PAGP is a publicly traded entity that owns an indirect, non-economic controlling general partner interest in PAA and an indirect limited partner interest in PAA, one of the largest energy infrastructure and logistics companies in North America.

    PAA and PAGP are headquartered in Houston, Texas. More information is available at http://www.plains.com.

    Investor Relations Contacts:        

    Blake Fernandez
    Michael Gladstein
    (866) 809-1291

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Glacier Bancorp, Inc. Announces Third Quarter Earnings Release and Conference Call

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    KALISPELL, Mont., Oct. 02, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Glacier Bancorp, Inc. (NYSE: GBCI) will report third quarter financial results after the market closes on October 24, 2024. A conference call for investors is scheduled for 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time on Friday, October 25, 2024.

    Please note that our conference call host no longer offers a general dial-in number.

    Investors who would like to join the call may now register by following this link to obtain dial-in instructions: https://register.vevent.com/register/BI32ee03ea65c34bd794e0027768d383d4

    To participate via the webcast, log on to: https://edge.media-server.com/mmc/p/9bh88vfv

    If you are unable to participate during the live webcast, the call will be archived on our website, http://www.glacierbancorp.com.

    Glacier Bancorp, Inc. is the parent company for Glacier Bank and its bank divisions: Altabank (American Fork, UT) Bank of the San Juans (Durango, CO), Citizens Community Bank (Pocatello, ID), Collegiate Peaks Bank (Buena Vista, CO), First Bank of Montana (Lewistown, MT), First Bank of Wyoming (Powell, WY), First Community Bank Utah (Layton, UT), First Security Bank (Bozeman, MT), First Security Bank of Missoula (Missoula, MT), First State Bank (Wheatland, WY), Glacier Bank (Kalispell, MT), Heritage Bank of Nevada (Reno, NV), Mountain West Bank (Coeur d’Alene, ID), The Foothills Bank (Yuma, AZ), Valley Bank (Helena, MT), Western Security Bank (Billings, MT), and Wheatland Bank (Spokane, WA).

    Randall M. Chesler, CEO
    (406) 751-4722

    Ron J. Copher, CFO
    (406) 751-7706

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Graham Visits Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative in Pickens

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for South Carolina Lindsey Graham

    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina) today met with leadership and employees at Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative in Pickens, South Carolina.

    Blue Ridge Electric Cooperative is a customer-owned electric utility company that has been operating in South Carolina since 1940. Graham is a customer of Blue Ridge.

    CLICK HERE FOR PHOTOS

    Graham gave an update with Blue Ridge President and CEO Jim Lovinggood during his visit.

    • LOVINGGOOD: “This storm was historic in every way you choose to measure it. We had about 90 percent of our customers out of power Friday morning at 10:00 AM… So far we’ve been able to get about 70 percent of those back on. So we’re down now to about 30 percent of our customers without power.” https://youtu.be/vTY7g3AqZwQ?si=MaDIT-YOP2UWp52C&t=69
    • GRAHAM: “This is Hurricane Hugo for the Upstate, if you’re old enough to remember that…We got flattened up here, folks. I wanted to come by and thank the co-ops and all the line crew out there and the people working out in the field. You know it’s a team sport here.” https://youtu.be/vTY7g3AqZwQ?si=5LSZOZI3CNz8NLEa&t=167
    • LOVINGGOOD: “We are working around the clock. We’ve set up in both of our campuses to house up to 700 outside workers. We have over 500 currently in the field and we’re hoping to get more help as the days go by.” https://youtu.be/vTY7g3AqZwQ?si=YdQY-t_gt1KbejXG&t=116
    • GRAHAM: “Just be patient. The people who are trying to restore your power lost their power. They haven’t seen their families, they are out there working 16 to 18-hour days working under very dangerous conditions. So to the extent you can be patient, please do. I know it’s frustrating, but the people trying to help you have suffered like you have.” https://youtu.be/vTY7g3AqZwQ?si=f_7q90Lk6sX3VLer&t=193

    Click here to watch the entire video

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-Evening Report: Limestone and iron reveal puzzling extreme rain in Western Australia 100,000 years ago

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Milo Barham, Associate Professor, Earth and Planetary Sciences, Curtin University

    Limestone pinnacles of the Nambung National Park karst. Matej Lipar

    Almost one-sixth of Earth’s land surface is covered in otherworldly landscapes with a name that may also be unfamiliar: karst. These landscapes are like natural sculpture parks, with dramatic terrain dotted with caves and towers of bedrock slowly sculpted by water over thousands of years.

    Karst landscapes are beautiful and ecologically important. They also represent a record of Earth’s past temperature and moisture levels.

    However, it can be quite challenging to figure out exactly when karst landscapes formed. In our new work published today in Science Advances, we show a new way to find the age of these enigmatic landscapes, which will help us understand our planet’s past in more detail.

    Flowstones, stalactites and caverns within Jenolan Caves, NSW, Australia.
    Matej Lipar

    The challenge

    Karst is defined by the removal of material. The rock towers and caves we see today are what is left after water dissolved the rest during wet periods of the past.

    This is what makes their age hard to determine. How do you date the disappearance of something?

    Traditionally, scientists have loosely bracketed the age of a karst surface by dating the material above and beneath. However, this approach blurs our understanding of ancient climate events and how ecosystems responded.

    Geological clocks

    In our study, we found a way to measure the age of pebble-sized iron nodules that formed at the same time as a karst landscape.

    This method has the technical name of (U/Th)-He geochronology. In it, we measure how much helium is produced by the natural radioactive decay of tiny amounts of the elements uranium and thorium in the iron nodules. By comparing the amounts of uranium, thorium and helium in a sample, we can very accurately calculate the age of the nodules.

    How iron nodules can reveal their age.
    Milo Barham

    We dated microscopic fragments of iron-rich nodules from the iconic Pinnacles Desert in Nambung National Park, Western Australia.

    This world-famous site is renowned for its otherworldly karst landscape of acres of limestone pillars towering metres above a sandy desert plain. The Pinnacles form part of the most extensive belt of wind-blown carbonate rock in the world, stretching more than 1,000km along coastal southwestern WA.

    The Western Australia ThermoChronology Hub (WATCH) ultra-high vacuum gas extraction line for measurements of radiogenic helium.
    Martin Danišik

    We examined multiple microscopic shards of iron nodules that were removed from the surface of limestone pinnacles. These nodules formed in the soil that lay on top of the limestone during the period of intense weathering that created the karst. As a result, they serve as time capsules of the environmental conditions that shaped the area.

    A scanning electron microscope image of iron-rich cement (lighter grey in centre) binding darker grey, rounded quartz sand grains within an analysed nodule.
    Aleš Šoster

    The big wet

    We consistently found an age of around 100,000 years for the growth of the iron nodules. This date is supported by known ages from the rocks above and beneath the karst surface, proving the reliability of our new approach.

    At the same time as chemical reactions caused growth of the iron-rich nodules within the ancient soil, limestone bedrock was rapidly and extensively dissolved to leave only remnant limestone pinnacles seen today.

    From examining the entire rock sequence in the area, we think this period of intensive weathering was the wettest time in this part of WA over at least the past half a million years.

    We don’t know what drove this increased rainfall. It may have been changes to atmospheric circulation patterns, or the greater influence of the ancient Leeuwin Current that runs along the shore.

    Such a humid interval is in dramatic contrast to the recent droughts and increasingly dry climate of the region today.

    Implications for our past

    Iron-rich nodules are not unique to the Nambung Pinnacles. They have recently been used to track dramatic past environmental change elsewhere in Australia.

    Dating these iron nodules will help to better document the dramatic fluctuations in Earth’s climate over the past three million years as ice sheets have grown and shrunk.

    Understanding the timing and environmental context of karst formation throughout this time offers profound insights into past climate conditions, environments and the landscapes in which ancient creatures lived.

    Dark iron-rich nodules attached to the side of the base of a limestone pinnacle in the Nambung National Park.
    Matej Lipar

    Climate changes and resulting environmental shifts have been crucial in shaping ecosystems. In particular, they have had a profound influence on our ancient hominin and human ancestors.

    By linking karst formation to specific climatic intervals, we can better understand how these environmental changes may have affected early human populations.

    Looking forward

    The more we know about the conditions that led to the formation of past landscapes and the flora and fauna that inhabited them, the better we can appreciate the evolutionary pressures that shaped the ecosystems we see today. This in turn offers valuable information for preparing for future changes.

    As human-driven climate change accelerates, learning about past climate variability and biosphere responses equips us with knowledge to anticipate and mitigate future impacts.

    The ability to date karst features with greater precision may seem like a small thing – but it will help us understand how today’s landscapes and ecosystems might respond to ongoing and future climate changes.

    Milo Barham has previously received research funding from the Minerals Research Institute of Western Australia.

    Andrej Šmuc, John Allan Webb, Kenneth McNamara, Martin Danisik, and Matej Lipar do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Limestone and iron reveal puzzling extreme rain in Western Australia 100,000 years ago – https://theconversation.com/limestone-and-iron-reveal-puzzling-extreme-rain-in-western-australia-100-000-years-ago-238801

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-Evening Report: More consumption, more demand for resources, more waste: why urban mining’s time has come

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michael Odei Erdiaw-Kwasie, Lecturer in Sustainability| Business and Accounting Discipline, Charles Darwin University

    Lynda Disher/Shutterstock

    Pollution and waste, climate change and biodiversity loss are creating a triple planetary crisis. In response, UN Environment Programme executive director Inger Andersen has called for waste to be redefined as a valuable resource instead of a problem. That’s what urban mining does.

    We commonly think of mining as drilling or digging into the earth to extract precious resources. Urban mining recovers these materials from waste. It can come from buildings, infrastructure and obsolete products.

    An urban mine, then, is the stock of precious metals or materials in the waste cities produce. In particular, electronic waste, or e‑waste, has higher concentrations of precious metals than many mined ores. Yet the UN Global E‑waste Monitor estimates US$62 billion worth of recoverable resources was discarded as e‑waste in 2022.

    Urban mining can recover these “hidden” resources in cities around the world. It offers sustainable solutions to the problems of resource scarcity and waste management. And it happens in the very cities that are centres of overconsumption and hotspots for the greenhouse gas emissions driving climate change.

    What sort of waste can be mined?

    Materials such as concrete, pipes, bricks, roofing materials, reinforcements and e‑waste can be recovered for reuse. Urban waste can be “mined” for metals such as gold, steel, copper, zinc, aluminium, cobalt and lithium, as well as glass and plastic. Mechanical or chemical treatments are used to retrieve these metals and materials.

    Simply disposing of this waste has high financial and environmental costs. In Australia, about 10% of waste is hazardous. Landfill costs are soaring as cities run out of space to discard their waste.

    The extent of this fast-growing problem is driving the growth of urban mining around the world. We are then salvaging materials whose supply is finite, while reducing the impacts of waste disposal.

    Many plastics can be recycled and turned into new products.
    MAD.vertise/Shutterstock

    What’s happening globally?

    In Europe, the focus is largely on construction and demolition waste. Europe produces 450 million to 500 million tonnes of this waste each year – more than a third of all the region’s waste. Through its urban mining strategy, the European Commission aims to increase the recovery of non-hazardous construction and demolition waste to at least 70% across member countries by 2030.

    In Asia, urban mining has focused on e‑waste. However, the region recovers only about 12% of its e‑waste stock. Rates of e‑waste recycling vary greatly: 20% for East Asia, 1% for South Asia, and virtually zero for South-East Asia. China, Japan and South Korea are leading the way in Asia.

    Australia is on the right track. Our recovery rate for construction and demolition materials climbed to 80% by 2022 — the highest among all types of waste streams. However, we recover only about a third of the value of materials in our e-waste.

    Africa has also recognised the growing value of urban mining resources. Regional initiatives include the Nairobi Declaration on e‑waste, the Durban Declaration on e‑Waste Management in Africa and the Abuja Platform on e‑Waste.

    Urban mining solves many problems

    The OECD forecasts that global materials demand will almost double from 89 billion tonnes in 2019 to 167 billion tonnes in 2060. The United Nations’ Global Waste Management Outlook 2024 shows the amount of waste and costs of managing it are soaring too. It’s estimated the world will have 82 million tonnes of e‑waste to deal with by 2030.

    These trends mean urban mining is becoming ever more relevant and important.

    Urban mining also helps cut greenhouse gas emissions. Unlocking resources near where they are needed reduces transport costs and emissions. Urban mining also provides resource independence and creates employment.

    In addition, increasing recovery and recycling rates reduce the pressure on finite natural resources.

    Urban mining underpins circular economy alternatives such as the “deposit and return” schemes that give people financial incentives to return e‑waste and containers for recycling in cities such as Singapore, Sydney, Darwin and San Francisco. By 2030, San Francisco aims to halve disposal to landfill or incineration and cut solid waste generation by 15%.

    What more needs to be done?

    Governments have a role to play by adopting and enforcing policies, laws and regulations that encourage recycling through urban mining instead of sending waste to landfill. European Union laws, for example, mandate increased recycling targets for municipal waste overall and for packaging waste, including 80% for ferrous metals and 60% for aluminium.

    In Australia, 2019 legislation prohibits landfills from accepting anything with a plug, battery or cord. Anything with a plug is designated as e-waste.

    Product design is an important consideration. A designer must balance a product’s efficiency with making it easy to recycle. Products with greater efficiency and easy-to-recycle parts are more likely to use less energy, lead to less waste and hence less natural resource extraction.

    Our urban mining research documents a more sustainable approach to product design. Increasing product stewardship initiatives are expected to encourage better product design and standards that promote reuse and recycling, producer responsibility and changes in consumer behaviour.

    Good information about the available resources is essential too. The Urban Mine Platform, ProSUM and Waste and Resource Recovery Data Hub collect data on e‑waste, end-of-life vehicles, batteries and building and mining waste. These centralised databases allow easy access to data on the sources, stocks, flows and treatment of waste.

    Traditional mining is not the only method for extracting raw materials for the green transition. Waste is set to be increasingly recycled, reducing demand for virgin materials. A truly circular economy can become a reality if governments develop and apply an urban mining agenda.

    Michael Odei Erdiaw-Kwasie receives funding from the Foundation for Rural and Regional Renewal (FRRR).

    Matthew Abunyewah receives funding from the Foundation for Rural and Regional Renewal (FRRR) and Northern Western Australia and Northern Territory Drought Resilience Adoption and Innovation Hub (Northern Hubb)

    Patrick Brandful Cobbinah receives funding from Lincoln Institute of Land Policy. He is a member of Planning Institute of Australia.

    ref. More consumption, more demand for resources, more waste: why urban mining’s time has come – https://theconversation.com/more-consumption-more-demand-for-resources-more-waste-why-urban-minings-time-has-come-232484

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI Translation: 02/10/2024 Polonia rockets for the HOMAR-K Corazón program are getting closer

    MIL ASI Translation. Region: Polish/Europe –

    Fuente: Gobierno de Polonia en poleco.

    Rocket Polonia for the HOMAR-K program is getting closer 02/10/2024 On October 2, 2024, an agreement was signed in the Republic of Korea between the Polish company WB Electronics SA and the Korean Hanwha Aerospace.

    The next day of the Polish delegation’s visit to the Republic of Korea brought the conclusion of an important contract from the point of view of the Polish Armed Forces and the Polish defense industry, as well as the development of national technical thought and the Polish economy. The production of 239 mm CGR-080 missiles will be carried out on the territory of Poland. The companies WB Electronics SA and Hanwha Aerospace Co. Ltd. are responsible for the implementation of the agreement signed today. It is planned that both entities will establish production potential for the production of ammunition for the currently acquired HOMAR-K multi-rotor missiles on the territory of our country. During the implementation of the contract, it is planned to build a factory whose target production capacity of ammunition will reach a level of several thousand CGR-080 missiles per year. The signed agreement provides for the transfer of technology for the production of guided missiles, equipment of the technological line, as well as the transfer of a license for the production of missiles. The developed approach of the Polish-Korean industry is another step towards achieving autonomy in the production of missiles and the possibility of deterring potential aggressors. Further development of international cooperation allows for broader thinking about the development of the Polish industry, economy, and thus our national defense potential.

    MILES AXIS

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: Rep. Young Kim Leads Bipartisan OC Delegation Letter for Disaster Relief Funding

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Young Kim (CA-39)

    Trabuco Canyon, CA – Today, U.S. Representative Young Kim (CA-40) led a bipartisan letter to Speaker of the House Mike Johnson and Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries urging for full disaster relief to be funded in Fiscal Year 2025 (FY2025) appropriations. The letter was first reported in The Hill.

    Rep. Kim was joined by Orange County Reps. Michelle Steel (CA-45), Lou Correa (CA-46), Mike Levin (CA-49), and Katie Porter (CA-47).

    “While we applaud the inclusion of $20 billion towards the [Disaster Relief Fund] in the continuing resolution, more funding is necessary for both the DRF and FEMA given the accumulation of backlogged costs the DRF must reimburse before addressing the many natural disasters Americans across the country currently face. Beyond the DRF, the U.S. Forest Service has faced ongoing staffing shortages in the Cleveland National Forest, where the Airport Fire began, during peak wildfire season. Furthermore, no funding was included for other important relief programs like the Small Business Administration’s disaster loans and the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s community development block disaster recovery grant program,” the members wrote.

    Read the full letter HERE or below.

    We urge you to include full disaster relief funding in FY 2025 government spending. While we were disappointed that disaster relief funding was not included in the three-month continuing resolution, we request that you support such funding in ongoing full-year appropriations negotiations. Disaster relief funding plays an essential role in supplying federal resources to areas impacted by natural disasters, such as wildfires, and it is our responsibility as lawmakers to ensure that our government is fully equipped to protect and rebuild our communities.

    Multiple wildfires have burned throughout the state of California over the last year, depleting available resources. According to CalFire, 6,332 wildfires have burned almost 1 million acres this year alone, destroying homes and taking innocent lives. In Orange and Riverside Counties, the Airport Fire has burned over 23,500 acres of land in the last month. We fear that the number of wildfires and the damage they cause will only continue to increase later this year.

    Federal assistance has supplemented state and local efforts to provide crucial disaster relief in the wake of these wildfires. For example, the Federal Emergency Management Administration’s (FEMA’s) Disaster Relief Fund (DRF) provides key support for responding to natural disasters. The DRF funds programs like Fire Management Assistance Grants (FMAGs), which allow the federal government to share the burden of fire mitigation and control costs. FEMA authorized FMAGs for several wildfires in California this year – including the Airport Fire – lessening the financial burden our state and local governments have been facing. Critical tools like FMAGs are made possible by federal disaster relief funding.

    While we applaud the inclusion of $20 billion towards the DRF in the continuing resolution, more funding is necessary for both the DRF and FEMA given the accumulation of backlogged costs the DRF must reimburse before addressing the many natural disasters Americans across the country currently face. Beyond the DRF, the U.S. Forest Service has faced ongoing staffing shortages in the Cleveland National Forest, where the Airport Fire began, during peak wildfire season. Furthermore, no funding was included for other important relief programs like the Small Business Administration’s disaster loans and the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s community development block disaster recovery grant program.

    With the passage of a three-month continuing resolution without sufficient disaster relief funding, it is now even more vital for Congress to allocate necessary funding towards disaster relief programs so the federal government can provide adequate assistance to those impacted by natural disasters. We ask that you support disaster relief funding as you negotiate FY 2025 government funding.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: How to Apply for FEMA Assistance in Georgia After Hurricane Debby

    Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency 2

    strong>ATLANTA – Georgia homeowners and renters in eight counties who had uninsured damage or losses caused by Hurricane Debby Aug. 4 – Aug. 20, 2024, may be eligible for FEMA disaster assistance.

    FEMA may be able to help with serious needs, displacement, temporary lodging, basic home repair costs, personal property loss or other disaster-caused needs. Homeowners and renters in Bryan, Bulloch, Chatham, Effingham, Evans, Liberty, Long and Screven counties can apply.

    There are several ways to apply: Go online to DisasterAssistance.gov, use the FEMA App or call 800-621-3362. Lines are open every day and help is available in most languages. If you use a relay service, such as Video Relay Service (VRS), captioned telephone or other service, give FEMA your number for that service.

    FEMA’s disaster assistance offers new benefits that provide flexible funding directly to survivors. In addition, a simplified process and expanded eligibility allows Georgians access to a wider range of assistance and funds for serious needs.

    What You’ll Need When You Apply

    • A current phone number where you can be contacted.
    • Your address at the time of the disaster and the address where you are now staying.
    • Your Social Security number.
    • A general list of damage and losses.
    • Banking information if you choose direct deposit.
    • If insured, the policy number or the agent and/or the company name.

    If you have homeowners, renters or flood insurance, you should file a claim as soon as possible. FEMA cannot duplicate benefits for losses covered by insurance. If your policy does not cover all your disaster expenses, you may be eligible for federal assistance.

    For the latest information about Georgia’s recovery, visit fema.gov/disaster/4821. 
    Follow FEMA on X at x.com/femaregion4 or on Facebook at facebook.com/fema.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: FEMA Assistance Now Available in Virginia

    Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency 2

    strong>Philadelphia, Pa. — Residents of Giles, Grayson, Smyth, Tazewell, Washington and Wythe counties as well as residents of the city of Galax are eligible to apply for assistance from FEMA to help with costs from damage and losses due to Hurricane Helene beginning September 25, 2024. 

    FEMA may be able to help you pay for temporary housing, home repairs and other needs due to the disaster, including:

    • Essential items such as water, food, first aid, prescriptions, infant formula, breastfeeding supplies, diapers, medical supplies and equipment, personal hygiene items and fuel for transportation
    • Rental assistance if you are displaced because of the disaster including financial assistance for the following: hotel stays, stays with family and friends, or other options while you look for a rental unit
    • Repair or replacement of a vehicle, appliances, room furnishings, personal or family computer
    • Books, uniforms, tools, computers and other items required for school or work, including self-employment
    • Moving and storage fees, medical expenses, childcare and funeral expenses

    There are four ways to apply:

    • Visit DisasterAssistance.gov.
    • Download the FEMA App.
    • Call the FEMA Helpline at 800-621-3362.
      • Lines are open every day and help is available in most languages. If you use a relay service such as video relay service (VRS) or captioned telephone service, please provide FEMA your number for that service.
    • In person assistance will also be available soon. 
      • Disaster Survivor Assistance (DSA) teams will be on the ground in impacted communities, walking door to door to share information and help residents apply for FEMA assistance. 
      • In coordination with the Virginia Department of Emergency Management (VDEM) and officials in impacted counties and cities, FEMA will be opening Disaster Recovery Centers soon. At a Disaster Recovery Center, you can get help applying for federal assistance, update your application and learn about other resources available.

    If you have insurance, you should file a claim as soon as possible. FEMA can’t pay for losses your insurance will cover.

    To watch an accessible video about how to apply, visit FEMA Accessible: Registering for Individual Assistance – YouTube.

    For more information on Virginia’s disaster recovery, visit vaemergency.gov,  the Virginia Department of Emergency Management Facebook page , fema.gov/disaster/4831 and facebook.com/FEMA.  

    ###

    FEMA’s mission is helping people before, during, and after disasters. FEMA Region 3’s jurisdiction includes Delaware, the District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia. Follow us on X at x.com/FEMAregion3 and on LinkedIn at linkedin.com/company/femaregion3.

    Disaster recovery assistance is available without regard to race, color, religion, nationality, sex, age, disability, English proficiency, or economic status. If you or someone you know has been discriminated against, call FEMA toll-free at 833-285-7448. If you use a relay service, such as video relay service (VRS), captioned telephone service or others, give FEMA the number for that service. Multilingual operators are available (press 2 for Spanish and 3 for other languages).

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Acting Deputy Administrator Michele Sumilas at a Swearing-in Ceremony for David Thompson as Mission Director for South Sudan

    Source: USAID

    DEPUTY ADMINISTRATOR MICHELE SUMILASThank you so much Matt [Rees] for MCing the event today, and thank you to Ambassador [Michael J.] Adler for his kind words. I don’t know, David, if I would take this job based on his admonition, but let me just say I’m really honored to be here. It’s actually my first swearing in as the Acting Deputy Administrator. So, I’m very honored to do that. I know the Administrator wishes she could be here. She’s currently on travel, but she has asked me to pass along her congratulations and to say that she’s thrilled you’re stepping into this role.

    So, I also want to just say, welcome to David’s family, his friends and colleagues. David’s family is spread across, as we know, several continents this morning. We’ve seen them all, and I have watched David point them out to everyone on the screen. He’s so proud of them. 

    And, I also just want to say that it was really my pleasure to have met his mom in my office earlier. We learned that we are both children of federal workers, and I think that really just brings a whole different spirit to why we’re here and what we do. Mary Lou raised her three children after David’s dad passed away. And, she really spent her career in the U.S. government building IT systems and actually worked with USAID for a time, I learned, over in our Rosslyn office – which many of us have fond memories of. So, I just want to say thank you for your service, and thank you for making David’s service possible. 

    Also, welcome to David’s sisters Kathi and Susan, his brother-in-law Scott, and his Uncle Mike and Aunt Barbara.

    David’s daughters, Flora and Celina, who are on the screen there, are joining virtually from the Netherlands, where they’re in college together – David shared that with me yesterday. He’s really proud of them and all the work that they’re doing, and that they are together in the Netherlands. I learned, also, that they’ve inherited their dad’s taste in music – The Who, Pink Floyd, and Lana Del Rey – and that they both will be soon aspiring to do a similar kind of work that their mother and their father do. 

    And, welcome, finally, to David’s wife, Priscila, who’s joining from South Africa. We’ll talk more about Priscila later, but she’s a scholar and a researcher focused on urban policy. 

    So, David grew up in Alexandria, Virginia – across the river – and from the beginning, he made friends with everyone. Some will say that if you walk around Alexandria, even today, it’s like walking around with the Mayor. And, he shared that he just had his high school reunion – I won’t say how many years.

    He studied architecture at the University of Virginia, something we don’t hear often. And, he moved to DC to work at a construction management firm. It was there that he first picked up running. He finished the Marine Corps Marathon and began a hobby that he would carry across many continents and into many relationships. 

    In 1996, he moved to Bosnia after the war there ended to help reconstruct homes and schools so that displaced persons could return to their communities. And, he found that although he loved the architecture part of the job, he loved working with community leaders more. And so, he returned to the U.S., and he enrolled in an international development master’s program at Duke.

    Most of the other students were public administrators or civil servants, but there was one other architect. Luckily, that was Priscila. So, they began to study together. They spent time in groups, and they were soon dating. He spent Christmas that first year with her back home in Brazil, and it was a success. But, upon returning from sunny Brazil, Priscila did find it difficult to adapt to the cold, darkness, and dreariness of the first real winter – today’s weather is probably emblematic of that. And, David would encourage her to join him outside for walks and runs in the Duke forest. “One foot after the other,” she remembers him saying. Step by step, they made it through to spring, and they’ve been together ever since. 

    So, it’s that steadiness – that focus on putting one foot ahead of the other despite whatever is happening – which is what David brings to teams here at USAID, which he joined in 2003. One former colleague described him as “our rock during difficult times.”

    In Honduras, he was the director of the democracy office during the military coup in 2009. His team was at the center of efforts to protect the rule of law and rally support for fair and credible elections. A colleague from the time said that “David guided us through critical tasks and tense communications, but more importantly, he was a supportive friend who genuinely cared about our wellbeing. He provided the calm and the smiles we needed to weather the storm.”

    In Afghanistan, he again was in a high-stress environment when the compound was under attack. And for 24 hours, he kept his 40-person team calm and confined to a secure building near their office. And, he was very adept at lightening the mood with his trademark humor.

    So, when the compound was secure, he went to work again, working with civil society, and he returned to those daily runs, even inviting his colleagues to join him around the embassy perimeter, again, putting one foot in front of the other.

    And then, later in Tanzania, he was Deputy Mission Director at a time when the country’s new president was less oriented toward partnership with the U.S. So, you led an overhaul of the strategy, defining new goals, and you drew attention to unfair policies like one that placed invasive and discriminatory conditions on girls’ participation at school. 

    Most recently, you were the Power Africa Coordinator, returning everyone to the office and helping them begin to work with local partners and helping them start awarding [contracts] – in fact, the first local contract – instead of only to big transnational companies. 

    So, we are very lucky to have David’s experience going to South Sudan. We feel like he’s very prepared for this important and challenging job. And, we know that South Sudan is challenging. The UN has estimated that nine million people in South Sudan, 73 percent of the population, will need humanitarian assistance in 2024.

    To meet this need, USAID has provided more than a half a billion dollars of aid this year. And, we’re providing nutrient-dense foods to fight malnutrition. We’re helping construct and repair boreholes and wells to improve access to clean water. And, we’re funding basic health services while pushing the government to allocate more of its resources to essential services and humanitarian assistance. This is all happening thanks to the great team on the ground, and we look forward to you leading that team to new places. 

    The staggering level of need is a coincidence of several different factors. First, the climate crisis has made seasonal floods more severe, displacing millions and submerging the farmland. By displacing so many and compounding the challenge of scarce resources, the floods have also exacerbated the violence that often happens between communities. And, even though South Sudan has been at peace since 2018, violence continues in many areas of the country, and the political elites have failed to implement most elements of the peace agreement.

    So, the South Sudanese people are anxious and fearful, and they’ve also had to absorb hundreds of thousands of refugees from neighboring Sudan, which will continue because it’s one of our largest humanitarian emergencies in the world today, and only getting worse. 

    So, we will continue to respond. David will lead us in that response. We will support the South Sudanese people to build a democratic country and mitigate conflict, call for an end to political violence and intimidation, and encourage political rivals to work together. 

    David, to state the obvious, this is not easy work, but we expect that you are the perfect person to take it on. The team on the ground is eager and ready to welcome you to post – there were many in that room waiting for your arrival. And, I’m sure that they will hear you say, step by step. One foot in front of the other. A little bit at a time. And together, the South Sudanese will realize their vision for a brighter future. 

    So, with that, please join me for your swearing in, and your mother as well.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: AB Specialty Silicones must pay $1.3M federal penalty, implement comprehensive safety programs after 2019 Waukegan plant explosion

    Source: US Department of Labor

    WAUKEGAN, IL – Chemical products manufacturer AB Specialty Silicones LLC will pay $1.3 million in penalties after an explosion and fire at its Waukegan plant in May 2019 claimed the lives of four workers. 

    The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration reached a settlement agreement with the company after an investigation revealed AB Specialty Silicones failed to ensure electrical equipment complied with OSHA standards. The company also used propane-powered forklifts to transport flammable liquids in areas where employees handled flammable liquids and gases.

    As part of the agreement, the company has temporarily ceased production and use of silicon-hydride emulsions at all facilities until a new process area for production is designed by an engineering firm.

    “This agreement will never replace the four workers lost in this preventable tragedy, but it’s a step in the right direction,” said OSHA Regional Administrator Bill Donovan in Chicago. “OSHA will continue to hold AB Specialty Silicones accountable for improving their safety culture by working with industry experts, and both management and employees to develop and continually test safety measures, emergency response procedures and training employees in hazard recognition.”

    On Oct. 1, 2024, the Administrative Law Judge overseeing the case before the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission accepted the parties’ notification of settlement and terminated proceedings.

    As part of the agreement, AB Specialty Silicones agreed to do the following: 

    • Develop a company-wide safety and health management system, implement an emergency action plan and conduct evacuation drills. 
    • Provide safety training to employees and offer it in all languages understood by employees. 
    • Require specialty training for management on handling flammable materials.
    • Purchase industrial trucks properly rated for handling flammable materials for all facilities. 
    • Perform comprehensive audits of its occupational health and safety management system certification and maintain at all facilities. 
    • Hire third-party consultants to assist with the analysis of electrical classification and hazards for any future or rebuilt facilities and audit those facilities six months after the start of operations.
    • Allow OSHA to periodically inspect facilities without requiring a warrant.

    AB Specialty Silicones will pay the penalty in 12 quarterly installments through Sept. 1, 2027. If a payment is missed, the entire penalty becomes due immediately. 

    Headquartered in Waukegan, Illinois, AB Specialty Silicones is a manufacturer and distributor of specialty silicone chemicals. 

    Learn more about OSHA. 

    Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission

    Docket No. 19-1831

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Department of Labor orders railroad to reinstate employee, pay $200K in back wages, damages after retaliation for safety complaints

    Source: US Department of Labor

    ENDERLIN, ND – A federal whistleblower investigation has found a North Dakota railroad company illegally retaliated against and terminated a claims representative who reported an injury, discussed safety concerns with their supervisor and filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Labor. 

    The department’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration investigated a complaint filed by an Enderlin-based employee of Soo Line Railroad Co. who reported an injury they believed was related to dust and chemical exposures during indoor workplace construction. In the months after, the claims representative discussed their safety complaints with their supervisor and co-workers. 

    While the Federal Railway Safety Act protects a worker’s right to report injuries, to discuss them and file complaints with regulatory agencies, Soo Line Railroad later suspended and fired the employee subsequently.

    OSHA investigators found Soo Line Railroad violated the claims representative’s federal protections and ordered the company to reinstate the employee, pay them more than $45,000 in back wages and $155,000 in other damages. The railroad operator must also remove negative reports from the worker’s personnel record.

    “Employees must be able to exercise their legal rights regarding workplace safety freely without fear of  employer retaliation,” explained OSHA Regional Administrator Jennifer S. Rous in Denver. “Our investigation and actions on this employee’s behalf reflect the U.S. Department of Labor’s determination to ensure workers’ rights are protected.”

     Based in Minneapolis, the Soo Line Railroad is a key U.S. subsidiary of Calgary-based Canadian Pacific Kansas City Limited, one of the six major Class I railroads in the U.S.

    The company and the former employee may file objections or request a hearing with the department’s Office of Administrative Law Judges within 30 days of receiving the agency’s order.

    OSHA enforces the whistleblower provisions of the FRSA and more than 20 other statutes protecting employees who report violations of various workplace safety and health, airline, commercial motor carrier, consumer product, environmental, financial reform, food safety, health insurance reform, motor vehicle safety, nuclear, pipeline, public transportation agency, railroad, maritime, securities, tax, criminal antitrust and anti-money laundering laws. For more information on whistleblower protections, visit OSHA’s Whistleblower Protection Programs webpage.

    Editor’s note: The U.S. Department of Labor does not release the names of employees involved in whistleblower complaints.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Lancement du cours régional de politique commerciale de l’OMC au Togo

    Source: World Trade Organization

    Pendant huit semaines, les participants aborderont la modernisation et la réforme du système commercial multilatéral, l’Accord sur les subventions à la pêche et les initiatives numériques et écologiques qui façonnent l’avenir du commerce mondial. Ils échangeront avec des experts de l’OMC et régionaux, ainsi que des académiciens de l’Université de Lomé, partenaire de l’OMC depuis 2023 dans l’organisation de ce cours.

    Dans un message vidéo diffusé lors de la cérémonie d’ouverture, Jean-Marie Paugam, Directeur général adjoint de l’OMC, a souligné l’importance de ce cours conçu pour répondre au contexte spécifique des questions émergentes dans la région. Il a déclaré: “Ce cours régional de politique commerciale mettra un accent particulier sur le contexte spécifique des politiques commerciales des pays francophones d’Afrique et leurs liens avec les accords de l’OMC. Il vous offrira également une plateforme pour réfléchir sur la manière dont le système commercial multilatéral peut être renforcé, réformé et modernisé. C’est une réflexion cruciale, surtout dans le cadre du débat actuel sur la pertinence du système commercial mondial.”

    S’exprimant au nom du Président de la République — Son Excellence Monsieur Faure Essozimna Gnassingbe — le Ministre délégué auprès du Ministre du Commerce, de l’artisanat et de la consommation locale, le professeur Kossivi Hounake, a remercié l’OMC d’avoir renouvelé sa confiance au Togo pour accueillir ce cours. Il a souligné l’importance de la coopération technique de l’OMC pour renforcer les capacités commerciales des pays d’Afrique et favoriser leur intégration dans l’économie mondiale. “Le bon fonctionnement d’un système commercial multilatéral exige, au-delà des règles, un système de suivi efficace. Il demande aussi que les Etats membres de l’OMC comprennent les possibilités que ces règles offrent afin que chacun d’entre eux soit en mesure d’en tirer pleinement profit.”

    Monsieur Kanka-Malik Natchaba, Ministre de l’Enseignement supérieur et de la recherche du Togo, a souligné le rôle de l’éducation comme vecteur fondamental de progrès socio-économique. “Je suis convaincu que cette formation contribuera encore davantage à renforcer les compétences des apprenants et décideurs politiques dans le domaine de la politique commerciale et qu’elle aidera les pays africains francophones à se positionner de manière plus efficace et plus équitable au sein du système commercial mondial,” a-t-il déclaré.

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  • MIL-OSI Economics: DDG Ellard spotlights role of the WTO, current priorities

    Source: World Trade Organization

    DDG Ellard began by discussing the WTO’s main functions: negotiations, trade monitoring, and dispute settlement. She also highlighted the importance of the technical assistance provided to developing members and least-developed country (LDC) members. Despite the rise of regional trade agreements, she noted that approximately 75% of global trade still operates under WTO rules. She emphasized the consensus-based nature of decision-making at the WTO, which ensures that all members, regardless of size or wealth, have an equal voice.

    DDG Ellard then outlined the Organization’s current negotiating priorities. First, she stressed the importance of bringing into force the Agreement on Fisheries Subsidies, adopted in June 2022, to end the worst form of fisheries subsidies. To do this, 111 WTO members — two-thirds of the WTO membership — must accept the Agreement; currently, 83 have done so, leaving 28 remaining for entry into force. She also highlighted the ongoing negotiations on the second part of the Agreement, which aims to address overcapacity and overfishing. “Maintaining momentum, especially at senior levels, is crucial for achieving the political will needed to conclude these negotiations,” she stated. She further underscored the need to find a way to incorporate plurilateral efforts of WTO members, namely the Investment Facilitation for Development Agreement and outcomes of the Joint Statement Initiative on E-commerce, into the WTO rulebook.

    DDG Ellard also discussed the vital role of committees in monitoring the implementation of WTO agreements. “Transparency and notifications are essential to our work — they are the glue that binds compliance and accountability,” she explained. She emphasized the importance of the Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) and Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT) committees in addressing specific trade concerns, noting that only a small fraction of these concerns escalates into formal disputes. She also highlighted the ePing platform, which provides easy access to notifications and specific trade concerns raised in the SPS and TBT committees, accessible to both governments and the private sector.

    Regarding dispute settlement, DDG Ellard commended the efforts of Ambassador Usha Dwarka-Canabady of Mauritius and the six co-facilitators on dispute settlement reform in assisting in the ongoing negotiations among WTO members to deliver a fully and well-functioning system by 2024, as mandated by ministers at the 12th and 13th Ministerial Conferences. DDG Ellard noted that although the Appellate Body is currently non-operational, the dispute settlement system still functions, as members continue to bring disputes to the WTO, with seven new cases initiated this year and seven panel proceedings ongoing.

    In discussing broader WTO reform, DDG Ellard acknowledged that while all members agree on the need for reform, their priorities differ. She outlined three main areas of focus: (i) reforming substantive rules through negotiations; (ii) improving the deliberative function related to how business is conducted within committees, councils, and other bodies; and (iii) enhancing the Secretariat’s support for WTO members.

    In conclusion, DDG Ellard emphasized the WTO’s vital role as a forum for members to engage across geopolitical fault lines and navigate complex trade issues collaboratively to avoid fragmentation. Pointing to the millions who have been lifted out of poverty since the WTO was created, she highlighted that this approach not only strengthens the multilateral trading system but also contributes to greater global stability and sharing the benefits of trade.

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  • MIL-OSI Economics: DG discusses strategies for navigating new environmental regulations with industry leaders

    Source: WTO

    Headline: DG discusses strategies for navigating new environmental regulations with industry leaders

    The Director-General highlighted a marked increase in environment-related measures, noting that 8,661 environment-related notifications have been submitted to various WTO committees since 1997. She acknowledged the importance of robust environmental standards, traceability and certification systems in the interconnected global market but pointed out that “these measures present significant challenges for market actors, especially in developing countries where businesses may need to comply with divergent standards to access international markets.”
    DG Okonjo-Iweala stressed the need to design new regulations carefully, ensuring that small producers in developing economies are integrated into global value chains rather than marginalized or excluded from the global market. She also emphasized the importance of developing robust traceability, verification and certification systems — often referred to as “quality infrastructure” — to bridge the information gap and reduce the costs of complying with regulations.
    Business leaders from the coffee, cocoa and palm oil sectors, alongside representatives from certification organizations, stressed the importance of balancing strong environmental protection with the practical challenges of compliance.
    They highlighted the need for clearer regulations, harmonized standards and aligned certification requirements to prevent confusion and reduce compliance costs. They also emphasized the importance of increased technical and financial support to help small producers navigate challenges and adapt to the evolving regulatory environment.
    DG Okonjo-Iweala expressed her gratitude for the productive discussions, noting that they represented the first step toward continued dialogue in the future.
    She said the key messages from today’s meeting would be shared with relevant policymakers. At the same time, she encouraged the business community to identify the opportunities presented by the new regulations while addressing the associated challenges.
    Looking ahead, the Director-General highlighted the critical need to address regulatory fragmentation. She emphasized that, in the long term, fostering stronger dialogue between policymakers and businesses is essential to ensure that new sustainability regulations “do not end up harming small farmers”.

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  • MIL-OSI Economics: Fannie Mae Forgoes Issuing Benchmark Notes on October 2, 2024 Announcement Date

    Source: Fannie Mae

    About Fannie Mae
    Fannie Mae advances equitable and sustainable access to homeownership and quality, affordable rental housing for millions of people across America. We enable the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage and drive responsible innovation to make homebuying and renting easier, fairer, and more accessible. To learn more, visit:
    fanniemae.com | X(formerly Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Blog

    Media Contact
    Christopher Davis
    202-752-7724

    Fannie Mae Newsroom
    https://www.fanniemae.com/news

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    Fannie Mae Resource Center
    1-800-2FANNIE

    This press release does not constitute an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to buy securities of Fannie Mae. Nothing in this press release constitutes advice on the merits of buying or selling a particular investment. Any investment decision as to any purchase of securities referred to herein must be made solely on the basis of information contained in Fannie Mae’s applicable Offering Circular, and no reliance may be placed on the completeness or accuracy of the information contained in this press release.

    You should not deal in securities unless you understand their nature and the extent of your exposure to risk. You should be satisfied that they are suitable for you in light of your circumstances and financial position. If you are in any doubt you should consult an appropriately qualified financial advisor.

    Benchmark Notes and Benchmark Securities are registered trademarks of Fannie Mae. Unauthorized use of these trademarks is prohibited.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Isabel Schnabel: Escaping stagnation: towards a stronger euro area

    Source: European Central Bank

    Speech by Isabel Schnabel, Member of the Executive Board of the ECB, at a lecture in memory of Walter Eucken

    Freiburg, 2 October 2024

    The euro area economy is stagnating. Over the past two years, real GDP has expanded, on average, by only 0.1% per quarter. Surveys among firms indicate that growth is likely to remain subdued during the second half of this year.

    Weak growth reflects, to a large extent, the exceptional shocks that hit the euro area economy in recent years, most notably the pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.[1]

    Another reason is the tightening of monetary policy. From late 2021 to the end of 2023, bank lending rates for house purchases by households increased from 1.3% to 4%, and those for corporate loans from 1.4% to 5.3%. Such levels had not been seen in more than a decade.

    Dampening growth in aggregate demand was needed to restore price stability.

    In 2021, when the euro area economy reopened in the pandemic and the economy’s supply capacity was still severely constrained, real private consumption rose by more than 8% in just two quarters. When we began to raise our key policy rates in July 2022, households and firms started to spend less and save more, thereby bringing supply and demand closer into balance.

    Yet, although the peak impact of monetary tightening is likely to be behind us and real incomes are rising as inflation falls and wages increase, growth remains shallow. Over the past 18 months, the recovery has repeatedly been weaker than anticipated.

    Aggregate growth figures mask, however, significant heterogeneity across euro area economies. Since interest rates started to rise, growth has become increasingly uneven (Slide 2).

    In some Member States, such as Malta, Spain and Portugal, output has expanded measurably. In Malta, for example, annual real GDP growth has averaged 6% since 2022. In Spain and Portugal, real activity has grown by nearly 4% annually.

    In fact, much of the euro area’s dismal growth performance since we started raising our key policy rates can be attributed to a small group of countries, including Germany, Finland and Estonia.

    If one were to plot growth in the euro area excluding Germany, for example, activity in the currency area would have been remarkably resilient in the face of the sharpest monetary policy tightening in decades and a war raging at the EU’s doorstep. Only a few advanced economies, most notably the United States, have expanded at a faster pace during this period (Slide 3).

    Monetary policy unlikely to be the key driver of heterogeneity

    Monetary policy has probably been one factor contributing to heterogeneity in the euro area. An economy such as Germany’s, which is centred around a strong manufacturing base, is likely to be more sensitive to changes in interest rates than more service-oriented economies.

    Three observations suggest, however, that monetary policy is unlikely to be the key driver of heterogeneity.

    First, output in Germany had started to stagnate well before the rise in interest rates. At the end of 2021, real GDP was only 1% above its level four years earlier, against increases of 4.9% for the euro area excluding Germany and even 10% in the United States over the same period.

    In other words, the growth gap was widening already well before we started tightening monetary policy.

    Second, we observe significant heterogeneity even in parts of economic activity that are more sensitive to changes in interest rates. In Germany, industrial production (excluding construction) is 10% lower today than it was before market interest rates started to rise in late 2021 – a considerably larger loss than that seen in most other economies (Slide 4, left-hand side).

    This contrast becomes even starker when one considers the production of capital goods, which tend to be the most interest-rate sensitive.

    Over the past two and a half years, the slowdown in the production of capital goods started earlier and was more pronounced in Germany than in other major euro area economies. Today, capital goods production in Germany is 3% lower than at the end of 2021. By contrast, it remained nearly 17% higher in the Netherlands over the same period (Slide 4, right-hand side).

    Third, German households have, on aggregate, so far benefited from the rise in interest rates.

    Since the end of 2021, their net interest income has increased sharply, as they shifted their savings into time deposits offering higher returns, while interest rates on long-running, fixed-rate mortgages remained low (Slide 5).

    By contrast, the widespread prevalence of flexible-rate mortgages in Spain has led to a notable increase in interest payments that has more than offset the rise in income gained from higher interest rates on savings.

    That is, the transmission of monetary policy through some channels, such as the mortgage channel, is likely to have been weaker, not stronger, in Germany than in other countries.

    Resilient growth in the south of the euro area

    To understand the main drivers behind the heterogeneity, it is necessary to look at both the countries that have grown faster than what might have been expected considering tight policy and those that have been underperforming.

    Let me focus first on the more dynamic regions of the euro area.

    In many cases, trade played an important role. In Spain, for example, net exports contributed, on average, around 0.4 percentage points to growth every quarter over the past two and a half years.

    This is a notable increase from the period preceding the pandemic (Slide 6, left-hand side). The same broad pattern can be observed in Italy and Portugal.

    A strong recovery in tourism after the pandemic has been a key factor supporting the rise in exports in these economies. But trade is not the whole story.

    Labour market developments played an equally important role. Greece is the most remarkable case. Unemployment fell from 13.7% in early 2022 to 9.9% in July this year, a level not seen since the global financial crisis (Slide 6, right-hand side).

    We observe similar improvements in labour markets across the south of the euro area. In Italy, for example, the number of people in employment has expanded by more than one million since 2022, measurably supporting private consumption and confidence.

    Finally, in some countries fiscal policy remained more accommodative than in others. In Italy, the government deficit last year was 7.2%, compared with 2.6% in Germany.

    Funds allocated under the Next Generation EU programme provided further impetus to growth and employment. In 2022 and 2023, 37% of the funds were allocated to the five fastest-growing countries although their share in the euro area’s economy accounted for only 13%.

    All in all, in large parts of the single currency area, the impact of tighter monetary policy was weakened by a combination of looser fiscal policy and a shift in consumption towards services. In addition, some of these economies have gone some way towards becoming more resilient through structural reforms after the sovereign debt crisis, which helps explain their overperformance.

    While some countries will need to adjust government spending to be in line with the new European fiscal rules, the gradual dialling back of monetary policy restraint since June, together with the continued rise in real incomes, is likely to support growth further over the medium term.

    Structural headwinds in export-oriented countries

    The gradual moderation in the degree of monetary policy restriction will also support growth in those parts of the euro area that have stagnated in recent years. Construction activity, for example, has contracted by 12% since 2022 in Finland and by nearly 7% in Germany.

    While rising costs for equipment and raw materials contributed measurably to the drag in construction, the recent decline in mortgage rates is already translating into rising demand for housing.

    A less restrictive policy stance may help reduce risks of negative growth spillovers from the core to the periphery. However, monetary policy is no panacea.

    Germany, in particular, is currently facing strong headwinds that will not be resolved by lower interest rates alone. Its business model is built on export-driven growth, focusing on the high-end segment of traditional manufacturing industries.

    From 2000 to 2015, Germany’s current account turned from a deficit of 1.8% of GDP to a surplus of 8.6% – an unparalleled surge among advanced economies (Slide 7, left-hand side). As a result, net exports accounted for almost one-third of growth over this period.

    But on average since 2016, net exports have no longer been contributing to growth, with Germany losing export market shares at a concerning pace (Slide 7, right-hand side). And with domestic demand not stepping up, the German economy has been growing by just 1% on average per year over this period.

    Of course, this needs to be seen in the context of the series of shocks in recent years. Germany’s growth outcomes were better than feared considering the sheer size of the energy shock. The swift reduction in gas consumption and the rapid switch to alternative energy sources in response to the sudden loss of access to Russian gas have demonstrated the adaptability of the German economy.[2]

    And yet, Germany is facing deep-seated challenges.

    In fact, the perils of relying on exports as a primary source of growth have long been known.

    In the two decades up to the pandemic, euro area exporters – and German firms in particular – benefited from exceptionally strong growth in some key markets, especially in China, where a real estate boom fuelled demand for goods exports from the euro area, particularly for capital goods.[3]

    ECB staff analysis shows that euro area firms would have lost export market shares at a much faster pace if it had not been for such geographical and sectoral effects, which largely offset parallel losses in price competitiveness related to higher energy and labour costs as well as weaker productivity growth (Slide 8, panel a).

    But since the pandemic, competitiveness effects have started to dominate as the special factors boosting euro area exports have slowed, explaining the sizeable drop in export market shares (Slide 8, panel b).[4]

    Export-led growth model may need adjustment

    Part of the weakness in exports is likely to be cyclical, reflecting the lagged effects of global monetary policy tightening and the weakness in China.

    But there is a risk that the pre-pandemic export-oriented growth model will face more permanent headwinds and require adjustment, for three main reasons.

    First, the nature of globalisation is changing. Geoeconomic fragmentation is intensifying, with global trade measures increasing sharply, especially for critical raw materials – the production of which is often concentrated in just a few countries.

    As such, the times when globalisation was boosting trade and growth may be behind us. There is evidence that geopolitics is increasingly hampering trade and that firms progressively seek to diversify their supply of strategic goods by sourcing them from producers in geopolitically aligned countries.[5]

    Given that euro area firms are more deeply integrated into global value chains than many of their competitors, fragmentation could hurt the euro area economy more than others.[6]

    Second, the energy shock was a major driver behind the decline in euro area market shares.

    Unlike past oil price shocks, which affected firms across the globe, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the resulting sharp spike in gas prices, was a massive competitiveness shock for the euro area, as the input costs of domestic exporters rose sharply relative to those of their competitors.

    As a result, the exports of energy-intensive sectors decreased strongly, accounting for almost the entire decline in total exports in 2023 (Slide 9, left-hand side).[7]

    ECB staff analysis shows that, at the peak of the European gas crisis, the average impact on euro area export market shares was a decline of 7%, with energy-intensive industries experiencing losses of more than 15% in export market shares (Slide 9, right-hand side).

    Although energy costs have fallen from their peak, they remain almost four times as high as in the United States (Slide 10, left-hand side). Energy will therefore likely remain a drag on euro area price competitiveness.

    Third, competition is changing.

    Two decades ago, Chinese firms specialised mainly in the production of low-value goods, such as clothing, footwear or plastic. Today, China is increasingly building up large production capacities in high-value-added industries, such as the automotive and specialised machinery sectors.

    China moving up in the value chain is not only directly dampening demand for euro area goods – it is also turning China into a fierce competitor in third markets.

    This is particularly visible in Germany and Italy, which over the past two decades have seen a steady increase in the number of sectors in which these economies and China have a revealed comparative advantage – meaning they export more in these sectors than the global average (Slide 10, right-hand side).

    With Chinese and euro area firms increasingly competing in similar export markets, China’s significant gains in price competitiveness vis-à-vis the euro area are weighing on euro area exports.

    Since 2021, China has accounted for the entire appreciation in real effective exchange rate of the euro based on producer prices (Slide 11, left-hand side). While euro area producer prices have increased significantly, Chinese producer prices have remained remarkably stable over the past four years (Slide 11, right-hand side).

    On the one hand, this is the result of generous state subsidies that are significantly higher than in most other advanced and major emerging market economies (Slide 12, left-hand side).[8]

    On the other hand, rising overcapacities are weighing on Chinese export prices.[9] The automotive sector is a case in point. China is making significant upfront investments in production and transport to boost its export capacity.

    Orders for new shipping vessels are projected to raise the number of electric vehicles available for exports by 1.7 million annually by 2026 (Slide 12, right-hand side). To put this in perspective, the total number of electric vehicles sold across the EU in 2023 was 2.5 million.

    Need for a reform agenda putting innovation and entrepreneurship first

    Europe, and Germany in particular, needs to adapt to this new environment. At a time when global economic relationships are becoming more uncertain, Europe needs to regain its competitiveness to protect its standard of living and social values.

    Past efforts to regain competitiveness were not without shortcomings. Policies aimed at reducing wage costs, for example, often came with significant economic hardship and social costs.

    Today, the focus needs to be a different one. Europe should put innovation and entrepreneurship at the heart of its agenda.

    In his recent report, Mario Draghi presents a candid and unsparing diagnosis of the state of the euro area economy and makes many useful proposals.[10]

    Some of those proposals are unlikely to find broad support among political leaders. But it would be wrong to reduce the report to a call for more joint borrowing, which in any case should only be discussed after evaluating the experience with the Recovery and Resilience Facility.

    In fact, many reforms that can foster European competitiveness do not need significant upfront investment, nor do they require changes to the EU Treaty.

    Let me highlight three areas that I consider most promising.

    Creating a European Silicon Valley

    First, Europe needs to facilitate the birth and growth of innovative start-ups.

    Since 2000, productivity per hour worked has increased by just 0.8% per year on average – only half the growth seen in the United States (Slide 13). European firms’ failure to reap the efficiency gains brought about by information and communication technologies is one of the root causes.[11]

    Europe is not short on innovation potential. But its regulatory framework and the lack of deep capital markets make it difficult for young firms to thrive.

    Over the past decade, European start-ups have raised funds equivalent to just 0.3% of GDP from venture capital investments, less than a third of the figure for the United States.[12] Banks do not have the risk-bearing capacity to fill this void, and this would not change even if we managed to revive securitisation in the euro area.

    Today, many promising start-ups shift their operations overseas because of a lack of risk capital. In 2022, 58 founders of “unicorns” in the United States – start-ups that went on to be valued over USD 1 billion – had been born in the euro area.

    If Europe wants to retain such potential, it needs to make private equity investments more attractive, including by removing the “debt bias” in national tax systems.

    Better mobilisation of capital is one way to foster innovation. Strengthening the Single Market, fostering competition and cutting red tape is another.

    The European economy remains segmented along national borders, torn between different rules and legal systems. This makes it difficult for young firms to grow into sufficient size and form innovation clusters, so that new ideas and technologies can spread faster and allow them to compete in an environment where “the winner takes most”.

    The Single Market is Europe’s most effective tool to mobilise economies of scale and to enable the creation of a European Silicon Valley. However, the level of European integration remains disappointingly low – especially in services, which amount to around 67% of the EU’s GDP. Intra-EU trade in services accounts for only about 15% of GDP, compared with close to 50% for goods.

    To a significant extent, this reflects regulatory and administrative barriers to doing business in the euro area that hold back competition and thus innovation.

    Green innovation as an engine of growth

    Second, Europe needs to leverage the green transition.

    Making the European economies more sustainable is not a choice. Weather-related disasters are becoming more frequent and more severe, which requires urgent action to reduce carbon emissions and adapt to the growing impact of climate change.

    Embracing the green transition comes with costs for society. Relative price changes are often most painful for those who can least afford it. But the green transition also offers the potential to unlock economic opportunities, especially for those moving first.

    This is the spirit of the Porter hypothesis – the view that environmental measures can be an important driver of innovation.[13] Although controversial, there is ample evidence in favour of the Porter hypothesis.

    Consider the automotive industry.

    Euro area car producers have lost export market share over the past few years (Slide 14, left-hand side). But these losses were largely confined to the combustion engine segment – in the electric car industry, euro area firms made considerable gains, also by developing hybrid technologies early.

    These gains were made possible by significant investments in research and development. According to the most recent data, automotive companies in the euro area still boasted the world’s largest investments in research and development in 2022, about twice as much as the United States and China.

    The green industry, including low-emission car production, is the only innovative sector where the EU is currently leading in terms of the number of patents (Slide 14, right-hand side).

    Technological leadership also allowed euro area firms to raise their export prices on motor vehicles more than others, benefiting from a relatively price-inelastic demand (Slide 15, left-hand side).[14] As a result, gross value added was typically more resilient than industrial production, as firms moved into higher-margin activities (Slide 15, right-hand side).

    In other words, Europe has invested more than other countries in being a frontrunner in the green transition. Now is not the time to backtrack. Europe needs to continue investing in green technologies and innovations to turn the green transition into an engine of growth.

    The sooner Europe decarbonises its energy consumption, the faster it will reduce its dependency on foreign suppliers and regain price competitiveness, because the marginal cost of renewable energies is practically zero.

    This is all the more important in times of the artificial intelligence revolution, which will significantly increase the demand for energy. At the same time, the adoption of new energy sources, such as hydrogen, may require a transition phase during which not all hydrogen can be generated from renewable energies.

    Managing the green transition requires both private and public investments. To foster this process, a mission-oriented industrial policy may be needed that strategically focuses on achieving the green transition through coordinated efforts and thus reduces uncertainty.[15]

    For example, last year France introduced new criteria for granting subsidies to purchase electric vehicles, which privilege supply chains that are entirely green. As China’s electric vehicle industry relies heavily on coal-generated electricity, these criteria implicitly favour European production.[16]

    Significant private and public investments are also needed to upgrade Europe’s electricity grid and to build new infrastructure, such as pipelines or networks of fuel stations for hydrogen, and these investments need to happen soon if Europe wants to be a leader in new technologies.

    The scale of these investments may require new financing ideas. Their costs, and the uncertainty about future payoffs, are often so large that they may not break even over conventional investment horizons.

    So, in some cases the resulting risks cannot be borne by entrepreneurs alone, making public-private partnerships a viable option to internalise the externalities arising from climate change. In some cases, this could include exploring options of granting state guarantees as a way for governments to incentivise private firms to invest in green infrastructure and technologies.

    Higher labour participation and immigration are indispensable to address labour scarcity

    Third, Europe needs to address labour scarcity.

    Longer life expectancy and declining fertility will lead to a sharp drop in the euro area’s working-age population and a significant increase in the old-age dependency ratio. These developments are most concerning in Italy, where the share in the total population of those aged between 15 and 64 is projected to fall from about 63% today to 55% by 2050 (Slide 16, left-hand side).

    Over the past ten years, these strains have partly been cushioned by immigration. But as the baby boomer generation is retiring and migration is expected to moderate, the drag on growth coming from an ageing population is likely to be significant.

    New research suggests that, over the next two decades, demographic change may lower annual per capita output growth by more than one percentage point in Italy and by 0.8 percentage points in Germany.[17]

    This comes at a time when a considerable share of firms across the euro area are already reporting acute shortages of labour limiting their business (Slide 16, right-hand side). Despite declining somewhat recently, this share has never been higher than in recent years.

    Labour scarcity cuts across society. In many countries, thousands of teacher vacancies are not filled, especially for STEM subjects. There are chronic staff shortages in hospitals and nursing homes.

    And all countries are facing a lack of skilled workers in specialised industries. These shortages are likely to dramatically increase as demographic change proceeds and cannot be offset by rising productivity alone.

    Europe should therefore do four things to address labour scarcity.

    First, it should further increase labour force participation. Significant progress has been made in recent decades, especially by bringing more women and older workers into the labour force. But participation rates remain below those in some other advanced economies.

    Second, resources need to be allocated more efficiently. The public sector has played an important role in explaining total employment growth over the past few years.[18] The health crisis in particular has made some of these developments necessary. But the larger the public sector becomes, the less human capital is available for private firms to expand their productive businesses.

    Third, Europe needs to strengthen education. In many euro area countries, a significant share of adults – in some cases more than a third – have not completed upper secondary school. Supporting education will not only unlock the benefits of new technologies. It will also work against demographic headwinds, as higher levels of education tend to lead to higher labour market participation.[19]

    Last, Europe needs to attract foreign workers. Solutions are needed for how to make immigration socially acceptable and how to promote the flow of workers across the single currency area.

    Conclusion

    Let me conclude.

    In recent years, growth in the euro area has become increasingly uneven. While monetary policy may have contributed to rising heterogeneity, it is not the main driver. Rather, structural headwinds are holding back growth in some countries more than in others.

    We cannot ignore the headwinds to growth. With signs of softening labour demand and further progress in disinflation, a sustainable fall of inflation back to our 2% target in a timely manner is becoming more likely, despite still elevated services inflation and strong wage growth.

    At the same time, monetary policy cannot resolve structural issues.

    European governments have a historic responsibility to turn the current challenges into opportunities. Europe has demonstrated in the past that it can adjust and rebound when faced with adversity.

    Escaping stagnation requires forceful action at both national and European level. It requires putting innovation and entrepreneurship first by promoting competition and business dynamism.

    This means strengthening the Single Market, improving access to private equity capital and reducing burdensome bureaucracy. It means leveraging the green transition to advance innovation and regain price competitiveness. And it means putting in place policies that incentivise labour participation and preserve a skilled workforce through immigration and education.

    In all these ways, we can make the euro area stronger.

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI: BigCommerce Appoints Travis Hess as CEO

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    AUSTIN, Texas, Oct. 02, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — BigCommerce Holdings, Inc. (“BigCommerce”) (Nasdaq: BIGC), an open SaaS, composable ecommerce platform for fast-growing and established B2C and B2B brands and retailers, today announced the appointment of Travis Hess as CEO. Brent Bellm will no longer serve as CEO of the Company or as Chairman of the Board. The Board elected Hess as a director of the Company, to fill the vacancy created by Bellm’s departure. Current board member Ellen Siminoff will assume the role of Executive Chair of the Board, effective immediately.

    Hess has a proven track record of helping businesses drive top-line growth and profitability. He joined BigCommerce as President in May 2024 and previously held senior leadership roles at leading global commerce agencies and consultancies such as Accenture where he led the firm’s direct-to-consumer commerce offering and go-to-market strategy. While at Accenture, Travis also managed Accenture’s Shopify partnership globally. He has served on partner advisory boards for Shopify, Klaviyo, SAP/Hybris, and Rackspace and was recognized as one the 30 Most Influential in Ecommerce by Signifyd in 2022.

    Prior to his time at Accenture, Hess was the executive vice president at The Stable, a leading omnichannel commerce agency that was acquired by Accenture, as well as the chief commercial officer and then chief executive officer of BVA, one of the most recognized global DTC and Shopify agencies, which was acquired by The Stable in December 2021.

    Travis is now responsible for leading BigCommerce’s global operations and for the overall success and growth of the business.

    “It’s been an amazing journey at the helm of BigCommerce, and I’m incredibly proud of everything that we have accomplished as a company over the past nine plus years,” said Brent Bellm. “There is a tremendous opportunity ahead for BigCommerce, and Travis is the perfect leader to take the company through its next phase of growth. I look forward to helping the team as we make this transition.”

    “Brent has been a critical part of BigCommerce’s success and we are forever grateful for his leadership and all that he has done to push the company to where it is today,” said Ellen Siminoff. “The market has evolved tremendously over the past decade, and under Travis’ leadership, we are perfectly positioned to stay a step ahead of the competition and continuously drive value for our vast and growing customer base.”

    “Brent and the entire BigCommerce team have done an incredible job building the business for nearly a decade, and I am honored to take on this new role at one of the most exciting companies in ecommerce today,” said Travis Hess. “At BigCommerce, we have an incredible base of customers, employees and partners coupled with a robust and differentiating suite of capabilities. The opportunity ahead of us is huge and nothing short of exciting. I look forward to working side-by-side with our team to help our customers get the most out of our offerings, and bring our business through its next phase of growth.”

    As part of today’s release, BigCommerce reaffirms its financial guidance for the third quarter of fiscal 2024 as previously provided on August 1, 2024.

    About BigCommerce

    BigCommerce (Nasdaq: BIGC) is a leading open SaaS and composable ecommerce platform that empowers brands and retailers of all sizes to build, innovate and grow their businesses online. BigCommerce provides its customers sophisticated enterprise-grade functionality, customization and performance with simplicity and ease-of-use. Tens of thousands of B2C and B2B companies across 150 countries and numerous industries rely on BigCommerce, including Burrow, Coldwater Creek, Francesca’s, Harvey Nichols, King Arthur Baking Co., MKM Building Supplies, United Aqua Group and Uplift Desk. For more information, please visit http://www.bigcommerce.com or follow us on X and LinkedIn.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    This press release contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. In some cases, you can identify forward-looking statements by terms such as “anticipate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “expect,” “intend,” “outlook,” “may,” “might,” “plan,” “project,” “will,” “would,” “should,” “could,” “can,” “predict,”“potential,” “strategy, “target,” “explore,” “continue,” or the negative of these terms, and similar expressions intended to identify forward-looking statements. However, not all forward-looking statements contain these identifying words. These statements may relate to our market size and growth strategy, our estimated and projected costs, margins, revenue, expenditures and customer and financial growth rates, our financial outlook, our plans and objectives for future operations, growth, initiatives or strategies. By their nature, these statements are subject to numerous uncertainties and risks, including factors beyond our control, that could cause actual results, performance or achievement to differ materially and adversely from those anticipated or implied in the forward-looking statements. These assumptions, uncertainties and risks include that, among others, our business would be harmed by any decline in new customers, renewals or upgrades, our limited operating history makes it difficult to evaluate our prospects and future results of operations, we operate in competitive markets, we may not be able to sustain our revenue growth rate in the future, our business would be harmed by any significant interruptions, delays or outages in services from our platform or certain social media platforms, and a cybersecurity-related attack, significant data breach or disruption of the information technology systems or networks could negatively affect our business. Additional risks and uncertainties that could cause actual outcomes and results to differ materially from those contemplated by the forward-looking statements are included under the caption “Risk Factors” and elsewhere in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”), including our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023 and the future quarterly and current reports that we file with the SEC. Forward-looking statements speak only as of the date the statements are made and are based on information available to BigCommerce at the time those statements are made and/or management’s good faith belief as of that time with respect to future events. BigCommerce assumes no obligation to update forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date they were made, except as required by law.

    Media Relations Contact
    BigCommerceICRPR@icrinc.com  

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Enhanced Community Development Awarded $65 Million in New Markets Tax Credits

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NEW YORK, Oct. 02, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — P10, Inc. (NYSE: PX), a leading private markets solutions provider, today announced Enhanced Community Development, a part of P10 subsidiary Enhanced Capital Group LLC, was awarded a $65 million allocation from the New Markets Tax Credits (NMTC) program administered by the U.S. Treasury Department’s Community Development Financial Institutions Fund. Under the program, the U.S. Treasury Department allocated a total of $5 billion to 104 Community Development Entities for the 2023 round.

    “Enhanced Community Development is continuing to meet the needs of underserved communities around the country,” said Luke Sarsfield, P10 Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. “Enhanced Capital’s team brings a mission-driven focus to their investments, providing financing solutions that generate positive social outcomes in the lower-middle market. This federal NMTC allocation further strengthens their ability to create opportunities that have a lasting impact.”

    Enhanced Community Development has deployed $750 million in federal and state NMTC investments across the United States, supporting over 130 projects and fostering economic activity in low-income communities. Previous NMTC-funded projects include manufacturing companies, healthcare facilities, educational institutions, and community centers that serve the needs of economically disadvantaged populations.

    “We are incredibly honored to receive this $65 million allocation, which enables us to significantly increase the impact on the communities that need it most,” said Richard Montgomery, Managing Partner at Enhanced Capital. “The New Markets Tax Credit program is a powerful tool for creating meaningful change in areas often overlooked by many investors and traditional sources of capital.”

    The NMTC program, created by Congress in 2000, is designed to drive economic revitalization in underserved communities by attracting private capital investment through federal tax credit incentives. The program has facilitated the deployment of more than $63 billion in low-income communities across the U.S., resulting in the creation or retention of over 894,000 jobs and the construction or rehabilitation of nearly 260 million square feet of commercial real estate.1

    For more information on Enhanced Community Development and its work in revitalizing underserved communities, please visit http://www.enhancedcapital.com.

    About P10
    P10 is a leading multi-asset class private markets solutions provider in the alternative asset management industry. P10’s mission is to provide its investors differentiated access to a broad set of investment solutions that address their diverse investment needs within private markets. As of June 30, 2024, P10 has a global investor base of more than 3,700 investors across 50 states, 60 countries, and six continents, which includes some of the world’s largest pension funds, endowments, foundations, corporate pensions, and financial institutions. Visit http://www.p10alts.com.

    About Enhanced Community Development:
    Enhanced Community Development (ECD), a subsidiary of Enhanced Capital, is a federally designated Community Development Entity focused on the financing needs of businesses and developments located in or serving low-income communities. ECD proudly participates in the federal New Markets Tax Credit (NMTC) Program and a variety of state NMTC Programs. ECD is an Equal Opportunity Provider. Since 2006, ECD has deployed $750 million in federal and state NMTC allocation to job-creating businesses and organizations in economically distressed communities.

    About Enhanced Capital:
    Enhanced Capital Group, LLC is a leading impact investment firm with over 24 years of experience investing in Climate Finance, Impact Real Estate, and Small Business Lending. From inception in 1999 through June 30th, 2024, inclusive of proprietary assets and assets managed by affiliates, Enhanced Capital has raised a total of $6.0 billion. Of the total assets under management, impact assets represent $3.8 billion invested in over 950 projects and businesses throughout 40 states, Washington DC, and Puerto Rico and does not include investments made by non-impact affiliates.

    For more information, visit http://www.enhancedcapital.com.

    Forward-Looking Statements
    Some of the statements in this release may constitute “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Words such as “will,” “expect,” “believe,” “estimate,” “continue,” “anticipate,” “intend,” “plan” and similar expressions are intended to identify these forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements discuss management’s current expectations and projections relating to our financial position, results of operations, plans, objectives, future performance, and business. The inclusion of any forward-looking information in this release should not be regarded as a representation that the future plans, estimates, or expectations contemplated will be achieved. Forward-looking statements reflect management’s current plans, estimates, and expectations, and are inherently uncertain. All forward-looking statements are subject to known and unknown risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other important factors that may cause actual results to be materially different; global and domestic market and business conditions; successful execution of business and growth strategies and regulatory factors relevant to our business; changes in our tax status; our ability to maintain our fee structure; our ability to attract and retain key employees; our ability to manage our obligations under our debt agreements; our ability to make acquisitions and successfully integrate the businesses we acquire; assumptions relating to our operations, financial results, financial condition, business prospects and growth strategy; and our ability to manage the effects of events outside of our control. The foregoing list of factors is not exhaustive. For more information regarding these risks and uncertainties as well as additional risks that we face, you should refer to the “Risk Factors” included in our annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2023, filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) on March 13, 2024, and in our subsequent reports filed from time to time with the SEC. The forward-looking statements included in this release are made only as of the date hereof. We undertake no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statement as a result of new information or future events, except as otherwise required by law.

    Ownership Limitations
    P10’s Certificate of Incorporation contains certain provisions for the protection of tax benefits relating to P10’s net operating losses. Such provisions generally void transfers of shares that would result in the creation of a new 4.99% shareholder or result in an existing 4.99% shareholder acquiring additional shares of P10, and it expires at the third anniversary of the IPO, October 2024.

    Disclaimer:
    Enhanced Capital Group, LLC, and its affiliates, is an Equal Opportunity Provider. The information presented is for discussion purposes only and is neither an offer to sell nor a solicitation of any offer to buy any securities, investment product, or investment advisory services. This is not an offering or the solicitation of an offer to purchase an interest in a fund.

    P10 Investor Contact:
    info@p10alts.com

    P10 Media Contact:
    Taylor Donahue
    pro-p10@prosek.com


    1 “The U.S. Department of the Treasury Announces $5 Billion in New Markets Tax Credits,” Department of the Treasury, September 19, 2024. https://www.cdfifund.gov/news/603

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Silynxcom Announces Results for First Half of 2024; Significant Revenue Growth and Improvement in Gross Margin

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    NETANYA, Israel, Oct. 02, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Silynxcom Ltd. (NYSE American: SYNX) (“Silynxcom” or the “Company”), a manufacturer and developer of ruggedized tactical communication headset devices as well as other communication accessories, reported its consolidated financial results as of and for the six months ended June 30, 2024.

    Key Financial Highlights for the First Half of 2024:

    • Revenues for the six months ended June 30, 2024 were $5,356 thousand, an increase of 73% from the equivalent period in 2023.
    • Gross profit – for the six months ended June 30, 2024 was $2,650 thousand, an increase of 121% from the equivalent period in 2023.
    • Gross margin for the six months ended June 30, 2024 was 49.47%, compared to 38.59% in the equivalent period in 2023.
    • Cash and Cash Equivalents – On January 17, 2024, Silynxcom successfully completed its initial public offering (the “IPO”), raising $5 million in gross proceeds by issuing 1.25 million ordinary shares, adding to a cash and cash equivalents and marketable securities balance of $3,659 thousand as of June 30, 2024, up from $568 thousand as of December 31, 2023, demonstrating strong liquidity to support ongoing investments and operations.
    • Operating profit – Operating profit was $267 thousand for the six months ended June 30, 2024, compared to an operating loss of $2,328 thousand for the equivalent period in 2023, reflecting a decrease in share-based compensation expenses. Non-IFRS operating profit amounted to $695 thousand for the six months ended June 30, 2024, representing an increase of more than 46% compared to $476 thousand for the equivalent period in 2023. A reconciliation between operating profit (loss) and non-IFRS operating profit (loss) is provided in Appendix A of this press release.
    • Net loss – Net loss was $696 thousand for the six months ended June 30, 2024, including $879 thousand in listing expenses, compared to a net loss of $2,326 thousand for the equivalent period in 2023. Non-IFRS net income for the six months ended June 30, 2024 totaled $611 thousand, representing an increase of more than 27% compared to $478 thousand for the equivalent period in 2023. A reconciliation between net income (loss) and non-IFRS net income is provided in Appendix A of this press release.

    “The first half of 2024 was a period of business expansion, growth and strategic investment for Silynxcom, as highlighted by our public listing on the NYSE American following a successful IPO in January 2024,” said Nir Klein, Chief Executive Officer of Silynxcom. “Our revenue increased during the first half of 2024 and we became cashflow positive, which we believe underscores our successful market expansion and enhanced financial stability.”

    “In 2023, we laid the foundation for new and advanced products and increased compatibility for leading systems in our target markets. In addition, we forged new relationships with key players in the global defense and law enforcement sectors, which have already led to purchase orders in 2024,” added Mr. Klein.

    Recent Corporate Highlights:

    • In April 2024, the Company announced the strengthening of its collaboration with 3M PELTOR to deliver next generation headset solutions.
    • The Company expanded sales in the Asia Pacific region.
    • Since October 2023, the Company has secured orders amounting to $4.85 million from the Israel Defense Forces and Israeli police forces.
    • In February 2024, the Company announced a third order from a leading global defense firm, bringing its total orders from this client to over $4.5 million.
    • The Company received its first order for the newly designed in-ear headset with an encrypted security system intended for use by law enforcement.
    • In March 2024, the Company launched a new system for law enforcement, compatible with commonly used terrestrial trunked radio and P25 systems.

    Use of Non-IFRS Financial Results

    In addition to disclosing financial results calculated in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”) as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board, this press release contains certain financial measures that are not prepared under IFRS.  These measures may be different from non-IFRS financial measures used by other companies. The Company defines non-IFRS operating profit (loss) as operating profit (loss) excluding the effect of share-based compensation expenses. The Company defines non-IFRS net income as net income (loss) excluding the effect of share-based compensation expenses and listing expenses. The Company’s management believes the non-IFRS financial information provided in this press release is useful to investors’ understanding and assessment of the Company’s ongoing operations because it provides management and investors with measurements of the Company’s operations and profitability excluding the impact of share-based compensation, an item that the Company does not consider to be indicative of its core operating performance, and listing expenses that are non-recurring and expensed in connection with the Company’s IPO. Management also uses both IFRS and non-IFRS information in evaluating and operating business internally and as such deemed it important to provide all this information to investors. The non-IFRS financial measures disclosed by the Company should not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for, or superior to, financial measures calculated in accordance with IFRS and the financial results calculated in accordance with IFRS and reconciliations to those financial statements should be carefully evaluated. Reconciliations between IFRS measures and non-IFRS measures are provided in Appendix A to this press release.

    About Silynxcom Ltd.

    For over a decade, the Company been developing, manufacturing, marketing, and selling ruggedized tactical communication headset devices as well as other communication accessories, all of which have been field-tested and combat-proven. The Company’s in-ear headset devices, or In-Ear Headsets, are used in combat, the battlefield, riot control, demonstrations and weapons training courses. The In-Ear Headsets seamlessly integrate with third party manufacturers of professional-grade ruggedized radios that are used by soldiers in combat or by police officers. The Company’s In-Ear Headsets also fit tightly into the protective gear to enable users to speak and hear clearly and precisely while they are protected from the hazardous sounds of combat, riots or dangerous situations. The sleek, lightweight, In-Ear Headsets include active sound protection to eliminate unsafe sounds, while maintaining ambient environmental awareness, giving their customers 360° situational awareness. The Company works closely with its customers and seek to improve the functionality and quality of the Company’s products based on actual feedback from soldiers and police officers “in the field.” The Company’s headset devices are compatible and easily integrate with various communication equipment devices currently being used by tens of thousands of military and law enforcement personnel in leading military and law enforcement units around the globe. The Company sells its In-Ear Headsets and communication accessories directly to military forces, police and other law enforcement units around the world. The Company also deals with specialized networks of local distributors in each locale in which it operates and has developed key strategic partnerships with radio equipment manufacturers.

    Forward Looking Statements

    This press release contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the “safe harbor” provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 and other federal securities laws and are subject to substantial risks and uncertainties. Forward-looking statements contained in this press release may be identified by the use of words such as “anticipate,” “believe,” “contemplate,” “could,” “estimate,” “expect,” “intend,” “seek,” “may,” “might,” “plan,” “potential,” “predict,” “project,” “target,” “aim,” “should,” “will” “would,” or the negative of these words or other similar expressions, although not all forward-looking statements contain these words. For example, the Company uses forward-looking statements when it discusses its belief that its revenue increase and cashflow positive status underscores the Company’s successful market expansion and enhanced financial stability. Forward-looking statements are based on Silynxcom’s current expectations and are subject to inherent uncertainties, risks and assumptions that are difficult to predict. Further, certain forward-looking statements are based on assumptions as to future events that may not prove to be accurate. For a more detailed description of the risks and uncertainties affecting the Company, reference is made to the Company’s reports filed from time to time with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), including, but not limited to, the risks detailed in the Company’s annual report for the year ended December 31, 2023, filed with the SEC on April 30, 2024. Forward-looking statements contained in this announcement are made as of the date of this press release and Silynxcom undertakes no duty to update such information except as required under applicable law.

    Investor Relations Contact:
    Silynxcom Ltd.
    ir@silynxcom.com

     
    Silynxcom Ltd.

    Consolidated Statements of Financial Position
    U.S dollars in thousands

     
            June 30, December 31,  
            2024     2023  
    Current assets                    
    Cash and cash equivalents         668       568  
    Marketable securities         2,991        
    Deposits with banking corporations         39       29  
    Trade receivables, net         2,060       2,452  
    Other current assets         347       430  
    Inventory         2,577       2,482  
              8,682       5,961  
                         
    Non-current assets                    
    Property, plant & equipment, net         114       94  
    Long-term deposits         66       16  
    Right of use assets         64       95  
              244       205  
                         
    Total assets         8,926       6,166  
                     
    Current liabilities                
    Current maturities of loans from banking corporations         60       73  
    Lease liabilities – current         49       60  
    Loans from related parties         11       43  
    Trade payable         947       1,315  
    Warrants at fair value               165  
    SAFE               409  
    Other accounts payables         1,053       1,791  
              2,120       3,856  
                         
    Non-current liabilities                    
    Loans from banking corporations               26  
    Commitment to issue shares         148        
    Lease liabilities         13       33  
    Liabilities for employee benefits, net         29       30  
              190       89  
                         
    Shareholders’ equity                    
    Share capital               52  
    Premium and other capital reserves         26,043       20,900  
    Capital reserve for transactions with controlling shareholders         1,542       1,542  
    Accumulated loss         (20,969 )     (20,273 )
              6,616       2,221  
                         
    Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity         8,926       6,166  
                         
     
    Silynxcom Ltd.

    Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Loss
    U.S dollars in thousands

     
          For the six month period
    ended June 30
     
          2024     2023  
                   
    Revenue     5,356     3,096  
                   
    Cost of revenue     2,706     1,901  
                   
    Gross profit     2,650     1,195  
                   
    Research and development expenses     259     569  
                   
    Selling and marketing expenses     699     1,989  
                   
    General and administrative expenses     1,425     965  
                   
    Operating profit (loss)     267     (2,328
                   
    Listing expenses     879      
                   
    Finance expenses     232     35  
                   
    Finance income     148     37  
                   
    Income (loss) before income tax     (696   (2,326
                   
    Income tax expenses          
                   
    Net income (loss)     (696   (2,326 )
                   
     
    Silynxcom Ltd.

    Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
    U.S dollars in thousands

     
            For the six month
    period ended
    June 30
     
            2024     2023  
    Cash flows from operating activities                    
    Net income (loss)         (696     (2,326 )
                         
    Adjustments Required to Present Cash Flows from Operating Activities                    
                         
    Income and expenses not involving cash flows                    
                         
    Depreciation and amortization         54       67  
    Increase (decrease) in liability for employee benefits, net         (1 )     (1
    Revaluation of derivatives measured at fair value through profit and loss               (31
    Other finance expenses                 11  
    20
    Share-based compensation         428       2,804  
              501       2,850  
    Changes in asset and liability line items:                    
                         
    Decrease (increase) in trade receivable         392       1,993  
    Decrease (increase) in other current assets         114       (227
    Decrease (increase) in inventory         (95 )     (231 )
    Increase (decrease) in trade payables         (368 )     (1,021
    Increase (decrease) in other accounts payables         (488 )     (635
              (445 )     (121
                         
    Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities         (640     403  
                         
    Cash flows from investing activities                    
    Increase in long-term bank deposit         (10 )     (11 )
    Increase in long-term deposit others         (50 )      
    Purchase of marketable securities, net         (2,961 )      
    Purchase of property, plant and equipment         (42 )     (4 )
                         
    Net cash used in investing activities         (3,063 )     (15 )
                         
    Cash flows from financing activities                    
    Repayment of loans from related parties         (32     (17
    Repayment of warrants         (165      
    Repayment of loans from banking corporations         (39     (40
    Repayment to former share holders         (250      
    Issuance of Ordinary Shares in the IPO, net         4,324        
    Repayment of lease liabilities         (33     (44
                         
    Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities         3,805       (101
    Exchange rate differentials for cash and cash equivalent balances         (2     (5
                         
    Increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents         100       282  
                         
    Balance of cash and cash equivalents at beginning of year         568       69  
                         
    Balance of cash and cash equivalents as at end of year         668       351  
                         
     
    Appendix A

    RECONCILIATION OF IFRS TO NON-IFRS MEASURES
    (Unaudited) U.S. dollars in thousands

     
              For the six month
    period ended June 30

       
              2024     2023    
                         
    IFRS Operating profit (loss)           267       (2,328  
                             
    Share-based compensation in Selling and marketing expenses           142       1,623    
                             
    Share-based compensation in General and administrative expenses           138       546    
                             
    Share-based compensation in Research and development expenses           84       355    
                             
    Share-based compensation in Cost of revenue           64       280    
                             
    Non-IFRS Operating profit           695       476    
                             
                             
                             
    IFRS Net income (loss)           (696     (2,326  
                             
    Listing expenses           879          
                             
    Share-based compensation expenses           428       2,804    
                             
    Non-IFRS Net income           611       478    

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-Evening Report: Joker: Folie à Deux as ‘ruin porn’ – how the new sequel plays with duplication and disintegration

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Anna-Sophie Jürgens, Senior Lecturer in Science Communication (Pop Culture Studies), Australian National University

    Warner

    Like two-headed playing cards, Joker stories are about dual identity, doubles and duplicity.

    Throughout DC comics and films, the Joker turns others into facsimiles of himself, grinning widely. He shares his state of mind through infectious laughter and mass “clownification”, creating copies as he goes.

    Film sequel Joker: Folie à Deux, directed by Todd Phillips and released in cinemas today, participates in this rich tradition. It also challenges it by introducing a Joker haunted by his own lost futures – the glam clown, homicidal entertainer and irresistible lover he could have become.

    What can we learn from the Joker character about our cultural fascination with duplication and disintegration?

    Madness by imitation

    Doubling, split consciousness and double meanings have been ingredients in Joker stories since the character’s creation in the 1940s.

    He offers different origin stories himself in the 2008 movie blockbuster The Dark Knight (with Heath Ledger as the Joker). He is presented as many in the recent comic series Three Jokers. The Joker shuffles his own “selves like a croupier deals cards” in the 2007 Batman comic The Clown at Midnight.

    Within the DC clowniverse, the Joker turns others into Joker copies and clowns, usually through the use of biological or chemical weapons or poisons, virology, hypnotism or sheer charisma. Joker copies include Joker fans and followers in clown costumes and masks, as in the 2019 film starring Joaquin Phoenix. In comics he is described as having an influence that

    […] affects people, on an almost subconscious, primal level. For most people – regular people – he inspires fear. For the less stable people – he simply inspires.

    For more than 80 years, his laughter has spread like a virus and caused mass-clownification countless times.

    ‘The whole world smiles with you.’ The new Joker sequel plays with dual identity and shadow selves.

    Multiplying his potency

    Joker stories tend to revolve around three scenarios of imitation, doubling and multiplication: several people acting as one (that is, the Joker), one person acting as many (as in Batman: R.I.P. when Batman tries to understand the Joker by experiencing his state of mind like a second consciousness), and a number of personalities nestled within the Joker wreaking havoc. All of these scenarios are powerful reminders clown laughter and humour need not be funny.

    The Joker character was inspired by famous films from the 1920s and ’30s, including Robert Wiene’s The Cabinet of Dr Caligari (1920), F.W. Murnau’s Nosferatu (1922), Fritz Lang’s Metropolis (1926), Roland West’s The Bat (1926) and Paul Leni’s The Man Who Laughs (1928). Many of these works feature hapless or unhappy (comic) performers, who all struggle with identity.

    The cultural mould to which the Joker belongs is linked with the more than century-old fascination with doppelgangers, male nervousness, violent and involuntary laughter and the loss of agency and sense of the self.

    The Joker has long played with ideas of duality.
    IMDB/Warner

    Haunting through absence

    The new sequel, Joker: Folie à Deux, draws on all these very Joker traditions. Arthur Fleck and his Joker (Phoenix again) struggles with his split identities.

    Set two years after the events of the previous film, Fleck is a patient at Arkham State Hospital, where he meets the dual character Lee Quinzel/Harley Quinn (played by Lady Gaga). She wants him to lean into his Joker self.

    Although she is neither the clown nor a scientist as she’s portrayed in other stories, she also wants to be a Joker version. Arthur himself wants to be the Joker, but for reasons both external and internal he ends up not really becoming the Joker we recognise from the first film.

    The sequel is ultimately a trick played on the audience. “There is no Joker,” Arthur confirms at the end, just Arthur. Folie à Deux is about a broken dream’s loveliness.

    The Joker is a collective dream that fails to come true. He appears in the form of fantasies. He is the past, but at the same time present and absent. This is how the concept of hauntology has been defined – a split between realities. The film glamorises and exploits disillusion as we watch the Joker and his future possibilities disintegrate.

    In this way, Joker: Folie à Deux is a clown version of ruin porn, inviting us to enjoy the “decay” of a character. It gives us glimpses of a post-double version of the Joker, a non-Joker, left in pieces.

    Joker: Folie à Deux is in cinemas now.

    Anna-Sophie Jürgens 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. Joker: Folie à Deux as ‘ruin porn’ – how the new sequel plays with duplication and disintegration – https://theconversation.com/joker-folie-a-deux-as-ruin-porn-how-the-new-sequel-plays-with-duplication-and-disintegration-240311

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI USA: Cassidy Announces Grant for Small Business Incubator in Jefferson Parish

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Louisiana Bill Cassidy
    BATON ROUGE – This morning, U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA) joined officials from JEDCO (Jefferson Parish Economic Development Commission), Greater New Orleans, Inc., and the Louisiana Department of Economic Development to announce the launch of the GNO Food and Beverage Incubator at the Churchill Technology and Business Park. Nearly half of the incubator’s start-up costs were provided by a U.S. Economic Development Administration (EDA) grant.
    “Louisiana’s food is the best in the world and this incubator will help keep it that way,” said Dr. Cassidy. “Chefs and caterers will use its kitchen space to serve new clients. They’ll grow their businesses and add to our culinary legacy.”
    JEDCO recently was awarded $4.2 million from various agencies to launch the GNO Food and Beverage Incubator, including $2 million from the EDA. This incubator was made necessary after the closing of Edible Enterprises, the only food and beverage incubator in the Greater New Orleans area, which sustained severe damage from Hurricane Ida.
    The food and beverage industry already has an enormous impact on Louisiana’s economy, especially via tourism. According to Oxford Economics in 2022, over $4.7 billion in direct, indirect, and induced food and beverage sales were generated by visitors to Louisiana. Additionally, the National Restaurant Association says there were 11,275 restaurants last year in Louisiana, supporting over 200,000 jobs.
    The incubator will provide small food and beverage businesses and start-ups with commercial kitchen space and technical assistance, in order for them to grow and service their clients. It will include three commercial kitchens and training and demonstration space, totaling 15,000 square feet.
    Cassidy praised everyone involved with the incubator for their efforts and was thanked for his support in a statement by JEDCO President and CEO Jerry Bologna.
    “It was an honor to welcome Senator Cassidy to Churchill Technology and Business Park today to announce the development of the Greater New Orleans Food + Beverage Incubator,” said Mr. Bologna. “JEDCO received a $2 million EDA grant and matching state and local dollars that will fund the design, engineering and construction of the facility, which fulfills a critical regional need. This incubator will be the only facility of its kind in the area, further solidifying Jefferson Parish and all of Greater New Orleans as a destination for culinary manufacturing and innovation. This project would not be possible without the support of our federal delegation. We are tremendously grateful for Senator Cassidy’s support.” 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Financial News: The Financial Navigator Program Will Start on October 3

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Central Bank of Russia –

    The Bank of Russia webinars on personal finance and investments are designed for young people and adult listeners. The knowledge gained from them will help you competently build a personal strategy to achieve your financial goals and learn how to avoid possible financial traps.

    The program has two thematic blocks. The first is devoted to the basics and principles of investing. The classes will cover the nuances of various investment products, the rules for forming an investment portfolio taking into account the acceptable level of risk, safe financial transactions, and choosing an intermediary. The second block focuses on financial planning and reasonable savings. Participants will also discuss how to get out of a difficult financial situation and learn about the rules of responsible borrowing.

    The webinars provide the opportunity for live communication. The lecturers will be experts from the Bank of Russia, and everyone will be able to ask questions about finances live.

    To participate in the program, simply register on the website projectYou can join webinars individually or as part of a group.

    The program will end on December 13, 2024.

    Preview photo: maxbelchenko / Shutterstock / Fotodom

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    Please note; This information is raw content directly from the information source. It is accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    http://vvv.kbr.ru/press/event/?id=21056

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Reed Delivers $250,000 for Saint Antoine Alzheimer’s Disease & Dementia Care

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Rhode Island Jack Reed
    NORTH SMITHFIELD, RI – In an effort to ensure more Rhode Islanders who need memory care can access the support they need and comfortably ‘age in place’ while receiving top-notch services, U.S. Senator Jack Reed has teamed up with the Saint Antoine Community to deliver a $250,000 federal earmark for a new, state-of-the-art Assisted Living Memory Care Unit.
    Saint Antoine’s newly renovated memory care unit features 24 home-like suites for patients with Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia and has helped develop a new model of care for seniors with cognitive needs. The memory care unit brings together elements of more skilled health care, rehab, and behavioral support services to residents on the same campus, rather than transferring the resident to a different environment.
    Senator Reed hopes that Saint Antoine’s new model of care can be applied elsewhere to help aging Americans across the country safely and comfortably ‘age in place’ and create a better model to advance treatment and improve care for seniors with Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia.
    “Alzheimer’s is a devastating disease that impacts millions of Americans and their families. This federal earmark for the Saint Antoine Community is helping to create a new environment of compassion and support for Rhode Islanders with developing cognitive needs and will pioneer a new model of care that hopefully can assist other seniors across the country,” said Senator Reed, who recently helped pass major legislation to combat Alzheimer’s disease and invest in finding new treatments and a cure.  “I’m grateful for the team and service providers at Saint Antoine who are working every day to support Rhode Islanders with Alzheimer’s and helping them age with dignity and comfort.”
    Saint Antoine’s new model being employed at the Assisted Living Memory Care Unit allows for greater flexibility in the use of its facility, improved cost-effectiveness, and the ability for residents to ‘age in place.’ The new care unit has transformed two wings in an existing part of Saint Antoine Residence into a supportive community of hope and care for seniors.
    “Saint Antoine Community stands out above all else when it comes to our continuum of care,” said Tammy Summiel, Executive Director of Primrose Lane Memory Care Assisted Living & The Villa Assisted Living.  “Our population is living longer and memory care can place such an added burden on families who cannot manage all their needs at home. With the addition of Primrose Lane, Saint Antoine Community can further emphasize the importance of family above all else, and allow residents and their families to enjoy each other’s company without extra stress. We have further strengthened our continuum, while addressing a growing need for affordable memory care in Northern Rhode Island.”
    Founded in 1913, Saint Antoine Community remains the largest long-term care facility in northern Rhode Island. All located on one campus, Saint Antoine Community provides access to rehabilitative services, assisted living, short/long term skilled care, and two tiers of residential memory care. Saint Antoine Community is located at 10 Rhodes Avenue, North Smithfield.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Innventure LLC and Learn CW Investment Corporation Announce Closing of Business Combination

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    ORLANDO, Fla., Oct. 02, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Innventure, Inc. (Nasdaq: INV) and Learn CW Investment Corporation (NASDAQ: LCW) (“Learn CW”), a special purpose acquisition company, today announced the completion of their previously announced business combination (“Business Combination”). The Business Combination was approved at an extraordinary general meeting of Learn CW’s shareholders on September 30, 2024. Upon the completion of the Business Combination, the combined company changed its name to Innventure, Inc. and its common stock is expected to begin trading on the Nasdaq Stock Market under the new ticker symbol “INV” beginning on October 3, 2024.

    In connection with the closing of the Business Combination, Innventure is expected to ring the Closing Bell at 4 p.m. EST on October 3, 2024 at the Nasdaq Marketsite.

    “We’re thrilled to reach this milestone, which supports our goal to found, fund and operate companies that offer transformative technology solutions,” said Bill Haskell, CEO of Innventure. “We believe becoming a public company creates a unique opportunity to offer investors access to technologies with early-stage economics and late-stage risk. I’m grateful to our partners at Learn CW for recognizing the value of our unique business model and supporting our vision to be a conglomerate of majority-owned companies. I’d also like to thank our multinational corporation partners for their engagement and collaboration, and the trust they put in us to commercialize their breakthrough technologies. We look forward to growing Innventure and maximizing shareholder value over the long term.”

    Rob Hutter, CEO of Learn CW, added, “As someone who has spent my career in venture creation, I am thrilled to help bring Innventure to the public market. I believe this public listing will further accelerate Innventure’s credibility and standing as the innovation launch partner of choice for the world’s largest companies, giving Innventure, in my opinion, the pick of the best opportunities for years to come and enabling investors to share in a remarkable stream of innovative companies that could compound over time and that are available few other places.”

    Innventure uses operational expertise to take what it believes to be breakthrough technologies sourced from multinational corporations to market. In the process, Innventure builds and scales companies around these technologies using a systematic, quantitative and repeatable analysis. Innventure has launched three such companies since its inception: PureCycle Technologies, Inc., AeroFlexx and Accelsius. PureCycle became a publicly traded company in 2021.

    Advisors
    Jones Day acted as legal advisor to Innventure, and Sidley Austin LLP acted as legal advisor to Learn CW. The Maples Group acted as Cayman legal advisor to Learn CW.

    About Innventure
    Innventure founds, funds, and operates companies with a focus on transformative, sustainable technology solutions acquired or licensed from multinational corporations. As owner-operators, Innventure takes what it believes to be breakthrough technologies from early evaluation to scaled commercialization utilizing an approach designed to help mitigate risk as it builds disruptive companies it believes have the potential to achieve a target enterprise value of at least $1 billion. Innventure defines ‘‘disruptive’’ as innovations that have the ability to significantly change the way businesses, industries, markets and/or consumers operate.

    About Learn CW Investment Corporation
    Learn CW Investment Corporation (“Learn CW”) was formed for the purpose of effecting a merger, share exchange, asset acquisition, share purchase, reorganization or similar Business Combination with one or more businesses. Learn CW is sponsored by CWAM LC Sponsor LLC, an affiliate of Learn Capital, LLC (“Learn Capital”) and Commonwealth Asset Management. Learn Capital is a leading venture capital firm focused on early- and mid-stage investments in the $5.4 trillion global education sector. Learn Capital was founded in 2008 by Rob Hutter and Greg Mauro, who formerly managed an affiliate of Founders Fund. The firm possesses decades of founding, operating, and investing experience in the education, consumer, hard tech, and enterprise technology sectors. Commonwealth Asset Management is a Los Angeles-based asset management platform founded in June 2019 and led by Adam Fisher, who is the former Head of Global Macro and Real Estate at Soros Fund Management LLC and the former founder and Chief Investment Officer of Commonwealth Opportunity Capital, GP LLC.

    Cautionary Statement Regarding Forward-Looking Statements
    This press release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, including statements regarding the parties or the parties’ respective management team’s expectations, hopes, beliefs, intentions, plans, prospects or strategies regarding the future, including the anticipated benefits of the Business Combination, including revenue growth and financial performance, product expansion and services, and the financial condition, results of operations, earnings outlook and prospects of Innventure and/or Learn CW, including, in all cases, statements for the period following the consummation of the Business Combination. Any statements contained herein that are not statements of historical fact are forward-looking statements. In addition, any statements that refer to projections, forecasts or other characterizations of future events or circumstances, including any underlying assumptions, are forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements are typically identified by words such as “anticipate,” “believe,” “continue,” “could,” “estimate,” “expect,” “forecast,” “intend,” “may,” “might,” “outlook,” “plan,” “possible,” “potential,” “predict,” “project,” “should,” “will,” “would” and other similar words and expressions, but the absence of these words does not mean that a statement is not forward-looking. The forward-looking statements contained in this press release are based on the current expectations and beliefs of the management of Learn CW and Innventure in light of their respective experience and their perception of historical trends, current conditions and expected future developments and their potential effects on Learn CW and Innventure as well as other factors they believe are appropriate in the circumstances. There can be no assurance that future developments affecting Learn CW or Innventure will be those that we have anticipated. These forward-looking statements involve a number of risks, uncertainties (some of which are beyond the control of the parties) or other assumptions that may cause actual results or performance to be materially different from those expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements, including those discussed and identified in the public filings made or to be made with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) by Learn CW, including in the final prospectus relating to Learn CW’s initial public offering, which was filed with the SEC on October 12, 2021 under the heading “Risk Factors,” or made or to be made by Learn SPAC Holdco, Inc., including in the registration statement on Form S-4, which was filed in connection with the Business Combination and has been declared effective by the SEC, and the definitive proxy statement/consent solicitation statement/prospectus relating to the Business Combination which was mailed to the Learn CW shareholders and sent to the unitholders of Innventure LLC. These risks and uncertainties include: expectations regarding Innventure’s strategies and future financial performance, including its future business plans, expansion and acquisition plans or objectives, prospective performance and opportunities and competitors, revenues, products and services, pricing, operating expenses, product and service acceptance, market trends, liquidity, cash flows and uses of cash, capital expenditures, and Innventure’s ability to invest in growth initiatives; the implementation, market acceptance and success of Innventure’s business model and growth strategy; Innventure’s future capital requirements and sources and uses of cash; that Innventure will have sufficient capital upon the approval of the Business Combination to operate as anticipated; Innventure’s ability to obtain funding for its operations and future growth; developments and projections relating to Innventure’s competitors and industry; the outcome of any legal proceedings that may be instituted against Learn SPAC Holdco, Inc., Learn CW or Innventure following the closing of the Business Combination; the risk that the announcement and consummation of the proposed Business Combination disrupts Innventure’s current plans; the ability to recognize the anticipated benefits of the Business Combination; unexpected costs related to the proposed Business Combination; limited liquidity and trading of Learn CW’s securities; geopolitical risk and changes in applicable laws or regulations; the possibility that Learn CW and/or Innventure may be adversely affected by other economic, business, and/or competitive factors; the potential characterization of Innventure as an investment company subject to the Investment Company Act of 1940; and operational risk. Should one or more of these risks or uncertainties materialize, or should any of our assumptions prove incorrect, actual results may vary in material respects from those projected in these forward-looking statements. All forward-looking statements in this press release are made as of the date hereof, based on information available to Learn CW and Innventure as of the date hereof, and Learn CW and Innventure assume no obligation to update any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as may be required under applicable law.

    Media Contact: Laurie Steinberg, Solebury Strategic Communications
    press@innventure.com

    Investor Relations Contact: Sloan Bohlen, Solebury Strategic Communications
    investorrelations@innventure.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Translation: Federal government and Boyle Street Community Services invest in vital community building in downtown Edmonton

    MIL OSI Translation. Canadian French to English –

    Source: Government of Canada – MIL OSI Regional News in French

    Press release

    Edmonton, Alberta, May 3, 2024 — Edmonton’s downtown core will have a renovated facility to deliver a vital range of programs and services thanks to a joint investment of more than $45 million from the federal government and Boyle Street Community Services.

    Announced by Minister Randy Boissonnault and Jordan Reiniger, Executive Director, Boyle Street Community Services, this new building will be better suited to provide health and support services to people experiencing homelessness and poverty in Edmonton’s growing downtown core.

    The new Okimaw Peyesew Kamik (King Thunderbird Centre) will be an accessible, energy-efficient building that will replace the former community centre. It will provide essential health and housing services, while supporting Edmonton’s vulnerable community, all under one roof. Located two blocks north of the former location, the centre will feature a private outdoor space for ceremony and land-based healing, as well as 75,000 square feet of indoor space, including a triage area for those waiting for health supports and services. Improvements to this innovative, solution-focused space include improved accessibility to services on the ground floor and the integration of important aspects of Indigenous culture and ceremony throughout the building. The renovated building, which will be carbon neutral, will serve as the headquarters for Boyle Street Community Services.

    For over 50 years, Boyle Street Community Services has been working to help people experiencing homelessness and poverty. The new facility will allow Boyle Street Community Services to continue its long-standing work in the community, providing vital programs such as basic needs support, health services, addictions assistance, identification and financial services, cultural healing and essential services.

    Quotes

    “Through this significant investment in the new Okimaw Peyesew Kamik (King Thunderbird Centre) in Edmonton, the federal government is helping to improve Edmonton’s downtown core. By ensuring Boyle Street Community Services continues to operate in a centralized location that provides a safe and reliable space for the community, we will make our downtown core a safer and more vibrant place to work and live. This world-class facility, which is being built to better meet the unique needs of a vulnerable population, will provide dignified support to those who need it most in our city.”

    The Honourable Randy Boissonnault, Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Official Languages, on behalf of the Honourable Sean Fraser, Minister of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities

    “Today’s transformative $21 million contribution to Okimaw Peyesew Kamik (King Thunderbird Centre) through the BCVI grant from the Government of Canada is ensuring that the people our organization serves receive the health and community services they need in a welcoming, accessible and beautiful building. It is also enabling us to build a carbon neutral and climate resilient building that will enable our organization to sustainably support our community for decades to come. The success of this project is yet another testament to the care and compassion that exists in Edmonton and Canada. It reminds us of what can be accomplished when we come together and put the dignity of our most vulnerable neighbours at the heart of our efforts.” On behalf of everyone who works at Boyle Street, I want to thank Ministers Boissonnault and Fraser, and their teams, for their dedication and commitment to our organization, and for their role in making okimaw peyesew kamik a reality.”

    Jordan Reiniger, Executive Director, Boyle Street Community Services

    Quick Facts

    The federal government is investing $21,000,000 in this project through the Green and Inclusive Community Buildings (GICB) Program, and Boyle Street Service Society is investing $24,023,383.

    These improvements are expected to result in annual fuel savings of approximately 99% for the facility and a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions of 709 tonnes.

    The Green and Inclusive Community Buildings (GICB) program was created to support Canada’s Strengthened Climate Plan: A Healthy Environment and a Healthy Economy. It supports the first pillar of the Plan by reducing greenhouse gas emissions and increasing energy efficiency, and by helping to build resilience to climate change.

    The program provides $1.5 billion over five years for modernization, repair or improvement work that promotes the environment and accessibility.

    At least 10 percent of the funds are allocated to projects for First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities, which includes Indigenous populations in urban centres.

    The application period for the Green and Inclusive Community Buildings program is now closed.

    On December 18, 2023, the federal government launched the Prairie Green Economy Framework, which highlights the need for a collaborative, regional approach to sustainability, focused on strengthening the coordination of federal programs and initiatives with significant investments. The Framework is the first step in a journey that will bring together many stakeholders. PrairiesCan, the federal department working to diversify Canada’s Prairie economy, has committed $100 million over three years to support projects aligned with priority areas identified by Prairie stakeholders to create a stronger, more sustainable and inclusive economy for the Prairie provinces and Canada.

    Infrastructure Canada supports the Prairie Green Economy Framework to encourage greater collaboration on investment opportunities, leverage additional funding and attract new investment to the Prairies to better meet needs.

    Related links

    Contact persons

    For further information (media only), please contact:

    Mathis DenisPress OfficerOffice of the Minister of Employment, Workforce Development and Official Languages343-573-1846mathis.denis@hrsdc-rhdcc.gc.ca

    Media RelationsInfrastructure Canada613-960-9251Toll Free: 1-877-250-7154Email: media-medias@infc.gc.caFollow us on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram And LinkedInWebsite: Infrastructure Canada

    Elliott TantiDirector, Communications and EngagementBoyle Street Community Services587-338-4025etanti@boylestreet.org

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI

  • MIL-OSI Translation: Minutes of the Council of Ministers of October 1, 2024.

    MIL OSI Translation. Government of the Republic of France statements from French to English –

    BILL

    MODERNIZATION OF THE ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT FUNDS REGIME

    The Minister of Economy, Finance and Industry presented a bill ratifying Ordinance No. 2024-662 of July 3, 2024, modernizing the alternative investment fund regime.

    This order was adopted on the basis of Article 40 of Law No. 2023-973 of October 23, 2023 relating to the green industry.

    It introduces numerous measures to modernise and simplify the alternative investment fund (AIF) regime in order to make our asset management law more attractive and competitive, to take maximum advantage of the entry into force of Regulation (EU) 2023/606 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 March 2023, known as “ELTIF 2.0” on 10 January 2024 and thus increase long-term financing of the European economy, necessary in particular to finance the transition to carbon neutrality.

    In this respect, the order modifies several provisions of the Monetary and Financial Code:

    – it modernises the regime of so-called “professional” FIAs, in particular by simplifying the rules for the composition of this type of FIA and creating a new corporate form without legal personality for specialised professional funds;

    – it adapts the rules applicable to so-called “non-professional” FIAs, in order to ensure their complementarity with ELTIF 2.0 funds;

    – it allows corporate mutual funds (FCPE) to invest in ELTIF 2.0 funds.

    DECREE

    REQUIREMENTS FOR THE NEEDS OF DEFENSE AND NATIONAL SECURITY AND THEIR ARTICULATION WITH THE DIFFERENT LEGAL REGIMES RELATING TO CRISIS PREPARATION AND MANAGEMENT

    The Minister of the Armed Forces and Veterans presented a draft decree relating to requisitions for the needs of defence and national security and their articulation with the various legal regimes relating to the preparation and management of crises.

    This decree is issued for the application of Article 47 of Law No. 2023-703 of August 1, 2023 relating to military programming (LPM) for the years 2024 to 2030 and containing various provisions relating to defense. This article carried out a complete renovation of the requisition system under the Defense Code, which appeared obsolete, complex to implement and based on criteria whose scope was uncertain.

    Article 47 of the LPM now distinguishes:

    – on the one hand, requisitions aimed at dealing with threats to the life of the Nation, decided by presidential decree deliberated in the Council of Ministers to respond to situations whose territorial scope exceeds that which the prefectural authorities can deal with on the basis of the general code of local authorities in the event of a threat to public order (article L. 2212 1, defense code);

    – on the other hand, requisitions aimed at dealing with emergency situations involving the safeguarding of national defence interests, decided by decree of the Prime Minister, in the absence of any other means available in good time, to enable the State to conduct the operations necessary for its defence (article L. 2212-2, defence code).

    This decree is intended to define the procedural arrangements for implementing this new requisition regime and the prior constraints which constitute its corollary, by considerably simplifying the legal framework previously applicable, which did not allow the public authorities to mobilise it effectively to respond to crisis circumstances.

    The dedicated book of the defense code is thus reduced from 182 to 30 articles, while clarifying the procedure for ordering the census of people, goods and services likely to be subject to a requisition measure as well as the conditions under which they can be subject to tests and exercises, thus contributing to the construction of a global policy of resilience of the Nation in the face of the risks and threats it faces.

    To meet this same purpose, this decree also proceeds, in a continuum logic, to the articulation between, on the one hand, the requisition measures and the prior constraints which constitute their corollary and, on the other hand, the different legal regimes relating to the preparation and management of crises linked to national defence, in connection with the prerogatives devolved to the public authorities by the defence code in matters of military defence and civil defence.

    Finally, taking into account the specific issues raised by the potential use of the requisition system, the decree defines a legal framework adapted to the specificities of all overseas communities, in particular to take into account their geographical isolation and their distance from mainland France.

    INDIVIDUAL MEASURES

    The Council of Ministers adopted the following individual measures:

    On the proposal of the Keeper of the Seals, Minister of Justice:

    – Ms Christine MAUGÜÉ, State Councilor, is appointed President of the Administration Section of the Council of State, effective October 8, 2024.

    On the proposal of the Minister of the Interior:

    – Mr. Laurent BUCHAILLAT, State administrator, is appointed prefect of Tarn;

    – the functions of prefect of the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region and prefect of the Côte d’Or exercised by Mr. Franck ROBINE are terminated, as of September 21, 2024;

    – the functions of prefect of the Brittany region, prefect of the West defense and security zone, prefect of Ille-et-Vilaine exercised by Mr. Philippe GUSTIN are terminated;

    – the functions of delegated prefect for defense and security with the prefect of the Hauts-de-France region, prefect of the North defense and security zone, prefect of the North exercised by Mr. Louis-Xavier THIRODE are terminated, as of September 26, 2024;

    – the functions of delegated prefect for equal opportunities with the prefect of the Hauts-de-France region, prefect of the North defense and security zone, prefect of the North exercised by Ms Virginie LASSERRE are terminated;

    – the functions of Prefect of Nièvre exercised by Mr. Michaël GALY are terminated;

    – the functions of Prefect of Aube exercised by Ms. Cécile DINDAR are terminated.

    On the proposal of the Minister of National Education and the Minister of Higher Education and Research:

    – the functions of rector of the Limoges academy exercised by Ms Carole DRUCKER-GODARD are terminated.

    On the proposal of the Minister for Europe and Foreign Affairs:

    – the functions of Director General of Globalization, Culture, Education and International Development exercised by Mr. Aurélien LECHEVALLIER are terminated, effective September 22, 2024.

    On the proposal of the Minister of the Armed Forces and Veterans:

    – various individual measures were adopted concerning general officers of the army, the navy, the air and space force, the general directorate of armaments and the army commissariat service;

    – the functions of Director General of Digital and Information and Communication Systems exercised by Mr. Vincent TEJEDOR are terminated.

    On the proposal of the Minister of National Education and the Minister of Labor and Employment:

    – the functions of High Commissioner for Vocational Education and Training exercised by Mr. Geoffroy de VITRY are terminated.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and/or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL Translation OSI