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Category: Canada

  • MIL-OSI Security: Swan River — Swan River RCMP looking for man involved in shooting

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    On September 18, 2024, at approximately 8:00 am, Swan River RCMP received a report of a female who had been brought to the Swan Valley Health Centre who had wounds from a firearm.

    The investigation has determined that a 48-year-old female from the community was walking outside of a multi-unit residence in Swan River when she was shot by someone in a passing vehicle. The female approached a passerby and got them to drive her to the Swan Valley Health Centre.

    A white SUV was seen in the area and police believed it was involved in the incident. Police located the SUV and determined the female registered owner of the vehicle was not involved. However, evidence that a firearm was used was located inside the vehicle, and the vehicle was seized.

    Officers continue to look for information about the shooting, but do not believe this was a random incident.

    The victim was treated and released from hospital.

    If you have information, please call Swan River RCMP at 204-734-4686, Crime Stoppers anonymously at 1-800-222-8477, or secure tip online at www.manitobacrimestoppers.com.

    MIL Security OSI –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Translation: Canada announces significant funding to boost critical mineral development in northern British Columbia and Yukon

    MIL OSI Translation. Canadian French to English –

    Source: Government of Canada – in French

    Press release

    The Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, the Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, along with the Honourable Josie Osborne, British Columbia Minister of Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation, and the Honourable Ranj Pillai, Yukon Premier, announced conditionally approved investments of up to $60 million in two critical minerals infrastructure projects in British Columbia’s Golden Triangle and Yukon. The funding would come from the Critical Minerals Infrastructure Fund (CMIF).

    September 20, 2024 Vancouver, British Columbia Natural Resources Canada

    Investments in critical minerals infrastructure are needed to ensure Canada seizes the unique opportunity presented by the shift to a low-carbon economy and capitalizes on its rich mineral resources. The country is well positioned to be a global leader and leading producer of a wide range of critical minerals that are essential to fueling the clean economy, and in doing so, create good jobs and economic opportunities across the critical minerals value chain – from upstream exploration and extraction to downstream processing, manufacturing and recycling.

    The Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, the Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, together with the Honourable Josie Osborne, British Columbia Minister of Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation, and the Honourable Ranj Pillai, Premier of Yukon, today announced, subject to a final due diligence review by Natural Resources Canada, funding of up to $60 million for two critical minerals infrastructure projects in British Columbia’s Golden Triangle and Yukon. The funding would come from the Critical Minerals Infrastructure Fund (CMIF).

    Galore Creek Mining Corporation (Galore Creek) plans to build a 43-kilometre access road to facilitate the development of its copper mine in Tahltan territory in northwestern British Columbia. The Galore Creek deposit contains over 12 billion pounds of copper. Once operational, the mine will significantly increase Canada’s annual supply of the metal. Construction of the access road would connect the mine project to existing road infrastructure, providing overland access to the proposed mill and processing facilities, and creating a transmission corridor for the mine to tap into BC Hydro’s low-emission electricity grid. Road improvements are essential to advancing critical mineral development in northwestern British Columbia, in partnership with First Nations. Subject to final due diligence, Natural Resources Canada has conditionally approved a CMIF investment of up to $20 million for this project.

    The Yukon government is seeking to undertake pre-feasibility activities to support a 765-kilometre high-voltage transmission line that would connect the Yukon electricity grid to the North American grid in British Columbia. It includes the development of energy infrastructure in two priority areas for critical mineral development: the Cassiar-Tanana region in Yukon and the Golden Triangle region in British Columbia. The transmission line would support critical mineral production projects such as cobalt, copper, molybdenum, nickel, platinum group metals, tungsten and zinc in Yukon and northern British Columbia. Subject to final due diligence, Natural Resources Canada has conditionally approved an investment of up to $40 million in CMIF funding for this project.

    The Critical Minerals Infrastructure Fund is a key program under Canada’s Critical Minerals Strategy that aims to address infrastructure gaps and ensure the sustainable production of critical minerals and the flow of resources to market through transportation, electrification and clean energy infrastructure projects. Further funding decisions on critical minerals infrastructure development projects under the CMIF are expected in the coming months.

    These projects, which benefit from close collaboration within the regional tables on energy and resources British Columbia and Yukon, along with the recently announced Northwest British Columbia Highway Corridor Improvement Project, are fundamental initiatives to facilitate the development of critical minerals in the Golden Triangle and Yukon. British Columbia’s Golden Triangle has significant mineral potential and contains approximately 75% of Canada’s known copper reserves. Copper is critical to a variety of industrial processes and is a fundamental component of electrical wires, electronics and renewable energy systems such as solar panels and wind turbines.

    Critical minerals are fundamental components of products used in clean energy technologies such as electric vehicles, power transmission lines and batteries. British Columbia and Yukon’s mining sectors provide many of the building blocks for the clean technologies needed to combat climate change and build a clean economy. Across the country, clean energy solutions represent enormous economic opportunities.

    Quotes

    “These two projects, delivered through the Canadian Critical Minerals Strategy’s flagship program, will help build the infrastructure needed to access and transport our rich critical mineral resources in northern British Columbia and the Yukon. Projects like these accelerate mine construction and allow us to seize this unique opportunity. We need these investments to support critical mineral development in the region, improve community accessibility and safety, and create good mining jobs in British Columbia and the Yukon.”

    The Honorable Jonathan Wilkinson

    Minister of Energy and Natural Resources

    “British Columbia is home to the critical minerals Canada and the world need to build a clean economy. We have a unique opportunity to create good jobs not only in northwest British Columbia, but in communities across the province that supply and service our mining sector. That is why we are working with Canada and First Nations to make the infrastructure improvements needed to unlock billions of dollars of investment in new critical mineral mines like Galore Creek, creating new opportunities for people and communities.”

    The Honourable Josie Osborne

    British Columbia Minister of Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation

    “The Grid Connect project is not just an energy project; it is a transformative initiative for all Yukoners. It will provide clean, affordable and reliable energy that will not only power our homes, but also drive economic and social growth. I thank our partners in British Columbia and the federal government for their collaboration on this important project that will benefit our northern communities. Our government is proud to take this step toward a more sustainable energy future.”

    Honourable Ranj Pillai

    Premier of Yukon

    “This project will connect Canada’s two westernmost territories and help integrate Yukon’s electricity grid with North America. It marks an important step in our shared journey to create a more connected and resilient energy landscape for Yukoners, while reducing greenhouse gas emissions. My sincere thanks to all those whose hard work and dedication made this goal a reality. I look forward to seeing how this progress will clean up Yukon’s energy, help protect our incredible natural landscapes, and create opportunities for economic growth.”

    The Honourable John Streicker

    Yukon Minister of Energy, Mines and Resources

    “We would like to thank Minister Wilkinson and the Government of Canada for their contributions to the development of the Galore Creek Mine and, by extension, Canada’s critical minerals industry. Canada’s support for the Galore Creek Mine demonstrates confidence in our project, our owners, our relationship with the Tahltan Nation, and our commitment to responsibly developing a world-class copper-gold mine.”

    Rob Mean

    Managing Director, Galore Creek Mining Corporation

    “The Galore Creek mine has the potential to significantly increase Canadian production of the copper needed to support the energy transition and global development, creating jobs and economic activity, which aligns with Teck’s goal as a Canadian metals company enabling the energy transition. This investment by the Government of Canada will support the development of the infrastructure needed to advance critical mineral projects and strengthen the country’s mining sector.”

    Jonathan Price

    President and CEO, Teck Resources Limited

    “Newmont is an equal partner in the Galore Creek project with Teck Resources. The Galore Creek mine is Canada’s largest non-developed copper project and could play a critical role in the transition to a low-carbon economy. Global demand for copper is exploding, and we are facing a shortage that underscores the importance of the project. The investment in a critical mine road, made through the Government of Canada’s Critical Minerals Infrastructure Fund, will help unlock the project and unleash the significant critical mineral potential of this region of northwest British Columbia.”

    Bernard Wessels

    General Manager, North America, Newmont Corporation

    Quick Facts

    Canada has developed its own critical minerals strategy with the aim of promoting the development of these resources and related value chains to contribute to the transition to a low-carbon economy and support advanced manufacturing and technologies.

    There Canadian Critical Minerals Strategy has five main objectives:

    supporting economic growth, competitiveness and job creation; promoting climate action and strong environmental stewardship; strengthening global security and partnerships with allies; advancing reconciliation with Indigenous peoples; and fostering a diverse and inclusive workforce and communities.

    Canada’s whole-of-government approach to critical minerals development is collaborative, forward-looking, iterative, adaptive and long-term. The initiatives outlined in the Strategy will be implemented and refined in collaboration with provinces, territories, Indigenous peoples, industry and other partners in Canada and internationally.

    The FIMC is a flagship program of the Strategy that supports transportation and clean energy infrastructure projects needed to increase Canada’s supply of critical minerals from responsible sources.

    The FIMC supports a variety of strategic priorities, including: decarbonizing mining industry operations, strengthening supply chains through the deployment of transportation infrastructure, and advancing economic reconciliation by supporting the participation of Indigenous peoples in critical infrastructure and mineral projects.

    The federal government also supports the development of Canada’s abundant critical mineral resources through regional tables on energy and resources of Natural Resources Canada. These regional tables are joint partnerships established with each provincial and territorial government that, in collaboration with Indigenous partners and with input from key stakeholders, seek to identify and accelerate the achievement of shared economic priorities for a low-carbon future in the energy and resource sectors.

    Related links

    Contact persons

    Natural Resources CanadaMedia Relations343-292-6100media@nrcan-rncan.gc.ca

    Cindy CaturaoPress SecretaryOffice of the Minister of Energy and Natural Resources613-795-5638cindy.caturao@nrcan-rncan.gc.ca

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

    MIL Translation OSI

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Security: Moncton, Shediac, Long Creek  — Five people arrested following Alert Ready message

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    Five individuals have been arrested following an Alert Ready that was issued for the Moncton and Shediac areas, in N.B., while police were searching for an armed individual.

    At approximately 1 p.m., on September 20, 2024, the Codiac Regional RCMP was dispatched to a report of an individual brandishing a firearm near Moncton High School, in Moncton. When police arrived, they were able to quickly identify a 15-year-old suspect.

    Upon further investigation, and in the interest of public and student safety, the New Brunswick RCMP issued an Alert Ready message at 2:48 p.m. Police were searching for a person travelling in a grey Dodge Caravan in the Moncton area, after last being seen near Moncton High School. Police provided a photo and of the suspect and vehicle. The public was asked to not approach and to call 911 immediately if they saw the vehicle or an individual associated with the vehicle.

    At approximately 3:45 p.m., five individuals were located and arrested, including the 15-year-old suspect in the Long Creek area, near Codys. The Dodge Caravan that was involved in the incident, was seized and will be towed to a secure location. The New Brunswick RCMP ended the Alert Ready a short time after the arrests.

    The public can expect an increased police presence in the Long Creek and Codys areas as part of the ongoing RCMP investigation.

    Members of the New Brunswick RCMP’s Air Services, Emergency Response Team, Police Dog Services, Caledonia Region and Codiac Regional general duty members all played significant roles arresting these individuals.

    If you have information regarding this incident that could help further the investigation, please contact the Codiac Regional RCMP at 1-506-857-2400. Information can also be provided anonymously through Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), by downloading the secure P3 Mobile App, or by Secure Web Tips at www.crimenb.ca.

    The New Brunswick RCMP would like to thank the public for their support, assistance and cooperation during this incident.

    The investigation is ongoing.

    MIL Security OSI –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI: DIAGNOS Announces Closing of Private Placement

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    BROSSARD, Quebec, Sept. 20, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — DIAGNOS Inc. (“DIAGNOS” or the “Corporation”) (TSX Venture: ADK) (OTCQB: DGNOF), a pioneer in early detection of critical health issues through the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies, announces the closing, today, of a non-brokered private placement of 8,333,333 units (each a “Unit”) issued at a price of $0.30 per Unit, for gross proceeds of $2,499,999.90 (“Private Placement”).

    Each Unit consists of:

    • One (1) common share (“Share”), and
    • One (1) common share warrant (“Warrant”).

    As part of the closing of the Private Placement, 8,333,333 Warrants have been issued to the subscribers. Each Warrant can be exercised to purchase one Share at a price of $0.40 per Share for a period of 18 months ending March 20, 2026.

    The net proceeds from the Private Placement will be used to fund product development and commercialization of AI-based screening services as well as general and administrative operations.

    All securities issued as part of the Private Placement are subject to a statutory hold period ending January 21, 2025.

    The closing of the Private Placement remains subject to receipt of all required approvals, including the approval of the TSX Venture Exchange, as well as execution of formal documentation.

    DIAGNOS would like to express its gratitude to the family office that participated in the Private Placement.

    DIAGNOS is also providing the following clarification: First paragraph of Section 6 of the 2024 management information circular, dated August 21, 2024, should read:

    “The Board of the Corporation has set August 21, 2024 (the “Record Date”) as the record date for the determination of the registered holders of voting shares entitled to receive notice of the Meeting. All holders of common shares (each, a “Common Share”) as of the Record Date are entitled to attend and vote thereat in person or by proxy. As at August 21, 2024, 81,435,607 Common Shares of the Corporation were issued and outstanding. The Common Shares are the only securities outstanding and entitled to be voted at the Meeting. Each Common Share entitles the holder thereof to one vote.”

    All monies quoted in this press release shall be stated and paid in lawful money of Canada.

    About DIAGNOS
    DIAGNOS is a publicly traded Canadian corporation dedicated to early detection of critical health problems based on its FLAIRE Artificial Intelligence (AI) platform. FLAIRE allows for quick modifying and developing of applications such as CARA (Computer Assisted Retina Analysis). CARA’s image enhancement algorithms provide sharper, clearer and easier-to-analyze retinal images. CARA is a cost-effective tool for real-time screening of large volumes of patients.

    Additional information is available at www.diagnos.ca and www.sedarplus.com. 

    Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.

    This press release contains forward-looking information. We cannot guarantee that the forward-looking information mentioned will prove to be accurate, as there may be a significant discrepancy between actual results or future events and those mentioned in this statement. DIAGNOS disclaims any intention or obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking information, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. The forward-looking information contained in this press release is expressly covered by this caution.

    The MIL Network –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI: Discovery 2024 Short Duration LP Closing October 16, 2024 – Maximum $25,000,000

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORONTO, Sept. 20, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Middlefield, on behalf of Discovery 2024 Short Duration LP (“Discovery 2024” or the “Partnership”), is pleased to announce that it has filed a final prospectus relating to the initial public offering of Discovery 2024 Class A and Class F units. The offering is being made in each of the provinces of Canada. Closing is scheduled for October 16, 2024.

    The objectives of the Partnership are to provide investors with capital appreciation and significant tax benefits to enhance after-tax returns to limited partners, including the deductibility of 100% of their original investment. The Partnership intends to achieve these objectives by investing in an actively managed, diversified portfolio comprised primarily of equity securities of Canadian gold mining companies.

    Middlefield is a leading provider of flow-through share funds in Canada and has a strong track record of delivering positive after-tax returns. Since 1983, Middlefield has sponsored 69 public and private flow-through funds and has acted as agent or manager for over $2.5 billion of resource investments.

    The syndicate of agents for the offering is being co-led by RBC Capital Markets and CIBC Capital Markets and includes BMO Nesbitt Burns Inc., National Bank Financial Inc., Scotia Capital Inc., TD Securities Inc., Richardson Wealth Limited, Manulife Wealth Inc., iA Private Wealth Inc., Canaccord Genuity Corp., Raymond James Ltd., Ventum Financial Corp., and Wellington-Altus Private Wealth Inc.

    For further information, please visit our website at www.middlefield.com or contact Nancy Tham in our Sales and Marketing Department at 1.888.890.1868.

    This offering is only made by prospectus. The prospectus contains important detailed information about the securities being offered. Copies of the prospectus may be obtained from your CIRO registered financial advisor using the contact information for such advisor. Investors should read the prospectus before making an investment decision.

    The MIL Network –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI: Ninepoint Partners Announces Estimated September 2024 Cash Distributions for Ninepoint Cash Management Fund – ETF Series

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORONTO, Sept. 20, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ninepoint Partners LP (“Ninepoint Partners”) today announced the estimated September 2024 cash distribution for the ETF Series of Ninepoint Cash Management Fund (the “Fund”). Ninepoint Partners expects to issue a press release on or about September 26, 2024, which will provide the final distribution rate. The record date for the cash distribution is September 27, 2024, payable on October 7, 2024.

    All estimates in this document are based on the accounting data as of September 20, 2024. Due to subscriptions and/or redemptions and/or other factors, the final September 2024 distribution may differ from these estimates and the difference could be material. The information included in this letter is for reference purposes only. Please reconcile all information against your official client statements. This is not intended to be a statement for official tax reporting purposes or any form of tax advice.

    The actual taxable amounts of distributions for 2024, including the tax characteristics of the distributions, will be reported to CDS Clearing and Depository Services Inc. in early 2025. Securityholders can contact their brokerage firm for this information.

    The per-unit estimated September distribution is detailed below:

    Ninepoint ETF Series Ticker Cash Distribution
    per unit
    Notional Distribution
    per unit
    CUSIP
    Ninepoint Cash Management Fund NSAV $0.16280 $0.00000 65443X105

    About Ninepoint Partners

    Based in Toronto, Ninepoint Partners LP is one of Canada’s leading alternative investment management firms overseeing approximately $7 billion in assets under management and institutional contracts. Committed to helping investors explore innovative investment solutions that have the potential to enhance returns and manage portfolio risk, Ninepoint offers a diverse set of alternative strategies including Alternative Income and Real Assets, in addition to North American and Global Equities.

    For more information on Ninepoint Partners LP, please visit www.ninepoint.com or please contact us at 416.362.7172 or 1.888.362.7172 or invest@ninepoint.com.

    Ninepoint Partners LP is the investment manager to the Ninepoint Funds (collectively, the “Funds”). Commissions, trailing commissions, management fees, performance fees (if any), and other expenses all may be associated with investing in the Funds. Please read the prospectus carefully before investing. The information contained herein does not constitute an offer or solicitation by anyone in the United States or in any other jurisdiction in which such an offer or solicitation is not authorized or to any person to whom it is unlawful to make such an offer or solicitation.

    Prospective investors who are not resident in Canada should contact their financial advisor to determine whether securities of the Fund may be lawfully sold in their jurisdiction.

    Please note that distribution factors (breakdown between income, capital gains and return of capital) can only be calculated when a fund has reached its year-end. Distribution information should not be relied upon for income tax reporting purposes as this is only a component of total distributions for the year. For accurate distribution amounts

    for the purpose of filing an income tax return, please refer to the appropriate T3/T5 slips for that particular taxation year. Please refer to the prospectus or offering memorandum of each Fund for details of the Fund’s distribution policy.

    The payment of distributions and distribution breakdown, if applicable, is not guaranteed and may fluctuate. The payment of distributions should not be confused with a Fund’s performance, rate of return, or yield. If distributions paid by the Fund are greater than the performance of the Fund, then an investor’s original investment will shrink. Distributions paid as a result of capital gains realized by a Fund and income and dividends earned by a Fund are taxable in the year they are paid. An investor’s adjusted cost base will be reduced by the amount of any returns of capital. If an investor’s adjusted cost base goes below zero, then capital gains tax will have to be paid on the amount below zero.

    Sales Inquiries:

    Ninepoint Partners LP
    Neil Ross
    416-945-6227
    nross@ninepoint.com 

    The MIL Network –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI: Ninepoint Partners Announces September 2024 Cash Distributions for ETF Series Securities

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORONTO, Sept. 20, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ninepoint Partners LP (“Ninepoint Partners”) today announced the September 2024 cash distributions for its ETF Series securities. The record date for the distributions is September 27, 2024. All distributions are payable on October 7, 2024.

    The per-unit September distributions are detailed below:

    About Ninepoint Partners

    Based in Toronto, Ninepoint Partners LP is one of Canada’s leading alternative investment management firms overseeing approximately $7 billion in assets under management and institutional contracts. Committed to helping investors explore innovative investment solutions that have the potential to enhance returns and manage portfolio risk, Ninepoint offers a diverse set of alternative strategies including Alternative Income and Real Assets, in addition to North American and Global Equities.

    For more information on Ninepoint Partners LP, please visit www.ninepoint.com or please contact us at 416.362.7172 or 1.888.362.7172 or invest@ninepoint.com.

    Ninepoint Partners LP is the investment manager to the Ninepoint Funds (collectively, the “Funds”). Commissions, trailing commissions, management fees, performance fees (if any), and other expenses all may be associated with investing in the Funds. Please read the prospectus carefully before investing. The information contained herein does not constitute an offer or solicitation by anyone in the United States or in any other jurisdiction in which such an offer or solicitation is not authorized or to any person to whom it is unlawful to make such an offer or solicitation. Prospective investors who are not resident in Canada should contact their financial advisor to determine whether securities of the Fund may be lawfully sold in their jurisdiction.

    Please note that distribution factors (breakdown between income, capital gains and return of capital) can only be calculated when a fund has reached its year-end. Distribution information should not be relied upon for income tax reporting purposes as this is only a component of total distributions for the year. For accurate distribution amounts for the purpose of filing an income tax return, please refer to the appropriate T3/T5 slips for that particular taxation year. Please refer to the prospectus or offering memorandum of each Fund for details of the Fund’s distribution policy.

    The payment of distributions and distribution breakdown, if applicable, is not guaranteed and may fluctuate. The payment of distributions should not be confused with a Fund’s performance, rate of return, or yield. If distributions paid by the Fund are greater than the performance of the Fund, then an investor’s original investment will shrink. Distributions paid as a result of capital gains realized by a Fund and income and dividends earned by a Fund are taxable in the year they are paid. An investor’s adjusted cost base will be reduced by the amount of any returns of

    capital. If an investor’s adjusted cost base goes below zero, then capital gains tax will have to be paid on the amount below zero.

    Sales Inquiries:

    Ninepoint Partners LP
    Neil Ross
    416-945-6227 
    nross@ninepoint.com 

    The MIL Network –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Government of Canada and FCM to Make a Sustainable Affordable Housing Announcement for Ontario

    Source: Government of Canada News

    OTTAWA — Terry Sheehan, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Labour and Seniors, on behalf of the Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, and Geoff Stewart, President of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM), will make an announcement for sustainable affordable housing in Northwestern Ontario.

    OTTAWA  — Terry Sheehan, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Labour and Seniors, on behalf of the Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, and Geoff Stewart, President of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM), will make an announcement for sustainable affordable housing in Northwestern Ontario.

    Date: Monday, September 23, 2024

    Time: 1:15 p.m. ET

    Location: This virtual event will be held using the Webex platform. Accredited media are asked to pre-register by emailing media@nrcan-rncan.gc.ca to obtain the announcement link.

    Note: To help ensure optimal sound quality, journalists are encouraged to use a microphone (headphones/headset) or a landline and to avoid using speaker mode if queuing up for questions.

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Promoting Alberta tourism in New York City

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    The mission will encourage travel-trade operators to feature Alberta itineraries, build relationships with industry partners, and secure valuable coverage in top-tier media publications. Meetings with New York-based sport associations will build relationships with key contacts and enable strategic conversations about Alberta’s potential to host upcoming major sporting events.

    “No matter where you’re from or what your interests are, Alberta has something for you—whether you come to explore our majestic natural landscapes, discover our vibrant cities or to watch the world’s best athletes compete in major sporting competitions. I’m looking forward to showing the United States what Alberta has to offer.”

    Joseph Schow, Minister of Tourism and Sport

    The U.S. is Alberta’s largest international market. In 2023, more than 1.2 million visitors from the U.S. came to Alberta. Through meetings with media partners and sport associations, the mission aims to encourage more American travellers to choose Alberta, and to spend more, stay longer and explore more parts of the province when they visit.

    Sport tourism is a fast-growing market, with many visitors coming to Alberta to watch or participate in major sporting events. Strengthening sport tourism in the province will help advance Alberta’s goal of reaching $25 billion in annual visitor expenditures by 2035.

    Minister Schow will be joined by one staff member. Mission expenses will be posted on the travel and expense disclosure page. Travel Alberta officials will also join Minister Schow, covering their own expenses.

    Alberta’s government is committed to working with its national and international partners to advance shared interests that can lead to new opportunities for people and businesses in Alberta and around the world.

    Itinerary for Minister Schow*

    Sept. 22

    • Travel to New York City

    Sept. 23

    • Meetings with sport tourism partners

    Sept. 24

    • Meetings with key media publications

    Sept. 25

    • Meetings with travel trade partners

    Sept. 26

    • Travel to Alberta

    *Subject to change.

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI USA: Miller Participates in Ways and Means Trade Hearing on Protecting American Innovation Through Strong Digital Trade Rules

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Carol Miller (R-WV)

    Washington D.C. – Today, Congresswoman Carol Miller (R-WV) spoke at a Ways and Means digital trade hearing focused on protecting American innovation by establishing and enforcing strong digital trade rules.

    Congresswoman Miller began her remarks by explaining how specific Korean digital policies, if passed, will end up harming U.S. businesses and threaten our national security in the Indo-Pacific. 

    “Korea may soon pass online platform laws and regulations that would make it difficult for U.S. companies to operate in their country. I am very concerned that such an important, strategic ally like the Republic of Korea is pursuing economic policies that target and discriminate against U.S. technology companies while welcoming state-owned Chinese companies with open arms. Chinese firms are the fastest growing tech companies in Korea, with many leveraging strategic partnerships with Korean monopolies who have a strong influence in Korea’s legislature. I am very concerned about the national security implications of Korea’s ill-advised economic discrimination and would urge them not to go down this path, and instead, continue our important technology partnership and the goals established in our free trade agreement. Our trade agreement with Korea is the second largest Free Trade Agreement (FTA) by trade flows, second only to the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA). ​​It is extremely concerning to me that our two biggest FTAs are both facing obstacles in the world of digital trade,” said Congresswoman Miller. 
     
    Congresswoman Miller asked the President of Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF), Robert D. Atkinson, how China will benefit from the Korean digital policies and how this will affect the United States regarding the economy and national security. 
     
    “Can you explain how China wins if Korea pursues economic discrimination policies against the United States and why are Chinese firms seeking to drastically increase their Korean userbase? Do you believe that Korea is assisting them in their growth?” asked Congresswoman Miller. 

    “Last time I was there [in Korea], I tried to use google maps to figure out where to go and I couldn’t. I could use a Korean app company and they say it’s national security. It has nothing to do with national security. It’s the fact that they wanted to favor their own domestic map companies, their own domestic players. That’s what they’re doing now by copying the European Digital Markets Act (DMA) and what they want to do is they want to be able to pass a law that would require American companies to turn over data to be interoperable to do other kinds of things that would benefit Korean companies. But they can’t write the law so blatantly that it admits that, so it would benefit Korean companies, but it would also benefit Chinese companies. They’re willing to make that trade-off because they think it’s going to benefit their companies more, and it’ll hurt our companies. This will benefit Chinese companies and make them stronger. I would put Korea again in the same categories as I’d put Canada. They need us a lot more than we need them. They’re dependent upon us not just for military, but they’re so focused right now on building technology partnerships. They want technology partnerships with us and we’re going ahead and saying “yes,” but I think there must be a quid pro quo with that. Yeah, we want technology partnerships with you so we can both be stronger against the Chinese, but we’re not going to do partnerships with you if you do these kinds of discriminatory things,” responded Dr. Atkinson. 

    “What are the national security concerns related to U.S. foreign policy in the Indo-Pacific should the U.S. be less economically tied to our strategic ally as they grow closer to China?” asked Congresswoman Miller. 

    “So, the fundamental question I think in, in the Indo-Pacific is, are these countries going to gradually move over into the China orbit or are they going to stay in the Western democratic market orbit? The Koreans don’t want to pick. They want to have really close relationship with the Chinese because they know Chinese are predatory and retaliatory. They will hurt the Korean companies. They’ve done that before, but we need to let them know that they can’t have it both ways. They have to pick. We’re their defender. They need to be on the side of the allies and democracy, so I think it’s a critical, critical issue that we make them choose and choose us,” responded Dr. Atkinson.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Translation: Government of Canada and Federation of Canadian Municipalities to make announcement for sustainable affordable housing in Ontario

    MIL OSI Translation. Canadian French to English –

    Source: Government of Canada – in French 1

    Media Advisory

    OTTAWA — Terry Sheehan, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Labour and Seniors, on behalf of the Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, and Geoff Stewart, President of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM), will make an announcement regarding sustainable affordable housing in Northwestern Ontario.

    OTTAWA— Terry Sheehan, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Labour and Seniors, on behalf of the Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, and Geoff Stewart, President of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM), will make an announcement for sustainable affordable housing in Northwestern Ontario.

    Date: Monday, September 23, 2024

    Time: 1:15 p.m. (ET)

    Location: This virtual event will be held via the Webex platform. Accredited journalists wishing to attend are requested to register in advance by email at media@nrcan-rncan.gc.ca to get the link to the ad.

    Note: To ensure optimal sound quality, we encourage journalists to use a microphone (headset) or landline and to avoid using speakerphone mode when on hold to ask a question.

    Contact persons

    Media Relations

    Natural Resources Canada

    Ottawa

    343-292-6100

    media@nrcan-rncan.gc.ca

    Cindy Caturao

    Press Officer

    Office of the Minister of Energy and Natural Resources

    Cindy.Caturao@nrcan-rncan.gc.ca

    Follow us on LinkedIn

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

    MIL Translation OSI

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Security: Moosomin — Update #2: Moosomin RCMP on scene of serious motor vehicle collision

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    On September 18, 2024 at approximately 9:30 p.m., Moosomin RCMP received a report of a two-vehicle collision on Highway #1, approximately 2 kilometers east of Wapella, SK.

    Officers responded along with local fire and EMS. Investigation determined a semi and truck collided. The passenger in the truck was declared deceased by EMS at the scene. She has been identified as a 22-year-old female from Grand Prairie, AB. Her family has been notified.

    The driver of the truck was transported to hospital by EMS with injuries described as non-life threatening.

    The driver of the semi reported no physical injuries to police.

    As a result of investigation, 21-year-old Zachory Taylor from Codette, SK is charged with:

    • one count, operation while impaired of motor vehicle causing death, Section 320.14(3), Criminal Code;
    • one count, operation while prohibited, Section 320.18, Criminal Code; and
    • one count, dangerous operation of motor vehicle, Section 320.13(1), Criminal Code.

    Zachory Taylor was also arrested on outstanding warrants from Nipawin RCMP and Weyburn Police Service.

    Zachory Taylor is scheduled to appear in Yorkton Provincial Court on September 23, 2024 (Information #90527573).

    Moosomin RCMP continue to investigate with the assistance of a Saskatchewan RCMP collision reconstructionist

    MIL Security OSI –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI USA: Senators Hassan, Ernst, Capito, and Blumenthal Push for Action to Address Iranian Plots to Commit Crimes in the United States

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for New Hampshire Maggie Hassan
    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senators Maggie Hassan (D-NH), Joni Ernst (R-IA), Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV), and Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) wrote to the Department of Justice calling for information – including the need for increased criminal penalties – to address recent reports that Iran is paying criminal organizations to commit violent crimes in the United States.  
    “Recent reporting indicates Iran is paying criminal organizations to carry out violent plots—including assassinations—against their critics within the United States,” wrote the Senators. “We write to request information regarding how the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) is prosecuting criminals who commit or attempt to commit acts of violence in the United States on behalf of foreign adversaries, and what statutory changes to the criminal code would help DOJ to robustly prosecute these crimes.”
    “An…example includes a plot, allegedly ordered by individuals in Iran, to use members of an Eastern European criminal organization who refer to themselves as ‘Thieves-In-Law’ in an attempt to murder a prominent critic of Iran—who is a United States citizen—within the United States,” continued the Senators. “The attempted assassination followed a prior plot by Iranian intelligence officials to abduct the same critic from within the United States for rendition to Iran.”
    The Senators are asking the Department of Justice to respond to the following questions:
    Please confirm reported news about foreign plots targeting critics in the United States. What has DOJ identified regarding efforts foreign governments have undertaken to enlist criminal actors to commit violent crimes against persons in the United States?
    Has DOJ observed an increased amount of these activities in recent months or years?
    What steps is DOJ taking to thwart this type of foreign government activity?
    What statutory changes to the criminal code—including increased criminal penalties for persons convicted of participating in these types of activities—would support efforts to deter and prosecute this criminal behavior?
    Click to see the full letter or see text below:
    Dear Attorney General Garland,
    Recent reporting indicates Iran is paying criminal organizations to carry out violent plots—including assassinations—against their critics within the United States. We write to request information regarding how the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) is prosecuting criminals who commit or attempt to commit acts of violence in the United States on behalf of foreign adversaries, and what statutory changes to the criminal code would help DOJ to robustly prosecute these crimes.
    According to recent reporting, “Iran has cultivated and exploited connections to criminal networks that are behind a recent wave of violent plots secretly orchestrated by elite units in the [Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps] and Iran’s Ministry of Intelligence.”  Iran’s violent plots include attempted assassinations and abductions around the world.
    A December 2023 Justice Department indictment of Iranian resident Naji Sharifi Zindashti exemplifies the problem. Mr. Zindashti stands accused of participating in a plot with a Canadian member of the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club in an attempt to murder two Maryland residents who fled to the United States after one of them defected from Iran.  The Treasury Department has identified Zindashti as the leader of a network that targeted Iranian dissidents for assassination at the direction of the Iranian regime.  
    An additional example includes a plot, allegedly ordered by individuals in Iran, to use members of an Eastern European criminal organization who refer to themselves as “Thieves-In-Law” in an attempt to murder a prominent critic of Iran—who is a United States citizen—within the United States.  The attempted assassination followed a prior plot by Iranian intelligence officials to abduct the same critic from within the United States for rendition to Iran. 
    These plots are even more troubling in light of last week’s indictment of Asif Merchant, a Pakistani national with ties to Iran, who is accused of attempting to pay individuals to assassinate a politician or government official in the United States.
    We request that you provide us with a written response as soon as possible, but no later than October 15, 2024, that provides an overview of recent efforts by foreign governments to use criminal actors, including members of criminal organizations, to commit violent crimes against individuals within the United States. We also request your response include answers to the following questions:
    Please confirm reported news about foreign plots targeting critics in the United States. What has DOJ identified regarding efforts foreign governments have undertaken to enlist criminal actors to commit violent crimes against persons in the United States?
    Has DOJ observed an increased amount of these activities in recent months or years?
    What steps is DOJ taking to thwart this type of foreign government activity?
    What statutory changes to the criminal code—including increased criminal penalties for persons convicted of participating in these types of activities—would support efforts to deter and prosecute this criminal behavior?
    If any relevant information is classified, we request you produce both an unclassified response that is suitable for public release, as well as a classified version for review by appropriate Congressional personnel.
    Thank you for responding to our concerns and for your continued work to protect our national security.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI USA: Unregistered Municipal Advisory Activity in Public-Private Partnerships

    Source: Securities and Exchange Commission

    Good afternoon everyone. I want to thank The Bond Buyer for organizing this Infrastructure Conference and for inviting me today to talk about some important regulatory safeguards that were put in place a decade ago to help state and local governments make effective infrastructure investments.

    But before I begin, I must remind you that my remarks are in my official capacity as Director of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Office of Municipal Securities, but do not necessarily reflect the views of the Commission, the Commissioners, or other members of the staff.

    These types of events give me a unique opportunity to speak directly to the municipal securities market about an issue that has framed my tenure with the Commission, first as a staff attorney serving as a principal drafter of the municipal advisor rules and now as the Director of the Office charged with overseeing municipal advisor regulation, namely unregistered entities engaging in municipal advisory activity.[1]

    Filling a Gap in the Regulatory Landscape

    To begin, I thought I would spend a few moments laying out the municipal advisor regulatory framework.

    Until the passage of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (“Dodd-Frank Act” or “Dodd-Frank”), advisors[2] to municipal entities[3] and obligated persons[4] were largely unregulated and were generally not required to register with the Commission or any other federal, state, or self-regulatory entity with respect to their municipal advisory activity.[5]

    Leaving the activities of these advisors generally unchecked, however, led to several cases of market abuses and economic damage to municipal entities and obligated persons.[6] For instance:

    • Congress found that a number of municipalities suffered losses from complex derivatives products that were marketed by unregulated financial intermediaries;[7]
    • The Commission brought action against a financial institution alleging payments by the financial institution to local firms whose principals or employees were friends of public officials in connection with a bond underwriting and interest rate swap agreement;[8] and
    • The Commission settled several actions against major financial institutions for their role in a series of complex, wide-ranging bid rigging schemes involving derivatives utilized by municipalities and underlying obligors as reinvestment products.[9]

    Dodd-Frank was enacted to generally strengthen oversight of the municipal securities market and to broaden current municipal securities market protections to cover, among other things, previously unregulated market activity.[10] Section 975 amended Section 15B of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”) creating a new class of regulated person required to register with the Commission: municipal advisors.[11] 

    Who Are Municipal Advisors?

    So, who are municipal advisors? Broadly speaking, municipal advisors assist municipal entities and obligated persons on the terms of bond offerings, investment of bond proceeds, and the structuring and pricing of related products.

    A “municipal advisor” is any person (who is not a municipal entity or an employee of a municipal entity) that:

    provides advice to or on behalf of a municipal entity or obligated person with respect to municipal financial products or the issuance of municipal securities, including advice with respect to the structure, timing, terms, and other similar matters concerning such financial products or issues; or undertakes a solicitation of a municipal entity or obligated person.[12]

    Key here is advice. As you may suspect, “advice” is not subject to a bright-line definition.[13] Instead, the determination of whether a person provides advice to, or on behalf of, a municipal entity or an obligated person regarding municipal advisory activity will depend on all the relevant facts and circumstances.[14] For purposes of the municipal advisor definition, advice includes, without limitation, recommendations that are particularized to the specific needs, objectives, or circumstances of a municipal entity or obligated person with respect to municipal financial products or the issuance of municipal securities, based on all the facts and circumstances.[15] Advice excludes, among other things, the provision of general information that does not involve a recommendation regarding municipal financial products or the issuance of municipal securities.[16]

    The focus of the advice standard is whether or not, under all of the relevant facts and circumstances, the information presented to a municipal entity or obligated person is sufficiently limited so that it does not involve a recommendation that constitutes advice.[17]

    The Exchange Act provides that municipal advisors and any person associated with such municipal advisor has a fiduciary duty to their municipal entity clients, prohibiting municipal advisors from engaging in any act, practice, or course of business that is not consistent with their fiduciary duty.[18] Although the Exchange Act does not provide that municipal advisors are deemed to have a fiduciary duty insofar as their advice is to non-municipal entity obligated person clients, some state fiduciary or agency laws may, depending on the facts and circumstances, apply to municipal advisor engagements with such obligated persons.[19] Municipal advisors do have other obligations to obligated person clients, such as a duty of fair dealing and a duty of care under current Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (“MSRB”) rules.[20]

    Now that I have laid out the regulatory framework, I want to summarize the key takeaways:

    First, the Commission applies the term “municipal advisory activities”[21] to a range of activities, including, but not limited to developing financing plans, assisting in evaluating different financing options and structures, and evaluating and negotiating terms.[22]

    Second, advice is not subject to a bright-line definition. Advice includes a recommendation regarding municipal financial products or the issuance of municipal securities. The determination of whether a recommendation has been made is an objective inquiry and a key factor that the Commission will consider is whether the recommendation reasonably would be viewed as a suggestion to take action or refrain from taking action.[23]

    Third, any person engaging in municipal advisory activity will be considered a municipal advisor and have a fiduciary duty to their municipal entity client, unless an exclusion or exemption applies.

    Finally, under federal securities law, a person must register with the Commission and the MSRB prior to engaging in municipal advisory activities. Any person that engages in municipal advisory activity prior to registering with the Commission and the MSRB as a municipal advisor violates Section 15B(a)(1)(B) of the Exchange Act.[24]

    Observations on Public-Private Partnerships

    The roughly $4 trillion[25] municipal securities market provides critical support to our nation’s infrastructure. The funds raised by our states and local governments in the municipal securities market have helped remove lead from water pipes; built roads and bridges; modernized hospitals; built clean-energy infrastructure, and so much more to ensure that we have the infrastructure needed to access critical services. But for decades now, observers have noted that tight fiscal conditions and rising costs associated with maintaining and building infrastructure have prevented our states and local governments from investing in infrastructure at the levels needed.[26]

    Recently enacted legislation has made funding and incentives available for a broad range of infrastructure development[27] and may also serve as a potential catalyst for the private sector to help in closing infrastructure gaps, including through public-private partnerships (“P3”).[28]

    As everyone in the room is aware, leveraging private capital to finance public infrastructure is not a new tool. Much of our nation’s early infrastructure was built through partnerships between the public and private sectors.[29] More recently, P3s have been used as a delivery option for complex highway projects throughout the nation[30] and have been presented as a tool to finance projects in other sectors, such as energy infrastructure, affordable housing, school facilities, and telecom.[31]

    Despite their widespread use, there is no universally accepted definition of a P3.[32] P3s are broadly described as any contractual agreement between a public entity and a private entity for the purpose of financing, constructing, operating, managing, and/or maintaining a public asset and related services.[33]

    Let’s break that down a bit: P3s are long-term contractual arrangements between a public entity and private entity, where the private entity makes a financing commitment expecting to be repaid with future tax revenue or user fees or similar arrangement. The private entity signing and managing the P3 contract is typically a special purpose vehicle (SPV) created for the purpose of the P3 project and having equity investors.[34]

    Pretty straightforward: instead of using public resources that may be limited by budget or debt restrictions, private financing steps in as an alternative to building much needed infrastructure, potentially using the same taxes and fees that the municipal entity or obligated person would have used to finance the project if it had decided to finance on its own.

    Well, there is more to the story. Definitionally, P3s exist on a spectrum as an alternative form of procurement[35] but also on a spectrum as an alternative form of financing. Financing packages come in all types of configurations: equity, debt, or a combination sourced from both public and private sources, including private activity bonds (“PABs”), federal credit assistance, state, or local funding, which may include the issuance of municipal securities.[36]

    Compared to more traditional financings of infrastructure – that is, using federal, state, or local funding, which more likely than not includes the issuance of municipal securities – P3s and other non-traditional methodologies that have been developed to deliver and finance infrastructure needs are a bit more complex.

    This complexity has brought with it a range of concerns regarding the use of P3s. Public officials and state and local inspector generals and auditors have studied individual transactions and have issued findings identifying key areas of concern. These concerns include transferring too little or too much risk between the public and private sectors; not using the most efficient and lowest cost financing available to the municipal entity or obligated person; and having very costly long-term impacts to fix short-term budgetary issues.

    Public entities have also been exposed to all sorts of contingent liabilities, including compensation clauses, non-compete clauses, and availability payment escalation clauses, leading to potential increased financial and political burdens on the public entity. Uncontrollable external events, oftentimes impacting anticipated revenues, have seen public entities having to make the choice to either terminate, suspend, or take full control over a project, even though the risk of such events was supposed to be borne by other parties.[38]

    Pathways to Public-Private Partnerships

    In light of these potential hurdles, how does a municipal entity or obligated person go about deciding to finance an infrastructure project using a non-traditional form of procurement?

    One way would be for municipal entities and obligated persons to rely on individuals and firms – advisors, consultants, banks, engineers, accounting firms, developers, real estate managers, investment specialists, diversified financial services groups – collectively, what I will be referring to as “P3 Consultants” that have positioned themselves as financial, legal, and technical experts on P3s. Individual or groups of P3 Consultants are purportedly capable of providing tailored advice to municipal entities and obligated persons on the entire P3 lifecycle. However, various reports[39] have identified that P3 Consultants have engaged in concerning behavior, including:

    • Failure by P3 Consultants to disclose conflicts of interest between the P3 Consultant and subcontractors hired to provide a VfM analysis, leading to the skewing of project costs in favor of a P3 procurement.
    • P3 Consultants with no experience in municipal financing, failing to include a public sector comparator as part of the VfM analysis and resultingly being unable to demonstrate that the procurement would be maximizing VfM.
    • P3 Consultants advising municipal entities or obligated persons that P3s that only used private debt and equity funding sources would be considered an “off-balance sheet” financing, despite the fact that projects procured with a mix of public and private funding sources would, under accounting standards be required to be includable on the municipal entities balance sheet.[40]

    Soliciting a P3 Consultant

    In staff’s review of P3s in the municipal securities market, one of the first questions that we asked ourselves is how does the process get started – how does a municipal entity or obligated person connect with a P3 Consultant and does that raise any regulatory issues?

    Municipal entities and obligated persons often solicit a P3 Consultant through a competitive request for proposal/qualification (“RFP/Q”) process, where the municipal entity or obligated person has defined the infrastructure project scope; completed a preliminary VfM, or other process, which compares[41] the costs and benefits of a P3 or other non-traditional procurement method against a traditional procurement method; defined requirements related to construction, operation, and management of the project; and assessed potential financing arrangements. But P3 Consultants may also approach the municipal entity (or obligated person) through an Unsolicited Proposal (“USP”) process.[42]

    So, how does the RFP/Q process tie back to our municipal advisor regulatory framework?

    Well, responses to requests for RFP/Qs alone do not constitute municipal advisory activity.[43] Persons providing a response in writing or orally to a RFP/Q from a municipal entity or obligated person for services in connection with a municipal financial product or the issuance of municipal securities is exempt from the definition of municipal advisor provided that such person does not receive separate direct or indirect compensation for advice provided as part of such response.[44] However, Unsolicited Proposals that broadly seek input on any infrastructure project may not be a process that is consistent with the RFP exemption to the municipal advisor definition.[45]

    We have previously spoken about the parameters and level of formality of the RFP/Q process that would be needed to qualify for the RFP exemption.[46] Staff is of the view that the USP process would need to meet the same standards to qualify any responses for the exemption. Municipal entities, obligated persons, or registered municipal advisors acting on their behalf, should apply a similar degree of formality by identifying a particular objective for the USP process. Otherwise, any person responding to a USP would need to consider if the substance of their proposal requires registration as a municipal advisor.

    We have seen instances where P3 Consultants are originating an infrastructure project by identifying public asset gaps, proposing project design recommendations, providing project affordability analyses, and/or discussing the viability of a public infrastructure project in general terms. Without including material specifically tailored to the needs, objectives, or circumstances of the municipal entity or obligated person, this may not rise to the level of municipal advisory activity. However, some Unsolicited Proposals have included subjective qualitative and quantitative criteria specially tailored to the municipal entity or obligated person that includes descriptions of proposed business arrangements (i.e., ground lease, management agreements); market studies that support revenue assumptions and financial, economic and social benefits; advice with respect to sizing and structuring of the financing package, which may include consideration or use of municipal securities or municipal financial products; and models allocating risk transfer between the public and private entity. P3 Consultants should be aware that, depending on the facts and circumstances, such submissions could constitute municipal advisory activity.

    Regardless of whether a P3 Consultant has been retained through an RFP/Q process or through a USP process, our overarching observation has been that municipal entities and obligated persons seem to rely heavily on the content of the proposals – and the implied expertise – of the P3 Consultant.

    The Role of the P3 Consultant

    What services do P3 Consultants provide? Well, services run the whole gamut.

    We have observed instances where the P3 Consultant analyzes and makes recommendations on the most cost effective and appropriate financing package for the delivery of the project, including:

    • Considering various financing alternatives to raise the necessary capital, which may include, without limitation: federal, state, or local funding, including the use of municipal financial products or the issuance of municipal securities; equity and lender commitments; and/or special facility financing; and
    • Assisting with the sizing and structuring of the financing package, which may include consideration or use of municipal securities or municipal financial products and participating in the preparation of disclosure documents.

    P3 Consultants should be aware that considering various financing alternatives and assisting with the sizing and structuring could constitute municipal advisory activity.

    We have seen P3 Consultants be asked to independently, or in collaboration with the staff of the municipal entity or obligated person and other advisors, draft RFP/Qs for the solicitation of financial and/or technical private sector project delivery partners (“Private Sector Partners”). Assisting a municipal entity or obligated person with drafting – or simply drafting – an RFP/Q is municipal advisory activity requiring registration with the Commission, absent an available exclusion or exemption, because the P3 Consultant (or any other entity) could be providing advice with respect to the parameters of such RFP/Q which includes the issuance of municipal securities or the use of municipal financial products.[47]

    Takeaways

    The SEC’s mission is to protect investors, maintain fair, orderly, and efficient markets, and facilitate capital formation. The Office of Municipal Securities remains dedicated to providing information to the municipal securities market to help persons and entities active in the market comply with the important safeguards that were put in place after the last financial crisis by Congress. The Exchange Act makes it unlawful for any municipal advisor to provide advice to or on behalf of, or to undertake a solicitation of, a municipal entity or obligated person without registering with the Commission.[48]

    As you continue your partnerships to help meet the nation’s infrastructure needs, I would like you to remember that addressing the risks that unregistered municipal advisory activity pose to municipal entities and obligated persons is a challenge that requires a whole municipal securities market approach.

    P3 Consultants and Private Sector Partners who advise municipal entities or obligated persons on the issuance of municipal securities, the use of municipal financial products, and/or the use of debt financing alternatives that are tailored to the specific needs, objectives, or circumstances of the municipal entity during any stage of the P3 lifecycle should remember that they may be engaging in municipal advisory activity requiring registration as a municipal advisor with the Commission and the MSRB. The relevant timeline for advice to obligated persons is slightly different but still includes advice prior to the issuance of municipal securities until they are no longer outstanding.[49]

    For other market participants, engaging persons acting as unregistered municipal advisors may have far-reaching consequences for themselves and others,[50] including eroding public trust, significant financial losses and inefficiencies, and undermining the legitimacy of the P3 process.

    More information about the Commission’s regulation of municipal advisors is available at the Office of Municipal Securities website.[51] The MSRB also provides educational material on various topics related to municipal advisors at its Education Center website that may be helpful to municipal entities, obligated persons, P3 Consultants, and Private Sector Partners and any other market participant seeking additional information.[52]

    Thank you again to The Bond Buyer for the invitation to address you today. I look forward to working with all of you toward our shared goal of regulatory compliance in furtherance of protecting the integrity of the municipal securities market.


    [3]           See Exchange Act Section 15B(e)(8) [15 U.S.C. 78o-4(e)(8)] defining “municipal entity.”

    [4]           See Exchange Act Section 15B(e)(10) [15 U.S.C. 78o-4(e)(10)] defining “obligated person.”

    [5]           See Municipal Advisor Adopting Release 78 FR at 67472.

    [6]           Id. at 67475.

    [7]           Id. at 67475 n.102 (citing S. Rep. No. 111-176, at 38 (2010)).

    [8]           Id. at 67475 n. 104 and accompanying text.

    [9]           Id. at 67475 nn. 105-106 and accompanying text.  

    [10]         Id. at 67626.

    [11]         See Section 975(a)(1)(B) of the Dodd-Frank Act [15 U.S.C. 78o-4(a)(1)(B)].

    [12]         See Exchange Act Section 15B(e)(4)(A) [15 U.S.C. 78o-4(e)(4)(A)]. The definition of municipal advisor includes financial advisors, guaranteed investment contract brokers, third-party marketers, placement agents, solicitors, finders, and swap advisors that provide municipal advisory services, unless they are statutorily excluded. See 15 U.S.C. 78o-4(e)(4)(B). The statutory definition of municipal advisor excludes a broker, dealer, or municipal securities dealer serving as an underwriter (as defined in section 77b(a)(11) of this title), any investment adviser registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C. 80b-1 et seq.], or persons associated with such investment advisers who are providing investment advice, any commodity trading advisor registered under the Commodity Exchange Act or persons associated with a commodity trading advisor who are providing advice related to swaps, attorneys offering legal advice or providing services that are of a traditional legal nature, or engineers providing engineering advice. See 15 U.S.C. 78o-4(e)(4)(C). The Commission exempts the following persons from the definition of municipal advisor to the extent they are engaging in the specified activities: accountants; public officials and employees; banks; responses to requests for proposals or qualifications; swap dealers; participation by an independent registered municipal advisor; persons that provide advice on certain investment strategies; certain solicitations. See Exchange Act Rule 15Ba1-1(d)(3)(i) through (viii) [17 CFR 240.15Ba1-1(d)(3)(i) through (viii)].

    [13]         Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at 67479.

    [14]         Id.

    [15]         Id. at 67480. See also Exchange Act Rule 15Ba1-1(d)(1)(ii) [17 CFR 240.15Ba1-1(d)(1)(ii)] (advice excludes, among other things, the provision of general information that does not involve a recommendation regarding municipal financial products or the issuance of municipal securities (including with respect to the structure, timing, terms and other similar matters concerning such financial products or issues)).

    [16]         See Exchange Act Rule 15Ba1-1(d)(1)(ii) [17 CFR 240.15Ba1-1(d)(1)(ii)]. See also Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at 67479-67480 (Commission providing clarifying guidance regarding “advice” only with respect to municipal advisors and solely for purposes of the municipal advisor definition).

    [17]         See Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at 67480. See generally Answer to Question 1.1 The General Information Exclusion from Advice versus Recommendation from the Registration of Municipal Advisors Frequently Asked Questions (“MA FAQ”), available at https://www.sec.gov/info/municipal/mun-advisors-faqs.

    [18]         See 15 U.S.C. 78o–4(c)(1).

    [19]         See, e.g., Arthurs Lestrange & Co., Inc., Exchange Act Release No. 42148, 1999 WL 1038053 at * 4 (Nov. 17, 1999) (financial advisor also a fiduciary under Pennsylvania state law).

    [20]         See MSRB Rules G-17 (fair dealing) and G-42(a)(i) (duty of care).

    [21]         See Exchange Act Rule 15Ba1-1(e) [17 CFR 240.15Ba1-1(e)].

    [22]         See Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at 67472.

    [23]         Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at 67480 and accompanying note 165 (citing FINRA Notice to Members 01-23 (Mar. 19, 2001), and Notice of Filing of Proposed Rule Change to Adopt FINRA Rules 2090 (Know Your Customer) and 2111 (Suitability) in the Consolidated FINRA Rulebook, Exchange Act Release No. 62718A (Aug. 20, 2010), 75 FR 52562 (Aug. 26, 2010); FINRA Regulatory Notice 11-02 (Know Your Customer and Suitability), Jan. 11, 2011, available at https://www.finra.org/sites/default/files/NoticeDocument/p122778.pdf).

    [24]         See 15 U.S.C. 78o-4(a)(1)(B).

    [26]         While the federal government contributes with funding, states and local governments carry most of the burden for maintaining and building infrastructure. See generally U.S. Dep’t of the Treasury, Infrastructure Investment in the United States (Nov. 15, 2023), available at https://home.treasury.gov/news/featured-stories/infrastructure-investment-in-the-united-states; American Society of Civil Engineers, Failure to Act, Economic Impacts of Status Quo Investment Across Infrastructure Investment Across Infrastructure Systems (2021), available at https://infrastructurereportcard.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/FTA_Econ_Impacts_Status_Quo.pdf and Bridging the Gap, Economic Impacts of National Infrastructure Investment, 2024-2043 (2024), available at https://bridgingthegap.infrastructurereportcard.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/2024-Bridging-the-Gap-Economic-Study.pdf.

    [27]         The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (“IIJA”) and the Inflation Reduction Act (“IRA”) make funding available for an array of projects. See Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act, Pub. L. 117-58 (2021) and the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, Pub. L. 117-169 (2022).

    [28]         In terms of private sector involvement in infrastructure development, the IIJA, for instance, provides planning grants for jurisdictions seeking to utilize P3 project procurement, requires projects with an estimated total cost of $750 million or more seeking either Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (“TIFIA”) or Railroad Rehabilitation and Improvement Financing (“RRIF”) funding to conduct a value-for-money (“VfM”) analysis, and increased the federal cap on tax-exempt private activity bonds (“PABs”) for highway or surface freight transfer facilities. See e.g., IIJA §§ 71001; 70701; 80403 [23 U.S.C. 611; 23 U.S.C. 601; 26 U.S.C. 142(m)(2)(A)].

    [29]         See John Forrer, James Edwin Kee, Kathryn E. Newcomer and Eric Boyer, Public Administration Review, Public-Private Partnerships and the Public Accountability Question (May/June 2010), 475-484, available at https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/40606405.pdf.

    [31]         See, e.g., N.J. Senate Bill No. 3565 (introduced Feb. 9, 2023) (proposed establishment of the Energy Infrastructure Public-Private Partnership Program); Colo. Senate Bill No. 23-035 (June 2, 2023) (CO housing authority has power to contract with private entities to facilitate P3s for affordable housing projects); Md. Prince George’s County Public Schools, First-of-Its-Kind Public-Private Partnership Delivers New Schools for 8K+ Students (Sept. 18, 2023), available at https://www.pgcps.org/offices/communications-and-community-engagement/newsroom/news/newsroom-archives/2023-2024/news-release-first-of-its-kind-public-private-partnership-delivers-new-schools-for-8k-students; Brenton Foundation and Coalition for Local Internet Choice, The Emerging World of Broadband Public-Private Partnerships: A Business Strategy and Legal Guide (May 2017), available at https://www.benton.org/sites/default/files/partnerships_0.pdf; National Science and Technology Council, National Artificial Intelligence Research and Development Strategic Plan May 2023, available at https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/National-Artificial-Intelligence-Research-and-Development-Strategic-Plan-2023-Update.pdf.

    [32]         In 1999, the U.S. General Accounting Office issued a glossary of the most commonly used terms in P3s to facilitate a better understanding of the terms as they are used. See U.S. General Accounting Office, Public-Private Partnerships, Terms Related to Building and Facility Partnerships (Apr. 1999), available at https://www.gao.gov/assets/ggd-99-71.pdf.

    [35]         See, e.g., Dominique Custos & John Reitz, Public-Private Partnerships, 58 Am. J. Comp. L. 555 (2010); NCSL Report; DOT Primer.

    [36]         See generally DOT Primer; DOT Guidebook on Financing.

    [37]         See, e.g., Denver International Airport, Great Hall After-Action Report (Aug. 9, 2022), https://www.flydenver.com/app/uploads/2024/06/greathall_AfterActionReport-2.pdf; Office of the Inspector General, City of Chicago, Report of Inspector General’s Findings and Recommendations: An Analysis of the Lease of the City’s Parking Meters (June 2, 2009), https://igchicago.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/Parking-Meter-Report.pdf; State of Texas, State Auditor’s Office, Audit Report on The Department of Transportation and the Trans-Texas Corridor, Report No. 07-015 (Feb. 2007), available at https://sao.texas.gov/reports/main/07-015.pdf.

    [38]         See generally supra note 37. See also Denver International Airport (Great Hall Project), City and County of Denver Auditor, Audit Report Denver International Airport Great Hall Construction (Apr. 20, 2023), available at https://www.flydenver.com/app/uploads/2023/09/greathallconstruction_Auditapril2023-1.pdf; Kevin DeGood, American Progress, When Public-Private Partnerships Fail: A Look at Southern Indiana’s I-69 Project (Feb. 15, 2018), available at https://www.americanprogress.org/article/public-private-partnerships-fail-look-southern-indianas-69-project/; Hearing, California Senate Transportation and Housing Committee, Tolls, User Fees, and Public-Private Partnerships: The Future of Transportation Finance in California? (Jan. 17, 2007), available at https://archive.senate.ca.gov/sites/archive.senate.ca.gov/files/committees/2015-16/stran.senate.ca.gov/sites/stran.senate.ca.gov/files/01-17-07Background.doc; Texas State Auditor’s Office, An Audit Report on The Department of Transportation’s Purchase of the Camino Colombia Toll Road (June 2, 2006), available at https://sao.texas.gov/reports/main/06-041.pdf. Concerns regarding P3s have been raised outside of the United States as well. See, e.g., Office of the Auditor General of Ontario, Annual Report 2014, available at https://www.auditor.on.ca/en/content/annualreports/arreports/en14/2014AR_en_web.pdf; Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives | Nova Scotia, Many Dangers of Public-Private Partnerships (P3s) in Newfoundland and Labrador (Sept. 2020), available at https://policyalternatives.ca/sites/default/files/uploads/publications/Nova%20Scotia%20Office/2020/10/HiddendangersofP3s.pdf.

    [39]         See generally supra notes 37 and 38.

    [42]         A USP process refers to a proposal submitted by an offeror (often a P3 Consultant but can be any private entity) for a P3 project that is not in response to any RFP/Q issued by a municipal entity, obligated person, or municipal advisor on their behalf.

    [43]         See Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at 67509.

    [44]         See Exchange Act Rule 15Ba1–1(d)(3)(iv) [17 CFR 240.15Ba1-1(d)(3)(iv)]. See also Municipal Advisor Adopting Release for a discussion on the RFP exemption. Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at 67508-67509.

    [45]         See generally Answer to Question 2.1 of the MA FAQ.

    [46]         Id.

    [47]         See Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at 67509.

    [48]         See Exchange Act Section 15B(a)(1)(B) [15 U.S.C. 78o-4(a)(1)(B)].

    [49]         Whether a person that advises clients about conduit financings or other financing options would be required to register as a municipal advisor is dependent on certain facts and circumstances. See Municipal Advisor Adopting Release, 78 FR at 67485. For conduit financings, a person will not be a municipal advisor to an obligated person until (among other things) the obligated person has begun applying to, or negotiating with, a municipal entity to issue conduit bonds on behalf of the obligated person. Id.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Canada announces new support for global polio eradication efforts

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    The world is on the verge of eradicating polio, but humanitarian crises, overstretched health systems and the aftershocks of the COVID-19 pandemic have created new challenges. Canada has played a leading role in the global health response to polio, and we are stepping up once again.

    September 20, 2024 – Ottawa, Ontario – Global Affairs Canada

    The world is on the verge of eradicating polio, but humanitarian crises, overstretched health systems and the aftershocks of the COVID-19 pandemic have created new challenges. Canada has played a leading role in the global health response to polio, and we are stepping up once again.

    Today, at the Rotary International conference held in Toronto, Ontario, the Honourable Ahmed Hussen, Minister of International Development, announced $151 million in funding as the next step in Canada’s support of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI).

    With this Canadian investment, GPEI and partners like UNICEF and the World Health Organization will deliver and expand quality, accessible polio immunization and health services around the world. This includes increased access to polio immunization for the most vulnerable populations, including women and girls, and in conflict-affected regions where there is little or no access to essential health services.

    Efforts will focus on stopping the transmission of all forms of poliovirus by vaccinating more than 370 million children annually against polio, preventing 600,000 children annually from suffering from paralysis and death; improving vaccine uptake and communications activities to support polio vaccination; continuing disease surveillance and containment activities; and strengthening health systems.

    The funding announced today will make a significant and meaningful difference in polio eradication efforts and in protecting those who are most affected. It will mean more children can live polio-free lives with good health. And it will take us one step closer to ending polio forever. 

    “This new commitment brings Canada’s historical contribution to eradicating polio to over $1 billion. This funding will support UNICEF and the WHO’s efforts to eliminate polio worldwide, helping to ensure that 370 million children are vaccinated annually against polio. Together, we will end polio, and build a healthier future for children everywhere.”

    – Ahmed Hussen, Minister of International Development

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Translation: Canada announces new support for global polio eradication efforts

    MIL OSI Translation. Canadian French to English –

    Source: Government of Canada – in French 1

    The world is on the verge of eradicating polio, but humanitarian crises, overburdened health systems, and the aftershocks of the COVID-19 pandemic have created new challenges. Canada has played a leading role in the global health response to polio, and we are responding again.

    September 20, 2024 – Ottawa, Ontario – Global Affairs Canada

    The world is on the verge of eradicating polio, but humanitarian crises, overburdened health systems, and the aftershocks of the COVID-19 pandemic have created new challenges. Canada has played a leading role in the global health response to polio, and we are responding again.

    Today, at the Rotary International Conference in Toronto, Ontario, the Honourable Ahmed Hussen, Minister of International Development, announced $151 million in funding as the next phase of Canada’s support for the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI).

    This Canadian investment will enable the GPEI and partners such as UNICEF and the World Health Organization to provide and expand accessible, quality polio health and immunization services around the world. This includes improving access to polio vaccination for the most vulnerable populations, including women and girls, and in conflict-affected areas where access to essential health services is limited or non-existent.

    Efforts will focus on ending transmission of all forms of poliovirus by vaccinating more than 370 million children annually against the disease, preventing 600,000 children from becoming paralyzed or dying each year, improving immunization rates and communications to promote polio vaccination, continuing surveillance and disease containment activities, and strengthening health systems.

    The funding announced today will make a significant and meaningful difference in polio eradication efforts and in protecting those most affected. It will enable more children to live polio-free and healthy lives. And it will bring us one step closer to eliminating this disease for good.

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

    MIL Translation OSI

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Co-chairs’ statement from the Women Foreign Ministers’ Meeting

    Source: Government of Canada News

    Following their landmark meeting in Toronto on September 19 and 20, 2024, the co-chairs, the Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada, and Senator the Honourable Kamina Johnson Smith, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade of Jamaica, issued the following statement:

    September 20, 2024 – Toronto, Ontario – Global Affairs Canada

    Following their landmark meeting in Toronto on September 19 and 20, 2024, the co-chairs, the Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada, and Senator the Honourable Kamina Johnson Smith, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade of Jamaica, issued the following statement:

    “We gathered in Toronto with women foreign ministers from around the world and reaffirmed our commitment to break down barriers and empower the next generation of women leaders.

    “We are encouraged that women’s political representation globally has doubled in the last 25 years. However, this still only amounts to around 1 in 4 parliamentary seats held by women today. 

    “We pledged to advance women’s participation in leadership and decision making and support safe and inclusive spaces for women in politics and public life. We also pledged to intentionally encourage young women across the world to enter politics and public life.

    “We are concerned with the growing hate and misogynistic discourse found online targeting women, particularly in civic spaces. The safety of online public spaces is a public good for societies and democracies as a whole, such that regulations to preserve safety and truth should not be seen as anti-transparency or anti-freedom of speech or the press.

    “We, therefore, agreed to address online, gender-based violence and prevent gendered disinformation and call on online platforms to take action and increase their accountability.

    “We discussed strategies for amplifying the voices of women and other marginalized groups, from grassroots to the highest levels of government.

    “We expressed our deepest concerns about the egregious human rights violations of women and girls in Afghanistan and call on the Taliban to restore women’s and girls’ rights to education and to meaningfully participate in public life and put an end to their draconian measures, which have erased decades of progress in women’s rights.

    “We discussed the question of gender imbalance within the UN system.

    “It is time for a woman Secretary-General.

    “We strongly encourage member states considering the nomination of a candidate for the position of the United Nations Secretary-General, to nominate women.

    “In noting that there have been only four women presidents of the UN General Assembly in the last 79 years, we believe that it is also time to pursue gender parity for this position.

    “It is within our reach to make these meaningful changes.

    “We engaged with diverse civil society representatives. They highlighted the importance of supporting women’s grassroots organizations and human rights defenders in shaping policies. We agreed to foster supportive environments for gender equality and recognized independent members of civil society as key drivers for the success and resilience of democracies.

    “Looking ahead, the year 2025 will mark the 30th anniversary of the Fourth World Conference on Women and the adoption of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action as well as 25 years since the unanimous adoption of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security. We cannot take these hard-fought gains for gender equality and inclusion for granted. Our collective efforts will be crucial in making sure women fully participate in shaping inclusive societies and a peaceful, sustainable and prosperous future.”

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Translation: Statement by the Co-Chairs of the Meeting of Women Foreign Ministers

    MIL OSI Translation. Canadian French to English –

    Source: Government of Canada – in French 1

    Following their historic meeting in Toronto on September 19-20, 2024, the Co-Chairs, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada, the Honourable Mélanie Joly, and the Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Trade of Jamaica, the Honourable Senator Kamina Johnson Smith, issued the following statement:

    September 20, 2024 – Toronto, Ontario – Global Affairs Canada

    Following their historic meeting in Toronto on September 19-20, 2024, the Co-Chairs, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada, the Honourable Mélanie Joly, and the Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Trade of Jamaica, the Honourable Senator Kamina Johnson Smith, issued the following statement:

    “We gathered in Toronto with women foreign ministers from around the world and reiterated our commitment to breaking down barriers and empowering the next generation of women leaders.

    “We are encouraged that women’s political representation around the world has doubled over the past 25 years. However, this still represents only about 1 in 4 parliamentary seats held by a woman.

    “We are committed to promoting women’s participation in leadership and decision-making, and to fostering inclusive and safe spaces for women in politics and public life. We are also committed to deliberately encouraging young women everywhere to enter politics and participate in public life.

    “We are concerned about the growing hateful and misogynistic discourse online that targets women, particularly in civic spaces. Safe online public spaces are a public good for societies and democracies as a whole, and regulations aimed at preserving safety and truth should not be seen as opposed to transparency, freedom of expression or freedom of the press.

    “We therefore agreed to counter gender-based violence online, prevent gender-based disinformation and call on online platforms to take measures to strengthen their accountability.

    “We discussed strategies to amplify the voices of women and other marginalized groups, both at the local level and at the highest levels of government.

    “We have expressed our deepest concerns about the gross violations of human rights suffered by women and girls in Afghanistan, and we call on the Taliban to restore women and girls’ rights to education and meaningful participation in public life, and to end their draconian measures that have erased decades of progress on women’s rights.

    “We discussed the issue of gender imbalance within the United Nations system.

    “It is time to appoint a woman as Secretary General.

    “We strongly encourage Member States considering a nomination for the position of UN Secretary-General to nominate a woman.

    “Noting that there have been only 4 women presidents of the United Nations General Assembly in the last 79 years, we believe that now is also the time to aim for gender parity in this position.

    “Making these significant changes is within our reach.

    “We engaged with various civil society representatives, who stressed the importance of supporting women’s community organizations and human rights activists in policy development. We agreed to foster environments that are conducive to gender equality and recognized that independent members of civil society are essential catalysts for the success and resilience of democracies.

    “The year 2025 will mark the 30th anniversary of the Fourth World Conference on Women and the adoption of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, as well as the 25th anniversary of the unanimous adoption of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security. We cannot take this hard-won progress towards gender equality and inclusion for granted. Our collective efforts will be essential to ensure that women are fully involved in building inclusive societies and a peaceful, sustainable and prosperous future.”

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

    MIL Translation OSI

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: DEMS attends International Railway Safety Council 2024 Conference (with photo)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    DEMS attends International Railway Safety Council 2024 Conference (with photo)
    DEMS attends International Railway Safety Council 2024 Conference (with photo)
    ******************************************************************************

         The Director of Electrical and Mechanical Services (DEMS), Mr Poon Kwok-ying, attended the International Railway Safety Council (IRSC) Conference in Vienna, Austria from September 18 to 20 (Austrian time). The Conference was an annual forum for railway safety regulators, operators and relevant stakeholders worldwide to exchange knowledge, experience and lesson learnt on railway safety.            The Electrical and Mechanical Services Department (EMSD) gave presentations on four separate railway safety topics to share its experience in the applications of innovation and technology (I&T) for enhancing railway safety as well as the regulatory experience and preventive measures on handling catastrophic flooding.           At the closing ceremony of the Conference on September 20 (Austrian time), Mr Poon, together with the Administrator of the National Railway Administration, Mr Fei Dongbin, and the Operations and Innovation Director of the MTR Corporation, Dr Tony Lee, were handed over the “IRSC Triangle” by the Organising Committee Chairman of this year’s Conference, symbolising that Hong Kong, China will be the host city of the next Conference.           Under the theme “Advancing Railway Safety through Innovations and Collaborations”, the IRSC 2025 Conference will be jointly hosted by the EMSD, the National Railway Administration and the MTR Corporation. The delegates around the world will be invited to participate the Conference in Hong Kong, China to carry out in-depth exchanges on the issue of railway safety development and also personally experience the China’s railway development in recent years. Over 300 internationally renowned railway experts from Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Ireland, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, South Africa, Sweden, Switzerland, Thailand, the United Kingdom, and more are expected to attend the Conference.

     
    Ends/Saturday, September 21, 2024Issued at HKT 11:00

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Translation: Traveler consultation: Have your say on the use of technology at the border

    MIL OSI Translation. Canadian French to English –

    Source: Government of Canada – in French 1

    Traveler consultation: Have your say on the use of technology at the border

    August 1, 2024

    Ottawa, Ontario

    The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) is working to make travel easier while keeping our borders secure. We are implementing tools and technologies and updating processes, laws and policies to build the border of the future.

    We are modernizing our services to meet the growing number of travellers, economic and migration trends, security threats including terrorism and organized crime, and the needs of travellers who want easier and faster self-service processing. Digital solutions will improve the border experience by reducing wait times for travellers and person-to-person interactions at the border, and allowing officers to focus on more targeted activities.

    The CBSA today launched a online survey which allows travelers to report their experiences and give their opinions on the Advance Declaration and future border tools. The survey is available from August 1 to September 26.

    The survey results will inform the planning and implementation of new and existing border tools, and identify areas for improvement. In addition to this survey, the Agency has engaged and will continue to engage with civil society groups, Indigenous groups, industry stakeholders, other government departments and its front-line employees.

    For further information or to arrange an interview with a CBSA representative, please contact:

    Media Relations Canada Border Services Agencymedia@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca1-877-761-5945

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

    MIL Translation OSI

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Independent Afghan journalists and media organizations win 2024 Canada-U.K. Media Freedom Award

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The 2024 Canada-U.K. Media Freedom Award presented to independent Afghan journalists and media organizations

    The 2024 Canada-U.K. Media Freedom Award has been presented today to independent Afghan journalists and media organizations for their courageous reporting despite restrictions imposed by the Taliban. 

    The Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada, and H.E. Lord Collins of Highbury, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Africa) of the United Kingdom, presented the award to Lotfullah Najafizada, CEO of Amu TV, on behalf of his fellow independent Afghan journalists and media organizations. 

    This award signals the enduring commitment of both Canada and the United Kingdom to support free and independent journalism.

    Every day, independent Afghan journalists and media organizations continue to offer a platform for uncensored information and hope in Afghanistan in the face of the severe repression brought by the Taliban since August 2021. 

    Independent reporters and media organizations navigate the risks posed by the Taliban’s harsh crackdown on journalism, working bravely to ensure the continuation of free press in a difficult climate. They report on significant issues affecting Afghanistan under Taliban rule, including human rights violations and the plight of women and girls, including forced marriages and bans on education.

    Established in 2020, the Canada-U.K. Media Freedom award recognises those who have championed freedom of speech and democracy.  

    Egyptian online newspaper Mada Masr won the award in 2023. Vietnamese journalist Pham Doan Trang was named as winner in 2022, and the 2020 winner was the Belarusian Association of Journalists.  

    The announcement of the 2024 award comes during the United Nations General Assembly High-Level Week.  

    The Media Freedom Coalition, which the U.K. and Canada co-founded and now has more than 50 members, celebrated its fifth anniversary during the week’s activities. 

    Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada said:

    We commend the independent Afghan journalists and media organizations who are working courageously and tirelessly to bring the world up-to-date information and thoughtful, expert analysis about what is happening in Afghanistan under Taliban rule.

    Media freedom remains essential to the protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms around the world. These independent journalists and media organizations are giving a voice to people whose voices are being silenced. Canada will continue to support them, together with our partners.

    Lord Collins of Highbury, UK Minister for Africa said:

    Despite the many restrictions they work under, these brave Afghan journalists have found innovative ways to get accurate, timely and valuable information to the people of Afghanistan, including on the plight of women and girls. They play a vital role in preserving the truth. The U.K. remains committed to media freedom, and to championing human rights and democracy around the world.

    Media enquiries

    Email newsdesk@fcdo.gov.uk

    Telephone 020 7008 3100

    Contact the FCDO Communication Team via email (monitored 24 hours a day) in the first instance, and we will respond as soon as possible.

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    Updates to this page

    Published 28 September 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Translation: CBSA temporarily suspends removals to Lebanon

    MIL OSI Translation. Canadian French to English –

    Source: Government of Canada – in French 1

    September 27, 2024 Ottawa, Ontario

    The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) has issued a temporary suspension of removals to Lebanon. This measure is being taken given that the situation in Lebanon is volatile and unpredictable due to violence and escalating clashes, including daily rocket and missile attacks, as well as airstrikes.

    The temporary suspension, known as an administrative deferral of removals (ADR), is imposed under subsection 230(1)(c) of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Regulations, on countries that are considered unsafe due to conditions such as environmental disasters or acts of violence.

    The SAR does not apply to persons who are inadmissible on grounds of criminality, serious criminality, violations of international or human rights laws, organized crime or security.

    Once the situation in Lebanon has stabilized and circumstances no longer pose a generalized risk to the entire civilian population, the SAR will be lifted and the CBSA will resume removals for individuals who are inadmissible to Canada and subject to an enforceable removal order.

    Quick Facts

    By law, the CBSA has a duty to remove inadmissible persons as soon as possible. Every person subject to a removal order from Canada has the right to due process before the law. Once individuals have exhausted all legal avenues of appeal or due process, they must leave Canada or be removed. There are currently 15 SARs in place for countries around the world. This list is available on the CBSA website:Arrests, Detentions and Removals – Removal from Canada.

    Contact persons

    Media Relations Canada Border Services Agencymedia@cbsa-asfc.gc.ca1-877-761-5945

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

    MIL Translation OSI

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Independent Afghan journalists and media organizations win 2024 Canada-U.K. Media Freedom Award

    Source: Government of Canada News

    The Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada, and H.E. Lord Collins of Highbury, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Africa) of the United Kingdom, presented the award to Lotfullah Najafizada, CEO of Amu TV, on behalf of his fellow independent Afghan journalists and media organizations.

    September 27, 2024 – New York City, United States of America – Global Affairs Canada

    The 2024 Canada-U.K. Media Freedom Award has been presented today to independent Afghan journalists and media organizations for their courageous reporting despite restrictions imposed by the Taliban. 

    The Honourable Mélanie Joly, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Canada, and H.E. Lord Collins of Highbury, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Africa) of the United Kingdom, presented the award to Lotfullah Najafizada, CEO of Amu TV, on behalf of his fellow independent Afghan journalists and media organizations. 

    This award signals the enduring commitment of both Canada and the United Kingdom to support free and independent journalism.

    Every day, independent Afghan journalists and media organizations continue to offer a platform for uncensored information and hope in Afghanistan in the face of the severe repression brought by the Taliban since August 2021.

    Independent reporters and media organizations navigate the risks posed by the Taliban’s harsh crackdown on journalism, working bravely to ensure the continuation of free press in a difficult climate. They report on significant issues affecting Afghanistan under Taliban rule, including human rights violations and the plight of women and girls, including forced marriages and bans on education.

    Established in 2020, the Canada-U.K. Media Freedom award recognises those who have championed freedom of speech and democracy.  

    Egyptian online newspaper Mada Masr won the award in 2023. Vietnamese journalist Pham Doan Trang was named as winner in 2022, and the 2020 winner was the Belarusian Association of Journalists.  

    The announcement of the 2024 award comes during the United Nations General Assembly High-Level Week.  

    The Media Freedom Coalition, which the U.K. and Canada co-founded and now has more than 50 members, celebrated its fifth anniversary during the week’s activities. 

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Australia: National Statement United Nations General Assembly

    Source: Australian Government – Minister of Foreign Affairs

    President, friends –

    Steeled by the horror of the most catastrophic conflict in history, humanity forged our United Nations.

    Its purpose often defined not as taking us to heaven, but saving us from hell.

    Yet we convene this week with so much of the human family enshrouded in darkness.

    More conflict than any time since World War Two.

    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Sudan.

    Myanmar.

    Yemen.

    Gaza.

    And now Lebanon.

    Brutal, degrading conflict ingraining hatred and division; pushing peace into the unseeable distance; and pulling neighbours into an endless, reflexive cycle of blame and retaliation.

    Such entrenched violence has its own gravity: more violence becomes the path of least resistance.

    Seeing past hatred is hard. Building trust is hard. Compromise is hard. Making peace is hard.

    But the future otherwise is not worthy of our children and the present is not worthy of ourselves.

    We must remember why we built this institution.

    The UN system is where the world comes together to agree and uphold standards and rules; to protect all of the world’s peoples and the sovereignty of all nations.

    These rules always matter – never more so than in times of conflict – when they help guide us out of darkness, back toward light.

    Back on a path towards peace, stability and prosperity.

    Not long after we last gathered here, Israel was attacked by the terrorist group Hamas, which killed 1,200 people.

    This was the greatest loss of Jewish life in a single day since the Holocaust, and Hamas continues to hold hostages.

    It was an attack that cannot and should not be justified.

    Like many countries, Australia has imposed sanctions on Hamas, its leaders and financial facilitators.

    In Israel’s response, more than 40,000 Palestinians have been killed.

    More than 11,000 children.

    Nearly two million Gazans displaced, some many times over.

    More than two million facing acute food insecurity.

    This must end.

    Palestinian civilians cannot be made to pay the price of defeating Hamas.

    All lives have equal value.

    Last month we marked 75 years since the world established the Geneva Conventions – the foundations of international humanitarian law, to limit human suffering in conflict.

    War has rules. Every country in this room must abide by them.

    Even when confronting terrorists.

    Even when defending borders.

    Israel must comply with the binding orders of the International Court of Justice, including to enable the provision of basic services and humanitarian assistance at scale.

    Australia shares the frustration of the great majority of countries, more than 77 years since the General Assembly adopted Resolution 181: a plan for two states side by side – one Jewish, one Palestinian.

    77 years later, that Palestinian state still does not exist – long held out as the promise at the end of a peace process that has ground to a halt.

    The world cannot wait.

    We must all contribute new ways to break the cycle of conflict.

    Earlier this year, Australia voted in this General Assembly in support of Palestinian aspirations for full membership of the UN.

    We have sanctioned Israeli extremist settlers and will deny anyone identified as an extremist settler a visa to travel to Australia.

    But individual country actions alone are not moving the dial.

    The international community must work together to pave a path to lasting peace.

    The world cannot keep hoping the parties will do this themselves; we cannot allow any party to obstruct the prospect of peace.

    As I have said for many months, Australia no longer sees Palestinian recognition as the destination of a peace process, but a contribution of momentum towards peace.

    Australia wants to engage on new ways to build momentum, including the role of the Security Council in setting a pathway for two-states, with a clear timeline for the international declaration of Palestinian statehood.

    Because a two-state solution is the only hope of breaking the endless cycle of violence – the only hope to see a secure and prosperous future for both peoples.

    To give the Palestinian people the opportunity to realise their aspirations through self-determination.

    To strengthen the forces for peace across the region and undermine extremism.

    A two-state solution, Israel and Palestine, is the opposite of what Hamas wants.

    Hamas does not want peace, and it does not want security for the State of Israel.

    Any future Palestinian state must not be in a position to threaten Israel’s security.

    There can be no role for terrorists. And it will need a reformed Palestinian Authority.

    Right now, the suffering across the region must end. Hostages must be released. Aid must flow.

    We have provided more than $80 million in humanitarian aid to support civilians who have been devasted by this conflict.

    But humanitarian aid is not a long-term answer.

    It is now nearly 300 days since Australia and 152 other countries voted for a ceasefire.

    Today I repeat that call.

    Just as I repeat Australia’s call for a ceasefire in Lebanon, and for parties to fully implement Resolution 1701. Lebanon cannot become the next Gaza.

    We know Australia is not a central player in the Middle East, but we seek to be a constructive voice for peace and the upholding of international law, including the protection of civilians.

    In order to protect civilians, we must also protect aid workers who deliver the food, water and medicine civilians need to survive.

    Aid workers are the best of humanity. Their selfless devotion to improving the lives of others should not cost them their own.

    Yet 2023 was the deadliest year on record for aid workers, and 2024 is on track to be even worse.

    Gaza is the most dangerous place on earth to be an aid worker.

    Australia felt this deeply with the IDF’s strike against World Central Kitchen vehicles, which killed Australian Zomi Frankcom and her colleagues.

    This was not a one-off incident. More than 300 aid workers have been killed since the start of this conflict.

    This week, Australia has convened a group of ministers to pursue a new Declaration for the Protection of Humanitarian Personnel.

    The Declaration will be developed over the coming months, to demonstrate the unity of the international community’s commitment to protect aid workers and to channel that commitment into action in Gaza, in Sudan, in Ukraine and in all current and future conflicts.

    All countries will be invited to join the Declaration.

    I want to thank my fellow ministers from Brazil, Colombia, Indonesia, Japan, Jordan, Sierra Leone, Switzerland and the United Kingdom – and the humanitarian leaders who have partnered with us in this.

    As Zomi Frankcom’s family said this week:

    “People like Zomi are rare and their bravery and selflessness should be not only celebrated but protected. They can’t be brave at any cost.”

    The world’s peoples are counting on all of us here to rededicate ourselves to international humanitarian law, and the rest of the rules we have agreed to preserve peace and security.

    Russia continues its vicious assault on the people and sovereignty of Ukraine, in flagrant violation of the UN Charter.

    Aside from terrible damage and loss of life in Ukraine, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is also propelling the global crisis in food and energy security…

    Raising the cost of living for working people all over the world.

    This year we saw Russia end the mandate of the Security Council’s Panel of Experts on the DPRK after fourteen years of unanimous support.

    The DPRK continues its unlawful activities with impunity, conducting illegal arms transfers to Russia and threatening our region, including the Republic of Korea and Japan.

    We are concerned that Russia is sharing nuclear and space information and technology with Iran.

    Rules are being blurred, undermined, and at times, blatantly violated.

    We must rally to defend these rules that protect all of us; these rules that form the character of the world that we want.

    A world where Australia and other countries have the freedom to decide our own futures, without interference and intimidation.

    A world where we can find collective solutions to our toughest problems.

    These problems are evolving and changing, but the commitment of some states to the rules underpinning the international system has not evolved for the better.

    Whether cyberattacks, interference, disinformation or economic coercion – some states circumvent the rules, putting further out of reach collective approaches to counter new and emerging threats.

    Pressing challenges like climate change, technology, poverty, reform of financial architecture – and increasingly necessary peacebuilding work.

    We need reform of the UN system to better serve us all.

    But reform cannot become a means for disruptors to dismantle protections for smaller countries.

    No state should pretend the rules don’t apply to them;

    Ignoring international rulings;

    Using might over multilateralism;

    Ruling by power alone, not by law;

    Favouring impunity rather than facing accountability;

    Forcing outcomes by economic coercion or military muscle, rather than on the level playing field we established so carefully.

    We see some states trying to set us against each other, when the challenges demand that we come together – that we stand together in support of the security, prosperity and sovereignty of all countries.

    Australia has a different vision for the world. One where no country dominates, and no country is dominated.

    When disputes inevitably arise, we insist those differences are managed through dialogue, and according to the rules, not simply by force or raw power.

    It’s why we have consistently pressed China on peace and stability in the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait.

    And why we have welcomed the resumption of leader and military level dialogue between the US and China.

    Some countries may dismiss the rules as a Western construct. Our Asia-Pacific region tells a different story.

    Take the agreement between Vietnam and Indonesia to delimit their Exclusive Economic Zone after twelve years of negotiations – an example of how long-standing maritime disputes can be resolved in accordance with international law.

    Take Vanuatu’s landmark International Court of Justice initiative on climate change.

    Or Fiji and Solomon Islands maritime boundary agreements.

    Take the Bay of Bengal Arbitration where states peacefully resolved long-standing and sensitive claims under UNCLOS: the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.

    Or Australia and Timor-Leste initiating the first ever compulsory conciliation under UNCLOS, leading to the resolution of our maritime boundary dispute.

    We see it in the Philippines’ decision to go to the Arbitral Tribunal, constituted under the UNCLOS – and its unanimous, clear, ruling in the South China Sea arbitration between the Philippines and China, which is final and binding on the parties.

    These cases in our region illustrate how international law has been built, defended and promoted by small and medium countries from different traditions.

    The countries of our region have embedded the rules that serve us all, and we make an ongoing contribution to maintaining and promoting them.

    Together we want to pursue peaceful ways to resolve disputes.

    We know that this doesn’t happen on its own. All of us help make it happen.

    Australia is doing this by being active, by exercising agency, and by contributing our efforts to the balance of power in our region and our world.

    Our candidacy for a non-permanent seat on the Security Council for the term 2029-2030 reflects our deep commitment to contributing to international peace and security.  

    The Security Council is a foundation of our collective peace and security. But we must reform it.

    Australia wants greater permanent and non-permanent representation for Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the Asia-Pacific.

    This body must represent the world as it is in the 21st century.  

    We must also reform the peacebuilding and conflict prevention architecture. It is not working.

    That will be the focus of our coming term on the Peacebuilding Commission.

    Australia will support national prevention strategies in our term, essential for local peacebuilding.    
     
    We are providing additional resources and staff to the PBC’s support and secretariat bodies.     

    And we will increase our voluntary contribution to the UN Peacebuilding Fund to $15 million per year.

    We are committed to doing all we can to de-escalate and prevent conflict.

    We do this by responding when we, or our neighbours, are coerced or have sovereignty threatened.

    We do this by supporting our region’s security – as we did at the Pacific Islands Forum this month, when we stood side-by-side with Pacific leaders to announce a Pacific-led, Australia-backed Pacific Policing Initiative.

    We do this by backing the call of Fiji’s President for a cessation of ballistic missile testing in the Pacific.

    We do this by combining reassurance and deterrence – by working with our friends and partners, openly and transparently, so no potential aggressor thinks the pursuit of conflict is worth the risk.

    But there is so much more to do.   

    For peace to be truly durable it must be built by, and for, all of society.

    That includes women.

    Yet here, in the world’s premier peace forum, only around one in ten speakers at this dais so far this week have been women.

    Gender equality is a primary predictor of peace, even more so than a state’s wealth or political system.

    That is why Australia champions the Women, Peace and Security agenda.  

    We support initiatives that we know are working, like the Southeast Asia Women Peace Mediators, who link stakeholders to enhance the potential for constructive dialogue.

    Like the Pacific Women Mediator’s Network, a locally led, vibrant and inclusive platform to support women’s political leadership.    

    And earlier this week, with Germany, Canada and the Netherlands, Australia invoked Afghanistan’s responsibility under international law for violations of the rights of women and girls.

    The Taliban have erased women from Afghanistan’s self-portrait.

    Effectively imprisoning half their society’s population immediately halves their country’s potential.

    Depleting the soul and prospects of a nation.

    Any country that wants to develop fully must encourage the full participation of all its people.

    So we can’t pursue only parts of the 2030 Agenda: we must achieve all of the Sustainable Development Goals.

    And yet, with just over five years to 2030, over a third of the SDG’s are stalled or regressing, and finance targets are not being met. 

    In times of scarcity, we need every development dollar to count.

    This is why we need to strengthen the global financial architecture.

    This is why Australia is backing the Multidimensional Vulnerability Index and the Bridgetown initiative.

    This is why Australia is championing reforms that make Multilateral Development Banks more responsive to global shocks, and build sustainability and resilience, particularly in the smallest and most vulnerable countries.

    This year, Australia committed 492 million Australian dollars to the Asian Development Fund, working with Japan to unlock a record 5 billion US dollars in new assistance to the region’s most vulnerable countries over the next decade.

    Financial pressures are further strained by the trend of trade being used as a point of leverage rather than an opportunity, as economic interdependence is misused for strategic and political ends.

    Nearly every country in this room depends on open trade with transparent and predictable rules.

    We must keep working together to uphold these trade rules that underpin our economic growth and the livelihoods of our peoples.

    Of course it’s not just finance and unfair trade arrangements that threaten development.

    Climate change is causing more disasters, reversing years of development gains overnight.

    Extreme weather threatens food and water security, with grave implications for global stability.

    Australia is acting at home, enshrining our ambitious emissions reduction targets into legislation: 43 per cent by 2030 and net zero by 2050.

    We are transforming our economy.

    Within this decade, 82 per cent of Australia’s electricity generation will be renewable, up from around 32 per cent when I first addressed you two years ago.

    We are building new industries to accelerate our economic transition and to export reliable, renewable energy to the world.

    And we are acting internationally, to respond to our partners.

    By the end of 2025, Australia will offer Climate Resilient Debt Clauses in our sovereign loans.

    And the groundbreaking Australia-Tuvalu Falepili Union Treaty entered into force on 28 August.

    It is the first time two nations have recognised, in a legally binding treaty, continuing statehood and sovereignty, notwithstanding the impacts of sea-level rise. 

    This agreement supports Tuvaluans to live and thrive at home through land reclamation and investments in infrastructure, education and health.

    At the same time, Tuvaluans have the choice to live, study and work in Australia.

    ‘Mobility with dignity’ means ensuring people have a genuine choice to stay.   

    Pacific voices have demonstrated sustained, clear and innovative leadership, as well as tremendous resilience.

    This is why we are bidding to host COP31 in partnership with the Pacific.

    We want to show the world the unique climate challenges facing our region and amplify the voices of Small Island Developing States, the custodians of our world’s oceans.

    President, we know that along with climate change, technology will define the multilateral system and development goals for decades to come.

    We want safe, accessible technology that is used for the global good – not as a tool for censorship, surveillance, exclusion and division.

    From the start of negotiations for the Global Digital Compact, Australia has advocated that all states should boost access to digital technologies that offer benefits to our world.

    We know that if countries don’t have digital infrastructure, they will miss out.

    This is why we are building sustainable south-south connectivity, including submarine cables across the Pacific.

    We also know not all knowledge is new.

    First Nations’ people’s deep knowledge must be preserved and protected.

    Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have been innovators, inventors and knowledge-holders for over 65,000 years.

    Whether it is firestick farming used to sustainably manage Country, or the engineering of great stone fish traps across rivers and seas.

    That unbroken line of innovation has continued to this day.

    Earlier this year, Australia’s Ambassador for First Nations People helped bring countries together to finalise the World Intellectual Property Organization Treaty on Intellectual Property, Genetic Resources and Associated Traditional Knowledge. 

    The treaty acknowledges the link between traditional knowledge, innovation and intellectual property.

    It helps First Nations communities identify and protect the use of their knowledge by others, which will in turn spur collaboration between researchers, innovators and communities, opening up new opportunities for First Nations entrepreneurship.

    This treaty is remarkable for another reason.

    It serves as a source for optimism.

    193 member states have agreed on new rules to the world’s intellectual property system.

    That is an extraordinary achievement.

    As I said at the outset, the international outlook is framed by entrenched division.

    Where consensus often seems a lost cause.

    But we collectively moved the intellectual property system a step forward.

    Just as we collectively moved forward this week with the Pact for the Future.

    And these recent wins remind us of the gains we’ve made we that need to protect.

    Of the ways our lives are better because of the United Nations.

    Of the ways our world is better because of our collective contribution to the international system.

    It promotes economic development and makes trade more fair – together supporting job creation, overcoming poverty, and enabling small and medium countries to resist coercion.

    It guards against the spread of nuclear weapons.

    It sets the standards that keep food safe.

    It assigns the satellite orbits that take the internet to the most remote reaches.

    It sets the standards that keep 120,000 flights and 12 million passengers safely in the sky every day.

    It is resolving and preventing conflicts in 53 peacekeeping and political missions.

    Each year it saves more than 350 million children from malnutrition.

    And most of all – let us always remember – we are collectively descended from people who lived in a harsher, more dangerous world…

    Who built this UN system to confine horrors of the past to history, and to give us a better life.

    We have no option and no excuse but to find a way through our challenges today, immense and intractable as they are.

    We must work together.

    We must drive change where it is needed, transparently, together.

    We must drive change to include all the world’s peoples.

    To deploy the collective agency that this forum provides, so we combat climate change, poverty and coercion…

    So we negotiate peace.

    President, friends –

    We must not allow others to divide us for their own gain…

    To dilute the protections that are inherent in the UN Charter, that are codified in the Geneva Conventions.

    Rather, we have to reinforce those protections, in the interests of all states and civilians.

    That is what Australia is for.

    A peaceful, stable and prosperous world for all.

    Where sovereignty is respected.

    Where civilians are protected.

    MIL OSI News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Translation: Independent Afghan journalists and media win 2024 Canada-UK Press Freedom Award

    MIL OSI Translation. Canadian French to English –

    Source: Government of Canada – in French

    Canada’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Honourable Mélanie Joly, and the United Kingdom’s Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State (Africa), HE Lord Collins of Highbury, presented the award to Amu TV CEO Lotfullah Najafizada on behalf of his fellow journalists and independent Afghan media.

    September 27, 2024 – New York, United States of America – Global Affairs Canada

    The 2024 Canada-UK Press Freedom Award was presented today to independent Afghan journalists and media outlets for their courage in reporting despite restrictions imposed by the Taliban.

    Canada’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Honourable Mélanie Joly, and the United Kingdom’s Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State (Africa), HE Lord Collins of Highbury, presented the award to Amu TV CEO Lotfullah Najafizada on behalf of his fellow journalists and independent Afghan media.

    This award is a testament to Canada and the UK’s enduring commitment to supporting free and independent journalism.

    Every day, independent Afghan journalists and media continue to provide a platform for uncensored information and hope in Afghanistan in the face of severe repression by the Taliban since August 2021.

    Journalists and independent media are facing the risks posed by the Taliban’s harsh crackdown on journalism, working courageously to ensure press freedom is maintained in a difficult climate. They are reporting on the critical issues facing Afghanistan under Taliban rule, including human rights violations and the plight of women and girls, including forced marriages and denial of access to education.

    Established in 2020, the Canada–UK Press Freedom Award recognizes individuals who have defended freedom of expression and democracy.

    Egyptian online newspaper Mada Masr won the award in 2023. Vietnamese journalist Pham Doan Trang was the winner in 2022, and the 2020 prize went to the Belarusian Association of Journalists.

    The announcement of the 2024 prize takes place during the high-level week of the United Nations General Assembly.

    The Media Freedom Coalition, which was co-founded by the United Kingdom and Canada and now has more than 50 members, celebrated its fifth anniversary during the week’s activities.

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

    MIL Translation OSI

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Outstanding recreation leaders honoured at 24th Annual Recreation Gathering

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Recreation leaders from across the Yukon gathered in Whitehorse from September 24 to 25 for the 24th annual Recreation Gathering, themed Reimagining Outdoor Active Recreation.

    • Read more about Outstanding recreation leaders honoured at 24th Annual Recreation Gathering
    • Add new comment

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Statement from Minister of Education Jeanie McLean on a new downtown Whitehorse school

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Minister of Education Jeanie McLean has issued the following statement:

    “Our government is exploring options to build a new school in downtown Whitehorse. In the coming months, we will be engaging with partners, stakeholders and the community to understand future needs and working to identify potential school locations.

    • Read more about Statement from Minister of Education Jeanie McLean on a new downtown Whitehorse school
    • Add new comment

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI Canada: New policy allows Yukon First Nations to offer high school credits for cultural learning

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    The Government of Yukon has introduced the Accreditation of Yukon First Nations Traditional Knowledge, Cultural and Language Learning Policy, enabling Yukon First Nations to deliver and assess credit programs for high school students. The new policy allows students to earn elective credits toward their graduation requirements through participating in cultural, language and traditional knowledge learning activities led by Elders, Knowledge Keepers, and other community members.

    • Read more about New policy allows Yukon First Nations to offer high school credits for cultural learning
    • Add new comment

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Cooper Requests a Major Disaster Declaration to Expedite Federal Aid for Tropical Storm Helene Recovery

    Source: US State of North Carolina

    Headline: Governor Cooper Requests a Major Disaster Declaration to Expedite Federal Aid for Tropical Storm Helene Recovery

    Governor Cooper Requests a Major Disaster Declaration to Expedite Federal Aid for Tropical Storm Helene Recovery
    mseets
    Fri, 09/27/2024 – 22:28

    Governor Roy Cooper has requested a Major Disaster Declaration from the federal government for North Carolina for 39 counties and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians for federal Public Assistance and Individual Assistance in the aftermath of Tropical Storm Helene. Public Assistance reimburses government entities and some non-profit organizations for emergency protective measures and debris removal, while Individual Assistance can provide direct financial support to impacted residents.

    The declaration will start the process for providing critical financial assistance to people and communities hit hard by the storm. On Wednesday, President Biden approved Governor Cooper’s request for a Federal Emergency Declaration which provided federal financial reimbursement for response actions by government entities and some non-profits.   

    “Helene brought pain and destruction to our state and we’re working to get help to people quickly,” Governor Cooper said. “As waters recede and winds die down, families and communities will need assistance to clean up and recover and this request can help speed up the process.”

    After making landfall Thursday night in Florida, Helene traveled north bringing record rainfall to the mountain and foothill regions of North Carolina. Landslides and major flooding are still occurring in many western counties and more than 900,000 households statewide are without power. Two people in North Carolina have lost their lives to the storm so far and first responders continue with emergency response and rescue efforts. Central and eastern parts of the state have also seen impacts also with multiple tornados reported and many counties still under flood warnings as rivers continue to rise.

    Travel remains extremely dangerous in the foothills and mountains where officials are urging people to shelter in place and avoid driving except in emergency situations. The North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT) has warned people to consider all roads in western North Carolina closed unless you are seeking higher ground. Motorists should not attempt to drive through standing water or around barricades. 

    All available state resources have been mobilized since Governor Cooper declared a State of Emergency on Wednesday. The State Emergency Response Team continues to support impacted communities with equipment, personnel and resources, including the North Carolina Swift Water Rescue Teams and Urban Search and Rescue Teams, and more than 378 North Carolina National Guard soldiers. Utility crews from other states and Canada have also been recruited to assist with post-storm debris removal and restoration of power in areas experiencing outages. 

    North Carolina residents throughout storm-impacted areas are urged to monitor news reports and follow guidance from local officials. For information about traffic, power outages, shelters and more, visit ReadyNC.gov.

    ###

    Sep 27, 2024

    MIL OSI USA News –

    September 29, 2024
  • MIL-OSI USA: Justice Department and EPA Announce Settlement to Reduce Benzene and Volatile Organic Compounds from Wastewater at Lima Refining Company’s Refinery in Ohio

    Source: US State of California

    Lima Refining Company Will Implement Injunctive Relief Valued at an Estimated $150M to Correct Deficiencies and Pay a Penalty of $19M

    The Justice Department and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) today announced a settlement with the Lima Refining Company (LRC), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Canadian-based Cenovus Energy, to address violations of the Clean Air Act at its refinery in Lima, Ohio.

    Under the settlement, LRC must pay a civil penalty of $19 million and implement an estimated $150 million in capital investments, including control technology expected to reduce emissions of benzene by an estimated 4.34 tons per year, other hazardous air pollutants (HAP) by 16.26 tons per year, and other volatile organic compound emissions (VOC) by 219 tons per year. The Lima Refinery is surrounded by a community with environmental justice concerns.

    “This settlement is part of an ongoing initiative to curtail illegal benzene and VOC emissions at refineries that have failed to allocate the necessary personnel and capital investments to ensure compliance with rules they have long been subject to,” said Assistant Attorney General Todd Kim of the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division. “Under the settlement, the refinery will implement controls that will greatly improve air quality and reduce health impacts on the overburdened community that surrounds the refinery.”

    “Lima Refinery unlawfully exposed the surrounding community to toxic benzene emissions and other hazardous pollutants,” said Assistant Administrator David Uhlmann of the EPA’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance. “Today’s settlement demonstrates how monitoring can help protect overburdened communities from harmful emissions from the oil and gas sector, including refineries. Lima will pay a substantial penalty for its violations and install $150 million in emissions controls that will provide cleaner air and healthier water to a community that deserves nothing less.” *

    “Environmental justice is a core priority of our Office and of the Department. Through its illegal emissions of benzene, VOCs and other pollutants from its facility, the LRC impermissibly violated the Clean Air Act and jeopardized the health of Ohio’s residents,” said U.S. Attorney Rebecca C. Lutzko for the Northern District of Ohio. “We will continue to be vigilant and strictly enforce environmental laws and regulations to protect our district’s residents from toxic pollutants. Ohioans should not have to worry about living and working in an area where air pollution from local industry could make them sick.”

    As part of the settlement, LRC will install one or more flash columns to reduce benzene in wastewater streams leading to its wastewater treatment plant and will cease operating, replace or upgrade other units at the refinery. LRC will also install six air pollutant monitoring stations to monitor air quality outside of the refinery fence line and make the results publicly available.

    The United States’ complaint, filed simultaneously with the settlement, alleges that LRC violated federal regulations limiting benzene in refinery wastewater streams, and HAP and VOC emissions at its Lima Refinery, as well as the general requirement to use good air pollution control practices.

    Benzene is known to cause cancer in humans. Short-term inhalation exposure to benzene also may cause drowsiness, dizziness, headaches, as well as eye, skin and respiratory tract irritation, and, at high levels, unconsciousness. Long-term inhalation exposure can cause various disorders in the blood, including reduced numbers of red blood cells and anemia in occupational settings. Reproductive effects have been reported for women exposed by inhalation to high levels, and adverse effects on the developing fetus have been observed in animal tests.

    VOCs, along with nitrous oxide, play a major role in the atmospheric reactions that produce ozone, which is the primary constituent of smog. Ground-level ozone exposure is linked to a variety of short- and long-term health problems, including difficulty breathing, aggravated asthma, reduced lung capacity and increased susceptibility to respiratory illnesses like pneumonia and bronchitis.

    This settlement is part of EPA’s and the Justice Department’s ongoing focus to assist communities that have been historically marginalized and disproportionately exposed to pollution.

    For more information about the settlement, please visit www.epa.gov/enforcement/2024-lima-refining-clean-air-act-benzene-waste-neshap-and-volatile-organic-compounds.

    The proposed consent decree, lodged in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, is subject to a public comment period and final court approval. Information on submitting comment and access to the settlement agreement is available at: www.justice.gov/enrd/consent-decrees.

    The EPA investigated the case.

    Attorneys with the Environment and Natural Resources Division’s Environmental Enforcement Section are handling the case.

    *Editor’s note: this quote has been updated for accuracy to remove the words “fence line.”

    MIL OSI USA News –

    September 29, 2024
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