Category: Finance

  • MIL-OSI Australia: National Press Club address Q&A, Canberra

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    Tom Connell:

    You mentioned the voters at the kitchen table and that’s what the Budget is really about. Before the last election they were told by Labor power bills would be lowered by $275 by the end of the term.

    This time around I’m wondering what you can assure them. So excluding any rebates and even setting the bar much lower, can you assure them that any increase in power prices won’t totally eat up the income tax cut you announced last night?

    Jim Chalmers:

    Well, I will assure people that we are doing everything we can to put downward pressure on electricity prices, and that takes a number of forms. In the near term extending energy bill relief is about taking some of the sting out of those electricity bills.

    That’s an important part of the cost‑of‑living help that was in the Budget last night and we know from the first 2 rounds of energy bill relief that that has been helpful, that has been meaningful, it’s been effective in limiting increases to power bills. In fact, better than that, in the official CPI last year – the year to December 2024 – electricity prices came down about 25 per cent largely but not entirely because of our rebates. And so in the near term, rebates have got an important role to play.

    But in the medium term and in the longer term, we are adding more cleaner and cheaper, more reliable sources of energy to the grid and over time that will put downward pressure on prices as well. We know from AEMO and from the experts that one of the reasons why we’ve had this upward pressure is not the new parts of the system, not the cleaner, cheaper, more reliable energy that we’re adding to the system but the legacy parts of the system which are becoming less reliable over time and so we’re doing those 2 things at once.

    We know that electricity bills are part of the cost‑of‑living pressure that people have felt over the last 4 or 5 years. There’s good reason for that – international reasons in particular, but we’re doing what we can in the near term and in the longer term simultaneously.

    Connell:

    First question from the floor – David Speers from ABC.

    David Speers:

    Thank you Mr President and thank you Treasurer for the address today. I just wanted to go to the migration figures that came out the other day. They showed net overseas migration had come down to 380,000.

    Your Budget says next financial year that will fall to 260,000 and then after that down to 225,000 for the next few years beyond that. How will that drop be achieved? And given Peter Dutton is suggesting that he’ll go further, is that possible or even desirable from your point of view?

    Chalmers:

    Well, first of all, it’s not clear to me what Peter Dutton is saying. He’s made an announcement, walked it back and then denied that he walked it back and so let’s see what he says about that tomorrow night.

    More substantially what you’re seeing in those migration numbers which you refer to is we are expecting the continuation of what has been now a very clear trend. We had the post‑COVID spike in migration as those numbers recovered and we have been managing that down over time to the levels that you rightly identify from the Budget last night.

    The forecast for net overseas migration in the Budget last night were largely what they were in the mid‑year update. One year had 5000 more, the next year had 5000 less or vice versa, so broadly the status quo. That is a combination of 2 things – it’s part of the normalising of the scheme after we had that big post‑COVID spike and it’s also partly because of the efforts that we have put in to managing those levels.

    Now, what I’ve tried to do – I think I’ve done it in this room in front of all of you before but on every occasion yourself, David, and others have asked me – we want to make sure that we manage down net overseas migration and do that in a considered and methodical way which recognises that there are genuine economic needs for migration as well. You won’t solve, for example, the housing shortage without sufficient workers, mostly by training the workers but also there’s a role for migration.

    And so we’re managing that down to more normal levels. We’re doing it in a considered and methodical way. There’s a role for migration in our economy, and I think the best way to set migration policy is not to really try and dial up the division like our political opponents try and do.

    Connell:

    Michelle Grattan from The Conversation.

    Michelle Grattan:

    Michelle Grattan, The Conversation. Treasurer, you’ve emphasised in your speech a number of times global shocks and disruption that we are seeing, and we may see another round of that disruption next week when President Trump presents his new tariff policy.

    Given those rapidly changing circumstances, would you be willing later in the year to have an economic statement, a major economic statement, to take account of new circumstances so that this Budget is not a set‑and‑forget document?

    Chalmers:

    Well, there are a couple of important points in your question, Michelle – one of them takes the outcome of the election for granted, and you won’t hear me doing that. We’ve got a relatively major event between now and then –

    Grattan:

    Assuming that.

    Chalmers:

    – where the people get to decide who governs them in the second half of the year.

    But your broader point, I think, is well understood, and your broader point is this: the big story of the budget, the big story of the global economy and our own economy is this dark shadow which is being cast by escalating trade tensions, which are very concerning to us, but also a slow‑down in China, a war in Eastern Europe, the collapsing ceasefire in the Middle East, political uncertainty in other parts of the developed world.

    And so all of that does create an element of heightened uncertainty in the global economy and the Budget is really designed to provision for that, to allow for that, to anticipate that and to make sure that we are well prepared and well placed to deal with this economic uncertainty which is coming at us.

    And the best insurance policy for Australia are the 2 essential elements of the Budget last night, which is to rebuild incomes and living standards at the household level, make sure that household budgets are more resilient – and we’re making very substantial progress there. The tax cuts are a part of that story.

    But, secondly, to make our economy more resilient overall, more competitive but also to make sure it’s more resilient because the big story of the Budget is dealing with those 2 pressures at once – cost of living and global economic uncertainty. And the combination of measures, the calibration of those measures in the Budget are really about responding to that.

    You asked me if there’ll be an economic statement later in the year. Again, I don’t take the outcome of the election for granted, but what we have shown is a willingness to be nimble with our economic policy, to play the cards that we’re dealt and try and make sure that Australians are beneficiaries, not victims, of all of that churn and change.

    Connell:

    Mark Riley from Network Seven.

    Mark Riley:

    Treasurer, thanks for your address. Today and in your interviews yesterday many times you said that this Budget is about building up Medicare and the election campaign will be about protecting Medicare and there is a lot of money in there for Medicare and bulk billing and urgent care clinics and also the price of medicines.

    But I want to ask you about the biggest omission in Medicare since its inception that’s still an omission – and that’s dental care. That can be absolutely life changing for people who cannot afford to go and see a dentist – low‑paid Australians, elderly Australians. It can literally keep them alive. I’m wondering if Labor will at least start a conversation to have some level of care covered by Medicare so Australians can get their teeth fixed?

    Chalmers:

    Thanks, Mark. I think this is a crucial question – how do we continue to strengthen Medicare to make sure that it’s responsible and it’s affordable and sustainable but also make sure that it’s delivering the kind of care that people need.

    And obviously, very good people, including people in the room today I can see around this hall have suggested to us and lobbied for us and advocated for us to do that and the answer to that question is the same answer to the question about a lot of things that we would love to do – we’ve got to make sure that we can afford it and make sure that there’s room for it in the budget.

    In this Budget, the big priority is incentivising more bulk billing and women’s health. But that’s not to say that in some future budget under a government of either political persuasion that we might be able to find room for this. I know from my own community that dental health has a direct link to health more broadly in the same way that mental health does and any good government from budget to budget will try and work out if they can do more.

    Connell:

    Next question, Phil Coorey from the AFR.

    Phil Coorey:

    Thank you, Tom. Hi Treasurer. Can I just sort of question you on your view about the budget bottom line improving since you were elected. And you often go back to the anchor point which is the Treasury assessment known as PEFO released during the campaign.

    So if we go back to the 21–22 campaign where Labor was elected, Treasury probably a little bit spooked by events in Ukraine and COVID forecast a deficit that year of $79.8 billion. The actual deficit that year turned out to only be $31.9 which was 1.4 per cent of GDP. Last night you forecast a deficit for next year of 42 per cent – sorry $42 billion which is 1.5 per cent of GDP. Isn’t the case that from then to now the bottom line is worsening?

    Chalmers:

    It’s the case that on the 7 years that we’ve been responsible for, there’s been the biggest ever nominal improvement in the budget we’ve ever seen – $207 billion and that’s partly because we turned 2 of those big deficits into 2 surpluses and we shrunk the deficit this year and we’ve shown in all 4 of our Budgets an element of restraint when it comes to real spending growth in banking upward revisions to revenue, in finding $95 billion worth of savings.

    Obviously, I read what you wrote the other day about the anchor point that we’ve chosen. I don’t think that there is a different, more rational anchor point to choose than the assessment of the books when we came to office put together by non‑political professional forecasters in the Treasury and in the Finance Department.

    And I know that there’s an appetite – I’m not accusing you of this, Phil, but certainly our political opponents – there’s an appetite to try and rewrite that time. They try and pretend away the fact that spending as a share of the economy was up near a third of the economy, we got it down closer to a quarter of the economy – that’s progress.

    And I know that all of these questions come from a good place and the good place that all of these questions come from is recognition that Katy and I share and our whole Cabinet, our Expenditure Review Committee, an understanding that even with all of the progress we’ve made cleaning up the mess that we found in the budget, we do acknowledge that there’s more work to do.

    In every Budget there’s been savings, in every Budget there’s been an element of restraint. It goes back to Mark’s question – every minister in this room has come to us with more good ideas than we can fund but we’ve tried to be as responsible as we can and as a consequence of that, we’ve made more progress in a single parliamentary term improving the budget than any government ever has.

    Connell:

    Next question, Clare Armstrong from News Corp.

    Clare Armstrong:

    Thanks Treasurer for your speech. You’ve often said since becoming Treasurer that you believe Australians understand the need to have tough, adult conversations about the economy. You said yesterday that it was economics, not politics front of mind when you were putting this Budget together.

    If those things are the case, why not use the opportunity to go further to address the structural deficit issues in the Budget, take it to an election within weeks and get a mandate? Or is it the case that because of the cost‑of‑living crisis, Australians are just not ready for that adult conversation?

    Chalmers:

    I think one of the defining characteristics of the way that Katy and Anthony and I have spoken to Australians about the economy over the course of the last 3 years is to err on the side of frankness. And even in the last little bit of my speech today, what I tried to say to people was to say that we understand that even with this progress we’re making in the aggregate numbers, we know that there’s still pressures there and we’re trying to help deal with them.

    And where that relates to the specific part of your question about budget repair, in every Budget – 4 of these now and the budget updates – you have to strike the best balance you can between budget repair, helping with the cost of living and investing in the future and that’s what we’ve tried to do, to strike that most effective balance we can.

    We get a lot of free advice from budget to budget. There have been people including people in this room who’ve told us we have to burn the budget to the ground and that would be the best economic policy – that would have sent us into recession, we know that now, that’s actually a fact. And so how that relates to the structural position of the budget is we’ve actually made more structural progress in the budget than most people recognise.

    I pay tribute here to Bill Shorten who’s left the Parliament but to Amanda Rishworth as well. The progress that we’re making on the NDIS, making sure that we’re providing a standard of care that people need and deserve in a way that is more sustainable. One of the big features of the Budget last night on the spending side was actually that we’re making better progress on the NDIS than we anticipated. That’s a structural fix.

    Aged care – and I’m not sure if Anika Wells is here and Mark Butler – but the work that they did on aged care is transformational in terms of the budget position, the structural position. And what we’ve done with interest costs as well.

    So those 3 changes are making a big structural difference to the budget. But, again, to your question, Clare and Phil’s before you, we don’t pretend that even with all this progress on budget repair, we don’t pretend that the job is finished. One of the reasons we’re asking Australians respectfully for another term in government is because we know that there’s more work to do.

    Connell:

    Next question, Andrew Clennell from Sky News.

    Andrew Clennell:

    It’s another question, not from a good place, Treasurer. I just wanted to read you a couple of quotes and see if you can identify who said this: ‘That deficit of vision has reduced the Budget to $100 billion missed opportunity, a Budget that borrows big and spends big but thinks small, a Budget that delivers generational debt without the generational dividend. A trillion dollars in debt and growing, deficits as far as the eye can see but barely anything else designed to survive beyond the election.’

    Then there was this: ‘These guys wouldn’t know the fiscal levers from a selfie stick,’ That’s a good one, ‘always the phoney photo op with these guys, always about them, and you can exist like that in politics and maybe for a period of time you can succeed, and that’s the biggest risk in this Budget. Instead of laying out an economic vision the government focuses on managing political perception.’

    Both of those were said by Jim Chalmers in May 2021. You’ve just delivered a Budget which forecasts a decade of deficits, a trillion dollars debt, the next 4 deficits of $179 billion. My question Treasurer is, do you feel like a hypocrite today?

    Chalmers:

    No, of course not because central to the Budget last night was an economic vision for the long term – building Australia’s future was a key element of the Budget. Building a Future Made in Australia, investing in every single stage of education which will pay intergenerational dividends long after any of us are still here. So the Budget is long on vision.

    It’s also long on recognising that people are under pressure and we’ve got responsibilities to them. And when you mention the fiscal position, the fiscal position this year – you mentioned the trillion dollars of debt which we inherited from our predecessors – we are at $940 this year, that’s a lot of debt but it was supposed to be $177 billion higher without our efforts and that’s saving Australians on interest costs.

    I appreciate the opportunity that you have given us to remember and reflect on what we inherited when we came to office and we have deliberately and decisively taken a very different approach to our predecessors. Their Budget was weighed down by waste and rorts and missed opportunities and what we’ve done is we’ve invested in the future of this country, building more homes, investing in lifelong learning, strengthening Medicare and these are legacy items that we will leave behind whenever we finish up in this place.

    Connell:

    If you think back to where you were in 2022 and now with no surpluses for the decade, was that the plan?

    Chalmers:

    Well, you’ve deliberately ignored there, Tom, 2 surpluses that we delivered. When we came to office, there were no surpluses, there were only deficits and we turned 2 of them into surpluses. I do think – you’d expect me to say this, maybe Katy will agree with me – we do think that is too easily dismissed and too easily diminished.

    We wouldn’t have had those 2 surpluses if we’d not taken the responsible approach to banking and saving and spending restraint that we have shown. And so let’s not lightly dismiss those 2 surpluses. They’re hard to get. We haven’t seen back‑to‑back surpluses in this country for almost 2 decades.

    So let’s not try and whitewash that from the history, that’s part of our record and we’re proud of it and it’s meant that there’s a structural benefit too because those 2 surpluses and the smaller deficit this year is paying dividends for us in the form of lower interest repayments.

    Connell:

    David Crowe from the SMH and The Age.

    David Crowe:

    Thank you, Tom. Thanks Treasurer, for your speech and for the Q&A. On the top up tax cuts, once they’re fully in place, they cost $7.4 billion a year each and every year because it goes to so many workers. But there’s no saving of $7.4 billion a year in that year when they start at that scale, so they’re unfunded. Why is that? Did you think you didn’t need to fund them by finding savings to offset the tax revenue foregone?

    Chalmers:

    First of all, as we’ve said on a number of occasions, we found $95 billion in savings over the course of our 4 Budgets. I’d say again – and I hope I’m not labouring this point – it’s pretty unusual for there to be billions of savings in a Budget which everybody knows is on the eve of an election. That’s unusual. There weren’t any savings in the March 22 Budget. So we are continuing to find savings.

    And as Katy said more eloquently than I do, the best way to think about budget repair is not in any one specific moment in time but the progress that we’ve made over 4 Budgets. And that $207 billion improvement in the budget is about making room for these sorts of things, which are tax cuts, cost‑of‑living relief and investments in Medicare.

    Crowe:

    But isn’t that double counting because – sure, yes – you’ve made previous savings over this term of parliament, but that doesn’t necessarily give you a new saving to fund a new initiative, and here you’ve lost tax revenue. You’ve foregone the tax revenue without any additional saving to cover that cost.

    Chalmers:

    The $207 billion improvement in the budget is net of those investments that we’re making in the tax cuts. It’s in addition to the tax cuts that we are providing.

    Now, we think it’s a very important, very worthy objective to return bracket creep where you can and do it in the most responsible, cost‑effective, efficient way that you can and that’s what the tax cuts represent.

    They are modest in isolation but substantial in combination with the rest of the tax cuts and the rest of the cost‑of‑living help and they come in conjunction with – at the same time as – we’re making this history‑making improvement in the budget more broadly. They are net of that. They are in addition to that.

    Connell:

    Next question, Anna Henderson from SBS.

    Anna Henderson:

    Thank you, Treasurer. In terms of what’s been announced so far in the lead up to this election, we’ve seen many billions in spending measures and not so much on the savings side. Will you commit that before the election you’ll reveal any additional savings that Labor would plan to make if returned to government, it won’t be something people find out from a budget document if you’re re‑elected?

    Chalmers:

    Well, what we’ve made clear last night in our Budget is that’s our economic plan and if there are additional savings to be made, we’ll detail them at the appropriate time.

    Henderson:

    Before the election?

    Chalmers:

    Well, if we’ve decided them before the election, we’ll reveal them before the election but let’s not forget, the Budget is not 20‑hours‑old yet. The best sense of what we plan to do in the economy is what’s in the Budget. A couple of billion dollars of savings already. It’s normal in the course of an election campaign for there to be subsequent announcements and subsequent decisions taken and we’ll outline them in the usual way.

    Connell:

    Next question comes from Matthew Cranston for The Australian.

    Chalmers:

    Welcome back, Matt.

    Matthew Cranston:

    Thanks, Treasurer.

    Chalmers:

    I usually see Matthew in the foyer of the IMF building in Washington DC. It’s nice to have you home.

    Cranston:

    Thanks for the free cup of coffee. But I think the public are probably a little bit more concerned about how much tax they’re going to be paying when they’re 55. So I went back through some of the budgets, to your first Budget, and added up all the extra tax upgrades, tax revenue upgrades you’ve got from the first Budget to this one. It comes to about $392 billion.

    So in that first Budget you also predicted that fiscal ‘26 deficit would be $42 billion. Last night, $42 billion. So that means that over those 4 years you’ve had this extra unexpected $400 billion worth of tax revenue and yet you haven’t been able to reduce that fiscal year deficit.

    So I don’t – I mean, the public – the general voting public wouldn’t know those figures. So my question to you is: why are you exploiting the lack of awareness from the voting public about where and how all that extra tax revenue you’ve got is being spent, not saved?

    Chalmers:

    Okay. Well, there are a few elements to that. Let me pull out the most important ones. What matters when you get these revenue upgrades in the budget – and they were more substantial at the start of our term than they were in the Budget last night – there was quite a small revenue change in the Budget we put out last night – what matters is what you do with those upgrades.

    And very, very unusual in historical terms – you want to make comparisons with the past – we’ve banked most of those upward revisions to revenue. Our predecessors used to spend most of them. In fact, we’ve banked, I think, $7 in every $10 over the course of our government and that’s because we recognise that one way we can get the budget in better shape and one way we have been getting the budget in better shape is to bank those upward revisions to revenue. So I think if you are going to quote that big number that you’ve quoted, that the Liberal Party uses as well, you need to recognise –

    Cranston:

    No, that’s my number.

    Chalmers:

    Understood, I’m not saying you got it from them, I’m saying it’s similar. You have to recognise that we’ve banked $7 in every $10 of those dollars and that’s because we understand the important role that that plays in budget repair.

    Cranston:

    All right, but I suppose the question just then is you’ve still got 30 per cent that the public don’t realise that, you know, that’s being spent, not saved.

    Chalmers:

    In every budget you make a series of decisions about revenue and about investments in the future and cost‑of‑living help and, in this case, tax cuts. It is historically unusual for a government to bank 70 per cent almost of these upward revisions to revenue.

    As I said, our predecessors – not just our immediate predecessors but the Howard government as well – they used to spend almost all of it. We’ve saved the vast majority of it – almost three‑quarters of it.

    Connell:

    Next question, Andrew Probyn from the Nine Network.

    Andrew Probyn:

    Treasurer, I want to ask you about tobacco excise. Over the past 5 years, Treasury thought that you’d raise something like $77 billion, and it’s now under $50 billion. Somewhat of a public policy disaster given that smoking hasn’t really shifted in rates in recent years.

    And you’ve got a bit of a triple disaster in a bottom line falling out of tobacco, which was once the fourth biggest revenue source, health outcomes not shifting and the creation of a multibillion‑dollar industry for organised crime. So my question is: what consideration has been given to reducing tobacco excise to attack the financial incentive that’s so attractive to crime gangs?

    Chalmers:

    We’d rather give tax relief to every Australian taxpayer than to provide tax relief for smoking. We don’t think that’s the best way to go about this problem that we acknowledge. There is a very big, very substantial problem in the budget when it comes to tobacco excise. I’ve been very upfront about that.

    There are 2 ways that tobacco excise comes down – one’s a very good way, and one’s a very bad way. The very good way is more people give up the darts, we want that. The bad way is that more people avoid the tax, and we are seeing in organised crime and in other ways there has been an increase in that kind of often violent tax evasion.

    And so what we’ve done in the Budget, recognising and acknowledging that problem, there is a very serious problem in the budget when it comes to that revenue line, is we invested another $157 million in enforcement and compliance. We think that’s a better way to collect more revenue in recognition and in acknowledgement of that problem. There was also $188 million in resourcing for compliance and enforcement, I think, in January of 2024.

    So we know we’ve got a problem there. We know we’ve got to do something about it. We’re not convinced that by cutting taxes for smoking that we’ll get the objective that we want. We think the better way is to invest in enforcement, and that’s what we’re doing.

    Connell:

    Laura Tingle from the ABC.

    Laura Tingle:

    Thanks, Tom. Treasurer, you said one of the priorities in the Budget is about lifting the productive capacity of the economy and you’ve also talked about the importance of small business. That’s something that the Coalition is clearly focused on.

    I just wondered if you could clarify for us the status of the instant asset write‑off. As I understand it, if legislation that’s already before the parliament isn’t extended by the time we leave here this week, it will – the write‑off level will revert to $10,00 for smaller businesses. What’s your plan for that, and what’s your plan for the future with the instant asset write‑off?

    Chalmers:

    Thanks, Laura. The extension for the instant asset write‑off that we’ve already budgeted for has been held up in the parliament. I think that’s, frankly, shameful that that’s been held up. It’s been held hostage to some Senate shenanigans.

    And so we want to see that passed. We’re talking with the crossbench about that right now, and I don’t want to drop them in it, but I’ve had a conversation with a crossbencher this morning about it. We know that it’s an issue and in case we run out of parliamentary runway, we want to see that extended.

    That’s been our goal all along. We’ve tried to pass it through the parliament. Katy will have a better sense of the Senate mechanics. She speaks fluent Senate, I don’t. But that’s been held up. So we want to see that passed. And as the Prime Minister indicated earlier today, we’ll have more to say about the future of the instant asset write‑off in addition to that.

    But we want to do the right thing by Australia’s small businesses. We think it’s a great thing that something like 25,000 new businesses are being created on average every month in the life of our government, which is a record.

    We’re doing what we can to support them – energy bill relief, this instant asset write‑off, supporting the hospitality sector with a tax break, extending the unfair trading practice protections for small business, strengthening the ACCC to level the playing field, what we’re doing in mergers and acquisitions. That’s all about supporting small business, and we’d like to pass the instant asset write‑off as part of that, too.

    Connell:

    Next question, Ben Westcott from Bloomberg.

    Ben Westcott:

    Thanks, Tom, and thanks for your speech, Treasurer. In just over a week from today it’s Liberation Day in the US when US President Donald Trump will announce his new tariff regime. I just wanted to check, in advance of that – sorry, and just now Donald Trump has said there will be very limited exemptions to the tariffs that are due to come into place.

    In advance of that day, have you had any conversations with your counterpart? Has the government had any conversations with the Trump administration to try and secure one of those exemptions? And have you been given any guarantees?

    Chalmers:

    No is the answer to the last part of your question. We take no outcome or no option for granted. But we are engaging, as you would expect us to. Wherever we can we’re engaging. And we’re speaking up for and standing up for Australia’s interests.

    There are 2 kinds of concern associated with these escalating trade tensions for us – the direct impact on our industries and workers and businesses. Obviously, a big concern, we want to make sure that we don’t trade away or give away the sorts of things that we cherish – the PBS is obviously a good example of that. But more broadly as well, these escalating trade tensions are a very substantial concern.

    Trade tensions, as you know and as your news organisation knows, risk higher inflation and slower growth at a time when the world is just coming to the good end of these inflationary pressures. And we’ve had a period and we expect a period of slow growth. And so growth has not been thick on the ground, and inflation has been a challenge, and so we don’t want to see these escalating trade tensions make things worse.

    We’ll continue to engage where we can. We’ll continue to speak up and stand up for Australia’s interests, and I’m sure that the outcome of President Trump’s deliberations will be known before long.

    Connell:

    Katina Curtis from The West Australian.

    Katina Curtis:

    Thanks, Tom. Thanks, Treasurer.

    Chalmers:

    I don’t know about that front page today, Katina, with me as the Nirvana cover –

    Curtis:

    What have you got against Nirvana?

    Chalmers:

    – it was a bit confronting, so.

    Curtis:

    I think it’s fair to say there’s been an increasing drumbeat of calls for broader tax reform. The tax cuts, top‑up tax cuts haven’t met the mark for most people in terms of that. And probably picking up on your earlier comments about reforms that Clare referenced, do you think that in order to bed down proper big reforms for the Australian economy, we need 4‑year terms in parliament? And would you put that to the people?

    Chalmers:

    First of all, I’ve always – for as long as I can remember – I’ve thought 4‑year fixed terms would be better than 3‑year variable terms. That sounds like something Anthony and Westpac would say, but I’ve always been a believer in 4‑year fixed terms.

    I can’t imagine that we would put that to a referendum ahead of some of the other referenda options that are available to us. And so I don’t want to say where that belongs in the queue. That would be better for long‑term economic decision‑making. I don’t think anybody seriously contests that.

    What I would contest, respectfully, Katina, is this idea that 3‑year terms prevents economic reform. I said before that it’s unusual in a pre‑election Budget to have billions of dollars of savings. It’s also unusual in a pre‑election Budget to have proper, genuine, serious economic reform.

    And here I shout out my colleague and my mate over here, Andrew Leigh, because we’ve been working on this non‑competes clause for a while now. I salute him and his work, his commitment. I see Danielle over there. We’ve been working with the PC on some of these other economic reforms like occupational licensing in the electrical trades. These are ways that we can keep the reform wheels turning even in the context of 3‑year parliamentary terms.

    Connell:

    Did you like any of the front pages?

    Chalmers:

    Next question.

    Connell:

    Final question – that might get a better answer – Jacob Shteyman AAP.

    Jacob Shteyman:

    Thanks, Treasurer, for your address. Jacob Shteyman from AAP. Your extra tax cuts in this Budget essentially just give back 2 years’ worth of bracket creep to income earners. As spending increases, income earners will face an increasing large share of the tax burden as a result of bracket creep. Why not just index the tax brackets to save having to do this every 2 years?

    Chalmers:

    Well, because we’ve got to make the budget add up and most countries in the OECD, they don’t index the tax brackets. I know it’s a suggestion put forward by good people. Good, well‑motivated people say that we should do that. We’re not considering that.

    There are good reasons to index parts of our economic armoury – social security and the like. But we’ve found a different, I think better way to return bracket creep now 3 times. We’re cutting taxes for every Australian taxpayer 3 times – last year, next year and the year after. And one of our big motivations there is returning bracket creep, but also doing it in a way where we get the most economic bang for buck.

    Now, you can see the Treasury analysis in the Budget papers last night really about the participation impacts in terms of labour hours, in terms of women’s workforce participation. We think we’re going to get a lot of economic bang for buck for those tax cuts, as modest as they are. And so that’s our preferred approach. We know that there are other approaches out there but we’ve got to make it all add up. We’ve got to make it all balance out with all of these other considerations that we have.

    Connell:

    We’ve got our own budget bottom line at the Press Club. Would you agree to a debate with the Shadow Treasurer; it will be packed out, I’m sure

    Chalmers:

    I would like to do that. Josh Frydenberg did that in the last election. Josh deserves the credit for agreeing to that. I thought it was a useful opportunity. He enjoyed it, I enjoyed it, and we got a lot out of it. And so I would have thought Angus Taylor could front up to the Press Club and have a debate. I’ve actually written to Angus with all of the requests that we’ve received for debates. I think there’s probably 10 different requests for debates.

    I would happily debate him at least weekly during the election campaign. I mean that seriously. I think that would be a good thing. And a lot of you have put forward suggestions about the best forum for that. If there’s a neutral forum, an appropriate forum, we should do it.

    I made myself available for Q&A on Monday night to do an economic debate. Unfortunately, he declined that opportunity, and that’s for him to explain why he did that. But I would certainly be very, very happy to fulfil what I think should be an obligation on a Treasurer, to front up to the National Press Club and to do an economic debate. And I hope he agrees to your kind invitation.

    Connell:

    I’m sure he’s watching. So there we go. We thank you for your time today. Try to contain your excitement as you get another Press Club membership. Ladies and gentlemen, please thank Jim Chalmers.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Address to the Canberra Business Chamber and Institute of Public Accountants online budget breakfast

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    It’s terrific to be with you and I’m sorry we’re not meeting in person in the Great Hall today. I acknowledge that I’m on Ngunnawal land today, and acknowledge all First Nations people joining us.

    Thank you to the Canberra Business Chamber and the Institute of Public Accountants for again putting on this event, which is really a fixture in the budget calendar. I’ve done your event many times. I enjoy it more in person than virtually, but it is a real pleasure to be able to engage with the Canberra business community.

    Let me start off with where we are in a global context, then go to a couple of the key measures in the Budget and finally finish up by asking the question: ‘What does the Budget mean for Canberra?’

    If we look around the world, uncertainty is up. We’ve always lived in an uncertain world, but policy uncertainty is combining with geopolitical uncertainty. At this moment, we’ve seen a range of our counterpart economies go into recession as they’ve sought to battle inflation. The UK and New Zealand have suffered recessions, and many other economies around the world have experienced quarters of negative growth as they sought to tame the global cost‑of‑living challenge. Australia, uniquely in our history, has managed to bring inflation down into the Reserve Bank’s target band without a significant rise in unemployment. We should be collectively extraordinarily proud of this. It’s not the story of the 70s, the 80s or the 90s, where taming inflation meant increasing unemployment.

    In Australia, we’ve managed to maintain full employment while getting prices back under control. And that in itself is a remarkable achievement. More than a million jobs created, interest rates now coming down, inflation back within the band, a strong labour market. So, while you look around the world and see a lot of uncertainty, there’s not many places you’d rather be than Australia.

    The Treasurer last night talked about 5 big themes. I don’t have half an hour, so let me focus on 2: cost of living and productivity. In terms of cost of living, our biggest measure is continuing the tax cuts that we began last year. Last year as you remember, we adjusted the tax cuts so every taxpayer got a tax cut. Now we’re announcing that from 2026–27, we’ll be delivering a tax cut worth $268 for everyone earning over $45,000 per year, and the same again the year after that. That will be worth about $10 a week for the average worker, and it adds to the previous tax cut worth about $40 a week for the average worker to around $50 a week. That sits alongside the energy bill relief which will be extended for another half year, reflecting the pressure many households are under.

    And then there’s the systemic changes: cheaper medicines, cheaper childcare. The work we’re doing in supermarket competition has a cost‑of‑living lens as well. We’ve commissioned the biggest review of the supermarkets in 17 years, and that review continues to make recommendations which build on the government’s work to tackle shrinkflation and ensure that Australian shoppers get a better deal at the checkout. You’ll soon be seeing the next iteration of CHOICE’s quarterly gross price grocery price monitoring, which is another measure that Labor has put in place to ensure that shoppers get a better deal.

    Now, Emma [Alberici] talked about productivity and about a couple of the productivity boosting measures we have in place. I want to focus on those because it is really important that we as progressives, are focused on not only boosting demand, but also on the supply side, on ensuring that we’re unlocking the growth potential of the Australian economy. Emma rightly talked about the work that we’ve done on early learning, providing that 3 day guarantee, following the experts and getting rid of the activity test in order to unlock the productivity potential of the Australian workforce. We’re investing in skills, finally completing that Gonski project of ensuring that every school gets its appropriate level of funding, and that final agreement with the Queensland Premier that was announced this week is the last piece of the puzzle in those Gonski reforms. It’s not just money, it’s about reforms. It’s about more targeted teaching, more intensive literacy and numeracy education to tackle that challenge that we’ve seen in the OECD PISA tests, where Australian students since the beginning of the millennium have slipped back about a year of achievement. We need to do better, and this money will allow us to do that.

    The boost in Free TAFE places is vital in ensuring that we have more skills for the jobs in the modern economy, particularly in construction. We understand that we need to increase uptake and we need to encourage apprentices to stay in on the tools. We recognise that by boosting investment in modular methods of construction, we can also unlock productivity in the housing sector. Housing sector productivity has gone down in Australia, as it has in many other advanced countries, and a recent Productivity Commission report talked about some of the challenges. They’re not bagging unions – far from it. They’re talking about the challenges of scale and about the way in which modular construction has sometimes struggled, about some of the regulatory challenges that housing construction faces, and our government is very focused on unlocking housing sector productivity.

    Now, Emma also talked about one of our key productivity boosting measures in this Budget, which is around the competition reforms relating to non‑competes. When I first started looking at this about 5 years ago, people said ‘Oh, it’s just an American thing. Sure, one in 5 American workers have non‑competes but you won’t find the same in Australia.’ So, we worked with e61 and with the ABS in order to do surveys that revealed, lo and behold, that one in 5 Australian workers were subject to a non‑compete clause – a clause that stopped them from moving to a better job. And then the argument came ‘It’s just executives being put on gardening leave’. But it turned out in the surveys that it’s gardeners, it’s early childhood workers, security guards, a whole range of workers in low‑wage professions that have been caught by standard form employment agreements which are preventing them from moving to a better job.

    Our reform will then unlock a productivity boost, because if you want to start a firm on a full‑employment economy, you need to hire workers from other firms. It’ll apply to workers earning under $175,000 – the Fair Work Act high‑income threshold. Our estimate, the estimates we have from the experts on this suggests that it will boost wages by around $2,500 per year. That means for those affected workers, those one in 5 – that’s a boost of around $50 a week, commensurate with the tax cut gains that I talked about.

    Getting rid of non‑compete laws for low wage workers shouldn’t trouble businesses, because you can still put in place non‑disclosure agreements that ensure that your secrets can’t walk out. And in fact, what’s going on at the moment is that many of these non‑compete clauses are not legally enforceable. We’re tying up workers and firms in a thicket of legal regulations. By getting rid of non‑competes and encouraging firms to instead use targeted non‑disclosure agreements, we will unlock productivity.

    Finally, for Canberra this Budget builds on the investments of past budgets. On our record investment in the national cultural institutions. Investment in the War Memorial and the National Security precinct. This Albanese Labor government hasn’t neglected Canberra’s infrastructure spend, as the previous government did in their final budget, when Canberra received just one‑fifth of our fair share of infrastructure investment from the Coalition. Instead, this Albanese government has invested in bike paths, roads, and light rail for the nation’s capital.

    We’ve got a public service which is right sized for the needs of the nation, and the Coalition’s proposals for a public service cut would devastate the ACT. On one hand, they’re saying that they’re going to cut one in 5 public servants which suggests that frontline services such as people processing veterans’ claims or parental leave benefits would suffer. But then they try and say, ‘well we won’t hurt frontline services – we’ll only cut the Canberra public service’. If they rip 41,000 public service jobs out, and only in Canberra – that’s half the public service in Canberra. That would also devastate the nation’s capacity to deal with future pandemics, with national security risks, and with biosecurity challenges. The Coalition can’t have it both ways. Either their public service cuts are a threat to frontline services, or they will devastate the nation’s policy infrastructure, including our national security.

    So, thanks for the chance to talk about Budget 2025. Jim Chalmers and Katy Gallagher have put together a fantastic Budget which invests in productivity, tackles the cost of living, and delivers for Australia.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Interview with Georgia Stynes, Canberra Drive, ABC Radio

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    Georgia Stynes:

    Our guest is the Labor Member for Fenner, Dr Andrew Leigh, who has been listening into this previous conversation and joins us. Good afternoon.

    Andrew Leigh:

    Good afternoon Georgia, great to be with you.

    Stynes:

    Yeah, nice to be with you too. Do you acknowledge that there were some forgotten people in this Budget that a lot of the measures seem to be aimed towards, well, either people who are paying tax or business?

    Leigh:

    Well in our previous Budgets, we’ve raised the JobSeeker rate, we’ve increased Commonwealth Rent Assistance by over 40 per cent. We have prioritised those who are doing it tough by supporting increases to the minimum wage and supporting increases to aged care workers and early childhood workers.

    Our tax cuts are directed towards everyone. So, everyone earning over $45,000 receives that same benefit over the 2 tax cuts. Somewhere around $10 a week in conjunction with our previous tax cut totals around $50 a week or $2,500 a year. So, we’ve looked to deliver egalitarian reforms at the same time as focusing on the long run productivity challenge that our predecessors left us with.

    Stynes:

    To be fair, that that would buy you a democracy sausage though at election day, which is partly what’s being said is that this looked like an election budget. There weren’t lots of big things, big picture things.

    Leigh:

    Look, I think $50 a week is pretty significant. And you put that alongside the energy bill rebates, that $75 off each of your next 2 quarterly bills. The work we’ve done around cheaper medicines, cheaper childcare and housing affordability through our work with the ACT Government and other state and territory governments, historic investment in housing, all of that is focused on making us a more productive economy and at the same time helping to keep our lid on prices.

    Leigh:

    You live in Canberra, you’ve lived in Canberra for a long time and I know you spend a lot of time out in the community ACTCOSS, Vinnies, lots of agencies – Marymead Catholic Care are telling us that they’re seeing people come through their doors that have never come through their doors before. People that used to donate to them are now queuing up for food banks. Things have changed.

    Don’t you think this was an opportunity? The Budget was an opportunity to help those people struggling with the cost of living?

    Leigh:

    Last week the ACT Labor team was out at Marymead in Lyneham around an announcement that we’d made of investing in housing for women and children fleeing domestic and family violence. We pioritise those social spends and social supports in this Budget, as we have the productivity boosting reforms. We’re aiming to be an inclusive government that makes these investments for everyone.

    And I don’t think there has been an Australian Government, certainly in my lifetime, that has given so much of a priority to Canberra. Through the investments in the national cultural institutions, the National Security Precinct, the work in the War Memorial, prioritising the public service over outsourced consultants and contractors and giving the ACT our fair share of infrastructure spending, which you see strongly reflected in this Budget with the investments in the Monaro Highway, Gundaroo Drive and the like.

    Stynes:

    Do you acknowledge that Canberra has changed? That we are seeing more people on the streets and there are people struggling, that we are in a cost‑of‑living crisis?

    Leigh:

    Look, I think there’s certainly cost‑of‑living challenges. Inflation is now back within the Reserve Bank’s target band and we’ve done that for the first time in Australian history without smashing the labour market. Previously, we had a big surge in joblessness as Australia sought to bring down prices. We haven’t done that this time. We’ve got inflation under control while maintaining a historically low rate of unemployment – the lowest average rate of unemployment of any government in 50 years.

    The UK has gone into recession, New Zealand has gone into recession. Other countries have suffered quarters of negative growth as they’ve sought to tame inflation. Australia has tamed inflation while maintaining full employment. And that is so important to the social equity goals that you’re talking about there Georgia.

    Stynes:

    Dr Andrew Leigh is our guest. He’s the Labor Member for Fenner. Just on the text line, one listener says ‘What about a Newstart hike? Why didn’t that happen? Another listener has said ‘Yeah, the people currently living in tents in and around Canberra will get cold comfort from this Budget’. Another listener has said ‘long‑term unemployment really needed more analysis. They need to be looking at why this is happening. There’s a huge resource there if the government could help them do courses lead to degrees, we could get them into aged care or others that need employees.’

    I just want to, I know you’re very busy – just before we run out of time. One of the things that you’re quite passionate about is this non‑compete clause. Can you just explain to people how this will work? The changes?

    Leigh:

    One in 5 workers are subject to a non‑compete which makes it hard for them to move to a better job. People like the 17‑year‑old dance instructor who found herself harassed at work and then when she moved to a competing dance studio, found herself being threatened for breach of contract by her former employer. These non‑compete clauses are dampening down wages and decreasing productivity.

    And so we’re going to be getting rid of non‑compete clauses for workers earning under $175,000. That’s going to be great for wages. Those affected workers will see on average a 4 per cent wage boost and it’ll be great for productivity. It’ll make it easier to start a business because in a full employment economy you need to hire workers from other firms if you’re going to get a new business off the ground.

    Stynes:

    How many people does that actually affect in Canberra? Is that dancer an example here in Canberra or is that a federal example?

    Leigh:

    That’s an example from interstate, but certainly in the ACT I would expect that it would be around one in 5 workers affected as well. You know, these aren’t just high paid executives who are being affected. These are gardeners, cleaners, security guards, early childhood workers who are signing up to standard form employment agreements Georgia, which contain non‑compete clauses making it harder for them to move to a better job.

    Job mobility is a really important part of a productive economy. It’s a really important part of an economy in which wages grow. Labor wants people to earn more and keep more of what they earn.

    Stynes:

    Just to clarify though, this is also working, you know, when you’ve got people you would know too, people who work in say banking or in other areas or a lawyer and they, they resign and then they’re sort of between another job, they can’t go and work for another law firm between that period. Is that what you’re talking about or are you talking about other things?

    Leigh:

    If they earn less than $175,000 yes, they’ll be caught. And I should be clear Georgia, for any of your listeners who are running small businesses, those small businesses still have the protection of intellectual property laws, of non‑disclosure agreements. So they can hold their secrets but they can’t bind their staff to the desk.

    Stynes:

    When we talk about – because just back on that for a minute. That happens in the public service, obviously that happens in corporate jobs. But you’re saying the cap is how much they earn, is that right?

    Leigh:

    That’s right. And so, this is about getting wage growth going. We’ve seen a decline in job mobility under the former government and that may well be one of the reasons why we saw such lousy wage outcomes, why real wages were falling so sharply when we took office.

    Allowing people to move to a better job is really fundamental. It’s a question of freedom and opportunity and it’s also a way of ensuring that people get the wage gains they deserve.

    Stynes:

    There’s quite a few texts coming through just before you go too. One person says, ‘But the point is we have historically high rates of homelessness in this country’. Another listener has said ‘These tax cuts are a huge waste of money’.

    Spreading across Australia reduces its impact per person. Wouldn’t it have been better for this huge amount to go into one or 2 areas – say health, say education, say homelessness. Do you think that might have been a better look if that money had actually gone there?

    Leigh:

    Well, health, education, homelessness are all big priorities for us. In education, you’ve got the 3 day childcare guarantee and the national schools funding agreement that we’ve now signed up to with all states and territories. With health, we’ve been moving to get cheaper medicines. Reforms in this Budget will bring down the cost of PBS medicines from $31 to $25.

    In housing, we’ve been making bigger investments in social housing than any previous Australian Government through the Housing Australia Future Fund and our work with the states and territories on dealing with planning and zoning. So, all of those areas are big priorities for the government and were front and centre in the Budget last night.

    Stynes:

    There is criticism that this was a cobbled together Budget. The idea that this is fit for an election, but it wasn’t expected to be delivered. Is that true? Was this cobbled together?

    Leigh:

    Not at all. This is a Budget that delivers tax cuts which the Liberals and Nationals today voted against, and which focuses on long‑term reform such as getting competition policy going again. It’s got reforms which will allow electricians to work across state and territory borders. Really important for a sparkie in Queanbeyan to be able to do a job in O’Connor.

    And it’s got reforms which are focused on investing for the long run. Increasing the funding to the Clean Energy Finance Corporation, so it can do more innovative work in tackling climate change and that decarbonisation challenge.

    Stynes:

    We’ll have to leave it there I’m sorry but thank you so much for your time, I appreciate it.

    Leigh:

    Thank you, Georgia.

    Stynes:

    Thank you. That’s Dr Leigh there, Labor Member for Fenner.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI: SUTNTIB AB “Tewox” has acquired two Lidl store buildings in Jurbarkas and Panevėžys

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Vilnius, Lithuania, March 27, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) —

    The special closed-end real estate investment company AB Tewox (hereinafter referred to as the Investment Company) and UAB Lidl Lietuva have completed a transaction for the acquisition of two Lidl store buildings. The Investment Company acquired the stores in Jurbarkas, Dariaus ir Girėno st. 83, and in Panevėžys, Klaipėdos st. 109, each with an area of approximately 2,000 sq. m. The buildings have long-term lease agreements with UAB Lidl Lietuva, which will use the proceeds to continue the company’s expansion strategy in Lithuania.

    Luminor bank has provided financing of 6.7 mEUR for the acquisition. The Investment Company was advised by the law firm TGS Baltic and Lidl Lietuva was represented by the law firm Sorainen.

    Contact person for further information:

    Paulius Nevinskas

    Manager of the Investment Company

    paulius.nevinskas@lordslb.lt

    https://lordslb.lt/tewox_bonds/

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: ICYMI: Grassley Talks District Judges, Reconciliation and Whistleblowers on The Bottom Line

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Iowa Chuck Grassley
    WASHINGTON – Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee and former chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, joined The Bottom Line on Fox Business to discuss nationwide injunctions, reconciliation and his work to secure the promotion of IRS whistleblowers.
    Audio and excerpts of Grassley’s remarks follow.
    [embedded content]VIDEO
    On Nationwide Injunctions:
    “It ought to be a bipartisan issue, because within the last few years, Democrats have talked about reform, and we have Justice Kagan saying that the national approach is obviously being abused.
    “I would say that the very least we want to do is… limit [district court decisions] to the district court where the district judge sits and listen to the injunction as it applies to the people that are in the court. That eliminates one judge making a decision that affects 93 district court systems that we have in the United States.
    “I can’t wait to see if the Supreme Court does something when I’m Chairman of the Judiciary Committee, and we see this process is being vastly abused. For the first 150 years [of the United States], there was never one of these national injunctions. Then, for the next 70 years, [nationwide injunctions were] not used very often. But, within the last 20 years, this has been used [against] both Republican and Democrat administrations.”
    On Reconciliation:
    “Some people are talking about getting [reconciliation] done by August. That’s too late. We had a November 5 election, where this was a big issue, and the President has a mandate… we have a responsibility to carry out the results of the November 5 election.
    “This debt ceiling limit should not be anything that stands in the way of getting the reconciliation bill passed, because [we must] get reconciliation passed to make sure we don’t have the biggest tax cut in the history of the country.
    “I think [President Trump] is going to get a good share of [his tax priorities], but I would doubt if he’s going to get all of them, because of the total cost of all five of them… I think the President needs to pick and choose and tell Congress what’s most important to him.”
    On IRS Whistleblowers Gary Shapley and Joseph Ziegler:
    “I’ve been protecting these whistleblowers for months, or maybe more than a year and a half, and I’m glad that they are getting their job back, getting a promotion and being able to help this new Trump administration know where the bodies are buried. 
    “Most whistleblowers that I know are very patriotic people. I think that these two that you bring up showed how patriotic they were. They stuck to it. They were willing to go public with it, and we ought to be honoring people that know where the bodies are buried.
    “There’s a lot of other whistleblowers throughout previous administrations that have been ill treated, and I’m going to fight to get their jobs back as well.”
    -30-

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Facility improvements benefit Alexander Maconochie Centre staff and detainees

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    As part of ACT Government’s ‘One Government, One Voice’ program, we are transitioning this website across to our . You can access everything you need through this website while it’s happening.

    Released 27/03/2025

    An $8 million investment in the Alexander Maconochie Centre (AMC) has delivered upgraded and expanded spaces, benefiting staff and detainees. This infrastructure improvement is designed to enhance working conditions for staff and provide additional areas for detainees to engage in education and rehabilitation programs.

    Staff moved into the new building in February and work is underway to repurpose the previous admin areas into additional education spaces for detainees.

    One large classroom for group education sessions is available, while a large group program room, an additional distance education space, and a private, multi-purpose space for female detainees, will be completed in coming months.

    Minister for Corrections Dr Marisa Paterson said the new spaces improved conditions for both staff and detainees.

    “These upgrades are enhancing working conditions for staff and improving educational enrolment opportunities for detainees,” Minister Paterson said.

    “The new administration building is a significant improvement for our dedicated staff who work hard every day to provide a critical service to the Canberra community.

    “The vacating of the previous administrative areas has created an opportunity to expand the spaces available for detainee services. These new areas will increase the capacity to provide education and rehabilitation programs, helping reduce the likelihood of detainees re-offending and returning to detention.”

    Heating and cooling of new and existing detainee education spaces will also be improved as part of the project.

    Education currently offered at the AMC and delivered by registered training organisations include courses in construction, safe work practices, business, and hygienic practices and food safety.

    Rehabilitation programs currently include the Explore, Question, Understand, Investigate, Practice/Plan and Succeed (EQUIPS) suite of programs, such as EQUIPS Addiction and EQUIPS Domestic and Family Violence

    Distance Education is available for eligible detainees, with tertiary-level support from a senior education officer. External study is subject to approval, and detainees are responsible for the relevant administration, deliverables and costs. Library and ICT resources are available to detainees engaging in distance education.

    Quotes attributable ACT Corrective Services Commissioner Leanne Close:

    “Education and training opportunities are an extremely important factor in reducing recidivism,” Ms Close said.

    “While the ACT is well above the national average, with more than a third of eligible detainees enrolled in education or training programs, these new detainee spaces increase our ability to provide these critical programs moving forward.”

    – Statement ends –

    Marisa Paterson, MLA | Media Releases

    «ACT Government Media Releases | «Minister Media Releases

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Support for Aussie tourism businesses

    Source: Australian Attorney General’s Agencies

    To help Australian tourism operators tap into the rapidly growing Filipino and Thai visitor markets, the Albanese Government is launching two new training programs.

    Delivered in partnership with the Australian Tourism Export Council, the Philippines Host and Thailand Host programs will equip Australian tourism businesses with the knowledge, cultural insights, and skills needed to deliver an unforgettable experience for inbound travellers.

    Travel from these markets has rebounded post-pandemic, with visitors from the Philippines reaching 171,900, and visitors from Thailand reaching 95,100 in 2024.

    But there is great potential to grow both markets further, with Tourism Research Australia forecasting that by 2029, annual visitors from the Philippines will increase by 42% and annual visitors from Thailand to increase by 47%.

    Airlines are expanding routes to meet this increasing demand, with Qantas adding Brisbane-Manila flights (100,000+ seats annually), Cebu Pacific increasing Sydney and Melbourne services, and Jetstar boosting Australia-Thailand routes to 22 weekly flights, including new Brisbane and Perth connections.

    The Albanese Government is helping tourism operators tap into new markets, recognising the opportunity it presents as highlighted in our Invested: Australia’s Southeast Asia Economic Strategy to 2040.

    The Host programs will be delivered by the Australian Tourism Export Council (ATEC), which also delivers the Tourism Training Hub, and the recently released Vietnam Host program.

    Australian tourism operators can register for the Philippines and Thailand Host Programs via the ATEC Tourism Training Hub.

    Quotes attributable to Minister for Trade and Tourism, Senator the Hon Don Farrell:

    “These new Programs will help deepen Australia’s engagement in Southeast Asia by preparing our tourism industry to attract and service visitors, and drive growth from the Philippines and Thailand.

    “New aviation services are helping increase travel between Australia and the Philippines and Thailand, which presents a wealth of opportunities for Australian businesses.

    “We want to ensure that our fantastic tourism operators are ready to take advantage of these opportunities, growing their businesses and creating jobs.”

    Quotes attributable to Mr Peter Shelley, Managing Director, Australian Tourism Export Council:

    “With the Philippines and Thailand emerging as key growth markets, now is the time for operators to invest in market readiness.

    “These new Host programs equip businesses with the knowledge and cultural insights to create meaningful visitor experiences and capitalise on these expanding opportunities.

    “Developed in collaboration with industry experts and Austrade, these Host programs provide tourism businesses with market-specific understanding that translates into the real-world.”

    Quotes attributable to Australian tourism industry representative, Tina Chaisuwan-Baker, Sales Manager – South East Asia, SeaLink Marine & Tourism: 

    “Undertaking ATEC’s Vietnam Host online course gave me key insights into the cultural preferences and service expectations of Vietnamese tourists coming into Australia. 

    “This knowledge has been essential in enhancing my approach to selling and tailoring our products, ensuring we meet the unique needs of the Vietnamese market.”

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Child Poverty – Global aid funding cuts – 14 million children at increased risk of severe malnutrition and death

    Source: UNICEF Aotearoa NZ

    Reductions in donor funding threaten to unravel decades of progress for the world’s most vulnerable children and women 
    At least 14 million children are expected to face disruptions to nutrition support and services because of recent and expected global funding cuts, leaving them at heightened risk of severe malnutrition and death – according to initial analyses issued by UNICEF as world leaders gather at the Nutrition for Growth Summit in Paris.
    The funding crisis comes at a time of unprecedented need for children who continue to face record levels of displacement, new and protracted conflicts, disease outbreaks, and the deadly consequences of climate change – all of which are undermining their access to adequate nutrition.
    “Over the last decades, we have made impressive progress in reducing child malnutrition globally because of a shared commitment and sustained investment,” said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell. “Since 2000, the number of stunted children under the age of five has fallen by 55 million, and the lives of millions of severely malnourished children have been saved. But steep funding cuts will dramatically reverse these gains and put the lives of millions more children at risk.” 
    Additional impacts across 17 high priority countries due to funding cuts include: 
    – More than 2.4 million children suffering from severe acute malnutrition could go without Ready-to-use-Therapeutic-Food (RUTF) for the remainder of 2025. 
    – Up to 2,300 life-saving stabilisation centres – providing critical care for children suffering from severe wasting with medical complications – are at risk of closing or severely scaling back services.
    – Almost 28,000 UNICEF-supported outpatient therapeutic centres for the treatment of malnutrition are at risk, and in some cases have already stopped operating.
    Today, levels of severe wasting in children under five remain gravely high in some fragile contexts and humanitarian emergencies. Adolescent girls and women are especially vulnerable. Even before the funding cuts, the number of pregnant and breastfeeding women and adolescent girls suffering from acute malnutrition soared from 5.5 million to 6.9 million – or 25 per cent – since 2020. UNICEF expects these figures to rise without urgent action from donors as well as adequate investments from national governments.
    “UNICEF is calling on governments and donors to prioritise investments in health and nutrition programmes for children and is urging national governments to allocate more funding to domestic nutrition and health services. Good nutrition is the foundation of child survival and development, with impressive returns on investment. Dividends will be measured in stronger families, societies and countries, and a more stable world,” said Russell. 
    UNICEF is determined to stay and deliver for the world’s children by continuing to prioritise high-impact programmes, optimise resources, and accelerate cost-saving measures. But urgent and immediate action is needed to mitigate the impact of the global funding crisis on children, protect the most vulnerable, and safeguard their futures. To address child and maternal malnutrition in the long-term – including through the prevention, detection, and treatment of child undernutrition – UNICEF launched the Child Nutrition Fund (CNF) in 2023, with the support of the UK Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office, the Gates Foundation, and the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation. UNICEF continues to urge governments, partners and philanthropic donors to contribute to this lifesaving fund and other flexible funding instruments for children and women.
    About UNICEF
    UNICEF, the United Nations agency for children, works to protect the rights of every child, everywhere, especially the most disadvantaged children and in the toughest places to reach. Across more than 190 countries and territories, we do whatever it takes to help children survive, thrive, and fulfil their potential.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI USA: WATCH: Baldwin, Welch Lead Schumer, Colleagues Spotlighting Trumps Cuts to Cancer and Alzheimer’s Cures

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Wisconsin Tammy Baldwin
    A full recording of the forum is available here
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senators Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) and Peter Welch (D-VT) led Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and 14 of their Senate colleagues at a forum to spotlight Elon Musk and President Donald Trump’s efforts to cut cancer, Alzheimer’s, and other diseases treatments and cures. The forum, “Cures in Crisis: What Gutting NIH Research Means for Americans with Cancer, Alzheimer’s, & Other Diseases,” featured witnesses that highlighted the dire impact of cuts at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), including former Director of the NIH, Dr. Monica Bertagnolli, M.D., two Alzheimer’s disease researchers from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Emory University, and two patients who have benefitted from NIH clinical trials.
    “I truly wish I didn’t need to host this forum but Elon Musk’s DOGE and Donald Trump are quite literally on a path to rip away cures to cancer and Alzheimer’s disease – all to make room in their budget for tax breaks for the richest of the rich. Today, we heard from the people who will be paying the price – and I hope my Republican colleagues and the President were listening,” said Senator Baldwin. “Right now, we are wasting precious time that we cannot get back for American families hoping that their loved one has a chance to get better.”
    “The Trump Administration has taken a wrecking ball to the National Institutes of Health without a care about who gets hurt in the process. The first to feel the impact of these cuts will be American patients who rely on NIH’s cutting-edge research to get new therapies and cure diseases like Alzheimer’s and cancer. DOGE’s mass firing spree has also left our nation’s top scientists on the chopping block, stifling American innovation and weakening our leadership in biomedical science for years to come. These cuts and layoffs mean the difference between life and death for communities in both red and blue states,” said Senator Welch. “I’m proud to join Senator Baldwin and our colleagues today to defend our commitment to science, research, and care across America.”
    “I resigned my post as NIH Director in January of this year. Since then, I have had no insight into how decisions are being made by our current leaders at HHS. I can speak, however, about the downstream effects of their decisions, and some irreparable damage that their policies are producing. To date more than 300 grants terminated; and about $1.5 billion in funding delays and barriers that are preventing NIH’s role of ensuring that funding is delivered to outstanding researchers across the nation,” said Dr. Bertagnolli, former Director of the NIH. “Today, we are just beginning to see progress against devastating diseases which have long been hopeless – Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, even pancreatic cancer – all because of NIH funding. And this has proven to be a great investment for American taxpayers – producing both extraordinary improvements in health, and significant profits for our nation’s economy. How can we afford to see this progress stalled? Overall, the loss to our nation on so many levels will be too great.”
    “I’m here to emphasize the critical importance of NIH funding in the fight against Alzheimer’s—a disease that is one of our greatest public health and economic challenges. While deaths from heart disease and cancer have leveled off or declined thanks to decades of NIH investment, deaths from Alzheimer’s and related dementias have increased. Over 6.9 million Americans live with Alzheimer’s today—a number projected to double by 2050 without effective solutions,” said Dr. Sterling Johnson, PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison Professor and Associate Director of Wisconsin Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center. “Our patients who have this progressive disease don’t have the luxury of time to shoulder the unnecessary delays and uncertainty that we are currently experiencing. The clock is ticking for them and their families. Now more than ever we need the continued full resolve and commitment of the federal government to meet their need.”
    “I am here today as a scientist who has had 2 NIH grants abruptly terminated in the past month. On February 28th my first NIH grant was terminated, which had only 6 months remaining on a 4-year award… While these terminations are devastating for me and my team, particularly junior faculty and students, my primary concern is for the patients, research participants and the families who are already being impacted by the NIH’s recent radical shift in funding priorities,” said Dr. Whitney Wharton, PhD, Emory University Associate Professor and Alzheimer’s Disease researcher. “Termination of my peer reviewed grants, and hundreds of others, which were awarded based on merit, has potentially devastating implications for all Americans. It sets a concerning precedent where scientific inquiry and peer reviewed and awarded projects are turned off and on based on a set of changing priorities. Not only can this cause confusion, but it could also impact the pipeline of new and talented young investigators, and erase entire communities of patients, who are the most impacted by diseases like Alzheimer’s, from research entirely.”
    “I speak here today not only for myself, but for every patient who has ever held out hope that research would buy them another year — or another decade. Without robust, sustained, and predictable funding from the NIH, those bridges to the next treatment won’t be there when patients need them. The bridge that saved me was built through decades of investment, innovation, and relentless commitment from our nation’s scientific community. But those bridges don’t build themselves,” said Dr. Larry Saltzman, M.D., retired physician living with leukemia and former Executive Research Director for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. “I am living proof of what NIH research can do, and I don’t think I would be here today without the commitment that Congress has shown by prioritizing NIH funding over the past many decades. I ask you to protect this funding — so that more people can outlive their expiration dates.”
    “The National Institutes of Health (NIH) and other federal agencies have been critical in funding groundbreaking research that offers hope to thousands of individuals like me, including by providing access to experimental treatments for ALS. The experimental drug I am taking could not only extend my life but could also lead to a cure. Access to this drug could mean seeing my son and grandson graduate high school and college, something I did not think was possible when I was diagnosed,” said Mr. Jessy Ybarra, veteran living with ALS and Board of Trustees member for the ALS Association. “But now funding cuts and reductions to funding at NIH and other research agencies threaten to derail decades of progress right when we are at the tipping point of finally finding a cure. But to be clear, this isn’t just about me, and everyone else impacted by ALS now and in the future. ALS costs our nation over one-billion dollars a year. Investing in finding a cure is not only fiscally responsible, but very simply, good public policy. I urge Congress to reject these harmful cuts to NIH and support the funding necessary to make ALS a livable disease and cure it. My life, our lives, and our economy depend on it.”
    Over the last two months, the Trump Administration has attacked, compromised, and gutted research at the NIH for lifesaving cures and treatments, including:
    Cutting Funding for Research Facilities: NIH announced last month that it was planning to arbitrarily cap indirect cost rates at 15%, which would slash billions of dollars in funding that helps research institutions, like the University of Wisconsin, operate their facilities and labs, pay staff, and buy equipment needed for groundbreaking work to find cures for diseases and treatments for patients.
    Funding Freeze for Alzheimer’s Disease: The Trump Administration is jeopardizing $65 million in funding for Alzheimer’s disease research at 14 research institutions across the country. 14 of the 35 Alzheimer’s Disease Research Centers (ADRCs) have had their funding halted because the Trump Administration continues to cancel NIH Advisory Council meetings, which are the final required step in the grant approval process.
    Terminating Grants for Lifesaving Research: The Trump Administration stopped all grant funding at NIH for ten days in February and is continuing to block funding for lifesaving disease research, like finding a cure for Alzheimer’s disease. This halt in funding is despite two court orders directing the Trump Administration to end its unlawful efforts to freeze all federal grants. This is in addition to Elon Musk indiscriminately terminating hundreds of active NIH grants every week, in direct defiance of federal court orders to stop NIH funding changes amid ongoing litigation.
    Gutting Critical Staff: Mass layoffs at HHS under Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s direction are impacting everything from research to clinical trials, including scientists, nurses, pharmacists, and experts tracking disease spread. Reports show the NIH is expected to cut between 3,400 and 5,000 positions from its workforce of 20,000.
    NIH funding contributed to research for roughly 99 percent of drugs approved between 2010 and 2019, including heart medications, according to the Center for American Progress. The advocacy group United for Medical Research found that in fiscal year 2023, funding from the agency supported more than 410,000 jobs, with 10,000 NIH-supported jobs in some states. In that same year, NIH-funded research fueled nearly $93 billion in economic spending. Overall, the economic benefit of NIH funding is more than twice the investment made through NIH appropriations. For a breakdown of how much funding each state receives from the NIH, click here.
    Joining Senators Baldwin and Welch at the forum were Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and Senators Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV), Patty Murray (D-WA), Chris Van Hollen (D-MD), Tina Smith (D-MN), Ed Markey (D-MA), Maggie Hassan (D-NH), Dick Durbin (D-IL), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Jacky Rosen (D-NV), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Angela Alsobrooks (D-MD), Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA).
    A full recording of the forum is available here. Witnesses opening statements are available here.
    A one-pager on President Donald Trump’s actions to gut the NIH and its impacts is available here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: ECEQ Transforms Sustainable Finance With Blockchain Innovation

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    DENVER, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Ecole de Commerce Esprit Quantique (ECEQ), also known as Quantum Mind Business School, has unveiled a groundbreaking initiative that seamlessly integrates financial innovation with environmental responsibility through its innovative ECEQ Token. This revolutionary approach establishes new standards for sustainable investment in the French market and beyond.

    Blockchain Technology Powers ECEQ’s Environmental Finance Solutions

    The ECEQ Token represents a sophisticated financial instrument specifically designed to catalyze environmental and technological transformation. By leveraging advanced blockchain technology and artificial intelligence capabilities, ECEQ has created a comprehensive ecosystem that effectively incentivizes and supports sustainable community development initiatives.

    “Our vision at Ecole de Commerce Esprit Quantique extends beyond traditional financial returns,” explains the institution’s leadership team. “We’re creating a technological and financial framework that makes sustainable investment both accessible and profitable for all stakeholders involved in our ecosystem.”

    The ECEQ Token distinguishes itself within the digital asset landscape through several innovative features that highlight Quantum Mind Business School’s commitment to technological advancement and environmental stewardship:

    • Transparent Blockchain Financing: Utilizing blockchain technology to ensure complete transparency in all financial transactions, allowing investors to track every aspect of green project investments with unprecedented clarity and accountability.
    • Smart Contract Ecosystem: Implementation of advanced smart contract technology that automates fund distribution for green initiatives, ensuring precise resource allocation while significantly reducing administrative overhead costs.
    • Decentralized Energy Exchange: Facilitating community-level energy trading that empowers residents and businesses to efficiently utilize and trade renewable energy resources, creating economic incentives for sustainable energy practices.

    Sustainable Environmental Practices Thrive Through ECEQ Token Ecosystem

    Ecole de Commerce Esprit Quantique has introduced a revolutionary reward system that directly encourages sustainable living practices through its token ecosystem. Residents and businesses can earn ECEQ Tokens by actively participating in verified low-carbon activities, creating direct financial incentives for sustainable choices including utilizing green energy sources, implementing effective waste management practices, and choosing eco-friendly transportation options.

    The ECEQ Token reward system represents a fundamental shift in how environmental behavior can be incentivized through financial mechanisms. By providing tangible economic benefits for sustainable practices, Quantum Mind Business School has created a self-reinforcing ecosystem where ecological responsibility becomes financially advantageous for all participants.

    Environmental Leadership Defines ECEQ’s Market Position

    Professor Pierre Duboisier, the driving force behind Ecole de Commerce Esprit Quantique, brings a profound personal commitment to the institution’s environmental initiatives. His philosophy emphasizes that finance must transcend simple wealth generation to become a catalyst for meaningful social progress.

    His personal observations of environmental challenges, particularly regarding the Seine River’s ecosystem degradation, have been instrumental in shaping ECEQ’s mission and strategic priorities. This connection to real-world environmental issues reflects Quantum Mind Business School’s commitment to addressing pressing ecological concerns through innovative financial instruments like the ECEQ Token.

    Smart City Development Advances Through ECEQ’s Blockchain Framework

    Quantum Mind Business School is positioning itself at the forefront of a transformative movement that integrates technology, finance, and environmental stewardship. By combining blockchain capabilities, artificial intelligence, and an unwavering commitment to sustainability, the ECEQ Token ecosystem is designed to:

    • Optimize urban resource management through data-driven solutions and automated efficiency mechanisms that enhance city infrastructure and reduce environmental impact.
    • Enhance investment returns while simultaneously generating positive environmental impact, proving that profitability and sustainability can successfully coexist within the same financial framework.
    • Accelerate the ecological transformation of cities worldwide by providing both financial resources and technological frameworks necessary for meaningful change at municipal, regional, and national levels.

    About ECEQ – Ecole de Commerce Esprit Quantique

    Ecole de Commerce Esprit Quantique (ECEQ), also known as Quantum Mind Business School, stands as a pioneering institution operating at the critical intersection of financial innovation, technological advancement, and environmental sustainability. With a comprehensive global vision and steadfast commitment to transformative solutions, ECEQ is actively redefining the role of finance in creating a more sustainable world.

    By combining rigorous financial expertise with cutting-edge technology and ecological consciousness, Ecole de Commerce Esprit Quantique is establishing new paradigms for responsible investment in the 21st century. The ECEQ Token represents the culmination of this visionary approach, offering a tangible mechanism through which financial incentives can drive positive environmental outcomes.

    Contact Information for Quantum Mind Business School

    • Business Name: Quantum Mind Business School
    • Contact Person: Pierre Duboisier
    • Email: service@eceq.org
    • Website: https://eceq.org/
    • Address: 518, 17th St, Denver, CO 80202, United States

    For more information about ECEQ’s innovative sustainable finance initiatives and the ECEQ Token ecosystem, please visit https://eceq.org/ or contact Quantum Mind Business School directly.

    Disclaimer: This press release is provided by Quantum Mind Business School. The statements, views, and opinions expressed in this content are solely those of the content provider and do not necessarily reflect the views of this media platform or its publisher. We do not endorse, verify, or guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of any information presented. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, investment, or trading advice. Investing in crypto and mining related opportunities involves significant risks, including the potential loss of capital. Readers are strongly encouraged to conduct their own research and consult with a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. However, due to the inherently speculative nature of the blockchain sector–including cryptocurrency, NFTs, and mining–complete accuracy cannot always be guaranteed. Neither the media platform nor the publisher shall be held responsible for any fraudulent activities, misrepresentations, or financial losses arising from the content of this press release.Speculate only with funds that you can afford to lose.Neither the media platform nor the publisher shall be held responsible for any fraudulent activities, misrepresentations, or financial losses arising from the content of this press release. In the event of any legal claims or charges against this article, we accept no liability or responsibility.

    Legal Disclaimer: This media platform provides the content of this article on an “as-is” basis, without any warranties or representations of any kind, express or implied. We do not assume any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information presented herein. Any concerns, complaints, or copyright issues related to this article should be directed to the content provider mentioned above.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/11fb9ea0-3ce1-4b00-9924-5bff7e9476cc

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Senate Intel Vice Chairman Mark R. Warner Pushes FBI Director to Confirm Investigation into Misuse of Messaging App Signal by Senior Trump Officials

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Commonwealth of Virginia Mark R Warner

    WASHINGTON – Today, Vice Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Mark R. Warner (D-VA) wrote Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Director Kash Patel requesting he confirm that the FBI will open an investigation into the Signal group chat that senior Trump administration officials used to discuss classified information, including information revealing that the United States was preparing to conduct airstrikes against Houthi targets in Yemen.

    “Department of Defense policies dictate that information concerning military plans, such as contained in the messages sent by the Secretary of Defense, is classified, and no reasonable process would allow for communication of this information over a commercial messaging application before U.S. pilots had completed and safely returned from their mission,” Sen. Warner wrote.   

    Director Patel, who was not part of the Signal chat, testified yesterday before Senate Intelligence Committee stating he could not provide information on this matter because he had only recently been made aware of it.

    “Yesterday you testified that you could not provide information to the Committee concerning this matter because you had only recently been made aware of it,” Sen. Warner continued. “In other contexts, the FBI has acted promptly to open an investigation when information of a similar nature has been mishandled.”

    Now, two days later, Sen. Warner is requesting that Director Patel clarify the actions the FBI will take to investigate this matter:

    1. Will you commit to opening an investigation of this matter, if you have not already done so?
    2. Will you collect the devices involved, whether government-issued or otherwise?
    3. Will you scan those devices for malware or other indications of unauthorized access?

    A copy of letter is available here and text is below.

    Director Patel,

    Between March 11th and 15th, the Secretary of Defense and other senior Trump Administration officials used a commercial messaging application to communicate information revealing that the United States was preparing to conduct airstrikes against Houthi targets in Yemen. The messages were sent as U.S. pilots were preparing to fly U.S. military aircraft into enemy-controlled airspace defended by surface-to-air missiles in order to strike targets known to change their location. Messages sent by the Secretary of Defense not only revealed, in advance, that the U.S. was planning airstrikes in Yemen, but also disclosed details concerning the timing, sequencing, and weapons to be used.  This information could have been used by the Houthis to shoot down U.S. aircraft, thereby endangering the lives of the U.S. pilots, as well as to relocate enemy targets or otherwise disrupt the mission.

    Department of Defense policies dictate that information concerning military plans, such as contained in the messages sent by the Secretary of Defense, is classified, and no reasonable process would allow for communication of this information over a commercial messaging application before U.S. pilots had completed and safely returned from their mission.  

    Yesterday you testified that you could not provide information to the Committee concerning this matter because you had only recently been made aware of it.

    In other contexts, the FBI has acted promptly to open an investigation when information of a similar nature has been mishandled.  As you have now had two days to consider the details of this matter, can you confirm the following:

    1. Will you commit to opening an investigation of this matter, if you have not already done so?
    2. Will you collect the devices involved, whether government-issued or otherwise?
    3. Will you scan those devices for malware or other indications of unauthorized access?

     Sincerely,

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Global: Do any non-drug treatments help back pain? Here’s what the evidence says

    Source: The Conversation – Global Perspectives – By Rodrigo Rossi Nogueira Rizzo, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Neuroscience Research Australia

    Monika Wisniewska/Shutterstock

    Jason, a 42-year-old father of two, has been battling back pain for weeks. Scrolling through his phone, he sees ad after ad promising relief: chiropractic alignments, acupuncture, back braces, vibrating massage guns and herbal patches.

    His GP told him to “stay active”, but what does that even mean when every movement hurts? Jason wants to avoid strong painkillers and surgery, but with so many options (and opinions), it’s hard to know what works and what’s just marketing hype.

    If Jason’s experience sounds familiar, you’re not alone. Back pain is one of the most common reasons people visit a doctor. It can be challenging to manage, mainly due to widespread misunderstandings and the overwhelming number of ineffective and uncertain treatments promoted.

    We assessed the best available evidence of non-drug and non-surgical treatments to alleviate low back pain. Our review – published today by the independent, international group the Cochrane Collaboration – includes 31 Cochrane systematic reviews, covering 97,000 people with back pain.

    It shows bed rest doesn’t work for back pain. Some of the treatments that do work can depend on how long you’ve been in pain.

    Is back pain likely to be serious?

    There are different types of low back pain. It can:

    • be short-lived, lasting less than six weeks (acute back pain)
    • linger for a bit longer, for six to twelve weeks (sub-acute)
    • stick around for months and even years (chronic, defined as more than 12 weeks).

    In most cases (90-95%), back pain is non-specific and cannot be reliably linked to a specific cause or underlying disease. This includes common structural changes seen in x-rays and MRIs of the spine.

    For this reason, imaging of the back is only recommended in rare situations – typically when there’s a clear suspicion of serious back issues, such as after physical trauma or when there is numbness or loss of sensation in the groin or legs.

    Many people expect to receive painkillers for their back pain or even surgery, but these are no longer the front-line treatment options due to limited benefits and the high risk of harm.

    International clinical guidelines recommend people choose non-drug and non-surgical treatments to relieve their pain, improve function and reduce the distress commonly associated with back pain.

    So what works for different types of pain? Here’s what our review found when researchers compared these treatments with standard care (the typical treatment patients usually receive) or no treatment.

    What helps for short-term back pain

    1. Stay active – don’t rest in bed

    If your back pain is new, the best advice is also one of the simplest: keep moving despite the pain.

    Changing the way you move and use your body to protect it, or resting in bed, can seem like to right way to respond to pain – and may have even been recommended in the past. But we know know this excessive protective behaviour can make it harder to return to meaningful activities.

    This doesn’t mean pushing through pain or hitting the gym, but instead, trying to maintain your usual routines as much as possible. Evidence suggests that doing so won’t make your pain worse, and may improve it.

    2. Multidisciplinary care, if pain lingers

    For pain lasting six to 12 weeks, multidisciplinary treatment is likely to reduce pain compared to standard care.

    This involves a coordinated team of doctors, physiotherapists and psychologists working together to address the many factors contributing to your back pain persisting:

    • neurophysiological influences refer to how your nervous system is currently processing pain. It can make you more sensitive to signals from movements, thoughts, feelings and environment

    • psychological factors include how your thoughts, feelings and behaviours affect your pain system and, ultimately, the experience of pain you have

    • occupational factors include the physical demands of your job and how well you can manage them, as well as aspects like low job satisfaction, all of which can contribute to ongoing pain.

    It’s important to keep up your normal routines when you have low back pain.
    Raychan/Unsplash

    What works for chronic back pain

    Once pain has been around for more than 12 weeks, it can become more difficult to treat. But relief is still possible.

    Exercise therapy

    Exercise – especially programs tailored to your needs and preferences – is likely to reduce pain and help you move better. This could include aerobic activity, strength training or Pilates-based movements.

    It doesn’t seem to matter what type of exercise you do – it matters more that you are consistent and have the right level of supervision, especially early on.

    Multidisciplinary treatment

    As with short-term pain, coordinated care involving a mix of physical, occupational and psychological approaches likely works better than usual care alone.

    Psychological therapies

    Psychological therapies for chronic pain include approaches to help people change thinking, feelings, behaviours and reactions that might sustain persistent pain.

    These approaches are likely to reduce pain, though they may not be as effective in improving physical function.

    Acupuncture

    Acupuncture probably reduces pain and improves how well you can function compared to placebo or no treatment.

    While some debate remains about how it works, the evidence suggests potential benefits for some people with chronic back pain.

    Some people may find relief from accupuncture.
    Katherine Hanlon/Unsplash

    What doesn’t work or still raises uncertainty?

    The review found that many commonly advertised treatments still have uncertain benefits or probably do not benefit people with back pain.

    Spinal manipulation, for example, has uncertain benefits in acute and chronic back pain, and it likely does not improve how well you function if you have acute back pain.

    Traction, which involves stretching the spine using weights or pulleys, probably doesn’t help with chronic back pain. Despite its popularity in some circles, there’s little evidence that it works.

    There isn’t enough reliable data to determine whether advertised treatments – such back braces, vibrating massage guns and herbal patches – are effective.

    How can you use the findings?

    If you have back pain, start by considering how long you’ve had it. Then explore treatment options that research supports and discuss them with your GP, psychologist or physiotherapist.

    Your health provider should reassure you about the importance of gradually increasing your activity to resume meaningful work, social and life activities. They should also support you in making informed decisions about which treatments are most appropriate for you at this stage.

    Rodrigo Rossi Nogueira Rizzo receives funding from the Australian Government’s Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF).

    Aidan Cashin receives funding from a National Health and Medical Research Council Investigator Grant

    ref. Do any non-drug treatments help back pain? Here’s what the evidence says – https://theconversation.com/do-any-non-drug-treatments-help-back-pain-heres-what-the-evidence-says-253122

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Security: Wyoming Fugitive Captured in Morgan County After Multi-Agency Manhunt

    Source: US Marshals Service

    Morgan County, CO – A month-long, multi-state manhunt for a wanted fugitive out of Wyoming culminated today with a joint law enforcement arrest operation in rural Morgan County. 

    Tyger Rodriguez, 25, was arrested during a multi-agency effort comprised of nearly a dozen different law enforcement agencies. Rodriguez is wanted by the Goshen County Sheriff’s Office for two counts of felony aggravated assault and battery stemming from incidents which occurred mid-February. Arrest warrants were issued February 19 and 20, and the U.S. Marshals Service’s Wyoming Fugitive Task Force was asked to assist on February 27. After developing information that Rodriguez had fled Wyoming and was possibly hiding in rural northeast Colorado, the U.S. Marshals Service’s Colorado Violent Offender Task Force (COVOTF) was contacted and joined the investigation. COVOTF investigators tracked Rodriguez to a rural property about four miles west of Fort Morgan. The Morgan County Sheriff’s Office was then contacted and provided significant support in continuing the investigation into Rodriguez’s whereabouts.

    On Wednesday, a joint law enforcement arrest operation between the U.S. Marshals COVOTF, the Northeast Regional SWAT Team, and the Colorado State Patrol SOAR team contained Rodriguez within the large rural property and eventually took him into custody safely.

    “We are incredibly grateful to all of our law enforcement partners whose dedication and cooperation made this arrest possible,” said Morgan County Sheriff Dave Martin. “We also extend our sincere thanks to the local businesses and citizens who offered their assistance throughout the investigation and today’s operation.”

    The arrest of this fugitive represents a culmination of extensive cooperative efforts between almost a dozen law enforcement agencies to include:

    • U.S. Marshals Colorado Violent Offender Task Force (Deputy U.S. Marshals and Task Force Officers (TFOs) from the Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI), Colorado Department of Corrections, Douglas County Sheriff’s Office, & Boulder County Sheriff’s Office)
    • NE Regional SWAT Team (Morgan County Sheriff’s Office, Fort Morgan Police Department, Brush Police Department, Sterling Police Department, Logan County Sheriff’s Office)
    • Colorado State Patrol SOAR Team
    • U.S. Marshals Wyoming Fugitive Task Force

    The charges pending against Rodriguez are allegations. The defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. Please direct any follow up regarding pending criminal charges to the Goshen County Sheriff’s Office.

    The Colorado Violent Offender Task Force is a multi-jurisdictional fugitive task force that targets the most violent offenders to include those wanted for murder, assault, sex offenses, and other serious offenses throughout the state and country. 

    Nationally, the U.S. Marshals Service fugitive programs are carried out with local law enforcement in 94 district offices, 85 local fugitive task forces, eight regional task forces, as well as a growing network of offices in foreign countries. Follow us on Twitter @USMSDenver.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-Evening Report: Do any non-drug treatments help back pain? Here’s what the evidence says

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Rodrigo Rossi Nogueira Rizzo, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Neuroscience Research Australia

    Monika Wisniewska/Shutterstock

    Jason, a 42-year-old father of two, has been battling back pain for weeks. Scrolling through his phone, he sees ad after ad promising relief: chiropractic alignments, acupuncture, back braces, vibrating massage guns and herbal patches.

    His GP told him to “stay active”, but what does that even mean when every movement hurts? Jason wants to avoid strong painkillers and surgery, but with so many options (and opinions), it’s hard to know what works and what’s just marketing hype.

    If Jason’s experience sounds familiar, you’re not alone. Back pain is one of the most common reasons people visit a doctor. It can be challenging to manage, mainly due to widespread misunderstandings and the overwhelming number of ineffective and uncertain treatments promoted.

    We assessed the best available evidence of non-drug and non-surgical treatments to alleviate low back pain. Our review – published today by the independent, international group the Cochrane Collaboration – includes 31 Cochrane systematic reviews, covering 97,000 people with back pain.

    It shows bed rest doesn’t work for back pain. Some of the treatments that do work can depend on how long you’ve been in pain.

    Is back pain likely to be serious?

    There are different types of low back pain. It can:

    • be short-lived, lasting less than six weeks (acute back pain)
    • linger for a bit longer, for six to twelve weeks (sub-acute)
    • stick around for months and even years (chronic, defined as more than 12 weeks).

    In most cases (90-95%), back pain is non-specific and cannot be reliably linked to a specific cause or underlying disease. This includes common structural changes seen in x-rays and MRIs of the spine.

    For this reason, imaging of the back is only recommended in rare situations – typically when there’s a clear suspicion of serious back issues, such as after physical trauma or when there is numbness or loss of sensation in the groin or legs.

    Many people expect to receive painkillers for their back pain or even surgery, but these are no longer the front-line treatment options due to limited benefits and the high risk of harm.

    International clinical guidelines recommend people choose non-drug and non-surgical treatments to relieve their pain, improve function and reduce the distress commonly associated with back pain.

    So what works for different types of pain? Here’s what our review found when researchers compared these treatments with standard care (the typical treatment patients usually receive) or no treatment.

    What helps for short-term back pain

    1. Stay active – don’t rest in bed

    If your back pain is new, the best advice is also one of the simplest: keep moving despite the pain.

    Changing the way you move and use your body to protect it, or resting in bed, can seem like to right way to respond to pain – and may have even been recommended in the past. But we know know this excessive protective behaviour can make it harder to return to meaningful activities.

    This doesn’t mean pushing through pain or hitting the gym, but instead, trying to maintain your usual routines as much as possible. Evidence suggests that doing so won’t make your pain worse, and may improve it.

    2. Multidisciplinary care, if pain lingers

    For pain lasting six to 12 weeks, multidisciplinary treatment is likely to reduce pain compared to standard care.

    This involves a coordinated team of doctors, physiotherapists and psychologists working together to address the many factors contributing to your back pain persisting:

    • neurophysiological influences refer to how your nervous system is currently processing pain. It can make you more sensitive to signals from movements, thoughts, feelings and environment

    • psychological factors include how your thoughts, feelings and behaviours affect your pain system and, ultimately, the experience of pain you have

    • occupational factors include the physical demands of your job and how well you can manage them, as well as aspects like low job satisfaction, all of which can contribute to ongoing pain.

    It’s important to keep up your normal routines when you have low back pain.
    Raychan/Unsplash

    What works for chronic back pain

    Once pain has been around for more than 12 weeks, it can become more difficult to treat. But relief is still possible.

    Exercise therapy

    Exercise – especially programs tailored to your needs and preferences – is likely to reduce pain and help you move better. This could include aerobic activity, strength training or Pilates-based movements.

    It doesn’t seem to matter what type of exercise you do – it matters more that you are consistent and have the right level of supervision, especially early on.

    Multidisciplinary treatment

    As with short-term pain, coordinated care involving a mix of physical, occupational and psychological approaches likely works better than usual care alone.

    Psychological therapies

    Psychological therapies for chronic pain include approaches to help people change thinking, feelings, behaviours and reactions that might sustain persistent pain.

    These approaches are likely to reduce pain, though they may not be as effective in improving physical function.

    Acupuncture

    Acupuncture probably reduces pain and improves how well you can function compared to placebo or no treatment.

    While some debate remains about how it works, the evidence suggests potential benefits for some people with chronic back pain.

    Some people may find relief from accupuncture.
    Katherine Hanlon/Unsplash

    What doesn’t work or still raises uncertainty?

    The review found that many commonly advertised treatments still have uncertain benefits or probably do not benefit people with back pain.

    Spinal manipulation, for example, has uncertain benefits in acute and chronic back pain, and it likely does not improve how well you function if you have acute back pain.

    Traction, which involves stretching the spine using weights or pulleys, probably doesn’t help with chronic back pain. Despite its popularity in some circles, there’s little evidence that it works.

    There isn’t enough reliable data to determine whether advertised treatments – such back braces, vibrating massage guns and herbal patches – are effective.

    How can you use the findings?

    If you have back pain, start by considering how long you’ve had it. Then explore treatment options that research supports and discuss them with your GP, psychologist or physiotherapist.

    Your health provider should reassure you about the importance of gradually increasing your activity to resume meaningful work, social and life activities. They should also support you in making informed decisions about which treatments are most appropriate for you at this stage.

    Rodrigo Rossi Nogueira Rizzo receives funding from the Australian Government’s Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF).

    Aidan Cashin receives funding from a National Health and Medical Research Council Investigator Grant

    ref. Do any non-drug treatments help back pain? Here’s what the evidence says – https://theconversation.com/do-any-non-drug-treatments-help-back-pain-heres-what-the-evidence-says-253122

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI USA: Hawley Presses FBI to Probe Biden-Era Targeting of Christians

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Josh Hawley (R-Mo)

    U.S. Senator Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) sent a letter to FBI Director Kash Patel, seeking documents related to the Biden administration’s targeting of Christians. Mere months after calling for a new Church Committee to investigate abuses by the Biden Department of Justice (DOJ), Senator Hawley is now asking the new administration to turn over the details of religious targeting by the Biden DOJ and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

    “Under President Biden, the FBI targeted people of faith. The FBI’s Richmond Field Office went so far as to issue a memorandum suggesting that certain traditionalist Catholics might be security risks and proposed infiltrating Catholic parishes. President Biden’s FBI also weaponized the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (‘FACE’) Act to target pro-life protesters and discourage people of faith from exercising their First Amendment rights. No doubt this is merely the tip of the iceberg,” asserted Senator Hawley.

    Hawley’s letter calls on the FBI to share any emails, memoranda, directives, and policy guidance related to the targeting of religious Americans under the Biden Administration. 

    “I trust that, under your leadership, this misconduct will end. But those responsible must be held accountable,” Hawley stated. 

    Senator Hawley concluded, “I appreciated our conversations before and during your confirmation hearing, and I was particularly grateful for your willingness to cooperate with our investigations into the FBI’s violations of First Amendment rights. Transparency and accountability will be paramount in restoring Americans’ faith in the Bureau. Getting to the bottom of the Biden Administration’s violations of religious liberty is an excellent place to start.”

    Read the full letter here or below. 

    The Honorable Kash Patel
    Director
    Federal Bureau of Investigation
    935 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
    Washington, D.C. 20535

    Dear Director Patel:

    Under President Biden, the FBI targeted people of faith. The FBI’s Richmond Field Office went so far as to issue a memorandum suggesting that certain traditionalist Catholics might be security risks, and proposed infiltrating Catholic parishes.[1] President Biden’s FBI also weaponized the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (“FACE”) Act to target pro-life protesters and discourage people of faith from exercising their First Amendment rights. No doubt this is merely the tip of the iceberg.

    I trust that, under your leadership, this misconduct will end. But those responsible must be held accountable. As the Chairman of the Subcommittee on Crime and Counterterrorism, I write to formally request the production of agency records concerning these FBI abuses, as detailed in the attached appendix, by April 30, 2025.

    I appreciated our conversations before and during your confirmation hearing, and I was particularly grateful for your willingness to cooperate with our investigations into the FBI’s violations of First Amendment rights. Transparency and accountability will be paramount in restoring Americans’ faith in the Bureau. Getting to the bottom of the Biden Administration’s violations of religious liberty is an excellent place to start.

    Richmond Field Office Memorandum and Related Memoranda

    1. All versions, drafts, or revisions of the memorandum issued by the FBI Richmond Field Office regarding “radical-traditionalist Catholics” as potential domestic terrorists, including any related memoranda issued by other FBI field offices or headquarters.
    2. All internal FBI communications, including emails, text messages, chat logs, and memoranda, discussing the development, approval, modification, or rescission of the Richmond Field Office memorandum.
    3. All documents identifying the FBI personnel, offices, or divisions involved in drafting, reviewing, approving, or disseminating the Richmond Field Office memorandum, including, but not limited to, communications between the Richmond, Portland, and Los Angeles field offices.
    4. All communications between the FBI and the DOJ regarding the content, approval, or implementation of the Richmond Field Office memorandum and any related memoranda.
    5. All policy guidance, directives, training materials, or enforcement plans related to the FBI’s monitoring of religious organizations, including, but not limited to, Catholic churches, as part of domestic terrorism investigations.
    6. All documents, including email communications, meeting notes, and memoranda, that reference or discuss any directive, instruction, or guidance issued by the White House, DOJ, National Security Council, or any other federal agency regarding the FBI’s monitoring of religious groups, including Catholic organizations.
    7. All internal assessments, audits, or reports evaluating the Richmond Field Office memorandum, including any documents analyzing its compliance with FBI policies, legal frameworks, or constitutional protections of religious freedom.
    8. All documents reflecting FBI efforts to collect intelligence, recruit informants, or conduct surveillance within churches or affiliated organizations based on the Richmond Field Office memorandum or other guidance.
    9. All documents relating to investigations, surveillance operations, or law enforcement actions initiated as a result of the Richmond Field Office memorandum or related memoranda, including any records of individuals or groups targeted under this initiative.
    10. All documents reflecting the role of the FBI’s Portland and Los Angeles Field Offices in the drafting, review, or dissemination of the Richmond Field Office memorandum, including any documents that identify officials responsible for coordinating these efforts.
    11. All communications, including emails, memoranda, and reports, between FBI officials and any external organizations, think tanks, or academic institutions that provided input on the characterization of Catholic Americans or other religious groups in domestic terrorism assessments.
    12. All documents, including communications with state and local law enforcement agencies, that discuss how the Richmond Field Office memorandum or similar FBI policies were implemented or considered for enforcement at the state or local level.

    FACE Act Abuses

    1. The identity of all individuals involved with the FBI’s enforcement of the FACE Act under the Biden Administration.
    2. All communications, including, but not limited to, emails, memoranda, directives, and policy guidance, sent to or from the FBI Director, Deputy Director, or any other senior official regarding the enforcement of the FACE Act under the Biden Administration.
    3. All documents reflecting internal FBI deliberations, discussions, or decisions regarding prioritization, enforcement strategy, or policy direction related to the FACE Act, including, but not limited to, any documents identifying the individuals or offices responsible for making those determinations.
    4. All communications, including emails, text messages, or memoranda, between the FBI and the DOJ regarding the enforcement or non-enforcement of the FACE Act under the Biden Administration.
    5. All documents, including briefing materials, talking points, or internal reports, prepared for or provided to the FBI Director or other senior officials regarding the enforcement of the FACE Act under the Biden Administration.
    6. All documents, including, but not limited to, policy memoranda, internal directives, guidance documents, or other materials issued by the FBI that establish, modify, or explain the agency’s enforcement priorities under the FACE Act, including any documents identifying the officials responsible for setting such priorities.
    7. All documents, including email communications, meeting notes, or internal memoranda, that reference or discuss any directive, instruction, or guidance issued by the White House, DOJ, or any other federal agency regarding the FBI’s enforcement of the FACE Act.
    8. All drafts, revisions, or final versions of any FBI policies, reports, or legal analyses concerning the enforcement of the FACE Act that relates to enforcement discrepancies between abortion-related clinics and religious institutions, including any records identifying the individuals responsible for such policies.
    9. All communications, including emails, memoranda, text messages, or meeting minutes, reflecting any discussions between FBI field offices and FBI headquarters regarding the prioritization or de-prioritization of FACE Act investigations.
    10. All internal FBI evaluations, audits, or assessments that discuss the agency’s approach to enforcing the FACE Act, including any discussions of political, policy, or strategic considerations.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Man charged with murder following Kawerau homicide

    Source: New Zealand Police (National News)

    Attributable to Detective Senior Sergeant Paul Wilson, Eastern Bay of Plenty Area Investigations Manager:

    A man has been arrested and charged with murder following an ongoing homicide investigation in Kawerau.

    A 21-year-old man has been charged with murder following the death of a man in Onslow Street on 26 February.

    Emergency services were called to the property at around 8.45am after a man was located deceased on the front doorstep of the address.

    Police have been working hard to piece together the events surrounding the man’s death and today arrested and charged a man in Hamilton.

    We are pleased to have been able to arrest someone in relation to this tragic incident.

    We would also like to thank those members of the public who provided information, and would still like to hear from those yet to come forward.

    The man will appear in Hamilton District Court tomorrow charged with one count of murder.

    Police continue to appeal for anyone who may have heard or seen anything suspicious in or around the Onslow Street area.

    We are aware there were some other people in the general area specifically between 5.15am-5.50am that morning who haven’t yet come forward and we would ask them to please contact us.

    If you have information that could assist the investigations team, please contact Police online at 105.police.govt.nz, clicking “Update Report” or by calling 105.

    Please use the reference number 250226/5646.

    Information can also be provided through Crime Stoppers online at crimestoppers-nz.org or by calling 0800 555 111.

    As the matter is now before the Court, Police are limited in providing further comment.

    ENDS.

    Holly McKay/NZ Police 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI: Banco Itaú Chile Files Material Event Notice announcing Dividend Distribution Proposal

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SANTIAGO, Chile, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — BANCO ITAÚ CHILE (SSE: ITAUCL) (the “Bank”) today announced that its Board of Directors has agreed, in its ordinary meeting held on this same date, to propose to the Ordinary Shareholders’ Meeting, to be held on April 24, 2025, the distribution of 30% of the profits for the 2024 fiscal year, corresponding to the amount of $112,988,077,742 as a dividend to shareholders, among the total of the Bank’s 216,340,749 validly issued shares in circulation. Therefore, if approved as indicated, a dividend of $522.2690513195920 per share would be distributed. Additionally, it will be proposed to the Shareholders’ Meeting that the remaining 70% of the profits be retained.

    The dividends that are approved will be available to shareholders starting on May 7, 2025. In this regard, shareholders who are registered in the Shareholder Registry at midnight on April 30, 2025, that is, those who are registered in said registry 5 business days prior to the payment date, will be entitled to receive dividends.

    The full Material Event Notice is available on the company’s investor relations website at ir.itau.cl.
    Investor Relations – Banco Itaú Chile

    IR@itau.cl / ir.itau.cl

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Reducing debt financing barriers for Community Housing Providers

    Source: New Zealand Government

    New Crown lending facilities and a loan guarantee scheme will support the growth of the Community Housing Provider (CHP) sector and put CHPs on a more level playing field with Kāinga Ora, Housing Minister Chris Bishop says. 

    “This Government believes in social housing. We are working hard to deliver better housing to those who need support, including by assisting the CHP sector to expand and grow.

    “Currently, CHPs account for 16 percent of our social homes – around 13,000 houses. The government has funded an additional 1,500 social houses in Budget 2024, 1,000 of which are to be delivered by CHPs from June this year.

    “Our ambition for the social housing system is for a level playing field between CHPs and Kāinga Ora. The underlying ownership of a house – whether public or private – should be irrelevant. What matters is the provision of warm, dry homes to those who need them, along with social support if required.

    “We call this competitive neutrality. In some areas and for some people, CHPs are the answer. In other areas, Kāinga Ora will be the way to go.

    “While KO’s borrowing is done through the Crown, CHPs currently access debt from the private market at higher rates. We have further work to do to better align KO and CHP access to, and costs of, finance.

     “The Government is moving to level the playing field between Kāinga Ora and CHPs by establishing Crown lending facilities of up to $150 million for the Community Housing Funding Agency (CHFA). CHFA was launched by Community Finance in 2024 and pools financing requirements for CHPs, unlocking lower cost finance at scale to support the delivery of CHP housing.  

    “The Government is working closely with CHFA and will provide them an interim lending facility in early April to support their immediate financing needs, with the final liquidity facility up and running later this year. 

    “This will lay the foundation for CHFA to borrow hundreds of millions or billions of dollars, supporting not just the delivery of social housing, but also CHPs’ broader affordable housing portfolios.  

    “We are also exploring the appetite of banks to participate in a loan guarantee scheme for CHPs, aligned to the principles of previous initiatives like the Business Finance Guarantee Scheme, and the North Island Weather Events Loan Guarantee Scheme.  

    “A loan guarantee scheme is where the Government takes on some proportion of the loan’s default risk, meaning lenders won’t need to hold as much capital to cover the debt and can use the capital elsewhere. This will likely enable lenders to pass on reduced interest rates to borrowers.  

    “I expect that this scheme will encourage greater participation by banks in the sector and enable them to pass on meaningfully reduced interest rates and other lending accommodations to CHPs. 

    “If banks see merit in a CHP loan guarantee scheme, the Minister of Finance will finalise its design and work towards a go-live date later this year. 

    “Together, these two initiatives will increase the scale at which CHPs can access lower cost debt financing, enabling them to grow.  

    “This is a really exciting day for the CHP sector in New Zealand. The changes are complex but important and will do a lot to allow the CHP sector to grow and deliver more warm dry houses for people in need.” 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Speech to KangaNews Debt Capital Markets Forum

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Opening
    Good afternoon. I’m excited to be here at the KangaNews Debt Capital Markets Forum. 
    It’s a pleasure to be here with all of you – investors, financial institutions, and wholesale market participants who play a vital role in unlocking New Zealand’s economic future.
    I’d like to thank ANZ for hosting this event and for inviting me to speak. 
    Debt capital markets are fundamental to the success of the Government’s plan to go for growth. 
    Capital is like water to a seed – it enables New Zealanders, businesses, government, and NGOs to action and grow their bright-ideas, ambitions, and aspirations. 
    The deeper our capital markets get, the more opportunities our country will have to thrive. 
    Today, I want to discuss how the Government is unlocking growth and overcoming funding and financing challenges in housing and infrastructure in a fiscally constrained environment. 
    I will also be announcing actions Cabinet has recently agreed to that will reduce debt financing barriers for Community Housing Providers. 
    Unlocking growth
    New Zealanders have said that inflation and the economy are in the top three issues facing the country. 
    The only sustainable way to fix the cost-of-living crisis is to ensure wages grow faster than inflation. 
    That means growing the economy through more high-paying jobs, increased productivity, greater innovation, and more investment. 
    The best thing the Government can do to support this is:

    one ensuring systems, regulations, and laws are growth-enabling – like the Resource Management Act, and
    two getting interest rates lower. 

    Now, the Government doesn’t set the Official Cash Rate (OCR) – that’s the Reserve Bank’s job – but we can help support lower interest rates through responsible fiscal management, getting the government’s books back in order, and investing in productivity-enhancing infrastructure. 
    That’s what we have been doing, and since we came into Government the OCR has dropped 175 basis points.
    In Budget 2024, we found $5.9 billion on average in annual operating savings and revenue, and $3.1 billion in capital savings and revenue over the forecast period. We reprioritised savings to fund tax relief and cost pressures in Health, and to support other growth-enabling initiatives. 
    For us, it’s about ensuring every public dollar goes to its best use. Greater value for money means we can provide more and higher quality services that people need. 
    Budget 2025 will be no different. 
    Without swerving too far into the Minister of Finance’s lane – I can say that Budget 2025 will focus on four areas:

    Lifting economic growth through measures to tackle New Zealand’s long-term productivity challenges,
    Using a social investment approach to improve life outcomes for people with high needs,
    Keeping tight control of government spending, while funding high-priority commitments and cost pressures, and
    Developing a pipeline of long-term infrastructure investments.

    In terms of infrastructure, this Government has and will continue to invest a record amount. More than $68 billion in capital is forecast to be spent by central government on infrastructure over the next five years. 
    For comparison from 2019 to 2023, $50.8 billion in capital was spent on infrastructure.
    Infrastructure Investment Summit 
    However, we know achieving economic growth is not all about government. We can’t unlock New Zealand’s potential without the private sector.
    So, we are also focused on attracting long-term private capital, capacity, and capability into our economy.
    To do this, earlier this month, the Prime Minister and I hosted the New Zealand Infrastructure Investment Summit in Auckland, which was attended by over 100 world-leading institutional investors, private investment firms, and construction companies.
    It was a huge win for our country, and it was good to see some of you there.
    During the Summit, we reaffirmed New Zealand’s position as being open for business, and as a safe and strong country to invest in.
    Overall, we focused on three areas:

    First, New Zealand’s infrastructure vision and upcoming public infrastructure opportunities,
    Second, changes to policy, regulation, and legislation to make it easier to do business here, and
    Third, other investment opportunities in growth sectors and the Māori economy.

    I just want to briefly touch on the first area. 
    It was great to get investable and developable opportunities in public infrastructure to market, including Christchurch Men’s Prison PPP and the Northland RoNS PPP. 
    But as Minister for Infrastructure, I think showcasing our long-term infrastructure pipeline made the biggest impression.
    This is what will give the private sector confidence to stay here and invest in people and equipment. 
    Firms just want to know: What’s next.
    For example, the Italian tunnelling company Ghella was preparing to leave New Zealand after completing the 16.2-kilometre Central Interceptor tunnel in Auckland. But following presentations on the pipeline and the positivity of the Summit, Ghella have decided to keep their workers, expertise, and tens of millions of dollars of plant, equipment, and associated services here. 
    Similarly, Plenary, an infrastructure investment firm managing more than $100 billion in assets has also committed to opening an office in New Zealand and to bidding on at least five PPPs over the next five years due to the PPP pipeline.
    Many global firms showed an interest in New Zealand. 
    When Guido Cacciaguerra of Webuild, a multinational construction and civil engineering firm, said “the Italians are coming back”, all I could think was – yes, that’s fantastic. 
    These guys helped us construct tunnels for the Tongariro hydro scheme in the 1960s. 
    It’s partnerships like these we need to help us close our infrastructure deficit, and we are committed to keep this momentum going.
    Overcoming funding and financing challenges in infrastructure and housing
    Now, let’s move onto overcoming funding and financing challenges in infrastructure and housing. 
    Public infrastructure in New Zealand has historically been primarily funded by taxpayers or ratepayers.
    But our heavy reliance on this blunt approach is not serving us well and has led to perverse outcomes including congestion, run-down assets, and the unresponsive provision infrastructure – contributing to unaffordable housing.
    The scale of New Zealand’s infrastructure challenge means we cannot continue the status quo – we need to leverage private capital and alternative funding and financing tools. 
    I want to outline several pieces of work that interact with debt capital markets, including:

    The establishment of the National Infrastructure Funding and Financing Ltd– or NIFFCo,
    Treasury’s new Funding and Financing Framework,
    The refresh of the Government’s PPP policies, and
    New funding and financing tools for infrastructure to support growth.

    Establishment of NIFFCo
    Let’s start with NIFFCo. 
    On 1 December 2024, we established NIFFCo to carry out three key functions: 

    Its first function is to act as the Crown’s ‘shopfront’ to facilitate private sector investment and interest in infrastructure – this includes receiving and evaluating any Market Led Proposals, or Unsolicited Bids.
    Its second function is to partner with agencies, and in some cases, local government, to provide expertise on projects involving complex procurement, alternative funding mechanisms and private finance – including PPPs and IFF Act transactions.
    Its third function is to administer central government infrastructure funds.

    When you decide to join us in transforming New Zealand’s infrastructure, you will likely work with NIFFCo. 
    Overall, I expect NIFFCo will help unlock access to capital for infrastructure and give the private sector a clear and knowledgeable Government-side partner to work with on projects and transactions.
    So, if you want to put forward a project, are looking for an opportunity to invest in New Zealand infrastructure or want to partner with Government – NIFFCo is open for business.
    NIFFCo will also lift the government’s commercial capability and help us be a better client of infrastructure. It will do this by deploying expertise into agencies that are working on projects involving private finance and alternative funding mechanisms.
    This includes, but is not limited to, projects involving traditional loans, equity investments, PPPs, developer levies, beneficiary levies, concessions, or other value uplift mechanisms.
    Funding and Financing Framework
    Now, let’s talk about Treasury’s new Funding and Financing Framework. 
    Last year, Treasury released this Framework to broaden the funding base for Crown investments, and to utilise private capital where efficient.
    It provides guidance to agencies that they should, in the first instance, seek user or beneficiary pays to fund new infrastructure projects rather than defaulting to taxpayer money.
    I expect proposals from sectors like transport, water, energy, housing, and adaptation to demonstrate how user or beneficiary pays can contribute towards funding.
    More utilisation of user- and beneficiary-pays will provide greater opportunities for the private sector, including debt capital markets, to participate in public investments.
    We want to use the government’s balance sheet more strategically and apply good commercial disciplines when deciding how to financially support a proposal – essentially providing “just enough support” to make proposals feasible.
    This will mean we can deliver more projects, and channel support to sectors where it is appropriate for the Crown to be the primary funder, like in health and education.
    PPP Framework and other guidance 
    To match our more commercial Funding and Financing Framework – we also needed to modernise the Crown’s policies and contracts, particularly in the PPP space.
    After extensive engagement, in November last year, we released a Blueprint outlining how the government will approach future PPPs.
    There are several key elements in the refreshed Blueprint that will foster a more appealing market for all participants:

    A more practical approach to risk transfer,
    Guidance for agencies on bid cost recognition,
    Enhancing the Interactive Tender Process,
    Allowing reasonable price validation to occur during the procurement process,
    Improving the process for managing claims and dispute resolution, and
    Increasing the capability and resourcing of the Crown so that we can be a better client.

    Our approach is to be smart about private capital and use it in a way that unlocks investment, enhances incentives for on-time on-budget delivery, and brings more maturity to the design, build, and maintenance of projects.
    The new PPP Blueprint sits alongside new Strategic Leasing Guidance, and Guideline for Market Led Proposals.
    New infrastructure funding and financing tools to get more houses built
    Let’s move onto new infrastructure funding and financing tools to get more houses built.
    As Minister of Housing, I am committed to – well, more accurately obsessed with – fixing our housing crisis.
    We are not a small country by land mass, but our restrictive planning system, particularly restrictions on the supply of urban land, has created a scorching hot land and housing market driven by artificial scarcity. 
    We are changing that by allowing our cities to grow up and out. But this won’t be enough on its own. We also need to enable the timely provision of enabling infrastructure. 
    Put simply, you can’t have housing without water, transport, and community facilities.
    However, under current settings councils, infrastructure providers, and developers face significant challenges to fund and finance enabling infrastructure for housing.
    We want to move to a future state where funding and financing tools enable the responsive supply of infrastructure where it is commercially viable to build new houses. 
    This will shift market expectations of future scarcity, bring down the cost of land for new housing, and improve incentives to develop land sooner instead of land banking.
    To achieve this future, our overarching approach is that growth pays for growth.
    Last month, I announced five changes to our infrastructure funding and financing toolkit to support urban growth. 
    I won’t cover all of these. But the most relevant to you are changes to the Infrastructure Funding and Financing Act (IFF) Act. 
    The IFF Act allows the creation of a Special Purpose Vehicle to raise finance for projects, where the cost is repaid through a levy charged to properties that benefit from a project over a period of about 20 to 30 years.
    We are making several remedial amendments to improve the effectiveness of the Act, particularly for developer-led projects, which will make the process simpler and cheaper.
    We are also broadening the Act to enable levies to be charged for major transport projects – a gamechanger in New Zealand for funding city-shaping projects. 
    These changes will lead to the Act being more effective, efficient, and utilised more often. 
    I expect, private capital will have far more opportunity to support public infrastructure projects.
    Reducing debt financing barriers for CHPs 
    Now, I would like to move onto actions the Government is taking to reduce debt financing barriers for Community Housing Providers, or CHPs. 
    As I noted earlier, we are fixing the housing crisis by getting the underlying market fundamentals right. This is the single best thing we can do to make housing more affordable.
    At the same time, I recognise that these changes will take some time and that there will always be New Zealanders who need housing support. 
    This Government believes in social housing, and we believe the CHP sector and private capital have a greater role to play in this space. 
    Currently, CHPs account for 16% of our social homes – or around 13,000 houses. 
    My ambition for the social housing system is to create a level playing field between CHPs and Kāinga Ora.
    I’m obsessed with building houses across the housing continuum for people who need them. But I am agnostic as to whether those houses are delivered by CHPs or by the government.
    I call this competitive neutrality. In some areas and for some people, CHPs are the answer. In other areas, Kāinga Ora is the way to go.
    However, we don’t have competitive neutrality right now.
    As I am sure you are aware, Kāinga Ora can borrow at a small margin above the Crown’s cost of financing, while CHPs effectively get access to finance at commercial rates.
    Update on last year’s announcement
    In November last year, I outlined three actions we are taking to help CHPs access borrowing to deliver housing:
    The first was making $70 million of Operating Supplement available upfront, unlocking equity CHPs need to raise debt.
    The second was making changes to IRRS contracts that makes the revenue stream more attractive for financiers. 
    And the third was to review the use of leasing to provide social housing.
    I’ll just give you a quick update on where those are at. 
    The Ministry of Housing and Urban Development are implementing updated criteria for providing Operating Supplement upfront to support delivery of the 1,500 CHP places committed through Budget 2024. 
    The updated criteria will focus on the basics – strategic alignment, value for money, deliverability, and whether upfront funding is really needed to unlock financing. We are also removing unhelpful eligibility requirements and allowing larger CHPs and projects in urban areas to access upfront funding, where appropriate. 
    On updates to the IRRS contracts, HUD are making the following changes that will be in place for the contracting of places from late May onwards: 

    Additional compensation where the Termination for Convenience clause is exercised on Build to Lease projects,
    Limiting the ‘step-in’ period to six months, and
    Providing a Financier Direct Deed when requested on all Build to Own projects.

    These changes will go some way to reducing real and perceived risk to financiers, although I acknowledge that there is more work to do. 
    On the use of leasing to provide social housing, HUD has moved to an ownership-agnostic approach. 
    Leasing could be useful where CHPs want to leverage their local expertise in managing social housing, while partnering with developers who could leverage their larger balance sheets to access finance that a small CHP could not.
    CHP credit enhancement 
    Last year, I also announced that the Government would explore a credit enhancement intervention for CHPs, so that they can access suitable debt.
    I am pleased to announce today that Cabinet has agreed to establish Crown lending facilities of up to $150 million for the Community Housing Funding Agency (CHFA) to cover:

    an interim lending facility to be provided in early April to support CHFA’s immediate financing needs, and
    a final liquidity facility. 

    In addition to this, the Minister of Finance intends to offer a loan guarantee scheme to banks to support their CHP lending.
    Both of these interventions align with our market-led approach to fixing our housing crisis, and our transition to more efficient and effective Crown investment. 
    The liquidity facility and loan guarantee scheme will provide critical support whilst we get the system right. 
    Let’s start with CHFA – 
    CHFA was launched by Community Finance in 2024 and aggregates the finance requirements for CHPs around New Zealand, unlocking lower cost finance at scale to support the delivery of social housing.
    The CHFA is largest lender to CHPs in New Zealand already indicating they are providing lending solutions highly valued by the sector.
    A Crown liquidity facility and credit rating will allow CHFA to lend to more CHPs on a much larger scale.
    This will lay the foundation for CHFA to borrow billions of dollars, supporting not just the delivery of social housing, but also CHPs’ broader affordable housing portfolios. 
    Housing Australia has a similar model – the Affordable Housing Bond Aggregator (AHBA). 
    Since its inception in 2018, Housing Australia has approved around $4.5 billion in AHBA loans to support the development of more than 18,800 social and affordable homes. 
    The AHBA loans have helped the sector save an estimated $800 million in interest and fees.
    I want this for New Zealand too. 
    Finally, on the loan guarantee scheme, the Minister of Finance and I have endorsed key design criteria as a starting point for Government’s engagement with banks. 
    I don’t want to get into too much detail, I will leave that to officials –
    But, at a high-level, I expect that this scheme will encourage participation among banks and enable them to pass on meaningfully reduced interest rates and other lending accommodations to CHPs. 
    Relatedly, last year, the Minister of Finance wrote to the Reserve Bank asking them to look further at the risk weights for lending to CHPs. The Bank intends to consult on potential changes in the middle of 2025. This process may also lead to a meaningful reduction in borrowing costs for CHPs.
    Overall, I am really excited about how these changes will support the CHP sector – we heard you, and we hope these changes enable you to grow and do more good work.  
    Conclusion
    Delivering on this Government’s vision for growth and higher living standards will require a strong partnership between government, investors, and the private sector. 
    Capital markets will play a pivotal role in financing New Zealand’s infrastructure future, and I encourage all of you to explore how your expertise and resources can contribute to this effort.
    We are committed to creating a stable, predictable, and investable infrastructure and housing environment – one that supports economic growth, enhances productivity, and improves the quality of life for New Zealanders.
    Together, through innovation and partnership, I am confident we can build a more prosperous New Zealand.
    I look forward to your insights and collaboration.
    Thank you. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Former North Dakota State Senator Sentenced to 10 Years’ Imprisonment for Traveling to Prague to Engage in Commercial Sex with Children

    Source: US State of North Dakota

    A former North Dakota state legislator for 45 years was sentenced today to 10 years in prison for traveling to Prague in the Czech Republic, where he paid to sexually exploit children.

    According to court documents, Raymon (Ray) Everett Holmberg, 81, of Grand Forks, traveled to Prague approximately 14 times between 2011 and 2021. During these trips, while staying at a brothel that catered to men looking to engage in commercial sex with adolescent boys, Holmberg paid for sex acts with boys. During some of the trips, Holmberg used the alias “Sean Evans.” Witnesses told law enforcement that Holmberg did not want his name on the brothel’s registry because he was a North Dakota state legislator. Witnesses also told law enforcement that Holmberg would also visit a public park in front of the main train station in Prague to procure sex from underage boys. 

    Holmberg also used the “Evans” alias to tell friends about his trips and encourage them to travel to Prague. In these communications, Holmberg shared an image of an adolescent boy that he called “his twink,” and said that “no one is ever to [sic] young . . . remember Prague.” He emailed a different friend a link to a brothel in Prague and suggested that they go that summer, writing: “The boys rent at around $60 . . .  (sex is extra).”  Holmberg also wrote: “It will be decadent but oh so much fun bro.  What happens in Prague—Stays in Prague.” Back in the United States, Holmberg boasted about having engaged in sexual activity with boys as young as 12- and 15-years old during his travels.

    According to the government’s sentencing memorandum, Holmberg’s sexual exploitation of minors was not limited to his trips to Prague. Holmberg established an online relationship with a 16-year-old Canadian boy, posing as a boy of a similar age in order to manipulate the Canadian teen into taking images of himself engaging in sexually explicit conduct and sending them to Holmberg.  

    On Aug. 8, 2024, Holmberg pleaded guilty to traveling in foreign commerce for the purpose of engaging in illicit sexual conduct.

    Matthew R. Galeotti, Head of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and Acting U.S. Attorney Jennifer Puhl for the District of North Dakota made the announcement.

    Homeland Security Investigations, Grand Forks, and the North Dakota Bureau of Criminal Investigations investigated the case.

    Trial Attorney Charles Schmitz of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, and Acting U.S. Attorney Jennifer Puhl for the District of North Dakota are prosecuting the case.

    This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative to combat the epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. Led by U.S. Attorneys’ Offices and CEOS, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to better locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, visit www.justice.gov/psc.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Former Avon, NY, police trainee pleads guilty to possession of child pornography and cyberstalking

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    ROCHESTER, N.Y.-U.S. Attorney Michael DiGiacomo announced today that Casey Medina, 33, of Rochester, NY, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Meredith A. Vacca to possession of child pornography and cyberstalking, which carry a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Katelyn M. Hartford, who is handling the case, stated that on August 22, 2024, investigators executed a search warrant on Medina’s cellular telephone. During a forensic extraction and a manual review of the phone, approximately 360 images of child pornography the defendant had received over a social media platform were recovered. At least one image involved a prepubescent child being subjected to violence.

    In addition, between May and August 2024, Medina disseminated and posted sexually explicit photographs that had been edited to falsely depict an individual (victim) engaged in sexually explicit activity to various social media platforms and public websites via the internet. The photographs depicted the victim’s face superimposed on pornographic images made to appear as if she was engaged in sexual intercourse. Beginning in May 2024, over the course of approximately 26 days, and again between June 2024 and July 2024, Medina sent, and recruited others via the internet to send, threatening and harassing text messages to the victim. The messages included threats to kidnap, rape, sexually abuse, and kill her, as well as including the sexually explicit images with her face superimposed on them. In many instances, Medina included identifying information while disseminating the victim’s images, including her hometown and place of work.

    The plea is the culmination of an investigation by the Onondaga County, NY, Sheriff’s Office, under the direction of Sheriff Tobias Shelley, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, under the direction of Special Agent-in-Charge Matthew Miraglia.         

    Sentencing is scheduled for August 4, 2025, at 2:00 p.m., before Judge Vacca.

    # # # #

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Former North Dakota State Senator Sentenced to 10 Years’ Imprisonment for Traveling to Prague to Engage in Commercial Sex with Children

    Source: United States Attorneys General 2

    A former North Dakota state legislator for 45 years was sentenced today to 10 years in prison for traveling to Prague in the Czech Republic, where he paid to sexually exploit children.

    According to court documents, Raymon (Ray) Everett Holmberg, 81, of Grand Forks, traveled to Prague approximately 14 times between 2011 and 2021. During these trips, while staying at a brothel that catered to men looking to engage in commercial sex with adolescent boys, Holmberg paid for sex acts with boys. During some of the trips, Holmberg used the alias “Sean Evans.” Witnesses told law enforcement that Holmberg did not want his name on the brothel’s registry because he was a North Dakota state legislator. Witnesses also told law enforcement that Holmberg would also visit a public park in front of the main train station in Prague to procure sex from underage boys. 

    Holmberg also used the “Evans” alias to tell friends about his trips and encourage them to travel to Prague. In these communications, Holmberg shared an image of an adolescent boy that he called “his twink,” and said that “no one is ever to [sic] young . . . remember Prague.” He emailed a different friend a link to a brothel in Prague and suggested that they go that summer, writing: “The boys rent at around $60 . . .  (sex is extra).”  Holmberg also wrote: “It will be decadent but oh so much fun bro.  What happens in Prague—Stays in Prague.” Back in the United States, Holmberg boasted about having engaged in sexual activity with boys as young as 12- and 15-years old during his travels.

    According to the government’s sentencing memorandum, Holmberg’s sexual exploitation of minors was not limited to his trips to Prague. Holmberg established an online relationship with a 16-year-old Canadian boy, posing as a boy of a similar age in order to manipulate the Canadian teen into taking images of himself engaging in sexually explicit conduct and sending them to Holmberg.  

    On Aug. 8, 2024, Holmberg pleaded guilty to traveling in foreign commerce for the purpose of engaging in illicit sexual conduct.

    Matthew R. Galeotti, Head of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and Acting U.S. Attorney Jennifer Puhl for the District of North Dakota made the announcement.

    Homeland Security Investigations, Grand Forks, and the North Dakota Bureau of Criminal Investigations investigated the case.

    Trial Attorney Charles Schmitz of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, and Acting U.S. Attorney Jennifer Puhl for the District of North Dakota are prosecuting the case.

    This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative to combat the epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. Led by U.S. Attorneys’ Offices and CEOS, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to better locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, visit www.justice.gov/psc.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: WF Holding Announces Pricing of Initial Public Offering

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Company to list shares on Nasdaq Capital Market under symbol “WFF”

    KUALA LUMPUR, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — WF Holding Limited (“WF Holding” or “Company”), a Malaysia-based manufacturer of fiberglass reinforced plastic (FRP) products, today announced the pricing of its initial public offering (the “Offering”) of 2,000,000 ordinary shares at a public offering price of US$4.00 per ordinary share. The ordinary shares have been approved for listing on the Nasdaq Capital Market and are expected to commence trading on March 27, 2025, U.S. Eastern time, under the ticker symbol “WFF.”

    The Company expects to receive aggregate gross proceeds of US$8 million from the Offering, before deducting underwriting discounts and other related expenses. In addition, the Company has granted the underwriters a 45-day option to purchase up to an additional 300,000 ordinary shares at the public offering price after the closing of the Offering, less underwriting discounts. The Offering is expected to close on or about March 28, 2025, subject to the satisfaction of customary closing conditions.

    Proceeds from the Offering will be used for expanding the Company’s production capacity, hiring and training staff, working capital and general corporate purposes.

    The Offering is being conducted on a firm commitment basis. Dominari Securities LLC is acting as the lead underwriter, with Revere Securities LLC acting as a co-underwriter for the Offering. Bevilacqua PLLC is acting as U.S. counsel to the Company, and The Crone Law Group, P.C. is acting as U.S. counsel to the underwriters in connection with the Offering.

    A registration statement on Form F-1 relating to the Offering was filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) (File Number: 333-282294) and was declared effective by the SEC on March 26, 2025. The Offering is being made only by means of a prospectus, forming a part of the registration statement, and a free writing prospectus. Copies of the final prospectus relating to the Offering, when available, may be obtained from Dominari Securities LLC by email at info@dominarisecurities.com, by standard mail to Dominari Securities LLC, 725 Fifth Avenue, 23rd Floor, New York, NY 10022 USA, or by telephone at +1 (212) 393-4500; or from Revere Securities LLC by email at contact@reveresecurities.com, by standard mail to Revere Securities LLC, 560 Lexington Ave, 16th Floor, New York, NY 10022 USA, or by telephone at (212) 688-2238. In addition, copies of the prospectus and free writing prospectus relating to the Offering may be obtained for free by visiting EDGAR on the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov.

    Before you invest, you should read the prospectus, the free writing prospectus, and other documents the Company has filed or will file with the SEC for more information about the Company and the Offering. This press release does not constitute an offer to sell, or the solicitation of an offer to buy any of the Company’s securities, nor shall there be any offer, solicitation or sale of any of the Company’s securities in any state or jurisdiction in which such offer, solicitation or sale would be unlawful prior to registration or qualification under the securities laws of such state or jurisdiction.

    About WF Holding Limited

    Based in Malaysia, WF Holding Limited is an ISO 9001:2015 certified manufacturer of fiberglass reinforced plastic (FRP) products including tanks, pipes, ducts and custom-made FRP products. With a track record of over 30 years, we design and fabricate products that meet the specific needs of our clients, ensuring high-quality and reliable performance. Our high-quality and durable products leverage the advantages of FRP to reinforce critical industrial infrastructure, driving resilience, longevity and sustainability. We also deliver a wide range of related services such as consultation, delivery, installation, repair and maintenance.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    Certain statements in this announcement are “forward-looking statements” as defined under the U.S. federal securities laws, including, but not limited to, the Company’s statements regarding the success of the Offering or the use of proceeds from the sale of the Company’s shares in the Offering. These forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties and are based on the Company’s current expectations and projections about future events that the Company believes may affect its financial condition, results of operations, business strategy and financial needs, including the expectation that the Offering will be successfully completed. Investors can find many (but not all) of these statements by the use of words such as “may,” “could,” “will,” “should,” “would,” “expect,” “plan,” “intend,” “anticipate,” “believe,” “estimate,” “predict,” “potential,” “project” or “continue” or the negative of these terms or other comparable terminology in this press release. The Company undertakes no obligation to update or revise publicly any forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent occurring events or circumstances, or changes in its expectations, except as may be required by law. Although the Company believes that the expectations expressed in these forward-looking statements are reasonable, it cannot assure you that such expectations will turn out to be correct, and the Company cautions investors that actual results may differ materially from the anticipated results and encourages investors to review other factors that may affect its future results in the Company’s registration statement and other filings with the SEC.

    For more information, please contact:

    WF Holding Limited
    Investor Relations
    Email:  corporate@winfung.com.my

    Sense Consultancy Group
    Yan Pheng Liang
    Email: phengliang@leesense.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: LeddarTech Reports Annual Shareholder Meeting Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    QUEBEC CITY, Canada, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — LeddarTech® Holdings Inc. (“LeddarTech” or the “Corporation”) (Nasdaq: LDTC), an automotive software company that provides patented disruptive AI-powered low-level sensor fusion and perception software technology, LeddarVision™, announces the voting results of its annual general and special meeting of shareholders held on March 26, 2025 (the “Meeting”). Shareholders voted on various proposals and elected directors to the board.

    Key Highlights of the Meeting

    1. Election of Directors: The full slate of six directors was elected to serve until the next annual meeting of shareholders or until a successor is elected or appointed.

    Nominee Votes For % of Voted Votes Against % of Voted
    Frantz Saintellemy 22,429,293 99.69% 68,631 0.31%
    Charles Boulanger 22,392,108 99.53% 105,816 0.47%
    Derek Aberle 22,470,109 99.88% 27,815 0.12%
    Yann Delabrière 22,475,831 99.90% 22,093 0.10%
    Sylvie Veilleux 22,471,696 99.88% 26,228 0.12%
    Lizabeth Ardisana 22,474,890 99.90% 23,034 0.10%

    As previously disclosed, Nick Stone and Michelle Sterling, who were members of the Board up to the Meeting, have decided not to stand for reelection.

    2. Approval of Auditor: The appointment of Richter LLP as auditors of the Corporation was approved, and the board of directors of the Corporation was authorized to fix the auditors’ remuneration.

    Votes For % of Voted Votes Withheld % of Voted
    25,480,228 99.81% 49,275 0.19%


    3. Other

    3.1 The amendment to the Corporation’s omnibus equity-based incentive plan to increase the number of common shares available for issuance thereunder was approved and ratified.

    Votes For % of Voted Votes Against % of Voted Votes Abstain % of Voted
    22,187,011 98.62% 199,079 0.88% 111,834 0.50%

    3.2 A second and separate amendment to the Corporation’s omnibus equity-based incentive plan for the adoption of an evergreen provision to the omnibus equity-based incentive plan, providing for an automatic annual increase in the common shares available for issuance thereunder over the next five years, was approved and ratified.

    Votes For % of Voted Votes Against % of Voted Votes Abstain % of Voted
    15,862,324 70.51% 6,630,055 29.47% 5,545 0.02%

    For further details on each of these matters, please refer to the Corporation’s management information circular dated February 7, 2025, available on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca and EDGAR at www.sec.gov. Final voting results on all matters voted on at the Meeting will be posted on the Investor Relations section of LeddarTech.com and filed on SEDAR+ at www.sedarplus.ca and EDGAR at www.sec.gov.

    About LeddarTech

    A global software company founded in 2007 and headquartered in Quebec City with additional R&D centers in Montreal and Tel Aviv, Israel, LeddarTech develops and provides comprehensive AI-based low-level sensor fusion and perception software solutions that enable the deployment of ADAS, autonomous driving (AD) and parking applications. LeddarTech’s automotive-grade software applies advanced AI and computer vision algorithms to generate accurate 3D models of the environment to achieve better decision making and safer navigation. This high-performance, scalable, cost-effective technology is available to OEMs and Tier 1-2 suppliers to efficiently implement automotive and off-road vehicle ADAS solutions.

    LeddarTech is responsible for several remote-sensing innovations, with over 170 patent applications (87 granted) that enhance ADAS, AD and parking capabilities. Better awareness around the vehicle is critical in making global mobility safer, more efficient, sustainable and affordable: this is what drives LeddarTech to seek to become the most widely adopted sensor fusion and perception software solution.

    Additional information about LeddarTech is accessible at www.leddartech.com and on LinkedIn, Twitter (X), Facebook and YouTube.

    Contact:
    Chris Stewart, Chief Financial Officer, LeddarTech Holdings Inc.
    Tel.: + 1-514-427-0858, chris.stewart@leddartech.com

    Leddar, LeddarTech, LeddarVision, LeddarSP, VAYADrive, VayaVision and related logos are trademarks or registered trademarks of LeddarTech Holdings Inc. and its subsidiaries. All other brands, product names and marks are or may be trademarks or registered trademarks used to identify products or services of their respective owners.

    LeddarTech Holdings Inc. is a public company listed on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol “LDTC.”

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Government to support greenfield housing

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government has made changes to build more homes on the outskirts of our cities, allocating $100 million to be lent to developers for housing infrastructure, as well as cutting the RMA red tape restricting land available for development, says Housing and Infrastructure Minister Chris Bishop.

    “The government is committed to letting our cities grow up and out to address our housing crisis. Medium-sized greenfield developments play a crucial role in increasing supply, but without the right support, many projects risk being delayed or unable to progress,” says Chris Bishop.

    “The government’s Going for Housing Growth and Resource Management Act reforms will be critical in addressing our housing crisis – but it will take time to legislate and then bed in. In the meantime, we don’t have time to waste, so these immediate changes are necessary interim measures to help boost housing supply. 

    “The government’s National Infrastructure Funding and Financing Agency (NIFFCo) has been developing a pipeline of potential important greenfield projects, and the initial transactions are expected to be drawn from this pipeline.

    “Under this new model, which we are calling the Greenfield Model, NIFFCo will lend to an Infrastructure Funding and Finance Act Special Purpose Vehicle at a very competitive interest rate during the development phase of a project. Then, the debt will be refinanced to private markets once the development is complete. The funding will ultimately be repaid by future homeowners through an annual levy.

    “The development phase of a project is often the riskiest, and private financiers reflect this by charging higher interest rates. NIFFCo’s loan will provide lower cost financing to developers over the development period by charging approximately what private financiers would charge for completed developments.

    “This support will bridge the financing gap and help ensure that new homes continue to be built in areas where they are needed most.

    “Funding for the new ‘Greenfield Model’ comes from unallocated funding within NIFFCo. It will be able to recycle capital into new projects after the five- to seven-year development period.

    “I am also announcing today that Cabinet has agreed to remove LUC-3 protections from the National Policy Statement on Highly Productive Land (NPS-HPL) this year, fulfilling National’s election promise.

    “The NPS-HPL protects our productive soils from development, ensuring New Zealand has a secure food supply. However, there needs to be a balance between how we protect our most productive land with our need for more housing to tackle our housing crisis.

    “As currently drafted, the NPS-HPL protects a total of 15 percent of the country’s landmass. Three classifications of soil are protected under the NPS-HPL, with two thirds being classified as LUC-3, the lowest quality.

    “Across the country, this change has the potential to open up new land for greenfield housing roughly equivalent to the size of the Waikato region.

    “To ensure we have got the balance between protecting our food supply and enabling more houses to be built, alongside this change we are going to consult on whether we should establish ‘special agriculture zones’. 

    “These would essentially protect LUC 1, 2 and 3 land when it is grouped together in a natural configuration in key horticultural horticulture hubs like Horowhenua or Pukekohe.

    “These are good, short-term and cost-effective interventions while we get the underlying system settings right to fix our housing crisis. They will both make it easier to bring new much needed housing projects to market that otherwise wouldn’t have happened or would have happened much later.”

    Notes to Editors:

    Background:

    1. The Infrastructure Funding and Finance Act (IFF Act) enables Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) to finance infrastructure by charging a levy to those who benefit from the infrastructure. NIFFCo provides equity and debt, raises necessary external debt finance, operates SPVs, and repays finance through levies collected through councils.
    2. The IFF Act has been successfully used for city-wide transport projects in Tauranga and a wastewater treatment plant in Wellington.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Speech to the Property Council Residential Development Summit

    Source: New Zealand Government

    Good morning. 
    I’m excited to be here at the Residential Development Summit. 
    Thank you to the Property Council for hosting this event. 
    Residential developers, investors, and the broader property community will play a key role in fixing New Zealand’s housing crisis.
    We need your knowledge, expertise, and big ideas to help New Zealand’s housing system grow. We need to go up, we need to go out, we need more housing choice, and we need more tenure types.
    Today I’d like to give you an update on our Going for Housing Growth programme, and how changes to the Resource Management Act (RMA) will make it simpler and easier to supply the housing that New Zealanders so desperately need. 
    I will also be announcing actions Government has agreed to that will enable more greenfield development – allowing our cities to grow out.
    Letting our cities grow
    I am, unapologetically, an urbanist – dare I say, an ‘urban nerd’ – and a proponent of growth. 
    I won’t dwell on our housing challenge. You’ve all heard me bang on about that before. Our housing crisis is holding New Zealand back socially and economically. 
    Report after report and inquiry after inquiry has found that our planning system, particularly restrictions on the supply of urban land, are at the heart of our housing affordability challenge.
    I believe that fixing our planning system by making it more enabling and getting the fundamentals right in housing are the best things we can do to unleash New Zealand’s potential.
    Getting this right will:

    lift economic growth and productivity,
    reduce the cost-of-living pressure from housing, and
    ensure New Zealanders can enjoy a higher standard of living. 

    As the Minister Responsible for RMA Reform, Minister of Housing, and now Minister of Transport, I get up every day determined to try and make a difference.
    Update on Going for Housing Growth 
    Let me start with an update of our Going for Housing Growth programme. 
    It has three pillars: 

    Pillar One: freeing up land for development and removing unnecessary planning barriers,
    Pillar Two: improving infrastructure funding and financing to support urban growth, and
    Pillar Three: providing incentives for communities and councils to support growth.
    Housing Growth Targets for Tier 1 and 2 councils to “live-zone” 30-years of housing demand,
    making it easier for cities to expand,
    strengthening the intensification provisions in the National Policy Statement on Urban Development (NPS-UD),
    putting in new rules requiring councils to enable mixed-used development, and
    abolishing minimum floor areas and balcony requirements.

    Pillar One
    We have made good progress on Pillar One which includes:
    I announced these changes last year and officials have been working hard on the finer details.
    The changes I announced last year build on the NPS-UD brought in by the previous government in 2020, but they obviously sit within the existing RMA structure.
    As you’ll have seen on Monday, the Government is replacing the RMA entirely with two new laws.
    This presents an obvious sequencing problem. We are committed to housing growth targets, strengthening density requirements, and so on.
    This year we will consult on changes through Pillar One, as intended. You can expect that around May.
    However, if we implemented them straight away in 2026, Councils would be forced to conduct expensive and lengthy plan changes – only to start all over again a year or so later once the new RMA comes into effect.
    So, we’ve made the pragmatic decision to implement Pillar One of our Housing Growth changes as part of the replacement of the RMA.
    This also allows us to think about housing growth targets in the context of standardised zones.
    So, councils will implement Phase 3 of the Resource Management reforms through development of new plans, starting from 2027.
    Rest assured, Pillar One will be ready to go for Councils’ 2027 Long Term Plan cycle. 
    Pillar Two
    Now, let’s talk about Pillar Two – improving infrastructure funding and financing.
    Pillar One is about upending the system by flooding the market with development opportunities and fundamentally making housing more affordable.
    But, freeing up urban land is not enough on its own. We also need to ensure the timely provision of infrastructure. 
    Put simply, you can’t have housing without land, water, transport, and other community infrastructure. 
    But under the status quo, councils and developers face big challenges to fund and finance enabling infrastructure. 
    So, last month I announced five changes to our infrastructure funding and financing toolkit to get more houses built. 

    The first is replacing Development Contributions (DCs) with a Development Levy System, where growth pays for growth,
    The second is establishing regulatory oversight of these Levies to ensure charges are fair and appropriate,
    The third is increasing the flexibility of targeted rates,
    The fourth is making changes to the Infrastructure Funding and Financing Act (IFF Act) that will make it more effective and simplify processes, and
    The fifth is broadening the IFF Act so that beneficiaries can help pay for major transportation projects.

    I won’t go into too much detail here today.
    But at a high-level, these changes will help create a flexible funding and financing system to match our flexible planning system. 
    These are some big changes, and it will take some time to get them right. 
    Our aim is to have legislation in the House by September this year, to come into effect next year. 
    Councils will be able to make the shift to development levies on the same timeline as the 2027 Long Term Plan cycle. 
    You can see, I hope, a lot of really good things coming together around 2027.
    Pillar Three 
    On Pillar Three, officials are working away on this, and we will have more to say later this year.
    Changes to RMA will support more housing
    I want to quickly talk about how RMA reform will make it simpler and easier to supply the housing New Zealanders need.
    For example, standardised zones will be a game changer. 
    I completely agree with urban economist Stuart Donovan – zoning is so balkanised that even large developers tend to stick to one or a few main centres as branching out requires reconfiguring to different planning rules.
    Developers currently face a Gordian knot of these rules. 
    Maximum building heights of 9m in Kapiti versus 8m in Dunedin. Porirua requires an outdoor living space of at least 20m2 for a medium-density residential unit – in the Manawatu it’s 36m2. In Dunedin, maximum building site coverage can vary from 30% to 60% whereas in Taupō it varies from 2.5% to 55%. 
    Councils are even getting involved with things as niche as whether it is possible for someone to see the TV from the likely location of their couch – or whether doors should face out for “privacy” or in for “inclusion and community”. 
    I get email after email about this stuff. People stop me in the street to tell me about it. It is utterly out of control.
    Councils should be focusing on engaging with communities, looking at capacity in the network, and making decisions on where growth is most appropriate. 
    And we need to grow both up and out. 
    For the remainder of this speech, I want to focus on what we are doing to enable more greenfield development. 
    Changes to the NPS-HPL
    The National Policy Statement for Highly Productive Land – or the NPS-HPL, was introduced by the last Government to protect New Zealand’s highly productive soils. This piece of national direction is intended to boost food security for both our domestic food supply and primary exports.
    However, it is clear that it has gone too far. As currently drafted, the NPS-HPL protects a total of 15 percent of the country’s landmass. That’s nearly as large as the entire Canterbury region.
    This protected land often surrounds our biggest and fastest growing cities where growth is busting to get out.
    I have lost count of the number of developers who have come up to me since this has been introduced, frustrated that they are unable to secure land for greenfield housing to be developed. 
    There needs to be a balance between how we protect our most productive land with our need for more housing to tackle our housing crisis. 
    Right now, that balance is out of whack. 
    National campaigned on amending the NPS-HPL to remove the lowest classification of land protected, what is known as LUC-3. 
    This kind of land is not the golden soils we need in Pukekohe – instead, it’s much lower quality land that is good for housing. 
    Despite being a lower quality of soil, two thirds of land protected by the NPS-HPL is classified as LUC-3.
    I am pleased to announce today that Cabinet has agreed to remove LUC-3 from the NPS-HPL this year, fulfilling our election promise. 
    Across the country, this will open up land for housing roughly equivalent to the size of the Waikato region. 
    Alongside this, we are going to consult on whether we should establish what we’ve called ‘special agriculture zones’ around key horticulture hubs like Horowhenua or Pukekohe. This would essentially protect LUC 1, 2 and 3 land when it is grouped together in a natural configuration.
    We need more houses, and we need more greenfield development. 
    Removing these restrictions will allow us to have our vegetables and eat them too. 
    Changes to the NPS-HPL will be progressed as part of our National Direction changes in Phase 2 of our RMA reforms. 
    I will announce further details about the timing and shape of that package tomorrow but wanted to announce this change today to highlight our Government’s commitment to greenfield housing.
    Greenfield Model 
    To further demonstrate this commitment, we are also taking action to get more greenfield houses built in the near term. 
    I am pleased to announce that the Government will provide finance to developers to ensure more medium-sized greenfield developments – think around 1,000 to 2,000 dwellings – are enabled through the Infrastructure Funding and Finance Act.  
    We are calling this the Greenfield Model. 
    The Government will support National Infrastructure Funding and Financing Ltd – or NIFFCo – in lending up to $100 million to developers for infrastructure needed to enable new greenfield housing. 
    This model is being funded using existing unallocated funding within NIFFCo. 
    Here is how it will work. 
    NIFFCo will lend to an IFF Act Special Purpose Vehicle at a very competitive interest rate during the development phase of a project. 
    Then, the debt will be refinanced to private markets once the development is complete, with the funding ultimately being repaid by future homeowners through an annual levy.
    The development phase of a project is often the riskiest – and private financiers reflect this by charging higher interest rates.
    NIFFCo’s loan will provide lower cost financing to developers over the development period by charging approximately what private financiers would charge for completed developments. 
    This is a big win for growth.  
    NIFFCo will also be able to recycle capital into new projects after the five- to seven-year development period. 
    We are putting the Greenfield Model in place as a targeted interim measure while our Going for Housing Growth policy and Local Government reforms bed-in from 2027 or so onwards.
    To date, the IFF Act has not been used for greenfield housing developments. 
    The Act is complex, and levies are deemed too expensive. The higher than anticipated levies are also much less favourable than using DCs which are often artificially low, under-recover growth costs, and are cross subsidised by rates. 
    The economics of IFF Act levies just don’t make sense right now. 
    The changes we are making through Pillar Two, particularly around improvements to the IFF Act and our shift from DCs to Development Levies, will do the heavy lifting to fix incentives and put in place a more effective infrastructure funding and financing system where growth pays for growth. 
    But, as fast as we are going on this, it won’t happen overnight. 
    So, the Greenfield Model is a good short-term, cost-effective intervention as the lower interest rate provides benefits of around $10,000 per dwelling. 
    For comparison, the Infrastructure Acceleration Fund, which was set up to support new housing by the previous government, cost around $28,000 per house. 
    This model will support growth that otherwise wouldn’t have happened – or would have happened much later. 
    I am excited to just crack on. 
    Conclusion
    Let me finish by saying that solving our housing crisis is one of this Government’s top priorities.
    And to be honest, it is my number one priority. 
    I look forward to working with you to grow up and out, and to deliver more housing that New Zealanders need. 
    Thank you. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Father-and-Son Duo from Westside Arrested on Federal Criminal Complaints Alleging Fentanyl Trafficking and Gun Sales

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    LOS ANGELES – A Westside father and son were arrested today on federal criminal complaints charging them with possessing narcotics – specifically, the powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl – with the intent to distribute it to others.

    Antonio Espinoza Zarate, 55, a.k.a. “El Gato,” of the Mar Vista area of Los Angeles, and his son, Francisco Javier Espinoza Galindo, 31, of Santa Monica, were arrested this morning and are scheduled to make their initial appearances this afternoon in United States District Court in downtown Los Angeles.

    Both defendants are charged with possession with the intent to distribute fentanyl. Antonio Espinoza also is charged with illegal reentry of a removed alien.

    According to affidavits filed with the complaints, Antonio Espinoza in July 2023 sold a pistol, a rifle, 131 rounds of ammunition, and more than 500 grams of fentanyl pills to a buyer. He is not licensed to engage in the business of dealing in firearms.

    In August 2023, Antonio Espinoza allegedly sold an AR-style rifle and approximately 1 kilogram of fentanyl pills to a buyer, supplied by Francisco Espinoza. In January 2025, he allegedly sold a rifle, a pistol, a revolver, and ammunition to a buyer. In February 2025, with his son present, Antonio Espinoza sold more than 500 grams of fentanyl pills to the confidential informant.

    Antonio Espinoza is a citizen of Mexico, who has been previously deported in 2010, 2013, 2014, and 2017 and illegally reentered the United States following his removals, according to court documents. His criminal history includes felony convictions in 2008 in Los Angeles Superior Court for possession of narcotics for sale and in 2015 in U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona for illegal reentry of a removed alien.

    A complaint contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

    If convicted of all charges, the defendants would face a statutory maximum sentence of life in federal prison and a mandatory minimum sentence of 10 years in federal prison.

    The investigation was conducted by the Homeland Security Investigations (HSI)-led El Camino Real Financial Crimes Task Force, a multi-agency task force that includes federal and state investigators who are focused on financial crimes in Southern California, with support from special agents with the United States Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California – Criminal Investigative Division; and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, with assistance from the Los Angeles Police Department regarding dangers to the community from the sales of narcotics and firearms.

    As U.S. DOJ special agents, the U.S. Attorney’s Office (USAO) Criminal Investigators conduct independent and joint-agency investigations to achieve successful prosecutions and adjudications of federal crimes charged in the district.  USAO investigators are positioned to address the prosecution priorities of the U.S. Attorney, as well as unique or project-based matters that may arise in the district and serve to generate or support a variety of federal cases with coordination and continuity among law enforcement partners throughout an investigation and trial.

    Assistant United States Attorney Diane B. Roldán of the Violent and Organized Crime Section is prosecuting these cases.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: Cantwell Joins Colleagues to Fight for Social Security Recipients

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Washington Maria Cantwell
    03.26.25
    Cantwell Joins Colleagues to Fight for Social Security Recipients
    As DOGE hacks away at Social Security, Seattle constituent was incorrectly marked dead; this week, he’s still fighting SSA to get his money back; Cantwell: These billionaires are “so out of touch with the American people.”
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA), senior member of the Senate Finance Committee and ranking member of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, joined Minority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and other Democratic colleagues at a press conference standing up for Social Security in the face of multiple Trump Administration efforts that will make it harder for recipients to access the benefits they earned and are entitled to.
    “Social Security is a contract between citizens and their government, so they can retire with dignity. 1.4 million people in the State of Washington want that right, of what they sacrificed and paid in to have that retirement. But what have they gotten out of the Trump administration?” Sen. Cantwell said. “First, cutting the workforce, then trying to cut offices, then coming up with a suggestion that that you should re-register to even qualify for Social Security. Is that any way to meet the contractual obligation our government has to help people have a minimal amount of dignity in retirement? But no – instead, this administration is trying to claim fraud.” 
    Referencing previous remarks from billionaire and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick on a conservative podcast claiming that anyone who complains about missed Social Security payments must be a fraudster, Sen. Cantwell added: “I guess he is so out of touch with the American people that he doesn’t understand that people are depending on that for a lifeline.”
    Yesterday, during a hearing of the Senate Finance Committee, Sen. Cantwell pressed Frank Bisignano — President Trump’s pick to serve as Commissioner of the Social Security Administration — on recent comments by Trump officials attacking Americans’ Social Security benefits.
    WATCH MORE:
    MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow: “Washington state Democratic Senator Maria Cantwell today bringing a story from her home state paper.”
    KXLY Spokane: “Senator Maria Cantwell grilled President Trump’s pick to oversee Social Security.”
    KEPR Pasco: “Cantwell says the cuts by President Trump and Elon Musk’s DOGE team are already impacting Washingtonians.”
             
    In the State of Washington, 1.4 million people receive Social Security. Below is a breakdown of Social Security Recipients by county:

    County

    Number of Social Security Recipients

    King Co.

    312,000+

    Spokane Co.

    115,000+

    Clark Co.

    98,000+

    Yakima Co.

    46,000+

    *County data sourced from SSA.gov*
    At yesterday’s hearing, Sen. Cantwell referenced a constituent in Seattle who was incorrectly presumed dead shortly after Elon Musk sicced his DOGE team on the Social Security Administration. DOGE staffers were specifically tasked with seeking out evidence that tens of millions of dead people are receiving Social Security benefits – a false claim made by both President Trump and Musk. Subsequently, Ned Johnson was incorrectly listed as dead by SSA, which failed to issue his next Social Security check and clawed back over $5,000 in prior benefits payments from his and his wife’s joint bank account.
    Sen. Cantwell said in the hearing, “And then what did he do? He had to go down to the building in Seattle, the federal building that you’re trying to close, and stand in line for hours and hours and hours to try to say he wasn’t dead and to stop taking his money.”
    Although his money was originally returned, on Monday the Social Security Administration withdrew the same amount from Mr. Johnson’s bank account yet again. He also found out that the administration had notified his Medicare carrier of his “demise,” so Mr. Johnson and his wife, Pam, went without health insurance for three months, KUOW reported this morning.
    Sen. Cantwell has been a long-standing champion for Social Security and protecting Washingtonian’s benefits. Sen. Cantwell co-sponsored and voted in December 2024 to pass the bipartisan Social Security Fairness Act, which repealed two Social Security policies that unfairly limited payments for people who also receive a pension from a job that is not covered by Social Security, as well as their surviving spouses and widow(ers). In 2018, Sen. Cantwell introduced and passed the Tribal Social Security Fairness Act to correct a long-standing inequity in the Social Security Act that prevented elected tribal leaders from contributing to and accessing Social Security benefits.
    Video of Sen. Cantwell’s remarks today are available HERE, audio HERE, and a transcript is HERE.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Cantwell Reintroduces Bipartisan Bill to Improve Fentanyl Overdose Tracking

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Washington Maria Cantwell

    03.26.25

    Cantwell Reintroduces Bipartisan Bill to Improve Fentanyl Overdose Tracking

    The Opioid Overdose Data Collection Enhancement Act would expand use of tools that record fatal and nonfatal overdoses in near-real-time; WA first responders say better data collection could help identify overdose hotspots so they can deploy resources faster & save lives

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA), ranking member of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation and senior member of the Senate Finance Committee, reintroduced the bipartisan Opioid Overdose Data Collection Enhancement Act. The bill would direct the Department of Justice (DOJ) to award grants to states, units of local government, law enforcement task forces, and tribes to adopt and implement an overdose data collection program, including the Overdose Data Mapping Application Program (ODMAP).

    The bill was drafted by and reintroduced alongside Senators Chuck Grassley (R-IA), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), and John Cornyn (R-TX). Originally introduced in September, it unanimously passed the Senate in December but was not brought up by the House of Representatives before the end of last session.

    “When responding to fentanyl overdoses, an extra minute can save a life,” said Sen. Cantwell. “Tracking fatal and non-fatal opioid overdoses will help our first responders, law enforcement, and public health professionals better target and prevent OD spikes and surge resources to communities that need them the most.”

    “The fight to end addiction and drug abuse in our communities requires a robust understanding of the problem at hand. By investing in local partners, we empower communities to more effectively track drug abuse trends and prevent future overdoses,” Sen. Grassley said. “I’m glad to support this cost-effective plan to expand vital data collection programs.”

    During Sen. Cantwell’s 10-city fentanyl roundtable tour across Washington state, she heard from multiple officials on the front lines of the epidemic that expanding ODMAP could help prevent overdoses and save lives. Expanding ODMAP would provide near real-time awareness of known or suspected overdose incidents across the United States, supporting public safety and public health efforts to coordinate immediate responses to sudden spikes in overdoses.

    The bill has supporters across the State of Washington:

    PUGET SOUND:

    “Effective and timely overdose prevention and response activities rely upon high-quality data. Within the ecosystem of Seattle, King County, and community teams working to address opioid overdose, timely and targeted data are always the starting point for interventions. We endorse legislation that will expand similar shared platforms of overdose data collection, mapping, and analysis,” said Seattle Fire Chief Harold Scoggins.

    “This bill would help Everett and communities across the country address the fentanyl and opioid crisis by implementing proven cutting-edge data tools to track overdoses,” said Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin. “The City of Everett supports all efforts to implement data-driven methods to address this critical issue and is proud to support the Opioid Overdose Data Collection Enhancement Act.”

    “The opioid epidemic affects all corners of our community,” said King County Sheriff Patricia Cole-Tindall. “I welcome Senator Cantwell’s efforts to help address this by building on the programs we have in place. Bringing more resources to fight this crisis is an essential step in saving lives.”

    “The importance of a robust data collection tool, such as the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program, that facilitates the near real-time tracking of fatal and nonfatal overdoses, and the administration of opioid reversal medications, cannot be overstated. By Senator Cantwell introducing this important bill, the Opioid Overdose Data Collection Enhancement Act, participating agencies and entities will be better able to identify overdose spikes and trends, allowing for rapid responses and deliberate strategies to save lives,” said NW HIDTA Executive Director Jonathan Weiner.

    EASTERN WA:

    “In critical emergencies, first responders need accurate information to act fast. This legislation would improve data collection, giving police officers and firefighters the reliable tools they need to protect and serve their communities,” said Spokane Mayor Lisa Brown.

    “As first responders on the frontlines of the opioid crisis, we see the devastating impact of overdoses every day. Expanding access to real-time overdose data through ODMAP is critical for improving emergency response, identifying emerging trends, and ultimately saving lives. The Opioid Overdose Data Collection Enhancement Act will provide vital support to local communities and agencies like ours, ensuring we have the tools needed to respond effectively to this crisis. I strongly support this bill and urge its swift passage,” said Spokane Fire Chief Julie O’Berg.

    “Fentanyl and other illicit drugs pose a significant risk to the health and well-being of Spokane citizens. The overwhelming majority of these substances make their way to our county from neighboring foreign countries such as Mexico. Investment in real-time overdose mapping technology will help law enforcement disrupt the flow of Fentanyl in the United States. Having accurate data on where overdose spikes occur will go a long way towards securing safer communities and saving lives threatened by the fentanyl crisis,” said Spokane County Sheriff John Nowels.

    “With over thirty-three years in law enforcement and currently serving as police chief in Spokane, Washington, I witness firsthand the devastating impact of the opioid crisis on individuals, families, and entire communities. The Opioid Overdose Data Collection Enhancement Act is a crucial step forward in equipping law enforcement, first responders, and public health professionals with the necessary tools to track, respond to, and prevent overdoses more effectively. This bill expands access to real-time overdose data collection tools, such as the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP). These tools enable us to identify trends, coordinate responses, and allocate resources where they are most needed. By utilizing existing DOJ funding, this legislation enhances our ability to combat the opioid epidemic without imposing additional financial burdens on taxpayers. I wholeheartedly support this initiative because timely, accurate data saves lives. The ability to monitor overdose spikes and share critical information across agencies allows us to act more swiftly, prevent more deaths, and ultimately foster safer, healthier communities,” said Spokane Police Chief Kevin Hall.

    CENTRAL WA:

    “The collection of data on overdoses is critical to the effectively addressing the serious opioid problem in this country.  Knowing when and where overdoses occur can enable agencies to focus on the areas needing more attention.  Funding for programs designed to collect overdose data is essential in the fight against the opioid epidemic,” said Yakima County Sheriff Robert Udell.

    “Having a single platform to share overdose data is essential to saving lives, guiding decisions, and preventing overdoses. ODMAP (Overdose Mapping) is the platform.  ODMAP allows for the collaboration and real-time data sharing between law enforcement, fire departments, EMS, hospitals, and health departments,” said Kennewick Police Chief Chris Guerrero.

    “Using ODMAP locally throughout our county has already proven invaluable in identifying overdose hotspots and enabling rapid, targeted responses. Expanding its use statewide has the potential to transform how we address the fentanyl crisis in Washington. By standardizing overdose tracking across the state, we can pinpoint trends, respond more effectively, and deploy life-saving resources faster than ever. This tool is more than just data—it empowers us to act decisively and collaboratively to save lives and combat this devastating epidemic,” said Melissa Sixberry, Director of Disease Control at the Yakima Health District.

    “In order to make the most appropriate moves to facilitate change, we must have good, accurate data. Otherwise we are blindly throwing darts at a board. ODMAP will allow for the most appropriate distribution of resources to help combat the nation-wide opioid epidemic. Without it, we will continue to potentially ignore high impacted areas that may desperately need the assistance,” said Cameron Haubrich, Chief of the Sunnyside Fire Department.

    “ODMAP creates a unified, real-time system to track and respond to overdoses, enabling first responders, health departments, and law enforcement to allocate resources more effectively. By identifying overdose hotspots and trends as they happen, we can deploy targeted interventions and engage communities in prevention efforts,” said Grant County Sheriff Joey Kriete when the bill passed the Senate in December.

    “ODMAP is a game-changer in fighting the overdose epidemic! With the real-time data from ODMAP, responders and communities can monitor overdose events, identify patterns, deploy resources where needed, and ultimately save lives! In the State of Washington, we currently only track overdose deaths which grossly underestimates the true magnitude of the overdose epidemic (by 6200%),” said Alicia Stromme Tobin, Executive Director of Safe Yakima Valley, when the bill passed the Senate in December. “ODMAP provides agencies with a tool to track fatal and nonfatal overdoses. By providing a comprehensive view of overdose trends, ODMAP fosters collaboration across public health, law enforcement and EMS, allowing for more targeted interventions and prevention efforts. I applaud Senator Cantwell for recognizing the tremendous positive impact ODMAP will have on saving lives! Congratulations and well done!”

    “Solutions start with a hope, hope is the gateway for innovation and collaboration, and efforts like ODMAP are the tools that communities need to impact the fentanyl crisis and save lives,” said Yakima Police Department Lt. Chad Janis when the bill passed the Senate in December.

    SOUTHWEST WA:

    “Vancouver strongly supports the Opioid Overdose Enhancement Act and urges the Department of Justice to award grants for the adoption and implementation of the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program (ODMAP). As Vancouver Fire responded to over 400 overdose calls in 2024, it has become increasingly clear that gathering and analyzing overdose data is a significant challenge. Our current process of manually searching medical records for specific call information is labor-intensive and costly. A centralized database would be invaluable in identifying overdose hotspots, tracking trends, and saving lives. This federal legislation is a crucial step toward streamlining these efforts and addressing the opioid crisis effectively,” said Vancouver Mayor Anne McEnerny-Ogle.

    “Vancouver Fire responded to more than 400 overdose calls in 2024. It has been a consistent challenge for us to gather data because it requires us to dig deep into our medical records system and search for keywords that will identify the specific call information. This process is labor intensive and time consuming. A centralized database would be very helpful to allow us to not only track location hotspots, but also trends. We fully support federal legislation that streamlines this process,” said Vancouver Fire Chief Brennan Blue.

    “Senator Cantwell’s bill to implement the Overdose Detection Mapping Application Program is a critical step in combating the opioid crisis. By providing timely data on overdoses and opioid reversal medication applications, this program will allow local departments of health and law enforcement to respond quickly and effectively, saving lives, holding opioid dealers accountable, and targeting resources where they’re needed most.  I strongly endorse this vital legislation,” said Vancouver Police Chief Troy Price.

    “Clark-Cowlitz Fire Rescue (CCFR) supports the Opioid Overdose Data Collection Enhancement Act and Comprehensive Opioid Abuse Grant Program. With the rise of opioid related incidents in our district as well as in the counties we serve, CCFR has worked with community partners to address opioid use, overdose, and treatment. Through our CARES Program and in partnership with neighboring fire districts and the Clark County’s Medical Program Director’s Office, CCFR has implemented administration of medications for opioid use disorder (MOUD) during the time of an opioid related incident or overdose. CCFR crews are able to introduce buprenorphine as well as provide leave-behind Narcan for individuals following administration of opioid overdose reversal medication. In partnership with treatment centers in the county, CARES is able to provide immediate referrals to these facilities in order to assist community members seeking treatment,” said John Nohr, Fire Chief of Clark-Cowlitz Fire Rescue.

    “The Washington Fire Chiefs Association fully endorses Senator Cantwell’s Opioid Overdose Data Collection Enhancement Act.  We believe that a crucial component of the Act, which supports adoption and implementation of the Overdose Detection Mapping Application (ODMAP), will place critical, data-driven, information into the hands of first responders, saving lives,” said Kristan Maurer, President of Washington Fire Chiefs Association, Fire Chief of Clark County Fire District 6.

    OLYMPIC PENINSULA:

    “Having access to real-time data is critical to getting ahead of the overdose crisis. With the rapidly changing drug supply, these kinds of data allow us to identify overdose clusters and communicate with individuals at risk as well as community partners so that we can help prevent overdoses in the future,” said Allison Berry, Health Officer for Clallam County & Jefferson County.

    The bill is also endorsed by several coveted national law enforcement organizations including: National Narcotic Officers’ Associations’ Coalition (NNOAC), National HIDTA Directors Association (NHDA), National Alliance of State Drug Enforcement Agencies (NASDEA), Association of State Criminal Investigative Agencies (ASCIA), National Association of Police Organizations (NAPO), Major County Sheriffs Association (MCSA).

    ODMAP was developed in 2017 by the Washington/Baltimore High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) as a free, web-based, mobile-friendly platform for near real-time reporting and monitoring of suspected fatal and non-fatal overdose events, as well as instances where opioid overdose reversal medications such as Naloxone were administered. It displays overdose data within and across jurisdictions, helping agencies identify spikes and clusters of suspected overdose events in their community, neighboring communities, and across the country.

    As of February 2025, approximately 5,330 agencies across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico are using the platform. Over 2.9 million overdose events have been entered into ODMAP and more than 36,000 users registered.

    Washington state has not adopted ODMAP statewide, however, localities in the state utilize the program. In 2025, 77 agencies across 17 counties in Washington state use ODMAP, and have logged 2,248 entries into ODMAP. In 2024, 7,857 entries were logged. Yakima County, Spokane County, and the City of Seattle have recently implemented programming that allows their data to instantaneously populate the ODMAP dashboard with all overdose responses. Elsewhere in the state, ODMAP coverage is limited and therefore only captures a portion of the overdose instances occurring.

    Currently, overdose data in Washington state is only available to government health partners and only contains fatal overdose cases (which are released months or years after the fact). Overdose counts are released publicly via Washington State’s Department of Health website. However, they only provide instances of fatal overdoses (a small fraction of all overdose incidents) and are hampered by significant delays. Currently, the most recent data populating the DOH overdose death rate data dashboard is from the fourth quarter of 2023.

    In 2023 and 2024, Sen. Cantwell traveled across the State of Washington to 10 communities — Tacoma, Everett, Tri-Cities, Seattle, Spokane, Vancouver, Port Angeles, Walla Walla, Yakima, and Longview – hearing from people on the front lines of the fentanyl crisis, including first responders, law enforcement, health care providers, and people with firsthand experience of fentanyl addiction.  She also participated in the National Tribal Opioid Summit, a gathering of approximately 900 tribal leaders, health care workers, and first responders from across the country hosted by the Tulalip Tribes following the first-ever statewide summit hosted by the Lummi Nation.  Sen. Cantwell has since used what she heard in those roundtables and related events to craft and champion specific legislative solutions, including:

    • The Halt All Lethal Trafficking of Fentanyl Act, which would permanently classify illicit fentanyl knockoffs as Schedule I drugs;
    • The Stop Smuggling Illicit Synthetic Drugs on U.S. Transportation Networks Act, which would crack down on the trafficking of illicit synthetic drugs, like fentanyl, using the U.S. transportation network;
    • The FEND Off Fentanyl Act, signed into law by President Joe Biden, which will help U.S. government agencies disrupt opioid supply chains by imposing sanctions on traffickers and fighting money laundering;
    • The Fight Illicit Pill Presses Act, which would require that all pill presses be engraved with a serial number and impose penalties for the removal or alteration of the number;
    • The Combating Illicit Xylazine Act, which would list xylazine as a Schedule III controlled substance while protecting the drug’s legal use by veterinarians, farmers, and ranchers, enable the Drug Enforcement Administration to track xylazine’s manufacturing to ensure it is not diverted to the illicit market;
    • The TRANQ Research Act of 2023, signed into law by President Biden, which will spur more research into xylazine (also called “tranq”) and other novel synthetic drugs by directing the National Institute of Standards and Technology to tackle these issues; and
    • The Parity for Tribal Law Enforcement Act, which would bolster Tribal law enforcement agencies by helping them hire and retain tribal law enforcement officers by raising their retirement, pension, death, and injury benefits to be on part with those of federal law enforcement officers.

    In addition, Sen. Cantwell voted for a series of federal funding bills allocating $1.69 billion to combat fentanyl and other illicit drugs coming into the United States, including an additional $385.2 million to increase security at U.S. ports of entry, with the goal of catching more illegal drugs like fentanyl before they make it across the border.  Critical funding will go toward Non-Intrusive Inspection (NII) technology at land and sea ports of entries. NII technologies—like large-scale X-ray and Gamma ray imaging systems, as well as a variety of portable and handheld technologies—allow U.S. Customs and Border Protection to help detect and prevent contraband from being smuggled into the country without disrupting flow at the border.

    A full timeline of Sen. Cantwell’s actions to combat the fentanyl crisis is available HERE.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: CalAmp Announces Headquarters Relocation to Carlsbad, CA to Streamline Operations and Strengthen Technical Hub

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CARLSBAD, Calif., March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — CalAmp, a global technology solutions innovator, today announced the relocation of its corporate headquarters from Irvine, CA, to Carlsbad, CA. This strategic move is designed to streamline operations and further align the company’s focus on its core technical hub, where much of its engineering, product development, and hardware expertise reside.

    “Our move to Carlsbad is a natural evolution in our journey to optimize efficiency and reinforce our commitment to innovation,” said Chris Adams, President and CEO of CalAmp. “Carlsbad has long been home to our talented engineering and product teams, making it the ideal location to centralize our operations and drive technological advancements that improve our customers’ lives.”

    CalAmp’s new headquarters will be housed in its existing Carlsbad office, a well-established center for the company’s research and development initiatives. The relocation underscores CalAmp’s commitment to fostering innovation and enhancing collaboration among its technical teams.

    While the headquarters moves to Carlsbad, CalAmp will maintain its additional offices worldwide, including locations in Eden Prairie, MN; Brooklyn, NY; London, UK; Milan, Italy; Paris, France; Barcelona, Spain; and Mexico City, Mexico. These offices will continue to support CalAmp’s global customers and partners with the high-quality service and solutions they expect.

    “This transition allows us to better leverage our strengths and position ourselves for future growth,” Adams added. “By consolidating our leadership and technical expertise in Carlsbad, we are creating an environment where innovation thrives and where we can better serve our customers.”

    For more information about CalAmp and its technology-driven solutions, visit www.calamp.com.

    About CalAmp

    CalAmp provides flexible solutions to help organizations worldwide monitor, track, and protect their vital assets. Our unique device-enabled software and cloud platform enables commercial and government organizations worldwide to improve efficiency, safety, visibility, and compliance while accommodating the unique ways they do business. With over 10 million active edge devices and 220+ approved or pending patents, CalAmp is the telematics leader organizations turn to for innovation and dependability. For more information, visit calamp.com, or LinkedInTwitterYouTube or CalAmp Blog.

    CalAmp, LoJack, TRACKER, Here Comes The Bus, Bus Guardian, CalAmp Vision, CrashBoxx and associated logos are among the trademarks of CalAmp and/or its affiliates in the United States, certain other countries and/or the EU. Spireon acquired the LoJack® U.S. Stolen Vehicle Recovery (SVR) business from CalAmp and holds an exclusive license to the LoJack mark in the United States and Canada. Any other trademarks or trade names mentioned are the property of their respective owners.

    CalAmp Investor  Contact: CalAmp Media Contact:
    Jikun Kim Mark Gaydos
    SVP & CFO Chief Marketing Officer
    ir@calamp.com Mgaydos@calamp.com

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