Category: Great Britain

  • MIL-OSI USA: ‘Go Getter’ High School Students Explore Data Analytics Profession at UConn Event: ‘It Looks Like a Fun Career’

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    Isabella Escobar and Anwesha Gupta, both juniors at Avon High School, spent a few minutes Monday morning in a friendly competition to see whose robot could scoop up more blocks and get them across a goal line.

    They were among 40 students from Avon, Farmington, and Capital Preparatory Magnet School in Hartford, who spent part of the day at UConn’s Graduate Business Learning Center, exploring careers in data analytics. The Data Analytics Day event was organized in partnership with Junior Achievement of Southwest New England.

    Gupta’s older sister is studying business in college and that piqued her own interest in the field.

    “I want to major in business and I’m figuring out what direction interests me. I’m testing the water for data analytics,’’ she said. “I’ve enjoyed myself today. It was very fun.’’

    Escobar is also leaning toward a business career, possibly in marketing or international affairs, but is open to other options. “I’m very lucky to be here. I’m excited,’’ she said.

    In addition to learning about emerging technology, including robotics, the students attended programs about communication and leadership, and how Microsoft Excel and Tableau can benefit business.

    During the latter program, professor John Wilson, academic director for the master’s in FinTech program, explained that visual analytics—collecting, analyzing and presenting information in an appealing and easy-to-understand way—is one of the hottest jobs in business today.

    Professor John Wilson, Academic Director for the graduate FinTech program told 40 high school students that careers in data visualization are among the most promising in business. (Nathan Oldham / UConn School of Business)

    That captured the interest of Capital Prep students Javaris Spencer, a junior, and Sherdon Rodney, a senior.

    “I wanted more information and a better understanding of the data analytics field,’’ Spencer said. “It’s been a good experience so far.’’

    “I learned about the role data analytics plays in life,’’ Rodney said, after viewing a brief introduction to a visual analytics presentation on the impact of domestic violence. “I’ve been thinking about how data has evolved and how it works, and how more companies want to use it. It looks like a fun career.’’

    Julie Armstrong, director of education at Junior Achievement, was excited about the new partnership between her organization and UConn, and felt it would be fruitful.

    “The students are self selected and all are interested in data analytics and in business, and have an aptitude for research,’’ Armstrong said. “The teachers we work with send us the real go-getters who want as much career exposure as possible.’’

    Wilson said the event appeared to be a success.

    “We’ve been tasked with workforce development and creating a pipeline to drive interest in STEM careers early on,’’ he said. “There’s great enthusiasm here today. Many students are interested in careers in analytics, and others are here just to gain a better understanding of what it is.’’

    UConn graduate student Gomathi Ramachandran helped develop the curriculum for the event. Ramachandran, a former educator now working as an educational financial systems analyst, is pursuing an advanced degree in business analytics and program management. She said she could witness the students’ engagement and hopes the program will expand their interests.

    “Growing up, I remember wishing for a mentor who would encourage me to believe in myself and in my ability to learn new things,’’ she said. “Back then, I was often afraid to take risks due to the fear of failure. Now, as an adult, I’m pursuing courses that push me out of my comfort zone daily. I’ve learned to embrace challenging subjects like SQL, visual analytics, and public speaking.’’

    She said she hopes the students who participated in Monday’s program developed curiosity, a belief in themselves and their abilities, and recognize that no concept is too difficult to grasp.
    Junior Achievement serves 35,000 students in Connecticut alone. The organization’s three pillars are financial literacy, career preparation, and entrepreneurship.

    Jeremy Race, President and CEO of the Southern New England chapter, said programs like the Data Analytics Day are invaluable and offer students exposure to high-impact careers that they might not otherwise experience.

    “By partnering with the UConn School of Business, Junior Achievement is providing high school students with unprecedented access to expertise in data analytics, showing them how numbers can tell powerful stories that drive business outcomes,’’ Race said.

    “This collaboration creates a unique bridge between academic theory and real-world application, allowing students to learn directly from professors and student mentors who are at the cutting edge of the field,’’ he said. “We are deeply grateful to our friends at UConn for their commitment to cultivating the next generation of business leaders and for opening their doors to give JA students this glimpse into the world of data-drive decision making.’’

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Natural Gas Weekly Update

    Source: US Energy Information Administration

    Temperature – heating & cooling degree days (week ending Mar 20)

    HDDs

    CDDs

    Region

    Current total

    Deviation from normal

    Deviation from last year

    Current total

    Deviation from normal

    Deviation from last year

    New England

    131

    -67

    -18

    0

    0

    0

    Middle Atlantic

    117

    -67

    -6

    0

    0

    0

    E N Central

    125

    -68

    -24

    0

    0

    0

    W N Central

    145

    -47

    -13

    0

    -1

    0

    South Atlantic

    66

    -41

    -3

    11

    0

    -4

    E S Central

    66

    -36

    -16

    3

    -2

    3

    W S Central

    41

    -20

    -2

    15

    3

    -2

    Mountain

    177

    22

    12

    0

    -2

    0

    Pacific

    122

    34

    40

    0

    -1

    0

    United States

    112

    -33

    -2

    4

    0

    -1

    Data source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
    Note: HDDs=heating degree days; CDDs=cooling degree days

       Average temperature (°F)

       7-day mean ending Mar 20, 2025

            Data source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

      Deviation between average and normal temperature (°F)

       7-day mean ending Mar 20, 2025

            Data source: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Global: Investment in the Hundred could save UK cricket from a financial sticky wicket

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Robbie Millar, Lecturer, Academy of Sport, Sheffield Hallam University

    English cricket, up in the air? Brian A Jackson/Shutterstock

    Cricket is an old sport that has evolved over centuries. But 2025 is shaping up to be a historic – and lucrative – year for the game in England and Wales.

    For the first time, private equity investment has entered the domestic game, changing the business structure of professional cricket forever. The source of this corporate interest – worth around £550 million – is the league of eight teams known as the Hundred.

    Established in 2021 by the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB), the focus of the Hundred was appealing to new audiences who have not engaged with cricket before.

    It is a much shorter format than traditional forms of the game such as the four-day County Championship competition, or the One Day Cup, which is made up of 50 overs (300 balls) per side.

    With the Hundred, each side gets 100 balls to bowl at their opponent’s wickets. The highest number of runs wins. It’s very simple. And entertaining.

    Not everyone is a fan of course, and there has been criticism of the tournament’s design, its addition to an already congested cricket calendar, and the fact that only eight of the 18 county cricket clubs (CCCs) are involved.

    But the ECB stood firm. And given the recent investment into the Hundred, it will no doubt feel vindicated.

    Because the cash is sorely needed. Our research shows that CCCs have struggled financially for a while, and are overdue an economic boost.

    To help with this, the Hundred started off with the ECB owning all eight teams or “franchises” in the league. Now it has sold 49% of each franchise and gifted the remaining 51% to each Hundred-hosting county.

    So now, for example, 51% ownership of the Oval Invincibles is in the hands of Surrey CCC. Each hosting county was then given the option of selling their share – and so far Yorkshire and Lancashire have done just that.

    The total sale of the franchises has generated £550 million, far exceeding expectations. From that, 10% (£55 million) will be ringfenced by the ECB to invest in measures to increase participation in cricket throughout England and Wales.

    A slightly complicated division of the rest of the spoils then basically leaves each Hundred-hosting county cricket club with £18 million (plus the 51% ownership of the franchise). The non-hosting CCCs will receive around £32 million each.

    For context, in 2023, Surrey CCC had the highest revenue at £65 million, while Leicestershire had the lowest at £5.5 million. So a one-off injection of £18 million would represent significant growth for clubs across the scale.

    Not cricket?

    But it’s not all good news, as the influence of private equity may cause internal conflicts about a CCC’s strategy. For while the ECB has said it will remain in control of the Hundred as a competition, the primary goal of the franchise sales is to achieve a return for investors.

    This will probably mean that the Hundred is prioritised over the other formats of domestic cricket – and even international commitments. As many of the high-profile players play across the different formats, they will need to manage their schedules and are likely to choose whatever brings the greatest financial rewards.

    And while the ECB has hinted at increasing the number of franchises in the future, the worry will still be that some clubs benefit more than others.

    More traditional fans may feel alienated.
    Graeme Dawes/Shutterstock

    Yet investment in the future is essential if cricket is to remain relevant and appeal to new audiences. There are already suggestions that Gen Z prefers other sports such as basketball and boxing, over cricket.

    Investment must also be used to improve stadium infrastructure and facilities, to attract good crowds and to generate the superstars of the future. But the influx of money means the Hundred is likely to dominate the broadcast schedule, and prioritising the tournament in this way may alienate some more traditionally minded fans.

    The commercial interest now stretches towards international markets and other sports. Four of the investment groups now involved in the Hundred are owners of Indian Premier League cricket franchises, while others are linked to the worlds of professional football (Birmingham Phoenix and Birmingham City FC) and Silicon Valley (London Spirit).

    Eventually, this could lead to increasing levels of commercialisation, of the kind sports fans have become accustomed to within English Premier League football.

    Overall then, cricket fans may look back on 2025 as a year of major change in the sport in England and Wales. Success is far from guaranteed but the early indications, especially with regards to finance, are overwhelmingly positive.

    And that was probably the point of the whole exercise. It might not be cricket as it used to be – but as with other sports today, many of the biggest decisions come down to whether or not they make money.

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Investment in the Hundred could save UK cricket from a financial sticky wicket – https://theconversation.com/investment-in-the-hundred-could-save-uk-cricket-from-a-financial-sticky-wicket-244989

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Melsonby hoard: iron-age Yorkshire discovery reveals ancient Britons’ connections with Europe

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Duncan Garrow, Professor of Archaeology, University of Reading

    The Melsonby hoard is a remarkable collection of more than 800 iron-age metal artefacts, which was found in a field near Melsonby, North Yorkshire, in December 2021.

    Its discovery represents a triumph of cross-sector collaboration in British archaeology. This extraordinary find excavated from Yorkshire soil is not just a collection of ancient objects, but signals a need for a significant revision of how we understand iron-age Britain.

    The presence of materials imported from the Mediterranean, and a type of continental European wagon new to Britain, challenges the idea that iron-age Britons were isolated. Instead, it tell us that “wealthy” iron-age people in northern England had contacts extending out across Europe.

    This 2022 excavation, supported by a £120,000 grant from Historic England and expertise from the British Museum, revealed more than 800 items dating to the first century BC – around the time of the Roman conquest under Emperor Claudius. The objects are almost certainly associated with the Brigantes tribe who dominated northern England during this period.


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    The scale of this discovery sets it apart from typical iron-age finds. The hoard includes partial remains of at least seven four-wheeled wagons and/or two-wheeled chariots, harnesses for at least 14 horses, 28 iron tyres (many deliberately bent), three ceremonial spears and two ornate cauldrons.

    In iron-age Britain, communities regularly placed metalwork in rivers and bogs to mark significant life events, including death. The Thames has yielded deliberately deposited human skulls alongside weapons and metal objects. The Melsonby hoard can be seen as a land-based equivalent of these water deposits.

    One of the most significant aspects of this discovery is the first evidence of four-wheeled wagons used by iron-age British tribes, possibly imitating vehicles seen in continental Europe. This finding suggests that northern Britain was far from isolated, instead participating in widespread networks spanning Europe to the Mediterranean.

    The craftsmanship displayed in the hoard as whole is exceptional. Some horse harnesses feature Mediterranean coral and coloured glass, showcasing the distinctive curving patterns typical of Celtic Art. One cauldron, likely used for mixing wine, combines Mediterranean and iron age artistic styles – concrete evidence of cultural exchange between Britain and continental Europe.

    Particularly intriguing is evidence that many items were deliberately burned or broken before burial. This practice of ritually “killing” valuable objects has deep roots in British prehistory, stretching back to the bronze age. By destroying such items, iron age elites may have been demonstrating their wealth and status through conspicuous consumption.

    However, the burning might also relate to funerary practices in some way. Though no human remains were found, the objects could have been burned on a funeral pyre in a cremation ritual. This places the Melsonby hoard in an interesting position between traditional archaeological categories. It is part “hoard” (a deliberate deposit of objects) and part “grave goods” (items placed with the dead).

    This dual nature isn’t without precedent. Chariot burials are well-documented in iron-age Yorkshire, while collections of horse equipment appear in other discovered hoards. The Melsonby find might represent a combination of these traditions.

    However, we wouldn’t know about any of this if it hadn’t been for the decision of metal detectorist Peter Heads to resist unearthing the hoard himself.

    On making the discovery in December 2021, Heads immediately contacted archaeologists at Durham University, setting in motion a textbook example of proper archaeological practice. This allowed crucial contextual information that would have been lost forever had the site been disturbed without professional supervision.

    The hoard’s objects were carefully identified using scanning technology at the University of Southampton, allowing archaeologists to excavate without causing damage. This meticulous approach will enable years of productive research into these artefacts.

    Valued at £254,000, the Melsonby hoard is now the subject of a fundraising campaign by the Yorkshire Museum. A selection of objects is already on display, giving the public access to these remarkable artefacts.

    As research continues on this extraordinary find, it stands as a powerful example of how proper archaeological practice – from responsible metal detecting to collaborative, well-funded excavation – can transform our understanding of Britain’s past.

    The Melsonby hoard offers a unique window into iron-age life in Britain, challenging long-held historical assumptions about regional development and cultural sophistication.

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

    ref. Melsonby hoard: iron-age Yorkshire discovery reveals ancient Britons’ connections with Europe – https://theconversation.com/melsonby-hoard-iron-age-yorkshire-discovery-reveals-ancient-britons-connections-with-europe-253274

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Portadown job fair opens doors to employment

    Source: Northern Ireland City of Armagh

    A vibrant job fair held at Millennium Court, Portadown, on Wednesday 28th March attracted a strong turnout of job seekers and local employers, reinforcing the commitment of Armagh City, Banbridge, and Craigavon Borough Council to employment growth and workforce development across the area.

    Organised by the Council’s Labour Market Partnership (LMP) in collaboration with the local Jobs and Benefits Office, the event featured leading businesses from various sectors, including retail, healthcare, manufacturing, and technology.

    Funded by the Department for Communities, Labour Market Partnerships create targeted employment action plans for council areas, allowing for collaboration at local and regional level to support people towards and into work.

    Job vacancies were available from major employers such as as Eventsec, Almac, Ulster Carpets, Shelbourne Motors, Avondale Foods, Translink, and many more. Attendees had the opportunity to engage directly with potential employers, learn about job openings, training opportunities, and support schemes designed to enhance their employability.

    Deputy Lord Mayor, Councillor Kyle Savage, attended the event and commented:

    “These job fairs are a crucial initiative to connect local people with employment opportunities, ensuring that businesses can access the talent they need to grow while supporting our residents in finding meaningful work. The turnout today highlights the demand for job opportunities and the enthusiasm of employers to invest in our local workforce.”

    Labour Market Partnership job fairs take place throughout the ABC borough during the year, providing attendees with a list of available vacancies, information on training and self-employment opportunities, careers guidance, and practical advice to enhance their job prospects.

    For more information about the work of the Labour Market Partnership, visit www.armaghbanbridgecraigavon.gov.uk/lmp

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Security: Stamford Man Indicted for Defrauding Mars, Inc. out of Millions of Dollars

    Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime News

    Marc H. Silverman, Acting United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, Anish Shukla, Acting Special Agent in Charge of the New Haven Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Harry Chavis, Special Agent in Charge of IRS Criminal Investigation in New England, and Charmeka Parker, Special Agent in Charge of the Northeast Region of the U.S. Department of Agriculture – Office of Inspector General today announced that a federal grand jury in New Haven has returned a nine-count indictment charging PAUL R. STEED, 58, of Stamford, with fraud and tax offenses stemming from his alleged commission of multiple frauds against his former employer Mars, Inc.

    The indictment was returned yesterday, and Steed was arrested this morning.  He appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge S. Dave Vatti in Bridgeport, pleaded not guilty, and is currently detained.

    The indictment alleges that, between approximately 2011 and 2023, Steed was employed by Mars Wrigley, a subsidiary of Mars. Inc. (“Mars”), working remotely from his home in Stamford.  Steed served as Global Price Risk Manager for Mars Wrigley’s Global Cocoa Enterprise.  As part of his employment, Steed was responsible for managing Mars Wrigley’s participation in the U.S. Department of Agriculture (“USDA”) Sugar-Containing Products Re-Export Program.  In approximately 2016, Steed created a company, MCNA LLC, to mimic an actual Mars entity, Mars Chocolate North America.  He then diverted millions of dollars in Mars assets to a bank account he set up in MCNA’s name by directing sugar refineries purchasing Mars’s re-export credits, obtained through the USDA program, to pay MCNA LLC as if it were a legitimate Mars entity.

    The indictment also alleges that Mars had an ownership interest in Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. (“ICE”), a financial services company that operated financial exchanges and clearing houses, and received quarterly dividends in connection with that ownership.  In 2017, Steed directed Computershare Limited (“Computershare”), a company that ICE utilized for stock-related services, to pay MCNA LLC for Mars’s dividends from its ownership shares in ICE.  As a result, more than $700,000 in dividend payments were diverted to the MCNA LLC account.  In 2023, after Steed had used a fraudulent letter purportedly from the Mars Treasurer authorizing him to trade ICE shares, Steed directed Computershare to sell Mars’s ICE shares entirely.  Computershare issued a check in the amount of more than $11.3 million, which Steed deposited into the MCNA LLC account.

    The indictment further alleges that, from 2013 through 2020, Steed used a company he owned called Ibera LLC to invoice Mars for services Mars did not receive.  Mars paid Ibera LLC approximately $580,000 through this scheme.

    The indictment charges Steed with seven counts of wire fraud, an offense that carries a maximum term of imprisonment on each count.  Steed is also charged with two counts of tax evasion, an offense that carries a maximum term of imprisonment of five years on each count, for failing to report and pay taxes on his stolen income, as alleged.

    According to statements made in court, Steed is alleged to have stolen more than $28 million from Mars and through his schemes.  More than $18 million was seized today for forfeiture, and the government is seeking to forfeit a Greenwich home that Steed is alleged to have purchased with nearly $2.3 million in stolen funds.  It is alleged that another $2 million was sent by Steed to Argentina, where he is a dual citizen, has family ties, and owns a ranch.

    Acting U.S. Attorney Silverman stressed that an indictment is not evidence of guilt.  Charges are only allegations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

    This matter is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation Division, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture – Office of Inspector General, with the assistance of the U.S. Marshals Service.  The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney David E. Novick.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: ICE Boston arrests Brazilian alien charged with assault, battery in Massachusetts

    Source: US Immigration and Customs Enforcement

    FRAMINGHAM, Mass. — U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement apprehended an illegally present Brazilian alien charged with assault and battery on a family member when officers arrested Weliton Pires-Dos Santos, 39, in Framingham Jan. 26.

    “Weliton Pires-Dos Santos illegally came to this country and refused to abide by our laws,” said ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Boston acting Field Office Director Patricia H. Hyde. “Pires victimized a member family and presents a threat to the residents of our Massachusetts communities. ICE stands committed to prioritizing the safety of our public by arresting and removing criminal alien offenders from our New England neighborhoods.”

    The U.S. Border Patrol arrested Pires Nov. 30, 2021, after he illegally entered the United States near San Luis, Arizona. The Border Patrol served Pires with a notice to appear and released him on his own recognizance.

    Officers from the Framingham Police Department arrested Pires Nov. 20, 2023, for assault and battery on a family member.

    ICE lodged an immigration detainer against Pires later that day with the Framingham Police Department, which refused to honor the detainer and released Pires from custody.

    Pires remains in ICE custody following his arrest.

    Members of the public can report crimes and suspicious activity by dialing 866-DHS-2-ICE (866-347-2423) or completing the online tip form.

    Learn more about ICE’s mission to increase public safety in our communities on X: @EROBoston

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Environment Secretary Steve Reed – Circular Economy speech

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    Environment Secretary Steve Reed – Circular Economy speech

    Speech by Environment Secretary Steve Reed at the Dock Shed in London, setting out his vision for a circular economy

    Thanks to British Land and Mace for hosting us at the Dock Shed today.

    The views up here are absolutely spectacular.

    I don’t think any of us can ever tire of looking at that iconic London skyline. No matter how many times you’ve seen it before.

    Or seeing the city shift and grow as buildings go up and down, as spaces are developed. As communities are created.

    When I was Lambeth Council Leader, I was co-chair of the Vauxhall Nine Elms Redevelopment – that’s the biggest regeneration project in Europe.

    But what people don’t always see is the waste that kind of development can produce.

    62% of all waste generated in the United Kingdom comes from construction.  

    That’s resources lost from our economy.

    Lost economic value.

    As we meet our commitment as a Government to build 1.5 million homes, the infrastructure for clean green energy and a reliable and clean water supply, the datacentres to make the UK an AI superpower, we can and we must get better use out of our materials and eradicate waste.

    Mace and British Land – and many others in the room – are already rising to the challenge.

    In this building alone, thousands of tonnes of carbon were saved by smarter material choices, meaning every structure has a smaller carbon footprint.

    The stone floor beneath your feet is completely recycled.

    And in new buildings across the development, British Land and Mace are using material passports to digitally track all components so they can be adapted and reused in the future.

    Later this morning I’m looking forward to visiting the Paper Garden, just a few minutes from here, transformed from an old printworks into an education centre and a garden, where 60% of materials have been retained or reclaimed, including railway sleepers and the logs of fallen trees from Epping Forest.

    The principles of a Circular Economy are embedded in these designs.

    That’s what I want to talk about today.

    Not just in construction but across all sectors.

    We have an opportunity to end the throwaway society and move to a futureproofed economy.

    Where things are built to last.

    Where products are designed to be reused and repaired. And materials given new life again and again.

    This isn’t about merely modifying the way we currently manage waste.

    I want to work with all of you to fundamentally transform our economy so we get more value from it.

    When I was in opposition, this is what business leaders told me they wanted a Labour Government to do.

    So when I became Secretary of State for Defra, I made creating a Circular Economy one of my five core priorities for that department.

    British businesses want to make this change.

    So now it’s part of the Government’s national Plan for Change.

    But it needs long-term direction on how regulation will develop.

    So you can plan with certainty, so we can build the infrastructure we need, and financial institutions and businesses can invest with confidence.

    Today I want to set that direction so, together, we can make the Circular Economy a reality.

    Turn back the years and the things Britain made were built to last.

    Washing machines would be fixed, clothes mended, broken pieces of furniture repaired. 

    But in recent times we’ve become trapped in a throwaway culture.

    It’s easier and quicker to replace something on Amazon than get it fixed.

    Our lives follow a ‘take, use and throw’ model that is economically unsustainable, creates mountains of waste that we have to bury or burn, and leaves our supply chains vulnerable and exposed.

    Yet we know the British public support change.

    Carrier bags sold by the main supermarkets have reduced by over 98% since 2014.

    We’ve cleaned up streets, rivers and beaches by banning single-use plastic items like cutlery and polystyrene cups.

    Both policies had huge public support.

    But we are falling behind the rest of the world.

    This Government is changing that.

    Packaging Extended Producer Responsibility will begin later this year, incentivising businesses to remove unnecessary packaging and make their products more recyclable and refillable.

    Simpler Recycling for the workplace starts next week.

    And a standardised, national approach to household recycling – paper, card, plastic, glass, metals and food waste – will be introduced next year so everyone understands more clearly what they can recycle and how they recycle it.

    This will end postcode confusion about bin collections and make sure households, workplaces and businesses never have to deal with the madness of 7 separate bin collections which the previous Conservative Government legislated to inflict on us.

    And this April, we will appoint the business-led organisation that will launch the UK’s first Deposit Management Scheme for drinks containers starting in 2027.

    Less than 60% of waste electricals are collected for reuse or recycling.

    4 in 5 of our plastic products are still made from virgin materials.

    Our household recycling rates haven’t improved in 15 years.

    UK landfill sites absolutely astonishingly cover an area almost as big as Greater London. 

    We burn 12 million tonnes of waste collected by councils every year.

    We throw away £22 billion in edible food annually. Four and a half billion in clothes. 2 and a half billion in usable furniture.

    This is bad for the environment, bad for society and it’s bad for the economy.

    We are literally shovelling money down the drain.

    Under Michael Topham’s leadership at the Environmental Services Association, our biggest recycling companies are stepping up to the challenge.

    Our reforms are giving them the confidence to invest £10 billion pounds in the UK’s recycling infrastructure over the next decade, creating over 21 thousand jobs right across the country.

    I know parts of the industry have concerns around the impacts of some of these reforms.

    We are listening. And we’ll keep listening to make sure the changes work for businesses.

    Based on businesses’ feedback, we’ll appoint a producer-led organisation to lead our packaging reforms, building on the successful business-led board that steered them to this stage.

    We’ve published estimated base fees for year one of the scheme, rather than ranges, to give businesses more certainty.

    And we have stopped mandatory labelling requirements to avoid any trade friction or increased costs within the UK and with the EU.

    We’ve also worked with the Food Standards Agency to confirm they will take up the role of competent authority, carrying out the checks to verify the suitability of recycling processes producing food-grade recycled plastics for trade, so we can uphold the value of high-quality UK recycled plastics on export markets.

    Beyond our packaging changes, our ban on disposable plastic vapes comes into force in June.

    We are changing the law so online marketplaces and vape producers pay their fair share to recycle the electricals that they put on the market – encouraging them to consider other options like reuse.

    We’ve set aside £15 million to reduce food waste from farms and ensure it reaches families in need.

    And we’ve set strict conditions for new energy-from-waste plants so they work better for local communities and maximise the value of resources that can’t be re-used or recycled.

    I’m proud of where we’ve got to so far. But I know these reforms are still not enough.

    We need a bigger shift to an economic system that encourages repair, reuse and innovation, where resources are used again and again, and waste is designed out of the system right from the start.

    I worked in business for 16 years, with responsibility for driving up profit and driving down cost.  

    To make this bigger shift, I know we must help you unlock innovation and technologies that will open new revenue streams.

    Work with local government to ensure the right infrastructure is in place.

    And show the public that the circular economy is not some abstract concept, but something that will bring real benefits to them, their families, small businesses and communities right across the UK.

    A Circular Economy makes sense.

    In the Netherlands, financial organisations like InvestNL and innovations such as the Denim Deal for textiles are stimulating innovation in every corner of their economy.

    I want the UK to match this. And then go further.

    Moving from our current throwaway society is vital to grow the economy and deliver our Plan for Change, so we can give working people economic security, and give our country national security.

    Towns and cities in every region will benefit from new investment that keeps materials in use for longer, whether in manufacturing and product design, processing or recycling facilities, or in the rental, repair and resale sectors.

    This will provide thousands of high quality, skilled jobs right across the country, getting more people into work, wages into pockets, and driving the regional economic growth this Government was elected to deliver.

    If you want to put a figure on it, external analysis suggests circular economy policies have the potential to boost the economy by £18 billion a year, every year.

    A Circular Economy is also a more resilient economy.

    Recent disruptions to global supply chains from the Covid 19 pandemic to Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine make it clear we can no longer rely on importing 80% of our raw materials from abroad.

    These include the materials and components essential to our phones, computers, electric vehicles, hospital equipment and clean energy infrastructure. And that’s to name just a few.

    To ensure our national security in an increasingly unstable world, we have no choice.

    We must embrace circular, local supply chains to reduce our exposure to global shocks and prevent us running out of critical resources.

    As the Chancellor has said, we need to remove barriers for British businesses, investors and entrepreneurs and grow the supply-side of our economy.

    It’s not just the economy though.

    Extracting resources and processing them is responsible for over half of global greenhouse gas emissions.

    Moving away from the linear make, use and throw model is vital to meeting our Net Zero and Environment Targets.

    It will mean less rubbish ending up in landfill. Fewer plastics under our feet and choking the seas, taking hundreds of years to break down.

    We can make better use of that land, whether for agriculture, housing, nature or green energy infrastructure.

    It will mean burning less waste. Less litter on our streets. Less fly tipping on the side of our roads.

    It will mean people can feel more pride in their communities.

    British businesses are already showing us what’s possible.

    From innovative tech startups turning waste into valuable materials, to social enterprises giving used goods a second life.

    Like SUEZ working with the Greater Manchester Combined Authority to give hundreds of tonnes of pre-loved items like furniture, bikes and toys a brand new lease of life.

    Reselling them to the local community at affordable prices or donating them to local charities.

    Too Good to Go, established in Copenhagen and spanning multiple global cities including here in London, which has over 100 million users and saved over 400 million meals.

    Low Carbon Materials in Durham, using alternative construction materials to decarbonise roads across the country.

    Or Ecobat Solutions’ in Darlaston recovering valuable materials from end-of-life lithium-ion batteries through their innovative recycling plant.

    I want to support businesses like these to succeed.

    By facilitating the transition you told me this sector wants to make.

    That’s why I set up the Circular Economy taskforce, bringing together experts from government, industry, academia and civil society to work with businesses on what they want to see so we create the best possible conditions for investment.

    I’m delighted to have so many members of the taskforce here with us in the room this morning.

    Under the leadership of Andrew Morlet and Professor Paul Ekins, the taskforce will work with businesses to develop the first ever Circular Economy Strategy for England.

    We will publish the Strategy in the coming Autumn.

    It will include the long-term regulatory roadmaps that businesses asked for, showing the journey to circularity, sector by sector, so you have the certainty and direction to invest in the future.

    We will start with five sectors that have the greatest potential to grow the economy: chemicals and plastics; construction; textiles; transport; and agrifood.

    This includes exploring how we can protect our battery supply so we can electrify the UK’s vehicle fleet, working with the Chancellor to make sure levers including the Plastics Packaging Tax help support the stability and growth of our plastics reprocessing sector, or how we harness new technologies to stop burning materials like the plastic films on packs of strawberries or mushrooms, but instead give them a new life.

    We’re already seeing innovation in plastic films by the company Quantafuel based in Denmark, and Viridor who are here today, alongside others, want to develop chemical recycling plants following that model here in the UK.

    It includes how we build on the industry led coalition ‘Textiles 2030’ to transform our world-leading fashion and textiles industry, tackle food waste to improve food security and bring benefits for consumers, businesses and the environment, and lower construction costs and emissions as we build 1.5 million homes during the lifetime of the current Parliament.

    In these roadmaps, we’ll learn from international best practice, including from the European Union.

    Until now, countries such as the Netherlands, Denmark and Germany have led the way on circularity.

    Our Strategy will give British businesses the support they need so we can put the UK back in the race.

    It will provide the freedom for businesses to harness the entrepreneurial spirit and innovation that Britain has long been known for.

    Those of you here today are the champions for this change.

    You were the first off the start line. You’ve battled to do what’s right for the environment, the economy, and the future of our country.

    I want to thank you for that.

    Businesses will lead the transition to a Circular Economy.

    It’s up to us to work together to bring the wider business community and society with us.

    We need to show the country that the Circular Economy is not just a diagram on a page.

    It’s cleaner streets, greener parks, and less fly-tipping in communities we’re proud to call home.

    It’s new income for businesses, thousands of skilled jobs, and economic growth in every region of the country.

    It’s resilience in the face of global supply chain shocks, and it’s essential for our national security.

    The Circular Economy is our chance to improve lives up and down the country. To grow our economy.

    And protect our beautiful environment for generations to come.

    I’m genuinely excited about what we can achieve together.

    My ask from you is simple.

    Please tell the taskforce, and tell me, what you need from us.

    Then work with us so we can make it happen.

    Thank you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 27 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Fatal Accident Inquiry support for families

    Source: Scottish Government

    Immediate access to non-means tested legal aid.

    Family members involved in deaths in custody Fatal Accident Inquiries (FAI) are to have immediate, free access to legal aid support and advice.

    Justice Secretary Angela Constance confirmed that she is using existing Ministerial powers to remove means-testing for legal aid in such cases, so that from 7 April families will not have to provide information on their income.

    Ms Constance announced the move as she updated the Scottish Parliament on a range of actions to address systemic failures identified by Sheriff Collins in his FAI determination relating to the deaths of Katie Allan and William Lindsay (also known as William Brown) at HM Prison & Young Offenders Institution Polmont. This followed the Justice Secretary’s previous statement to Parliament on the issue in January this year.

    All of the Sheriff’s 25 recommendations have been accepted and work on these will be delivered at pace and progress will be closely monitored.

    Ms Constance outlined the measures being implemented, which include:

    •           The Scottish Prison Service (SPS) has initiated a dedicated operational taskforce, chaired by the SPS Chief Executive, and involving NHS partners, to ensure all of the recommendations are actioned.

    •           His Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Prisons for Scotland will provide the Justice Secretary with an initial report by the summer on how the implementation of Sheriff Collins’ FAI recommendations will be independently reviewed.

    •           The Scottish Prison Service is overhauling its Suicide Prevention Strategy ‘Talk to Me’ across the prison estate. The strategy will be published at the end of this year, with a full training package to be rolled out in 2026.

    •           In consultation with the Lord Advocate, an independent review of the FAI system has been commissioned to focus on improving the efficiency, effectiveness, and trauma-informed nature of investigations into deaths in prison custody. The appointment of a Chair is expected to be announced shortly.

    Ms Constance said:

    “I was grateful to have had the opportunity to again meet with the families of William Lindsay and Katie Allan today and extend my deepest condolences to them, as I do to all those affected by a death in custody.

    “It is through ongoing and decisive action that we will create the lasting change they rightly demand and deserve. We have made substantial progress since my January statement to Parliament.

    “We will continue to drive forward change and strengthen accountability. This is about changing the system and the culture that underpins it.”

    Background

    From Monday 7 April, close family members involved in deaths in custody FAIs will have access to free non-means-tested legal aid.

    The formal response from Scottish Ministers and Scottish Prison Service to the FAI determinations was submitted to the Scottish Courts and Tribunal Service and published on 13 March.

    Read the Justice Secretary’s statement to Scottish Parliament, 27 March 2024

    Read the Justice Secretary’s Deaths in Custody statement to Scottish Parliament, 23 January 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Christmas Village receives sparkling reviews

    Source: Scotland – City of Aberdeen

    Aberdeen’s Christmas Village is set to return to the city later this year following positive feedback on last year’s event.

    Councillors from the Finance and Resources Committee yesterday agreed an update on the event after an independent evaluation of the Christmas Village was undertaken by Aberdeen and Grampian Chamber of Commerce.

    Committee Convener Councillor Alex McLellan said: “Aberdeen’s Christmas Village continues to be hugely popular with local residents, and visitors to the city, over the festive period.

    “Aberdeen City Council, working in partnership with Aberdeen Inspired, will continue to build on the successes of previous years as we move towards the 2025 festive period.”

    Aberdeen City Council Co-Leader Councillor Ian Yuill said: “The feedback from last year’s Christmas Village is key as we look towards the future and continue to create a fun and engaging attraction that can be enjoyed by all ages.

    “I would like to thank everyone involved in the Christmas Village for their continued hard work and support in making this a fantastic event.”

    The Evaluation found that:

    • 98% of visitors thought the event should be repeated in the future;
    • 91% rated the market as ‘good’ or ‘excellent’;
    • 87% from outside Aberdeen said that the Christmas Village improved their perception of the city;
    • 87% said they were ‘very likely’ or ‘certain’ to recommend the event to friends and family;
    • 97% of businesses in the Curated in the Quad Market said that the stall was good for their business.

    The Aberdeen Christmas Village was delivered last year in partnership with John Codona’s Pleasure Fairs, Aberdeen Inspired, and Charlie House, with the event raising more than £32,000 for the charity.

    Last year saw the addition of a thrill ride alongside the traditional ferris wheel, a new festive light trail, as well as the return of a relaxed festive space in Union Terrace Gardens, which also hosted the Nativity Scene. The event was more inclusive than ever with relaxed sessions, free community events, and sensory packs available to borrow.

    The Christmas Village is held from mid-November to the end of December and includes festive food and drink, an ice rink, fun showground rides for all ages, and Curated in the Quad, a Christmas market featuring more 64 local makers including food, drink, crafts, and gifts.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: New opening hours for Provost Skene’s House

    Source: Scotland – City of Aberdeen

    From 1 April 2025 Provost Skene’s House will be open: 
     
    April to October 
    Thursday to Monday 10am-5pm (Sunday 11am-4pm) 
    Admission free 
     
    About Provost Skene’s House 
    Provost Skene’s House celebrates the pioneering people of Aberdeen and the North-East of Scotland who have not only shaped the city, but have also helped transform the world. Dating from 1545, the oldest surviving townhouse in Aberdeen shares the stories, discoveries and achievements of over 100 remarkable individuals: innovators, scientists, life savers, writers, sporting champions and stars of stage and screen. They range from singer and activist Annie Lennox to Robert Thomson, inventor of the pneumatic tyre, and football legend Denis Law. 
     
    Provost Skene’s House is managed by Aberdeen Archives, Gallery & Museums (AAGM). The other city-centre locations are Aberdeen Art Gallery, Aberdeen Maritime Museum, and Aberdeen City and Aberdeenshire Archives. 
     
    The opening hours for the Art Gallery and Maritime Museum are unchanged. 
     
    For visiting information go to www.aagm.co.uk or follow AAGM on Facebook, Instagram Tiktok and Linkedin @AbdnArtMuseums

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Whale sculpture takes pride of place in new public park

    Source: Scotland – City of Edinburgh

    A design portraying one of the Firth of Forth’s most special visitors – the humpback whale – has been commissioned by the Council to be displayed in the new Gasholder 1 public park.

    The piece of public art by Svetlana Kondakova Muir has been put in place to take centre stage in the new park which opened at the end of last year as part of the £1.3bn regeneration of the wider area. Visitors will be able to enjoy the new piece of art at the park’s official opening on Saturday 5 April.

    Last February the Council invited locally based artists and creative practitioners to develop ideas for a new artwork to be co-created with the local community.

    Locals and visitors to Granton Waterfront were then given a sneak peek of six shortlisted designs for the new piece exhibited at Granton Station. Ideas for the selected pieces were taken from community interests and themes connected to Granton and the artists provided opportunities for the local community to participate in the design process. A panel of experts then selected Svetlana Kondakova Muir’s whale as the winning design in Summer 2024.

    By portraying the whale, the artist is celebrating the local natural environment. The sculpture is a galvanised steel and aluminium life-sized head of a humpback whale appearing to emerge vertically from underwater. At four metres tall, it is an awe-inspiring size, allowing visitors to experience the full might of this incredible creature. To complement the gasholder structure, it was made in a contemporary polygonal style using simple, flat shapes with straight edges, a style that is both minimalist and striking.

    Aluminium-cast artworks created by local school children and college students, including an oyster reef, barnacles and other wildlife as well as textured panels created by pupils who have complex support needs from Oaklands School, will be added to the structure in summer 2026.

    Culture and Communities Convener Cllr Val Walker said:

    The new park – Gasholder 1 – officially opens on Saturday 5 April and I’m really looking forward to hundreds of visitors joining us that day and being able to see this this beautiful piece of art which is a spectacular focal point. I’m sure it will become a huge draw for local people and those visiting the area in the future months and years ahead. I’m hoping those who haven’t already explored the new green space will have the opportunity to do so at our official opening or in their own time at some point soon.

    The gasholder has always played an important role in Granton Waterfront and it is fantastic to see it has been completely restored and is now lit up as a permanent feature after dark.

    Artist Svetlana Kondakova Muir said: 

    It was a great honour to be awarded the Gasholder Public Art Commission and I am excited to see the sculpture complete. The best part about this project has been working with the local community to come up with ideas – it was them who chose the whale – and to create elements of sea life which will be cast in aluminium and added to the sculpture. I feel privileged that my artwork will be housed within such a distinctive landmark in Edinburgh’s landscape. Most importantly, I hope that Granton Whale will highlight the importance of marine conservation and the value of our relationships with the natural world.

    Published: March 27th 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Global: Coffee enemas probably won’t detox your system – they’re more likely to cause you serious damage

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Dipa Kamdar, Senior Lecturer in Pharmacy Practice, Kingston University

    AJR_photo/Shutterstock

    What do King Charles and Gwyneth Paltrow have in common? Give up? They’ve both at one point or another caused coffee colonic-related controversies.

    In a 2004 speech to the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists on complementary therapies and cancer care, the then Prince of Wales’s comments on Gerson therapy – a health programme, marketed as an alternative treatment for cancer, that includes regular coffee enemas as a way to clear toxins from the body – seemed to endorse the unproven regimen. The prince’s opinion drew criticism from medical experts.

    Wellness influencer Gwyneth Paltrow, on the other hand, promoted a DIY coffee enema kit on Goop, her lifestyle website – again drawing criticism from specialists who urged Goop fans to “keep the coffee out of your rectum and in your cup”.




    Read more:
    Gwyneth Paltrow’s new Goop Lab is an infomercial for her pseudoscience business


    Despite the expert critique, coffee enemas continue to be a social media wellness trend offered in many alternative health clinics as a method to cleanse the colon and detoxify the body. More worryingly, coffee enemas are still recommended by some influencers as an alternative treatment for cancer and other serious illnesses.

    So, why does the popularity of this controversial trend persist despite the bad press? Do the benefits of a coffee enema outweigh the risks?

    An enema clears the bowel of faecal matter. Usually, the procedure involves inserting a nozzle attached to a pouch containing fluid into the rectum so the liquid can be squeezed in. In conventional medicine, enemas are used to clear the bowel before surgery, for severe cases of constipation or sometimes as part of a bowel management scheme – in people with inflammatory bowel diseases, for example.

    It’s claimed by some coffee enema advocates that, before the advent of modern painkillers, Florence Nightingale used coffee enemas as a form of pain management in soldiers during the Crimean War, and doctors used them in the second world war.

    Gerson therapy

    But despite the advances in medicine and technology since Nightingale was nursing injured soldiers, coffee enemas continue to be promoted as a health practice.

    Gerson therapy continues to be highly publicised as an alternative option to chemotherapy. Patients follow a strict organic vegetarian diet, which can include up to 13 glasses of fruit juice and up to five coffee enemas daily.




    Read more:
    Apple Cider Vinegar: how social media gave rise to fraudulent wellness influencers like Belle Gibson


    The Gerson Institute claims the enemas can increase gut movement which helps to empty bowels. Coffee enemas are believed to help the body expel toxins from the liver and gut, which is thought to relieve pain.

    Coffee contains compounds kahweol and cafestol, thought to boost an enzyme which helps remove harmful substances from the body. These substances are turned into bile salts and expelled from the body. The caffeine in coffee is thought to stimulate the liver and widen the bile ducts to increase the flow of bile and help remove toxins.

    Several studies show there is no evidence to prove this regime works to cure cancer and it is not supported by any reputable cancer organisations. But it’s possible the placebo effect might help some patients feel better. A review showed there were more reports about the side effects of coffee enemas than their efficacy. Some people, for instance, experienced proctocolitis – inflamed rectum and colon – and rectal burns.

    Self-cleaning

    Because of the amount of waste that is expelled from the gut, coffee enemas can remove potassium from the body. This can lead to electrolyte imbalance, dehydration, muscle weakness and nausea. In severe cases, it can cause irregular heartbeats and lung problems. Using any enemas regularly for a long time can cause the bowel muscle to weaken, which is linked to constipation and inflammation of the bowel. In some cases, enemas may damage the balance of good bacteria in the gut, which can cause cramping, diarrhoea and bloating and increase the risk of infection.

    There no need for DIY enemas of any kind: the gut is self-cleaning. Regular digestion and bowel movements means the body gets rid of waste naturally. A high-fibre diet, rich in fruits, vegetables, wholegrains and seeds should be enough for good digestive health and could even reduce the risk of cancer. Current advice suggests we consume at least 30g of fibre daily. Most adults, however, have an average of only 19g of fibre daily. Drinking plenty of water is also crucial to gut health. Research suggests that eating fermented foods, such as kimchi, kefir and kombucha, can help the good bacteria in the gut and aid with digestion.

    Drinking coffee is more likely to be beneficial for health than coffee enemas. Studies show that moderate coffee intake is linked to lower risk of heart disease, for example.

    Social media can be a useful way to learn about health but it’s important to check who is giving this information – do they have credentials to back up their claims? It’s always best to check with your doctor or specialist before embarking on any alternative or complementary therapies.

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

    ref. Coffee enemas probably won’t detox your system – they’re more likely to cause you serious damage – https://theconversation.com/coffee-enemas-probably-wont-detox-your-system-theyre-more-likely-to-cause-you-serious-damage-252412

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Industry leaders discuss how new ports strategy can drive city’s growth plans

    Source: City of Plymouth

    Industry leaders and port operators at the Port Strategy event

    Industry leaders have been invited to play a part in Plymouth’s ambitious plans to drive growth in its four ports and further strengthen its position as a leader in marine innovation and transitioning to net zero.

    A special roundtable meeting for industry leaders heard how a new Ports Strategy sets out a clear vision for growing the economic contribution of Plymouth’s ports, creating green jobs and ensuring the city remains at the forefront of marine technology, sustainable development and maritime skills.

    Business leaders were asked to consider how to foster ongoing collaboration between the Council, harbour authorities, port operators, and other key stakeholders to drive forward new initiatives, and what their roles could be in making progress against the six recommendations in the strategy:

    • Investing in and developing maritime skills as a key enabler of future growth and to anchor the benefits of this growth in local communities
    • Preserving space for the ports with more detailed work to determine future requirements
    • Maintaining Plymouth’s expertise in innovation in marine autonomy, clean propulsion and digital ocean technology
    • Fostering communication and collaboration to promote Plymouth’s ports and to identify and drive forward new initiatives
    • Supporting investment in infrastructure to ensure the ports remain competitive
    • Recognising the significant role that the ports can play in preparing for net zero and the opportunity and benefits that this could deliver in productivity and job creation.
    Industry leaders discuss the new Ports Strategy

    Councillor Tudor Evans, Leader of Plymouth City Council, said: “Plymouth’s ports are the beating heart of the city’s economy. They support a diverse range of industries and are driving innovation in marine autonomy, clean propulsion, and digital ocean technologies.

    “The new strategy is a blueprint for ensuring that Plymouth remains a global leader in the marine sector while also securing long-term prosperity for our communities. The event with business leaders and port operators gave us an important chance to discuss the opportunities and get their valuable input.”

    Plymouth’s ports currently underpin a marine and defence sector that employs over 20,100 full-time equivalents (FTEs), contributing 22 per cent of the city’s GVA. Plymouth also boasts the largest concentration of marine employment of any local authority in England, with sector wages exceeding both local and national averages.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Emergency fund launches to support the city’s third sector ahead of longer-term review

    Source: Scotland – City of Edinburgh

    Charities due to lose funding from the Edinburgh Integration Joint Board (EIJB) will be able to apply for emergency support from the City of Edinburgh Council.

    A one-off Third Sector Resilience Fund will launch tomorrow (Friday 28 March) and will remain open for two weeks. It will only be open to organisations in Edinburgh directly impacted by the closure of the EIJB’s third sector grants programme and applications must be made by 12 noon on Friday 11 April.

    This package of support will include a funded programme worth £1m to allow third sector advice providers to continue to offer income maximisation, debt, and welfare advice services previously funded by the EIJB grants programme.

    Applications will be reviewed and reported to a special meeting of the Policy and Sustainability Committee on Monday 12 May, with the intention of releasing funds in June.

    Further work is progressing to review the relationship between the public sector and third sector in Edinburgh, to improve funding certainty in future years.

    Council Leader, Jane Meagher, said:

    Many of these local charities are at the forefront of helping those in our city with the greatest need. We’ve urgently been working to provide a lifeline to those affected by the closure of the previous grants programme, and I’m really pleased that we’ve found a way forward.

    This fund should provide enough money to potentially support all 64 affected organisations for up to nine months. It must be said that this is a one-off emergency fund – we need to act quickly, and I urge applications to be made as soon as possible.

    Alongside this we must develop a stronger way of supporting the third sector in our city. We recognise that the EIJB, like the Council, is under significant financial pressure and there needs to be longer-term change.

    Tackling poverty and inequality is one of the biggest challenges we’ve set ourselves as a city and this will be a really important piece of work – for us, for our partners and for the whole third sector.

    Benjamin Napier, CEO of Citizens Advice Edinburgh, is a member of the third sector reference group which the Council has set up as it reviews the funding relationship the city has with charities.

    He said:

    We welcome this investment in the third sector and hope it will go some way to providing resilience, while we continue our work with colleagues across the Council to find a longer-term solution.

    We recognise the pressures on public funding and thank the Council for their efforts in securing this funding. The third sector in Edinburgh plays a vital and very cost-effective role in supporting some of the most vulnerable people in our communities.

    We look forward to strengthening the relationship between the Council and the third sector. By working together in this way, we can create real and lasting change for our citizens.

    The City of Edinburgh Council Third Sector Resilience Fund is a short term, one off, draw down resource using reserves agreed for use during 2025/26.

    The fund aims to:

    • Provide financial support in 2025/26 for Edinburgh based third sector organisations significantly impacted by the closure of the EIJB Grants Programme
    • Ensure that the closure of the EIJB Grants Programme does not affect, disrupt, or delay the delivery of other grant funded or commissioned projects and services in the city during 2025/26.

    Towards these aims:

    • The funding is for the period 1 July 2025 to 31 March 2026, whilst the wider review of the Council’s approach to supporting the third sector in Edinburgh is undertaken during 2025/26
    • Is intended to ensure the viability and survival of the third sector organisations whilst a new sustainable long-term approach, aligned with the Council’s Business Plan priorities, is developed for implementation from 2026/27 onwards
    • Not intended to provide costs associated with closure of an organisation because of the loss of EIJB grant funding, and
    • Not intended to be used for delivery of any specific projects or services that would be the direct function of the EIJB(noting that this fund will provide resilience until such time as the EIJB’s Strategic Plan is published and any future procurement processes are confirmed and made available to the 3rd sector).

    Please email policyandinsight@edinburgh.gov.uk for the full criteria for the fund and to apply.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Security: Former Bank Teller Pleads Guilty to Stealing More Than $180,000

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    BOSTON – A Saugus man pleaded guilty yesterday in federal court in Boston to embezzling bank funds while working as a teller at a Boston branch of a national bank.

    Derek Aut, 28, pleaded guilty to embezzlement by a bank employee and aggravated identity theft. U.S. Senior District Court Judge William G. Young scheduled sentencing for June 16, 2025. Aut was previously charged by criminal complaint on Dec. 18, 2024.  

    According to the charging documents, while working as a teller at a bank branch in Boston, Aut stole from the bank accounts of two customers by forging the victims’ names on withdrawal slips, among other things. When one of the victims noticed money missing from her account, Aut attempted to cover his theft by taking money from the other victim’s account and depositing it into the first victim’s account. In total, Aut took more than $180,000 from the victims’ accounts.  

    The charge of embezzlement by a bank employee provides for a sentence of up to 30 years in prison, five years of supervised release and a $1 million fine. The charge of aggravated identity theft provides for a mandatory sentence of two years in prison to be served consecutive to any other sentence imposed. Sentences are imposed by a federal district court judge based upon the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.  

    United States Attorney Leah B. Foley and Michael J. Krol, Special Agent in Charge of Homeland Security Investigations in New England made the announcement. Assistant U.S. Attorney Kristen A. Kearney of the Securities, Financial & Cyber Fraud Unit is prosecuting the case.
     

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Sir Chris Bryant speech at Connected Futures Festival

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    Sir Chris Bryant speech at Connected Futures Festival

    Minister for Data Protection and Telecoms, Sir Chris Bryant, gave a speech at the Connected Futures Festival on 26 March 2025.

    Hello. My name is Chris Bryant and I’m the telecoms minister. I’m really sorry I can’t be with you. Well, I’m here with you virtually, which I suppose is particularly important for the kind of connectivity that we’re talking about. But I’m afraid that, as you’re meeting, I will be in Parliament for the spring statement, when the Chancellor of the Exchequer will be talking about economic growth and how we get the economy to really springboard into the future.

    I suppose that’s the key part of what I want to say today, which is that connectivity is a vital part of making sure that the UK economy grows, that everybody gets a chance to participate in our economic future, and that we embrace the technological changes that can make so many differences to people’s lives, whether in the delivery of public services or in the delivery of all the services that we rely on, whether it’s ordering a pizza, parking your car, or engaging with our local GP and seeing our latest test results.

    I know that the geopolitical picture looks uncertain at the moment, and many parts of our lives, of course, are uncertain. Sometimes, trying to predict the future is difficult. That’s one of the reasons that, whereas we’ve always talked about “future telecoms” in the past, we’re changing the terminology to something which I think suits much better the situation that we face today. And that’s why instead of referring to “future telecoms”, we’re now going to be referring to “advanced connectivity technologies”, because advanced optics and satellite communications aren’t the ghosts of telecoms futures anymore, but actually telecoms present – let’s face it! Last year, Aston University transmitted data 4.5 million times faster than the average home broadband connection. We have started to send data through visible light. And Vodafone made the first video call via space last year. I’m an MP for a constituency in South Wales in The Valleys, and so I was very happy to see that that call took place from a remote Welsh mountain. The death of “notspots” may just about be in sight for us all!

    The breakthroughs we are seeing mean that the UK could once again be a leader in connectivity over the next ten years, and I’m absolutely determined that we take forward those opportunities.

    But before I take you into the future, let’s just pause briefly in the present. As we shape the next generation of connectivity, we must remember that some people in this country haven’t yet got this generation of technological connectivity. There’s 1.6 million people in the UK who live largely offline. We have to factor them into our future, and our ambition is to have gigabit-capable broadband in every home and in every business, and higher quality 5G to all populated areas by 2030. Through the Digital Inclusion Action Plan, which we’ve recently launched, we’ll make sure people also have the devices and skills to be part of a digital future. We want to tackle digital exclusion so that we can take the whole of our country with us. So, deploying the best technology we have today and taking a leading role in shaping the technologies of tomorrow is vital to our economic success.

    We will shape them, obviously, with global allies – but we will be guided by three central ideas. First of all, do they bring connectivity to everyone, everywhere, whatever your circumstances? Secondly, do they have security and resilience built in from the start? And thirdly, are they built sustainably, so that better connectivity gets us closer to net zero and not further away? These are all equally important, fundamental principles and ideas behind what we’re trying to achieve in this area.

    The UK has the potential to be at the forefront as we develop these technologies. For a start, we build on research from some of the best universities in the world, and the JOINER research and innovation platform gives them a unique test network to prepare for 6G. British firms are getting connectivity to places it hasn’t gone before, like trains, offshore wind farms and space. BT, who nearly two centuries ago set up the world’s first nationwide communications network, are now leading the way with Toshiba in trials of quantum secure comms. And global companies like Ericsson, Nokia and Samsung have all chosen to do R&D work here in this country, in the United Kingdom.

    We will shape them, obviously, with global allies – but we will be guided by three central ideas. First of all, do they bring connectivity to everyone, everywhere, whatever your circumstances? Secondly, do they have security and resilience built in from the start? And thirdly, are they built sustainably, so better connectivity gets us closer to net zero and not further away? These are all equally important, fundamental principles and ideas behind what we’re trying to achieve in this area.

    The UK has the potential to be at the forefront as we develop these technologies. For a start, we build on research from some of the best universities in the world, and the JOINER research and innovation platform gives them a unique test network to prepare for 6G. British firms are getting connectivity to places it hasn’t gone before, like trains, offshore wind farms and space. BT, who nearly two centuries ago set up the world’s first nationwide communications network, are now leading the way with Toshiba in trials of quantum secure comms. And global companies like Ericsson, Nokia and Samsung have all chosen to do R&D work here in this country, in the United Kingdom.

    We can and should go further, though, making the UK a global leader in advanced connectivity. And that’s where the government and industry really must work hand-in-hand. We will strengthen our supply chains – that’s really important. Today we will publish the government’s response to the report from the Telecoms Supply Chain Diversification Advisory Council, outlining how we will support a thriving ecosystem of suppliers for our networks. I’m immensely grateful to all those who took part in the Council’s work.

    We will back your growth in this sector. Advanced connectivity will be one of the growth markets in our Industrial Strategy within the digital and technology sector. That means the backing across Whitehall to help you succeed. As a sign of that commitment, today I can announce that we will invest nearly £60 million over the next year, 2025 to 2026, to support UK leadership in R&D so that more of the technology providing the world’s critical connectivity is developed here in the UK.

    If we get this right, then ten years down the line we will be able to say that this technology has made people’s daily lives better, put more money in people’s pockets and helps to keep the UK and our allies safe in a turbulent world. That’s a connected future we can only build together.

    Thank you and I hope you have a good conference today.

    Updates to this page

    Published 27 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: HMRC late payments interest rates to increase from 6 April 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government Non-Ministerial Departments 2

    News story

    HMRC late payments interest rates to increase from 6 April 2025

    HMRC interest rates for late payments will be increased by 1.5% for all taxes from 6 April 2025.

    The HMRC interest rates for late payments will be increased by 1.5% for all taxes from 6 April 2025 following a change in legislation.

    This increase was announced at Autumn Budget 2024 and the change will take effect from 6 April 2025.

    Information on the interest rates for payments will be updated shortly.

    How HMRC interest rates are set

    HMRC interest rates are set in legislation and are linked to the Bank of England base rate.

    Late payment interest was set at base rate plus 2.5%. From 6 April 2025 this will increase to base rate plus 4.00% for most taxes.

    Repayment interest is set at base rate minus 1%, with a lower limit – or ‘minimum floor’ – of 0.5% and remains unchanged.

    The differential between late payment interest and repayment interest is in line with the policy of other tax authorities worldwide and compares favourably with commercial practice for interest charged on loans or overdrafts and interest paid on deposits.

    The rate of late payment interest encourages prompt payment and ensures fairness for those who pay their tax on time, while the rate of repayment interest fairly compensates taxpayers for loss of use of their money when they overpay.

    Updates to this page

    Published 27 March 2025

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  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Statement on behalf of the Transition Board

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Statement on behalf of the Transition Board

    The Tata Steel / Port Talbot Transition Board met on 27th March 2025.

    The Tata Steel / Port Talbot Transition Board met on 27th March 2025.

    The Secretary of State for Wales and Chair of the Transition Board, Rt Hon Jo Stevens MP sought endorsement from the Board on a £3.27 million mental health and well-being fund, designed to support affected workers, families, and associated communities. The funding will bolster and expand the current services provided by the local authority and third sector partners. This support will look to provide grants to community groups, school support, and mental health advisory services.

    This has been a challenging time for the communities impacted by Tata Steel UK’s transition. By ensuring the third sector is properly funded, resourced and equipped to deliver essential services within the community, this Board is demonstrating its commitment to securing the right mental health support for those impacted. The Board understands that with this preventative action good mental health and resilience can be safeguarded within the community ensuring a healthy workforce, which in turn steers people away from long term sickness, securing jobs and livelihoods while boosting economic growth for the whole region.

    The Board also received updates on:

    • Tata Steel UK’s decarbonisation programme;
    • The Department of Business and Trade’s plans for a steel strategy;
    • The Transition Board funds that have already been announced, including applications received for the Supply Chain fund, and support being provided from the Employment and Skills fund.

    Those in attendance included: Rt Hon Jo Stevens MP, Secretary of State for Wales; Rebecca Evans MS, Cabinet Secretary for Economy, Energy and Planning in the Welsh Government; Sarah Jones MP, Minister of State in the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero and the Department of Business and Trade; Cllr Steve K Hunt, Leader of Neath Port Talbot Council; Frances O’Brien, CEO of Neath Port Talbot Council; Rajesh Nair, CEO of Tata Steel UK; Stephen Kinnock, MP for Aberafan Maesteg; David Rees, MS for Aberavon; Luke Fletcher MS for the region of South Wales West; Sarah Williams-Gardener; independent member of the Board; Alun Davies, National Officer for Steel & Metals, Community Union and Tom Hoyles, Politics, Press and Research Officer, GMB Wales.

    -ends-

    Updates to this page

    Published 27 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Christina McKelvie, 1968-2025

    Source: Scottish National Party

    Christina McKelvie’s partner, Keith Brown, along with her sons, Lewis and Jack, are deeply saddened to announce her passing this morning at Glasgow Royal Infirmary.

    Christina’s sons Lewis and Jack and I are heartbroken to announce the death of Christina at Glasgow Royal Infirmary this morning.

    Christina was an MSP from 2007, serving her constituents in Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse, from 2011. She convened two committees before becoming a Minister in 2018. She loved her job, and she loved her party and was always a champion for the people of Scotland and an advocate for social justice and for Scotland to be an independent nation in Europe.

    To us, she was our beloved mum, partner and gran to Maeve and Leo. She was always hard working and enthusiastic and lit up every room she was in with her positivity and bright smile. She was always proud of her working class roots in Easterhouse and often said she could not have dreamt of becoming a government minister for the Scottish Government.

    We are immensely proud of all Christina achieved. She was passionate about many issues, including advocating for people living with MND and sponsoring the first Wear It Pink at the Scottish Parliament in support of Breast Cancer Now many years before her own diagnosis with breast cancer, after which she used every opportunity to encourage women to check themselves and go to screening appointments.

    As a Parliamentarian, she was proud of her work as convener of two Committees – European and External Relations and then the Equalities Committee which added Human Rights to its title and remit under her convenership. She also championed policy and legislation through promoting ‘Clare’s Law’ – to allow the disclosure of previous violent and abusive behaviour to those at risk. As a Minister, she launched the world’s first strategy to tackle social isolation and loneliness as a health issue, tackled the stigma surrounding menopause, and introduced legislation banning FGM.

    As a constituency MSP, Christina worked hard to support her constituents and many local groups and absolutely loved every part of Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse. Christina was also a committed trade unionist and long-standing member of Unison from her time working in social work services in Glasgow.

    Today, we have lost our much loved Christina and know she will be very much missed by all our family and also her many, many friends, staff and constituents.

    Christina was born on 4 March 1968. She became an MSP in 2007, latterly representing Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse from 2011. She was Minister for Equalities from 2008 to 2023, when she became Minister for Culture, Europe and International Development, and was Minister for Drugs and Alcohol Policy from February 2024. As an MSP, she was Convener of the European and External Relations Committee and a member of the Congress of Local and Regional Authorities of the Council of Europe between 2016 and 2018, and then Convener of the Equalities and Human Rights Committee from September 2016 till she became a Minister in 2018.

    Christina took medical leave last August to undergo treatment for secondary breast cancer.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Young musicians delighted to win Aberdeen competition

    Source: Scotland – City of Aberdeen

    Two talented musicians are celebrating success at the Aberdeen finals of the Scottish Young Musicians Competition 2025, held at the Cowdray Hall, earlier this week.

    Violinist Michelle Tse, a pupil at Aberdeen Grammar School, won the Aberdeen City Council Senior Solo Performer of the Year 2025, which was open to city pupils in Year Four to Year Six at Secondary School.

    Michelle will now represent Aberdeen in the finals of the national competition on Sunday 25 May at the prestigious Royal Conservatoire of Scotland in Glasgow.

    Diya Dileep, a saxophonist, from Cults Academy, won the Aberdeen City Council Junior Solo Performer of the Year 2025, for Year Three pupils at Secondary School and below.

    Councillor Martin Greig, Convener of the Education and Children’s Services Committee, said: “Huge congratulations to Michelle and Diya and well done to all the young musicians who participated in the competition.  We have amazing creative talent in our area. It’s great to enjoy the excellent music-making from our local musicians.

    “I’m sure everyone will join me in wishing Michelle all the very best in the final of the Scottish Young Musician competition in Glasgow in May.”

    Following her winning performance Michelle said: “It was truly an exciting evening—thank you to all my teachers, fellow musicians, and the adjudicators. It is my great honour to represent the City of Aberdeen at the finals.”

    The finalists performed before a panel of external judges: Jenna Main, Business Development Manager, Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music; Craig McDermott, Head teacher, Northfield Academy; and Clara-Jane Maunder, emerging composer and violinist from Aberdeen, who has also composed the city’s official anthem for the forthcoming Tall Ships festival.

    For the third year running, the Council’s Music Service had organised the local competition, in partnership with the Scottish Young Musicians competition, which is open to all young musicians who go to school in Scotland, whatever standard or age.

    120 young musicians in Aberdeen entered the first round of the competition in January 2025.

    The junior event was held on Monday 24 March and the senior event took place on Tuesday 25 March. 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Aberdeen City and Aberdeenshire Archives re-open

    Source: Scotland – City of Aberdeen

    Aberdeen City and Aberdeenshire Archives will re-open to the public for research visits at the Town House on Broad Street on Tuesday 29 April. The Archives have been closed to the public for almost a year to allow the team to carry out a major collection move from Old Aberdeen House to the Town House.  
     
    The collections of Aberdeen City and Aberdeenshire Archives contain a wealth of documents and records dating from the 12th century to the present day, relating to the rich history and heritage of the City of Aberdeen and the three ancient counties of Aberdeen, Banff and Kincardine. A valuable resource for all kinds of research, they range from minutes, registers, accounts, letters and logbooks, to maps, plans and photographs and include:

    • The oldest and most complete collection of burgh records in Scotland, dating back to 1398, which were recognised by UNESCO in 2013 as being of outstanding historical importance to the United Kingdom.

    • Business records including those of the Port of Aberdeen, the Northern Cooperative Society Ltd., and Esslemont and Mackintosh. 
       

    Follow Aberdeen City and Aberdeenshire Archives on Facebook for all the latest news about reopening @aberdeencityandaberdeenshirearchives 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Statement: In memory of Christina McKelvie MSP

    Source: Scottish Greens

    A statement on the passing of Christina McKelvie from Scottish Green Co-Leader Patrick Harvie.

    Patrick Harvie said:

    “This Parliament has lost one of our very best today. And I want to offer my deepest sympathy to all those who knew and loved Christina.

    “Today is a moment of pain and sadness. But Christina’s life and her extraordinary spirit deserve to be celebrated.

    “In her first speech, she said she would “rather be a citizen of a nation that looks to persuade and co-operate than bully and cajole”

    “She was talking about Scotland as a nation, but I think those words also captured the kind of person she was, and the kind of politician she was.

    “Lots of people in politics start out with those kinds of values and ideals, but Christina was someone who absolutely held fast to them. Compassion and kindness were at her core.

    “As Christina’s partner, and our colleague, Keith Brown said today: she “lit up every room she was in” – that was certainly true of this room, our national Parliament. She brightened it in every sense.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Charity Commission welcomes appointment of Mark Simms as interim Chair

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government Non-Ministerial Departments

    News story

    Charity Commission welcomes appointment of Mark Simms as interim Chair

    The Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) has appointed the serving Board member of the Commission as the organisation’s interim Chair.

    Mark Simms OBE

    Mark Simms, OBE, will lead the Commission from 25 April 2025 on an interim basis while DCMS continues its search for a permanent Chair. Mark joined the Charity Commission as a Board Member in March 2023 and was awarded an OBE in 2024 for services to social enterprise.

    In response, Orlando Fraser KC, said:

    I very much welcome the news of Mark Simms’s appointment as interim Chair to succeed me. I have known Mark personally a long time, both at the Rugby Portobello Trust and most recently from his role here as a Member of the Commission, and I could not think of a better person for the job.

    Mark Simms, OBE said:

    It will be an honour to step into this role at such a crucial time for the sector. Charities are at the heart of our communities, and I am committed to ensuring the Commission remains fair, balanced, and effective in its work.

    As a charity leader myself, I understand the challenges charities face and the importance of regulation that strengthens, rather than stifles, their impact and continues to uphold the trust that charities need to thrive.

    Charity Commission chair Orlando Fraser announced he would “hand on the baton” after almost seven and a half years at its APM in November.

    Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, Lisa Nandy thanked him for his service to the Charity Commission as Chair and board member, and for “his work towards a fairer, balanced and independent Charity Commission.”

    Interim Chair appointed to the Charity Commission for England and Wales – GOV.UK

    ENDS

    Notes to editors

    1. All appointments to the Commission’s board are made by DCMS on a fixed term basis, in accordance with the Cabinet Office’s Governance Code on Public Appointments.

    2. The Charity Commission is the independent, non-ministerial government department that registers and regulates charities in England and Wales. Its ambition is to be an expert regulator that is fair, balanced, and independent so that charity can thrive. This ambition will help to create and sustain an environment where charities further build public trust and ultimately fulfil their essential role in enhancing lives and strengthening society.

    Updates to this page

    Published 27 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Local Planning Authority casework portal expands to include Section 78 casework

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Local Planning Authority casework portal expands to include Section 78 casework

    Five Local Planning Authorities (LPAs) now piloting expanded service with nationwide rollout planned from June 2025

    We have expanded our casework portal trial to include Section 78 cases, marking a significant milestone in our organisation’s digital transformation programme. 

    Successful pilot expansion 

    Following the successful implementation of the Householder Appeals Service (HAS) with five pilot LPAs, the casework portal is now being used to handle Section 78 appeals. This expansion represents the next phase in modernising and future-proofing our online appeal services. 

    Tom Warth, Head of Planning and Environmental Appeals Service at the Planning Inspectorate, said: 

    “The feedback and collaboration from our pilot LPAs has been invaluable in developing a system that truly meets user needs. This expansion to include Section 78 appeals demonstrates our commitment to creating a more efficient, accessible and user-friendly appeals process for all stakeholders.” 

    The five LPAs participating in the pilot are: 

    • London Borough of Barnet 
    • Royal Borough of Greenwich 
    • London Borough of Havering 
    • London Borough of Richmond upon Thames 
    • London Borough of Bromley 

    National rollout from June 2025 

    We are pleased to announce that following the pilot phase, the LPA casework portal will begin rolling out to all authorities across England from June 2025. The rollout will be conducted in tranches to ensure a smooth transition and appropriate support for each authority. 

    Benefits of the new appeals portal 

    The expanded digital service offers numerous benefits including: 

    • Streamlined submission and management of appeals 
    • Improved tracking and monitoring capabilities 
    • Enhanced communication between all parties 
    • Reduced paper-based processes 
    • More efficient handling of casework 

    Preparing for the transition 

    We encourage LPAs to begin considering how this transition might affect their internal processes. Comprehensive training materials, guidance and support will be provided throughout the implementation period. 

    Further information 

    LPAs can find preview videos of the dashboard functionality via our YouTube playlist, including: 

    • An overview of features and functionality 
    • Guidance on dashboard access and user management 
    • Step-by-step instructions for completing appeal questionnaires 

    To stay updated on developments, follow the Planning Inspectorate on LinkedIn or sign up for email alerts via our subscription form.

    Updates to this page

    Published 27 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Interim Chair appointed to the Charity Commission for England and Wales

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government Non-Ministerial Departments

    News story

    Interim Chair appointed to the Charity Commission for England and Wales

    The Secretary of State has appointed Mark Simms OBE as Interim Chair of the Charity Commission. This interim appointment has been made while the process for finding the next Chair is completed.

    Mark Simms OBE

    Appointed for a six month term from 25 April 2025 or until a new Chair is appointed, whichever is sooner. 

    Mark Simms is the Chief Executive Officer of P3 Charity, a national organisation that supports some of the most vulnerable people across the UK. Under his leadership, P3 has grown significantly in its reach and impact, delivering innovative services in homelessness, mental health, criminal justice, and social inclusion.

    Mark has more than 25 years’ experience in the voluntary and public sectors, with a deep understanding of how to lead purpose-driven organisations through complex and changing environments. He is widely recognised for championing person-led approaches and for building high-performing teams that deliver real social impact. He has contributed to several national advisory boards focused on systems change, public service reform, and tackling inequality.

    Mark joined the Charity Commission as a Board Member in March 2023 and was awarded an OBE in 2024 for services to social enterprise.

    Remuneration and Governance Code

    The Chair of the Charity Commission is remunerated £62,500 per annum. This interim appointment was made by the Secretary of State as an exceptional appointment without competition, following consultation with the Commissioner for Public Appointments, in accordance with the Cabinet Office’s Governance Code on Public Appointments. Under the Code, any significant political activity undertaken by an appointee in the last five years must be declared. This is defined as including holding office, public speaking, making a recordable donation, or candidature for election. Mark Simms has not declared any significant political activity. 

    DCMS has around 400 regulated Public Appointment roles across 42 Public Bodies, we encourage applications from talented individuals from all backgrounds and across the whole of the United Kingdom. Applications for the next substantive Chair of the Charity Commission for England and Wales will open soon, to receive a notification when applications open please create an account on the HM Government Public Appointments Website.

    Updates to this page

    Published 27 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Child poverty in Scotland falls

    Source: Scottish Government

    UK Government decisions ‘hold back further progress’.

    New statistics show that child poverty in Scotland has fallen, in contrast to the rest of the UK.

    Annual statistics published today show that compared with the previous year’s statistics, relative child poverty in 2023-24 reduced from 26% to 22% in Scotland while absolute child poverty fell from 23% to 17%. UK Poverty statistics published today show levels of relative child poverty at 31% and absolute child poverty at 26%.

    Modelling published today suggests that UK Government policies are “holding back” Scotland’s progress. It estimates the UK Government could reduce relative child poverty by an additional 100,000 children in 2025-26 if it heeded Scottish Government calls to end the two child limit, replicate the Scottish Child Payment in Universal Credit, remove the benefit cap and introduce an essentials guarantee.

    This model does not take into account the UK Government’s own impact assessment of its welfare cuts announced yesterday , which states that they will leave an additional 250,000 people, including 50,000 children, in poverty.

    Social Justice Secretary Shirley-Anne Somerville said:

    “Eradicating child poverty is the Scottish Government’s top priority and we are committed to meeting the 2030 targets unanimously agreed by the Scottish Parliament.

    “Our policies are having to work harder than ever to make a difference, against a backdrop of a continuing cost of living crisis, rising energy costs and UK Government decision making. However, we know these policies are working.

    “Statistics published today show that, although we have not met the interim child poverty targets, the proportion of children living in relative poverty has reduced and year-on-year rates are now lower than they have been since 2014-15, while the proportion in absolute poverty has also fallen with the annual figure the lowest in 30 years.

    “While JRF predict child poverty will rise in other parts of the UK by 2029, they highlight that policies such as our Scottish Child Payment, and our commitment to mitigate the two-child limit, ‘are behind Scotland bucking the trend’.

    “But decisions taken by the UK Government are holding us back, and yesterday’s Spring statement will only make things worse. The DWP’s own figures show that proposed welfare cuts will drive 50,000 more children into poverty, which must call into question their commitment to tackling child poverty. I have already written to Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall to seek reassurance about the purpose and direction of the UK Government’s Child Poverty Taskforce. The Taskforce’s credibility has been drastically undermined by the policies announced by the UKG in the past few days.”

    Background:

    Poverty levels broadly stable over last decade

    Child poverty modelling: update

     Covering the period until March 2024, child poverty after housing costs (AHC) has been consistently lower in Scotland compared to the UK overall over the last two decades.

    • Three-year averages

    The latest statistics show that relative child poverty levels in Scotland are six percentage points lower than the UK average – 23% compared to 30% in 2021-24 (31% England, 31% Wales and 24% NI). 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Plymouth City Council and Homes England launch new City Centre Vision

    Source: City of Plymouth

    Vision outlines shared ambition to provide 10,000 new homes in the city centre 

    Plymouth’s city centre could see up to 10,000 new homes built over the next decade as part of a new working relationship with Homes England.

    The Council and Homes England have produced a new ‘Plymouth City Centre Vision’ which sets out a shared ambition to provide 10,000 new homes in the city centre and surrounding area.

    The vision recognises that there will be around £4.4 billion of Government investment in HM Naval Base Devonport over the next 10 years and that this will stimulate the demand for new homes, with Babcock requiring 5,500 new employees and a further 2,000 construction jobs being created in the Dockyard.

    It also recognises that Plymouth’s city centre currently has a very low level of housing with only 1,000 homes, compared to 8,000 homes for typical cities of Plymouth’s size.

    Council Leader Tudor Evans said: “This is huge and very, very exciting. We have talked about creating more homes in the city centre for a few years now, but this will help catapult words and plans into bricks, mortar and homes.

    “The regeneration of the city centre has a major role to play in supporting the Growth Alliance Plymouth programme to deliver new housing, new skills provision and, through regeneration, to transform perceptions of the city centre.

    “We have been working with Homes England to establish Plymouth as a priority place for investment and to bring forward plans to deliver 10,000 new homes as part of a “new town in the city”. We have a memorandum of understanding that describes the strategic objectives of our partnership, including the exploration of a potential joint venture.”

    The aim is to establish a new residential core in the city centre to stimulate market activity and maximise public and private investment to deliver transformational change, which will address the current housing shortage as well as deliver new homes for new workers.

    Eamonn Boylan, Homes England Chief Executive, said: “The partnership between Plymouth City Council and Homes England is a brilliant example of how the public sector can unite to promote and accelerate housing delivery. The Agency will work with the council and other key stakeholders in the Growth Alliance Plymouth programme to bring forward ambitious development plans, including a shared a vision for up to 12,000 new homes across a prioritised pipeline of sites.”

    Steve Hughes, Chief Executive of the Plymouth City Centre Company, said: “This is great news and yet another sign of growing confidence in our city centre which is definitely on the up.”

    The announcement has also been welcomed by members of the Growth Alliance Plymouth (GAP), the partnership established last year between Babcock, The Royal Navy and City Council to work across the city with Government to put in place the infrastructure, workforce and support for the wider business ecosystem to drive inclusive growth and address housing shortages and entice relocation of skilled workforces to the area.

    John Gane, Managing Director for Babcock’s Devonport site, said: “As a core partner of Growth Alliance Plymouth (GAP), Babcock, working alongside the Royal Navy and Plymouth City Council, is helping to optimise the city’s growth potential and drive regeneration, ensuring Plymouth is an attractive and prosperous city for people to live and work in. We are serious about the future of Plymouth and securing bids such as the Homes England investment, it is already clear the extent of influence this GAP partnership can have.”

    The Council has a successful track record of working with Homes England on projects including major estate regeneration schemes such as North Prospect and Barne Barton, as well as forward funding of land assembly for projects like Bath Street and the West End. This partnership will bring together the land, funding and expertise of both organisations, as well as seeking private sector partner(s) to deliver residential and commercial projects that build on the many successful projects that the Council has completed, such as the Box, the Barcode and the ongoing investment in Armada Way.

    Homes England has identified Plymouth as one of a number of priority places where it will work particularly closely with partners to transform struggling town centres into vibrant neighbourhoods with homes, jobs, leisure facilities and new public realm.

    Homes England’s Board and Executive visited Plymouth in November 2024 to see first-hand the scale of investment being made in the Dockyard and the opportunities for housing delivery in the city centre.

    Further work will now be carried out by the Council and Homes England on the detail of how and where these homes could be and what infrastructure would be required to support their delivery.

    The Council and Homes England have strengthened their partnership in the last 18 months, setting up a strategic regeneration and infrastructure board, and combining resources to produce a delivery plan that aims to deliver up to 12,000 new homes across the city and other parts of the city over a 15-year period. This includes exploring new models of partnership and co-investment that will unlock and accelerate housing delivery.

    Homes England and Plymouth City Council are also collaborating on the Civic Centre. The project will see the creation of the new City College Plymouth’s Blue Green Skills Hub within the basement, ground and first floor of the Civic Centre. This will deliver 60 new courses to 2,000 students.

    Councillor Tudor Evans said: “The Civic Centre is an iconic building and its transformation will signal confidence to the wider market that Plymouth is serious about regeneration.

    “This is a large and complex project – perhaps the biggest we have delivered and is only possible due to the commitment of some of our key City partners. We are enormously grateful to all who believe in us, believe in this scheme and believe in Plymouth.”

    Part of Homes England’s role is to introduce potential development partners who have a track record of delivering high quality residential projects. The Council has already had discussions with a number of these partners about the role that they might play in the delivery of new homes across Plymouth city centre.

    Last March, Cabinet agreed to enter into an agreement to lease with City College Plymouth, allocate £8.5m Levelling Up Fund grant and the purchase of the building from Urban Splash for £1.

    The project to refurbish the Civic Centre has also benefitted from grant funding from the Future High Streets Fund. Now, subject to approvals, additional grant funding is under consideration by Homes England to help complete the transformation.

    The Council and College are progressing design proposals, including workshop space in the basement, teaching space on the ground and first floors of the north and south block and public-facing spaces.

    The Civic Centre has planning consent for 144 apartments in the tower and a range of commercial space in the podium, with parking and plant in the basement. The consent includes demolishing some of the 1970s extensions on the west side of the building. City College is looking to take all of the commercial space and the changes to the existing consent means a new planning application will need to be submitted.

    Jackie Grubb, Chief Executive of City College Plymouth said: “This new campus provides a fantastic opportunity to ensure Plymouth’s residents are equipped with the skills needed to support the growth of the defence, marine and other sectors of the economy.

    “Almost half of the courses will be linked to the ‘blue and green’ economy – marine, nuclear and net zero, equipping students with the skills to work in sectors such as offshore wind, sustainable construction and environmental science.”

    Luke Pollard MP, Member of Parliament for Plymouth Sutton and Devonport, said: “I’ve been proud to work with the City Council and Government Ministers in securing funding. By working together we are creating a beacon to attract investors to our city, with more demand for shops, cafes, restaurants and entertainment.

    “It’s a team effort to deliver for Plymouth and convert an eyesore into new homes. 

    “We promised thousands of new homes will be built in the city centre and this is the start of us delivering on that promise.” 

    Within the building itself, contactors Gwella continue the strip out work that began under Urban Splash. Various concrete repair and strengthening works still need to be carried out, but the extent of this is not yet known. An extensive structural survey will take place to get a clear picture of concrete repairs needed.

    The Council will employ a principal contractor for the main refurbishment works, which are expected to start next Spring and will involve removing existing cladding. Re-cladding the building and other refurbishment work would start at the end of 2026 and be completed by May 2028.

    Once the ‘shell and core’ of the space to be occupied by City College Plymouth is complete, it will be handed over to the college to fit out. This is programmed to take up to 15 months. The Council has appointed a team of designers, professional advisers and consultants already working on the project, including structural engineers, mechanical and electrical engineers and planning consultants.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: FestivALL stages major celebration of inclusion at Foyle Arena

    Source: Northern Ireland – City of Derry

    FestivALL stages major celebration of inclusion at Foyle Arena

    27 March 2025

    The Foyle Arena in Derry was buzzing with activity this week as hundreds of people came together to promote diversity and inclusion during the two-day FestivALL programme.

    The events were delivered by Derry City and Strabane District Council, in partnership with the Public Health Agency, with a series of activities including multi-sports, music and dance, aimed at reducing the barriers faced by people with disabilities, carers and older people.

    Throughout the months of February and March, disability lead organisations and performers from Ardnashee Tribe Dance Troupe, Foyle Down Syndrome Trust, The Hub, Knockavoe School and Destined, have all been putting in the hours to prepare some show-stopping performances for the festival showcase event. 
    Foyle Arena came alive with Arndashee Choir opening the event and included performances from local artists Renegade Zoo and High-End Dead.
    The second day of FestivALL offered multi sports activities to participants including taster sessions on the climbing wall and accessible bikes.

    Chair of Council’s Health and Community Committee, Councillor Caitlin Deeney, attended the opening event, which drew participants from a wide range of local organisations.

    “FestivALL is a wonderful and joyous celebration that helps to improve wellbeing by breaking down the physical, communicational, social, and economic restrictions faced by people with disability,” she explained.

    “It also provides a positive platform for performers with disability to show off their talents and creativity.
    “I had an amazing time meeting everyone and I want to congratulate all involved for bringing so many people together to share in such an uplifting and empowering experience.

    “FestivALL sends a positive message about working together to create a welcoming and inclusive community for everyone and highlights Council’s commitment to promoting access to and inclusion across Derry and Strabane.”
    For more information on Derry and Strabane Council’s Access and Inclusion Projects visit www.derrystrabane.com/subsites/inclusion

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Global: Canadians are anxious as they ponder how to vote this election. Which leader can ease their fears?

    Source: The Conversation – Canada – By Lori Turnbull, Professor of Political Science in the Faculty of Management at Dalhousie University, Dalhousie University

    This federal election is being described as the most consequential in modern Canadian history. The country is in a tariff and trade war with its closest ally, the United States, and President Donald Trump is threatening Canada’s sovereignty.

    No wonder Canadians are feeling anxious and fearful. And in times of crisis, people tend to look extra hard for leaders they can trust.

    Liberal Leader Mark Carney, a rookie in politics but an internationally respected economist, is enjoying a wave of momentum. Due to his stints as governor of the Bank of Canada during the 2008-09 financial crash and the Bank of England during Brexit, he’s well-qualified to manage economic roller-coasters. Can his impressive CV help calm the fears of Canadians?

    Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, on the other hand, has been connecting with supporters by giving voice to their worries about the economy, jobs, crime and the housing crisis. He’s made people feel heard, but he’s also been accused of building his brand appeal by stoking — rather than soothing — Canadians’ fears about the future.

    Carney’s track record as a fixer could give him the edge now that the election campaign is in full swing and Canada’s fears are being amplified.

    Liberals wildly unpopular

    Before Justin Trudeau announced his plans to leave politics, the next federal election was shaping up to be a showdown between Trudeau and Poilievre, two career politicians with likeability problems and a palpable mutual resentment.

    Each of them often used fear as a tool to warn Canadians about the dangers of electing the other. The mood in the country was sour.

    In July 2024, an Abacus Data poll indicated only 23 per cent of Canadians felt the country was headed in the right direction. The affordability crisis was weighing on people, as 45 per cent of respondents reported having a hard time keeping up with daily expenses due to rising prices.

    The long-standing consensus around the benefits of immigration was crumbling due to the lack of suitable housing for everyone.




    Read more:
    Canada at a crossroads: Understanding the shifting sands of immigration attitudes


    A third of Canadians also self-identified as “political orphans” who felt that none of the political parties truly represented them.

    Most of the public was blaming the Liberals for the broad mismanagement of various important complex policy files, and the Conservatives were the largest beneficiaries of voter frustration. They looked like they had the next election in the bag.

    Dramatically altered landscape

    It’s now March 2025 and the political playing field looks wildly different. Though the aforementioned issues remain salient, Trudeau has resigned and Carney has erased the lead in public support that Poilievre and the Conservatives held not long ago.

    Most polls suggest the parties are in a dead heat while others have Carney pulling ahead. In the hope of winning enough votes to form a majority government — in Carney’s own words, he’s asked the public for a “strong, positive mandate” — he is running on a platform aimed at the political centre to offer a home to those political orphans.

    Carney’s pitching tax cuts, pipeline projects, reduced trade barriers between the provinces and balanced operational spending while running deficits for investments that would grow the economy. He’s done away with the unpopular consumer carbon tax.

    Given that Carney is pulling the Liberals back to the centre, and that there is actually overlap between the Conservatives and the Liberals — both spent the first full day of the campaign promising income tax cuts — it seems the real choice in this election is about leadership rather than dramatically different policy platforms.

    It’s no surprise that Carney’s unique professional experience elevates his bid to be prime minister in the current political climate. So far, he’s been a calm presence amid a volatile and developing storm. Despite Conservative efforts to try to diminish him, his credentials speak for themselves.

    This helps him to build trust among voters. At any other time, his snippiness with the media when asked about his financial holdings might cost him some political capital, but in the current moment, he will likely be given a pass.




    Read more:
    Can Mark Carney truly connect with Canadian voters? Canada will now find out


    Poilievre no longer has Trudeau for a target

    As British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan once explained, politics is about “events, dear boy, events.”

    Much to the certain chagrin of Conservatives, the polls suggest this moment was custom-made for Carney.

    Trump’s attacks and threats against Canadian sovereignty tee up Carney’s pitches for Canada’s economic independence perfectly. His campaign material basically writes itself, and his economic gravitas makes him a solid messenger.

    Carney is both reassuring Canadians in this moment of anxiety as well as tapping into Canadian pride, in his own words and through celebrity proxies like comedian Mike Myers who are helping him reach audiences who tuned out Trudeau a long time ago.

    Mike Myers appears with Mark Carney in this ad on Carney’s YouTube channel.

    This is not to count out Poilievre. With the Conservative base firmly behind him, he could be poised to form a government or keep Carney to a minority.

    But the question on the ballot is no longer about Trudeau — it’s about who Canadians trust to lead them through a disruptive and unpredictable time.

    Poilievre has been working tirelessly for years to position himself as the person for the job.

    But the peculiar circumstances of the moment — and the fear and anxiety that Canadians are having trouble shaking amid Trump’s continuing threats — might drive many voters towards the non-politician whose track record as a fixer gives people the reassurance they are looking for.

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

    ref. Canadians are anxious as they ponder how to vote this election. Which leader can ease their fears? – https://theconversation.com/canadians-are-anxious-as-they-ponder-how-to-vote-this-election-which-leader-can-ease-their-fears-252701

    MIL OSI – Global Reports