Category: Great Britain

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Survey launched to inform NHS dental contract reform

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Survey launched to inform NHS dental contract reform

    Dentists in England encouraged to take part to inform government plans to improve NHS dentistry

    • Dentists nationwide encouraged to take part in survey on costs of running dental practices
    • Findings will support government’s plans to reform dental contract by giving a more accurate picture of what is driving up dental costs
    • Research is part of mission to improve access to dental care for patients through government’s Plan for Change

    Dentists across England are being urged to take part in a new nationwide survey to help inform the government’s long-term dental reform programme.

    The survey will gather information on the costs and pressures involved in running a dental practice.

    The research is part of the government’s wider plans to reform the dental contract in England, providing better access to care for patients by making NHS work more appealing to dentists.

    Health Minister Stephen Kinnock said:

    We are working to fix an NHS dentistry sector left broken by years of neglect.

    We have already rolled out an extra 700,000 urgent dentistry appointments and introduced a supervised toothbrushing programme to prevent tooth decay in young children in the most deprived communities. 

    More work is needed, but to find the right solution we must make sure we are clear about the problem. Through this survey, we will gain a better understanding of the pressures faced by the sector so we can fix them and deliver better care for patients through our Plan for Change.

    Results of the survey will support the development of the government’s dental reform programme and the annual pay review process conducted by the independent Review Body on Doctors’ and Dentists’ Remuneration (DDRB).

    It forms part of the government’s Plan for Change to improve NHS dental services, addressing challenges that have left many patients struggling to access care, amid reports that some have undertaken DIY dentistry.

    The government has started on its manifesto commitment to roll out extra urgent dental care appointments across the country.

    It is particularly targeting areas of dental deserts, where patients have struggled to get appointments, and has rolled out a national supervised toothbrushing programme for 3 to 5 year olds in early years settings – including nurseries and primary schools.

    Practice owners who complete the anonymous survey can also register their interest in participating in follow-up interviews to provide more detailed insights into the financial challenges they face.

    The survey is open to all dental practices across England until 16 June 2025.

    Updates to this page

    Published 16 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: TUV Representatives Attend Balmoral Show

    Source: Traditional Unionist Voice – Northern Ireland

    TUV representatives from all levels of government were pleased to attend this year’s Balmoral Show. Under blue skies and amidst strong crowds, our team engaged with many members of the farming community to listen, discuss and stand alongside them on the pressing issues facing agriculture today.

    Across countless conversations, the same key concerns emerged:
    • Labour’s proposed plans to extend Inheritance Tax – a direct threat to family farms.
    • Stormont’s new Nutrient Action Plan – viewed by many as unworkable and deeply unfair to local producers.
    • The ongoing crisis of Bovine TB – a long-standing issue that still lacks effective resolution.

    Many livestock and poultry breeders raised concerns over continuing difficulties in moving animals across the Irish Sea Border — whether for shows, sales, or the introduction of new bloodlines to pedigree stock. The end of the grace period for veterinary medicines from GB to Northern Ireland in December 2025 also remains a critical worry for many.

    Added to this are growing national and international pressures:
    • The trade deal to import beef from America.
    • GB’s ongoing challenges with Bluetongue.
    • Europe’s outbreak of Foot and Mouth Disease.

    These are not abstract concerns — they are matters which threaten livelihoods, food security, and the future of rural life.

    The TUV remains resolutely committed to speaking up for our farming and agri-food sector — in Westminster, Stormont, and local councils. We will continue to stand against policies that punish our producers and defend Northern Ireland’s right to trade and farm freely within our own country.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Serious crash Two Wells

    Source: New South Wales – News

    Emergency services are at the scene of a serious crash at Two Wells.

    Just before 5am, Friday 16 May, police and emergency services were called to Port Wakefield Highway, Two Wells (near the intersection with Port Gawler Road) after reports of a crash between a car and truck. On arrival, the driver of the car was trapped and fire crews quickly worked to remove them from their vehicle. The driver was subsequently airlifted to hospital with life threatening injuries.

    The driver of the truck, a 30-year-old-man from Mallala, was uninjured and was taken to hospital for mandatory blood tests.

    Major Crash investigators are making their way to the scene.

    Port Wakefield Road is closed to all northbound traffic from Port Gawler Road and diversions are in place via Old Port Wakefield Road. Road users are asked to avoid the area.

    Anyone who witnessed this crash or has dashcam is asked to contact police. You can anonymously provide information to Crime Stoppers online at https://crimestopperssa.com.au or free call 1800 333 000.

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI NGOs: Northern Ireland: Executive’s racial equality strategy fails amid rising racist attacks in a ‘year of hate’

    Source: Amnesty International –

    New PSNI report shows 1,807 racist incidents 1,188 crimes in the year to end of March 2025 – the highest levels recorded since records began in 2004/05

    Level of race hate incidentshit new high during summer 2024

    These police figures should be a wake-up call to the Executive. Its racial equality strategy has failed. Promises made years ago remain broken. Meanwhile racism has grown’ – Patrick Corrigan 

    The last 12 months were a ‘year of hate’ according to Amnesty International following new figures published today (15 May) showing racist attacks hit an all-time high over the last year. 

    The figures were published today in areport by the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) and the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA), which tracked recorded hate crimes and incidents for the 12 months to the end ofMarch2025. 

    Thereportreveals that there 1,807 incidents 1,188 crimes recorded by the police in the year to date. There were 454 more race incidents and 349 more race hate crimes recorded in the last 12 months than in the previous corresponding period.  

    Six of the eight highest monthly levels of race incidents since records began in 2004 were recorded between May and October 2024. 

    More than half (635) of recordedrace hatecrimesin the periodwere in Belfast.   

    Patrick Corrigan, Amnesty International’s Northern Ireland Director, said: 

    “The past year has been a year of hate for victims of racism in Northern Ireland. These figures should serve as a stark wake-up call for the Northern Ireland Executive. 

    “The Executive’s ten-year racial equality strategy has failed. Promises made years ago remain broken, while racism has been allowed to flourish. Last year, race hate crime hit an all-time high – a shameful milestone. 

    “As the current Racial Equality Strategy nears its expiration at the end of this year, the Executive must deliver more than rhetoric. It must implement a bold, effective action plan to confront and dismantle the toxic prejudice that has taken root across Northern Ireland.” 

    An independent review of the Northern Ireland Executive’s Racial Equality Strategy 2015 – 2025, commissioned by the Executive and published in December 2024, found the strategy has been undermined by the lack of an action plan and budget. 

    View latest press releases

    MIL OSI NGO

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Go.Compare

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    Mission

    GoCompare.com Limited, trading as Go.Compare is a Welsh financial services comparison company based in Cardiff, Wales.

    Its website provides comparison details for financial products including car insurance, home and pet insurance and breakdown cover. Since 2021 it has been owned by Future plc.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Global: Cockney Yiddish: how two languages influenced each other in London’s East End

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Nadia Valman, Professor of Urban Literature, Queen Mary University of London

    Yiddish is a familiar presence in contemporary English speech. Many people use or at least know the meaning of words like chutzpah (audacity), schlep (drag) or nosh (snack).

    These words have been absorbed into English from their original speakers, eastern European Jews who migrated to Britain in the late 19th century, through generations of living in close proximity in areas like London’s East End.

    Linguistics scholars have even theorised that elements of a Yiddish accent may have influenced the cockney accent as it evolved in the early 20th century. Phonetic analysis of cockney speakers recorded in the mid-20th century suggests that East Enders who grew up with Jewish neighbours spoke English with speech rhythms typical of Yiddish.

    A distinctive pronunciation of the “r” sound is thought to have originated among Jewish immigrants and spread into the wider population.


    Get your news from actual experts, straight to your inbox. Sign up to our daily newsletter to receive all The Conversation UK’s latest coverage of news and research, from politics and business to the arts and sciences.


    But, as we explore in our new podcast, cockney reshaped the Yiddish language too. This can be seen in surviving texts from the popular culture of the Jewish immigrant East End, including newspapers and songsheets, where songs, poems and stories dramatise the thrills and challenges of modern London.

    The Yiddish music of London’s East End brought together the Yiddish language and Jewish culture of eastern Europe with the raucous, irreverent style of the cockney music hall. Theatres and pubs overflowed with audiences eager to see the immigrant experience in Whitechapel represented in all its perplexity and pathos, with a good measure of slapstick comedy.

    A Yiddish music hall song from around 1900 jokes that East Enders live on “poteytes un gefrayte fish” – a Yiddish version of the cockney staple fish and chips. The song lists the many novelties that immigrants encountered on arriving in the metropolis: trains running underground, women wearing trousers and people speaking on telephones.

    Yiddish music hall song ‘London hot sikh ibergekert’ (London has turned itself upside down) performed by the author’s (Vivi Lachs) band Katsha’nes.

    Yiddish was also the language of street protest in the Jewish East End. During the “strike fever” of 1889, when workers throughout east London were demanding better pay and working conditions, the Whitechapel streets resonated with the voices of Jewish sweatshop workers singing:

    In di gasn, tsu di masn fun badrikte felk rasn, ruft der frayhaytsgayst (In the streets, to the masses / of oppressed peoples, races / the spirit of freedom calls).

    This song was penned by the socialist poet Morris Winchevsky, an immigrant from Lithuania who spoke Yiddish as a mother tongue but preferred to write in literary Hebrew. In London he switched to writing in the vernacular language of Yiddish in order to make his writing more accessible to immigrant Jewish workers. The song became a rousing anthem in labour protests across the Yiddish-speaking world, from Warsaw to Chicago.

    The decline of Yiddish

    Yet from the earliest days of Jewish immigration to London, the Yiddish-language culture of the East End was a focus of anxiety for the Jewish middle and upper class of the West End. They regarded Yiddish as a vulgar dialect, detrimental to the integration of Jewish immigrants in England.

    While they provided significant philanthropic support for immigrants, they banned the use of Yiddish in the educational and religious institutions that they funded.

    In 1883, budding novelist Israel Zangwill was disciplined by the Jews’ Free School, where he worked as a teacher, for publishing a short story liberally sprinkled with dialogues in cockney-Yiddish.

    By the 1930s Yiddish had begun to decline. As Jews moved away from the East End, local Yiddish newspapers folded and publications dwindled.

    The Yiddish writer I.A. Lisky, who wrote fiction for a keen but diminishing readership in the London Yiddish newspaper Di tsayt, movingly described a young woman and her grandmother who each harbour complex hopes and worries but cannot communicate: “Ken ober sibl nit redn keyn yidish un di bobe farshteyt nor a por verter english. Shvaygt sibl vayter.” (But Sybil spoke no Yiddish, and her grandmother knew only a few words of English. So she remained silent.)

    Yiddish-language newspapers like Der Fonograf flourished in the early 20th century East End.
    Courtesy of Jewish Miscellanies website.

    Jewish writers of the postwar period were haunted by the sense of a lost connection to the Yiddish language and culture of previous generations.

    The novelist Alexander Baron, who grew up in Hackney, remembered his grandparents reading Yiddish literature and newspapers, and his parents speaking Yiddish when they did not want their children to understand what they were saying.

    In his novel The Lowlife (1963) the narrator’s vocabulary is peppered with Yiddish words. But these fragments are all that remains of his link to the East End where he was born. When he returns to these streets, he feels that “my too, too solid flesh in the world of the past is like a ghost of the past in the solid world of the present; it can look on but it cannot touch”.

    Yiddish in London today

    If you walk through the north London neighbourhood of Stamford Hill today, you’ll hear Yiddish on the streets and see new Yiddish books on the shelves of the local bookshops. Although they have no connection to the Victorian Jewish East End, the ultra-orthodox Hasidic community who live there speak Yiddish as their first language.

    And for a younger generation of secular Jews, Yiddish is also acquiring a new appeal. They look to past traditions of Jewish diasporism to forge an identity rooted in language, culture and solidarity with other minorities rather than nationalism.

    London is one centre of this worldwide revival: the Friends of Yiddish group established in the East End in the late 1930s is now flourishing in its contemporary incarnation as the Yiddish Open Mic Cafe. And Yiddish is once again a language that anyone can learn.

    The Ot Azoy Yiddish summer school is in its 13th year, and new Yiddish language schools are thriving, including east London-based Babel’s Blessing, which teaches diaspora languages including Yiddish and offers free English classes to refugees and asylum seekers. The annual Yiddish sof-vokh hosts an immersive weekend for Yiddish learners.

    Yiddish culture too is being rejuvenated. Projects we have been involved with include the Yiddish Shpilers theatre troupe, the Great Yiddish Parade marching band, which has brought Winchevsky’s socialist anthems back onto London’s streets, and the London band Katsha’nes, which has reimagined cockney Yiddish music hall songs for the 21st century.

    If Yiddish was once reviled as a debased, slangy mishmash, full of borrowings and adaptations, it’s precisely for those qualities that it is celebrated today.

    Nadia Valman received funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council for research included in this article.

    Vivi Lachs received funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council for research included in this article.

    ref. Cockney Yiddish: how two languages influenced each other in London’s East End – https://theconversation.com/cockney-yiddish-how-two-languages-influenced-each-other-in-londons-east-end-252779

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Security: Dominican National Pleads Guilty to Fentanyl Distribution Conspiracy

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    BOSTON – A Dominican national residing in the Bronx, N.Y. has pleaded guilty in federal court in Boston in connection with his role in a fentanyl distribution hub in the Bronx that sent fentanyl laced with xylazine, a horse tranquilizer, to Massachusetts.

    Jairo Collazo, 36, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute and to possess with intent to distribute controlled substances, involving 400 grams or more of fentanyl. U.S. District Court Judge Richard G. Stearns scheduled sentencing for Sept. 17, 2025. Collazo was charged by criminal complaint in April 2024 and later indicted.  

    According to court records, Collazo operated a fentanyl distribution hub out of a basement in the Bronx, from which he distributed fentanyl to destinations including Boston, Mass.; Fitchburg, Mass.; Springfield, Mass.; Syracuse, N.Y; and the State of Vermont. Collazo and his coconspirators whom he called “employees” used the basement in the Bronx to package fentanyl into glassine wax paper bags for distribution. Collazo traveled to Massachusetts on two occasions, in December 2023 and January 2024, to distribute fentanyl to a witness working with law enforcement. On April 12, 2024, during a search of the Bronx basement, fentanyl packaged for distribution, materials used for cutting fentanyl with other substances and bottles of xylazine were recovered. Collazo used xylazine to cut the fentanyl and offered to sell it to the cooperating witness. More than 2 kilograms of fentanyl was seized from Collazo.

    According to court records, in 2021, Collazo pleaded guilty in New York Supreme Criminal Court to criminal possession of a controlled substance in the first degree (heroin) and was sentenced to two years incarceration.

    The charge of conspiracy to distribute and to possess with intent to distribute controlled substances, involving 400 grams or more of fentanyl provides for a sentence of at least 10 years and up to life in prison, at least five years and up to a lifetime of supervised release and a fine of up to $10 million. Collazo lacks lawful status in the United States is subject to deportation after completion of any sentence imposed. Sentences are imposed by a federal district court judge based upon the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and statutes which govern the determination of a sentence in a criminal case.

    United States Attorney Leah B. Foley and Stephen Belleau, Acting Special Agent in Charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration, New England Division made the announcement. Valuable assistance was provided by the Fitchburg Police Department and the Boston Police Department. Assistant U.S. Attorney Samuel R. Feldman is prosecuting the case.
     

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: ILM Highland and Highland Council Launch Electrical Recycling Service in Fort Augustus

    Source: Scotland – Highland Council

    Published by the Reuse Network

    Reuse Network member ILM Highland, in partnership with The Highland Council, proudly launched a new Household Electrical Recycling Collection Service with a community event in Fort Augustus held on Friday 2nd May.

    The launch marked the beginning of a new monthly collection service aimed at helping residents across Highland communities recycle unwanted electrical items—whether working or broken. The new service covers Fort Augustus, Caol, Kinlochleven, Mallaig, Kingussie, Golspie, Melvich & Bettyhill, Kinlochbervie, Aultbea, Kyleakin, Lochcarron, Raasay & Sconser.

    The Highland Council and ILM Highland have been awarded £135,000 of funding from the Scottish Government’s Recycling Improvement Fund (Small Grant Scheme) to increase circular economy practices for Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) across the region.

    This includes the introduction of the new electrical and electronic equipment collection service and new facilities at 4 Household Waste Recycling Centres which will be available in the coming weeks, for the separation of domestic appliances which are suitable for reuse.

    The funding includes the purchase of a new van which will be utilised by ILM Highland to provide the monthly collection of WEEE in communities which have limited access to Household Waste Recycling Centres, to help increase the recycling and reuse of this type of waste.

    David Gunn, Manager (Recycling Improvement Fund) Operations at Zero Waste Scotland said: “It’s fantastic to see recycling and reuse being made more accessible to rural communities through this new service. By supporting households across the Highlands to recycle their electrical items – whether broken or in working order, this initiative is not only helping to reduce waste but also playing a vital role in Scotland’s journey towards a more circular economy.”

    The event was held at the Village Hall car park, where members of the public joined representatives from ILM Highland and Highland Council for a photo opportunity and live demonstration of the collection service.

    Residents are encouraged to bring any electrical item with a plug, cable, or household battery. While most small and large appliances are accepted, vapes and disposable/rechargeable vape devices could not be collected. Lithium batteries in power tools, however, are accepted.

    Martin Macleod, CEO at ILM Highland said: “This initiative represents our continued commitment to reducing waste and supporting our communities. We’re grateful to Highland Council for their partnership and to the residents of Fort Augustus for such a warm welcome.”

    All reusable items collected will be earmarked for repair and resale, while remaining components will be responsibly recycled—supporting ILM Highland’s mission as a social enterprise reinvesting profits into community support and home improvement services for vulnerable residents.

    Councillor Graham MacKenzie, Chair of Highland Council’s Communities and Place Committee, said: “I am delighted that The Highland Council and ILM Highland have been successful in securing the funding from the Scottish Government to help improve the recycling facilities in Highland. Electrical and electronic waste is the fastest growing waste stream in the world, and recent research shows that the Highland region, produces the most e-waste per capita than anywhere else in Europe. Increasing the opportunities for the public to recycle and reuse e-waste has significant environmental and social benefits that help to reduce carbon emissions, preserve precious metals found in all kinds of tech and helping to create jobs within Highland.”

    Details of the new WEEE collection service are available on the Council’s website www.highland.gov.uk/recycle.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Council progressing well against Operational Delivery Plan

    Source: Scotland – Highland Council

    Councillors have approved a progress report on Highland Council’s Operational Delivery Plan for 2024/25 which provides a planned approach to transforming Highland communities by bringing major sources of investment to the area and new ways of delivering services.

    The report noted positive feedback from Audit Scotland on progress made since 2020, including plans in place to support priorities and an embedded culture of transformation.

    Transformation projects within the Delivery Plan aimed to make savings of £27.6m in 2024/25, for example, by changing procurement processes, generating income from tourism, and reducing numbers of senior managers. The report forecasts that 95% of savings will have been delivered, excluding Adult Social Care, where earmarked reserves have been used to frontload the transformation of the service.

    Leader of the Council, Cllr Raymond Bremner said: “I welcome this report which shows the progress being made as directed by our Future Highland Programme bringing changes in services to benefit communities across Highland. A focus on driving external investment has already seen successes such as £17.5 million investment for home energy efficiency.

    “The report also reflects the positive comments in the recent Audit Scotland report about the ways in which Highland Council is taking steps to transform its delivery of services.”

    Convener of the Council, Cllr Bill Lobban added: “Members have had the opportunity to discuss the Delivery Plan report which is vital to ensure that the Council’s ambitious plans are robustly scrutinised to keep project delivery on track. Innovative approaches to income generation such as the Storr Centre are paying off for people in Highland.”

    Chair of Corporate Resources Committee, Cllr Derek Louden said: “Long term financial stability, sustainable service delivery and affordability is what we are aiming to achieve to enable continuous improvements to service delivery for Highland. This report is a positive step in the right direction, highlighting the importance of good value systems and processes such as in procurement, where savings of hundreds of thousands of pounds have been delivered.”

    The report also highlighted how staff have been kept informed and involved, with 97% agreeing that a roadshow programme for staff set the Council’s vision for the future; 96% that it clearly articulated opportunities; and 78% that they could see the benefits for communities from the Council’s Delivery Plan.

    The delivery plan shows how Highland Council intends to transform over time, with a focus on six development areas incorporated into the following portfolios:

    • Person-centred solutions.
    • Workforce for the future.
    • Reconfiguring our asset base.
    • Net zero energy, investment and innovation.
    • Corporate solutions.
    • Income generation.

    The Operational Delivery Plan supports the My Future Highland Programme and Performance Plan which combined together comprise the Council’s transformation programme.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Council to invest £756m in the Highlands

    Source: Scotland – Highland Council

    Highland Councillors have considered £756m investment across Highland communities over the next 5 years when they discussed an updated report on the consolidated Highland Investment Plan (HIP) at a meeting of The Highland Council today Thursday 15 May.

    Convener of the Council, Cllr Bill Lobban said: “The consolidated programme which was presented to Members is part of a longer-term strategy for the Highland Investment Plan which creates a potential £2.1bn of capital investment over a twenty-year period.

    “Councillors agreed that officers progress actions to ensure the HIP programme is managed within the overall funding as described in the report.”

    Leader of the Council, Cllr Raymond Bremner said: “The Highland Investment Plan is creating a new generation of community based facilities known as Points of Delivery or PODs. In addition to schools and community facilities the HIP also aims to provide investment for transport and roads, depots and offices. People will start to see a real difference in their communities over the coming five years as these projects are rolled out.”

    The first phase of agreed HIP projects includes investment in Beauly, Charleston, Dingwall, Dunvegan, Fortrose, Inverness High and Thurso schools.

    The consolidated HIP report reflects decisions made by the Council over the past year on capital project priorities and budgets, and the HIP will continue to operate within agreed funding and affordability. The full report can be found here (Item 4).   

    More information on the Highland Investment Plan can be found on the Council’s website:  

    https://www.highland.gov.uk/highlandinvestmentplan

    15 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Council’s Community Council Scheme Review moves on to second public consultation

    Source: Scotland – Highland Council

    Members of The Highland Council have noted the feedback received during phase 1 of the Community Council Scheme Review 2024-25 public consultation and have agreed to proceed to a second and final consultation.

    Members also agreed an amendment from the Nairnshire Area Committee members to amend the “Review of the Highland Scheme of Establishment for Community Councils 2024/25 – Phase 1 Feedback” 2.1(ii) to add an additional bullet point:

    • The proposals for East Nairnshire CC as set out in 7.3 and Appendix 2 to proceed to phase 2 consultation.

    The consultation will focus on revised and new boundary proposals, amendments to existing Scheme proposals, and new proposals.  

    The Council has made a commitment to review the Scheme on a regular cycle.

    Feedback was received on boundary proposals, finance, the role of Community Councils, membership, and elections.

    Leader of the Council, Cllr Raymond Bremner said: “During the first consultation period we received 96 responses from individuals, Community Councils and individual Community Council members so I’d like to thank everyone for their input into the process.”

    Convener of the Council, Cllr Bill Lobban added: “We are now ready to move forward and the proposals we are consulting on in this next phase have all come following feedback directly from the first phase of public consultation.”

    A 12-week public consultation will run from 22 May until 13 August 2025.

    Following this, a further report will go to a special meeting of The Highland Council on 18 September at which Members will make a final decision to approve a New Scheme of Establishment for Community Councils.

    15 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Infant with rare, incurable disease is first to successfully receive personalized gene therapy treatment

    Source: US Department of Health and Human Services – 2

    News Release
    Thursday, May 15, 2025

    NIH-supported gene-editing platform lays groundwork to rapidly develop treatments for other rare genetic diseases.
    A research team supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has developed and safely delivered a personalized gene editing therapy to treat an infant with a life-threatening, incurable genetic disease. The infant, who was diagnosed with the rare condition carbamoyl phosphate synthetase 1 (CPS1) deficiency shortly after birth, has responded positively to the treatment. The process, from diagnosis to treatment, took only six months and marks the first time the technology has been successfully deployed to treat a human patient. The technology used in this study was developed using a platform that could be tweaked to treat a wide range of genetic disorders and opens the possibility of creating personalized treatments in other parts of the body.
    A team of researchers at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) and the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania (Penn) developed the customized therapy using the gene-editing platform CRISPR. They corrected a specific gene mutation in the baby’s liver cells that led to the disorder. CRISPR is an advanced gene editing technology that enables precise changes to DNA inside living cells. This is the first known case of a personalized CRISPR-based medicine administered to a single patient and was carefully designed to target non-reproductive cells so changes would only affect the patient.
    “As a platform, gene editing — built on reusable components and rapid customization — promises a new era of precision medicine for hundreds of rare diseases, bringing life-changing therapies to patients when timing matters most: Early, fast, and tailored to the individual,” said Joni L. Rutter, Ph.D., director of NIH’s National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS).
    CPS1 deficiency is characterized by an inability to fully break down byproducts from protein metabolism in the liver, causing ammonia to build up to toxic levels in the body. It can cause severe damage to the brain and liver. Treatment includes a low protein diet until the child is old enough for a liver transplant. However, in this waiting period there is a risk of rapid organ failure due to stressors such as infection, trauma, or dehydration. High levels of ammonia can cause coma, brain swelling, and may be fatal or cause permanent brain damage.
    The child initially received a very low dose of the therapy at six months of age, then a higher dose later. The research team saw signs that the therapy was effective almost from the start. The six-month old began taking in more protein in the diet, and the care team could reduce the medicine needed to keep ammonia levels low in the body. Another telling sign of the child’s improvement to date came after the child caught a cold, and later, had to deal with a gastrointestinal illness. Normally, such infections for a child in this condition could be extremely dangerous, especially with the possibility of ammonia reaching dangerous levels in the brain.
    “We knew the method used to deliver the gene-editing machinery to the baby’s liver cells allowed us to give the treatment repeatedly. That meant we could start with a low dose that we were sure was safe,” said CHOP pediatrician Rebecca Ahrens-Nicklas, M.D., Ph.D.
    “We were very concerned when the baby got sick, but the baby just shrugged the illness off,” said Penn geneticist and first author Kiran Musunuru, M.D., Ph.D. For now, much work remains, but the researchers are cautiously optimistic about the baby’s progress.
    The scientists announced their work at the American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy Meeting on May 15th and described the study in The New England Journal of Medicine.
    Funding for this project was provided by the NIH Common Fund Somatic Cell Genome Editing program grants, U01TR005355, U19NS132301, U19NS132303, DP2CA281401, and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute grants R35HL145203 and P01HL142494. In-kind contributions for the study were made by Acuitas Therapeutics, Integrated DNA Technologies, Aldevron, and Danaher Corporation. Additional funding was provided by the CHOP Research Institute’s Gene Therapy for Inherited Metabolic Disorders Frontier Program.
    About the National Institutes of Health (NIH): NIH, the nation’s medical research agency, includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. NIH is the primary federal agency conducting and supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and is investigating the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov.
    NIH…Turning Discovery Into Health®

    Reference
    Musunuru et al, “Patient-Specific In Vivo Gene Editing to Treat a Rare Genetic Disease.” N Engl J Med. Online May 15, 2025. DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa25re

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Making learning more accessible with Microsoft Education

    Source: Microsoft

    Headline: Making learning more accessible with Microsoft Education

    For GAAD 2025, explore how Microsoft accessibility tools enhance education, creating inclusive and engaging classrooms where every student can thrive.

    Accessibility tools for learning play a significant role in student success, helping all students fully engage with what’s happening in class and beyond. By providing access to content that might otherwise be difficult to access, these tools help to create a more inclusive classroom where everyone can feel understood, valued, and supported for their unique strengths. Global Accessibility Awareness Day (GAAD) 2025, celebrated on May 15, reminds us that everyone deserves the opportunity to thrive.

    Every student—whether they have a permanent disability, a temporary challenge like a broken hand, a situational disability such as difficulty reading in bright sunlight, or simply needs extra support with reading or writing—can benefit from greater accessibility to digital tools to support their learning experience. At Microsoft, we believe accessibility isn’t just a feature—it’s a foundation for empowering all students and educators to reach their full potential. Built-in accessibility features across Microsoft software and hardware can amplify everyone’s success, regardless of learning differences or physical abilities. Explore Microsoft accessibility tools and see how you can make learning more inclusive, engaging, and equitable for your school community.

    Building an inclusive learning environment

    Every student’s learning needs are unique. Some may have a disability, while others might be learning English, recovering from an injury, or trying to focus in a noisy home environment. Microsoft accessibility tools are designed to empower every student to engage independently and confidently in their learning. These tools come with built-in accessibility features, eliminating the need for extra downloads or stigmatizing third-party applications. Students get the help they need, right when they need it.

    Get started with Microsoft accessibility tools today and learn how to create a more inclusive classroom experience with professional learning from Microsoft Learn.

    Start the accessibility training module

    Immersive Reader

    Available in Microsoft products like Reading Coach and Microsoft Edge, Immersive Reader can help students improve reading comprehension, while also supporting learning differences. Students can use line focus to concentrate on one part of the text at a time. They can break words into syllables, adjust font size, and increase line, word, and letter spacing to reduce visual crowding to improve readability. For educators in Kent School District in Washington, US, using Immersive Reader helps make sure that all students are empowered to share their voices and participate.

    I think when we’ve got kids that need different support mechanisms to learn, the Microsoft assisted learning tools become really, really vital. Last year, I had a student that had dysgraphia and dyslexia and so being able to listen to the audio was necessary and the Immersive Reader was essential for the success of this student.

    Amber Raftery, sixth-grade teacher, Kent School District, US

    As teacher-librarian and technology integration specialist Amber Gonzalez shares, the power of Microsoft 365 is that accessibility and assistive learning features like Immersive Reader are just one click away—helping to make it easy for every student to get the support they need, when they need it.

    Reading Coach

    Reading Coach is a free, standalone Learning Accelerator that uses AI-powered stories and personalized practice to help students improve their reading fluency. Used by half a million learners in over 190 countries worldwide, Reading Coach can help make reading more engaging and accessible with built-in tools like Immersive Reader, providing an opportunity for students to boost their potential and confidence. Educators can also suggest reading practices and track student progress with new educator features in Reading Coach.

    After three weeks of Reading Coach, we saw students gain one reading level—sometimes even one and a half. Some jumped two levels in just six weeks. And nearly half the class reached their expected reading level.

    Kris Vande Moortel, former teacher and Microsoft education advisor, Belgium

    Get started with Reading Coach

    Reading Coach with AI-powered stories helps students take charge of their learning and push themselves further by providing individualized support. Some teachers are seeing remarkable progress in a fraction of the time—giving them more opportunities for one-on-one attention where it’s needed.

    Microsoft Translator

    Translator offers real-time translation of text and speech in over 60 languages, helping to make communication easier for students, parents, and caregivers who speak different languages. For educators in Texas City Independent School District, the embedded support of Translator in Word and mobile devices helps ensure that multilingual students have assistance when they encounter an unfamiliar word.

    We found that Microsoft Translator is key to enabling English as a second language (ESL) students to keep up and to learn along with the rest of the class. When they are hung up on a word or a phrase or want to learn how to say something in English, they can transition back to their native language and use Translator to quickly contextualize in English.

    Hope Smalley-Jackson, business teacher, Texas City Independent School District, US

    Students can use Translator at school, home, or whenever they need language support. It can help bridge communication gaps, supporting accessible classroom learning with cross-language understanding and even multilingual casual conversations to help students and families.

    Additional tools

    If typing is tough—whether due to learning challenges, a temporary issue like a broken arm, or even fatigue—students can use dictation to turn speech into text effortlessly. Tools like live captions also help by converting speech to text or translating languages in PowerPoint, OneNote, and Microsoft Teams meetings, providing support for people with hearing disabilities, auditory processing disorders, or language needs. Plus, live captions fully supports multiple languages, making content accessible for multilingual speakers, too.

    Support accessibility with AI

    Additionally, AI-powered tools can help you address specific student needs. For instance, a 2024 study commissioned by Microsoft from professional services firm EY highlights how AI can help address the specific challenges faced by employees who are neurodivergent or living with a disability. The study found that Microsoft 365 Copilot helped:

    • Remove barriers that arise like drafting communication and organizing thoughts.
    • Reclaim time and energy by simplifying tasks like summarizing and proofreading.
    • Boost confidence and sense of inclusion by enhancing performance and work quality.

    While the study focused on workplace settings, the insights can be applied to educational environments. Just as AI tools can support diverse employee needs, they can also be instrumental in addressing diverse learning needs. Copilot helps educators personalize instruction, making it easier to tailor lessons to individual student requirements. Educators in Northern Ireland saw this firsthand when the Education Authority of Northern Ireland (EANI) adopted Copilot.

    EANI initially rolled out AI-powered learning tools on a small scale, selecting key innovative educators to pilot the free version of Copilot Chat in their classrooms. They also introduced training sessions focused on effective prompt writing, showcasing Microsoft 365 Copilot capabilities. Educators quickly discovered the practical benefits of upgrading to Microsoft 365 Copilot for tasks like creating PowerPoint presentations, generating questions in Microsoft Forms, and developing differentiated classroom resources. The substantial time savings and enhanced ability to meet diverse student needs drove widespread staff adoption and growing enthusiasm.

    Try Copilot Chat

    Make your classroom more inclusive by using AI to differentiate materials for students. Try using the dedicated IEP assistant tool in Khanmigo for Teachers or use Copilot Chat and your own prompts and files to help you draft parts of an individualized education program (IEP).

    For Copilot Chat, be sure to sign in with your school’s Microsoft account to ensure your data is protected, then copy and paste this prompt:

    You are a special education teacher drafting an IEP for a [grade level] student who [describe student’s needs]. Write a goal for [area/topic] that is specific, measurable, attainable, reasonable, and time bound.

    Whether you’re exploring AI, excited to try Reading Coach, or looking to make your classroom more inclusive with tools like Immersive Reader and Translator, GAAD 2025 is the perfect time to dive in. Get started and explore Microsoft accessibility tools to help every student thrive.

    Explore accessibility tools

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: expert reaction to study on new CRISPR gene therapy for children with a rare metabolic disease

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    A study published in The New England Journal of Medicine looks at a new CRISPR gene therapy for children with a rare genetic disease.

    Dr Alena Pance, Senior Lecturer in Genetics, University of Hertfordshire, said:

    “The authors searched thoroughly for off-target effects because this would seriously jeopardise the use of the approach in therapy. However, as far as the document I could see goes, there is no attempt to assess the cell type targeting efficacy, meaning whether the genetic tools (CRISPR and guide RNA) are reaching hepatocytes and what percentage or proportion of these cells are being corrected. This is very important because this will determine the level of physiological improvement of the disease hence also the value of the intervention.

    “CRISPR-based therapy has been used to correct genetic diseases before as the authors mention in their introduction. The best example is the recently approved therapy for sickle cell disease. The approach used in that case, as well as the one in development for Duchenne muscular dystrophy, is different though in the sense that sickle cell anaemia is overcome by using CRISPR tools to de-silence a foetal globin gene that leads to functional haemoglobin. This is done outside the body using Haematopoietic stem cells which give rise to all cell types in the blood, these cells are obtained from the patient, modified and then put back to re-populate the bone marrow, so in this way full correction can be achieved. The DMD approach consists in using CRISPR to cause skipping of the portion of the dystrophin gene that has the most frequent mutations in it. These mutations lead to deficiency in dystrophin expression by generating a stop signal so the protein isn’t made, so by making the machinery ‘hope over’ this region, a smaller but functional dystrophin is made thereby restoring muscle mass and function. In this case, the therapy is administered intravenously and though not all the muscle cells are corrected, and the proportion varies, it is sufficient for a significant restoration to make a physiological difference. Many different cell types will be targeted but as only muscle cells produce dystrophin, it doesn’t really matter.

    “In the case of CPS1, the therapy consists in substituting a nucleotide for the correct one, so this is a highly precise corrective change. As opposed to the two examples described which can be applied to a variety of mutations causing the same disease, the approach in the paper is applicable to the one specific nucleotide change or in other words this specific form of the disease. The paper explains that the patient has in fact two different mutations affecting each of the genes from their father and their mother, only one, the paternal mutation, is targeted. The approach is applicable to any disease caused by a single nucleotide change, however more often than not, diseases are caused by a variety of variants so perhaps more general strategies could be more effective than very precise ones. It will depend on how accurate the general vs specific options can be in terms of targeting the right cell types and DNA sequences.”

     

    Comments provided by our friends at the Spanish SMC:

    Dr Miguel Ángel Moreno-Mateos, Tenured scientist CSIC & PI, Andalusian Center for Developmental Biology, CSIC-Pablo de Olavide University, said:

    Since the emergence of CRISPR-Cas technology, progress has been made to develop a variety of tools that have the potential to contribute to the cure of many genetic diseases. This work demonstrates how, by detecting a specific congenital disease in the first days after birth, a robust protocol can be implemented with the ultimate goal of curing, at least partially, a patient with a particular genetic alteration that causes a rare disease. This protocol contains several steps, including i) characterization of the mutation or mutations that cause the disease, ii) design and comparison of the efficiency of various CRISPR-Cas approaches, which in this case are based on base editing and include various Cas proteins with different DNA recognition capabilities, iii) genetic and physiological safety testing of CRISPR-Cas reagents and lipid nanoparticle-based complexes both in vivo and in vitro, and iv) finally, targeted treatment in the patient’s liver in two doses seven months after birth, following approval by the relevant agencies.

    “Although this has been a very specific approach, partly motivated by the devastating nature of the disease, it represents a milestone that demonstrates that these therapies are now a reality. In any case, as the article reports, the patient will be monitored for a long time to ensure his well-being and determine whether additional doses are needed to further improve the symptoms of the disease.

    “On the other hand, given the risk involved and as the article itself acknowledges, the percentage of gene editing in the patient himself and any possible unwanted edits have not been evaluated, although they were determined in in vivo and in vitro studies. However, based on the physiological results, everything indicates that, at least so far, the therapy has been successful and has significantly improved the patient’s quality of life.

    “In summary, this work is proof of principle for a rapid and effective protocol for CRISPR-Cas therapies for the cure of human diseases in general and so-called rare diseases in particular, opening the door to other similar treatments in the near future.”

     

    Prof Marc Güell, coordinator of the Translational Synthetic Biology research group and full professor at Pompeu Fabra University (UPF), said:

    Is the study of good quality?

    “It seems to me to be a study of the highest quality and totally extraordinary. In fact, I was deeply moved to read it. It reflects the great potential of gene editing for therapeutic purposes. The researchers and clinical team have done a very thoughtful design with all the precautionary steps that the situation allows: characterisation of mutations, design of editors to correct, measurement of efficiency and off-target [unwanted effects], as well as testing the reagents in cell and animal models. Extraordinary work in record time.”

     

    How does this work fit with the existing evidence?

    “Great proof of concept that it is not impossible to treat very rare diseases at the individual level.”

     

    Are there any major limitations to be taken into account?

    “We will have to characterise the precision gene editing process in the future (patient safety permitting). For now, it has been possible to measure the positive clinical effects, but for patient safety reasons it has not been possible to obtain liver tissue to characterise the efficiency of gene editing.

    “It’s a great demonstration, but it’s also worth noting that this correction has been done in the liver; other tissues are much more difficult to gene edit, for now.”

     

    What are the implications for the real world?

    “Individualised, tailor-made therapies for a single patient are no longer a dream. Obviously, the process followed is of very high complexity and will require a lot of work to see how to scale it up and expand it to other cases. In any case, this work sheds a lot of light on the future.”

     

    Prof Gemma Marfany, Professor of Genetics at the University of Barcelona (UB) and CIBERER member, said:

    “This is the first case of a fully customised therapy, for a single baby (what is called ‘n of 1 therapy’), treated in vivo with a base-editing therapy for a very severe ultrarare disease. The disease causes the accumulation of ammonium, which is highly toxic to neurons and can lead to death in the first months of life. With the help of several leading biotech companies, a novel and very precise strategy has been designed to uniquely modify the mutated nucleotide in the gene to reverse the effect, and instead of a truncated protein, produce the complete protein. In addition, instead of using therapeutic viruses, lipid particles have been used to deliver the gene-editing system to the liver, in three doses within weeks of each other, avoiding an unwanted immune response and achieving remission of the most dangerous symptoms, reducing palliative medication and allowing incorporation of a normal diet.

    “It is truly a unique case, a successful proof of concept, designed and applied in record time, in which researchers and clinicians have not skipped a single preclinical step, as they have generated human cellular models and also a humanised mouse model with the patient’s mutation to test the safety of the dose and the efficiency of the therapeutic strategy. In addition, they have had all the approvals from the relevant bioethics committees. It seems to me to be a scientific ‘miracle’ that has made it possible to cure a very rare severe disease, and provides knowledge to treat many other diseases.”

     

    ‘Patient-Specific In Vivo Gene Editing to Treat a Rare Genetic Disease’ by K. Musunuru et al. was published in The New England Journal of Medicineat 18:00 UK time on Thursday 15 May 2025. 

     

    DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa2504747

     

     

    Declared interests

    Dr Miguel Ángel Moreno-Mateos: “I have collaborated with one of the authors of the paper, Benjamin P. Kleinstiver, with whom I published a research paper three years ago.”

    Prof Gemma Marfany: no conflicts of interest

    Dr Alena Pance: No conflicts.

    For all other experts, no reply to our request for DOIs was received.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: ICE Boston removes Dominican national charged with larceny, drug crimes in Massachusetts

    Source: US Immigration and Customs Enforcement

    BOSTON — U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement removed a Dominican national charged with drug trafficking and larceny charges in Massachusetts. Officers with ICE Boston removed Alixon Romero-Roa from the United States to the Dominican Republic April 8.

    “Alixon Romero-Roa illegally entered the United States and immediately engaged in criminal activity,” said ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations Boston acting Field Office Director Patricia H. Hyde. “Romero apparently attempted to peddle poison in our Massachusetts neighborhoods, potentially ruining families and creating victims if allowed to continue. ICE Boston will not allow criminal alien offenders to continue creating victims in our New England communities. We remain steadfast in our duty to prioritize public safety by arresting and removing illegal alien offenders from our streets.”

    U. S Border Patrol arrested Romero Oct. 3, 2021, after he illegally entered the United States near Rio Grande Valley, Texas.

    On Oct. 22,2021, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services served Romero a notice to appear before a Justice Department immigration judge.

    The Topsfield Police Department arrested Romero Dec. 4, 2021, and charged him with larceny over $250 by single scheme.

    On April 27, 2022, a DOJ immigration judge ordered Romero removed from the United States to the Dominican Republic.

    The Boston Police Department arrested Romero March 3 and charged him with drug possession with intent to distribute and drug trafficking. The next day, ICE Boston lodged an immigration detainer against Romero with the Nashua Street Jail.

    “We are encouraged that our law enforcement partners opted to honor our immigration detainer in this case,” Hyde said. “It is refreshing that the Nashua Street Jail placed a priority on public safety. The alternative would be for ICE to send a team of officers to make an at-large arrest potentially placing the officers, the offender — and most importantly, the community — in harm’s way.”

    On March 6, 2025, the Nashua Street Jail honored ICE’s detainer and released Romero into ICE Boston’s custody. ICE officers served Romero with a warrant of removal.

    ICE Boston removed Romero from the United States to the Dominican Republic April 8.

    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 New England communities on X at @EROBoston.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Sunderland beaches named amongst the best in the country

    Source: City of Sunderland

    Sunderland’s ever popular Roker and Seaburn beaches have been named among the best in the country in the 2025 Seaside Awards.

    The awards from leading environmental charity Keep Britain Tidy are presented to the best beaches in England and celebrate the quality and diversity of its coastline.

    Councillor Lindsey Leonard, Cabinet Member for Environment, Transport and Net Zero at Sunderland City Council, said: “We’re delighted that both Roker and Seaburn beaches will be proudly flying the national Seaside Awards flag again this year after being recognised as being among the best in England for their quality, cleanliness, and management. We’re also delighted that Roker Beach has once again been awarded a prestigious blue flag – a symbol of the highest standards in water quality, cleanliness, and visitor facilities.

    “And the award of a Seaside Award for Seaburn Beach – alongside a ‘Good’ rating for water quality – reflects the high standards maintained across the seafront. It continues to be a fantastic place for residents and visitors to enjoy the seaside and one of the city’s most popular destinations for residents and visitors. Our teams work tirelessly to keep our coastline clean, welcoming, and safe all year round, and this continued recognition through national awards is a testament to that hard work.”

    Councillor Beth Jones, Cabinet Member for Communities, Culture and Tourism at Sunderland City Council, added: “We’re fortunate in having a stunning coastline, with much loved award-winning beaches and panoramic views and its own growing food and drink scene, as well as fantastic facilities for families and we’re looking forward to welcoming the many people who enjoy them all year round.

    “We’ve also just recently confirmed the expansion of Sunderland BID to our seafront – an exciting development that will unlock even more potential across Roker and Seaburn – helping us strengthen our coast-to-city visitor journey and support businesses in one of our most-loved locations so we’re really excited about the future of Roker and Seaburn and making the most of the many attractions they have to offer.”

    Millions of pounds worth of investment in the regeneration of the city’s seafront have seen it going from strength to strength in recent years, with new developments including the Seaburn Inn hotel, Stack and a host of new restaurants and cafes, including Blacks Corner Tram Shelter, North and the Tin of Sardines making it a magnet for residents and visitors alike.

    While a new play area at Seaburn with digital play, sand and sensory zones which was designed with the help of local school children has significantly increased the family offer.

    The recent launch of a new Seafront Business Improvement District (BID) is set to bring further significant benefits to the seafront by creating a vibrant, welcoming and safe environment and improving links with the city centre and Sheepfolds to attract more visitors and boost the local economy.

    Sunderland City Council has also recently launched a city wide app to help residents, businesses and visitors to get the best out of the city by getting all the latest updates on local events and attractions.

    Downloading The Sunderland App allows users to discover hidden gems from cosy cafes to gourmet restaurants, navigate their way around the city using interactive maps and unlock exclusive deals and discounts: The Sunderland App – MySunderland 

    People can also take advantage of free Superfast WiFI covering the city centre, right along to the seafront too to download the app and use it without using up their data: Free Sunderland Wi-Fi – MySunderland

    While www.mysunderland.co.uk is the place to go to keep up with everything you need to know about the city’s offer.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Secretary of State visit highlights NI company’s major growth under Windsor Framework

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Secretary of State visit highlights NI company’s major growth under Windsor Framework

    Secretary of State for Northern Ireland visits food distribution company, PRM, as figures from the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency show the Northern Ireland economy grew faster than the UK as a whole in the final quarter of 2024.

    Secretary of State Hilary Benn with CEO and Founder of PRM Group Philip Morrow and Company Director Lynne Morrow.

    The Secretary of State for Northern Ireland today [Wednesday 14 May] visited PRM, a leading food distribution company based in Lisburn. While there, he learned more about the significant growth the company has seen from having the benefit of dual market access provided under the Windsor Framework. This status, unique only to Northern Ireland, allows the free movement of goods between Northern Ireland and Great Britain and the EU.

    PRM has said that dual market access to both the UK and EU is a major factor behind its growth strategy, which over the past year has enabled it to commit to a £15m investment in its Lisburn headquarters paired with the creation of 40 additional jobs. 

    The NI Composite Economic Index (NICEI) from the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA) shows that in each of the five sectors it tracks, Northern Ireland grew in output between October and December 2024. Output rose by 0.9% in Q4, contributing to a yearly growth in output of 3.6% across NI. Whilst for the UK overall, Q4 growth was 0.1% and yearly growth was 1.4%.

    Today’s visit follows the Prime Minister’s recent announcement of two new trade deals with the US and India. Both deals will open up new export opportunities for businesses across Northern Ireland, providing them with full market access to two of the world’s largest economies and enabling them to grow further and thrive. Sectors said to benefit the most from these trade deals include agricultural food products, biotechnology manufacturing and whiskey.

    Speaking after his visit, the Secretary of State, Hilary Benn, said: 

    “PRM’s expansion is a great example of how dual market access is helping Northern Ireland’s businesses to expand and create more jobs.

    “With full access to both the UK and EU markets, and now new trade opportunities with the US and India, Northern Ireland  is uniquely placed for success. 

    “These are tangible  benefits that are strengthening Northern Ireland’s economy and creating prosperity.” 

    Philip Morrow, CEO and Founder of PRM Group, said:

    “While Brexit brought with it understandable apprehension, there’s no doubt that the Windsor Framework has unlocked unique advantages for businesses and individuals in Northern Ireland. 

    “We have found ourselves in a very favourable position perfectly positioned between the UK and EU with full access to both markets. That’s an enviable place to be, and it’s been instrumental in shaping our investment decisions and future growth. 

    “At PRM, it’s allowed us to commit £15 million to expanding our Lisburn headquarters and create over 40 new jobs. Businesses here have been handed the key to the best of both worlds and that’s something we should champion, celebrate and capitalise on.”

    Our Plan for Change sets out a bold vision for Northern Ireland’s economic future – to go further and faster in driving growth, attracting investment, and putting more money in the pockets of working people. Expanding international trade, cutting red tape and supporting innovation are key pillars to this plan. 

    The government continues to operate the Duty Reimbursement Scheme, allowing companies to claim back any additional duties paid on goods deemed “at risk” of entering the EU, ensuring fairness and competitiveness.

    Updates to this page

    Published 15 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Global: The Supreme Court’s ruling on gender raises serious questions for schools

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Jessica Ringrose, Professor of the Sociology of Gender and Education, Institute of Education, UCL

    Shutterstock

    The UK Supreme Court has ruled that when the Equality Act refers to “sex” it means biological sex, not gender identity.

    The Equality and Human Rights Commission has released an interim update on the implications of the UK Supreme Court judgement, which covers public spaces such as toilets.

    Schools in England and Wales must already provide single sex toilets for children aged over eight, and single sex changing rooms for children over 11. Schools in Scotland must provide separate toilet facilities for all pupils. The Equality and Human Rights Commission guidance states that schools must not permit trans girls to use the girls’ facilities, or trans boys to use the boys’.

    The ruling has caused worry for schools. Some teachers are concerned about the impact of potential changes for their pupils, including LGBTQ+ young people, whom they are in charge of safeguarding.


    Get your news from actual experts, straight to your inbox. Sign up to our daily newsletter to receive all The Conversation UK’s latest coverage of news and research, from politics and business to the arts and sciences.


    LGBTQ+ charities have pointed out that organisations enforcing toilet use on the basis of biological sex may cause disproportionate harm to trans people, threatening their dignity and rights. For instance, it may lead to the policing of bathrooms on the basis of perceived sex differences and profiling, so that those that do not “look” female or male enough can be targeted.

    The Supreme Court ruling itself notes that enforcing section 29 of the Equality Act must represent “a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim”. Organisations must also, therefore, bear in mind they should not implement policies that can harm trans students.

    Forcing transgender youth to use facilities that don’t align with their gender identity can have harmful consequences, leading to increased isolation and shame and not wanting to attend school.

    In addition, separate facilities only for trans youth may also cause stigma and lead to discrimination. Young trans people may feel that their gender identity is more visible in daily school life, and this may lead to them feeling more unsafe at school.

    The government is expected to publish revised guidance on how schools can support trans pupils in light of the ruling later this year. In the meantime, it is important to remember that schools have a duty of care to safeguard all pupils.

    And this isn’t just about bathrooms. The Supreme Court’s ruling may have left trans and gender diverse young people (those who don’t identify as male or female), already an extremely vulnerable group, feeling more at risk. Research has pointed to schools as a place where trans and gender-diverse young people face significant discrimination from both school staff and their peers.

    A systematic review of research – a study which assesses the findings of a range of scholarly research studies on a particular topic – has estimated that the proportion of adolescents who identify as trans or gender diverse is between 2.5% and 8.4%. The lowest end of that estimate would translate to 27 trans or gender diverse pupils in an average-sized English secondary school. The research also suggests that this proportion is increasing.

    The importance of relationships and sex education

    A key way schools can support trans and gender diverse young people is through the provision of relationships and sex education that addresses LGBTQ+ identities. This should be part of a whole school approach to safeguarding. It is necessary for the wellbeing and safety of all pupils, regardless of sexuality or gender.

    A UCL Institute of Education guide to good practice that I contributed to sets out key principles to ensure high quality relationships and sex education. This includes taking into account the needs and views of all pupils, including trans and gender diverse pupils.

    Comprehensive, inclusive relationships and sex education benefits all pupils.
    LightField Studios/Shutterstock

    Schools should consider how disability, race, culture, age and religion or belief intersect with gender and sexuality. They should be inclusive. This means acknowledging which groups have privilege, and how unequal societal and institutional structures and power relations shape society and schools.

    Schools’ approach should ensure that young people have access to accurate information, health services, advice and knowledge, and encourage positive attitudes towards sexuality and body image while also tackling taboos and shame driven by inequalities. And relationships and sex education should be contemporary, relevant, and flexible.

    It should incorporate the experiences of all young people, including trans and gender diverse pupils, in order to be responsive to changing school populations. Finally, it should be research and evidence driven. This means drawing upon up to date, peer-reviewed academic research evidence, rather than political bias.

    The School of Sexuality Education charity has also offered further strategies for schools to be inclusive and supportive. These include challenging gender stereotypes and transphobic bullying in schools, upholding confidentiality whenever possible, and making sure to share relevant resources, including support services within the school and with parents.

    Overall, high quality relationships and sex education lessons that cover issues of LGBTQ+ sexual health and rights will enable schools to be inclusive environments that prioritise the safety, respect and dignity of all pupils.

    Still, the Supreme Court’s ruling has put schools and teachers in a difficult position. Schools urgently need the government to deliver its guidance on this issue – in a way that addresses schools’ very real concerns about the welfare of their trans pupils.

    Jessica Ringrose receives funding from Arts and Humanities Research Council.

    ref. The Supreme Court’s ruling on gender raises serious questions for schools – https://theconversation.com/the-supreme-courts-ruling-on-gender-raises-serious-questions-for-schools-255748

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI USA: School Nursing Association Members Gain a Broader Perspective of Nursing on a National Level

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    Having grown up in Connecticut, Madeleine Willett ’26 (NURS) has only know what it’s like to be a nurse in New England, that is, until the National Student Nurses’ Association (NSNA) gave her insight outside of the state’s border.

    NSNA was founded in 1952 and has over “50,000 members in 1,500 nursing programs nationwide,” according to the NSNA website. It’s open to students enrolled in associate, baccalaureate, diploma, and generic graduate nursing programs.

    The Student Nurses’ Association (SNA) has chapters in 600 nursing programs, UConn School of Nursing being one of them.

    “Through the SNA chapter and my involvement with the national organization, I’ve been exposed to unique, geographically specific challenges in nursing that differ significantly from what I’ve known in New England,” said Willet, SNA vice president.

    UConn SoN Student Nursing Association members with advisor D’Ana Brooks, DNP, RN, CNL, at the National Student Nurses’ Association convention on April 9-13, 2025. (Contributed Photo)

    SNA currently has 213 students. Nine of those students, including Willett, got to attend NSNA’s 73rd annual convention hosted in Seattle, Washington on April 9-13, 2025.

    D’Ana Brooks, DNP, RN, CNL, clinical instructor and SNA advisor attended the event alongside her students. To be selected to go, Brooks, Willett, and Chapter President, Allison Villano, selected students based off submitted applications.

    “It was an absolute pleasure to join them for the conference and see them so involved as leaders at the national level,” said Brooks. “Connecticut was well represented at the conference, and UConn’s presence was felt! Our students have big goals to continue to grow our local and state chapters.”

    This year’s theme was “Ignite, Innovate, Lead,” and over 2,000 nursing students, educators, and nursing leaders were in attendance.

    Willett went to the conference as not only the SNA vice president, but as a member of the Nominations and Elections committee as part of the national leadership team. On this committee she helped organize and run the elections for the conference to elect the next national board and Chair of State Presidents.

    They work throughout the year to explain the policies and procedures around campaigning, facilitating elections, voting, and debates.

    The position gave her the opportunity to increase her communication, organizational, and conflict resolution skills while also showing her what nursing is like in other communities.

    UConn SoN Student Nursing Association members with National Student Nurses’ Association President Ryan Barrett. (Contributed Photo)

    “This convention offers so many opportunities to interact with students from across the country and learn new skills and get a broader perspective of what it means to be a nurse in the United States vs. Connecticut,” said Willett.

    Exhibits throughout the convention provided students with the opportunity to meet and connect with individuals in employment and academic settings, creating a space for networking.

    They also had the chance to meet NSNA leaders including the Board of Directors, Nominating and Elections Committee, and the Chair of the Resolutions Committee.

    Being able to work on the committee with nursing students all over the country and interacting with NSNA staff including Chief Executive Officer Dr. Kenya Williams, EdD, MBA, MSN, RN, RP, CAE, FNYAM, FADLN, FAAN, was a highlight for Willett.

    You can see all of the different realms in nursing and get to meet some of the biggest leaders in the field,” she remarked.

    Samantha Youngs ’26 (NURS), SNA secretary, attended the convention alongside Willett. Similar to Willett, the convention gave her perspectives on nursing from various specialties and backgrounds from all over the country.

    “I pursued a career in healthcare to have the privilege of caring for others and to make a difference in the lives of my future patients, and I feel continuously empowered to do so while interacting with other nursing students and nurse leaders,” said Youngs.

    While at the convention she had the privilege of serving in the House of Delegates. They voted on 39 resolutions and “witnessed firsthand how students are shaping the future of the nursing profession,” she said.

    Youngs joined SNA as a freshman and has attended the convention since she was a sophomore. This past April, she was deemed the new CT and UConn SNA chapter presidents.

    “Taking on the role of President of the UConn Student Nurses’ Association feels absolutely surreal,” Youngs remarked. “I am looking forward to working alongside the accomplished SNA officers and continuing to foster an environment where student nurses feel seen, heard, and supported.”

    Both SNA and the NSNA convention have given Willett and Youngs opportunities that they wouldn’t have thought possible prior to their involvement.

    When reflecting on their time, they both emphasized their appreciation for their advisor Brooks.

    “I am especially grateful for the guidance of our advisor, Dr. Brooks, whose support and creativity mean so much to our chapter,” Willett said. “UConn SNA helps shape leaders, creates community, and makes our nursing education more personalized and meaningful.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Military Families visit museums for free this summer

    Source: US State of Rhode Island

    Providence, RI � Actively serving military members and their families can visit participating museums nationwide for free as part of the Blue Star Museums program, an initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) and Blue Star Families (BSF) in collaboration with the Department of Defense.

    In Rhode Island, the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts (RISCA) announced today that the museums participating in the program, which kicks off Saturday (May 17) and concludes Sept. 1, include the following:

    � Bristol Art Museum and Coggeshall Farm Museum, Bristol. � Newport Restoration Foundation and Sailing Museum and National Sailing Hall of Fame, Newport. � Providence Children’s Museum and RISD Museum, Providence. � Living Sharks Museum, Westerly. � Museum of Work and Culture, Woonsocket.

    “Blue Star Museums is another way to salute our active-duty military members and their families and provide them with valuable educational and cultural opportunities. It’s another tangible way to remind our troops and their families how much we all value and appreciate their service to our nation,” said U.S. Senator Jack Reed.

    “The National Endowment for the Arts is honored to help connect military service members and their families with their communities through the Blue Star Museums program,” said Mary Anne Carter, Senior Advisor for the National Endowment for the Arts. “Museums and cultural institutions offer countless opportunities for our military to create special memories, celebrate America’s history, and connect with our country’s heritage and culture.”

    “For 15 years, Blue Star Museums has opened doors for military families to explore, connect, and feel at home in their communities,” said Kathy Roth-Douquet, CEO of Blue Star Families. “Thanks to our continued partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts and participating museums nationwide, we’re proud to continue this tradition of belonging and enrichment. Museums are more than cultural spaces�they’re places where military families feel seen, welcomed, and celebrated.”

    This free admission program is available for those currently serving in the United States military�Air Force, Army, Coast Guard, Marine Corps, Navy, and Space Force, members of the Reserves, National Guard, U.S. Public Health Commissioned Corps, NOAA Commissioned Corps�and up to five family members. Qualified members must show a Geneva Convention common access card (CAC), DD Form 1173 ID card (dependent ID), DD Form 1173-1 ID card or the Next Generation Uniformed Services (Real) ID card for entrance into a participating Blue Star Museum.

    “We are grateful to all the museums in Rhode Island and throughout the nation who are showing their appreciation for members of the military and their families. The arts play an integral role in the health and well-being of individuals and communities,” Todd Trebour, Executive Director of RISCA, said. “RISCA is thrilled to help spread the word about this program.”

    The NEA and Blue Star Families rely on national service organizations to help spread the word about the Blue Star Museums program, such as the National Assembly of State Art Agencies, American Alliance of Museums, American Association of State and Local History, Association of African American Museums, Association of Art Museum Directors, Association of Children’s Museums, Association of Science and Technology Centers, Association of Tribal Archives, Libraries and Museums, Association of Zoos and Aquariums, and National Trust for Historic Preservation.

    In addition, regional museum associations also help with recruitment efforts, including the Association of Midwest Museums, Mid-America Arts Alliance, Mid-Atlantic Association of Museums, Mountain-Plains Museums Association, New England Museum Association, Southeastern Museums Conferences, and Western Museums Association.

    Established by Congress, the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) is an independent federal agency that is the largest funder of the arts and arts education in communities nationwide and a catalyst of public and private support for the arts. By advancing opportunities for arts participation and practice, the NEA fosters and sustains an environment in which the arts benefit everyone in the United States. To learn more, visit arts.gov or follow us on Facebook, Instagram, X, and YouTube.

    Blue Star Museums is one of the NEA’s programs that supports military personnel and their families. Others include the Creative Forces�: NEA Military Healing Arts Network and grants awarded to nonprofit organizations to support projects that reach military and veteran populations.

    Blue Star Families (BSF) is the nation’s largest military and veteran family support organization. Its research-driven approach builds strong communities with a focus on human-centered design and innovative solutions. A “blue star family” is the family of a currently serving military member, including active duty, National Guard, reserve forces, and those transitioning out of service. Since its founding in 2009, BSF has delivered more than $336 million in benefits and impacts more than 1.5 million people annually through an expansive network of chapters and outposts.

    Established in 1967, RISCA is a state agency supported by appropriations from the Rhode Island General Assembly and federal grants from the NEA. RISCA provides grants, technical assistance and staff support to arts organizations and artists, schools, community centers, social service organizations and local governments to bring the arts into the lives of Rhode Islanders. To learn more, visit www.arts.ri.gov or follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Housing Bill: Greens slam block on cheaper rents

    Source: Scottish Greens

    It is time to end rip-off rents.

    The Scottish Government must go further to protect renters from unaffordable rent hikes, warn the Scottish Greens.

    Amendments to the Housing (Scotland) Bill proposed by the Scottish Greens would mean that rent would increase no more than the cost-of-living or increases in wages. For those areas where rents are already too high, Councils could put in place lower increases, freezes or rent reductions.

    Last night, the Scottish Government and opposition parties refused to back those plans at Stage 2. They also blocked proposals that would give the Government powers to introduce an emergency national rent cap if required. 

    Independent analysis from the Scottish Parliament Information Centre shows that, had they applied between 2019 and 2024, Green plans to cap rent increases at the lowest of wage and cost of living increases would have saved renters across Scotland an average of £94 a month, and up to £273 in Lothian. 

    Scottish Green MSP Maggie Chapman intends to continue pushing for stronger rent controls and better renters’ rights through the Housing Bill and will force another vote on lower rents at Stage 3 in June. 

    Ms Chapman said: 

    “Proper rent controls are a crucial part of tackling the housing emergency – saving renters money and making sure rents are fairer across the board going forward. 

    “Our proposals would do just that – improving rent control measures so that rents won’t outpace wages, allowing the Government to introduce an emergency rent cap if needed, and ensuring that there are proper sanctions on landlords who continue to flout the rules. 

    “With opposition parties and the Government refusing to back these proposals yesterday, it’s clearer than ever that the Scottish Greens are the only party committed to standing up for renters, in a sector dominated by the landlord lobby. 

    “The Housing Bill was introduced by the Scottish Greens. It gives us the opportunity to transform the broken housing market and protect renters all across our country.

    “I’ll be bringing these important proposals back at Stage 3 of the Housing Bill. So the Government and opposition parties will have an important choice to make – end rip-off rents for good, or continue with business as usual, and let renters continue to pay the price. 

    “All parties agree that we are in a housing emergency – but frankly, we all need to start acting like it.” 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Immigration white paper

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 3

    Oral statement to Parliament

    Immigration white paper

    The Home Secretary gave an oral statement to the House of Commons on 12 May to introduce the ‘Restoring Control over the Immigration System’ white paper.

    Madam Deputy Speaker, with your permission, I will make a statement on the government’s white paper on Restoring Control over the Immigration System.

    Five months ago, the figures were published that showed net migration had reached a record high of more than 900,000 under the last government – a figure that had quadrupled in the space of just 4 years.

    It was the consequence of specific government choices made from 2020 onwards, including introducing what was effectively a free market experiment on immigration – encouraging employers to recruit from abroad, loosening controls in different areas but without any requirement to tackle skills and labour shortages here at home. Choices which undermined the immigration system and the economy too.

    This government is making very different choices. We made clear at that time, just as we had set out in our manifesto, this government would restore order and control to the immigration system, bringing net migration substantially down but also boosting skills and training here at home.

    The white paper we are publishing today does exactly that and it is built on 5 core principles.

    First, that net migration must come down so the system is properly managed and controlled.

    Second, that the immigration system must be linked to skills and training here in the UK, so that no industry is allowed to rely solely on immigration to fill its skills shortages. 

    Third, that the system must be fair and effective, with clearer rules in areas like respect for family life, to prevent perverse outcomes that undermine public confidence.

    Fourth, that the rules must be respected and enforced – including tackling illegal and irregular migration and deporting foreign criminals.

    And finally, that the system must support integration and community cohesion, including new rules on the ability to speak English and the contribution that people can bring to the UK.

    The United Kingdom is an interconnected and outward-looking nation. Our history and our geography mean that, for generations, British people have travelled overseas to live and work, and people have come to the UK to study, work, invest or seek refuge. And British citizens draw on heritage from all over the world and that has made us the country we are today.

    Through many years our country has been strengthened by those who have come here to contribute – from the doctors in our NHS to the entrepreneurs founding some of our biggest businesses to those who came through generations to work in jobs from coal mining to caring for our loved ones to serving in our armed forces. People often coming to do some of the most difficult jobs of all.

    Our trading nation, global leading universities and strong historic international connections mean that migration will always be part of our country’s future as well as our past.

    But that is exactly why immigration needs to be properly controlled and managed. It hasn’t been.

    Overseas recruitment shot up while training in the UK was cut.

    Lower skilled migration soared while the proportion of UK residents in work plummeted.

    In 2019 10% of skilled work visas went to non-graduate jobs; by 2024 that had risen to 60%.

    Employers were even given a 20% wage discount if they recruited for shortage jobs from abroad – actively discouraging them from paying the going rate or training here at home.

    Education institutions were allowed to substantially expand the number of overseas students without proper compliance checks.

    Social care providers were encouraged to recruit from abroad with no proper regulation.

    So we saw a serious increase in exploitation – deeply damaging for those who came to work here in good faith, and also for other workers and responsible companies who were being undercut.

    The rules and laws that are supposed to the immigration system were too often ignored.

    By 2024, returns of people with no right to be in the UK were down over a third compared to 2010.  

    And, of course, criminal gangs were allowed to build an entire smuggling industry along our borders, undermining security and creating a crisis in the asylum system.

    Madam Deputy Speaker, later this year we will set out further reforms on asylum and border security, and on tackling illegal and irregular migration, building on the new counter-terrorism powers in the Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill before the House this evening, because no one should be making these dangerous crossings on small boats.

    But this white paper sets out how we restore that control to the legal migration system so it is sustainable, fair and works for the UK.

    First, we are overhauling the approach to labour market policy so for the first time we properly link the immigration system to skills and training here in the UK.

    So that where there are skills or labour shortages in the UK, immigration should not always be the answer to which employers turn. Because that long-term failure to tackle skills shortages, to bring in proper workforce planning, to get UK residents back into work, or to improve pay, terms and conditions here at home is bad for our economy as well as for the immigration system because it undermines our productivity and growth.

    So we will lift the threshold for skilled worker visas back to graduate level and above, removing up to 180 different jobs from the list, increasing salary thresholds.

    Access to the points-based system for lower-skilled jobs will be limited to areas on a new temporary shortage list, including jobs which are critical to the industrial strategy, but access will be time-limited. There must be a domestic workforce strategy in place, and employers must be acting to increase domestic recruitment.

    We will expect workforce strategies to be drawn up more widely in other higher-skilled areas too where there is overreliance on recruitment from abroad.

    To support that work we will establish the new Labour Market Evidence Group, bringing together skills bodies from England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, the Department for Work and Pensions, the Industrial Strategy Council and the Migration Advisory Committee to gather and share evidence on shortage occupations in different parts of the country and also to highlight the role that skills, training, pay and conditions and other policies can play in improving domestic recruitment, so that increased migration is never again the only answer to the shortages the economy faces.

    This new approach means we also need to act on social care.

    The introduction of the Social Care Visa led not only to a huge increase in migration but also to a shameful and deeply damaging increase in abuse and exploitation.

    When proper checks were finally brought in, 470 care providers had their licence to sponsor international staff suspended. 39,000 care workers were displaced.

    Overseas recruitment for care jobs has since dropped but it must not surge like that again. And it’s time we addressed domestic issues, including a proper fair pay agreement to show respect to people who do some of the most important jobs in the country.

    We are therefore ending overseas recruitment of care workers. It will continue to be possible to extend existing visas and to recruit displaced care workers and people already in the UK with working rights on other visas.

    Alongside the new visa controls and workforce strategies, we will also increase the immigration skills charge paid by employers who recruit from abroad by 32%. That money will be invested through the Spending Review in supporting skills and training here in the UK.

    We will ensure that Britain continues to attract the brightest and best global talent, by enhancing visa routes for very high skilled individuals, top scientific and design talent, and people with the right experience to support growth in key strategic industries.

    Madam Deputy Speaker, international students bring huge benefits to the UK – supporting our world-leading universities, bringing in top talent and investment.

    But we will strengthen compliance requirements and checks to prevent visa misuse.

    Currently, too many people on the Graduate Visa are not doing graduate jobs. So we will reduce the unrestricted period from 2 years to 18 months. Those who want to stay will need to get a graduate job on a Skilled Worker Visa so that we can ensure they are contributing to the economy.

    Just as our rules on work visas are based on the contribution we expect people to make when they come to our country, we will consult later this year on new earned settlement and citizenship rules that apply the same approach, extending the principles of the points-based system, doubling the standard qualifying period for settlement to 10 years with provisions to qualify more swiftly that take account of the contribution people have made.

    Because the ability to speak English is integral to the ability for everyone to contribute and integrate, we will introduce new, higher language requirements across a range of visa routes, for both main applicants and their dependants. So family, too, can work, integrate and contribute.

    The system for family migration has become overly complex with policies increasingly developed around case law from court decisions rather than a co-ordinated framework set out by Parliament. So we will set out a new clearer framework, to be endorsed by Parliament, including clarifying how Article 8 rules should be interpreted and applied to prevent confusion or perverse conclusions.

    We will review current community sponsorship schemes that support recognised refugees and will continue to take action against trafficking and modern slavery. And we will shortly appoint a new Windrush Commissioner to ensure that Windrush lessons continue to be learnt and the Home Office also makes sure its standards are upheld.

    But the rules must be respected and enforced across the board. So we will also bring in stronger controls where there is evidence of visa misuse. We are also rolling out e-visas and digital ID, including better use of technology to monitor when people are overstaying on their visa, or to support the increase in illegal working raids. Since the election we have increased returns and we will go further.

    Those who come to our country must abide by our laws.

    So we will develop new procedures to ensure the Home Office is informed of all foreign nationals convicted of offences – not just those who go to prison – so we can also revoke visas and remove other offenders in a wide range of crimes who are abusing our system.

    Madam Deputy Speaker, already we are reducing the number of visas being granted this year, and updated figures will be published before the end of the month.

    Already we are increasing returns with over 24,000 people in the first 9 months, the highest 9-month period for 8 years.

    The impact of the changes to skilled worker visas, care worker visas, settlement, students and English language is expected to reduce visas by around 100,000 a year. In addition, the new workforce strategies, immigration skills charge, family and asylum reforms will further bring numbers down on top of that. And as the Prime Minister has said, where we need to go further to restore a sustainable system, we will.

    Conclusion

    In conclusion, Madam Deputy Speaker, throughout our history, Britain has been strengthened by people coming to start new businesses, study at our universities, contribute to our cultural and sporting excellence, and do some of the toughest, most essential jobs in our country.

    But to be successful, effective and fair, our immigration must be properly controlled and managed. This white paper sets out how we will restore control, fairness and order to the system, how we will continue to bring net migration down, and how we will turn the page on the chaos and failure of the past. I commend this statement to the House.

    Updates to this page

    Published 12 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Community created blossom exhibition on tour

    Source: City of Plymouth

    This spring, communities across Plymouth have teamed up with local creatives and artists to create blossom-inspired art.

    Photograph of one of the workshops

    Plymouth City Council’s Green Communities team partnered up with the National Trust’s Cotehele property to offer communities in Devonport, Keyham, and around Central Park the opportunity to work with professional creatives. In total, over 250 people took part in these creative workshops, with over 20 sessions taking place across the three communities.

    From powerful poetry to buzzing bee puppets, nature sculptures to blooming blossom prints, we are celebrating all their wonderful work through a community tour, which will see their pieces toured throughout the city and in nearby National Trust properties.

    The tour will be happening between 19 May to 31 May, and the creative pieces will be blossoming in Mount Wise Neighbourhood Centre in Devonport, Keyham Green Places, and the Central Park Hub, along with Cotehele, Antony, and Saltram.

    Photograph of some of the artists taking part in the project

    As well as the artwork, there will be free nature inspired arts and crafts available, along with the opportunity to learn more about the Green Communities project.

    The creatives who have been working with the communities are poet and performer Liv Torc, local storyteller and puppet maker Samantha Webb, nature artist and illustrator Devon Tipping, and printmaker, Grace Beswick.

    Councillor Tom Briars-Delve, Cabinet Member for the Environment and Climate Change, said:  “I am really pleased that we can host this opportunity for members of the community to showcase their skills and the excellent work they have created as part of this initiative with the National Trust. 

    “My family and I are looking forward to seeing their artwork at the community tour. I hope many people are able to join us with the free arts and crafts.”

    Also through the Blossom project, throughout Plymouth and the Tamar Valley, the Green Communities team and Cotehele have offered skill sharing workshops, free sustainable travel, storytelling sessions and lots of other ways to get involved in springtime celebrations. With over 350 people getting involved in the Plymouth events.

    A representative from the National Trust said: “The Festival of Blossom takes place across England, Wales and Northern Ireland each spring with the aim of connecting people and nature. Blossom serves the natural world by providing food and habitat to early pollinators but also brings hope and joy to people after a long winter.

    “A lot of celebrations infuse nature with creativity because artistic expression welcomes people in to share their own voices, identities, experiences and as a result, brings people together to look anew at where they live and all its untapped beauty. Nowhere is this more strongly evident than in the ever-growing creative community of Plymouth and the surrounding Tamar Valley and we hope that the Festival of Blossom will only grow each year, welcoming more and more people to celebrate spring and all it does for us.”

    This project has been funded by the National Trust’s Festival of Blossom thanks to the players of the People’s Postcode Lottery.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Mayor lights up Council buildings to raise awareness for Foster Care Fortnight

    Source: Northern Ireland – City of Derry

    Mayor lights up Council buildings to raise awareness for Foster Care Fortnight

    9 May 2025

    The Mayor of Derry City and Strabane District Council will light up civic buildings on Monday 12th May to celebrate Foster Care Fortnight.

    The week commencing Monday 12th May until Sunday 25th May 2025 is Foster Care Fortnight which is used to shine a light on fostering and shows how foster care transforms lives.

    HSC NI Foster Care proudly celebrate their foster carers during this time, and everything they do to support children and young people, giving them the opportunity to grow and succeed.

    Mayor of Derry City and Strabane District Council, Cllr Lilian Seenoi-Barr, said she was delighted to light up Council buildings and The Alley Theatre in turquoise and yellow to raise awareness of such an important time.

    “Every child deserves to live in a stable and loving home, where they feel valued and safe; where they can grow, learn and thrive. But unfortunately, the number of children currently in foster care within our city and district continues to grow. I am delighted to be supporting such an important cause and lighting up our civic buildings to raise awareness for Foster Care Fortnight.

    “I would encourage everyone to have the discussion at home and consider becoming foster carers. By opening your home to a child or young person in need, you could transform their life all for the better. HSC NI Foster Care offer a wealth of knowledge and support to those considering becoming foster carers. If you are truly considering it, please reach out to those who can offer you guidance and advice to make that next step in changing someone’s life.”

    The theme of this year’s awareness fortnight is The Power of Relationships. Whether it’s the bond between a foster carer and a child, the support of social workers, the friendships built within fostering communities, or the connections with birth families, these relationships shape lives, create stability and open up new possibilities for the future.

    There are 3,359 children currently living in foster care in Northern Ireland and as this number continues to rise, HSC NI Foster Care are asking people to consider opening their hearts and homes to a child or young person in need.

    “HSC NI foster carers come from various walks of life, offering diverse skills and experience to meet the individual needs of each child/young person. If you’re a good listener, patient, understanding, and compassionate you already have many of the qualities to make a great foster carer.

    “You can foster whether you are single, married or have a partner; have children of your own or not; are employed or claiming benefits or own or rent your home. HSC NI Foster Care welcomes enquiries from people from all backgrounds, regardless of race, religion, language, culture, gender, disability, age or sexual orientation,” said a spokesperson from HSC NI Foster Care.

    There are different ways to get involved depending on your lifestyle and personal circumstances as not all foster care requires a full-time commitment.

    HSC NI foster carers receive ongoing support, tailored training and development opportunities, financial allowances and access to family activities and support groups.

    To find out more call HSC NI Foster Care on 0800 0720 137 or visit adoptionandfostercare.hscni.net

    HSC NI Foster Care host a range of information events throughout the year across Northern Ireland, both in-person and virtual. Keep up to date on social media.

    Facebook: @HSCAdoptionAndFosterCare

    X: @HSCAdopt_Foster

    Instagram: @hscni_adoption_fostercare

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Dive Into a Magical Underwater Adventure with Encore PAA’s Disney’s The Little Mermaid

    Source: Northern Ireland – City of Derry

    Dive Into a Magical Underwater Adventure with Encore PAA’s Disney’s The Little Mermaid

    14 May 2025

    Alley Theatre, Strabane | 20th – 24th May 2025 | Tickets: £19

    Encore Performing Arts Academy (Encore PAA) returns to the Alley Theatre, Strabane, with a spectacular new production of Disney’s The Little Mermaid, running from 20th to 24th May. Following their acclaimed productions of Oliver!The Sound of Music, and Nativity! The Musical, Encore is ready to enchant audiences once again with this timeless underwater tale.

    Set in a magical kingdom beneath the sea, The Little Mermaid follows Ariel, a curious and spirited young mermaid who dreams of life in the human world above. When she falls in love with the dashing Prince Eric, Ariel makes a dangerous deal with the sea witch Ursula to become human—risking everything for the chance to follow her heart.

    Based on one of Hans Christian Andersen’s most beloved stories and the classic Disney animated film, this hauntingly beautiful love story is brought to life with stunning costumes, a live orchestra, and a vibrant cast that rivals any professional production. Featuring unforgettable songs like “Under the Sea,” “Kiss the Girl,” and “Part of Your World,” the show promises a magical night for the entire family.

    “We are incredibly proud of the dedication and talent our cast has poured into this production,” said Rebecca Thompson from Encore PAA. “The Little Mermaid is such a beloved story, and bringing it to life with the energy and heart of our young performers has been a joy. We can’t wait for audiences to experience the magic, the music, and the unforgettable journey we’ve created on stage.”

    With music by eight-time Academy Award-winner Alan Menken, lyrics by Howard Ashman and Glenn Slater, and a book by Doug Wright, this delightful musical will transport audiences to an unforgettable world under the sea.

    Don’t miss your chance to experience this enchanting musical adventure!

    Tickets are £19 and available now from the Alley Theatre website:www.alley-theatre.com or box office 028 71 384444

    This amateur production is presented by arrangement with Music Theatre International (Europe). All authorised performance materials are also supplied by MTI Europe.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Mayor encourages public and employers to choose active travel with launch of 2025 Active Travel Cha

    Source: Northern Ireland – City of Derry

    Mayor encourages public and employers to choose active travel with launch of 2025 Active Travel Cha

    15 May 2025

    Individuals, organisations and businesses can register now to take part in this fun challenge to improve their health and the environment by walking, cycling or using public transport to commute to work, school, or for social and leisure activities.

     

    To support healthier, greener travel choices, Mayor of Derry City & Strabane District Council, Cllr Lilian Seenoi-Barr was joined by challenge partners to launch the 2025 Active Travel Challenge for participants in the Northwest.

    Throughout June, the initiative encourages people across Northern Ireland to leave the car at home in favour of walking, cycling, public transport or other active travel options.

    Mayor of Derry City & Strabane District Council, Cllr Lilian Seenoi-Barr, said: “This challenge is a brilliant way to give people the impetus to consider their active travel options to work. Our Council area’s ever expanding greenway network and Translink’s frequent services around the City and District means there has never been a better time to switch to active travel. 

    “Active travel is a great way to introduce physical activity to your daily routine and reap the health and fitness benefits of regular exercise. You’ll be playing your role in protecting the planet and you’ll be surprised how much money it saves over a month so sign up today and start reaping the rewards.”

     

    Funded by Translink, the Department for Infrastructure and the Public Health Agency (PHA), and delivered in partnership with Sustrans, Western Health and Social Care Trust and Derry City & Strabane District Council, the Active Travel Challenge has also been backed by the Infrastructure Minister, Liz Kimmins MLA, highlighting the growing momentum around sustainable travel.

     

    Minister Kimmins commented: “Investing in cleaner and greener transport is one of my department’s seven Foundations for a Better Future.

    “Signing up to the Active Travel Challenge this June is a great way to start making little changes in how we travel. Choosing to walk, wheel or cycle for shorter everyday journeys, and combining this with public transport for longer trips, is good for the environment and helps us build a healthier body and mind.

    “I would like to build on the success of the 2024 challenge which had over 1,400 participants and over 21,000 active journeys logged and would encourage employers and individuals to register and start making a difference today.” 

    Chris Conway, Translink Group Chief Executive, said: “It is great to see this initiative growing year on year encouraging more people to give sustainable and active travel a go. Last year’s challenge saw an impressive collective saving of around 13 tonnes (13,000kg) of CO₂ emissions helping reduce congestion and improve air quality.

     

    Research shows that people who take public transport are more active, clocking up more steps, helping support physical and mental wellbeing. We look forward to playing our part in this annual challenge, working together to create a healthier society and more sustainable future for everyone.”

    Aidan Dawson, Chief Executive of the PHA, said: “The Active Travel Challenge gives everyone the opportunity to look at ways we can incorporate physical activity into our daily routines. Getting more active can help us maintain a healthy weight, improve sleep quality and help reduce anxiety and the risk of developing chronic conditions such as heart disease, osteoporosis, some cancers and type 2 diabetes.

    “As well as all that, it can also boost your mental health and wellbeing. The PHA would encourage everyone across Northern Ireland to take part in the Active Travel Challenge to benefit your mental and physical wellbeing and help our planet by reducing your carbon footprint.”

    Claire Pollock, Head of Sustrans Northern Ireland, added: ”The Active Travel Challenge is a great opportunity for people to leave the car behind and choose walking, cycling and public transport options instead.  We encourage everyone to make the change to a healthier lifestyle that will also benefit the environment.”

    The initiative is open to everyone of all ages across Northern Ireland. It also presents a valuable opportunity for businesses, community organisations, universities, and local authorities to engage staff, students and members, encouraging friendly competition and supporting long-term modal shift.

    Registration is free and is open now online. Participants can register as individuals or teams and simply log their active journeys online, for a chance to win a range of rewards including retail vouchers, travel passes, gym memberships and much more.

    To find out more and get involved in this year’s Active Travel Challenge go to atc.getmeactive.org.uk or email [email protected]. Keep up to date with all the latest ATC action on social media using #GetMeActiveNI

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Council launches innovative Access Rider template for artists

    Source: Northern Ireland – City of Derry

    Council launches innovative Access Rider template for artists

    15 May 2025

    Making life easier for artists who are d/Deaf, disabled or neurodiverse is the purpose of an Access Rider template now available on Derry City and Strabane District Council’s website.

    Launched in partnership with a number of cultural venues and disability-led organisations, the innovative template, now available in multiple accessible formats on the Council website (https://www.derrystrabane.com/subsites/inclusion/access-rider), provides artists with a structured framework to clearly outline their access requirements to employers, venues, and collaborators. The Access Rider will help an individual detail their particular needs and identify any reasonable adjustments that may need to be taken to allow them to complete the job. The document will ensure that the individual and the organisation (like a gallery or events team) feel comfortable working together. Once completed the Access Rider can be taken to any venue or organisation.

    The Access Rider is made up of four parts and will collect the artist’s general contact information, their access requirements relating to their job, information required in case of an emergency and any other relevant information the artist wishes to share.

    “Conversations about accessibility can often be challenging, with many artists struggling to fully communicate their needs,” said Caitriona Porter, Council’s Access and Inclusion Project Co-ordinator. “The Access Rider eliminates this barrier by offering a straightforward method for artists to document and share their requirements, ensuring they can perform their roles effectively.

    “This initiative represents a significant step forward in Derry City and Strabane District Council’s commitment to creating an inclusive cultural sector where all artists can participate fully and contribute their talents without unnecessary barriers,” she added.

    Cultural venues and arts organisations throughout the region are encouraged to familiarise themselves with the Access Rider concept and incorporate it into their standard operating procedures when working with artists.

    For additional information about the Access Rider template please contact the inclusion team at [email protected].

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Council closes Strathfoyle Play Park temporarily following suspected arson attack on equipment

    Source: Northern Ireland – City of Derry

    Council closes Strathfoyle Play Park temporarily following suspected arson attack on equipment

    15 May 2025

    Derry City and Strabane District Council had to close Strathfoyle Play Park this morning after an arson attack resulted in significant damage to its play equipment. The incident occurred overnight on Wednesday 14th May and is being treated as a deliberate act of vandalism.

    The arson attack has left the slide area of the play park unsafe for public use, prompting the Council to close off the Tower area and slide, until necessary repairs can be carried out. The damage is estimated to be substantial, and the Council is working closely with the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) to investigate the incident.

    Mayor of Derry City and Strabane District Council, Cllr Lilian Seenoi-Barr expressed deep concern over the attack.

    “I am appalled by this senseless act of vandalism. Strathfoyle Play Park is a vital community asset that provides children and families with a safe and enjoyable environment. The Council is committed to restoring the park as quickly as possible and will keep the public informed of progress.

    “I would encourage anyone with information surrounding the incident, to report it to the relevant authorities. We cannot put up with such reckless behaviour in our communities. This play park is such a valuable asset for the children and young people of Strathfoyle and the wider community, and it is such a shame that it will have to be closed over this spell of beautiful weather.” 

    Strathfoyle Play Park is a popular destination for local families and children. The closure has caused disappointment among residents who rely on the park for recreational activities. The Council has urged the community to report any information related to the incident to assist in the investigation.

    The Northern Ireland Fire Service (NIFRS) said they were called to reports of a slide on fire at the park in the Beechwood Park area of Strathfoyle. They also confirmed it had been started deliberately.

    The public are reminded to report any relevant information regarding the incident. You can contact Derry City and Strabane District Council at 028 71 253 253 or the Police Service of Northern Ireland directly.

    The Council appreciates the public’s understanding and cooperation during this challenging time.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Monsters of the Deep come ashore at Aberdeen Art Gallery

    Source: Scotland – City of Aberdeen

    As Aberdeen gets ready to welcome the Tall Ships fleet to the city from 19 to 22 July, a major new special exhibition opens to the public at the Art Gallery this weekend (Saturday 17 May). 

    Monsters of the Deep: Science Fact or Fiction? invites visitors on a journey from medieval imaginings to modern-day discoveries through a fascinating and sometimes terrifying combination of legend, folklore and science. 

    From a frightening Feegee mermaid, to the spindly legs of a a Japanese spider crab, there are lots of strange and wonderful things to see in Monsters of the Deep. Visitors will come face to face with the skull of the world’s largest warm-blooded predator, the killer whale, and marvel at the tooth of an extinct megalodon and the double-tusked skull of a narwhal. Eerie deep-sea specimens from across the globe are on display, as well as some of the technological tools scientists use today to explore the ocean floor.  

    The exhibition is based on one originated by the National Maritime Museum Cornwall and has been re-imagined for Aberdeen by Helen Fothergill – Service Manager, Aberdeen Archives, Gallery and Museums, and her team of curators and exhibition officers. The many lenders to the exhibition include the University of Aberdeen, Loch Ness Centre, Viktor Wynd’s Museum of UnNatural History, Natural History Museum, National Museums Scotland, National Maritime Museum Cornwall and the University of Southampton.

    There’s a raft of activities to enjoy at the Art Gallery and Maritime Museum, inspired by Monsters of the Deep. From a BSL exhibition tour, talks by intrepid explorers, eminent scientists and the curator of the UnNatural History Museum, to creative sessions, hands-on family fun with Macduff Marine Aquarium and classic monsters-inspired film screenings with the Belmont Cinema, there’s something for all ages to enjoy. Full programme details are on the Art Gallery website at www.aagm.co.uk

    Helen Fothergill, curator of the Aberdeen exhibition, said: “When Aberdeen was confirmed as a destination for the Tall Ships Races, the Archives, Gallery & Museums team immediately set about bringing this amazing exhibition originated by the National Maritime Museum Cornwall to the city. With a fascinating combination of medieval maps, preserved sea creatures and artworks, Monsters of the Deep sets the scene for the city’s summer of maritime celebrations. We have been able to work with some wonderful and supportive people during the development of this project and could not have done without the help of our partners and willing lenders. So when you feel the need to come face-to-face with a mermaid or discover what really lurks beneath the waves, head for Aberdeen Art Gallery!“  

    Councillor Martin Greig, Aberdeen City Council’s culture spokesman, said: ”With the opening of Monsters of the Deep we’re just weeks away from welcoming the Tall Ships to Aberdeen. There’s a tremendous sense of organisations pulling together to showcase the best of Aberdeen and we’re grateful to the many partners who have supported the exhibition, including the University of Aberdeen Collections for important objects loans and the Friends of Aberdeen Archives, Gallery & Museums for supporting talks by Darren Naish and Viktor Wynd as part of the public programme of events. The summer in Aberdeen is set to be full of exciting maritime-related things to do, including the second year of Festival of the Sea. I hope that as many people as possible will enjoy the celebrations.”

    Monsters of the Deep: Science Fact or Fiction
    17 May – 26 October
    Aberdeen Art Gallery, Schoolhill, Aberdeen, AB10 1FQ 
    Monday to Saturday 10am-5pm, Sunday 11am-4pm (special extended opening to 8pm on Friday 19, Saturday 20, Sunday 21 July during the Tall Ships weekend)
    Adults £10
    Concessions and Friends of Aberdeen Archives, Gallery & Museums £7
    Exhibition pass £14
    Children aged 12 and under free

    https://www.aberdeencity.gov.uk/AAGM/whats-aberdeen-art-galleries-and-museums/monsters-deep-science-fact-or-fiction

    The programme of associated events begins on Wednesday 21 May at 12.30 with a free lunchtime talk – Can The Law Save the Ocean? – at the Maritime Museum by Dr Mitchell Lennan, Lecturer in Environmental Law, University of Aberdeen.

    Trudi Collier will give a BSL tour of Monsters of the Deep on Thursday 19 June at 2pm – free with exhibition entry,

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Record-breaking FDA biosimilar approvals to create opportunities for drug developers and manufacturers, says GlobalData

    Source: GlobalData

    Record-breaking FDA biosimilar approvals to create opportunities for drug developers and manufacturers, says GlobalData

    Posted in Pharma

    FDA biosimilar approvals reached a record 19 in 2024, with projections indicating that 2025 could surpass this milestone trend. This presents a golden opportunity for Contract Manufacturing Organizations (CMOs) specializing in biologics, as more blockbuster drugs approach patent expiration and regulatory barriers to entry diminish, says GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.

    Kathryn Kinch, Pharma Product Manager at GlobalData, comments: “Increased approvals of biosimilars are likely to lower biologic prices, enhancing consumer demand and competition among drug companies, which will benefit CMOs through higher biosimilar volumes.”

    GlobalData’s Bio/Pharmaceutical Outsourcing Report notes that momentum for biosimilars is set to accelerate. Patents for 14 biologics expired in 2024, including major products like UCB SA’s Cimzia and Johnson & Johnson’s Simponi. Even more biologics – 18 – will lose patent protection in 2025, paving the way for a new wave of biosimilar entrants, including Amgen’s Prolia and Roche’s Perjeta.

    In addition to the increase in biosimilar approvals, the report showcases growing importance of strong relationships in clinical supply chains, major pharmaceutical companies’ intentions to establish manufacturing facilities in the US, highlighted by Novartis‘ announcement of a $23 billion investment, and the initial 100 days of US President Trump’s administration and the potential effects on pharmaceutical investments and tariff concerns in the US.

    In the report, GlobalData Pharma Analyst Katarina Zahedi also shares highlights from the Clinical Trial Supply (CTS) New England conference, such as “the importance of understanding the scope of the trial, geographic location, the demand for and the type of drug, and timeframe for trial start-up – as these are all factors that will influence cost. For example, a biologic is more costly to develop than drugs of other molecule types, as it requires longer development timelines and specialized requirements for trials and manufacturing due to their complexity.”

    The Bio/Pharmaceutical Outsourcing Report is a monthly analysis of news and trends affecting pharmaceutical contract manufacturing organizations. The report lists the latest contract manufacturing agreements, opportunities and threats for CDMOs, M&A and financing of CDMOs, and emerging regulatory news.

    MIL OSI Economics