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Category: housing

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: 17 October 2024 Solving the problem of multiplying cats and dogs Cats and dogs can help make a house a home, but if your furry friends are not ‘fixed’ you might end up hounded by the pitter-patter of too many tiny paws.

    Source: New Zealand Government Kainga Ora

    That is why Kāinga Ora is teaming up with New Zealand’s oldest and largest animal welfare charity, SPCA, and some Northland vet clinics to offer hundreds of customers in Whangarei and Kaitaia the opportunity to get their cats and dogs desexed at no charge.

    The SPCA will cover the costs involved and the teams at Top Vets in Kaitaia and the Mog and Dog Desexing Clinic in Whangārei will carry out the procedures.

    “Pets can be great companions and support people’s wellbeing, which is why Kāinga Ora is a pet-friendly landlord and happy to consider applications from customers who want to have pets in their home,” says Jordan Seymour, Manager Housing and Wellbeing Support for Northland.

    “We have a partnership with SPCA because we want to encourage our customers to be responsible pet owners. Getting pets desexed is a responsible thing to do, but the costs can be a barrier for some of our customers because they are living on very low incomes.

    “When SPCA approached us about taking part in a campaign aimed at getting more cats and dogs in Northland desexed, we were keen to jump onboard because we know some of our properties do have large numbers of un-desexed cats and dogs.

    “With SPCA covering the cost of desexing for our customers pets, we’re hoping to avoid the problems caused by unwanted litters,’’ says Jordan.

    Over the coming weeks, Top Vets in Kaitaia will desex up to 200 cats and 200 dogs belonging to local Kāinga Ora customers, and a similar number of cats and dogs from Kāinga Ora homes in Whangārei will be desexed by the Mog and Dog Desexing Clinic. Pets receiving the surgeries will also be microchipped at no cost.

    “We’re pleased to be able to team up with Kāinga Ora to offer these important services to pet owners who may be struggling,” says Rebecca Dobson, National Desexing Programme Manager at SPCA. “Desexing is vital in bringing down the number of unwanted animals in these communities, and we know cost is often a barrier for pet owners especially during a cost-of-living crisis.

    “We’re also covering the costs of microchipping, as we believe it’s an important part of responsible pet ownership. Microchipping gives pets the best possible chance at being reunited with their families if they’re ever lost,” says Ms Dobson.

    For more information

    Page updated: 17 October 2024

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: ChildFund – Celebrity Treasure Island win for kids in the Pacific

    Source: ChildFund New Zealand

    New Zealand Tongan actor JP Foliaki has won TVNZ’s Celebrity Treasure Island and done it for his home in South Auckland, and for children and young people in the Pacific.
    “As a charity, (ChildFund) provide fresh water to the Pacific. It’s one thing to be for your community here in New Zealand, but it’s another thing to look out for your people back home.”
    “All of us at ChildFund, from our teams in Auckland, to the teams in Tarawa and the islands of Kiribati and Honiara and Temotu Province in Solomon Islands thank JP with all our hearts for his win tonight,” says CEO of ChildFund, Josie Pagani.
    The $100k win will now go to ChildFund’s work in the Pacific, bringing clean water to children and their families who otherwise would not have easy access to drinking water.
    “It is unacceptable in 2024 that 1 in 10 deaths for children under 5 years in parts of the Pacific is linked to diarrhea, vomiting and dirty water. This is a problem that is fixable. So let’s fix it,” says CEO of ChildFund Josie Pagani.
    The Pacific has some of the highest rates of preventable deaths for children in the world, due largely to dirty water.
    ChildFund is bringing clean water to children in Kiribati and Solomon Islands, and will expand its programmes across the region over the next year.
    “The Pacific is our home and for many New Zealanders these children are our extended family. We can’t fix all the problems in the world but we can make a difference in the place we call home too.”
    “This is how we can help to power the Pacific’s future by making sure children and young people have a decent chance at learning skills and getting an education – rather than getting sick or worse, says Josie Pagani.
    Dirty water is linked to diarrhea and vomiting, and causes some of the highest numbers of preventable child deaths in the Pacific:
    – 1 in 10 deaths for children under 5 years in Kiribati
    – 1 in 14 deaths for children under 5 years in Solomon Islands
    – Only 16% of school children In Solomon Islands, have clean, safe water
    – Only 27% of households in Kiribati have access to clean, safe water
    JP’s win will help to complete the following projects:
    – Rebuild a water pipe and pump system that will provide water to 3,000 people in 18 communities as well as the local school the Temotu Province of Solomon Islands
    – Provide families in some of the 33 islands and atolls of Kiribati with 10 litre Solvatten units that use solar energy to purify water in just a few hours. Each unit can provide 6,000 litres of safe drinking water every year.
    – Install 75 litre solar powered distillation tanks at pre-schools, schools and community centres – giving children access to clean safe drinking water every day.
    – Build rainwater harvesting infrastructure (roofs and gutters) to capture precious, albeit infrequent rain.
    “We would also like to thank the teams and crew at Celebrity Treasure Island for making this possible, and all the New Zealanders who continue to support our work.”
    For every dollar donated, the New Zealand government provides an additional $4

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor orders flags to half-staff in honor of Sen. John Arthur Smith

    Source: US State of New Mexico

    SANTA FE – Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham has ordered all flags in the state of New Mexico to be flown at half-staff in honor of former state senator John Arthur Smith, who passed away on October 7. Flags will be lowered from sunrise on October 18 until sundown on October 21.

    Smith served the people of New Mexico for over three decades, representing District 35—which includes Dona Ana, Hidalgo, Luna, and Sierra Counties—from 1989 until his retirement in 2020. As the longtime chairman of the New Mexico Senate Finance Committee, he earned the respect of colleagues across the political spectrum, guiding the state’s fiscal policy with prudence and ensuring that funds were used wisely to benefit New Mexicans.

    Smith championed wise state investments in healthcare and education, particularly in his hometown of Deming, where he advocated for improved hospitals and schools. He also played a pivotal role in the creation of the Early Childhood Education and Care Department trust fund, laying the foundation for universal, high-quality childcare in New Mexico and serving as a national leader in early childhood education reform.

    “Senator John Arthur Smith’s dedication to our state, his financial expertise, and his commitment to improving the lives of New Mexicans will leave a lasting legacy,” said Lujan Grisham. “It is fitting to honor his life of public service through this period of mourning.”

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Castro Applauds FAA Plan to Approve Direct Flights from DCA to SAT

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Joaquin Castro (20th District of Texas)

    October 16, 2024

    SAN ANTONIO — Today, Congressman Joaquin Castro (TX-20) released the following statement after the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) announced a plan to grant San Antonio International Airport (SAT) one of the ten new direct flights slots from Washington D.C.’s Ronald Reagan National Airport (DCA). Castro, a longtime advocate for direct flights from SAT to DCA, worked to secure the additional direct flights as part of the FAA Authorization Act of 2024.

    “For years, I’ve been working with my colleagues in the San Antonio delegation to get our city a direct flight to the nation’s capital. Today’s announcement is a long-sought win for travelers, businesses, and the military families that call our city home. When finalized, these direct flights will make it easier for San Antonio’s business sector, including our growing cybersecurity industry, to work directly with the federal government to support job growth and economic development at home. I appreciate the Biden-Harris administration’s decision to bring these flights to San Antonio and I look forward to welcoming new travelers to my hometown.”

    Currently, 96 American cities with smaller populations than San Antonio offer direct flights to DCA, including Tulsa, Akron, Cedar Rapids (IA), and Pensacola (FL).

    Congressman Castro has worked consistently to secure federal funding and resources to expand San Antonio International Airport and make the airport an attractive partner for more direct flights. After working to pass the Bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act with approximately $1.2 billion for Texas airports, he was quickly able to secure $20 million of those funds for the construction of a Ground Load Facility at SAT to improve airport operations and capacity. As part of the FY2023 federal appropriations bill, he additionally secured $1.5 million to allow the airport to purchase three electric passenger buses and assorted infrastructure to transport passengers from the car rental facility and lower the airport’s carbon footprint.



    Previous Article

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Continuing care: Ministers LaGrange and Nixon

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    “We are committed to ensuring Alberta has a continuing care system that provides Albertans with the health care, personal care services and accommodations they need to support their independence and quality of life.“Establishing a new provincial health agency dedicated to continuing care gives us the opportunity to broaden our efforts to care for all Albertans who need daily supports and services in continuing care homes, supportive living or through home and community care.“Minister of Seniors, Community and Social Services Jason Nixon will become the sector minister for the new continuing care provincial health agency.  “As the oversight minister, and the minister responsible for the health care system in Alberta, I will ensure Alberta Health works alongside the Ministry of Seniors, Community and Social Services as we continue to deliver these critical services and build towards the standing up of the new continuing care agency. Alberta Health will continue to assist in determining how services will be delivered in the future.”

    Adriana LaGrange, Minister of Health

    “As the new sector minister for continuing care, I am committed to ensuring seniors, people with disabilities, people facing homelessness and other vulnerable Albertans are supported with comprehensive, wraparound services that meet both their medical and non-medical needs.“This change will not interrupt service delivery or impact funding in any way.“We will be looking to ensure all aspects of continuing care – including home care and community care – can be expanded in innovative ways to support people as their situations and needs evolve.“We will be looking to make the system easier to access. A new, unified approach will include a new, user-friendly online platform to connect partners and Albertans to continuing care supports and enable people to request the services they need directly.“And we won’t be doing this in isolation – we are establishing a transitional committee that will help guide the transformation, and we will be consulting with key organizations, operators and experts.”With the experience of health care professionals and social service specialists, we will develop services that work together, while continuing to support Albertans in choosing where and how they would like to live.”

    Jason Nixon, Minister of Seniors, Community and Social Services

    Related information

    • Refocusing health care in Alberta

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: CONGRESSMAN BISHOP ANNOUNCES NEW ELIGIBILITY FOR HURRICANE HELENE FEMA DISASTER RELIEF

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Sanford D Bishop Jr (GA-02)

    THOMASVILLE, Ga. – Congressman Sanford D. Bishop, Jr. (GA-02) announced that several counties in Georgia’s Second Congressional District were added to the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s (FEMA) Major Disaster Declaration for Hurricane Helene. The counties include:

    • Thomas County – Individuals and households are now eligible to apply for financial and direct services (FEMA Individual Assistance)
    • Dooly County, Grady County, Mitchell County, and Thomas County – local governments are now eligible for FEMA Public Assistance for repairs or replacement of disaster-damaged facilities (roads, bridges, water control facilities, public buildings and equipment, public utilities, parks, recreational, other facilities)

    More information about these developments as well as federal, state, and local resources in response to Hurricane Helene are available on Congressman Bishop’s website at https://bishop.house.gov/resources-services/hurricane-preparedness.

    Before and since Hurricane Helene hit Georgia and the southeast United States, Congressman Bishop has been in contact with the White House, U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and FEMA. He and his staff have also been in regular contact with the Georgia Governor’s office, Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency (GEMA), and nongovernmental partners as they prepared for and responded to fallout from the hurricane.

    “I have worked with federal, state, and local officials to make sure our efforts are coordinated to expedite assistance to our families, farmers, business owners, cities, and counties,” said Congressman Bishop. “Working with Congressman Austin Scott, Senators Ossoff and Warnock, the entire Georgia Delegation, and our Georgia state government partners we helped guide President Biden, Vice President Harris, and other federal emergency agencies through our Georgia communities that were hit hard by this storm.”

    “Seeing the impact, first-hand, is crucial in understanding the challenges we face and appreciating the resilient spirit of Georgians as we rebuild,” added Congressman Bishop. “I will continue working to assure that Congress provides the needed resources to Georgia communities impacted by this hurricane.”

    In response to Hurricane Helene, Congressman Bishop, along with his congressional colleagues urged President Biden to issue an expedited major disaster declaration for Georgia counties significantly impacted by the storm. That request was honored within 24 hours. He also sent a letter to U.S. House and U.S. Senate leadership asking for appropriations to be made available as soon as possible to fully fund unmet agricultural disaster relief needs.

    Over 8,500 federal personnel have been on the ground, working side-by-side with state and local officials, to help survivors get what they need to begin their recovery. As of today, FEMA has approved over $860 million, which includes $507 million in assistance for individuals and communities affected and over $351.5 million for debris removal and activities to save lives, protect public health and safety and prevent damage to public and private property.

    Georgia residents that need emergency or immediate assistance should contact GEMA via https://gema.georgia.gov/hurricane-helene or apply for financial assistance at disasterassistance.gov. These websites provide updated information on resources and shelters.

    Georgia residents that need farm or ranch assistance can reach out to the USDA either by calling 877-508-8364 or visiting https://www.farmers.gov. For personalized assistance for your individual operation, use the Disaster Assistance Discovery Tool (https://www.farmers.gov/protection-recovery/disaster-tool) to determine eligibility.

    Local governments requiring rural development assistance, such as housing, sewer, and water, can reach out to USDA at https://www.rd.usda.gov/resources/rural-development-disaster-assistance.

    Poultry and livestock producers affected by Hurricane Helene can get assistance with emergency animal mortality disposal through USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) Environmental Quality Incentives Program. You can learn more at https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/programs-initiatives/eqip-environmental-quality-incentives or by contacting your local USDA Service Center (find yours here by visiting https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/contact/find-a-service-center).

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Hoyle, Wyden, Merkley Announce $25 Million in Funding for Port of Coos Bay Intermodal Project

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore)

    October 16, 2024

    WASHINGTON, DC – Today, U.S. Representative Val Hoyle and U.S. Senator Ron Wyden and U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley, announced $25,018,750 in federal funding for the Pacific Coast Intermodal Port (PCIP) Terminal Planning Project. The investment comes from the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Nationally Significant Multimodal Freight and Highways Projects (INFRA) grant program.  

    “I am thrilled today that the U.S. Department of Transportation has awarded over $25 million for the Port of Coos Bay Intermodal Project,” said U.S. Representative Val Hoyle. “This project has the potential to bring over 8000 jobs to Southwest Oregon’s coastal communities and to strengthen our nation’s supply chain. Today’s announcement brings us one step closer to rebuilding the South Coast as an economic engine for the state and introduces more pathways to the middle class.” She added, “I would like to thank Secretary Buttigieg, the U.S. Department of Transportation, the White House, and my partners in Congress for their support and persistence to help bring this project closer to fruition.”

    “Today’s $25 million announcement takes a significant step forward to landing this Port of Coos Bay project that will ultimately generate thousands of good-paying jobs on the South Coast and extend huge economic and environmental benefits throughout Oregon,” said U.S. Senator Ron Wyden. “There’s still more work to be done, and I am committed to keep pressing the case along with Congresswoman Hoyle and Senator Merkley to provide all the federal investment this project has earned and fully deserves.”

    “This $25 million federal investment from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law is a historic win for Oregon’s rural South Coast and our entire state and is the kickstart that Coos Bay’s transformative container port project needs. This project will create thousands of good-paying union and permanent local jobs, boost the economy, and help address bottlenecks in the national supply chain, while cutting greenhouse gas emissions,” said U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley. “I have long championed this critical project alongside Representative Hoyle, Senator Wyden, Port leadership, and a diverse community of stakeholders, and together we advocated to the highest levels of the Biden administration to ensure this federal commitment. Today’s win moves the Port of Coos Bay forward toward the vision of becoming the first fully ship-to-rail port facility on the West Coast and is a testament to the power of collaboration and never giving up—the Oregon Way.”

    In addition to creating thousands of jobs in a rural area that has been too often overlooked, the PCIP project will benefit the nation’s supply chain by easing congestion at West Coast Ports. It will also be the nation’s first ship-to-rail port on the West Coast, meaning the facility will not need to rely on trucks to move cargo. The project is also anticipated to use renewable energy sources to provide green electricity, which will allow for the use of electric-powered cargo handling equipment, vehicle charging, and onshore power. The Port will be fitted with electric power plug-ins to power ships at berth (known as “cold ironing”) during the process of unloading.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Mother and Son Sentenced for Illegally Importing Endangered Wildlife

    Source: United States Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF)

    PHOENIX, Ariz. – Raymond Anthony Rabago Montoya, 23, of Phoenix, was sentenced on October 2, 2024, by United States District Judge Dominic W. Lanza to 12 months and one day in prison, followed by three years of supervised release. He also was ordered to pay $3,000 to the Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund. His co-defendant and mother, Griselda Guadalupe Montoya-Gastelum, 50, of Sonora, Mexico, was previously sentenced by Judge Lanza on July 8, 2024, to 18 months in prison, followed by three years of supervised release. Montoya-Gastelum pleaded guilty to Conspiracy to Violate the Lacey Act on April 25, 2024, and Rabago Montoya pleaded guilty to the same offense on April 26, 2024.

    Defendants coordinated the illegal importation of exotic and protected wildlife from Mexico, including tigers, panthers, monkeys, and exotic parrots, into the United States, concealed through ports of entry, for financial gain. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service began investigating the defendants in August 2022 after receiving a report from a person who believed that the four exotic parrots they had purchased from Rabago Montoya had been illegally imported. This report and further investigation led to the January 2023 execution of a search warrant at the home of Carlos Castro, where a tiger cub, an alligator, 12 snapping turtles, 6 tortoises, and boxes of other reptiles were found. Snapchat messages revealed that Montoya-Gastelum and Castro discussed illegal exotic animal sales and trades. Castro was subsequently convicted of Unlawful Sale of Wildlife in the Arizona Superior Court, Maricopa County.

    After federal agents observed advertisements for the sale of spider monkeys on Facebook, they conducted two undercover purchases of monkeys from the defendants for $6,000 each, one in April and one in May 2023. In June and August 2023, Rabago Montoya was encountered by law enforcement with dozens of endangered parrots concealed in his vehicle, many of which were deceased. Defendants were indicted on September 12, 2023, and arrested the following day.

    “Once again we see Arizonans profiting from the concealment of contraband through the Nogales and Lukeville Ports of Entry,” said United States Attorney Gary Restaino. “Here, in lieu of controlled substances we have mistreated protected animals: and the sentences imposed send strong messages both of deterrence and of the importance of robust environmental protections.”

    “Wildlife trafficking is illegal and immoral, as countless animals that are taken from the wild are smuggled across borders in inhumane conditions,” said Edward Grace, Assistant Director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Office of Law Enforcement. “In the case of spider monkeys, many trafficked animals perish due to inadequate care, while those that survive face a life of captivity. We hope this case emphasizes that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and our partners will continue to ensure that those engaged in wildlife trafficking are brought to justice.”

    U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Homeland Security Investigations, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Customs and Border Protection’s U.S. Border Patrol, and the Pinal County Sheriff’s Office conducted the investigation in this case. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Stuart Zander and Lisa Jennis, District of Arizona, Phoenix, handled the prosecution.
     

    CASE NUMBER:           CR-23-01305-PHX-DWL
    RELEASE NUMBER:    2024-138_Montoya et al.

    # # #

    For more information on the U.S. Attorney’s Office, District of Arizona, visit http://www.justice.gov/usao/az/
    Follow the U.S. Attorney’s Office, District of Arizona, on X @USAO_AZ for the latest news.

    2024-138_Montoya et al.

    MIL Security OSI –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Felon Convicted of Possessing Firearms and Transporting Stolen Vehicle

    Source: United States Bureau of Alcohol Tobacco Firearms and Explosives (ATF)

    A man with fifteen prior felony convictions who used a stolen motorcycle to drive from Minnesota to Iowa and broke into a Winneshiek County home to steal firearms and other items pled guilty on October 15, 2024, in federal court in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

    Steven Michael Current, age 58, from Canton, Minnesota, was convicted of one count of possession of firearms as a felon and one count of interstate transportation of a stolen motor vehicle.

    In a plea agreement, Current admitted that he had fifteen prior felony convictions, and on September 26, 2022, he broke into a rural Winneshiek County home and stole eight firearms.  Current also admitted that he drove a stolen 2004 Harley Davidson Motorcycle from Canton, Minnesota, to the burglary scene in Iowa on September 26, 2022.  This motorcycle was stolen from a home in Rochester, Minnesota, on June 9, 2022.  Current admitted that, during the burglary, he dropped two unscratched Minnesota lottery tickets from his pocket.  Current was identified by images captured on a home camera system, and by images from the Minnesota store where Current purchased the lottery tickets.      

    This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. On May 26, 2021, the Department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results.

    Sentencing before United States District Court Chief Judge C.J. Williams will be set after a presentence report is prepared.  Current remains in custody of the United States Marshal pending sentencing.  Current faces a possible maximum sentence of 25 years’ imprisonment, a $500,000 fine, and3 years of supervised release following any imprisonment.

    The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Patrick Reinert and was investigated by Winneshiek County, Iowa, Sheriff’s Office, Fillmore County, Minnesota, Sheriff’s Office, and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.  

    Court file information at https://ecf.iand.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/login.pl.

    The case file number is 23-CR-02050.

    Follow us on X @USAO_NDIA.

    MIL Security OSI –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Cooper Visits Yancey and Mitchell Counties to Survey Storm Damage as Federal, State, Local and Non-profit Partners Continue Unprecedented Response to Helene

    Source: US State of North Carolina

    Headline: Governor Cooper Visits Yancey and Mitchell Counties to Survey Storm Damage as Federal, State, Local and Non-profit Partners Continue Unprecedented Response to Helene

    Governor Cooper Visits Yancey and Mitchell Counties to Survey Storm Damage as Federal, State, Local and Non-profit Partners Continue Unprecedented Response to Helene
    mseets
    Wed, 10/16/2024 – 17:27

    Today, Governor Roy Cooper traveled to Pensacola and Bakersville where he was joined by FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell, NCDPS Secretary Eddie Buffaloe and Commander of the State Highway Patrol Colonel Freddie Johnson to assess storm damage, witness relief operations and speak with those affected by Helene. In Pensacola, the Governor visited a supply distribution center operating at the Pensacola Volunteer Fire Department. In Bakersville, the Governor joined Mayor Charles Vines for a walking tour to see areas that sustained damage during the storm.

    “Today I was on the ground in Pensacola, Yancey County and Bakersville, Mitchell County, talking with folks affected by Helene and seeing how hard people are working to rebuild from this storm,” said Governor Cooper. “The people of Western North Carolina are strong, and we will keep working with them to surge resources and to recover and rebuild their communities.”

    The Major Disaster Declaration requested by Governor Cooper and granted by President Biden now includes the following North Carolina counties and designations which were added Tuesday night:

    • Cabarrus, Cherokee, Forsyth, Graham, Iredell, Lee, Nash, Rowan, Stanly, Surry, Union, and Yadkin counties for Individual Assistance,
    • Cabarrus, Cherokee, Forsyth, Graham, Iredell, Lee, Nash, Rowan, Stanly, Surry, Union and Yadkin counties for debris removal and emergency protective measures, including direct Federal assistance, under the Public Assistance program.
    • Swain County for permanent work (already designated for Individual Assistance and assistance for debris removal and emergency protective measures, including direct Federal assistance, under the Public Assistance program.

    The Major Disaster Declaration already includes 27 North Carolina counties (Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Avery, Buncombe, Burke, Caldwell, Catawba, Clay, Cleveland, Gaston, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, Lincoln, Macon, Madison, McDowell, Mecklenburg, Mitchell, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, Transylvania, Watauga, Wilkes and Yancey) and the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.

    Also today, Governor Cooper issued an emergency Executive Order authorizing the North Carolina Department of Commerce, Division of Employment Security, to increase the amount of weekly unemployment payments available to North Carolinians in the aftermath of Hurricane Helene. As a result of this Order, weekly unemployment benefits will increase from a maximum of $350 a week to a maximum of $600 a week. Prior to the executive order, many low-income and part-time workers would have received less than the $350 weekly maximum. To ensure that these workers receive necessary benefits in the wake of Helene, the order will also increase benefits by $250 a week (up to the $600 cap) for all eligible workers. This order is tied to the State of Emergency for Hurricane Helene, and will remain in effect until the end of the Emergency or until it is rescinded.

    Law enforcement is working to ensure the safety of responders amid reports of threats and misinformation. FEMA officials remain in communities and are conducting operations to help people impacted by these storms recover as quickly as possible following reports of threats on the ground. Governor Cooper has directed the Department of Public Safety to work with local law enforcement to identify specific threats and rumors and coordinate with FEMA and other partners to ensure the safety and security of all involved as this recovery effort continues.

    North Carolina National Guard and Military Response

    Nearly 3,400 Soldiers and Airmen are working in Western North Carolina. Joint Task Force- North Carolina, the task force led by the North Carolina National Guard is made up of Soldiers and Airmen from 12 different states, two different XVIII Airborne Corps units from Ft. Liberty, a unit from Ft. Campbell’s 101st Airborne Division, and numerous civilian entities are working side-by-side to get the much-needed help to people in Western North Carolina.

    National Guard and military personnel are operating 12 aviation assets and approximately 1,200 specialized vehicles in Western North Carolina to facilitate these missions. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is helping to assess water and wastewater plants and dams. Residents can track the status of the public water supply in their area through this website.

    FEMA Assistance

    More than $102 million in FEMA Individual Assistance funds have been paid so far to Western North Carolina disaster survivors and approximately 181,000 people have registered for Individual Assistance. More than 2,000 households are now housed in hotels through FEMA’s Transitional Sheltering Assistance.

    Approximately 1,400 FEMA staff are in the state to help with the Western North Carolina relief effort. In addition to search and rescue and providing commodities, they are meeting with disaster survivors in shelters and neighborhoods to provide rapid access to relief resources. They can be identified by their FEMA logo apparel and federal government identification.

    North Carolinians can apply for Individual Assistance by calling 1-800-621-3362 from 7am to 11pm daily or by visiting www.disasterassistance.gov, or by downloading the FEMA app. FEMA may be able to help with serious needs, displacement, temporary lodging, basic home repair costs, personal property loss or other disaster-caused needs.

    Help from Other States

    More than 1,500 responders from 38 state and local agencies have performed 142 missions supporting the response and recovery efforts through the Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC). This includes public health nurses, emergency management teams supporting local governments, veterinarians, teams with search dogs and more.

    Beware of Misinformation

    North Carolina Emergency Management and local officials are cautioning the public about false Helene reports and misinformation being shared on social media. NCEM has launched a fact versus rumor response webpage to provide factual information in the wake of this storm. FEMA also has a rumor response webpage.

    Efforts continue to provide food, water and basic necessities to residents in affected communities, using both ground resources and air drops from the NC National Guard. Food, water and commodity points of distribution are open throughout Western North Carolina. For information on these sites in your community, visit your local emergency management and local government social media and websites or visit ncdps.gov/Helene.

    Storm Damage Cleanup

    If your home has damages and you need assistance with clean up, please call Crisis Cleanup for access to volunteer organizations that can assist you at 844-965-1386.

    Power Outages

    Across Western North Carolina, approximately 11,000 customers remain without power, down from a peak of more than 1 million. Overall power outage numbers will fluctuate up and down as power crews temporarily take circuits or substations offline to make repairs and restore additional customers.

    Road Closures

    Some roads are closed because they are too damaged and dangerous to travel. Other roads still need to be reserved for essential traffic like utility vehicles, construction equipment and supply trucks. However, some parts of the area are open and ready to welcome visitors which is critical for the revival of Western North Carolina’s economy. If you are considering a visit to the area, consult DriveNC.gov for open roads and reach out to the community and businesses you want to visit to see if they are welcoming visitors back yet.

    NCDOT currently has approximately 2,000 employees and 900 pieces of equipment working on approximately 7,000 damaged road sites.

    Fatalities

    Ninety-five storm-related deaths have been confirmed in North Carolina by the Office of Chief Medical Examiner. This number is expected to rise over the coming days. The North Carolina Office of the Chief Medical Examiner will continue to confirm numbers twice daily. If you have an emergency or believe that someone is in danger, please call 911.

    Volunteers and Donations

    If you would like to donate to the North Carolina Disaster Relief Fund, visit nc.gov/donate. Donations will help to support local nonprofits working on the ground.

    For information on volunteer opportunities, please visit nc.gov/volunteernc

    Additional Assistance

    There is no right or wrong way to feel in response to the trauma of a hurricane. If you have been impacted by the storm and need someone to talk to, call or text the Disaster Distress Helpline at 1-800-985-5990. Help is also available to anyone, anytime in English or Spanish through a call, text or chat to 988. Learn more at 988Lifeline.org.

    If you are seeking a representative from the North Carolina Joint Information Center, please email ncempio@ncdps.gov or call 919-825-2599.

    For general information, access to resources, or answers to frequently asked questions, please visit ncdps.gov/helene.

    If you are seeking information on resources for recovery help for a resident impacted from the storm, please email IArecovery@ncdps.gov.

    ###

    Oct 16, 2024

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressional Coal Caucus Co-Chairs’ Statement on SCOTUS’ Decision to allow the EPA to implement their Power Plant Rule

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

    October 16, 2024

    Washington, D.C. – The Congressional Coal Caucus Co-Chairs Representatives Carol Miller (R-WV), Dan Meuser (R-PA), Harriet Hageman (R-WY), and Morgan Griffith (R-VA) released a statement on the Supreme Court’s decision to allow the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to implement their power plant greenhouse gas rule. 

    “While we are disappointed in the Supreme Court’s decision not to stay the EPA’s power plant greenhouse gas rule, we are hopeful that the Washington D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals will overturn this illegal rule. This rule unfairly targets coal and gas-fired power plants and furthers the Biden-Harris administration’s far left agenda. The United States produces energy cleaner and more efficiently than any other developed nation in the world, and stifling American energy production will only empower our adversaries. As the co-chairs of the coal caucus, we will do everything in our power to stop this illegal rule from hurting American workers and consumers,” said the Congressional Coal Caucus Co-Chairs. 

    The Congressional Coal Caucus is the voice of American coal communities in Congress. It represents both eastern and western mining states, along with all of the types of coal produced throughout the country.

    Background:

    • The Congressional Coal Caucus joined in sending a bicameral resolution highlighting how unrealistic these emissions requirements are on existing coal-fired power plants and newly constructed gas-fired power plants. This attempt to force the closure of power plants that supply America’s baseload electricity was previously tried under President Obama and overturned by the Supreme Court in West Virginia v. EPA.
    • The EPA finalized the Power Plant Rule on April 25th, 2024, which will create a devastating impact on our electric grid, current coal-fired power plants, new natural-gas fired power plants, and U.S. energy production.
    • These rules are in violation of the Clean Air Act and will increase energy prices, the cost of living for Americans, and will shut down the majority of U.S. coal producers by 2032.

    ### 

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Kansas Man Sentenced for Issuing Race-Based Death Threats to Multiple Black People

    Source: United States Attorneys General 1

    A Kansas man was sentenced today to 80 months in prison for threatening multiple Black people in and around the Wichita area, and for interfering with the housing rights of a white woman because he believed that she was dating and associating with Black people.

    Austin Schoemann, 31, of Wichita, previously pleaded guilty to two counts of interference with federally protected activities, two counts of interstate threats and one count of interference with housing. In connection with the plea, Schoemann admitted that, in July 2022, he brandished a firearm and used racial slurs in order to threaten two Black juveniles while they were entering a QuikTrip gasoline station, and that he also used his firearm to threaten a Black adult who intervened to support the juveniles. Schoemann also acknowledged that, from January 2022 through August 2022, he interfered with the federally protected housing rights of a white woman by making threats to hurt or kill any Black people who visited her home. Schoemann further admitted that he sent videos and messages to the woman’s family members and others in which he repeatedly threatened to shoot and kill Black people.

    “Racially-motivated threats of violence cannot be tolerated in our society,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “For months, this defendant made threats to a woman and her family that he would shoot and kill any Black person who visited the woman’s home. After that campaign of terror, the defendant called two Black children racist slurs, and threatened the children and a Black woman with a gun when they happened to cross paths at a convenience store. This case should make clear that the Justice Department will not rest in bringing the perpetrators of racially-motivated hate crimes to justice.”

    “Perpetrators of hate crimes inflict pain upon victims in furtherance of a larger goal of breeding fear and divisiveness within our communities,” said U.S. Attorney Kate E. Brubacher for the District of Kansas. “The Justice Department is standing against racial violence and threats of racial violence by prosecuting offenders, but we need the public’s help.  The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Kansas encourages those who are victims of or witnesses to hate crimes to report these incidents to law enforcement.”

    The FBI Kansas City Field Office and Wichita Police investigated the case.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney Aaron Smith for the District of Kansas and Trial Attorneys Thomas Johnson and Erin Monju of the Civil Rights Division’s Criminal Section are prosecuting the case.

    MIL Security OSI –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Action to boost jobs and investment for clean energy in Scotland

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 2

    UK government accelerates “skills passport” and with Scottish Government strikes deal for Great British Energy to work with Scottish public bodies.

    • Energy Secretary visits Aberdeen as UK and Scottish Governments partner to make billions available in funding across the UK including for Scotland’s clean energy industry

    • UK and Scottish Governments strike new deal for Great British Energy to work with Scottish public bodies to support clean energy supply chains

    • UK Government also confirms the speeding up of delivery of a ‘skills passport’ to support oil and gas workers to move into offshore wind

    The UK Government will take decisive action to help make available billions of pounds in funding across the UK including for Scotland’s clean energy industry, the Energy Secretary has pledged ahead of a visit to Aberdeen.  

    The Energy Secretary will visit Aberdeen with Great British Energy Chair Juergen Maier for the first time since the city was announced as the headquarters for the UK’s new publicly-owned energy company. 

    Following the visit, the UK Government is set to sign a new agreement with the Scottish Government today (Thursday 17 October) to boost Great British Energy’s ambitions to support clean energy supply chains and infrastructure.  

    By developing partnerships with Scottish public bodies in the clean energy sector – including Crown Estate Scotland, the Enterprise Agencies and the Scottish National Investment Bank – Great British Energy can deliver quickly and effectively, avoid duplication, and deliver maximum impact and value for money from Scottish projects. 

    Scotland has a strong pipeline of opportunities and is at the forefront of floating offshore wind development, and Great British Energy is in prime position to help accelerate this work by harnessing expertise in project development, investment and work with local communities. 

    Great British Energy has £8.3 billion of funding over this Parliament, and work is underway with the energy industry in Scotland to use this for public investment to create new private sector jobs and drive projects in Scotland.  

    Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said:  

    Scottish energy workers will power the United Kingdom’s clean energy future- including in carbon capture and storage, in hydrogen, in wind, and with oil and gas for decades to come as part of a fair transition in the North Sea.  

    Unlike in the past we’re also working closely with the Scottish Government with a new agreement to ensure our publicly owned company Great British Energy is primed to accelerate clean energy investment in Scotland.

    This follows the announcement in the summer of a partnership between Great British Energy and The Crown Estate, covering England, Wales and Northern Ireland, which could support the leveraging of up to £30-60 billion of private investment. 

    Ahead of the visit, the UK Government has also confirmed that oil and gas workers will be supported to move more easily into careers in the renewable sector, including offshore wind, as the UK government accelerates delivery of a ‘skills passport’.  

    The passport is an industry led initiative overseen by RenewableUK and Offshore Energies UK and supported by the UK and Scottish Governments which will align standards, recognise transferable skills and qualifications and map out career pathways for suitable roles. A digital tool for workers is set to be piloted by January 2025.   

    The UK Government’s Office for Clean Energy Jobs is working closely with Skills England to support other British workers on the energy transition, which by 2030 could create hundreds of thousands of new jobs across the UK.  

    Many of the skills required for the transition already exist, with research from Offshore Energies UK showing that 90% of oil and gas workers have transferable skills for offshore renewable jobs.  

    Acting Cabinet Secretary for Net Zero and Energy Gillian Martin said:  

    I welcome this collaborative agreement committing Great British Energy to work with our public bodies to maximise investment into Scotland.  Scotland already has a strong pipeline of clean energy and supply chain opportunities, is at the forefront of floating offshore wind development, and has a depth of knowledge and experience on community & local energy. We look forward to working with Great British Energy to ensure it delivers real benefits for the people of Scotland and a just energy transition.  

    To make sure that no offshore energy workers are left behind, the Scottish Government provided initial funding of £3.7 million between 2022 – 2024 for the development of the industry-led Skills Passport.

    Secretary of State for Scotland Ian Murray said:  

    The UK government will support our world class, world leading offshore workforce with the recognition they deserve and support the transition to renewable jobs in the future.  

    This is an area the UK Government and Scottish Government can and should work in partnership to deliver for Scotland and harness the potential we have to truly lead the world in renewables jobs. That’s why we have set out to reset the relationship between Scotland’s two governments to deliver better outcomes for Scots.  

    It should be easier to switch between oil and gas and renewables work offshore. The present situation, where training in one industry isn’t recognised in the other, cuts off opportunities for oil and gas workers. The fact some workers are paying out of their own pockets is scandalous. 

    We need to cut that red tape and deliver a skills passport that allows offshore workers to move flexibly back and forth between both industries in the years and decades to come.

    Great British Energy Chair Juergen Maier said: 

    The clean energy transition is a huge opportunity for Scotland, which is already at the cutting edge of technology like floating offshore wind, and Great British Energy is well positioned to help accelerate the development of key supply chains and infrastructure. 

    By working closely with the Scottish Government, alongside The Crown Estate in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, we can help to drive forward investment and create jobs across the country.

    RenewableUK’s Executive Director of Offshore Wind Jane Cooper said:  

    The upsurge in offshore wind jobs over the course of this decade and beyond creates excellent opportunities for highly-skilled oil and gas workers to bring their valuable experience to the clean energy sector. We’re working closely with our colleagues at Offshore Energies UK, and the UK and Scottish Governments, to make that transition as smooth as possible across all parts of the energy industry. The Energy Skills Passport is a great example of what we can achieve together and we’ll continue to look for other potential areas of work that can further support the transition of workers between sectors.

    David Whitehouse, Chief Executive Officer, Offshore Energies UK comments: 

    This package of announcements contains significant measures for firms, their workers and their supply chains across the UK. The skills passport is an important part of the toolkit industry is assembling in recognition of the integrated nature of the energy landscape. Those working in our domestic oil and gas sector have powered the country for the last fifty years and will play a critical role in our energy future. The sector is committed to working in partnership with government to leverage our industrial strengths to deliver a managed transition that creates opportunities for people and communities around the country.

    In Wales, the UK Government is already discussing how Great British Energy could work in partnership with their publicly-owned renewable energy developer, Trydan Gwyrdd Cymru, and other public bodies to deliver on shared priorities with the Welsh Government.  

    The UK Government is also working closely with the Northern Ireland Executive on opportunities for Northern Ireland, to help accelerate the clean energy transition across the United Kingdom. 

    Yesterday (Wednesday 16 October) the Energy Secretary also confirmed that Liz Ditchburn has been appointed as Chair of the North Sea Transition Authority, which regulates and influences the oil, gas, carbon storage and offshore hydrogen industries. Liz is a highly experienced public sector leader and will help to deliver the UK Government’s plans for a phased, responsible and prosperous energy transition in the North Sea. 

    Notes to editors

    The skills passport will show how these offshore workers’ skills and qualifications can be recognised by employers across various sectors, facilitating their smooth transition into the renewable energy sector. It will identify where oil and gas health and safety standards will be recognised in the offshore wind sector and map out different career pathways into the wind industry.   

    See figures on clean energy jobs.

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    Updates to this page

    Published 17 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Joint press conference, Bendigo

    Source: Australian Treasurer

    LISA CHESTERS:

    It’s also an important milestone in Bendigo here, particularly in this particular precinct to officially open the Medicare Urgent Care Clinic and I’m so proud to have the Treasurer of Australia, a good friend of mine, Jim Chalmers here to do that official opening. I acknowledge also too all of our amazing health professionals that are here, our doctors, our nurses, our administrators, people who do bookings, we’ve got [indistinct] here. Thank you very much for joining us the CEO of Bendigo Health, the Primary Healthcare Network they’ve also joined us here today. And I know that we are having a press conference in the middle of what is a very busy day here at Bendigo Primary Care. Thank you for hosting us.

    This has been a long time coming for us here in Bendigo. As I was telling the Treasurer, it was the former Treasurer, Wayne Swan, who actually funded the initial funding for this building to be built. It was built under the former Labor government’s GP Super Clinic funding model and the idea back then, and I’m telling the former federal Member for Bendigo’s story Steve Gibbons, and [indistinct] who also served on the board for a while with the Primary Healthcare Network. The vision was for always for this to be a Medicare‑funded Urgent Care Clinic. The ability to do that after‑hours care, the ability to bulk bill where it wasn’t about your credit card, it was about your Medicare card, making sure that everybody in our postcode could have access to that primary care that they needed after‑hours.

    So, it took us a long time to get here. There was a period when we were in Opposition where we had funding cuts to Medicare, it made it very hard for doctors to bulk bill and very hard for clinics to stay open. But the investment that we’ve seen in Medicare has really turned that around and has brought us to where we are today. So, it’s a proud moment for us in Bendigo. It’s a proud moment for our health precinct, but it’s a really proud moment for us in federal Labor. We’re committed to Medicare and we’re reinvesting and strengthening Medicare each and every day, which is why I’m really proud to introduce the Treasurer of Australia here to officially open the Medicare Urgent Care part of this clinic. So welcome back to Bendigo, Jim.

    JIM CHALMERS:

    Thanks, Lisa. It’s very kind of you, Lisa, to invite me here and to introduce me to all of these healthcare super stars at the Urgent Care Clinic here in Bendigo for a very, very proud day for your wonderful local community, and for all of the people who are providing just first‑class healthcare for people of this community and the surrounding areas as well. It’s a real honour to be here as Treasurer. It’s a real honour to have funded so many of these Urgent Care Clinics around Australia. In our 3 Budgets we found $720 million to fund Urgent Care Clinics – 76 of them so far – including this one that we open today.

    One of the things that is really terrific about Urgent Care Clinics is the way that they help healthcare providers in communities like this one work as a team, take pressure off the local hospital, work with each other to provide the best standard of care that we can for the families and pensioners and people of communities like this one here in Bendigo.

    This one’s got a terrific vibe to it, a really amazing vibe to it, because you can tell the teamwork that makes it all work here in Bendigo. As I understand it, more than 800 presentations already. It’s only been open for a month or so, taking the pressure off Bendigo Hospital and providing a bit of peace of mind too for local families and local pensioners and others, knowing that they’ve got another option that they can come to when they’re looking for Healthcare and where they can stay out of the emergency department if that’s possible.

    Most importantly a massive thank you to all of you. It’s a really proud day, a really exciting day. Before we unveil the plaque, I just have to make some broader points as well. We’ve also got a national announcement that’s happening today and so I just wanted to touch on that.

    One of our motivations when it comes to the billions of dollars we’re investing in strengthening Medicare, and the $720 million we’re investing as part of that in Urgent Care Clinics is helping people with the cost of living. Out‑of‑pocket health costs are one of the big pressures on household budgets, and so what we’re trying to do as an Albanese Labor government is to try and take some of the sting out of these cost‑of‑living pressures that we know people are feeling right around Australia in communities like this one.

    So out‑of‑pocket health costs, but also the tax cuts for every taxpayer, energy bill relief for every household, cheaper medicines, cheaper early childhood education, which is a real passion of Lisa’s, more rent assistance, getting wages moving again, fee‑free TAFE, strengthening Medicare, all of these things are about easing cost‑of‑living pressures. Easing cost‑of‑living pressures are the number one priority of the Albanese Labor government. That’s why we’re investing so substantially in easing out‑of‑pocket health costs, and that’s one of the reasons why Urgent Care Clinics are so important.

    But today we’re taking another step as well. Today we are announcing the next steps in banning unfair trade practices. A lot of businesses in our community do the right thing and they’ve got nothing to worry about, but we’re also seeing the troubling escalation in dodgy trading practices, whether it’s the way that people find it hard to get out of subscriptions, the way prices increase while people are making a transaction, the farming of people’s information, dodgy marketing practices like pretending that there’s a limited time that people can buy something online.

    There are a whole bunch of practices that we are worried about, which put additional pressure on people when it comes to the cost of living. So, we want to ban unfair trading practices. We’ve put in train the steps to do that today. Yesterday we talked about our intention, our willingness to ban surcharges on the use of debit cards. People shouldn’t have to pay huge fees to use their own money. Yesterday’s announcement was about debit cards, today we’re talking about banning unfair trading practices. This is all part of our efforts to deal with or address these cost‑of‑living pressures that people are under.

    From time‑to‑time people will say to us: how big a difference can you make in Medicare out‑of‑pocket health costs? How big a difference can you make with all of this competition policy, empowering the ACCC, banning surcharges on debit cards, cracking down on dodgy trading practices? The truth is we are coming at this cost‑of‑living challenge from every conceivable angle. Not with one or 2 policies, but the highest priority of this Albanese government dealing with cost‑of‑living pressures that we know people are facing in housing, in out‑of‑pocket health costs and in other areas as well. The highest priority for our government, and that’s why these Urgent Care Clinics are so important as well, as part of our efforts.

    Okay, tricky questions to Lisa, easy questions to me. I’m in your hands.

    JOURNALIST:

    I was just wondering if I start on just why – or if there is any particular urgent need that you’ve seen for this place [indistinct] prior to this opening? Was there an urgent need?

    CHESTERS:

    Yeah, definitely. This is one of the clinics that was funded for a short period by the state Labor government, and then our Health Minister – Mark Butler – let me know that negotiations were on that the federal government would take it over as part of its Medicare Urgent Care Clinic. We know that there had been pressure on EDs. Any parent that’s had to go up there with an urgent issue knows the wait times. Locally we knew it anecdotally, we also knew it through the data coming through that there was a lot of pressure on EDs. We also knew because the previous government cut so much money out of Medicare – and froze the Medicare rebate and froze the Medicare incentive – that doctors weren’t doing after‑hours services any more. So, the need was there, the data was there and that’s why I’m really proud that our government has prioritised this clinic, coming on board with the federal fund and becoming a federally funded Medicare Urgent Care Clinic.

    CHALMERS:

    I really want to pay tribute to Lisa Chesters here. Strengthening Medicare is one of Lisa’s reasons for being and one of our government’s reasons for being, and we know from Lisa’s advocacy for this local community just how important it is to build an Urgent Care Clinic here to take some of the pressure off the hospital. There’s an urgent need in a lot of communities around Australia for more bulk billing options and more Medicare‑supported doctors, and that’s why we’re building 76 of these and providing $720 million to keep them running. It’s obvious in communities like these the need, and we’re delighted to see the way that all the different parts of the health system are working together to make it a success already. It’s only been open for a month, but already hundreds of people who would otherwise be in the ED at the hospital are coming here to get first‑class treatment and that’s a great thing.

    JOURNALIST:

    Just on another local health issue, and then we can go to other matters. We got word earlier this month that Bendigo Health has flagged job cuts at some of the hospitals, 5,000‑odd staff. The Australian Nursing Midwifery Federation says there’s a major restructure but they understand 9 full‑time clinical nursing jobs will be lost. What do you say to those staff who believe there isn’t any investment into expanding the health workforce by the federal government?

    CHESTERS:

    It’s one of those ones we’ll have to take on notice. It really is a state government matter but what I will say is that I know that the state and federal government are constantly in discussions about how can we better fund our health and hospitals sector. It is something that I know that they’re working through methodically. They’ve engaged the unions in doing this in a fair and transparent process. It’s not new, but it really is one that the state government is working closely with the Bendigo Health on.

    JOURNALIST:

    What’s the difference between a federal Urgent Care Clinic and the state‑run Priority Care Clinic?

    CHESTERS:

    The federal government pays the bills for a Medicare Urgent Care Clinic. That’s essentially the big difference. Which is our role, it’s primary healthcare and it fits within the broader GP, Medicare scope of practice.

    JOURNALIST:

    And how – what does it work when a patient comes in? How do they present? What’s the process?

    CHESTERS:

    You can call, the majority of patients are encouraged to make a phone call to book themselves in. They first are triaged by the nurse or the team that answers the call. If it’s considered to be emergency, they’re encouraged to call an ambulance, 000, or go straight to EDs. But if it’s more an urgency care matter they make an appointment for them. They don’t have to be sitting here; they’re sent a reminder message and then just encouraged to be here about 20 minutes prior to the appointment and I’m hoping I got that right. Not that I’ve had to use the service yet. It’s because we use online, because we’re all used to using the phones and the booking system, it’s well organised. On the busier days it’s 10 til 10. Critical being that after‑hours after‑school opportunity, over the weekends. And it’s a service that’s proving to be very popular because it is where you can get a bulk‑billed GP appointment within 24 hours of needing one.

    JOURNALIST:

    Just on the announcement today, regarding putting an end to hidden in‑ticket purchases, like you promised to consider debit card surcharges, this is a promise that will mean there’ll be consultation down the road. When it’s possible your government may not be in power next year, why not just act now rather than push [indistinct] down the track?

    CHALMERS:

    Consultation is a good thing. We want to make sure that as we crack down on excessive fees and we crack down on dodgy trade practices that we’re doing that in a way that looks after the interests of consumers and small businesses, and makes sure that there aren’t unintended consequences. We’ve shown a real enthusiasm, a real willingness, a real commitment to crack down on the sorts of fees and practices which risk ripping people off. We have empowered and funded the ACCC to do their really important work and we’ve flagged the next steps that we’re taking when it comes to this. But I don’t think we should see consultation as a bad thing, consultation’s a good thing. We’re a government that works through issues in a considered and a methodical but ultimately in an impactful way. We know that people are at risk here when it comes to anti‑competitive behaviour and dodgy behaviour, and fees that they increasingly can’t afford, and so we’re acting on their interests and we’re making sure that we get it right.

    JOURNALIST:

    Look, I just want to confirm which industries the government are wanting to focus on in this crackdown. Are you looking at live music? There’s been some discussion about gym subscriptions.

    CHALMERS:

    We’re talking about a wide range of practices but including subscription traps – where it’s really hard to get out of a subscription, that happens across a number of different sectors. Drip pricing where there are hidden fees throughout the stages of a purchase. There are manipulative online practices, including where there’s a sense of urgency like a countdown timer to make people make rash decisions about what they want to buy. We’re worried about dynamic pricing which is where, during the actual course of the transaction the price keeps escalating. We’re worried about businesses which ask customers for too much information, in some cases much more than is necessary to buy the good or the service. We’re also worried about those instances where it’s hard to contact a business if you haven’t got the product that you were looking for or you had some other question after sale. These are the sorts of issues that we’re looking at. That obviously has relevance to a whole range of sectors – particularly those available for online purchasing. We’re not taking a very specific sector‑specific approach here. We’re looking at all of these potentially dodgy practices and making sure we can rub them out where we can.

    JOURNALIST:

    Given lock‑in subscriptions are a fundamental part of some business models, like gyms, how will you stop them, those businesses from being shuttered down completely?

    CHALMERS:

    We obviously want to see a healthy, profitable business sector but those profitable businesses can’t be making profits on the back of dodgy practices. Again, as a huge supporter of the business community in this country – and particularly the small business community, we want to make sure that there aren’t unintended consequences for the vast majority of businesses who do the right thing. But when some are tempted to do the wrong thing, we need to crack down on that. We need to make sure, when it comes to subscriptions, it can’t be incredibly easy to sign up to a subscription and incredibly difficult to get out of it. We get a lot of feedback about that. We want to work with the ACCC to crack down on that too.

    JOURNALIST:

    Look, do you think the timing of the PM’s decision to buy a new home is poor given an election is coming up? Many Australians are struggling to pay their mortgage or rent. I mean, look, I understand that the PM – people can buy property wherever they want, but I mean here, and particularly in Bendigo, we have a huge homelessness problem. The list of people waiting for social housing are at a 1,000 in this local area. I mean, what do you say especially to those who are sleeping rough and may see coverage of the PM buying such an expensive house on the Central Coast and, you know, wondering what this government’s on about?

    CHALMERS:

    I understand. The government’s highest priority is easing the cost of living and a big part of that is our housing agenda. Too many people are sleeping rough. Too few people can find an affordable place to rent or buy. It is becoming too hard for young people in particular to get a toehold in the housing market, and these are the motivations behind the $32 billion that we have invested through 3 Budgets in building more homes, to make it easier for more Australians to find a place to rent or find a place to buy. This is our highest priority, cost of living, and housing is an important part of that.

    When it comes to the decisions that the Prime Minister has made about his own personal arrangements, I do understand that there’s a lot of interest in it. We do understand, I think collectively, that Prime Ministers decisions like this are scrutinised. I would say a couple of things about that. First of all, I work incredibly closely with the Prime Minister. I work as closely, if not more closely than anybody else. I have seen first‑hand for myself his 100 per cent focus on easing the cost of living and building more homes for Australians and making the right economic decisions for the right economic reasons. I cannot fault for one second his commitment to easing the cost‑of‑living pressures that people confront and building more homes as the important part of that.

    He has made a decision with Jodie that they want to have a place which is closer to Jodie’s family. I think a lot of Australians would understand that aspect of it. Certainly, I understand that aspect of it. But his focus is on easing cost‑of‑living pressures for the whole country, I’ve seen that laser‑like focus for myself up close.

    JOURNALIST:

    In terms of the Urgent Clinics here Bendigo and other areas, is it going to help the healthcare system or is it just going to shuffle everything around and not take the pressure off?

    CHALMERS:

    It’s already taking pressure off the emergency department at Bendigo Hospital. One of the heartening things just meeting some of the professionals who have joined us today, some of them on their day off – we appreciate that – one of the things that really strikes you about this Urgent Care Clinic, and I’ve seen it in others, is the way that the whole health system, the whole local health ecosystem, works together to deliver great outcomes for people, often at the most stressful times.

    Lisa and I know, as parents, it’s so stressful when your kid is sick or your mum, and you want to make sure that there are options and the heartening thing, the inspiring thing frankly, about the work in clinics like this one and emergency departments is the way that the place is working together. I just heard really quite a remarkable thing about where, if one place is quieter than the other, there are calls between different parts of the health system to make sure that we’re getting people through. That’s exactly as we want it. That means that every single cent of these hundreds of millions of dollars we’re investing in Urgent Care Clinics is money well spent.

    JOURNALIST:

    Those that don’t have access to these Urgent Care Clinics, as such, what do you say to them if they’re struggling to get into their GPs, their EDs are full, you know, what do they do?

    CHALMERS:

    We’re building as many as we can afford to build. There are 76 of these now, that’s what $720 million is buying. Every community would like one and we are doing our best to put one in as many communities as we can – here in Bendigo, in my hometown, right around Australia. We know that there’ll always be a need for more investment in health. We’re enthusiastic about that, billions and billions of dollars of investment in strengthening Medicare to help ease out‑of‑pocket costs to give people peace of mind when they’re sick or when their loved ones are sick, and people should expect that to continue for as long as there’s a federal Labor government working closely with state governments like this one.

    JOURNALIST:

    Australian birth rates declined once again. Is this becoming a problem for our economy?

    CHALMERS:

    That has been a long‑term trend and there are reasons for that, including good reasons for it. As I’ve said before, it can be expensive to have kids, and people make their own decisions for their own reasons. My job, working closely with Lisa and other colleagues, is to make sure that people can have the choice of whether to have more kids or not. Our investment in early childhood education, our investment in healthcare, paying superannuation on paid parental leave, all of these decisions that we’ve taken as a government working closely with Katy Gallagher, the Women’s Minister and others, is about making it easier for people to have more kids if they want to. But we know that affordability is a big part of that challenge and that’s why our cost‑of‑living help is so important as well.

    JOURNALIST:

    Is the government talking to Westpac about the repeated outages that we’ve been seeing this week, affecting mobile and online banking? I believe there’s been 3 already this week for customers of Westpac and St George, BankSA.

    CHALMERS:

    We have been speaking with Westpac about these really concerning developments. They have had a number of outages in recent days, and when something like that happens it enlivens the cybersecurity part of our government. In the last couple of years we’ve gotten much better at working with private sector entities like Westpac and others who are the subject of various – whether it’s denial of service or other kinds of interruptions. But we do work closely, whether it’s with the banks or the other businesses and organisations, to make sure that when something happens like this, as unwelcome as it is, that we’re responding when we can and that also we’re keeping each other informed as things develop.

    JOURNALIST:

    Does more need to be done to secure crucial services for bank customers? I mean this is not unusual.

    CHALMERS:

    Unfortunately, this is a sign of the times. We are seeing more of these sorts of interruptions in an economy which is becoming increasingly digital and where the technological changes so fast we are at risk of some of these sorts of interruptions. We’ve got a colleague now, Andrew Charlton, who’s been appointed to oversee cybersecurity in particular, working closely with Tony Burke. Our whole government sees it as an important part of our responsibilities to make sure that we catch up and keep up with developments in this space because we don’t want to see people inconvenienced by these kinds of interruptions.

    JOURNALIST:

    I have just one more question, sorry. Just on the economy and from a business perspective, here in Bendigo, there’s been significant issues in the CBD for some time: for‑lease signs on shop fronts, particularly in the Hargreaves Mall. We hear from businesses and ABC Central Vic, that your government is not doing enough for small businesses. What do you say to people in regional communities like Bendigo who despair in the fact that they may not be able to sustain businesses or even keep shop fronts open until the end of the year?

    CHESTERS:

    The problem with the Bendigo Mall is a perpetual problem that we’ve had for decades, and anybody who says otherwise hasn’t lived in Bendigo for a long time. It’s long been identified that the challenges sometimes relate to the landlords and who they’re trying to attract into the businesses in the mall. We’ve also had some other issues in the mall. There’s quite a bit of construction going on. But this is one of those ones which local chambers of commerce, Be.Bendigo has worked with the City of Greater Bendigo to bring them all together to talk about ‘what’s the vibe? What do we want? Who do we want to prioritise to be our businesses?’ It really starts with the landlords, it starts with Be.Bendigo and it starts with local government. In terms of the federal government support that we have with small business, we’re doing what we can, whether it be the instant asset write‑off, whether it be helping people with their payroll, whether it be investing where we can, supporting people with skills, helping with apprentices, making sure that we’ve got the skilled workers that we need coming through our TAFE. This is the federal government making sure that we stay in our lane and our responsibility. This issue comes up every federal election, every state election, every local government election. But the answer is the same. It comes back to what are the landlords, what’s the vision, how are they working with our local chambers of commerce about who we want to attract in businesses in the CBD.

    JOURNALIST:

    I mean, Bendigo itself are driving hard the tourism dollar here. We’ve seen major events here. We are seeing a comedy festival here. People are travelling to this town in particular and wanting to come to Bendigo to see the lovely, you know, Bloom Festival and a couple of days ago it was beautiful. But seeing – walking a couple of shops – blocks down the street, it’s not such a great story. I mean, I think that there obviously needs to be a whole – is there not a whole – isn’t there more – shouldn’t there be more approach to ensure that the city is at least pleasurable for people to visit?

    CHESTERS:

    It is and people love coming to Rosalind Park. What the state government has done in reducing train fares to get people into town’s been fantastic. Any day on the weekend I love getting stopped and people asking me for directions because it means they’re not local. It means we’ve got people coming in. Last weekend was a big example of that. This weekend coming. The town is abuzz on the weekend and that’s what you want to have happen. I’m sure the landlords will get together with Be.Bendigo and City of Greater Bendigo to work it out. We are seeing a revival and a change of shops coming into the mall. This is one of those issues where if you get too many people involved in the discussion, it takes longer.

    MIL OSI News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Durbin Announces New Resources To Address Child Lead Poisoning Risks In Chicago

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Illinois Dick Durbin

    10.16.24

    CHICAGO – Today, U.S. Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL) joined officials from CountyCare, Cook County Health, and the Cook County Department of Public Health to unveil new proactive measures taken by all five Medicaid managed care insurance companies (MCOs) in Illinois in response to a request by Durbin and U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth (D-IL) to address lead poisoning risks to children in Chicagoland.

    In March, Durbin and Duckworth had urged MCOs to step up to address lead poisoning risks to children in Chicago by preemptively sending drinking water test kits, water filters, home visitors, and educational materials to all enrolled children in the city. As a result of these letters, CountyCare, the largest MCO in Cook County, agreed to the Senators’ request and sent educational materials as well as a coupon redeemable at local Jewel-Osco grocery stores for a free water filter to nearly 90,000 families in Cook County. The other four MCOs made similar commitments, including providing grants to primary care providers for lead tests and to local community organizations to distribute free water filters to low-income families.

    “Children continue to face the unacceptable risk of lead poisoning in the very place they call home,” said Durbin. “I sent letters with Senator Duckworth to the five Medicaid insurance companies in Illinois, calling upon them to take new, proactive measures to address this dire health risk. I applaud CountyCare for being the first to step up and implement innovative strategies to prevent the threat of lead exposure for low-income children. Today’s announced initiatives from all five insurance companies will support children’s health and provide some peace of mind for parents as we continue to work towards replacing lead pipes in our community.”

    “We appreciate the leadership of Senator Durbin and Senator Duckworth in addressing the number one environmental hazard that is 100 percent preventable. Collaboration is key in tackling public health issues, and efforts like this are crucial in preventing such problems whenever possible. Let’s continue working together to build healthier and safer communities,” said LaMar Hasbrouck, MD, Chief Operating Officer of the Cook County Department of Public Health. 

    “There is no safe level of lead exposure for children. Lead can cause serious and permanent health problems, including irreversible brain damage,” said Dr. Erik Mikaitis, Interim CEO of Cook County Health, which includes CountyCare, the largest Medicaid Managed Care Plan serving residents of Cook County. “I am grateful to Senator Durbin and Senator Duckworth for their leadership on this issue. By creating these new outreach strategies, we are strengthening our collaborative, multi-faceted approach to prevent, mitigate and treat lead exposure and keep children safe.”

    Today’s announcement comes during Children’s Health Month and ahead of National Lead Poisoning Prevention Week.  The Senators’ letters to CountyCare, Aetna, BlueCross, Meridian, and Molina followed the finding earlier this year that 129,000 Chicago children—68 percent of those younger than age six—were potentially exposed to lead in their home drinking water, due to the presence of lead pipes—given that Chicago has the highest number of lead pipes of any city in the country.  

    Medicaid, the federal-state health insurance program for low-income individuals, has a comprehensive benefit for kids—requiring all covered children to receive lead screenings at ages one and two. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) states that there is a specific and presumptive risk of lead exposure for children on Medicaid. Further, if a child tests for an elevated blood lead level, states are required to provide diagnostic and treatment services.

    Last week, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced its final Lead and Copper Rule Improvements (LCRI) to address lead in drinking water, which requires 100 percent lead pipe replacement in 10 years among other requirements to protect public health. In Illinois, the state reported more than one million lead service lines (LSLs), the most per capita in the nation, and replacing LSLs statewide is estimated to cost $11.6 billion. Illinois has received more than $578 million from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law earmarked for LSLs from EPA. The Natural Resources Defense Council found that Illinois will benefit the most from lead pipe remediation, with up to $89 billion in avoided health costs.

    Earlier this year, Durbin reintroduced his Lead-Safe Housing for Kids Act, a bill to require the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) to update its lead poisoning prevention measures to reflect modern science and ensure that families and children living in federally assisted housing are protected from the devastating consequences of lead poisoning. 

    -30-



    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Grassley Emphasizes Value ESOPs Bring Local Economies at IA-CEO Conference

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Iowa Chuck Grassley

    POLK COUNTY, IOWA – U.S. Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), a senior member and former chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, today delivered a keynote address at the 2024 Iowa CEO Employee Ownership Conference in Ankeny.

    Grassley discussed the future of our nation’s business landscape as the baby boomer generation enters retirement, as well as his longstanding support for Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs): “[…T]his tax-advantaged tool has helped boost productivity, create wealth among the workforce, expand prosperity and grow civic roots in communities across the country,” he said. 

    Download photos HERE. Grassley’s prepared remarks follow. 

    Iowa Center for Employee Ownership (IA-CEO)

    Employee Ownership Conference

    FFA Enrichment Center/DMACC Campus, Ankeny

    Wednesday, October 16, 2024

    Good morning. It’s good to be here with all of you.

    Thank you, Randy, for your work with the University of Northern Iowa (UNI), a school near and dear to my heart. And thank you for the invitation to speak about another subject near and dear to my heart: building prosperity for Iowans across our state.

    Now, typically, I wouldn’t be able to join you in person on a weekday in the middle of October. But since we’re in the thick of a presidential election year, Congress is out of session until after November 5th.

    As you know, we’re also in the thick of harvest season. This week, my son and grandson are on our family farm in New Hartford running the combine and hauling grain from the fields. 

    I’m the second generation of our fourth-generation family farm, so I understand what weighs on the minds of Iowans looking to pass on the reins of a farm or small business. Although, a farmer never really retires.

    Like most family farms in Iowa, a lion’s share of our small- and medium-sized businesses are owned by baby boomers. These operations are expected to change ownership in the next five to 10 years. Finding the future stewards of these farms and businesses is top of mind for communities across Iowa. 

    It will have tremendous impact on the tax base, population, school enrollment, jobs, economic vitality and social capital of the local and regional community.

    This year, I completed my 44th year holding question-and-answer sessions with Iowans in all 99 counties in our state. Two issues that regularly come up at my meetings with small businesses and manufacturers are workforce shortages and employee retention. 

    The workforce and succession planning are top of mind for so many small businesses in Iowa, including those of you here in this room. As the baby boom generation prepares to pass the torch, a sizeable segment of our state’s economy will hinge on the strategic transition of farms and businesses. 

    Changing ownership of a business the same family has owned and operated for decades is complicated. Potential buyers and sellers need to navigate a maze of issues, including complex family dynamics, taxes, financing and more. 

    A decade or so ago, the impending demographic shift was often referred to as the Silver Tsunami. Since 2011, roughly 10,000 Americans turn 65 every day. I would suggest the so-called tsunami has delivered rolling waves of changes, instead of catastrophic disruptions to health care, housing, transportation and community services. I attribute that to forward-thinkers, like those of you attending today’s conference. 

    We’ve seen across many sectors of the economy that not all of the demographic disruptions hit the fan at once. 

    That’s partially because people are staying in the workforce longer, by choice or financial necessity. 

    Like I said earlier, a farmer never really retires. The same often goes for a family-run business, perhaps due to the fact owners don’t always have a viable succession plan or buyer. Having a succession plan can give families, landowners and small businesses much-needed peace of mind. After putting years of sweat and investments into their farm or business, many Iowans are what we call cash-poor and asset-rich.  

    As we look ahead to this era of transition in business ownership, it’s important for leaders in government, business and academia to collaborate. Together, we can anticipate the challenges and embrace the economic opportunities this demographic shift will present. 

    From that standpoint, I applaud the efforts of your organization, in partnership with my alma mater, UNI.  

    I want to commend you for taking a proactive approach. You’re grabbing the bull by the horns to identify the obstacles and possibilities that lie ahead. By engaging stakeholders and raising public awareness, your efforts can help expand local economic vitality and prosperity for generations to come. 

    You understand that a majority of the businesses owned by baby boomers will close for good if a viable buyer isn’t found. Usually, a viable buyer is restricted by the sale price, or there simply isn’t a buyer available at all. 

    Let’s not underestimate the benefits your efforts will bring workers and the community. Day in and day out, workers help build and grow a company. When workers are able to capture financial equity in their employing business, it fosters an ownership culture that strengthens morale and reinforces roots in the community. 

    These dynamics sow the seeds for broader advantages for nearby schools, civic clubs, volunteer fire departments, places of worship, and more.

    If you think about it, your mission kills two birds with one stone. On the one hand, you provide an off-ramp for business owners to pull wealth from their business, monetizing the retirement nest egg they’ve feathered for decades. 

    On the other hand, you’re expanding ownership opportunity and offering a piece of the financial pie to the workforce, empowering employees to share in the fruits of their own labor. 

    As a former chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, fostering economic growth is central to my philosophy on tax policy. That includes my support for federal tax advantages for Employee Stock Ownership Plans. 

    Everything these days goes by an acronym, but “ESOPs” have been around for decades.  

    A century ago, big corporations like Proctor & Gamble, J.C. Penney and Sears Roebuck provided stock ownership through a tax vehicle Congress added to the federal tax code in 1921. 

    The iteration we have today sprang up in the 1950s, for the purpose of transitioning ownership of a company to its employees. 

    ESOPs were formally recognized in law in 1974 thanks to the efforts of Senator Russell Long – one of my predecessors at the helm of the Senate Finance Committee.  

    An ESOP allows companies to use IRS tax-qualified plans as a tool for business succession, and as a workplace empowerment tool to foster an ownership culture. They provide the seller better options to manage tax liabilities from the sale of the business rather than what many consider tax confiscation at the point of sale. 

    Senator Long once declared ESOPs would be the perfect elixir to the economy. In fact, he used the term “Geritol,” if anyone here remembers that once-popular vitamin supplement. 

    The good news is ESOPs have outlasted Geritol. For decades, this tax-advantaged tool has helped boost productivity, create wealth among the workforce, expand prosperity and grow civic roots in communities across the country. 

    When Congress passed the Tax Reform Act of 1984 that included tax-free, roll-over treatment, Washington cleared the path for privately held businesses to transfer ownership, unlocking a burst of economic activity and new ownership to the next generation of employees. 

    To this day, ESOPs are a preferred tool for business succession in America.  

    From my platform on the Senate Finance Committee, once again, I will have a front row seat at the tax policymaking table in the new Congress. With 2025 will come a major tipping point for the U.S. economy, as lawmakers and a newly elected president confront a tax cliff. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act that I helped shepherd into law in 2017 is set to expire at the end of next year.  

    This package enacted across-the-board tax cuts for every American taxpayer. As a result, businesses and families kept more of their hard-earned money in their pockets. 

    That means Iowans got to save, spend and invest more of their own money. If the 2017 Trump tax cuts expire, we will say good-bye to trillions of dollars in tax breaks. 

    The 2017 tax law also unlocked opportunities for small business across our state – the engines of the nation’s economy. Whether a business was structured as a “C” corporation or subchapter “S,” the law lowered tax rates on their income. This tax cut applies to ESOPs with partial employee-ownership. 

    The law lowered the maximum corporate tax rate from 35 percent to a single marginal rate of 21 percent, empowering businesses to expand, hire more people or raise wages. 

    Just as importantly, for pass-through businesses the law lowered tax rates across the board and created a new 20 percent business income deduction. 

    Together, those reforms shrunk the top federal income tax rate from 39.6 percent to 29.6 percent. Farmers and small businesses operate on tight margins. These tax breaks make a tremendous difference on the bottom line.  

    I’m always on the lookout for ways to continue to build on the success of ESOPs. A provision I’ve long cosponsored to make ESOPs a more attractive option for S corporations was incorporated into the SECURE 2.0 Act, which Congress passed at the end of 2022. 

    I’ve written tax policy in the U.S. Senate for more than four decades and counting. I’ll let you in on a secret: When you tax something – anything – you get less of it. 

    Tax laws influence purchase decisions on items ranging from cars and clothes to farm machinery and investments. Just consider back-to-school tax-free shopping weekends. Or how states with no state income tax attract people from high-tax states. 

    On the flip side, high taxes on cigarettes, gambling and alcohol aim to limit those behaviors. Tax incentives operate the same way, informing research and development, college savings and homeownership. 

    I’m sure many of you want to know what’s going to happen on those expiring tax cuts in 2025. That crystal ball will get some clarity after November 5th. 

    In closing, I want you to know I agree ESOPs are a key instrument for communities to foster economic prosperity across our state. 

    Ownership is a core principle in America’s promise of prosperity — and freedom itself — that our nation’s Founders enshrined in our Constitution. 

    In my 99 county meetings, I’ve seen good things happening and economic vitality thriving in communities with ESOP-structured businesses. 

    ESOPs can provide that pathway to prosperity.  

    Business owners preparing to retire can get tax-advantaged cash in their pockets, after many years of building their business. 

    Employees can build equity in the company and find greater satisfaction on the job. 

    With your advocacy, communities can realize more opportunities to keep valued businesses thriving and tap into the ownership culture that attracts a dynamic workforce. 

    Thank you again for inviting me to speak to you today. I look forward to continuing this conversation and welcome your feedback. I’m happy now to open up the floor to questions. 

    -30-

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Cassidy Convenes Louisiana Energy Security Summit, Highlights Louisiana Investments and Future Economic Potential

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Louisiana Bill Cassidy

    BATON ROUGE – U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA) hosted the “Louisiana Energy Security Summit: Unleashing American Abundance in a Changing Global Landscape” at the Capitol Park Museum in Baton Rouge, bringing together leaders from the federal, state, and local government levels, industry, the research community, and elsewhere. 

    In his keynote address, Cassidy highlighted the geopolitical challenges confronting U.S. manufacturers operating internationally. Adversaries exploit lax environmental and labor standards to gain an unfair trade advantage over American companies. 
    “We are working to preserve the jobs we have in Louisiana and create more in the future,” said Dr. Cassidy. “We can do this by requiring that trade with countries like China be fair, and not allow them to pollute the atmosphere while we’re working to clean it.”
    “The Foreign Pollution Fee Act is a trade policy that rewards U.S. businesses and workers while penalizing foreign polluters. It creates a level playing field for American companies on the global stage. It’s a win for American workers, the U.S. economy, our national security, and the environment,” added Dr. Cassidy.
    The summit featured ten panels which explored protecting U.S. interests from unfair trade practices, Louisiana’s low emissions manufacturing advantage, and the role of natural gas in strengthening U.S. geopolitical influence. Panelists included presidents and CEOs from Entergy, First Solar, Buzzi UnicemUSA, Orsted, and Aluminum Technologies, former Trump administration officials, and leaders from Louisiana trade associations and major energy and Fortune 500 companies. 

    “We have the talent, we have the resources, we have the God-given location here in Louisiana with the Mississippi River, the Gulf, so much pipeline running underneath us, some of the greatest ports in the country, we’ve got all those tools. We just need to make sure we marry those with good policy,” said Louisiana Association of Business and Industry President Will Green. “If we do, we will be unstoppable here in Louisiana.”
    “This is an energy economy here in Louisiana. We send it out, and we bring it in. It’s a manufacturing powerhouse. This state embodies what we can achieve again, if we open our alliances and we shut down our adversaries,” said Former Chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality James Connaughton.
    “There is a market disadvantage for U.S. producers and manufacturers,” said Former Energy Deputy Secretary Mark Menezes. “This is basic fairness. As a consumer you have choices to make on products. You can choose a U.S.-made product or something that is imported. The choice is easy. And as a consequence of making that choice you address the fundamental fairness of this, you recognize the importance of the U.S. role, and you incentivize U.S. manufacturers to come back from China.”
    “Everyone in this room knows China has not relaxed. They have increased production and are flooding the market,” said Huntsman Corporation Vice President of Global Communications and Government Affairs Kevin Gundersen. “We have gotten away from [our] competitive advantage, and we have leaned into our disadvantage as a country. I think there needs to be a course correction.”  
    “We already import more than 26 million tons [of cement] per year. All of the countries where we import cement—they don’t have all the environmental regulations we do. They don’t have all the laws. They don’t have all the regulation, so we already have a disadvantage,” said Buzzi UnicemUSA President and CEO Massimo Toso. “So we do appreciate the effort by Senator Bill Cassidy and his colleague to put in place a carbon border adjustment mechanism.”
    “Non-market actors overseas, subsidies, and unfair trade practices make it cheaper to produce goods than companies like ourselves,” said CF Industries Vice President for Public Affairs Linda Dempsey. “We’ve got the best workers and the best standards, but the second piece really is flipping the switch on the trade rules.”
    “The cheap solar panels that are brought in from China don’t have the same standards of which we hold ourselves accountable to creating an unfair blade,” said First Solar CEO Mark Widmar. “Between American ingenuity, passion, creativity, and know-how, we can outcompete, but we need fairness.”
    Background
    Cassidy and U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) introduced their Foreign Pollution Fee Act to level the playing field with Chinese manufacturing and expand American production.
    Earlier this month, he released the 3rd episode of Bill on the Hill, where he highlights his Foreign Pollution Fee Act and discusses China’s growing economy and military coming at the expense of the American worker. After hearing fellow Americans share their concerns, Cassidy presented his plan to address the nexus between economic development, national security, and the environment. His Foreign Pollution Fee Act would even the playing field while holding China accountable.
    He penned editorials in Foreign Affairs, The Washington Times, and jointly in the USA Today Network discussing the geopolitical threat that China poses to U.S. global standing. Cassidy also joined Greta Van Susteren on Newsmax to discuss his foreign pollution fee, noting the competitive advantage China receives from intentionally ignoring environmental standards. 
    Last Spring, the Louisiana Senate and House of Representatives unanimously adopted a resolution urging Congress to pursue an industrial manufacturing and trade policy to counter competition from China. Learn more here. 
    Last Congress, Cassidy released a landmark energy policy outline in response to the Biden administration’s assault on domestic energy. The outline details how we can successfully reset U.S. energy policy, including Cassidy’s plan for an Energy Operation Warp Speed to cut permitting red tape and unleash domestic energy and manufacturing. In support of this complete vision and in addition to the Foreign Pollution Fee Act, Cassidy led Republican colleagues in opposition to a domestic carbon tax and introduced the first comprehensive judicial reform for permitting bill. He also pushed back on disastrous proposals from the Biden administration to limit development in the Outer Continental Shelf with the introduction of the WHALE Act and the Offshore Energy Security Act of 2023.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Senator Hassan Visits Semiconductor Manufacturing Business in Salem

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for New Hampshire Maggie Hassan

    SALEM – U.S. Senator Maggie Hassan toured GPD Optoelectronics in New Hampshire on Wednesday, a local business that manufactures specialized semiconductors with applications in aerospace, defense, telecommunications, and other industries. The visit underscored the impact of the bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act, which Senator Hassan helped develop and pass into law, on boosting semiconductor production in the United States and increasing demand for American-made components, like those made by GPD Optoelectronics.

    “It was great to visit GPD Optoelectronics today, which is a prime example of the New Hampshire businesses that are driving American innovation,” said Senator Hassan. “GPD Optoelectronics’s work to produce specialized semiconductors not only continues to create excellent and well-paying jobs in New Hampshire, it also allows us to outcompete countries like China and strengthens our national security by ensuring that we meet our defense and infrastructure supply chain needs here at home.”

    Senator Hassan has been a leader in supporting small businesses and fostering innovation. She worked across the aisle to develop and pass into law the bipartisan CHIPS and Science Act, which is strengthening our economic and national security. The law is helping to support our supply chains, lower costs, and ensure that America can outcompete countries like China by investing in research and manufacturing here at home. Additionally, Senator Hassan has led efforts to cut taxes for innovative businesses and startups, and she successfully advocated for doubling the refundable R&D tax credit for small businesses and startups in the Inflation Reduction Act, which is now law.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: October 16th, 2024 Heinrich Announces Legislation to Build More Homes in New Mexico, Highlights Over $1 Million He Secured for Housing Development in Santa Fe

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for New Mexico Martin Heinrich

    SANTA FE, N.M. — U.S. Senator Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, met with leaders from Santa Fe Habitat for Humanity and Homewise to announce his New Homes Tax Credit Act, legislation to build more housing and renovate homes for working families, and see how the $1,100,000 he secured through the Appropriations process is helping Santa Fe Habitat for Humanity develop land and build housing for working families.

    U.S. Senator Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) announces his New Homes Tax Credit Act in Santa Fe, October 16, 2024. 

    “New Mexico is facing a housing shortage. The driving factor behind it is clear: we need to build more homes to meet demand. I authored the New Homes Tax Credit Act and secured federal funding to build more housing, so we can give more working families in our state a shot at owning a home. I will continue fighting to increase housing supply and put homeownership within reach for more New Mexicans,” said Heinrich.

    Heinrich recently introduced the New Homes Tax Credit Act, legislation that will provide tax credits to incentivize new investments and additional resources for single-family home construction and renovations for working families.  

    As Chairman of the U.S. Joint Economic Committee (JEC), Heinrich released a report on housing supply in America, which found that underbuilding, restrictive zoning policies, and home financing hurdles have caused the supply of starter homes to shrink and prices to rise. High interest rates and mangled supply chains have also contributed to increased home prices. Heinrich’s legislation will address the lack of housing inventory for individuals and families whose incomes are up to 120 percent of the area median income (AMI), particularly including in areas where middle-income families have historically been priced out. In Albuquerque, Santa Fe, and Las Cruces, New Mexico, for example, this added housing inventory would benefit families with annual incomes of up to $103,680, $109,800, and $78,960, respectively. 

    Additionally, Heinrich secured $1,100,000 through the Fiscal Year 2024 Appropriations process for Santa Fe Habitat for Humanity to develop land into a mixed-income development focused on building 25 to 30 housing units for working families. In total, Heinrich has secured $14,500,000 in Congressionally Directed Spending (CDS) for northern New Mexico to address the housing shortage.

    For a list of Heinrich’s actions to lower housing costs and tackle the housing shortage in New Mexico, click here.  

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Readout of Principal Deputy National Security Advisor Jon Finer’s Trip to  Haiti

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    Principal Deputy National Security Advisor Jon Finer traveled to Port-au-Prince, Haiti on October 16 to meet with senior Haitian officials, and leadership of the Multinational Security Support (MSS) mission and the Haitian National Police (HNP) to drive progress on security and governance efforts. Mr. Finer was joined by a senior U.S. delegation from the Department of State, the Department of Defense, the U.S. Agency for International Development, and the National Security Council.  During separate meetings with members of the Transitional Presidential Council (TPC) and Prime Minister Garry Conille, Mr. Finer expressed condolences for the tragic loss of innocent life in the recent gang-led massacre in Pont-Sondé and reiterated the U.S. commitment to support Haitian-led efforts to restore security and pave the way toward free and fair elections.  Mr. Finer also commended the TPC for the transition of the presidency to President Leslie Voltaire on October 7, while noting that all Haitian officials must continue to put country over party and deliver on their promise to work for all Haitians.
    In his meeting with MSS and HNP leadership, Mr. Finer underscored our continued commitment to rally international support and provide the tools necessary to restore security and rule of law in Haiti.  To ensure that the MSS has the resources that it requires, the United States is by far the largest contributor to support the MSS mission to date.  Following the Haitian government’s request to the UN Security Council to authorize a UN peacekeeping mission to take over from the MSS at an appropriate time, Mr. Finer reassured Haitian officials of U.S. support for such a transition.
    The United States remains the largest contributor of humanitarian aid to the Haitian people through our UN and NGO partners, while also supporting the renewal of the HOPE/HELP trade preferences program as soon as possible to spur greater economic prosperity in Haiti.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Kansas Man Sentenced for Issuing Race-Based Death Threats to Multiple Black People

    Source: US Justice – Antitrust Division

    Headline: Kansas Man Sentenced for Issuing Race-Based Death Threats to Multiple Black People

    A Kansas man was sentenced today to 80 months in prison for threatening multiple Black people in and around the Wichita area, and for interfering with the housing rights of a white woman because he believed that she was dating and associating with Black people.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Learn How to Salvage Disaster-Damaged Family Treasures

    Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency

    Headline: Learn How to Salvage Disaster-Damaged Family Treasures

    Learn How to Salvage Disaster-Damaged Family Treasures

    RALEIGH, N.C. –  As North Carolina households recover from Tropical Storm Helene, FEMA’s preservation teams will be in Disaster Recovery Centers throughout the state to demonstrate how to safely handle and salvage your damaged items. These specialists will show you how to salvage storm-damaged family photos, artwork, textiles, media and other family treasures. 

    Save Your Treasures Program Schedule

    • Oct. 17 – 20: McDowell County Disaster Recovery Center: McDowell County Senior Center, 100 Spaulding Rd., Marion, N.C. 28752 from 8:30 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.
    • Oct. 19 – 21: Buncombe County Disaster Recovery Center: A.C. Reynolds High School, 1 Rocket Dr., Asheville, N.C. 28803 from 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. 

    If you are unable to attend an in-person demonstration, you can learn more about salvaging family treasures by visiting http://www.fema.gov/disaster/recover/save-family-treasures or culturalrescue.si.edu/who-we-are/hentf.

    Survivors can also visit a recovery center to apply for FEMA assistance, receive referrals to other assistance that may be available and much more. To find the nearest center, visit http://www.fema.gov/drc or text “DRC” and a zip code to 43362.

    It is not necessary to go to a center to apply for FEMA assistance. The fastest way to apply is online at DisasterAssistance.gov or via the FEMA app. You may also call 800-621-3362. If you use a relay service, such as video relay, captioned telephone or other service, give FEMA your number for that service. 

    barbara.murien…
    Wed, 10/16/2024 – 23:02

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Help us make homelessness rare, brief and non-recurring

    Source: City of York

    Published Wednesday, 16 October 2024

    To help us achieve our aim of making homelessness and rough sleeping rare, brief and non-recurring, we’re asking everyone interested to comment on our new draft strategy.

    Our five-year Homelessness and Rough Sleeping Strategy aims to build on the work of our highly-effective Housing Navigators and our partners. Through it, we plan to offer people who are homeless or facing homelessness, quick routes into suitable housing that can be sustained with high-quality support which is tailored to each individual’s needs.

    For single homeless people, we plan to focus on rapidly re-housing them directly into their own home, and ideally avoid time in a hostel or temporary accommodation.

    Where an individual or a family needs help to establish and maintain a tenancy, we will offer them support from our or our partner’s services. This will help prevent any future breakdown in tenancies and help people keep their homes.  

    Key to the success of this strategy, is working with partners to build up the supply of suitable and affordable homes. Our Housing Delivery Programme is underway with creating 600 homes in the city, and the Ordnance Lane site has been reworked to be 100% affordable and deliver more much-needed one and two-bedroomed homes.  

    Councillor Michael Pavlovic, Executive Member for Housing at City of York Council, said:

    Homelessness and rough sleeping on our streets is a problem for not just an individual, but for us all and we need to do everything we can to end it. We have spent time trying to get the right approach, talking to those who work with and have been homeless, as well as specialist academics in this area.

    “I’d ask anyone with an interest in housing, preventing homelessness and supporting anyone off the streets into a home to give ten minutes of their time to join this consultation. Your support will add to our strategy and help build hope and homes for all facing homelessness.”

    All feedback and data from this consultation will be used to inform our Homelessness Strategy which will be presented to the Council’s Executive to consider in December 2024.

    To take join in this consultation, please click here and take part before 15 November 2024.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Cantwell, Murray, Kilmer Announce $51M Federal Grant to Repair Hood Canal Bridge

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Washington Maria Cantwell
    10.16.24
    Cantwell, Murray, Kilmer Announce $51M Federal Grant to Repair Hood Canal Bridge
    Hood Canal Bridge is a vital link between Olympic and Kitsap peninsulas & helps more than 30,000 daily commuters avoid a 100-mile detour around Puget Sound; As the longest floating saltwater bridge in the world, the structure is deteriorating in the harsh marine environment
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senators Maria Cantwell (D-WA) and Patty Murray (D-WA) and U.S. Representative Derek Kilmer (D, WA-06) announced that the Washington State Department of Transportation will receive $51,125,917 in federal funds to repair the Hood Canal Bridge.
    The funding comes from the Infrastructure for Rebuilding America (INFRA) Grant Program, which provides grants to nationally and regionally significant transportation projects to improve the country’s freight network.
    “Thanks to the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the Hood Canal Bridge will receive the repairs it needs to continue providing a vital connection between Kitsap, Jefferson, and Clallam Counties, with more than 30,000 crossings per day. Without this bridge, drivers would need to take a 100-mile detour around Puget Sound. And if the bridge’s retractable span were to fail, submarines and other vessels would be cut off from Naval Base Kitsap – Bangor,” Sen. Cantwell said. “This bridge is critical to the quality of life for residents and our national security.”
    “The Hood Canal Bridge is an absolutely critical connection for people and businesses on the Olympic and Kitsap peninsulas,” said Sen. Murray. “This is a piece of infrastructure that must remain safe and reliable so people can get to where they need to go—whether that’s work, a doctor’s appointment, or anything else. With thousands of travelers relying on this bridge just about every day, I’m proud to have worked together with Senator Cantwell and Representative Kilmer to ensure we bring these federal dollars home to replace outdated portions of this bridge.”
    “The Hood Canal Bridge is often a lifeline for folks on the Olympic Peninsula, enabling them to get where they need to go,” said Rep. Kilmer. “This federal funding is a major step toward improving the safety and reliability of the bridge, helping ensure that it will remain open, accessible and resilient for years to come. And with federal support it means this project can move forward without the costs falling solely on the backs of taxpayers in our state. That’s a win-win.”
    This project will replace over 3,400 linear feet of the western half of the bridge including the replacement of 55 reinforced concrete crossbeams and 216 prestressed concrete girder lines and the placement of nearly 4,800 cubic yards of concrete. Preliminary design work is scheduled to begin in November 2025, with project completion scheduled for June 2027. The project’s total budget is $85.2 million.
    The Hood Canal Bridge links the Olympic and Kitsap peninsulas, allowing over 30,000 motorists to get to and from work each day. As the longest floating bridge in the world over saltwater, this unique structure sits in a harsh marine environment that’s deteriorated its condition over the past 40 years. Currently, vehicles that can cross the bridge are weight-restricted at 17,000 lbs per axle or less, and overweight vehicles are forced to drive nearly 100 miles around Puget Sound.  If the bridge’s condition goes unaddressed, further deterioration and restrictions would have severe impacts on commerce and the livelihood of those who depend on the bridge every day.
    The Hood Canal Bridge also crosses a channel used by U.S. Navy submarines to reach the Pacific Ocean from Naval Base Kitsap -Bangor. Should the bridge’s retractable span become unusable, those vessels would be cut off from the base.
    Sen. Cantwell authored the INFRA Grant Program in the FAST Act of 2015, to provide grants to nationally and regionally significant freight and highway projects. This grant program was the first discretionary grant program to focus on improving the multimodal freight network and addressing freight bottlenecks. In 2022, as chair of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, Sen. Cantwell helped secure $8 billion over five years for the INFRA Grant Program as part of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, a 78 percent increase in funding. Additionally, in August 2024, Sen. Cantwell wrote a letter to Department of Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg in support of the Hood Canal Bridge project’s INFRA grant application. The State of Washington has received 11 INFRA Grants, for a total of $532,300,108 since the start of the program.
    Sen. Murray, as a senior appropriator and then Assistant Majority Leader, helped secure $3.2 billion for the INFRA grant program in advance appropriations in addition to the $4.8 billion funded through the Highway Trust Fund when she helped pass the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, for a total of $8 billion over five years. 

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Klobuchar On Track to Visit All Minnesota’s 87 Counties By Tomorrow

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn)
    MINNESOTA –  Today Senator Amy Klobuchar met with Minnesotans in five counties as part of her commitment to visit every county in 2024. Klobuchar stopped in Baudette in Lake of the Woods County to discuss federal funding she helped secure for search and rescue equipment. In Koochiching County, Klobuchar met with the widow and colleagues of fallen Voyageurs National Park Ranger Kevin Melvin Grossheim. In Itasca County, Klobuchar toured a child care hub in Grand Rapids, and in Hubbard County, Klobuchar met with local Park Rapids officials to tour housing that was supported with federal funding. Finally, in Cass County, Klobuchar met with the mayor and local business leaders to discuss economic development and tourism.
    Tomorrow, Klobuchar will have events at American Peat Technology in Aitkin, the Cloquet Carlton County Airport in Carlton, and Lakes and Pines Community Action Council in Kanabec at which point she will have visited every one of Minnesota’s 87 counties this year.
    “One of the best parts of my job is going out across the state every year and meeting with Minnesotans,” said Klobuchar. “I get to see incredible innovation, hear inspiring stories from families, thank our first responders, and talk to local leaders about what resources they need. These stops are how I get ideas for new legislation and how I know what to prioritize in Washington to make a real difference in people’s lives.”

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Sorensen Statement on Announced Layoffs at Deere & Company

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Eric Sorensen (IL-17)

    ROCK ISLAND, IL – Today, Congressman Eric Sorensen (IL-17) released the following statement on the news of an additional round of layoffs at Deere & Company.  

    “Every day, I’m proud to be a Quad Citizen and call this place my home. We have a special way of life here, we take pride in what we do, and how we do it. Deere & Company is part of the fabric of the Quad Cities and the UAW workers who build the Seeders & Harvesters that are used around the world help our community thrive and grow,” said Sorensen. 

    “Today is a hard day for our Quad Cities community and I pledge to do everything that I’m able to support the workers affected by these layoffs. Our Congressional Office has the resources to connect affected workers with services and benefits. We will work hand-in-hand with our partners in the Governor’s Office and UAW to make sure that we do everything we can to support workers.”  

    “Representing our district on the House Agriculture Committee has always been important, and it is clear from today’s decision that now more than ever we need to pass a bipartisan Farm Bill. Critical programs that impact the price of corn and soy are running out of money and need to be replenished and updated. This affects Deere & Company’s production and impacts workers as much as our family farmers. We must get a bipartisan Farm Bill passed, which will open up opportunities for Deere.” 

    “Deere & Company’s annual profits exceed $7 billion. Today’s stock price exceeded $410 per share. C-suite salaries are in the tens of millions of dollars. They can afford to better take care of their workers in John Deere’s hometown.” 

    Congressman Eric Sorensen serves on the House Committee on Agriculture and the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology. Prior to serving in Congress, Sorensen was a local meteorologist in Rockford and the Quad Cities for nearly 20 years. His district includes Illinois’ Quad Cities, Rockford, Peoria, and Bloomington-Normal. 

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Allens advises Multiplex on a big year of city-shaping projects

    Source: Allens Insights

    In the latest in a succession of major social and commercial infrastructure projects, Allens has advised Multiplex as Managing Contractor for the Victorian Health Building Authority’s Parkville Precinct Redevelopment – Materials Handling Building Project.

    The Parkville Precinct Redevelopment is an important step in the staged redevelopment of the Royal Melbourne Hospital and Royal Women’s Hospital.

    The redevelopment adds to a run of city-shaping commercial and mixed use residential projects in Victoria and South Australia for Multiplex. In the past 12 months, other project that Allens has advised Multiplex include:

    • Cbus Property’s $1 billion sustainable office tower at 435 Bourke Street;
    • each of Brookfield Asset Management, Citiplan and Journal Student Living’s student accommodation projects at Grattan Street and Market Way (Franklin Street);
    • OSK Property’s BLVD residential tower at OSK Property’s $3 billion Melbourne Square precinct, one of Australia’s largest development projects;
    • Chasecrown’s Parkline all-electric mixed-use luxury apartment complex in Kent Town, South Australia; and
    • City of Adelaide and ICD Property’s vibrant new mixed-use precinct, the expansion of Adelaide Central Market. 

    ‘These projects show that there remains strong private capital appetite for quality social infrastructure and commercial development projects,’ said Partner David Donnelly, who led the Allens team on each of the transactions.

    ‘We have loved partnering with Multiplex for the long term. Not only does it provide scale and efficiency benefits for Multiplex, but it provides invaluable learning opportunities for our lawyers at all levels,’ said Managing Associate Ben van Weel.

    Allens has also advised Multiplex on numerous critical infrastructure projects in recent years, including the New Footscray Hospital PPP, Frankston Hospital Redevelopment PPP, GLM 2 Social Housing PPP, the Western Sydney Airport Terminal and National Resilience Centres in Victoria, Queensland and WA.

    Allens legal team

    David Donnelly (Partner), Ben van Weel (Managing Associate), Ashleigh Blumor (Senior Associate), Tom Bleby (Associate), Soha Refaat (Associate), Lana Yang (Associate), Lisa Wang (Associate), Roberta Hernandez (Lawyer), Harrison Philp (Lawyer), Penny Hollingdale (Lawyer)

    Contact for further information

    Public Relations & Social Media Manager

    MIL OSI News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Interview with Nick Bryant, RN Drive, ABC Radio

    Source: Australian Treasurer

    NICK BRYANT:

    So, with the cost of living biting and a national election looming, the federal government is threatening to ban debit card surcharges from the start of 2026, a plan which has been slammed on the other side of politics. Stephen Jones is the Assistant Treasurer. Stephen, welcome back to Radio National Drive.

    STEPHEN JONES:

    Good to be with you, Nick.

    BRYANT:

    The RBA reckons Australians are losing about a billion dollars a year to surcharges. Take me through what the government is proposing and what it would look like in practice?

    JONES:

    Well, this is understandably in response to consumers saying, ‘why am I having to pay money to access my own money to pay for a cup of coffee or a grocery – a basket?’ That’s a pretty reasonable concern by Australians. The plan, we want to ensure that we remove those surcharges, but we want to do it in a way that doesn’t lump the cost of that on small businesses, a simple ban on its own would mean that small businesses are picking up the tab. So, we’ve got to go upstream to look at that whole network of charges that is leading or ending in a small business and their customers. So, it’s the banks, it’s the card service providers, Visa, Mastercard, EFTPOS, but it’s also the payment systems operators. So, we’ve got to look at all of that, untangle it, work out what a reasonable cost for providing those services is, and ensuring that Australians aren’t being slugged by these unreasonable surcharges just to access their own money.

    BRYANT:

    This would only apply to debit cards, but a lot of people use their credit cards to pay for things. Why not have those surcharges go as well?

    JONES:

    Good point. Around about 90 per cent of the exchanges that we’re talking about are done on a debit card, particularly for younger Australians who are more likely not to have a credit card. They might have a buy now, pay later account and a debit card, but more and more people are using debit cards for their day‑to‑day retail transactions. So, the case is cut and dried in this area. Credit products are a little bit different and are treated differently, always have been. So, the biggest part of the big problem is the debit cards, where people are being slugged a surcharge to use their own money, many times in instances where they can’t get the cash out or they can’t use it.

    BRYANT:

    Now, the Head of the Commonwealth Bank basically said during parliamentary proceedings or in this parliamentary committee, that this issue was being infused with populist politics, that the bank’s payment operations are actually making a loss. So, is this performative politics? Is this a bit of bank‑bashing?

    JONES:

    Absolutely not. And as I said in response to your earlier question, it’s not just the banks, it’s the card providers, the system providers such as Visa, Mastercard, EFTPOS, they’ve got charges in the system. It’s the payment network systems who run the rails around which our payments run throughout the country. Most of them not known to everyday consumers, but they’ve got charges in the system as well. So, it’s about untangling all of that. We’ve got the Reserve Bank looking at what it actually costs to run those rails, to run those charge systems, and what is being passed on to the consumer and where the excessive charging is. Job of work between now and Christmas. We’ll get the results of that, we’ll move on that early in the year – new year – and giving the whole system clear signal from the 1 January 2026. If they haven’t moved on it, we will.

    BRYANT:

    Now, the Opposition has been critical of your proposals. Here’s what the Opposition Leader, Peter Dutton, had to say today.

    [Excerpt]

    PETER DUTTON:

    This is actually a plan for a plan. I mean, this Prime Minister always promises but never delivers. And we’re very happy to look at anything the government’s going to propose. It’s not an announcement, it’s just that they’re looking at it and it could come in, in 2026. Australian families need help now from this government. And instead of making good decisions, the government’s made bad decisions.

    [End of excerpt]

    BRYANT:

    I mean, he’s got a point, hasn’t he? This is a plan for a plan. It’s what Donald Trump had in that debate, a concept for a plan.

    JONES:

    Peter Dutton’s got no plan for the economy and no economic policies. He had 9 years to do something about this. It wasn’t a priority for him then. It wasn’t a priority for any of the 3 years when he had my job. It wasn’t a priority for any of the 9 years when he sat around the cabinet table. And now he’s criticising the government for wanting to do something which needs to be done. We’ve got a clear process for dealing with it. It’s not populist; it’s about ensuring we do the right thing, which is about ensuring we take all the evidence. We ensure that we don’t have any unintended consequences, such as having small business pick up the costs for a ban on surcharging. So, we’ll do it in the right way. We’d expect Peter Dutton to support it because it’s in the interests of consumers. But we remember that he’s voted against every single measure that we’ve put in place to provide cost‑of‑living relief for Australians. Whether it’s energy bill relief, whether it’s provisions which enable workers to get better pay rises, whether it’s medicines relief. In every opportunity Peter Dutton has had to vote in favour of cost‑of‑living relief for Australians, he’s done the opposite.

    BRYANT:

    If you just join me here on Radio National Drive, I’m speaking with the Assistant Treasurer, Stephen Jones, about the government’s promise to crack down on debit card surcharges. There is a process underway. You’re waiting for the Reserve Bank to finish its review into retail payments regulation. They’ve been waiting for you to pass legislation to provide them with more powers, which is now stuck in parliament. You’re saying this change won’t happen until 2026. People are hurting now. Why can’t this be expedited?

    JONES:

    Well, it can be expedited if the Opposition votes for the bill, which is before the Senate right now. That’s available for them to do that. They’ve said they’ll oppose it. They can vote in favour of the bill, the payment systems reform bill, which is in the Senate now, and that would give the government the additional powers. At the moment, those powers sit solely with the Reserve Bank of Australia. We’ve given a pretty good indication about what we’ll do as a government. Of course, the bloke who wants to be the alternative Prime Minister for Australia could announce his policy, but he hasn’t.

    BRYANT:

    And let’s talk about the man who is the Prime Minister at the moment. There has been a lot of talk today about the PM’s new luxury ocean view home he’s bought on the Central Coast in NSW. Isn’t this a bit tone‑deaf at the time of a cost‑of‑living crisis ahead of what will surely be a cost‑of‑living election and in the middle of the housing crisis? The optics of this just aren’t very good.

    JONES:

    Look, the PM and his fiancée Jodie are planning to get married next year. They wanted to buy a place in the area where Jodie grew up and 3 generations of her family live, and I think they’re entitled to do so. The housing that we’re focused on is our housing program, our plan to build new homes to ensure that we have a roof over the head of every Australian. We’ve got legislation before the parliament which is being blocked by the Coalition and the Greens. They should get out of the way and enable that to occur so we can help everyday Australians, through our Help to Buy Scheme, get access to the housing market. This is the housing issue that everyday Australians are focused on and it’s the focus of our government.

    BRYANT:

    Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones, thank you for joining me on Radio National Drive.

    JONES:

    Good to be with you.

    MIL OSI News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Economy – Transmission of monetary policy to financial conditions: A speech by RBNZ Assistant Governor Karen Silk

    Source: Reserve Bank of New Zealand

    16 October 2024 – A speech will be delivered by Assistant Governor Karen Silk at the Citi Australia and New Zealand Investment Conference in Sydney, Australia.

    Financial conditions are significantly influenced by monetary policy settings and are therefore something that we monitor closely. The banking system is a key channel through which monetary policy settings influence financial conditions in New Zealand.

    Specifically, monetary policy affects bank funding costs and, in turn, the lending rates banks offer. This impacts the amount of money that households and businesses have to spend and shapes their inclination to save and invest.

    During the post-COVID period, tight monetary policy settings implemented to reduce inflation have made financial conditions more restrictive. This has contributed to a weakening of aggregate demand in the economy and increased our confidence that consumer price inflation is moving sustainably back to its target mid-point of 2%.

    However, the ongoing effects from the monetary and fiscal policy response to the COVID-19 pandemic, which significantly increased liquidity in the banking system, have supported lower bank funding costs. This has impacted the extent to which banks have increased their lending rates.

    The upshot of this is that financial conditions were less restrictive during the recent tightening cycle for the same level of the Official Cash Rate (OCR) when compared with previous cycles. However, through ongoing monitoring we have been able to identify and factor this into our decision-making to ensure that financial conditions have been where we needed them to be to achieve our monetary policy objectives.  

    As liquidity is being drained from the banking system, bank funding conditions have been normalising towards their pre-COVID state. Over time, this is likely to influence the amount of decline in bank lending rates, even as wholesale rates fall, as banks seek to maintain their net interest margins.

    The factors discussed in this speech are important for understanding the effectiveness of monetary policy transmission, but there are many others that are considered in monetary policy decision-making. While we remain confident that inflation will converge back to the 2% target midpoint in the medium term, we will continue to assess and respond to the risks arising from broader economic conditions to manage inflation back to this level.
     
    More information

    Read the related Bulletin here: https://govt.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=bd316aa7ee4f5679c56377819&id=b1b3bdc72d&e=f3c68946f8

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    January 23, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Jokowi was once seen as Indonesia’s ‘new hope’. Instead, he leaves a legacy of democratic backsliding

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Edward Aspinall, Professor in Southeast Asian Politics, Australian National University

    As Indonesia’s president Joko Widodo (Jokowi) prepares to leave office, Indonesia is still routinely lauded as one of Asia’s most important democracies. Jokowi was first elected, in 2014, on the promise of breaking with the old Jakarta elite and making government more responsive to ordinary people.

    He was backed by many ardent supporters of Indonesia’s Reformasi movement. This movement had brought down the authoritarian leader, Suharto, in 1998 and pushed a transition to democracy in the years that followed.

    But Jokowi has overseen a serious period of democratic backsliding.

    Democratic decline

    Under his watch, the Indonesian government has hobbled democratic control institutions. This includes Indonesia’s once-lauded Corruption Eradication Commission, abbreviated as KPK.

    Security agencies such the army and the police have begun to resume a political role.

    The government has banned major Islamic organisations.

    Civil society groups speak of a dramatically narrowed civic space. They complain, for example, about the government’s increasing reliance on the Electronic Information and Transactions Law to prosecute critics of the government for defamation and its growing willingness to use violent means to respond to protests.

    Jokowi’s opponents in the political elite are routinely investigated for corruption and other alleged wrongdoing.

    In last February’s presidential election, there were widespread reports the police and other agencies were pressuring community leaders to mobilise the vote for Jokowi’s preferred candidate, Prabowo Subianto.

    How and why does Jokowi leave this legacy?

    How did a man who was once seen as a “new hope” for Indonesian democracy end up here?

    The answer is part of a global story that has become broadly familiar in recent years.

    These days, it is generally not unelected coup leaders who destroy democracy. Experiences like those of Thailand and Myanmar in recent years are, happily, no longer typical.

    Instead, elected populist leaders hollow democracy out from within. They do so by hobbling institutions, such as anti-corruption commissions, which are meant to check executive power.

    Jokowi has, in my view, followed this pattern.

    Unlike many populists, Jokowi never peppered his early speeches with angry denunciations of his opponents as traitors. He never tried to whip up vitriol against vulnerable minorities.

    Instead, he positioned himself as a leader who was uniquely able to understand and to embody the aspirations of ordinary people.

    His trademark campaign method was known as blusukan. He would drop by unexpectedly at a marketplace, for example, to chat with ordinary people about prices and other everyday matters.

    Jokowi has positioned himself as a man of the people.
    BahbahAconk/Shutterstock

    A former mayor, he was interested in the nitty gritty of governance, such as how to improve transport services or upgrade parks. He was less interested in “abstract” notions like human rights.

    The implications of this philosophy only became apparent after Jokowi was elected president.

    He retained his belief in his own unique ability to understand the aspirations of ordinary citizens, which had been long neglected by elite politicians.

    He maintained a single-minded focus on what ordinary Indonesians wanted – improved living standards and better social welfare. And he used polls to regularly monitor public opinion.

    For Jokowi, maintaining popular support and satisfying public demands was the essence of democracy. He was not interested in institutions that place limits on governmental power, which are arguably just as important to a functioning democratic system.

    For example, his government enacted legal amendments that significantly weakened the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK).

    Late last year, the Constitutional Court – headed by his brother-in-law – changed the the rules on candidate age limits to allow Jokowi’s son, Gibran Rakabuming Raka, to stand for the vice presidency. Many Indonesians viewed this as a transparent – and successful – attempt to manipulate a key control institution for the purpose of maintaining Jokowi’s dynastic grip on power.

    Even so, as Jokowi leaves office, he does so a very popular politician.

    Prabowo as president

    Jokowi hands power to a man with an even more chequered democratic history.

    Prabowo Subianto is a former general with a record of alleged human rights abuses dating back to the late Suharto period. (Although, like other senior military officers accused of responsibility for the Suharto regime’s well-documented record of human rights abuses, he was never convicted of any crimes). Prabowo was close to the heart of that regime: indeed, he used to be Suharto’s son-in-law.

    Prabowo has promised he would provide the strong hand the country needed.
    Algi Febri Sugita/Shutterstock

    Prabowo has since reinvented himself as a fun-loving grandfather figure and Jokowi’s greatest fan, capitalising on the president’s own popularity.

    In fact, Prabowo used to be among Jokowi’s greatest rivals before becoming his defence minister in 2019.

    In previous elections, Prabowo presented himself as a firebrand populist who angrily denounced his opponents for allegedly selling Indonesia out to foreigners. He promised he would provide the strong hand the country needed to become truly great.

    We don’t know yet what kind of president Prabowo will be. His early political socialisation, as a leading elite figure close to the heart of the Suharto regime, suggests his instincts are likely to be deeply authoritarian.

    He inherits from Jokowi a country in which democratic institutions have already been seriously undermined, and a series of lessons in how to weaken them further.

    Edward Aspinall has received funding from the ARC and DFAT.

    – ref. Jokowi was once seen as Indonesia’s ‘new hope’. Instead, he leaves a legacy of democratic backsliding – https://theconversation.com/jokowi-was-once-seen-as-indonesias-new-hope-instead-he-leaves-a-legacy-of-democratic-backsliding-237319

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    January 23, 2025
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