Category: housing

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Property Market – NZ housing market ticks up as buyers seize opportunities – QV

    Source: QUALITY VALUATION (QV)

    The average New Zealand residential property value has decreased slightly with values in the main centres easing due to high stock levels and cautious buyer sentiment, while some regions saw significant gains.
     
    The latest QV House Price Index shows the average national home value fell 0.3% over the June quarter to $910,479, leaving values 0.6% lower than a year ago and around 14.5% below the market’s peak in late 2021.
     
    Values rose in Queenstown and Invercargill, while creeping up a little in Whangarei, Hamilton, Tauranga and Christchurch, while Auckland, Wellington and Dunedin recorded further declines, highlighting ongoing variability across the main urban areas.

    QV National Spokesperson Andrea Rush said buyers were taking advantage of increased choice and easing interest rates, with first-home buyers and owner-occupiers remaining the most active, particularly in lower to mid-value areas where affordability is within reach.

    “Regional divergence is becoming more evident, with more affordable markets recording notable quarterly gains such as Wairoa (12.6%), Gore (8.8%), Buller (6.2%), the Far North (5.8%) and Waitomo (5.2%), while others continue to track lower due to economic uncertainty and a cautious buyer pool,” Ms Rush said.
     
    She noted that falling interest rates are easing affordability pressures. The Reserve Bank reviews the OCR this week, with some expecting a 0.25% cut, though many predict it will hold at 3.25%.
     
    “Some buyers may be anticipating lower rates, with bank activity back to mid-2022 levels after the market peak,” she said. “However, it’s unclear how much of this reflects new purchases versus refinancing.”
     
    “Ongoing global conflict, economic uncertainty, and rising living costs are likely to limit any significant upswing in the near term.”

    Northland

    The upswing in the Northland market continues with values rising 2.1% in the three months to June. The average value across the region is $741,628. Values are now just 0.6% lower year on year.

    In the three months to June, values in the Far North rose a massive 5.83% and the average property value jumped nearly $10,000 from $705,192 in the June quarter to $714,029. In Whangarei, the average value is $736,179 after a slight quarterly rise of 0.3%. While Kaipara’s average value is $841,032, after a slight 0.7% lift over the quarter.

    Auckland

    The Auckland property market saw values edge down overall in June as high stock levels and cautious buyer sentiment continued to weigh on prices, with some localised pockets of resilience emerging across the Super City. The average home value across the Auckland Region dropped 1.0% in the June quarter and is now $1,232,340, which is 1.4% lower than in June 2024 and 18.8% lower than the market’s nationwide peak of late 2021.

    In the June quarter the only area to see values increase was the local council areas previously known as Auckland City (0.1%).  While other areas of the region saw a decline in values over the quarter; Manukau (-1.2%); North Shore (-1.7%), Waitakere (-1.0%), Rodney (-0.04%), Papakura (-0.1%); and Franklin (-0.6%).
     
    QV Auckland Registered Valuer, Hugh Robson said the Auckland housing market is much the same as last month, with high levels of stock on the market across most suburbs helping to keep prices fairly stable.
     
    “For now, buyers have the upper hand, with many agents continuing to report low attendance numbers at open homes. Some buyers are making cheeky offers to see what might be accepted in the current market,” Mr Robson said.
     
    Despite these conditions, he noted steady activity from first-home buyers, particularly in the city’s low to medium value suburbs, where affordability remains within reach.
     
    “New multi-townhouse developments also continue to be built across the city, adding to the options available for buyers and renters alike. Interest rates remain relatively low, providing some comfort for those entering the market, while rental levels are fairly stable at the moment,” he said.

    Waikato

    The latest QV House Price Index shows Hamilton’s average home is now worth $791,707, with values continuing a slight upward trend from last month, rising 0.5% over the June quarter. Values are now 1.2% higher than this time last year and 13.4% lower than the nationwide peak of late 2021.

    QV Hamilton Registered Valuer Marshall Wu said the Waikato market was continuing to show a ‘generally positive trend’ this year, with Hamilton City and several major districts recording modest value growth so far in 2025.
     
    “There’s been some renewed confidence among buyers and sellers as the OCR has remained lower for a sustained period, helping to support market activity and making housing a bit more accessible for first-home buyers. However, with inflation on the rise, the market now expects only limited further cuts in the months ahead,” he said.
     
    “A soft economy, lower population growth, and global uncertainty are still constraining housing demand across the region. Real estate agents are telling us there’s still plenty of stock on the market, and sellers are having to adjust expectations on price. Buyers, meanwhile, are being cautious in light of a looser labour market and persistently high unemployment.
     
    “Overall, we’re still expecting values to post a modest rise in 2025, but it’s likely to be at a slower pace.”
     
    The Waikato Region demonstrated strengthening market activity in June with a 1-month increase of 0.1% and a 3-month gain of 0.5%. The average home value now stands at $818,230, up from $791,909.
     
    The Waitomo District surged 4.9% over 3 months and 5.2% annually, while the Taupo District recorded a -6.6% half yearly drop. Hauraki values also rose 1.1% over the June quarter and are 4.1% higher year on year; while Thames/Coromandel inched up by 0.1% in the June quarter and 1.4% year on year, while the Waikato District was up 2.1% over the past three months and 1.6% year on year.  Ōtorohanga and Waipa districts, also recorded quarterly gains of 0.2% and 1.8% respectively. While South Waikato values decreased 2.5% over the quarter.

    Bay of Plenty

    Home values in Tauranga are essentially flat, rising just 0.1% over the past three months to an average of $1,024,609. This is 0.3% lower than a year ago and 12.2% below the nationwide peak of late 2021.

    Across the Bay of Plenty, the average value is also flat, dipping 0.3% this quarter to $887,954 and 0.3% annually.
     
    QV North Island Revaluation Manager Sophie Treder said, “In Tauranga, values have held steady, with only a slight lift over the past quarter, while across the wider region, average values have seen a marginal decline.”
     
    She noted owner-occupiers and first-home buyers continue to be the main drivers of activity, with an uptick in investor interest adding to market dynamics. “Most sellers are setting prices that align with market conditions, although some are entering the market with higher expectations before adjusting to meet buyer sentiment,” she said.
     
    Rotorua and Gisborne recorded quarterly declines of 0.5% and 0.9% respectively, while Whakatane fell 1.4%. Opotiki District saw the largest drop in the region, down 6.6% for the quarter. Kawerau District was the only area to record growth, with values up 3.0% in the three months to June.

    Hawkes Bay

    Napier City home values were flat, up just 0.1% over the past three months to a new average value of $755,772 which is 0.7% lower year on year and 15.3% lower than the previous peak of January 2022. Hastings values rose 0.7% over the past three months to a new average of $774,602 which is 1.8% lower than the same time last year and 15.8% below the nationwide peak of late 2021.

    Meanwhile, Wairoa saw values one of the highest increases in the country rising 12.6% in the three months to June and 27.2% year on year to a new average value of $483,244. While Central Hawke’s Bay District increased 0.9% over the quarter and values are 3.2% lower year on year with a new average value of $553,179.

    Taranaki

    The Taranaki region has seen a recent positive trend with home values up 0.4% over the past three months and 1.7% in the year to June. In New Plymouth, values rose 0.2% in the June quarter and are 1.4% higher year on year with the average home now worth $725,326 which is 2.8% lower than the peak. Values continued to rise in South Taranaki, up 2.6% over the quarter to June, and 3.7% year on year to $448,875; while Stratford dropped 2.4% over the quarter to an average value of $487,455 which is 1.6% higher year on year.

    QV New Plymouth Registered Valuer Danny Grace said the Taranaki market was maintaining steady momentum, with values holding firm across much of the region.
     
    “In New Plymouth, activity has picked up, and there’s more confidence among buyers and sellers, particularly in the lower end of the market where demand remains healthy,” he said.
     
    Mr Grace noted that while interest in well-located, modern homes was steady, the higher end of the market was seeing less buyer interest, with longer selling times and fewer active purchasers.
     
    “While the region isn’t experiencing rapid growth, the market is holding its ground, supported by a consistent level of demand, particularly from buyers focused on more affordable segments,” he said.

    Palmerston North

    Home values in Palmerston North dipped 0.5% over the June quarter and homes there are now worth on average $632,536, which is 0.8% lower than this time last year and 13.5% below the nationwide market peak in late 2021.

    QV Palmerston North Registered Valuer Olivia Betts said the Palmerston North property market was showing signs of softening, with prices edging down slightly in recent months.

    “It’s not a dramatic drop, but this easing reflects broader market conditions and seasonal tr

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Stein Provides Updates on Flooding

    Source: US State of North Carolina

    Headline: Governor Stein Provides Updates on Flooding

    Governor Stein Provides Updates on Flooding
    lsaito

    Raleigh, NC

    Today Governor Stein provided updates on recent flooding in central North Carolina and urged North Carolinians to stay safe and be aware of ongoing flooding and road closures in their areas.

    “I am grateful to the first responders who are keeping people safe and for the proactive work of emergency management professionals and the North Carolina Department of Transportation,” said Governor Josh Stein. “I urge all North Carolinians to listen to any guidance from local weather and local emergency management officials and be aware of any road warnings and closures before they leave the house.”

    Local states of emergency have been declared in Alamance, Moore, and Orange Counties, and there have also been reports of flooding in Durham County. North Carolina Emergency Management continues to support impacted communities with resources, rescue teams, and personnel as requested to supplement local responders.

    NCDOT has reopened several major roads that closed due to flooding, including I-40/85 in Alamance County, but about 120 roads remain closed due to this weather event. The department reminds everyone to play it safe and never try to pass through standing water.

    For real-time travel information, visit DriveNC.gov or follow NCDOT on social media.

    Please follow your local government and local news outlets on their websites and on social media. Many local emergency management agencies have public notification systems in place that you can sign up for.

    In the event of flooding, North Carolina Emergency Management officials recommend these tips:

    • Listen to local weather forecasts – floods can occur with little notice.
    • Enable emergency alerts on your cell phone to receive notifications from the National Weather Service.
    • Barricades are there for your safety. If you see a barricade, find another route. Do not attempt to go around it.
    • Turn around if you see flooding to reduce the likelihood of drowning.
    • Never walk through moving water – 6 inches of moving water can knock a person down.
    • Don’t drive through flooded areas – 2 feet of moving water can sweep a vehicle away.
    • Visit Fiman.NC.Gov to access the state’s over 600 flood gauges and to sign up for alerts for the gauges closest to your home.
    Jul 7, 2025

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: How often should you really be washing your bedding? A microbiologist explains

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Primrose Freestone, Senior Lecturer in Clinical Microbiology, University of Leicester

    Andrey_Popov/Shutterstock

    Most of us spend around a third of our lives in bed. Sleep isn’t just downtime; it’s essential for normal brain function and overall health. And while we often focus on how many hours we’re getting, the quality of our sleep environment matters too. A clean, welcoming bed with crisp sheets, soft pillowcases and fresh blankets not only feels good, it also supports better rest.

    But how often should we really be washing our bed linens?

    According to a 2022 YouGov poll, just 28% of Brits wash their sheets once a week. A surprising number admitted to leaving it much longer, with some stretching to eight weeks or more between washes. So what’s the science-backed guidance?

    Let’s break down what’s actually happening in your bed every night – and why regular washing is more than just a question of cleanliness.


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    Each night, as we sleep, we shed hundreds of thousands of skin cells, excrete oils from our sebaceous glands, and sweat up to half a pint of fluid – even if we’ve showered just before bed. Our skin hosts millions of bacteria and fungi, many of which are transferred onto sheets, pillows and duvets as we move during the night.

    That fresh sweat may be odourless, but bacteria on our skin, particularly staphylococci, break it down into smelly byproducts. This is often why you wake up with body odour, even if you went to bed clean.

    But it’s not just about microbes. During the day, our hair and bodies collect pollutants, dust, pollen and allergens, which can also transfer to our bedding. These can trigger allergies, affect breathing, and contribute to poor air quality in the bedroom.

    Dust mites, fungi and other unseen bedfellows

    The flakes of skin we shed every night become food for dust mites – microscopic creatures that thrive in warm, damp bedding and mattresses. The mites themselves aren’t dangerous, but their faecal droppings are potent allergens that can aggravate eczema, asthma and allergic rhinitis.

    Fungi also find your bed appealing. Some species, like aspergillus fumigatus, have been detected in used bed pillows and can cause serious lung infections, particularly in people with weakened immune systems.

    If you sleep with pets, the microbial party gets even livelier. Animals introduce extra hair, dander, dirt and sometimes faecal traces into your sheets and blankets, increasing the frequency at which you should be washing them.




    Read more:
    There are benefits to sharing a bed with your pet — as long as you’re scrupulously clean


    So, how often should you wash your bedding?

    Sheets and pillowcases

    • When: Weekly, or every three to four days if you’ve been ill, sweat heavily, or share your bed with pets.

    • Why: To remove sweat, oils, microbes, allergens and dead skin cells.

    • How: Wash at 60°C or higher with detergent to kill bacteria and dust mites. For deeper sanitisation, tumble dry or iron. To target dust mites inside pillows, freeze for at least 8 hours.

    Mattresses

    • When: Vacuum at least weekly and air the mattress every few days.

    • Why: Sweat increases moisture levels, creating a breeding ground for mites.

    • Tips: Use a plastic or allergen-proof mattress protector and replace the mattress every seven years to maintain hygiene and support.

    Pillow interiors

    Blankets and duvet covers

    • When: Every two weeks, or more often if pets sleep on them.

    • Why: They trap skin cells, sweat and allergens.

    • How: Wash at 60°C or as high as the care label allows. Some guidance recommends treating these like towels: regular and hot washes keep them hygienic.

    Duvets

    • When: Every three to four months, depending on usage and whether pets or children share your bed.

    • Why: Even with a cover, body oils and mites eventually seep into the filling.

    • How: Check the label: many duvets are machine-washable, others may require professional cleaning.

    Your bed may look clean – but it’s teeming with microbes, allergens, mites and irritants that build up fast. Washing your bedding isn’t just about keeping things fresh; it’s a matter of health.

    Regular laundering removes the biological soup of sweat, skin, dust and microbes, which helps to reduce allergic reactions, prevent infections and keep odours at bay. And as research continues to show the profound effect of sleep on everything from heart health to mental clarity, a hygienic sleep environment is a small but powerful investment in your wellbeing.

    So go ahead – strip the bed. Wash those sheets. Freeze your pillows. Your microbes (and your sinuses) will thank you.

    Sweet dreams – and happy laundering.

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

    ref. How often should you really be washing your bedding? A microbiologist explains – https://theconversation.com/how-often-should-you-really-be-washing-your-bedding-a-microbiologist-explains-256516

    MIL OSI Analysis

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: ‘Pylon wars’ show why big energy plans need locals on board

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Simone Abram, Professor in the Department of Anthropology, Director of Durham Energy Institute, Durham University

    David Iliff / shutterstock

    Thousands of new electricity pylons are to be built across parts of England under the government’s plans to decarbonise the electricity. And some people aren’t happy.

    A glance at recent Daily Telegraph articles seem to suggest most of the genteel English countryside is about to be taken over by evil metal monsters. Headlines talk of “noisy” pylons set to “scythe through” “unspoiled countryside”, leading to a “pylon penalty” for house prices and even “mass social unrest”.

    While some of the stories are rather over the top, they reflect a genuine unease, and there have been significant campaigns against pylons. In Suffolk, for instance, resistance is building against plans for a 114-mile-long transmission line connecting new offshore wind farms to Norwich and beyond.

    So why do these towering steel structures evoke such powerful feelings?


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    Pylons have had a particular fascination since they were first introduced in the 1920s. Even then, the biggest challenge was to get “wayleaves” (permission) to cross farmland. To calm rural protest groups, the government’s electricity board commissioned an architect, Reginald Blomfield, to design transmission towers with an eye to “visual amenity”.

    Pylon cleaning, 1946.
    Smith Archive / Alamy

    In the most protected areas, expensive underground cabling was used to hide the transmission lines altogether. The board used its copious marketing materials to emphasise that this option was around six times more expensive, and therefore only for exceptional use. By the 1940s pylons were much cheaper than underground cables, providing a techno-economic rationale that remains politically persuasive today.

    Why we love the countryside

    One reason pylons are so controversial is related to a particularly English fascination with landscape. The geographer David Matless wrote some years ago of the “powerful historical connection” between Englishness and a vision of its countryside. People feel a degree of ownership over a varied landscape, encompassing lowland and upland, north and south, picturesque and bleak, and often have strong opinions about what “fits”, what constitutes “heritage” and what is “out of place”.

    Even if most of England is privately owned and commercially farmed, many people still imagine the land as a public good tied to national sentiments and see pylons as intruders in the landscape.

    Intruders? Pylons in England’s Peak District.
    Martin Charles Hatch / shutterstock

    This could also explain why proposals to build infrastructure across the English countryside often provoke significant objections. My research on planning in the Home Counties (the areas surrounding London) back in the 1990s revealed a very determined population of well-educated and well-resourced people willing to spend significant amounts of time and money ensuring that the landscape met their expectations.

    Concerted efforts had seen off a proposal from the then Conservative government to build a motorway through the Chiltern Hills to the west of London, for example.

    There were, and still are, innumerable village groups willing to turn up to public enquiries and to pay lawyers to launch appeals and legal challenges. They may have been sceptical of the more grungy road protesters (historically embodied by the indomitable Swampy), but there was certainly common purpose.

    My conclusion at the time was never to underestimate the effectiveness of local action where people’s vision of the English countryside was challenged. More recently, plans to run the HS2 rail line through those same hills ran into fierce local opposition, which prompted significant redesigns.

    That’s all well and good, but today we face catastrophic climate change and biodiversity loss. Wind turbines are one of the most effective ways to decarbonise electricity supplies, but they are in different places from the old coal and gas power stations. Ironically, the same love of landscape that pushed wind farms out to sea now fuels opposition to the cables that bring the power back to land.

    Democratic decisions?

    One of the challenges here is that decisions over things like high-voltage transmission lines are based on models that seek to “optimise” the design of equipment, on the basis of cost or effectiveness, or both. These models have no way to account for landscape and heritage value or aesthetics and should never be the sole basis for decisions about infrastructure.

    Running pylons across Suffolk might be the cheapest route with least electrical loss, but is it the best option? What would the alternatives be? Starting the discussion from the basis of techno-economic modelling often preempts a properly balanced debate.

    This isn’t an argument for or against big pylons. It’s a call for more democratic planning and not less.

    Studies consistently show that people resent being excluded from decisions that reshape their landscape and environment. Planning is a political process, and in any such process, humiliating your opponent rarely leads to long-term harmony.

    Top down decisions about “national infrastructure” may save time on paper but are not a good way to make progress. It appears autocratic and shifts objectors onto the streets or into the courts.

    Real consultation takes time and effort. But it builds trust and leads to better outcomes.

    Maybe pylons are the least-worst option. Maybe not. But we won’t know unless we ask – and listen.


    Don’t have time to read about climate change as much as you’d like?

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    Simone Abram receives funding from EPSRC for research on integrated energy systems and equality, diversity and inclusion in energy research. She received funding from the Norwegian Research Council for research on socially-inclusive energy transitions. Her Chair is co-funded by Ørsted UK but she does not represent the company in any way and any views expressed here remain independent.

    ref. ‘Pylon wars’ show why big energy plans need locals on board – https://theconversation.com/pylon-wars-show-why-big-energy-plans-need-locals-on-board-258877

    MIL OSI Analysis

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: What research on sexting reveals about how men and women think about consent

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Rikke Amundsen, Lecturer in Digital Media and Culture , King’s College London

    Nicoleta Ionescu/Shutterstock

    Sexting – the creating and exchanging of sexual texts, photos and videos – has become part of many people’s sexual and romantic lives. In an age where interpersonal relations often take place through digital technology, particularly since the pandemic, understanding sexting can help us better understand intimacy.

    Discussions around this topic inevitably involve concerns about sexual consent, and violation of it. One frequent concern is the risk of intimate image abuse, where private sexual images are shared without the consent of the person depicted. Another is the risk of receiving unsolicited or non-consensual “dick pics”.

    These violations can and do affect people of any gender identity. But research suggests that both types of violation particularly affect girls and women, who are more likely to be victims of the non-consensual further sharing of intimate images and to receive unsolicited dick pics. Girls are also more likely than boys to report feeling pressured into sending nudes or other sexual content.

    In my research, I have explored how men and women experience and navigate consent when sexting in heterosexual relationships.


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    I have found that consent is central to the sexting practices of both women and men, but that they approach it differently. Overall, the women I spoke to were most concerned about the risk of having their consent violated. The men, on the other hand, were more worried about the risk of accidentally violating the consent of the person they were sexting with.

    Women’s experiences

    Between June 2016 and February 2017, I interviewed 44 women about their use of digital media and technology in their romantic and sexual relations. A core part of this involved discussion about their experiences of sexting. Our conversations focused especially on their experiences of sexting with men, and on their notions of intimacy, risk and trust.

    My participants primarily saw mitigating the risk of intimate image abuse as an individual responsibility. In other words, these women saw themselves as responsible for ensuring that their consent was not violated by a sexting partner.

    They reflected on the importance of women taking charge to protect themselves. For example, by not placing their trust in the “wrong” kind of person when sexting. Many employed tactics to reduce risk, from not showing their face in an image, to establishing close connections with the friends and family of their sexting partner.

    As one participant in her mid-20s explained: “I do try to meet their family and friends beforehand, just so, if anything does happen, I can kind of go and tell his mum.”

    Just as the women focused on their individual responsibility for reducing risk, they also understood men as individually responsible for the sexism of sending unsolicited dick pics. Overall, they saw it as an issue of some men behaving badly, rather than part of a broader, systemic issue. This view differs from that of scholars in this area, who have linked non-consensual dick pics to wider misogyny and social issues like rape culture.

    Men’s experiences

    The 15 interviews I conducted with men took place between May 2022 and May 2023, five years after the interviews with women. During these intervening years, the #MeToo movement gained global reach. This movement raised awareness about the widespread, social and structural issues that lead to sexual consent violations and abuse of power in sexual relations.

    This research, the findings of which will be published in a forthcoming book chapter, coincided with what many have recognised as a backlash to #MeToo. This backlash (in politics, entertainment and wider society) has manifested in, for example, the advance of the manosphere and crackdowns on sexual and reproductive rights.

    Only one participant mentioned #MeToo specifically, noting its role in putting sexual consent on the agenda. However, it was clear that the rapidly changing and tumultuous social and political landscape regarding sexual consent informed the mens’ experiences.

    One participant in his late thirties stressed how an interest in consent was what made him want to participate in an interview. He said: “I’ve grown up through a period where … understanding about consent has changed a lot. Men of my age … I just think we’re very ill prepared for the expectations of modern society.”

    My women participants had been most concerned to protect themselves from having their consent violated. But the men appeared to be most worried about the possibility that they might violate a woman’s consent by not having ensured sexual consent when sexting.

    Some participants struggled with managing what they understood as conflicting messages regarding women’s expectations of men when sexting. For some, it meant avoiding sexting they saw as “risky”. For others, it meant continuously establishing consent by checking in with a partner.

    Moving forward

    Overall, my interviews revealed that both men and women take consent seriously, and are eager to prevent its violation.

    This is something I explored further in workshops with other researchers, relevant charities and stakeholders. Our discussions, summarised in the Consent in Digital Sexual Cultures report, stress the importance of creating room (for young men especially) to explore ideas around consent without worrying about social repercussions.

    Charities like Beyond Equality and Fumble are already creating spaces for such discussions in their meetings with young people at school, in the university and online. We also need to see more of these discussions taking place in the home, at government level and through collaboration with tech companies.

    Navigating consent in sexual relationships has long been a fraught task for many. Digital technology has created new opportunities for sexual interaction, but also for the violation of consent. We need spaces for dialogue, to help us figure out – together – what good sexual consent practice is and should look like, for everyone involved.

    Rikke Amundsen has received a British Academy/Leverhulme Small Research Grant with reference number
    SRG2223230389. This grant covered the costs of the research outlined in the Consent in Digital Sexual Cultures Report.

    ref. What research on sexting reveals about how men and women think about consent – https://theconversation.com/what-research-on-sexting-reveals-about-how-men-and-women-think-about-consent-254760

    MIL OSI Analysis

  • MIL-OSI Analysis: Welcome to post-growth Europe – can anyone accept this new political reality?

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Peter Bloom, Professor of Management, University of Essex

    TSViPhoto/Shutterstock

    Across much of Europe, the engines of economic growth are sputtering. In its latest global outlook, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) sharply downgraded its forecasts for the UK and Europe, warning that the continent faces persistent economic bumps in the road.

    Globally, the World Bank recently said this decade is likely to be the weakest for growth since the 1960s. “Outside of Asia, the developing world is becoming a development-free zone,” the bank’s chief economist warned.

    The UK economy went into reverse in April 2025, shrinking by 0.3%. The announcement came a day after the UK chancellor, Rachel Reeves, delivered her spending review to the House of Commons with a speech that mentioned the word “growth” nine times – including promising “a Growth Mission Fund to expedite local projects that are important for growth”:

    I said that we wanted growth in all parts of Britain – and, Mr Speaker, I meant it.

    Across Europe, a long-term economic forecast to 2040 predicted annual growth of just 0.9% over the next 15 years – down from 1.3% in the decade before COVID. And this forecast was in December 2024, before Donald Trump’s aggressive tariff policies had reignited trade tensions between the US and Europe (and pretty much everywhere else in the world).

    Even before Trump’s tariffs, the reality was clear to many economic experts. “Europe’s tragedy”, as one columnist put it, is that it is “deeply uncompetitive, with poor productivity, lagging in technology and AI, and suffering from regulatory overload”. In his 2024 report on European (un)competitiveness, Mario Draghi – former president of the European Central Bank (and then, briefly, Italy’s prime minister) – warned that without radical policy overhauls and investment, Europe faces “a slow agony” of relative decline.

    To date, the typical response of electorates has been to blame the policymakers and replace their governments at the first opportunity. Meanwhile, politicians of all shades whisper sweet nothings about how they alone know how to find new sources of growth – most commonly, from the magic AI tree. Because growth, with its widely accepted power to deliver greater productivity and prosperity, remains a key pillar in European politics, upheld by all parties as the benchmark of credibility, progress and control.

    But what if the sobering truth is that growth is no longer reliably attainable – across Europe at least? Not just this year or this decade but, in any meaningful sense, ever?


    The Insights section is committed to high-quality longform journalism. Our editors work with academics from many different backgrounds who are tackling a wide range of societal and scientific challenges.


    For a continent like Europe – with limited land and no more empires to exploit, ageing populations, major climate concerns and electorates demanding ever-stricter barriers to immigration – the conditions that once underpinned steady economic expansion may no longer exist. And in the UK more than most European countries, these issues are compounded by high levels of long-term sickness, early retirement and economic inactivity among working-age adults.

    As the European Parliament suggested back in 2023, the time may be coming when we are forced to look “beyond growth” – not because we want to, but because there is no other realistic option for many European nations.

    But will the public ever accept this new reality? As an expert in how public policy can be used to transform economies and societies, my question is not whether a world without growth is morally superior or more sustainable (though it may be both). Rather, I’m exploring if it’s ever possible for political parties to be honest about a “post-growth world” and still get elected – or will voters simply turn to the next leader who promises they know the secret of perpetual growth, however sketchy the evidence?

    Which way is the right way?
    Pixelvario/Shutterstock

    What drives growth?

    To understand why Europe in particular is having such a hard time generating economic growth, first we need to understand what drives it – and why some countries are better placed than others in terms of productivity (the ability to keep their economy growing).

    Economists have a relatively straightforward answer. At its core, growth comes from two factors: labour and capital (machinery, technology and the like). So, for your economy to grow, you either need more people working (to make more stuff), or the same amount of workers need to become more productive – by using better machines, tools and technologies.

    The first issue is labour. Europe’s working-age population is, for the most part, shrinking fast. Thanks to decades of declining birth rates (linked with rising life expectancy and higher incomes), along with increasing resistance to immigration, many European countries face declines in their working population. “”). Rural and urban regions of Europe alike are experiencing structural ageing and depopulation trends that make traditional economic growth ever harder to achieve.

    Historically, population growth has gone hand-in-hand with economic expansion. In the postwar years, countries such as France, Germany and the UK experienced booming birth rates and major waves of immigration. That expanding labour force fuelled industrial production, consumer demand and economic growth.

    Why does economic growth matter? Video: Bank of England.

    Ageing populations not only reduce the size of the active labour force, they place more pressure on health and other public services, as well as pension systems. Some regions have attempted to compensate with more liberal migration policies, but public resistance to immigration is strong – reflected in increased support for rightwing and populist parties that advocate for stricter immigration controls.

    While the UK’s median age is now over 40, it has a birthrate advantage over countries such as Germany and Italy, thanks largely to the influx of immigrants from its former colonies in the second half of the 20th century. But whether this translates into meaningful and sustainable growth depends heavily on labour market participation and the quality of investment – particularly in productivity-enhancing sectors like green technology, infrastructure and education – all of which remain uncertain.

    If Europe can’t rely on more workers, then to achieve growth, its existing workers must become more productive. And here, we arrive at the second half of the equation: capital. The usual hope is that investments in new technologies – particularly AI as it drives a new wave of automation – will make up the difference.

    In January, the UK’s prime minister, Keir Starmer, called AI “the defining opportunity of our generation” while announcing he had agreed to take forward all 50 recommendations set out in an independent AI action plan. Not to be outdone, the European Commission unveiled its AI continent action plan in April.

    But Europe is also falling behind in the global race to harness the economic potential of AI, trailing both the US and China. The US, in particular, has surged ahead in developing and deploying AI tools across sectors such as healthcare, finance, manufacturing and logistics, while China has leveraged its huge state-supported, open-source industrial policy to scale its digital economy.

    Keir Starmer announces the UK’s AI action plan. Video: BBC.

    Despite the EU’s concerted efforts to enhance its digital competitiveness, a 2024 McKinsey report found that US corporations invested around €700 billion more in capital expenditure and R&D, in 2022 alone than their European counterparts, underscoring the continent’s investment gap. And where AI is adopted, it tends to concentrate gains in a few superstar companies or cities.

    In fact, this disconnect between firm-level innovation and national growth is one of the defining features of the current era. Tech clusters in cities like Paris, Amsterdam and Stockholm may generate unicorn startups and record-breaking valuations, but they’re not enough to move the needle on GDP growth across Europe as a whole. The gains are often too narrow, the spillovers too weak and the social returns too uneven.

    Yet admitting this publicly remains politically taboo. Can any European leader look their citizens in the eye and say: “We’re living in a post-growth world”? Or rather, can they say it and still hope to win another election?

    The human need for growth

    To be human is to grow – physically, psychologically, financially; in the richness of our relationships, imagination and ambitions. Few people would be happy with the prospect of being consigned to do the same job for the same money for the rest of their lives – as the collapse of the Soviet Union demonstrated. Which makes the prospect of selling a post-growth future to people sound almost inhuman.

    Even those who care little about money and success usually strive to create better futures for themselves, their families and communities. When that sense of opportunity and forward motion is absent or frustrated, it can lead to malaise, disillusionment and in extreme cases, despair.

    The health consequences of long-term economic decline are increasingly described as “diseases of despair”rising rates of suicide, substance abuse and alcohol-related deaths concentrated in struggling communities. Recessions reliably fuel psychological distress and demand for mental healthcare, as seen during the eurozone crisis when Greece experienced surging levels of depression and declining self-rated health, particularly among the unemployed – with job loss, insecurity and austerity all contributing to emotional suffering and social fragmentation.

    These trends don’t just affect the vulnerable; even those who appear relatively secure often experience “anticipatory anxiety” – a persistent fear of losing their foothold and slipping into instability. In communities, both rural and urban, that are wrestling with long-term decline, “left-behind” residents often describe a deep sense of abandonment by governments and society more generally – prompting calls for recovery strategies that address despair not merely as a mental health issue, but as a wider economic and social condition.

    The belief in opportunity and upward mobility – long embodied in US culture by “the American dream” – has historically served as a powerful psychological buffer, fostering resilience and purpose even amid systemic barriers. However, as inequality widens and while career opportunities for many appear to narrow, research shows the gap between aspiration and reality can lead to disillusionment, chronic stress and increased psychological distress – particularly among marginalised groups. These feelings are only intensified in the age of social media, where constant exposure to curated success stories fuels social comparison and deepens the sense of falling behind.

    For younger people in the UK and many parts of Europe, the fact that so much capital is tied up in housing means opportunity depends less on effort or merit and more on whether their parents own property – meaning they could pass some of its value down to their children.

    ‘Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism’, a discussion hosted by LSE Online.

    Stagnation also manifests in more subtle but no less damaging ways. Take infrastructure. In many countries, the true cost of flatlining growth has been absorbed not through dramatic collapse but quiet decay.

    Across the UK, more than 1.5 million children are learning in crumbling school buildings, with some forced into makeshift classrooms for years after being evacuated due to safety concerns. In healthcare, the total NHS repair backlog has reached £13.8 billion, leading to hundreds of critical incidents – from leaking roofs to collapsing ceilings – and the loss of vital clinical time.

    Meanwhile, neglected government buildings across the country are affecting everything from prison safety to courtroom access, with thousands of cases disrupted due to structural failures and fire safety risks. These are not headlines but lived realities – the hidden toll of underinvestment, quietly hollowing out the state behind a veneer of functionality.

    Without economic growth, governments face a stark dilemma: to raise revenues through higher taxes, or make further rounds of spending cuts. Either path has deep social and political implications – especially for inequality. The question becomes not just how to balance the books but how to do so fairly – and whether the public might support a post-growth agenda framed explicitly around reducing inequality, even if it also means paying more taxes.

    In fact, public attitudes suggest there is already widespread support for reducing inequality. According to the Equality Trust, 76% of UK adults agree that large wealth gaps give some people too much political power.

    Research by the Sutton Trust finds younger people especially attuned to these disparities: only 21% of 18 to 24-year-olds believe everyone has the same chance to succeed and 57% say it’s harder for their generation to get ahead. Most believe that coming from a wealthy family (75%) and knowing the right people (84%) are key to getting on in life.

    In a post-growth world, higher taxes would not only mean wealthier individuals and corporations contributing a relatively greater share, but the wider public shifting consumption patterns, spending less on private goods and more collectively through the state. But the recent example of France shows how challenging this tightope is to walk.

    In September 2024, its former prime minister, Michel Barnier, signalled plans for targeted tax increases on the wealthy, arguing these were essential to stabilise the country’s strained public finances. While politically sensitive, his proposals for tax increases on wealthy individuals and large firms initially passed without widespread public unrest or protests.

    However, his broader austerity package – encompassing €40 billion (£34.5 billion) in spending cuts alongside €20 billion in tax hikes – drew vocal opposition from both left‑wing lawmakers and the far right, and contributed to parliament toppling his minority government in December 2024.

    In the UK, the pressure on government finances (heightened both by Brexit and COVID) has seen a combination of “stealth” tax rises – notably, the ongoing freeze on income tax thresholds, which quietly drags more earners into higher tax bands – and more visible increases, such as the rise in employer National Insurance contributions. At the same time, the UK government moved to cut benefits in its spring statement, increasing financial pressure on lower-income households.

    Such measures surely mark the early signs of a deeper financial reckoning that post-growth realities will force into the open: how to sustain public services when traditional assumptions about economic expansion can no longer be relied upon.

    For the traditional parties, the political heat is on. Regions most left behind by structural economic shifts are increasingly drawn to populist and anti-establishment movements. Electoral outcomes have shown a significant shift, with far-right parties such as France’s National Rally and Germany’s Alternative for Germany (AfD) making substantial gains in the 2024 European parliament elections, reflecting a broader trend of rising support for populist and anti-establishment parties across the continent.

    Voters are expressing growing dissatisfaction not only with the economy, but democracy itself. This sentiment has manifested through declining trust in political institutions, as evidenced by a Forsa survey in Germany where only 16% of respondents expressed confidence in their government and 54% indicated they didn’t trust any party to solve the country’s problems.

    This brings us to the central dilemma: can any European politician successfully lead a national conversation which admits the economic assumptions of the past no longer hold? Or is attempting such honesty in politics inevitably a path to self-destruction, no matter how urgently the conversation is needed?

    Facing up to a new economic reality

    For much of the postwar era, economic life in advanced democracies has rested on a set of familiar expectations: that hard work would translate into rising incomes, that home ownership would be broadly attainable and that each generation would surpass the prosperity of the one before it.

    However, a growing body of evidence suggests these pillars of economic life are eroding. Younger generations are already struggling to match their parents’ earnings, with lower rates of home ownership and greater financial precarity becoming the norm in many parts of Europe.

    Incomes for millennials and generation Z have largely stagnated relative to previous cohorts, even as their living costs – particularly for housing, education and healthcare – have risen sharply. Rates of intergenerational income mobility have slowed significantly across much of Europe and North America since the 1970s. Many young people now face the prospect not just of static living standards, but of downward mobility.

    Effectively communicating the realities of a post-growth economy – including the need to account for future generations’ growing sense of alienation and declining faith in democracy – requires more than just sound policy. It demands a serious political effort to reframe expectations and rebuild trust.

    History shows this is sometimes possible. When the National Health Service was founded in 1948, the UK government faced fierce resistance from parts of the medical profession and concerns among the public about cost and state control. Yet Clement Attlee’s Labour government persisted, linking the creation of the NHS to the shared sacrifices of the war and a compelling moral vision of universal care.

    While taxes did rise to fund the service, the promise of a fairer, healthier society helped secure enduring public support – but admittedly, in the wake of the massive shock to the system that was the second world war.

    In 1946, Prime Minister Clement Attlee asked the UK public to help ‘renew Britain’. Video: British Pathé.

    Psychological research offers further insight into how such messages can be received. People are more receptive to change when it is framed not as loss but as contribution – to fairness, to community, to shared resilience. This underlines why the immediate postwar period was such a politically fruitful time to launch the NHS. The COVID pandemic briefly offered a sense of unifying purpose and the chance to rethink the status quo – but that window quickly closed, leaving most of the old structures intact and largely unquestioned.

    A society’s ability to flourish without meaningful national growth – and its citizens’ capacity to remain content or even hopeful in the absence of economic expansion – ultimately depends on whether any political party can credibly redefine success without relying on promises of ever-increasing wealth and prosperity. And instead, offer a plausible narrative about ways to satisfy our very human needs for personal development and social enrichment in this new economic reality.

    The challenge will be not only to find new economic models, but to build new sources of collective meaning. This moment demands not just economic adaptation but a political and cultural reckoning.

    If the idea of building this new consensus seems overly optimistic, studies of the “spiral of silence” suggest that people often underestimate how widely their views are shared. A recent report on climate action found that while most people supported stronger green policies, they wrongly assumed they were in the minority. Making shared values visible – and naming them – can be key to unlocking political momentum.

    So far, no mainstream European party has dared articulate a vision of prosperity that doesn’t rely on reviving growth. But with democratic trust eroding, authoritarian populism on the rise and the climate crisis accelerating, now may be the moment to begin that long-overdue conversation – if anyone is willing to listen.

    Welcome to Europe’s first ‘post-growth’ nation

    I’m imagining a European country in a decade’s time. One that no longer positions itself as a global tech powerhouse or financial centre, but the first major country to declare itself a “post-growth nation”.

    This shift didn’t come from idealism or ecological fervour, but from the hard reality that after years of economic stagnation, demographic change and mounting environmental stress, the pursuit of economic growth no longer offered a credible path forward.

    What followed wasn’t a revolution, but a reckoning – a response to political chaos, collapsing public services and widening inequality that sparked a broad coalition of younger voters, climate activists, disillusioned centrists and exhausted frontline workers to rally around a new, pragmatic vision for the future.

    At the heart of this movement was a shift in language and priorities, as the government moved away from promises of endless economic expansion and instead committed to wellbeing, resilience and equality – aligning itself with a growing international conversation about moving beyond GDP, already gaining traction in European policy circles and initiatives such as the EU-funded “post-growth deal”.

    But this transformation was also the result of years of political drift and public disillusionment, ultimately catalysed by electoral reform that broke the two-party hold and enabled a new alliance, shaped by grassroots organisers, policy innovators and a generation ready to reimagine what national success could mean.

    Taxes were higher, particularly on land, wealth and carbon. But in return, public services were transformed. Healthcare, education, transport, broadband and energy were guaranteed as universal rights, not privatised commodities. Work changed: the standard week was shortened to 30 hours and the state incentivised jobs in care, education, maintenance and ecological restoration. People had less disposable income – but fewer costs, too.

    Consumption patterns shifted. Hyper-consumption declined. Repair shops and sharing platforms flourished. The housing market was restructured around long-term security rather than speculative returns. A large-scale public housing programme replaced buy-to-let investment as the dominant model. Wealth inequality narrowed and cities began to densify as car use fell and public space was reclaimed.

    For the younger generation, post-growth life was less about climbing the income ladder and more about stability, time and relationships. For older generations, there were guarantees: pensions remained, care systems were rebuilt and housing protections were strengthened. A new sense of intergenerational reciprocity emerged – not perfectly, but more visibly than before.

    Politically, the transition had its risks. There was backlash – some of the wealthy left. But many stayed. And over time, the narrative shifted. This European country began to be seen not as a laggard but as a laboratory for 21st-century governance – a place where ecological realism and social solidarity shaped policy, not just quarterly targets.

    The transition was uneven and not without pain. Jobs were lost in sectors no longer considered sustainable. Supply chains were restructured. International competitiveness suffered in some areas. But the political narrative – carefully crafted and widely debated – made the case that resilience and equity were more important than temporary growth.

    While some countries mocked it, others quietly began to study it. Some cities – especially in the Nordics, Iberia and Benelux – followed suit, drawing from the growing body of research on post-growth urban planning and non-GDP-based prosperity metrics.




    Read more:
    Beyond GDP: changing how we measure progress is key to tackling a world in crisis – three leading experts


    This was not a retreat from ambition but a redefinition of it. The shift was rooted in a growing body of academic and policy work arguing that a planned, democratic transition away from growth-centric models is not only compatible with social progress but essential to preventing environmental and societal collapse.

    The country’s post-growth transition helped it sidestep deeper political fragmentation by replacing austerity with heavy investment in community resilience, care infrastructure and participatory democracy – from local budgeting to citizen-led planning. A new civic culture took root: slower and more deliberative but less polarised, as politics shifted from abstract promises of growth to open debates about real-world trade-offs.

    Internationally, the country traded some geopolitical power for moral authority, focusing less on economic competition and more on global cooperation around climate, tax justice and digital governance – earning new relevance among smaller nations pursuing their own post-growth paths.

    So is this all just a social and economic fantasy? Arguably, the real fantasy is believing that countries in Europe – and the parties that compete to run them – can continue with their current insistence on “growth at all costs” (whether or not they actually believe it).

    The alternative – embracing a post-growth reality – would offer the world something we haven’t seen in a long time: honesty in politics, a commitment to reducing inequality and a belief that a fairer, more sustainable future is still possible. Not because it was easy, but because it was the only option left.


    For you: more from our Insights series:

    To hear about new Insights articles, join the hundreds of thousands of people who value The Conversation’s evidence-based news. Subscribe to our newsletter.

    Peter Bloom does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment. His latest book is Capitalism Reloaded: The Rise of the Authoritarian-Financial Complex (Bristol University Press).

    ref. Welcome to post-growth Europe – can anyone accept this new political reality? – https://theconversation.com/welcome-to-post-growth-europe-can-anyone-accept-this-new-political-reality-257420

    MIL OSI Analysis

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Green Economics – ASB and Cogo launch online energy calculator to help customers save thousands a year by switching to electric

    Source: ASB

     ASB has partnered with global carbon management fintech Cogo to launch a new online calculator which enables Kiwis to measure, understand and optimise the efficiency of their home and vehicle, helping to lower costs, while making their homes more sustainable.

    When homeowners are ready to upgrade, they can use the Better Energy Calculator to view and compare options and energy savings that are specific to their property. By choosing to switch heating, appliances or their vehicle to electric, ASB customers stand to benefit from installation discounts and could borrow up to $80,000 at 1% for up to three years through the ‘Better Homes Top Up’ for eligible upgrades.

    ASB Lend and Protect Tribe Lead, David Jackson says: “The Cogo team are experts in their field at building technology that has great economic and environmental value. We’re thrilled to be leading the way by providing this online tool to our customers and to all Kiwi.

    “Based on research conducted by Rewiring Aotearoa,[1] consumers could save up to $3,000 per year in energy costs with changes such as switching to an EV when it’s time for a new car and replacing old gas appliances with electricity. It means that customers looking to upgrade, are able to make an informed decision on cost-effective long-term choices that are also sustainable.”  

    ASB is the first bank in New Zealand to offer Cogo’s Home and Vehicle Electrification solution. It’s part of an ‘electrification ecosystem’ on ASB’s website, which offers personalised suggestions on changes energy users could make, and the upfront costs and potential savings of these changes.

    For example, the Better Energy Calculator shows that for a four-person dwelling in the Auckland suburb of Birkenhead, a homeowner could save $1,400 per year by switching their heating, hot water and cook tops to electric, with upfront costs from $15,500. Adding solar to the home increases potential savings by an additional $1,600 per year, based on upfront costs from $11,000. In fact, if they go electric with their next vehicle (costing $49,990), this homeowner could save another $1,200 per year on car running costs. [2]  

    With a click of a mouse, people can connect directly with Cogo’s trusted installers offering exclusive discounts, and with the ASB team, who can support with financing of upfront costs. The Better Energy Calculator even removes the hard work of research by suggesting EVs most similar to the user’s existing vehicle.

    Cogo founder and CEO, Ben Gleisner says: “We share a strong alignment with ASB in our mission to encourage people to take personal action on climate change, and electrifying their homes and cars is a great way to start.  Success for us would be thousands of Kiwi making changes that save them money and reduce their carbon footprint.”  

    The Better Energy Calculator is available now, to anyone, on the ASB website: Get better energy with ASB (ref. https://www.asb.co.nz/home-loans-mortgages/better-energy.html )

    [1] Rewiring Aotearoa, Electric Homes Report (ref. https://www.rewiring.nz/electric-homes-report )
    2 Upfront costs represent the initial outlay for the product only and do not include finance or interest rates which vary.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Prostate Cancer – What Every Man Should Know

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    When Vernon Owens came back from a work trip in early 2023, he expected to resume his usual health routine. Instead, a routine blood test from his UConn Health primary care doctor set off a chain of events that would change his life and potentially save it.

    “I was just going in for a routine physical, but my doctor at UConn Health noticed something unusual in my bloodwork, my PSA was higher than usual,” said Owens. “At first it was around 3.5, and then when they checked it again, it went up a little more. That’s when I knew I needed to take it seriously.”

    PSA, or prostate-specific antigen, is a protein produced by the prostate. According to Dr. Ben Ristau, a urologic oncologist and surgical director of Urologic Oncology at UConn Health, PSA screening is the primary tool for detecting prostate cancer before symptoms ever appear. The PSA test is a simple blood test that measures the level of prostate-specific antigen, a protein produced by both normal and cancerous prostate cells. Elevated PSA levels can indicate prostate cancer, but not always.

    “PSA can go up for a variety of benign reasons,” Ristau said. “Enlarged prostate, inflammation, urinary tract infections — all of these can cause temporary increases in PSA. That’s why we usually repeat the test and look at other indicators before jumping to a biopsy.”

    Ristau recommends that men at average risk begin discussing PSA screening with their doctors around age 50. Those at higher risk, such as Black men or those with a family history, should begin discussions as early as age 40–45.

    “There’s also a conversation to be had about when to stop screening,” said Ristau. “For men with a life expectancy under 10 years, continuing PSA testing may do more harm than good. It’s about balancing benefits and risks.”

    If PSA remains elevated, doctors may order an MRI of the prostate to look for suspicious areas and evaluate prostate size. If necessary, a targeted biopsy follows.

    “The majority of prostate cancers are caught early because of PSA screening,” said Ristau. “It’s a simple blood test, but interpreting it isn’t always simple. PSA can be elevated for many reasons that aren’t cancer, such as inflammation or an enlarged prostate. That’s why it’s important to follow up with diagnostic tests, like MRI and biopsy, if it remains high.”

    Prostate cancer is the most commonly diagnosed non-skin cancer in American men. About 1 in 8 men will be diagnosed with it in their lifetime. The good news is that most prostate cancers are slow-growing and highly treatable, especially when caught early.

    “The majority of prostate cancers don’t cause symptoms until they’re advanced,” explained Ristau, “That’s why PSA screening is so important, it can detect cancer long before symptoms appear.”

    The prostate is a small gland in the male reproductive system, located just below the bladder. It produces seminal fluid that nourishes and transports sperm. Prostate cancer begins when cells in the prostate start to grow uncontrollably.

    “Most men will develop some form of prostate cancer if they live long enough,” Ristau said. “But not all prostate cancers are life-threatening. The key is knowing which ones need treatment and which can be safely watched.”

    In Owens case, his PSA continued to rise. An MRI revealed an abnormal area, and a biopsy confirmed prostate cancer diagnosis. Fortunately, it was localized and caught before it spread. He was then referred to Ristau to discuss his options.

    “He came in with an elevated PSA, had an MRI that showed some abnormalities, and a biopsy confirmed the diagnosis,” said Ristau. “Like with all my patients, we had a heart-to-heart discussion about the best path forward.”

    That conversation included all the options: active surveillance, radiation, hormone therapy, or surgery to remove the prostate.

    Not all prostate cancers need to be treated right away. Many are low-grade and slow growing.

    “For those cases, we recommend active surveillance,” said Ristau. “That means regular PSA tests, MRIs, and occasional biopsies to monitor for changes. The goal is to avoid unnecessary treatment and its side effects while staying ahead of any progression.”

    Research shows that many men on active surveillance never require treatment, and even those who eventually do often benefit from years of preserved quality of life.

    “It was scary,” Owens recalled. “I had to learn fast, about the Gleason score a grading system used to assess how aggressive prostate cancer cells look under the microscope, about staging, about the options I had. I went home, did my homework, and got two more opinions,” Vernon said. “Ultimately, after talking with my wife and weighing the risks, I decided surgery was right for me.”

    “There are several treatment paths, including radiation, hormone therapy, or active surveillance if the cancer is low risk,” said Ristau. “In Vernon’s case, surgery was the most appropriate next step.”

    On October 2, 2023, Owens underwent a robotic prostatectomy performed by Ristau using the Da Vinci robotic system. The minimally invasive approach meant a quicker recovery and less pain.

    “I expected it to be a lot more painful,” Owens recalled. “But I was only in the hospital for one day. They told me I had to be able to walk and use the bathroom I did both right away.”

    He credited his smooth recovery in part to years of martial arts training, which gave him strong core control and prepared him for the pelvic floor exercises recommended after prostate surgery to help manage incontinence.

    “By the next day, I was walking laps around the hospital wing,” he said. “The care I received was exceptional. Everyone was professional, responsive, and made my wife and me feel supported through the entire process.”

    Follow-up PSA tests after surgery showed the best possible result: less than 0.01, indicating no evidence of cancer in the body.

    Now cancer-free, Owens is back to work and living his life. He continues regular follow-up visits with Ristau and has become a vocal advocate for men’s health within his professional and personal circles.

    Screening matters, especially for those at higher risk. This includes men with a family history of prostate cancer, those with BRCA gene mutations, and Black men, who are more likely to develop aggressive forms of the disease.

    “Men of color especially need to be aware,” Owens said. “We sometimes wait too long to get checked. I’m almost 67 now, and I want other men, especially Black men, to understand how important it is to stay on top of your health. Prostate cancer doesn’t have to be a death sentence if you catch it early.”

    “I tell my friends: don’t wait. If you feel off, get checked. If you’ve never had a PSA test, ask for one. And if prostate cancer runs in your family, start screening early, says Owens”

    He’s also grateful for the care he received at UConn Health.

    “Dr. Ristau and his team were phenomenal,” he said. “He answered all my questions, even the hard ones. He made me feel confident and calm during one of the most uncertain times in my life. Thanks to him, I get to tell my story and hopefully help someone else catch it early too.”

    Learn more about PSA screening and prostate cancer care at UConn Health.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Prostate Cancer – What Every Man Should Know

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    When Vernon Owens came back from a work trip in early 2023, he expected to resume his usual health routine. Instead, a routine blood test from his UConn Health primary care doctor set off a chain of events that would change his life and potentially save it.

    “I was just going in for a routine physical, but my doctor at UConn Health noticed something unusual in my bloodwork, my PSA was higher than usual,” said Owens. “At first it was around 3.5, and then when they checked it again, it went up a little more. That’s when I knew I needed to take it seriously.”

    PSA, or prostate-specific antigen, is a protein produced by the prostate. According to Dr. Ben Ristau, a urologic oncologist and surgical director of Urologic Oncology at UConn Health, PSA screening is the primary tool for detecting prostate cancer before symptoms ever appear. The PSA test is a simple blood test that measures the level of prostate-specific antigen, a protein produced by both normal and cancerous prostate cells. Elevated PSA levels can indicate prostate cancer, but not always.

    “PSA can go up for a variety of benign reasons,” Ristau said. “Enlarged prostate, inflammation, urinary tract infections — all of these can cause temporary increases in PSA. That’s why we usually repeat the test and look at other indicators before jumping to a biopsy.”

    Ristau recommends that men at average risk begin discussing PSA screening with their doctors around age 50. Those at higher risk, such as Black men or those with a family history, should begin discussions as early as age 40–45.

    “There’s also a conversation to be had about when to stop screening,” said Ristau. “For men with a life expectancy under 10 years, continuing PSA testing may do more harm than good. It’s about balancing benefits and risks.”

    If PSA remains elevated, doctors may order an MRI of the prostate to look for suspicious areas and evaluate prostate size. If necessary, a targeted biopsy follows.

    “The majority of prostate cancers are caught early because of PSA screening,” said Ristau. “It’s a simple blood test, but interpreting it isn’t always simple. PSA can be elevated for many reasons that aren’t cancer, such as inflammation or an enlarged prostate. That’s why it’s important to follow up with diagnostic tests, like MRI and biopsy, if it remains high.”

    Prostate cancer is the most commonly diagnosed non-skin cancer in American men. About 1 in 8 men will be diagnosed with it in their lifetime. The good news is that most prostate cancers are slow-growing and highly treatable, especially when caught early.

    “The majority of prostate cancers don’t cause symptoms until they’re advanced,” explained Ristau, “That’s why PSA screening is so important, it can detect cancer long before symptoms appear.”

    The prostate is a small gland in the male reproductive system, located just below the bladder. It produces seminal fluid that nourishes and transports sperm. Prostate cancer begins when cells in the prostate start to grow uncontrollably.

    “Most men will develop some form of prostate cancer if they live long enough,” Ristau said. “But not all prostate cancers are life-threatening. The key is knowing which ones need treatment and which can be safely watched.”

    In Owens case, his PSA continued to rise. An MRI revealed an abnormal area, and a biopsy confirmed prostate cancer diagnosis. Fortunately, it was localized and caught before it spread. He was then referred to Ristau to discuss his options.

    “He came in with an elevated PSA, had an MRI that showed some abnormalities, and a biopsy confirmed the diagnosis,” said Ristau. “Like with all my patients, we had a heart-to-heart discussion about the best path forward.”

    That conversation included all the options: active surveillance, radiation, hormone therapy, or surgery to remove the prostate.

    Not all prostate cancers need to be treated right away. Many are low-grade and slow growing.

    “For those cases, we recommend active surveillance,” said Ristau. “That means regular PSA tests, MRIs, and occasional biopsies to monitor for changes. The goal is to avoid unnecessary treatment and its side effects while staying ahead of any progression.”

    Research shows that many men on active surveillance never require treatment, and even those who eventually do often benefit from years of preserved quality of life.

    “It was scary,” Owens recalled. “I had to learn fast, about the Gleason score a grading system used to assess how aggressive prostate cancer cells look under the microscope, about staging, about the options I had. I went home, did my homework, and got two more opinions,” Vernon said. “Ultimately, after talking with my wife and weighing the risks, I decided surgery was right for me.”

    “There are several treatment paths, including radiation, hormone therapy, or active surveillance if the cancer is low risk,” said Ristau. “In Vernon’s case, surgery was the most appropriate next step.”

    On October 2, 2023, Owens underwent a robotic prostatectomy performed by Ristau using the Da Vinci robotic system. The minimally invasive approach meant a quicker recovery and less pain.

    “I expected it to be a lot more painful,” Owens recalled. “But I was only in the hospital for one day. They told me I had to be able to walk and use the bathroom I did both right away.”

    He credited his smooth recovery in part to years of martial arts training, which gave him strong core control and prepared him for the pelvic floor exercises recommended after prostate surgery to help manage incontinence.

    “By the next day, I was walking laps around the hospital wing,” he said. “The care I received was exceptional. Everyone was professional, responsive, and made my wife and me feel supported through the entire process.”

    Follow-up PSA tests after surgery showed the best possible result: less than 0.01, indicating no evidence of cancer in the body.

    Now cancer-free, Owens is back to work and living his life. He continues regular follow-up visits with Ristau and has become a vocal advocate for men’s health within his professional and personal circles.

    Screening matters, especially for those at higher risk. This includes men with a family history of prostate cancer, those with BRCA gene mutations, and Black men, who are more likely to develop aggressive forms of the disease.

    “Men of color especially need to be aware,” Owens said. “We sometimes wait too long to get checked. I’m almost 67 now, and I want other men, especially Black men, to understand how important it is to stay on top of your health. Prostate cancer doesn’t have to be a death sentence if you catch it early.”

    “I tell my friends: don’t wait. If you feel off, get checked. If you’ve never had a PSA test, ask for one. And if prostate cancer runs in your family, start screening early, says Owens”

    He’s also grateful for the care he received at UConn Health.

    “Dr. Ristau and his team were phenomenal,” he said. “He answered all my questions, even the hard ones. He made me feel confident and calm during one of the most uncertain times in my life. Thanks to him, I get to tell my story and hopefully help someone else catch it early too.”

    Learn more about PSA screening and prostate cancer care at UConn Health.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Educators poised to “fight forward” for public education

    Source: US National Education Union

    PORTLAND, Ore. — At NEA’s annual Representative Assembly (RA), educators took an unprecedented step to respond to the demands of the time and sustain their momentum—disrupting business as usual by boldly embracing a transformative shift to strengthen the movement for public education that has been growing in every district and state since January.

    In an unprecedented move, delegates to the NEA RA voted to spend nearly one day of their meeting training and empowering thousands of members with the knowledge, strategies, and tools they need to build campaigns and organize effectively to protect and strengthen public education in communities nationwide. Nearly 7,000 educators will return home ready to advocate for their students and colleagues—at the bargaining table, in school board meetings, at state legislatures, and at the ballot box.

    “We must use our power to take action that leads, action that liberates, action that lasts,” said NEA President Becky Pringle in her address to delegates. “We are going to Educate. Communicate. Organize. Mobilize. Litigate. Legislate. Elect.”

    Demonstrating their unwavering commitment to reversing harmful education cuts, advancing equity and inclusion for every student and educator—regardless of ZIP code, race, or identity—and renewing the promise of democracy, delegates participated in intensive training sessions designed to equip them with the skills and strategies needed to lead effective advocacy efforts in their communities and across every district and state nationwide.

    The trainings covered a range of topics, including effective advocacy, fighting vouchers and privatization, promoting inclusive and just schools, protecting immigrant students and building power for the common good. Delegates were quick to sign up, with most sessions reaching capacity within hours of registration opening.

    In the wake of unprecedented attacks from state legislatures and with the current administration and outside interests more focused on providing tax breaks for billionaires than protecting children, NEA has been leading the charge for education and racial justice. Since January, union members, family and friends have flocked to NEA’s advocacy channels, sending hundreds of thousands of messages to Congress that demand our lawmakers protect public education and embrace diversity. In fact, some 30% of the messages sent to Congress were sent from people new to NEA’s activist universe. That energy and enthusiasm has been on display at walk-ins, rallies, and marches across the country and, no doubt, played a role in NEA being poised to finish the year with a net increase in membership.

    “We cannot simply fight against,” added Pringle. “We must also fight forward: for our vision of a public school system where every student—every one—attends a school that is safe, welcoming, and plentiful in resources; a school where every student is celebrated for who they know themselves to be; a school that is steeped in excellence and care; where education justice is recognized as a birthright; where educators—you—are valued as the professionals you are.”

    On the final day, delegates from across the nation came together with focus and determination—dedicating their time to learning, strategizing, and organizing campaigns designed to build enduring power in their communities. Fueled by the momentum they’ve created throughout the gathering, they left equipped with the tools, knowledge, and resources needed not just to sustain that energy, but to amplify it.

    “Our educators will leave energized and prepared to carry their learnings back to every corner of the country—ready to engage with school boards, town halls, state legislatures, and even Congress,” said Pringle. “United in purpose, they are ready to keep advocating for their students, schools, and communities—facing the challenges to public education head-on with renewed strength and solidarity.”

    ###

    Follow us on Bluesky at https://bsky.app/profile/neapresident.bsky.social & https://bsky.app/profile/neatoday.bsky.social

    The National Education Association is the nation’s largest professional employee organization, representing 3 million elementary and secondary teachers, higher education faculty, education support professionals, school administrators, retired educators, students preparing to become teachers, healthcare workers, and public employees. Learn more at www.nea.org.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Walker: The FY26 Budget: Georgia Gets the Job Done

    Source: US State of Georgia

    By: Sen. Larry Walker, III (R–Perry)

    When you hear “state budget,” you might think of bureaucrats in suits arguing over line items in some far-off building. However, we do things differently here in Georgia, and this year’s budget proves it.

    On July 1, our Fiscal Year (FY) 2026 budget officially took effect. It’s an almost $38 billion spending plan that reflects conservative principles: live within your means, invest in what matters and never forget whose money you’re spending. Unlike Washington, where gridlock and runaway spending seem to be the norm, Georgia passed a balanced budget on time, with no drama and no new debt.

    As a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, I worked closely with Chairman Blake Tillery and my colleagues to ensure this budget reflects the values of middle Georgia — places like Warner Robins, Dublin, Cochran and Hawkinsville — where folks work hard, stretch a dollar and expect their government to do the same.

    Let’s start with education. Whether you have a child in school, a grandchild learning to read or just want to see the next generation succeed, this budget pledges meaningful investments. We fully funded the new Promise Scholarship Program, expanding school choice so more families can find the right fit for their children. That’s a conservative win, empowering parents instead of bureaucracy.

    We added $18.4 million to place 116 new literacy coaches in schools and increased funding for student mental health and advocacy specialists. These aren’t abstract policies; they’re life-changing personnel that will support schools across our state.

    On the practical side, we’re helping school districts afford safer, more reliable transportation by spending $20 million on new buses and over $10 million to strengthen routes and operations. This support makes a real difference in spread-out systems like those in Laurens or Dodge County.

    We also doubled down on job training. Career and technical education is booming across Georgia, and we’re meeting that demand with $33.4 million for our technical colleges, plus $15.8 million for high-demand fields like commercial truck driving, nursing and aviation.

    At the end of the day, not every student needs a four-year degree to build a successful life. Whether they’re training at Oconee Fall Line Tech or Central Georgia Tech, we’re ensuring students in our area can gain the skills they need and start a career without piling on student debt or leaving home.

    I was especially proud of our substantial investments in agriculture, Georgia’s number one industry. We added $7.3 million for updated ag-ed equipment and expanded Young Farmer positions in schools across the state. That kind of seed planting pays off for future family farms, vital to food security in the coming years. We also invested over $51 million to modernize Department of Agriculture facilities and funded a pilot program to promote Georgia-grown wood products, boosting our timber industry.

    While our counterparts in D.C. spend months debating how many billions to borrow, here in Georgia we’re putting taxpayer dollars to work where they matter most and doing it without spending money we don’t have.

    Public safety was another top budget priority this year. We committed nearly $40 million to hiring additional correctional officers and raising pay for chaplains, counselors, and food service workers. That matters here at home, too, as Pulaski State Prison and other correctional facilities in our region rely on these investments to remain fully staffed and secure. We’re also upgrading crime lab technology and building a new law enforcement training center in Monroe County, so that Georgia’s next generation of officers is well-prepared to keep our communities safe.

    While Congress continues to delay federal VOCA funds that support crime victims, we stepped in with $3.1 million to keep those services going.

    All of this — and I’ll say it again — while lowering taxes.

    That’s the difference conservative leadership makes. We didn’t chase headlines or fund every pet project. We focused on the basics: strong schools, good jobs, safe communities and smart investments that deliver real results for the people of the 20th Senate District.

    If you’d like to know more about how this budget impacts you or if you have ideas for how we can keep improving, my door is always open, and I’m proud to serve you.

    # # # #

    Sen. Larry Walker serves as Chairman of the Senate Committee on Insurance and Labor. He represents the 20th Senate District, which includes Bleckley, Dodge, Dooly, Laurens, Treutlen, Pulaski and Wilcox counties, as well as portions of Houston County.  He may be reached by phone at (404) 656-0095 or by email at Larry.Walker@senate.ga.gov.

    For all media inquiries, please reach out to SenatePressInquiries@senate.ga.gov.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Congratulating Cabo Verde on Fiftieth Anniversary, Secretary-General Recognizes Its ‘History Marked by Pain, Injustice, But Also by Solidarity’

    Source: United Nations 4

    Following are UN Secretary-General António Guterres’ remarks, delivered by Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed, at the fiftieth anniversary of Cabo Verde and the fiftieth anniversary of its partnership with the United Nations, in Praia today:

    I am happy to be with you today on behalf of the United Nations Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, and I thank the Government and the people of Cabo Verde for your warm welcome and hospitality.  I am honoured to deliver his remarks on this historic occasion.

    It is with deep emotion that I send these words to a country I hold close to my heart.  As Secretary-General of the United Nations, as former Prime Minister of Portugal and as a long-time friend, I am honoured to mark this fiftieth anniversary of Cabo Verdean independence and partnership with the United Nations.

    Cabo Verde has shaped my conscience and conviction.  And I celebrate with you the enduring spirit of the povo cabo-verdiano — a people whose determination has long outshone the constraints of geography.

    The story of Cabo Verde is a story of freedom reclaimed.  On 5 July 1975, the world bore witness to the birth of a new republic.

    After centuries of colonial rule, the people of Cabo Verde — together with their brothers and sisters in Guinea-Bissau — rose up to demand self-determination.

    As a Portuguese citizen, I cannot speak of Cabo Verde without acknowledging the deep and complex history we share — a history marked by pain, injustice, but also by solidarity.

    I carry with me the memory of walking through the gates of the former Tarrafal concentration camp — in the company of Edmundo Pedro and Sérgio Vilarigues, who had endured its horrors.  Their stories of suffering and resistance are etched into my memory.

    Today, we honour so many heroes of that struggle — heroes like Amílcar Cabral.  Receiving the Order of Amílcar Cabral by Prime Minister Carlos Veiga remains one of the greatest honours of my life.

    From the beginning, Cabo Verde chose the harder path: Stability over strife.  Dialogue over division.  The peaceful transition to independence, the embrace of democracy and good governance.  A model that endures.

    Cabo Verde is also a wonder of geography.  Ten volcanic islands scattered across the Atlantic, bound by morabeza — that singular warmth and grace that define the Cabo Verdean soul.

    But, it is the people who truly set Cabo Verde apart.  A culture that is at once rooted and global, melancholic and joyful.

    This nation gave the world morna — a music of sodade, of longing for home across distant seas.  It brought us the timeless voice of Cesária Évora, who sang from Mindelo to the world — and made every listener feel a little closer to Cabo Verde.

    When Cabo Verde gained independence, many may have doubted. Yet, five decades later, you stand as a middle-income country and a champion of peace and equality.

    As Prime Minister of Portugal, I had the privilege of working closely with Cabo Verde to deepen our cooperation.  I recall with pride the signing of the Acordo de Cooperação Cambial — a monetary agreement that was more than a technical arrangement.

    It was a bridge between our economies, a symbol of trust and a recognition of Cabo Verde’s growing role on the global stage.  And through it all, you have remained true to your values.

    Welcoming migrants, upholding the rule of law and staying true to the principles of solidarity and open cooperation.  I saw these values in action during my last visit.

    At the port of Mindelo, I watched the sails of the Ocean Race rise against the horizon — a striking reminder of Cabo Verde’s openness, resolve and connection to the wider world.

    What stayed with me was not just the race, but the spirit onshore — young people learning, communities coming together, leaders thinking boldly about the future.  It reinforced what I have always felt:  Cabo Verde is not just navigating the tides of change — it is helping to chart the course. 

    And the United Nations has been honoured to journey with you. From the earliest development plans — schools, health systems and social protection, to our shared work on food security, disaster resilience and democratic institutions.

    From supporting the graduation from least developed country status, to cooperating on climate action, ocean conservation, biodiversity protection, renewable energy.  And advancing the multidimensional vulnerability index — a vital tool to reflect the unique challenges of small island developing countries.

    Together, we are exploring new frontiers:  the blue economy, digital inclusion and diaspora engagement.  And today, as we celebrate your past, we also recommit to your future.  A future shaped by resolve.  Cabo Verde knows, more than most, the realities of climate change.  Rising seas, droughts, external shocks.

    Your location also brings higher costs — for transport, for energy, for resilience.  But, you have turned water scarcity into a frontier of innovation.

    You are building climate resilience in your infrastructure and communities.  You are expanding clean energy.  You are leading on marine conservation.  And as co-lead of the Small Island Developing States Coalition for Nature, you are rallying global action to protect our planet’s most vulnerable ecosystems.

    You are showing the world that ocean stewardship is a responsibility.  And the world must match your determination with support — through climate finance, technology and fairer systems for small island developing States.

    Fifty years ago, Cabo Verde was born into freedom.  Today, it moves boldly into the future with ambitious plans grounded in the Sustainable Development Goals; with innovation in the blue economy, biodiversity and climate resilience; with empowered youth and inclusive growth; with leadership in regional affairs — from the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to the African Union; and with more regional integration — taking advantage of the African Continental Free Trade Area.

    The people of Cabo Verde understand what it means to struggle — and to overcome.  To the povo cabo-verdiano, in every island and across the ocean:  This celebration belongs to you.

    As Secretary-General of the United Nations, I salute your journey.  As a friend, I rejoice in this moment and celebrate with you.  As a citizen of the world, I thank you — for your example, your partnership, your promise.

    May Cabo Verde forever shine:  As a light in the Atlantic.  A bridge between continents.  A country of hope and dreams.  Parabéns, Cabo Verde.  Long live the republic.  Long live your journey.  Long live your future.  Obrigado.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI: EMGS – Vessel activity and multi-client sales update for the second quarter 2025

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Electromagnetic Geoservices ASA (the “Company” or “EMGS”) releases information on vessel activity and multi-client sales during the quarter approximately 4-5 working days after the close of each quarter. The Company defines vessel utilisation as the percentage of the vessel charter period spent on proprietary or multi-client data acquisition. Downtime (technical or maritime), mobilisation, steaming, and some standby activities are not included in the utilisation rate.  

    At the end of the second quarter 2025 the Company had one vessel on charter, the Atlantic Guardian. The Atlantic Guardian completed the second of two proprietary surveys in India in the quarter and started transit back to Norway for three fully prefunded multi-client surveys in the North Sea with a total contract value of USD 2.7 million.

    The utilization for the second quarter was 44% compared with 51% for the second quarter 2024. 

    EMGS had one vessel in operation and recorded 3.0 vessel months in the quarter. In the second quarter 2024, the Company recorded 3.0 vessel months.

    Multi-client revenues in the second quarter
    The Company expects to record approximately USD 200,000 in multi-client late sales in the second quarter of 2025.

    EMGS will publish its second quarter 2025 financial results on Wednesday 13 August 2025 prior to 07:30 local time (Norway). A recorded presentation will also be made available over the Internet. To access the presentation, please go to the Company’s homepage (www.emgs.com) and follow the link.

    Contact
    Anders Eimstad, Chief Financial Officer, +47 948 25 836

    This information is published in accordance with the Norwegian Securities Trading Act § 5-12.

    About EMGS
    EMGS, the marine EM market leader, uses its proprietary electromagnetic (EM) technology to support oil and gas companies in their search for offshore hydrocarbons. EMGS supports each stage in the workflow, from survey design and data acquisition to processing and interpretation. The Company’s services enable the integration of EM data with seismic and other geophysical and geological information to give explorationists a clearer and more complete understanding of the subsurface. This improves exploration efficiency and reduces risks and the finding costs per barrel. CSEM technology can also be used to detect the presence of marine mineral deposits (primarily Seabed Massive Sulphides) and in other offshore construction and exploration activity.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Fengate highlights responsible investment progress with release of 2024 Sustainability Report

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORONTO, July 07, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Fengate Asset Management (Fengate) today released its 2024 Sustainability Report (the report), demonstrating the firm’s continued commitment to responsible investment in Canada and the United States (U.S.).

    Fengate’s second firmwide sustainability report, the latest report details the significant progress made in several key areas between January and December 2024, including responsible labour, environmental, social, and governance (ESG) data management, climate risk management, and economic impact reporting. The full 2024 Sustainability Report is available here.

    “Fengate was founded with a fundamental commitment to upholding our responsibilities to our stakeholders, our environment, and our communities, as we believe responsible investment is critical to delivering long-term, sustainable value,” said Lou Serafini Jr., President and CEO of Fengate. “This report demonstrates that we can achieve impactful results by being thoughtful in the opportunities we pursue, in the decisions we make, and by selecting the right partners to help deliver our projects.”

    The report also highlights key accomplishments from across Fengate’s infrastructure, private equity, and real estate businesses. Highlights include:

    • Engaging labour responsibly: Fengate Infrastructure’s LAX Consolidated Rent-a-Car (ConRAC) project in Los Angeles was delivered under a Project Labour Agreement (PLA), creating more than 5,000 jobs and generating US$200 million in wages for the local workforce throughout construction. More than 4.1 million union construction labour hours were generated, with all of North America’s Building Trades Unions (NABTU) trades involved.
    • Raising the bar for sustainable design: Fengate Real Estate’s Harmony Commons student residence project delivered for the University of Toronto became the largest passive house-certified building in Canada, and the largest passive house dormitory in the world. The building consumes 70% less energy and contributes 90% less GHG emissions per person in peak conditions and eliminates the use of fossil fuels for heating and cooling.
    • Moving the needle on the energy transition: With nine renewable energy assets throughout the U.S., Fengate Infrastructure achieved a capacity of 749 megawatts (MW), generating more than 1.9 million megawatt-hours (MWh) of renewable energy in 2024.
    • Enhancing nature protection: A third of Fengate Real Estate’s 600-acre Friday Harbour Resort in Innisfil, Ontario, is dedicated nature reserve. Every measure has been taken to ensure that natural wildlife – including 40 species of birds, deer, and red fox – are protected. Additionally, new wetlands have been created to provide enhanced habitat opportunities for a range of flora and fauna.
    • Improving resource conservation: Fengate partnered with U-PAK Emerald Energy to divert 100% of landfill waste from the office buildings it manages to achieve zero waste, with 628 metric tonnes of waste diverted, 2,093 tonnes of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions avoided, and 125 MWh of electricity generated from waste.
    • Elevating industry leadership: Fengate was recognized as one of Canada’s Best Managed Companies for the 17th consecutive year, named as one of Canada’s Top Small & Medium Employers, and was recognized by Great Place to Work Canada as a Best Workplace for Financial Services, Women, Inclusion, Mental Wellness, Today’s Youth, Giving Back, and Most Trusted Executive Teams. The firm also achieved a 5/5 PRI (Principles for Responsible Investment) score on policy, governance, and strategy for the 2024 assessment period.

    About Fengate
    Fengate is a leading alternative investment manager with more than $24 billion in assets under management, focused on infrastructure, private equity, and real estate strategies. With offices in Toronto, Miami, and Houston, and 300 team members across North America, Fengate leverages more than 50 years of entrepreneurial experience to deliver excellent investment results on behalf of its clients. Learn more at www.fengate.com.

    Media contact
    Dale Gago
    Communications and Marketing Business Partner
    Fengate Asset Management
    dale.gago@fengate.com
    437 326 1473

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Westminster Abbey bells chime at Lord Mayor of Westminster’s Civic Service | Westminster City Council

    Source: City of Westminster

    Westminster Abbey opened its doors to residents, community groups, friends and family of the Lord Mayor for one of the most important events in the City of Westminster’s calendar—the Civic Service. This officially marks the appointment of the Lord Mayor and Deputy High Steward, Cllr Paul Dimoldenberg.

    The service began with morning prayers, or matins sung by the Choir of Westminster Abbey. The Lord Mayor read from the Book of Deuteronomy, while Westminster City Council Leader, Councillor Adam Hug, delivered a reading from the New Testament, reflecting on the importance of community. The sermon was given by The Reverend David Stanton, Sub-Dean and Canon Treasurer.

    Following the service, the Abbey’s bells rang out as councillors, cadets from the RAF and Army, emergency service representatives, and guests joined the Lord Mayor for a reception in the College Garden.

    In 1965 the new City of Westminster, incorporated the Boroughs of Paddington and St Marylebone by Royal Charter. The following year, the Queen granted the First Citizen the style and dignity of Lord Mayor. To recognise these links between Westminster Abbey and the City Council, the Dean and Chapter welcomes annually the new Lord Mayor of Westminster, the Deputy High Steward, in State to the Civic Service. However, an annual Civic Service dates back to 1935 where the honorary role of Deputy High Steward is given to the Lord Mayor of Westminster by the Dean of Westminster and Chapter. 

    Speaking after the service, The Lord Mayor of Westminster, Cllr Paul Dimoldenberg, said:

    “On such a historic day, it was a privilege to share this moment with family, friends, and all those who have made my career as a councillor so memorable.”

    “Despite being is one of my lesser-known responsibilities, it’s importance is not lost on me, and it is a great honour and a privilege to hold the position of Deputy High Steward of Westminster. 

    “This city has been my home for over 50 years but events like this serve as a reminder of how special Westminster truly is.”

    For those who were unable to attend, the service is available on Westminster Abbey’s website.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Small grants, big splash: new Blue Sparks programme launched to connect Plymouth with the sea

    Source: City of Plymouth

    Community groups across Plymouth are being invited to bring their ideas to life with the launch of the Blue Sparks Community Grants Programme, helping people connect with, enjoy and protect Plymouth Sound. 

    The new scheme, launched by Plymouth Sound National Marine Park and supported by The National Lottery Heritage Fund, will run over the next three years, supporting grassroots organisations to develop and deliver their ideas through grants of up to £2,500, and in special cases up to £5,000. These grants are designed to help people access, explore, and better understand the marine park and its blue spaces. 

    But what exactly are blue spaces? They’re our rivers, seas, lakes and coastal waters, places that support nature, connect us with Plymouth’s rich maritime heritage, and are vital for our mental and physical wellbeing. Plymouth Sound sits at the heart of these blue spaces, and the Blue Sparks programme aims to help even more people experience, enjoy, and learn about them. 

    Whether it’s creating art to showcase Plymouth’s heritage assets or improving our local blue spaces, the grants will fund grassroots projects that support Plymouth Sound National Marine Park’s ambition to make Britain’s Ocean City more accessible and enjoyable for all. 

    Councillor Tudor Evans OBE, Leader of Plymouth City Council, said:  “Plymouth is Britain’s Ocean City, and our relationship with the sea shapes who we are. The Blue Sparks grants are a fantastic way for local groups to get involved with Plymouth Sound National Marine Park, bringing community-led projects to life that help people enjoy, learn about and protect the waters on our doorstep. Whether it’s getting young people involved in ocean activities or celebrating our maritime heritage, this programme will help more people connect with the Sound in new ways.” 

    Stuart McLeod, Director England – London & South at The National Lottery Heritage Fund said:  “Investing in heritage means investing in the people and communities it belongs to. That’s why we’re proud to support the Blue Sparks Community Grants Programme as part of our continued partnership with Plymouth Sount National Marine Park. Thanks to National Lottery players, this initiative will empower local people to celebrate, protect, and connect with the incredible marine and natural heritage on their doorstep. We’re excited to see the creative and meaningful ways Plymothians will bring Britain’s Ocean City to life.” 

    Plymouth Sound National Marine Park: Britain’s First 

    Plymouth Sound is home to the UK’s first National Marine Park, celebrating and protecting the vibrant waters, wildlife and heritage of our local seas while ensuring they can be enjoyed by everyone. From the bustling waterfront and historic naval docks to thriving seagrass meadows and a rich maritime history, the National Marine Park is about making Plymouth’s blue spaces accessible to all, supporting health and wellbeing, driving the local economy and tackling the climate emergency. 

    Covering over 8,600 hectares of ocean, estuaries and coastline, the National Marine Park is home to thousands of marine species and plays a vital role in Plymouth’s identity and future. Through community projects, learning opportunities and initiatives like Blue Sparks, the National Marine Park is working to ensure Plymouth’s marine environment is protected and celebrated for generations to come. 

    The launch of Blue Sparks is part of the wider five-year Heritage Horizon Award project, supporting the development of the UK’s first National Marine Park with funding from The National Lottery Heritage Fund. The National Lottery Heritage Fund launched The Heritage Horizon Awards in 2019 to support ambitious, innovative and transformational projects that revolutionise UK heritage. These awards help transform lives and local economies, place the UK at the forefront of major environmental and heritage projects, and show confidence in the heritage sector to rebuild and thrive. As part of this, Plymouth Sound National Marine Park received £11.6 million to help revolutionise the way Plymouth connects with its marine heritage. 

    The Blue Sparks programme is now open for applications. 

    For more information on how to apply, visit: plymouthsoundnationalmarinepark.com/blue-sparks-programme 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: First ARU Peterborough undergrads set to graduate

    Source: Anglia Ruskin University

    Peterborough’s historic cathedral is the venue for ARU Peterborough’s graduation ceremony on 11 July

    The first cohort of ARU Peterborough students to join the city’s new university in 2022 are preparing to celebrate their graduation this week, with many having already secured skilled jobs in the local area.

    Peterborough Cathedral will host this year’s graduation ceremony for ARU Peterborough students at 2pm on Friday, 11 July.

    Students who have studied undergraduate degrees, degree apprenticeships, postgraduate courses and professional development qualifications will cross the cathedral stage to mark the formal completion of their studies.

    “Congratulations to all our graduates on their success. This graduation ceremony marks a historic milestone for ARU Peterborough. It is a celebration of the achievements of our first cohort of students and reflects our mission to create opportunities, drive social mobility, and deliver high level skills tailored to local and national needs.

    “This graduation also signals the beginning of an exciting new chapter for our university and community, as we expand our academic offer with a range of new courses available to start this September.”

    Principal of ARU Peterborough, Professor Ross Renton

    The first graduation is a landmark moment for the city, which until the opening of ARU Peterborough, was known as a higher education “cold spot”. The university has provided opportunities for many students to develop their skills – opportunities they might not have had otherwise.

    James Johnson, 26, is to start work after graduation at local firm ParkAir as an Embedded Software Engineer. The Applied Computer Science graduate from Yaxley said: “It’s unlikely I would’ve attended university if it wasn’t for ARU Peterborough. I was 24 when I enrolled and going further afield wasn’t an option.

    “Finding a local job straight after graduation means a lot. At the start, I was a little uncertain if university was right for me. This proves going to ARU Peterborough was the right thing to do.”

    Faaizah Hussain, who lives in Peterborough and has studied for a BSc (Hons) degree in Accounting and Finance at ARU Peterborough, will give the Vote of Thanks speech at the graduation ceremony on 11 July.

    Faaizah, who has now enrolled on a Postgraduate Certificate in Education to become a teacher, said: “I had already secured an apprenticeship and hadn’t planned on going to university until I found out about ARU Peterborough. I wasn’t keen on moving away or commuting long distances, and I didn’t realise there was a university here until my mum came across an advert and told me about it.

    “Studying at ARU Peterborough has far exceeded my expectations. The one-to-one support has helped shape both my confidence and my character. University turned out to be so much more than I imagined – there wasn’t just academic guidance, there was genuine care from the tutors.

    “Throughout my time here, I’ve taken on so many different roles. I co-founded a student society, was elected as a student governor, became a course representative, and worked as a student ambassador, which I absolutely loved. ARU Peterborough really gives you the platform to grow and get involved in ways that make a lasting impact on not just your own student experience, but the university’s future as a whole.”

    Kazim Raffiq-Fazal, from Peterborough, has been a student ambassador during his computer science degree course and has just started a job at a Cambridgeshire software development company.

    Kazim, 20, said: “I did my A-levels here in Peterborough and I knew university would be the next step for me. I went to a few open days at other institutions but I knew I wanted to study close to where I was living. I went to an open day at ARU Peterborough, met some of the lecturers and saw what the course contained, and it was everything I was looking for.

    “I don’t think I would have had the same experience if I had gone to university elsewhere. Studying close to home has allowed me to spend less time commuting and I have been able to take part in more study and activities.

    “In my second year I did an internship at a software company and that led to an offer to work for them after I graduated.”

    ARU Peterborough is a partnership between Anglia Ruskin University, Peterborough City Council and the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority.

    “Huge congratulations to the first ever graduates of ARU Peterborough. This is both a personal achievement for each student and a landmark moment for our city. 

    “ARU Peterborough is transforming lives, tackling the higher education cold spot we faced, and building a pipeline of talent that meets the needs of local businesses. It’s helping people gain the skills and confidence to succeed and thrive in our local economy. 

    “This day is another example of what can be achieved through ambition and partnership between the City Council, ARU and the Combined Authority. And it marks just the beginning of ARU Peterborough’s growing role in the city’s regeneration and success.” 

    Paul Bristow, Mayor of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough

    “Firstly, a huge congratulations to all those who will be graduating on 11 July.

    “When the concept of ARU Peterborough was created, its vision was to teach skills businesses in Peterborough are calling out for – andfor these to be skills needed for careers of the future.

    “These are the very first set of graduates who will be leaving ‘job ready’. It will help ensure we retain our brightest and most hard working students, delivering confident and capable employees to our businesses and helping our city to flourish for years to come.”

    Councillor Nick Thulbourn, cabinet member for growth and regeneration at Peterborough City Council

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Security: DHS Terminates TPS for Nicaragua: It Was Never Meant to Last 25 Years

    Source: US Department of Homeland Security

    WASHINGTON – Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem today announced the termination of Temporary Protected Status for Nicaragua, which will expire on July 5, 2025.  The termination will be effective 60 days after the publication of the Federal Register notice. 

    At least 60 days before a TPS designation expires, the Secretary of Homeland Security, after consultation with appropriate U.S. government agencies, must review the conditions in a country designated for TPS to determine whether the conditions supporting the designation continue to be met and, if so, how long to extend the designation.  

    Temporary Protected Status was never meant to last a quarter of a century,” said a DHS Spokesperson. “The impacts of a natural disaster impacting Nicaragua in 1999 no longer exist.  The environmental situation has improved enough that it is safe enough for Nicaraguan citizens to return home. This decision restores integrity in our immigration system and ensures that TPS remains temporary.

    After conferring with interagency partners, Secretary Noem determined that conditions in Nicaragua no longer meet the TPS statutory requirements. The Secretary’s decision was based on a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services review of the conditions in Nicaragua and in consultation with the Department of State. The Secretary determined that, overall, country conditions have improved to the point where Nicaraguans can return home in safety.

    Nicaraguan nationals departing the United States are encouraged to use the U.S. Customs and Border Protection CBP Home app to report their departure from the United States and take advantage of a safe, secure way to self-deport which includes a complimentary plane ticket, a $1,000 exit bonus, and potential future opportunities for legal immigration.

    ###

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: With Improved Conditions, DHS Ends TPS for Honduras

    Source: US Department of Homeland Security

    WASHINGTON – After finding improved country conditions in Honduras, Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem today announced the termination of Temporary Protected Status, as required by the statute. The termination will be effective 60 days after the publication of the Federal Register notice. 

    Honduras was designated for TPS in 1999 after the impact of Hurricane Mitch in 1998. The Government of Honduras has made tremendous strides over the years to recover from the hurricane and, as a result of those efforts, it is safe for their nationals to return home. 

    Temporary Protected Status was designed to be just that—temporary,” said Secretary Kristi Noem. “It is clear that the Government of Honduras has taken all of the necessary steps to overcome the impacts of Hurricane Mitch, almost 27 years ago. Honduran citizens can safely return home, and DHS is here to help facilitate their voluntary return. Honduras has been a wonderful partner of the Trump Administration, helping us deliver on key promises to the American people. We look forward to continuing our work with them.

    After conferring with interagency partners, Secretary Noem determined that conditions in Honduras no longer meet the TPS statutory requirements. The Secretary’s decision was based on a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services review of the conditions in Honduras and in consultation with the Department of State. The Secretary determined that, overall, country conditions have improved to the point where Hondurans can return home in safety. Additionally, under President Castro, Honduras has taken steps to welcome home their citizens, providing access to economic and food assistance programs, as well as labor integration and job training.

    Honduran nationals departing the United States are encouraged to use the U.S. Customs and Border Protection CBP Home app to report their departure from the United States and take advantage of a safe, secure way to leave the United States with a complimentary plane ticket, a $1,000 exit bonus to help them resettle in Honduras, and preserve future opportunities for legal immigration.

    ###

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Convicted Killer Sentenced to 35½ Years for RICO Conspiracy and VICAR Kidnapping

    Source: US FBI

               WASHINGTON – U.S. Attorney Jeanine Ferris Pirro announced that Christopher Green, 39, of the District of Columbia, was sentenced today to a total of 35 ½ years in prison for conspiracy in violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), violent crime in aid of racketeering (VICAR) kidnapping, first degree murder while armed (with aggravating circumstances), attempted robbery while armed, assault with a dangerous weapon, and firearms offenses, in connection with a series of violent crimes he committed in early 2017.  The prosecution had asked the judge to impose a sentence of 60 years.

               In addition to the 426-month prison sentence, U.S. District Court Judge Randolph D. Moss ordered that the defendant also serve five years of supervised release.

              The sentencing today follows a 12-day re-trial, earlier this year, in which a federal jury found Green, aka “Twin,” guilty of RICO conspiracy and VICAR kidnapping.

              At his initial trial in 2021, Green was found guilty of the murder, assault and attempted robbery offenses. However, the jury was unable to reach a verdict on the RICO conspiracy and VICAR charges, which led to the recent trial and convictions.

               Green was sentenced today with respect to the charges he was convicted of in both trials.

             According to the government’s evidence, Green was a core member of a criminal organization that operated in the District of Columbia, Prince George’s County, Maryland, and elsewhere, primarily making money through a series of armed robberies. Green’s actions in Southeast Washington, D.C., on April 9, 2017, led to the death of 25-year-old Zaan Scott. Mr. Scott, a swim coach at the Eastern Market pool, was on his way home when Green attempted to rob him at gunpoint. Mr. Scott died on May 17, 2017, of a blood clot that the medical examiner determined was a result of the shooting. Green was also found guilty at the initial trial of firing gunshots at another victim on February 23, 2017.

               In the recent re-trial, the evidence established that Green and a co-conspirator committed a series of violent acts and were working as an “enterprise” to enrich themselves. The VICAR kidnapping conviction in the re-trial involved an incident on April 8, 2017, in which Green and a co-conspirator confronted a young man at gunpoint as the man was getting out of his car in a convenience store parking lot. Green ordered the victim back into the car and robbed him of his ATM card. He then forced the victim to drive to a nearby apartment complex, where he forced him to take off his clothes, and then robbed him of his sneakers and other belongings.

               Joining in the announcement were Assistant Director in Charge Steven J. Jensen of the FBI Washington Field Office, and Chief Pamela Smith of the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD).

               This case was investigated by the FBI’s Washington Field Office, the Metropolitan Police Department, and the Prince George’s County Police Department. It was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Nihar R. Mohanty of the Violent Crime and Narcotics Trafficking Section of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia and Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Liebman of the Superior Court Division Homicide Section.

    19cr19

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: The New England Strike Force Joins Nationwide Crackdown on Health Care Fraud

    Source: US FBI

    CONCORD- Acting U.S. Attorney Jay McCormack, together with Acting U.S. Attorneys Michael P. Drescher of the District of Vermont and Craig M. Wolff of the District of Maine, announces a sweeping enforcement action aimed at combatting health care fraud across New England. The enforcement action is a result of the collaboration and partnership between the Districts of New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine, and the New England Strike Force.

    The New England Strike Force charged six defendants in connection with unrelated allegations including conspiracies to defraud the State of New Hampshire’s Medicaid program (NH Medicaid), Medicare, and other federal benefit programs, totaling over $14 million. The charges filed in federal court throughout New England are part of the Department of Justice’s 2025 National Health Care Fraud Takedown. The charges stem from various schemes, including a previously convicted social worker who submitted claims to NH Medicaid following his disbarment from billing federal health care programs, a conspiracy to submit false and fraudulent claims to Medicare for wrist, knee, and back braces and other equipment that were medically unnecessary, and a conspiracy to fulfill illegitimate prescriptions for drugs including Ozempic.

    The schemes charged in the District of New Hampshire include:

    Previously Convicted Felon Charged in New Scheme Fraudulently Billing Medicaid and Exploiting a Vulnerable Patient

    • United States v. Erik Alonso: Erik Alonso, age 54, of Miami, Florida, was charged by indictment with eight counts of health care fraud in connection with an alleged scheme to submit claims to NH Medicaid, despite being barred from billing federally funded health care programs following a previous heath care fraud related conviction in 2015. Alonso failed to disclose his exclusion to his employer, a Laconia, New Hampshire-based telehealth psychotherapy provider, and purportedly provided psychotherapy treatments to NH Medicaid beneficiaries between March 2022 and July 2024 via telehealth. In addition, Alonso allegedly exploited a psychotherapy patient by using purported psychotherapy sessions to seek and obtain assistance from that client with personal tasks, including preparing an application for a presidential pardon of his prior conviction and assisting him with applying for licensure in other New England states.  The case is being prosecuted by DOJ Trial Attorneys Danielle Sakowski, Thomas Campbell, and John Howard, and Assistant United States Attorney Matthew Vicinanzo of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Hampshire.

    Straw Owner of Health Care Company Used to Commit Fraud and Launder Illicit Proceeds

    • United States v. Leo Anzivino Jr.: Leo Anzivino, Jr., age 34, of Teaticket, MA, was charged by indictment with conspiracy to commit health care fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and four counts of money laundering in connection with an alleged scheme to fraudulently obtain over $6 million in Medicare funds. According to the indictment, Anzivino, Jr. acted as the straw owner of a durable medical equipment (“DME”) company, Advanced Medical Supply (Advanced), and conspired with others to cause the submission of false and fraudulent claims to Medicare for DME.  The indictment further alleges that Anzivino falsified bank account documents, including beneficial ownership information, and conspired to launder fraudulent funds from the DME scheme to conceal and disguise the nature, source, origin, and control of the proceeds of the DME fraud.  Anzivino, Jr., made four transfers from one Advanced account at a New Hampshire bank to another Advanced account at a Massachusetts bank, totaling over $3 million dollars, to conceal a co-conspirator’s control over the funds. The government seized approximately $353,768.29 in assets tied to the alleged scheme.  This case is being prosecuted by DOJ Trial Attorneys Danielle Sakowski, Thomas Campbell, and Tiffany Wynn, and Assistant United States Attorney Matthew Vicinanzo of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of New Hampshire.

    The schemes charged in the District of Vermont include:

    Global Pharma and Money Laundering Scheme

    • United States v. Manthan Rohit Shah: Manthan Rohit Shah, 37, of Mumbai, India, was charged by indictment with misbranding prescription medication, conspiring to import controlled substances, and conspiring to commit international concealment money laundering.  As alleged in the indictment, Shah owned and operated Company-1, a pharma company based in Mumbai, India. Company-1 allegedly shipped controlled substances and misbranded pharmaceutical drugs, including drugs that contained potentially potent, dangerous, and/or addictive substances, into New England and across the United States.  Shah and Company-1 used fake prescriptions to provide a veneer of legitimacy for customer orders, despite the customers never obtaining such prescriptions.  Shah undertook various acts in furtherance of the drug conspiracy. For example, on or about May 6, 2025, Shah sent a text message to an undercover law enforcement agent regarding Company-1’s fulfillment of illegitimate prescriptions for 50 pens of the drug Ozempic, costing approximately $6,200, to be shipped from a location outside the United States to an address in Vermont.  Shah also conspired with others to direct the shipment of pharmaceutical drugs without valid prescriptions to a network of online pharmacies and call centers that fulfilled orders placed by customers in New England and across the United States. Shah then conspired with others to launder the funds from financial accounts in the United States, through shell companies, and to Shah’s company in India.  The case is being prosecuted by DOJ Trial Attorneys Patrick Brown, John Howard, and Thomas Campbell.

    Health Care Scheme Involving Purchase of Tulum Penthouse, High-Volume Cash Withdrawals

    • United States v. Evelyn Herrera: Evelyn Herrera, 61, of Loxahatchee, Florida, was charged by complaint with conspiracy to commit health care fraud in connection with an alleged scheme to fraudulently obtain approximately $6.5 million in Medicare funds.  According to the charging documents, Herrera, the owner of Merida Medical Supplies Inc., a purported DME company, submitted false and fraudulent claims to Medicare from individuals residing across New England for wrist, knee, and back braces and other equipment, which were medically unnecessary and ineligible for reimbursement by Medicare.  After the funds from these fraudulent services were deposited into a bank account controlled by Herrera, she allegedly conducted financial transactions and attempted to conceal the source, origin, and control of the health care fraud proceeds generated by Merida. For example, Herrera allegedly sent an international wire from her bank account, indicating it was to be used to purchase property in Mexico, and sent other funds to a cryptocurrency wallet that she controlled.  During the scheme, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (“CMS”) issued a payment suspension to Herrera for suspected fraud, after which Herrerra allegedly attempted to withdraw large amounts of cash from a bank and siphon funds off to other individuals.  The case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorneys Sarah Rocha, Thomas Campbell, and Tiffany Wynn.  The complaint was filed in the District of Vermont.

    Health Care CEO Indicted in Cross-Border Health Care Fraud Scheme

    • United States v. Donald Jani: Donald Jani, 39, of Maharashtra, India, was charged by indictment with health care fraud and conspiracy to commit health care fraud in connection with an alleged scheme to fraudulently obtain approximately $1.9 million in Medicare funds.  According to the indictment, Jani, the CEO of CSS Pain Relief, Inc., a purported DME company, submitted false and fraudulent claims to Medicare for DME.  Jani and his co-conspirators allegedly used the personal identifying information of elderly and disabled New England residents to fraudulently bill Medicare.  As part of the conspiracy, Jani unlawfully used the personal identifying information of medical providers in the District of Vermont and elsewhere to create the false appearance that the DME claims were premised on legitimate medical orders. The case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorneys Sarah Rocha, John Howard and Thomas Campbell.  The indictment was brought in the District of Vermont.

    The scheme charged in the District of Maine includes:

    Individual Charged in Health Care and Identity Theft Scheme

    • United States v. Joseph Dobie: Joseph Dobie, 36, of Lewiston, Maine, was charged by complaint with aggravated identity theft, false statements relating to health care matters, and unlawful use of Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (“SNAP”) benefits in connection with an identity-theft scheme. As alleged in the complaint, Dobie used a stolen identity to fraudulently obtain Medicaid and SNAP benefits in Maine, while simultaneously receiving SNAP benefits in New York.  The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Nicholas Scott. The complaint was filed in the District of Maine.

    Additionally, the New England Strike Force provided valuable support in a nationwide investigation:

    Operation Gold Rush: Transnational Criminal Organization-Led Health Care Fraud and Money Laundering Scheme

    Outside of New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine, the New England Strike Force also supported a nationwide investigation, Operation Gold Rush, which resulted in charges in the Eastern District of New York, the Northern District of Illinois, the Central District of California, the Middle District of Florida, and the District of New Jersey against 19 defendants in connection with the largest loss amount ever charged in a health care fraud case brought by the Department at $10.6 billion. Twelve of these defendants have been arrested, including four defendants who were apprehended in Estonia as a result of international cooperation with Estonian law enforcement and seven defendants who were arrested at U.S. airports and the U.S. border with Mexico, cutting off their intended escape routes as they attempted to avoid capture. The criminal case is being prosecuted by DOJ Fraud Section Assistant Chiefs Kevin Lowell and Shankar Ramamurthy, and Trial Attorneys Sara Porter, Andres Almendarez, Leonid Sandlar, Monica Cooper, Thomas Campbell, Danielle Sakowski, and Matthew Belz.  Trial Attorney Sara Porter initiated the investigation, which has been supported by members of multiple Strike Forces. The civil forfeiture proceeding is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney David C. Nelson of the District of Connecticut and Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section Trial Attorneys Emily Cohen and Chelsea Rooney. Office of Public Affairs | National Health Care Fraud Takedown Results in 324 Defendants Charged in Connection with Over $14.6 Billion in Alleged Fraud | United States Department of Justice

    These charges are part of a strategically coordinated, nationwide law enforcement action that resulted in criminal charges against 324 defendants for their alleged participation in health care fraud and illegal drug diversion schemes that involved the submission of over $14.6 billion in intended loss and over 15 million pills of illegally diverted controlled substances. The defendants allegedly defrauded programs entrusted for the care of the elderly and disabled to line their own pockets. The United States has seized over $245 million in cash, luxury vehicles and other assets in connection with the takedown. Descriptions of each case involved in the national enforcement action are available at Criminal Division | 2025 National Health Care Fraud Takedown.

    The New England Strike Force’s cases are the result of investigations conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation; the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General; the Food and Drug Administration, Office of Criminal Investigations; Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation; and the United States Department of Defense Office of Inspector General, Defense Criminal Investigative Service.

    Leveraging advanced data analytics, forensic accounting, interagency collaboration, and subject-matter expertise, the New England Strike Force investigates and prosecutes complex health care fraud and money laundering schemes across the region, focusing on both individuals and corporations engaged in criminal conduct. DOJ Fraud Section Assistant Chief Kevin Lowell leads the Strike Force.

    The details contained in the charging document are allegations. The defendant is presumed to be innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in the court of law.

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    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Shiprock Man Faces Federal Charges for Fatal Stabbing During Residential Break-In

    Source: US FBI

    ALBUQUERQUE – A Shiprock man is facing a federal murder charge after allegedly breaking into a home and fatally stabbing a man during a violent altercation in the early morning hours.

    According to court documents, on Friday, June 27, 2025, Armondo Paul, 25, an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation, was arrested after officers from the Navajo Nation Police Department responded to a stabbing at a Shiprock residence. Upon arrival, officers found the victim deceased with a neck wound believed to be from a bladed weapon.

    The investigation revealed Paul went to a home after midnight and turned off the power to that residence. After a young woman and her father exited their home to investigate, Paul forcibly entered their residence armed with a knife. After a brief struggle, Paul stabbed the male in his neck. Paul then fled the scene; he was apprehended later that day.

    Paul is charged with second-degree murder. He will remain in custody pending trial, which has not been scheduled. If convicted of the current charge, Paul faces up to life in prison.

    U.S. Attorney Ryan Ellison and Philip Russell, Acting Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Albuquerque Field Office, made the announcement today.

    The Farmington Resident Agency of the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Albuquerque Field Office investigated this case with assistance from the Navajo Nation Police Department and Department of Criminal Investigations. Assistant U.S. Attorney Zachary C. Jones is prosecuting the case.

    A criminal complaint is merely an allegation. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: MiddleGround Capital Signs Definitive Agreement to Sell Arrow Tru-Line to the Chamberlain Group, a Blackstone Portfolio Company

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LEXINGTON, Ky., July 07, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — MiddleGround Capital (“MiddleGround”), an operationally focused private equity firm that makes control investments in North American and European headquartered middle-market B2B industrial and specialty distribution companies, today announced that it has entered a definitive agreement to sell its portfolio company Arrow Tru-Line (“ATL”), an independent manufacturer and supplier of structurally critical overhead garage door hardware components, to the Chamberlain Group, a global leader in intelligent access and monitoring with leading brands including LiftMaster and myQ.

    Arrow Tru-Line is the market-leading manufacturer and distributor of metal garage door components and hardware, serving OEMs, distributors and installers across North America. Originally founded in 1970 and headquartered in Archbold, Ohio, ATL manufactures a complete offering of essential hardware, including hinges, brackets, angles, tubes, springs and pre-assembled track sets through the processes of rollforming, stamping, assembling and sourcing products. The company, led by CEO Thomas Brockley, operates six manufacturing and distribution facilities across the U.S. and Canada.

    “Since we acquired Arrow Tru-Line in late 2021, Tom and the management team have done an exceptional job operating the business and positioning the company for the future, while preserving core manufacturing jobs that are so important for the US economy,” said John Stewart, Founding and Managing Partner of MiddleGround. “In partnership with our operations team, the management team has vertically integrated the business to drive further value for customers. Through the execution of operational improvements, the company has substantially improved free cash flow conversion and profitability. Additionally, we are excited to provide our investors with much-needed liquidity. The fact that we have been able to achieve such a positive outcome given the economic conditions of the last four years is a testament to our team and our investment strategy.”

    “We are very proud to have helped ATL improve its manufacturing capabilities through the hard work of our operations team and the management team. MiddleGround provided the company with critical capital investment that allowed for the vertical integration of key components while expanding the company’s capabilities, setting the company up for future revenue growth,” said Lindsay Quintero, Vice President at MiddleGround. “The company is well-positioned to capitalize on future growth in the U.S. housing market based on aged U.S. housing stock, record-high homeowner equity, and an ongoing undersupply of housing. We’ve aligned ATL’s product portfolio to include a full suite of garage door hardware products that will enable the company to capitalize on current industry tailwinds that include an accelerated demand for residential repair and remodeling, new housing construction, and increased commercial construction in North America. We believe that as a part of Chamberlain, the combined platform is well-positioned to deliver even greater value through its highly complementary product offering.”

    “MiddleGround has been an exceptional partner for ATL. Their operational expertise and deep, hands-on experience has positioned us with several competitive advantages,” added Mr. Brockley. “We’re looking forward to continuing the strategic momentum MiddleGround has imparted under the Chamberlain Group.”

    The transaction is MiddleGround’s third full exit for its first fund, MiddleGround Capital I, LP, which closed in August 2019 at $460 million.

    Advisors
    Raymond James served as financial advisor and Greenberg Traurig served as legal counsel to MiddleGround Capital. Wells Fargo served as exclusive financial advisor and Simpson Thacher & Bartlett LP served as legal counsel to the Chamberlain Group.

    About MiddleGround Capital
    MiddleGround Capital is a private equity firm based in Lexington, Kentucky with over $4.1 billion of assets under management. MiddleGround makes control equity investments in middle market B2B industrial and specialty distribution businesses. MiddleGround works with its portfolio companies to create value through a hands-on operational approach and partners with its management teams to support long-term growth strategies. For more information, please visit: https://middleground.com/.

    About Arrow Tru-Line
    Arrow Tru-Line is the leading independent manufacturer and supplier of overhead garage door hardware components in North America selling into both residential and commercial sectors. Headquartered in Archbold, OH, the company has 6 facilities supporting its core manufacturing footprint spread across the U.S. and Canada. For more information, please visit: www.arrowtruline.com.

    About Chamberlain Group
    Chamberlain Group (GG) is global leader in intelligent access and Blackstone portfolio company. Our myQ ecosystem allows you to unlock your home’s full potential with an all-in-one access + monitoring app. myQ also delivers seamless, secure, access to businesses and communities worldwide. CG’s LiftMaster® and Chamberlain® products are found in 50+ million homes, and 13 million+ people rely on myQ® daily. Our patented vehicle-to-home connectivity solution, myQ Connected Garage, is available in millions of vehicles from the leading automakers.

    Follow Chamberlain Group on LinkedIn and Instagram.

    About Blackstone
    Blackstone is the world’s largest alternative asset manager. Blackstone seeks to deliver compelling returns for institutional and individual investors by strengthening the companies in which the firm invests. Blackstone’s more than $1.1 trillion in assets under management include global investment strategies focused on real estate, private equity, credit, infrastructure, life sciences, growth equity, real assets, secondaries and hedge funds. Further information is available at www.blackstone.com. Follow @blackstone on LinkedIn, X (Twitter), and Instagram.  

    MiddleGround Capital Media Contacts
    Doug Allen/Maya Hanowitz
    Dukas Linden Public Relations
    MiddleGround@dlpr.com
    +1 (646) 722-6530

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Mortgage Rates Today – July 7, 2025: QuoteMortageUSA Launches Daily Refinance Rate Report for U.S. Homeowners

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    New York City, NY, July 07, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) —

    In an effort to provide homeowners with timely and transparent financial insights, QuoteMortgageUSA, a leading digital mortgage solutions provider, has launched its daily mortgage refinance rate report. This initiative offers consumers up-to-date access to refinance trends, market context, and personalized tools to compare lender offers—all without impacting their credit score.

    As of July 7, 2025, the national average refinance rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage stands at 6.80%, reflecting a modest increase of 3 basis points over the past week. This stabilization follows a period of gradual increases throughout June and may signal temporary relief for borrowers after weeks of volatility in the mortgage market.

    Homeowners can visit QuoteMortgageUSA.com and complete a short, secure form to receive personalized refinance options in minutes—without a phone call or credit inquiry.

    Refinance Rate Snapshot – July 7, 2025

    Conventional Mortgages

    • 30-year fixed: 6.80%
    • 20-year fixed: 6.50%
    • 15-year fixed: 5.86%
    • 10-year fixed: 5.58%

    Jumbo Mortgages

    • 30-year fixed: 7.19%
    • 15-year fixed: 6.29%

    FHA Loans

    • 30-year fixed: 6.73%
    • 15-year fixed: 5.41%

    VA Loans

    • 30-year fixed: 6.30%
    • 15-year fixed: 5.80%

    These figures reflect data as of July 7, 2025.

    With rates stabilizing and even falling for shorter-term and adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) products, this week may offer a timely opportunity to refinance or lock in rates if you’re a buyer. Borrowers with strong credit and the ability to put down 20% or more can often secure better-than-average rates. 

    To maximize savings, consider these key strategies:

    • Compare multiple lenders to find competitive offers.
    • Improve your credit score to access lower tiers.
    • Make a larger down payment to reduce risk and interest.
    • Choose the right loan type—shorter terms offer lower rates but higher monthly costs.

    Discover how much you could save — explore your personalized refinance options today at QuoteMortgageUSA.com.

    Why Homeowners Are Considering Refinancing

    While mortgage rates remain above the historic lows seen during the pandemic, many homeowners with rates above 7% may still benefit from refinancing. This is particularly relevant for those seeking to reduce monthly payments, access built-up equity, switch loan types, or fund major purchases.

    “Timing is everything in today’s market,” said a spokesperson from QuoteMortageUSA. “That’s why we’re making it easier than ever to compare real offers from trusted lenders, on your terms — without phone calls or pushy sales tactics.”

    Understanding the Refinance Opportunity

    Refinancing involves replacing your current mortgage with a new one, ideally with better terms or cash-out access. Through QuoteMortageUSA’s secure digital form, homeowners can explore:

    • Cash-out refinancing up to 100% of home value
    • Opportunities to remove mortgage insurance
    • Switching from variable-rate to fixed-rate loans
    • Payment relief via adjusted loan terms

    QuoteMortageUSA users can explore matched refinance offers from over 50 lending partners in less than two minutes — directly through a secure form at QuoteMortageUSA.com.

    Breaking Down Refinance Costs

    Refinancing can lead to long-term savings, but homeowners should understand the associated costs. Closing costs typically range from 2% to 6% of the loan amount and may include:

    • Loan origination and application fees
    • Appraisal and title services
    • Legal and recording fees
    • Prepayment penalties (if applicable)

    QuoteMortageUSA provides an instant savings and cost breakdown once the online form is submitted, helping users make informed financial decisions with no commitment.

    QuoteMortageUSA: A Smarter, Simpler Way to Refi

    QuoteMortageUSA’s new daily rate report is part of a broader effort to modernize the refinance experience by combining transparency, ease of use, and trusted lender access.

    Key Benefits of the QuoteMortageUSA Platform:

    • Personalized loan programs matched to your credit and goals
    • Refinance offers from 50+ mortgage lenders
    • Entirely digital, no phone calls or sales pressure
    • No impact to credit score to view matched offers
    • Available in both English and Spanish

    Explore Your Personalized Refinance Offers Today

    Visit QuoteMortageUSA.com and complete the secure 2-minute form to see how much you could save or access through refinancing. No credit pull, no phone calls — just real offers, instantly.

    About QuoteMortageUSA

    QuoteMortageUSA is a next-generation platform that helps U.S. homeowners make smarter, more informed financial decisions. With personalized refinance tools, daily rate insights, and access to a broad lender network, QuoteMortageUSA simplifies the process from start to finish.

    Contact Information

    Company Name: QuoteMortageUSA Ltd.
    Customer Support Email: support@quotemortgageusa.com
    Phone Number: 912-718-8234
    Mailing Address: Southridge House, Southriver Lane, New Kingstown, British Virgin Islands

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    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: PRESS RELEASE: Barragán, Wasserman Schultz, Garcia Lead Letter Urging FCC to Prioritize Language Accessibility in Hurricane Resiliency Planning

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Nanette Diaz Barragán (CA-44)

    For Immediate Release

    July 6, 2025

    Contact: jin.choi@mail.house.gov

    Barragán, Wasserman Schultz, Garcia Lead Letter Urging FCC to Prioritize Language Accessibility in Hurricane Resiliency Planning

    Washington, D.C. – Last week, Congresswomen Nanette Barragán (CA-44), Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-25), and Sylvia Garcia (TX-29) led 24 of their colleagues in calling on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to include language access experts and advocates for communities with limited English proficiency (LEP) in the agency’s upcoming Hurricane Season Resiliency Roundtable on July 7, 2025.

    Signed by Members of Congress representing linguistically diverse and hurricane-prone districts, the letter urges FCC Chairman Brendan Carr and Acting Bureau Chief Zenji Nakazawa to prioritize multilingual, culturally competent emergency communications and to embed language accessibility into every phase of disaster preparedness and response.

    “Nearly 68 million United States residents speak a language other than English at home, and over 25 million are classified as LEP,” the lawmakers wrote. “During hurricanes and other disasters, these individuals face significant, documented barriers to accessing emergency alerts, evacuation orders, and disaster recovery information in a language that they can understand.”

    “As the FCC convenes its Hurricane Season Resiliency Roundtable, it has an opportunity to address longstanding gaps in language accessibility during disasters,” they continued. “To improve access to lifesaving information and support economic resilience, the FCC should prioritize making public safety communications—including Wireless Emergency Alerts, Emergency Alert System messages broadcast over television and radio, and 9-1-1 accessibility standards—multilingual, culturally competent, and accessible to all.”

    Rep. Barragán has long championed language accessibility and continues to lead efforts in Congress to ensure that language is never a barrier to safety or survival. 

    In addition to Barragan, Wasserman Schultz, and Garcia, the letter was signed by Representatives Maxwell Frost, Darren Soto, Adriano Espaillat, Yvette Clarke, Alma Adams, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Frederica Wilson, Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick, Bennie Thompson, Eleanor Holmes Norton, Sanford Bishop, Jr., Lois Frankel, Nydia Velázquez, Kathy Castor, Lizzie Fletcher, Raja Krishnamoorthi, Dan Goldman, Jared Moskowitz, Robin Kelly, Cleo Fields, Judy Chu, Valerie Foushee, Kevin Mullin, and Bobby Scott.

    The full text of the letter can be found here and below:

    Chairman Carr and Acting Bureau Chief Nakazawa:

    As the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) prepares for its upcoming Hurricane Season Resiliency Roundtable, we urge you to include language access experts and advocates who serve communities with limited English proficiency (LEP). Public safety communications that fail to address language needs leave millions of people vulnerable, and no resiliency framework is complete without closing this gap.

    Nearly 68 million United States residents speak a language other than English at home, and over 25 million are classified as LEP.[1] During hurricanes and other disasters, these individuals face significant, documented barriers to accessing emergency alerts, evacuation orders, and disaster recovery information in a language that they can understand. These challenges are not hypothetical—they have played out in real time during recent disasters, with serious and sometimes deadly consequences.

    In Houston, for example, nearly half a million residents have limited or no English proficiency, and the city is home to more than 145 spoken languages.[2] When Hurricane Beryl tore through Houston last year, significant portions of the city’s LEP community reported feeling unprepared, as most emergency resources were available in English and Spanish but not other languages spoken by a large number of residents.[3] This is particularly alarming as Harris County, where Houston is located, scores a 100/100 or “very high” for hurricane risk on the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s National Risk Index.[4]

    The State of Florida, another hurricane hotspot, boasts over 4.8 million foreign-born residents who speak more than 130 languages.[5] More than 400,000 households in Florida speak Haitian Creole as their primary language, and tens of thousands more primarily speak Portuguese, French, Chinese, Vietnamese, Tagalog, Arabic, German, Russian, Italian, or another language.[6] Communicating effectively with these diverse populations is a complex undertaking—particularly for rural, agricultural counties in north central Florida, which often operate with limited resources. Many of these counties lack in-house interpreters or multilingual social media outreach, and more than a third do not have bilingual staff or call-in language lines.[7] These constraints highlight the need for stronger federal support and coordination to ensure all communities receive timely, accurate emergency information in a language that they understand.

    The stakes of inadequate communication go beyond immediate safety—they also affect a community’s ability to recover economically after a disaster. Immigrants in Florida’s workforce—including many who are classified as LEP—contribute an estimated $179 billion to the state economy annually in personal income, making up more than one-fifth of all spending power in the state.[8] Throughout the United States, immigrants represent approximately 17 percent of the nation’s labor force and contribute over $2 trillion annually to the United States’ gross domestic product. Ensuring effective communication with these LEP communities during emergencies not only protects lives but also safeguards economic resilience by minimizing disruption and enabling faster recovery.

    As the FCC convenes its Hurricane Season Resiliency Roundtable, it has an opportunity to address longstanding gaps in language accessibility during disasters. To improve access to lifesaving information and support economic resilience, the FCC should prioritize making public safety communications—including Wireless Emergency Alerts, Emergency Alert System messages broadcast over television and radio, and 9-1-1 accessibility standards—multilingual, culturally competent, and accessible to all. Language access must be embedded into every phase of disaster management: preparedness, response, and recovery. Yet too often, it is treated as an afterthought.

    For these reasons, we urge the FCC to include LEP-serving advocates, language access experts, and representatives of immigrant, refugee, and Indigenous communities in the July 7th roundtable. Their perspectives are critical to identifying systemic weaknesses, enhancing protocols, and ensuring emergency systems reach all communities before, during, and after disasters.

    Thank you for your attention to this critical component of disaster preparedness and public safety.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Paving across six state highways in the south Puget Sound and Kitsap Peninsula starts in July

    Source: Washington State News 2

    Seven work zones cover 82 miles of pavement repairs in Kitsap, Pierce, Thurston and Mason counties

    OLYMPIA – Work to provide a smoother ride for travelers and preserve six state highways in the south Puget Sound region begins Monday, July 14.

    Contractor crews working for the Washington State Department of Transportation will remove and replace asphalt on highways in Thurston, Pierce, Kitsap and Mason counties.

    The first state highway where travelers will see nighttime lane and ramp closures is State Route 16, west of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge in Gig Harbor. Work will begin on the remaining highways later in July.

    People can get information on each highway via the project webpage and WSDOT app. Information will be shared as work schedules are finalized.

    Paving work zones

    Kitsap/Pierce counties:

    • Gig Harbor – SR 16 between Stone Drive and Burley Olalla Road
    • Silverdale – SR 3 between SR 303 and Sherman Hill Road 

    Thurston County:

    • Olympia – Interstate 5 between Pacific Avenue and 93rd Avenue (SR 121)
    • Tumwater – I-5 between 93rd Avenue (SR 121) and Maytown Road

    Thurston/Mason counties:

    • Kamilche – Northbound US 101 between SR 108 and SR 8

    Pierce County:

    • Puyallup – SR 512 between SR 167 and SR 7
    • Sumner – SR 410 between SR 167 and Myers Road

    The $25.8 million project helps preserve the existing highways for years to come. The new surface will reduce the potential for costly emergency maintenance repairs and unexpected lane closures.

    The work is scheduled to finish this fall.

    Project at a glance 

    Work is planned in lanes in most need of repair on each highway. Crews will grind down existing asphalt, then pave a layer of fresh asphalt. After a curing time, they will return to install permanent lane markings.

    Nearby businesses and residential areas may experience increased night construction noise. Grinding and paving is unavoidably loud. Crews will work quickly and efficiently to minimize disruptions.

    People traveling are encouraged to watch their speeds. Drivers need to slow down and give crews the room they need to repave the highways.

    For the latest information about projects on state highways, use WSDOT’s real-time travel map or sign up for email updates.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Alberta-Ontario MOUs fuel more pipelines and trade

    [.

    The two provinces agree on the need for the federal government to address the underlying conditions that have harmed the energy industry in Canada. This includes significantly amending or repealing the Impact Assessment Act, as well as repealing the Oil Tanker Moratorium Act, Clean Electricity Regulations, the Oil and Gas Sector Greenhouse Gas Emissions Cap, and all other federal initiatives that discriminately impact the energy sector, as well as sectors such as mining and manufacturing. Taking action will ensure Alberta and Ontario can attract the investment and project partners needed to get shovels in the ground, grow industries and create jobs.

    The first MOU focuses on developing strategic trade corridors and energy infrastructure to connect Alberta and Ontario’s oil, gas and critical minerals to global markets. This includes support for new oil and gas pipeline projects, enhanced rail and port infrastructure at sites in James Bay and southern Ontario, as well as end-to-end supply chain development for refining and processing of Alberta’s energy exports. The two provinces will also collaborate on nuclear energy development to help meet growing electricity demands while ensuring reliable and affordable power.

    The second MOU outlines Alberta’s commitment to explore prioritizing made-in-Canada vehicle purchases for its government fleet. It also includes a joint commitment to reduce barriers and improve the interprovincial trade of liquor products.

    “Alberta and Ontario are joining forces to get shovels in the ground and resources to market. These MOUs are about building pipelines and boosting trade that connects Canadian energy and products to the world, while advocating for the right conditions to get it done. Government must get out of the way, partner with industry and support the projects this country needs to grow. I look forward to working with Premier Doug Ford to unleash the full potential of our economy and build the future that people across Alberta and across the country have been waiting far too long for.”

    Danielle Smith, Premier of Alberta

    “In the face of President Trump’s tariffs and ongoing economic uncertainty, Canadians need to work together to build the infrastructure that will diversify our trading partners and end our dependence on the United States. By building pipelines, rail lines and the energy and trade infrastructure that connects our country, we will build a more competitive, more resilient and more self-reliant economy and country. Together, we are building the infrastructure we need to protect Canada, our workers, businesses and communities. Let’s build Canada.”

    Doug Ford, Premier of Ontario

    These agreements build on Alberta and Ontario’s shared commitment to free enterprise, economic growth and nation-building. The provinces will continue engaging with Indigenous partners, industry and other governments to move key projects forward.

    “Never before has it been more important for Canada to unite on developing energy infrastructure. Alberta’s oil, natural gas, and know-how will allow Canada to be an energy superpower and that will make all Canadians more prosperous. To do so, we need to continue these important energy infrastructure discussions and have more agreements like this one with Ontario.”

    Brian Jean, Minister of Energy and Minerals

    “These MOUs with Ontario build on the work Alberta has already done with Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Northwest Territories and the Port of Prince Rupert. We’re proving that by working together, we can get pipelines built, open new rail and port routes, and break down the barriers that hold back opportunities in Canada.” 

    Devin Dreeshen, Minister of Transportation and Economic Corridors

    “Canada’s economy has an opportunity to become stronger thanks to leadership and steps taken by provincial governments like Alberta and Ontario. Removing interprovincial trade barriers, increasing labour mobility and attracting investment are absolutely crucial to Canada’s future economic prosperity.”

    Joseph Schow, Minister of Jobs, Economy, Trade and Immigration

    Together, Alberta and Ontario are demonstrating the shared benefits and opportunities that result from collaborative partnerships, and what it takes to keep Canada competitive in a changing world.

    Quick facts

    • Steering committees with Alberta and Ontario government officials will be struck to facilitate work and cooperation under the agreements.
    • Alberta and Ontario will work collaboratively to launch a preliminary joint feasibility study in 2025 to help move private sector led investments in rail, pipeline(s) and port(s) projects forward.
    • These latest agreements follow an earlier MOU Premiers Danielle Smith and Doug Ford signed on June 1, 2025, to open up trade between the provinces and advance shared priorities within the Canadian federation.

    Related information

    • Leading the way on interprovincial trade

    Related news

    • Next stop for free trade: Ontario!

    Multimedia

    • Watch the news conference

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: New Law Delivers Federal Funding to Reimburse Local Law Enforcement for Trump Security Costs in Palm Beach County

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Lois Frankel (FL-21)

    New Law Delivers Federal Funding to Reimburse Local Law Enforcement for Trump Security Costs in Palm Beach County

    West Palm Beach, FL, July 4, 2025

    The reconciliation bill signed into law includes critical funding to reimburse law enforcement agencies for overtime costs incurred while protecting the President. This new grant program will ensure local and state agencies are not left shouldering the financial burden of presidential security operations. The grant period will cover expenses over the next five years, providing long-term support for those on the front lines of public safety.

    Importantly, this grant program will give local Palm Beach County law enforcement an opportunity to recover millions of dollars from the federal government for security provided to President Trump while he is in our area.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Trahan Opposes Trump’s Disastrous Bill to Slash Health Care, Nutrition, and Education to Fund Tax Breaks for the Wealthy

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Lori Trahan (D-MA-03)

    WASHINGTON, DC – Today, Congresswoman Lori Trahan (MA-03) voted NO on the Republican reconciliation package supported by President Donald Trump, citing the bill’s catastrophic impacts on working families, seniors, and children with disabilities across the Commonwealth.
    “Donald Trump’s bill isn’t about helping working families – it’s about giving the wealthiest 1 percent another massive tax break while ripping away health care, food, education, and essential services from millions of Americans,” said Congresswoman Trahan. “In Massachusetts, the cost of Trump’s betrayal will be devastating. Seniors will lose care, children with disabilities will lose critical support, and working families will struggle just to put food on the table and keep the lights on, all so millionaires and billionaires can pocket tens or even hundreds of thousands more each year in tax breaks.”
    Donald Trump’s “Big, Ugly Bill” will deliver nearly $1 trillion in tax cuts to the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans, including an average tax break of at least $80,000, while the bottom 20 percent of families will lose money due to the steep cuts in the bill. Specifically, the legislation will:

    Kick 17 million Americans off their health care, including 326,262 people in Massachusetts. The bill slashes more than $1 trillion from health care programs, enacts the largest Medicaid cut ever, and triggers $500 billion in Medicare cuts. Independent estimates project more than 51,000 preventable deaths as a direct result of these cuts.

    Close hospitals and nursing homes across the country. Up to 300 hospitals, many serving rural and underserved areas, could be forced to cut staff and services or shut down entirely. An estimated one in four nursing homes could close.

    Defund Planned Parenthood, stripping millions of women of access to cancer screenings, birth control, and basic preventive care.

    Deliver the largest cut to nutritional assistance in U.S. history, slashing SNAP by 20 percent. As many as 5 million people could lose food assistance, with tens of millions of children at risk of losing school breakfast and lunch programs.

    Increase energy costs for working families and seniors, with cuts to clean energy programs causing families to pay an average of $400 more per year. Low-income seniors will face even greater challenges affording heating and electricity.

    Kill more than 1 million jobs, with 840,000 clean energy jobs lost over the next 5 years and nearly 800,000 more over the next decade.

    Undermine public schools while making college and higher education more expensive. The bill creates a permanent, unlimited tax credit for private school vouchers, draining funds from public schools and attacking protections for student borrowers.

    Make dangerous weapons cheaper and more accessible, by eliminating taxes on silencers, short-barreled rifles, and short-barreled shotguns – taxes that have been in place since 1934 to protect public safety.

    Add $4 trillion to the national debt, including $700 billion in new interest payments alone, driving the debt to 128% of GDP by 2034 and threatening long-term economic stability.

    “This is a reverse Robin Hood plan,” said Congresswoman Trahan. “It takes from the most vulnerable to give to the ultra-wealthy, and it will do lasting damage to the health, safety, and economic security of our communities. I voted no, because Massachusetts families deserve better.”
    The reconciliation bill passed today 218-214 with all Democrats and just two Republicans voting NO.
    ###

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Africa: Samora Machel’s vision for Mozambique didn’t survive: what has taken its place?

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Luca Bussotti, Professor at the PhD Course in Peace, Democracy, Social Movements and Human Development, Universidade Técnica de Moçambique (UDM)

    Samora Moisés Machel, the first president of independent Mozambique, was born in 1933 in Gaza province, in the south of the country. He died in an unexplained plane crash on 19 October 1986, in Mbuzini, South Africa.

    Authoritarian and popular, humble and arrogant, visionary and tactical. All these words have been used to describe Machel. Despite these contradictions, there was one quality that everyone recognised in him: his charisma. At the time this gift wasn’t lacking in many political leaders of emerging countries, especially those of Marxist-Leninist inspiration. Cuba’s revolutionary leader Fidel Castro above all.

    Their common faith went beyond any personal or family interest. It was a faith for the progress of humanity, for the liberation of oppressed peoples from the colonial yoke, from the chains of capitalism and from traditional values and practices considered regressive.

    Machel’s enlightenment programme was as fascinating as it was difficult to achieve in Mozambique in the mid-1970s. Small farmers, with all their “traditional” beliefs, made up the majority of the population. It was a political battle for social justice as well as a cultural crusade.

    Machel’s speech on 25 June 1975, at the Machava Stadium in Maputo, proclaiming Mozambique’s independence from Portugal, highlighted the contradictions. The new head of state addressed the “workers”, who represented a small minority of the Mozambican people. At the same time, he called for freedom from colonial-capitalist oppression and the effective, total independence of the new country, already identifying its possible enemies: the unproductive and exploitative bourgeoisie.

    The task of nation-building

    Machel’s charisma recalled that of the proto-nationalist hero Gungunhana, who had tried to resist the Portuguese occupation at the end of the 19th century. Machel’s grandfather, Maguivelani, was related to the “terrible” Gungunhana, the last emperor of Gaza, who was defeated in 1895 by Mouzinho de Albuquerque after years of struggle. He was deported to Portugal, where he died in 1906.

    Paradoxically, the anti-traditionalist Machel was the descendant of a great traditional chief. This heritage played a role in shaping his personality and political action.

    Machel’s main task was to build a nation that only existed because of political unification under the Portuguese. The initial choices, embedded in the Cold War atmosphere, forced the nationalist Machel to opt for a rapprochement with the Soviet Union. Mozambique formally adopted a Marxist-Leninist doctrine at its Third Congress in 1977.

    That approach meant political intolerance and the repression of “dissidents”, as well as the marginalisation of certain ethnic groups, above all the Amakhuwa people, who did not sympathise with Machel’s party, Frelimo.

    The forces opposed to the Marxist-Leninist solution expected democratic elections to be held after the proclamation of independence from Portugal. But this opportunity never came. Portugal handed over power to Frelimo (Lusaka Accords, 1974), ignoring the existence of other political groups.

    The treatment of leaders who opposed Frelimo’s vision was harsh. On their return from abroad, many were imprisoned in concentration camps in the north of the country.

    They included the resistance leader Joana Simeão, along with others such as Uria Simango, former vice-president of Frelimo, his wife, Celina Simango, and Lázaro Kavandame, the former Makonde leader who left Frelimo because he didn’t agree with its political line.

    They were put on arbitrary trial and executed. The dates and the method of execution are still officially unknown, despite the former president Joaquim Chissano’s public apology, in 2014, for these deaths.

    About a year after independence, an armed opposition, Renamo, was formed. It was financed first by Ian Smith’s Southern Rhodesian government, and then by the South African apartheid regime.

    Renamo, contrary to Machel’s expectations, had a solid popular base in central and northern Mozambique, especially among peasant populations who had expressed opposition to the policies of collectivisation and cooperation imposed by the Marxist-Leninist government.

    And it was war which led Machel to a controversial agreement with the South African apartheid enemy. The Nkomati Accords, signed in 1984, provided for the end of Mozambique’s logistical support to the exiled African National Congress in Mozambique and South Africa’s military and financial support to Renamo.

    This agreement did not bring peace. On the contrary, the war intensified, as the South African regime continued to finance Renamo.

    Machel died in 1986, with the war still raging, unable to see the end of a conflict that had devastated Mozambique and which defeated the socialist principles.

    The General Peace Accords between the Mozambican government, represented by the president, Chissano, and Renamo, represented by its leader, Afonso Dhlakama, were only signed in Rome in 1992.

    End of an era

    Machel took the first, important steps towards a rapprochement with the west, as demonstrated by his visit to Ronald Reagan in Washington in September 1985.

    It can be said that with his death the First Mozambican Republic ended, with all its positive and negative elements. The dream of building a fair Mozambique with an equitable distribution of national wealth came to an end.

    Machel had worked hard to ensure that health, education, transport, water and energy were distributed equally among Mozambicans. A poor but fair welfare state was born. But it was quickly dismantled in the years following his death. The Mozambican state had very few resources to devote to the welfare state. The rest was done by the rapid abandonment of an ideology, the socialist ideology, which by then the Frelimo elite no longer believed in.

    In addition, international financial institutions entered the country, with the notorious structural adjustment policies, as early as 1987.

    Corruption, which Machel sought to combat with various measures, and which he addressed at many of his rallies, spread across the country and all its institutions. The Frelimo political elite soon became the richest slice of the nation.

    Several observers began to speak of a kleptocracy. The country suffered from continuous corruption scandals. One of the biggest became known as “hidden debt,” in which the political elite, including one of ex-president Armando Guebuza’s sons and former intelligence chief, Gregório Leão, were convicted of a scheme that cost the public treasury more than US$2 billion.

    However, the main defeat was the fall of an inapplicable socialism.

    The adoption of a capitalist, liberal and democratic model, at least formally, put an end to the arbitrary violations of human rights as in the age of the socialist state, such as “Operation Production” of 1983. The programme aimed to move “unproductive” people living in cities to the countryside to promote agricultural production.

    In reality, it turned into arbitrary detentions and displacement of entire families, increasing the systematic violation of human rights by the state.

    At the same time, the end of socialism meant democratic openness. Since the 1990 constitution, Mozambique has had as its fundamental principles respect for civil and political freedoms based on the 1948 Declaration of Human Rights. Still, socio-economic rights have been denied as a result of the dismantling of the welfare state.

    How he’s remembered

    Today, many people miss Machel’s rule. Those who were close to him, such as José Óscar Monteiro, the former interior minister, recall him as an ethical statesman, intolerant of corruption and abuses against “his” people. So do some of the international media.

    Others, since the 1980s, such as Amnesty International, have denounced the serious violations of the most basic human rights by the Mozambican government and its leader.

    What remains of Machel today is above all his ethical teaching. He died poor, committed to the cause of his nation, leaving his heirs moral prestige.

    It is curious that his figure is associated, even in musical compositions by contemporary rappers from Mozambique, with his historical enemy, Dhlakama, who died in 2018.

    This popular tribute is proof of the distance between the country’s current ruling class and a “people” who are looking to the charismatic figure of Venâncio Mondlane, the so-called “people’s president”. But that’s another story that won’t fit here.

    – Samora Machel’s vision for Mozambique didn’t survive: what has taken its place?
    – https://theconversation.com/samora-machels-vision-for-mozambique-didnt-survive-what-has-taken-its-place-260110

    MIL OSI Africa