Category: housing

  • MIL-OSI USA: Ricketts Announces Upcoming Mobile Office Hours

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Pete Ricketts (Nebraska)

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Pete Ricketts (R-NE) announced his constituent casework staff will be hosting Mobile Office Hours around the state.

    At Mobile Office Hours, Ricketts’ staff will be on-site to assist Nebraskans with their casework needs. If Nebraskans can’t get an answer in a timely manner or feel they have been treated unfairly, Ricketts and his staff may be able to help resolve the issue or help them get in touch with the correct people.

    All times below are local. For more information about Ricketts’ constituent services, please visit https://www.ricketts.senate.gov/services.

    Monday, March 31, 2025

    Kimball County

    KCTS Building

    10:30 am – 11:30 am MT

    233 S. Chestnut Street

    Kimball, NE 69145

    Banner County

    Banner County Courthouse

    9:00 am – 10:00 am MT

    204 State Street

    Harrisburg, NE 69345

    Tuesday, April 1, 2025

    Fillmore County

    Fillmore County Courthouse

    County Board of Supervisors Room

    10:00 am – 11:00 am 

    900 G Street

    Geneva, NE 68361

    Thayer County

    Thayer County Courthouse

    Commissioner’s Room

    1:00 pm – 2:00 pm

    225 N 4th Street

    Hebron, NE 68370

    Thomas County

    Thomas County Courthouse
    1:30 pm – 2:30 pm

    503 Main Street

    Thedford, NE 69166

    Friday, April 4, 2025

    Cuming County 

    Cuming County Courthouse

    1:00 pm – 2:00 pm

    200 S. Lincoln Street

    West Point, NE 68788

    Tuesday, April 8, 2025

    Perkins County

    Perkins County Courthouse 

    9:00 am – 10:00 am MT

    200 Lincoln Avenue

    Grant, NE 69140

    Washington County

    Washington County Courthouse

    10:00 am – 11:00 am

    1555 Colfax Street

    Blair, NE 68008

    Nemaha County

    Nemaha County Courthouse

    10:30 am – 11:30 am 

    1824 N Street

    Basement Meeting Room

    Auburn, NE 68305 

    Chase County

    Chase County Courthouse

    11:00 am – 12:00 pm MT

    921 Broadway 

    Drivers Examiner’s Room

    Imperial, NE 69033

    Dundy County

    Dundy County Courthouse

    1:00 pm – 2:00 pm MT

    112 W 7th Avenue

    Benkelman, NE 69021

    Richardson County

    Richardson County Courthouse

    1:00 pm – 2:00 pm

    1700 Stone Street

    Commissioner Room

    Falls City, NE 68355

    Hitchcock County

    Hitchcock County Courthouse

    3:00 pm – 4:00 pm

    229 East D Street

    Trenton, NE 69044

    Wednesday, April 9, 2025 

    Hayes County

    Hayes County Courthouse

    9:00 am – 10:00 am 

    505 Troth Street

    Hayes Center, NE 69032

    Sherman County 

    Sherman County Courthouse 

    11:00 am – 12:00 pm 

    630 O Street 

    Loup City, NE 68853

    Frontier County

    Frontier County Courthouse

    11:30 am – 12:30 pm

    1 Wellington Street

    Stockville, NE 69042

    Thursday, April 10, 2025

    Deuel County

    Deuel County Courthouse 

    10:30 am – 11:30 am MT

    718 3rd Street 

    Chappell, NE 69129

    Keith County

    Keith County Courthouse 

    1:00 pm – 2:00 pm MT

    511 N Spruce Street

    Ogallala, NE 69153

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: ICYMI: At Hearing, Warren Highlights Risk of DoD Drug Supply Produced Overseas, Military Leader Agrees on the Need For Domestic Drug Manufacturing

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Massachusetts – Elizabeth Warren
    March 28, 2025
    A report reveals supply chain for a third of all drugs on the FDA essential medicines list is at very high risk because the ingredients are sourced from foreign countries. 
    “This overreliance gives our adversaries the power to restrict DoD access to drugs when we need to be able to treat our men and women in uniform.”
    Video of Exchange (YouTube)
    Washington, D.C. – At a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee, U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) questioned Mr. Keith M. Bass, nominee for Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, on the Department of Defense’s (DoD) pharmaceutical supply chain vulnerabilities. Mr. Bass committed to purchasing essential drugs from domestic manufacturers and working to expand DoD’s capabilities of manufacturing essential drugs in-house.
    Senator Warren has raised concerns about the DoD’s overreliance on foreign drug manufacturers and ensuing supply chain risks, including drug shortages and their impact on service members’ health and national security. 
    “DoD should prioritize domestic purchasing, but there are some instances where it makes sense for DOD to actually produce the medication itself,” said the senator.
    Mr. Bass agreed with the Senator on the need to have onshore capabilities: “The health and well-being of all of our military members is a priority… I commit to working with you and your staff.”
    Senator Warren secured provisions in the fiscal year 2025 National Defense Authorization Act that requires the Pentagon to establish a plan to ensure access to safe, high-quality pharmaceutical products and eliminate or mitigate risks in the pharmacy supply chain, including the feasibility of establishing a pharmaceutical manufacturing facility owned and operated by the Department of Defense (DoD).
    Transcript: Hearings to examine the nominations of Troy Meink, Michael Duffy, Emil Michael, and Keith BassSenate Armed Services CommitteeMarch 27, 2025
    Senator Elizabeth Warren: Thank you. Mr. Chairman, healthcare for our men and women in uniform is critical in peacetime and even more so in wartime. Mr. Bass, if you are confirmed as Assistant Secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, you’re going to be responsible for ensuring nearly 10 million service members and their families receive quality health care, including timely access to medication. I am very concerned about our overreliance on foreign nations for the very medications that put the health of service members at risk and our national security along with it. 
    DoD spends over $5 billion on prescription drugs each year. It’s a lot of money. But in November 2023, the Defense Logistics Agency released a report revealing that the supply chain for a third of all drugs on the FDA essential medicines list is at very high risk. Why? Because the ingredients from these drugs are sourced from China, or we don’t even know where they’re sourced from. 
    So, Mr. Bass, do you agree that it is a threat to our readiness and to the potential health of our service members that DoD’s pharmaceutical supply chain relies so heavily on China?
    Mr. Keith Bass: Thank you, Senator, and thank you again for meeting with me. I do agree that it is a threat. It is a vulnerability.
    Senator Warren: This overreliance gives our adversaries the power to restrict DoD access to drugs when we need to be able to treat our men and women in uniform. It also leaves us with much less visibility into the practices of foreign manufacturers, which, by the way, routinely have quality issues that threaten both the efficacy and the safety of these drugs. For these reasons, the DoD report recommends boosting the production of finished drugs, active pharmaceutical ingredients, and other key starting materials so that we are making more of this right here in the United States. 
    Mr. Bass, do you think DoD should work to onshore the critical drugs the military needs, including writing contracts that require manufacturers to onshore these capabilities? 
    Mr. Bass: Thank you, Senator. I do. I think that we need to work with our industrial base, our private and public partners, and we need to have rapid response contracts, and we need to make sure that we have either onshore or near-shore capabilities.
    Senator Warren: Good. I’m glad to hear you say this. DoD should prioritize domestic purchasing, but there are some instances where it makes sense for DoD to actually produce the medication itself, like when the DoD is the sole customer for that medication. One example: the adenovirus vaccine, which is critical in preventing serious respiratory illness among service members, particularly service members in basic training. DoD developed the vaccine and licensed it then to private industry, but because the military is basically the only buyer, DoD couldn’t find a commercial manufacturer for nearly a decade. DoD eventually had to pay a private manufacturer nearly $100 million just to resume production. And during the years that the private sector refused to manufacture for DoD, there were thousands of cases of adenovirus per month and service members who actually died. 
    So Mr. Bass, if confirmed, will you commit to expanding DoD’s capabilities of producing essential drugs in-house to reduce risk and to secure DoD’s medical supply chain?
    Mr. Bass: Thank you, Senator. The health and well-being of all of our military members is a priority. I’m not familiar with the report, but I commit to working with you and your staff. 
    Senator Warren: All right, I appreciate that, because this is a serious problem, and ultimately, these are investments that will pay off. One expert estimated that the DoD would make its money back in three years after building its own adenovirus manufacturing facility. This is a long-standing, bipartisan concern. I worked with Senator Rubio for years on this, and last year, the Senate adopted our language directing the DoD to enter into contracts to domestically manufactured drugs and drug components that are currently sourced overseas and that are used exclusively by the military. I want to see us get that in the final version of the NDAA. There’s more work to do, and I look forward to working with you on this, Mr. Bass. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Banking: Elevate Your Business With Galaxy S25

    Source: Samsung

    In today’s fast-paced and demanding work environment, businesses are looking for ways to simplify how they perform complex tasks. These intricate tasks can vary and involve anything from navigating multiple steps or business processes, dependencies, resources, stakeholders and uncertainties.
     
    Samsung Galaxy S25 series has now set the standard for what an AI-enabled phone can do as a true AI companion. Galaxy AI capabilities are now able to integrate AI agents allowing businesses to perform complex tasks across apps, services and even devices.
     
    Together with Google, Samsung is reshaping the future of Android and evolving it into the revolutionary AI-integrated OS1. This integrated collaboration is able to unlock powerful AI experiences that integrate diverse AI agents, such as Bixby, Gauss, Gemini, Chat GPT and Co-pilot. Samsung worked closely with Google to provide this latest, most cutting-edge AI innovations on Galaxy S25 series through One UI 72.
     
    This partnership, which started from a very early development stage, introduces native integration of Gemini on Galaxy devices for the first time and transforms the Galaxy AI experience to be more intuitive through multimodal capabilities. Businesses can now look forward to Gemini – an innovative feature that performs seamless actions across multiple apps, so every task takes fewer steps.
     
    To top this off – Intuitive, personalised AI is redefining how Samsung interacts with the world with the most natural, context-aware and personalised experiences. The Galaxy S25 series now also comes with up to six-months free access to Gemini Advanced. The direct business benefit of Gemini Advanced feature is that it comes with Samsung’s most capable AI models and priority access to the newest features like Gems, custom AI experts for any topic and Deep Research, which acts as your personal AI research assistant.
     
    It is very clear from these ground-breaking business features that Samsung aims to deliver an optimised AI experience by leveraging a variety of these incredible AI agents effectively. The Galaxy AI platform introduced with Galaxy S25 series has now been optimised for AI from the framework level, allowing various AI agents to effortlessly control multiple apps. These AI agents are able to work seamlessly in the background to perform tasks tailored to the user’s needs, simplifying complex business tasks.
     
    Many of these innovative Gemini features included in Galaxy S25 were developed to ensure an optimised user experience – thanks to the incredible collaboration that was formed with Google from the early stages. Bixby, Samsung’s voice-based AI agent specialised in device control, will now also play a pivotal role in advancing Home AI by enabling more intuitive and effortless control of Galaxy devices, as well as seamless connectivity and management of Samsung products like TVs and home appliances.
     
    But, it does not end there. Samsung knows just how important data privacy and safety is to businesses. That is why it has also built a broader AI ecosystems with AI-integrated OS. The cloud-based AI security features, enhanced in collaboration with Google, uphold the highest standards of data privacy and give you the choice to enable or opt out of Google Gemini.
     

     
    Users can now choose whether to enable Google Gemini or opt out based on their preferences. This cloud-based AI security feature now ensures that user input data is immediately deleted as soon as the output is created. No personal information is accessed without authorisation.
     
    And then there’s the remarkably seamless actions across apps/Gemini Live feature that is able to achieve the most cutting-edge AI experiences on Galaxy S25 series. In this case as well, Samsung has worked closely with partners that include both Google and Qualcomm to enhance AI capabilities and boost device performance. Together, these partners have been able to bring Gemini and Gemini Live to Galaxy S25 series, making it simpler for businesses to not only perform complex tasks, but also be context-aware.
     
    Now, there’s also the Multimodal Search – a new mobile search experience based on Galaxy S25 series’ capacity to interpret text, voice, images, video and even gestures. Businesses can now stop searching and instead be able to start finding more of what they want. The all-enhanced Circle3 to Search feature now understands the context of everything on your screen to anticipate your needs. It transforms the way we use devices with a new conversational, multimodal user interface, now introduced on Galaxy S25 series.
     
    Galaxy AI is now integrated naturally into every touch point of the interface and with One UI 7, Samsung has created an experience where every interaction feels effortless. Also, complemented by AI Select that is built mainly for contextual search – it now suggests solutions, next actions and useful information based on what’s on your screen – all of this without having to manually activate relevant apps.
     
    And furthermore, the barrier-breaking communication capability that is able to record and analyse calls with on-device transcript and AI summary for calls + on-device transcript and AI summary – allows businesses to communicate freely across countries with increased language support. And with the introduction of Samsung’s innovative Galaxy AI – this comprehensive artificial system is now able to not only enhance but elevate individual and business experiences across their Galaxy devices.
     
    Importantly, Samsung’s Galaxy AI vision remains. The global electronics giant seeks to democratise the benefits of mobile AI innovation so that its business users can enjoy barrier-free communication, maximise their productivity, unleash creativity and better track their health in their daily lives.
     
    Availability
    The Galaxy S25 series will be available for official retail sale in South Africa starting 14 February 2025. The Galaxy S25 Ultra comes in the following colours4 in Titanium Silverblue, Titanium Black, Titanium Whitesilver and Titanium Gray. Galaxy S25 and Galaxy S25+ will be available in Navy, Silver Shadow, Icyblue and Mint4.
     
    South African customers can pre-order the Galaxy S25 series through Samsung’s official online store, Samsung Shop App and participating retail partners.
     

    MIL OSI Global Banks

  • MIL-OSI: E Ink Introduces E Ink Ripple™ and Second-Generation Waveform Architecture for E Ink Spectra™ Displays

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    BILLERICA, Mass., March 28, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — E Ink (8069.TW) the originator, pioneer, and global commercial leader in electronic paper (ePaper) technology, today announced a breakthrough for their E Ink Spectra™ product line to reduce page flashing and enhance color performance.

    By implementing a wave-like transition effect known as E Ink Ripple, screen refresh effects are minimized, enabling a smoother transition between display updates. Additionally, by leveraging the newly developed waveform driving architecture, E Ink enhances color mixing for its E Ink Spectra products by using the existing color particles to create new color options.

    In addition to E Ink Ripple, E Ink has created a new waveform architecture, that combined with an upgraded integrated chipset system to 3-bit processing, expands the current color display system for E Ink Spectra 6 to include eight primary colors for enhanced visual details. Industry partners within the E Ink ecosystem, including Fitipower, Solomon Systech, Himax Technologies, Novatek, Integrated Solutions Technology, and UltraChip have begun supplying chips compatible with the new waveform architecture. When paired with the standalone T2000 controller, the color possibilities can be further expanded.

    “E Ink continuously refines ePaper technology to enhance color performance,” said Johnson Lee, Chairman of E Ink. “Based on customer feedback, the newly developed waveform architecture enables the precise display of standard colors required by advertisers, ensuring a more agile and targeted solution. This advancement will further increase ePaper’s adoption in the advertising and signage sector.”

    For E Ink Spectra 3100 Plus, the new E Ink Ripple Waveform architecture builds upon the existing black, white, red, yellow, and orange color palette by adding dark gray and light gray, resulting in a total of seven display colors. Previously, the bright colors red, orange, and yellow were widely used in retail to highlight promotional messages. The addition of two grayscale shades, along with black and white, forms a four-level grayscale range, improving text clarity and smoother edges in character rendering.

    With the T2000 chip, E Ink Spectra 6 expands from its original six-color display to include cyan, light green, and orange, providing a more refined image with a larger color gamut. The expanded color range enriches shadow details, skin tones, and other nuanced imagery. Gradient colors are rendered with greater precision, reducing graininess and enhancing object edges, providing a more comfortable viewing experience.

    Moreover, the breakthrough in the E Ink Ripple waveform architecture contributes to a smoother transition effect. Large digital signage displays can utilize the E Ink Ripple animation for a more natural and seamless page refresh, creating a softer visual experience and significantly improving page transition quality on ePaper screens.

    The E Ink Ripple breakthrough highlights E Ink’s commitment to full-color ePaper technology, continuously expanding the color gamut and striving for more true-to-life color reproduction based on customer feedback. E Ink remains dedicated to delivering the best color performance in the market. E Ink Ripple and E Ink’s enhanced color ePaper technology will be showcased at Touch Taiwan 2025 from April 16 to 18 at E Ink’s booth #L717 and at Display Week in San Jose, CA from May 13-15 in booth #628.

    About E Ink
    E Ink Holdings Inc. (8069.TWO), based on technology from MIT’s Media Lab, provides an ideal display medium for applications spanning eReaders and eNotes, retail, home, hospital, transportation, logistics, and more, enabling customers to put displays in locations previously impossible. E Ink’s electrophoretic display products make it the worldwide leader for ePaper. Its low power displays enable customers to reach their sustainability goals, and E Ink has pledged using 100% renewable energy in 2030 and reaching net zero carbon emissions by 2040. E Ink has been recognized for their efforts by receiving, validation from Science-Based Targets (SBTi) and is listed in both the DJSI World and DJSI Emerging Indexes. Listed in Taiwan’s Taipei Exchange (TPEx) and the Luxembourg market, E Ink Holdings is now the world’s largest supplier of ePaper displays. For more information please visit www.eink.com. E Ink. We Make Surfaces Smart and Green.

    Contact:
    V2 Communications for E Ink
    eink@v2comms.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/0e7c35b6-d55d-439c-ae0e-a1ff2a36d153

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Governor Lamont and Connecticut Department of Transportation Commemorate 10th Anniversary of CTfastrak

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    (NEW BRITAIN, CT) – Governor Ned Lamont and Connecticut Transportation Commissioner Garrett Eucalitto today hosted a ceremony in downtown New Britain attended by a large crowd of state and local officials, transit advocates, small business owners, housing developers, and commuters to celebrate the tenth anniversary of CTfastrak, the state’s first regional bus rapid transit system.

    Launched on March 28, 2015, CTfastrak is a system of ten bus routes operated by the Connecticut Department of Transportation that provides direct service to and from Waterbury, Cheshire, Southington, Bristol, Plainville, New Britain, Newington, West Hartford, Hartford, and Manchester, with portions operating on a 9.4-mile dedicated roadway between New Britain and Hartford. It provides a one-seat, no-transfer ride to many regional employment, shopping, and healthcare destinations, as well as to rail service, including the New Haven Line, the Waterbury Branch Line, and the Hartford Line.

    Since its launch, CTfastrak has provided more than 28.5 million passenger trips. Today, it averages about 14,000 weekday trips. Among CTfastrak’s routes is Route 101, which is the busiest bus route in the state, serving about 1.1 million passengers annually.

    More than $550 million in transit-oriented development projects near CTfastrak stations have been completed, are currently under construction, or are being planned.

    In 2024, the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy ranked CTfastrak the No. 1 bus rapid transit system in the United States.

    “Take one look at any neighborhood that has a CTfastrak station and compare it with how those areas were doing ten years ago and you will note the hundreds of new units of housing and the many new businesses that have established operations in these communities over the last decade,” Governor Lamont said. “CTfastrak’s impact extends beyond providing commuters with convenient public transit. It is revitalizing communities and showing the direct connection between our transportation system and the growth of vibrant communities where people want to live, work, and play.”

    The Connecticut Department of Transportation continues to evolve CTfastrak’s service based on customer feedback and changing ridership habits.

    “CTfastrak has done more than connect communities — it’s reshaped the state’s economy and set the gold standard in the U.S. for bus rapid transit,” Commissioner Eucalitto said. “This success proves that when government, local leaders, and the private sector collaborate, we can deliver results that help residents and businesses thrive.”

    For more information about CTfastrak, visit cttransit.com/services/ctfastrak.

     

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Local Leaders Statewide Back Mental Health Reforms

    Source: US State of New York

    coalition of 36 county executives, mayors and local leaders from across New York State today announced their strong support for Governor Kathy Hochul’s mental health reforms. In their letter to Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins and Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, these officials urged the New York State Legislature to swiftly pass these vital reforms to ensure that clinicians have the tools and resources necessary to help people with serious mental illness in their respective communities.

    “For too long, individuals struggling with severe mental illness have been left without the care they so desperately need,” Governor Hochul said. “These reforms will ensure that those who are most vulnerable and in crisis receive timely, life-saving treatment. By strengthening our mental health system, we are making New York safer, more compassionate, and better equipped to meet the needs of all its residents.”

    Coalition of Local Leaders Across the State said, “As elected officials who hear from a variety of constituents, we think these are commonsense changes that will help people get the behavioral healthcare they need, when they need it. We applaud Governor Hochul for having the courage to propose these changes and we urge the Legislature to support these changes to the law that would enable our communities to better care for those in need.”

    Governor Hochul’s proposal includes critical updates to involuntary commitment laws to further clarify that individuals could be involuntarily admitted if they are at significant risk of physical harm when their mental illness prevents them from being able to meet their basic needs such as food, shelter, and medical care. These changes will align New York with 43 other states, help vulnerable New Yorkers access the care they need, and further strengthen the continuity of mental healthcare statewide. It will also allow psychiatric nurse practitioners to participate in the commitment process in some instances.

    The Governor’s budget proposal also includes amendments to Kendra’s Law, which governs Assisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT) – an intervention that has demonstrated success reducing negative outcomes like criminal justice involvement and homelessness. The Governor’s Budget proposal also increases funding and enhances oversight over the program.

    The Governor is also proposing to increase funding for Enhanced Service Packages, which allow individuals to access AOT services without a court order and provide a transition option for those whose AOT orders have expired. Standardizing these packages across counties will ensure more individuals receive the support they need and deserve.

    Since taking office, Governor Hochul has committed over $1 billion to transforming New York’s mental health system. Her administration has restored inpatient psychiatric beds, increased oversight of insurance companies to ensure coverage for mental health care, and expanded outpatient services, crisis stabilization units, and peer support programs. These efforts align with the Governor’s broader commitment to a full continuum of care, providing sustained support for individuals beyond immediate crisis intervention.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: March 27th, 2025 Heinrich Joins Bicameral Push Urging Trump Administration to Reinstate Executive Order Supporting Tribal Self-Determination

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for New Mexico Martin Heinrich

    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.) joined U.S. Representative Teresa Leger Fernández (D-N.M.) and the New Mexico Congressional Delegation in sending a letter to President Trump urging him to reinstate Biden-era Executive Order 14112, titled “Reforming Federal Funding and Support for Tribal Nations to Better Embrace Our Trust Responsibilities and Promote the Next Era of Tribal Self-Determination.”

    President Trump’s decision to revoke the Executive Order reversed a significant policy designed to empower Tribal Nations by improving their access to federal funding and reducing bureaucratic hurdles. Signed by President Biden in 2023, the order aimed to reduce government interference on Tribal funding, and to make sure federal agencies meet their legal obligations for tribes.

    The order had tangible positive impacts, including facilitating federal support for tribal emergency response efforts and funding critical infrastructure projects such as fisheries management and broadband connectivity. It also established the Tribal Access to Capital Clearinghouse, a centralized hub for Native businesses to navigate federal funding opportunities. Its revocation creates uncertainty for Tribal Nations, potentially reinstating restrictive barriers to funding and creating instability in federally supported tribal programs.

    The letter pointed to key provisions of the rescinded executive order that aligned with the administration’s stated goals, including increasing “accessibility, flexibility, and utility of Federal funding and programs for Tribal Nations, while increasing the transparency, and efficiency of Federal funding processes.” The lawmakers warned that removing these provisions will exacerbate challenges that already hinder Tribal Nations’ ability to meet their communities’ needs.

    “Too often, federal funding processes impose unnecessary barriers for Tribal Nations, including restrictive limitations and burdensome reporting requirements,” the lawmakers wrote. “Without the coordination and efficiency processes established under the Tribal Self-Determination EO, these challenges will only grow, creating uncertainty and instability that directly undermines tribal self-determination.”

    The lawmakers called on the administration to immediately reinstate Executive Order 14112 and engage in meaningful consultation with Tribal Nations moving forward.

    “We urge you to restore [the Biden-era executive order] and work directly with Tribal Nations, Congress, and your federal agencies to ensure Tribal Nations are able to exercise their sovereignty and more efficiently access federal support,” the letter concluded.

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

    Dear President Trump: 

    We write to request your reconsideration of your recent decision1 to rescind Executive Order 14112, “Reforming Federal Funding and Support for Tribal Nations to Better Embrace Our Trust Responsibilities and Promote the Next Era of Tribal Self-Determination” (Tribal Self-Determination EO). The Tribal Self Determination EO was designed to improve the efficiency and coordination of federal funding and demonstrate the Federal Government’s commitment to upholding its treaty and trust obligations to Tribal Nations. Because the Tribal Self-Determination EO is intended to improve efficiency, coordination, and respect for Native American Tribes, we believe it is a policy position that your administration and all subsequent administrations would favor. 

    Tribal Nations have a legal, government-to-government relationship with the United States. The inherent sovereignty of Tribal Nations is recognized in the U.S. Constitution, in treaties, and across many federal laws and policies. It is important that your administration not include Tribes in any efforts to target diversity, equity, and inclusion programs. Tribal Nations have legal status as a political, not racial class and the United States has a trust responsibility to them.

    Section five of the Tribal Self-Determination EO directed agencies to increase the accessibility, flexibility, and utility of Federal funding and programs for Tribal Nations, while increasing the transparency and efficiency of Federal funding processes. This aligns closely with the administration’s stated goals to maximize governmental efficiency and productivity. Too often, federal funding processes impose unnecessary barriers for Tribal Nations, including restrictive limitations and burdensome reporting requirements that hinder Tribal Nations from meeting their communities’ needs. Without the coordination and efficiency processes established under the Tribal Self-Determination EO, these challenges will only grow, creating uncertainty and instability that directly undermines tribal self-determination. 

    We request an explanation of why the Tribal Self-Determination EO was rescinded, and whether any Tribal Nations were consulted prior to its rescission. We urge you to restore Executive Order 14112 and work directly with Tribal Nations, Congress, and your federal agencies to ensure Tribal Nations are able to exercise their sovereignty and more efficiently access federal support.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UN Human Rights Council 58: UK Statement for the Interactive Dialogue with the High Commissioner on Haiti

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Speech

    UN Human Rights Council 58: UK Statement for the Interactive Dialogue with the High Commissioner on Haiti

    UK Statement for the Interactive Dialogue with the High Commissioner on Haiti with the participation of the Independent Expert. Delivered by the UK Human Rights Ambassador, Eleanor Sanders.

    Thank you, Mr President.

    We thank the High Commissioner for his report. The ongoing and rapid deterioration of human rights in Haiti is shocking. 

    The Haitian people have long suffered indiscriminate attacks by armed criminal gangs – these have contributed to over a million Haitians being displaced from their homes.

    Widespread recruitment, exploitation and abuse of children by these gangs is still happening. At the same time the use of sexual violence as a form of punishment and to spread fear within communities is increasing.

    Re-establishing security to end the scourge of gangs remains essential to Haiti’s long-term stability. The UK supports the work of the Multinational Security Support Mission to Haiti and is providing £5 million to OHCHR to ensure the Mission’s compliance with international standards on human rights, conduct and discipline.

    We will continue to take action against perpetrators of human rights abuses in Haiti through sanctions.

    High Commissioner,

    Given the increasing chaos spread by Haitian gangs, how can the international community best assist the Haitian government in bringing about lasting improvements to the security environment?

    Thank you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 28 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Security: Bay Roberts — Bay Roberts RCMP investigates stabbing, man charged

    Source: Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    Thirty-six-year-old Kelvin Coombs is charged with aggravated assault by RCMP NL following a disturbance in Bay Roberts that occurred on March 27, 2025.

    At approximately 4:30 p.m. on Thursday, Bay Roberts RCMP received the report of a stabbing that occurred on a residential property in Bay Roberts. A man was transported to Carbonear General Hospital for treatment of injuries sustained.

    RCMP officers from Bay Roberts and Harbour Grace detachments immediately responded and attended the home. The suspect, Coombs, who initially refused to exit the residence for police, eventually exited the home and was arrested without further incident. He was held in police custody overnight.

    RCMP NL’s East District General Investigation Section was engaged and obtained a warrant to search the property. Last evening, a search was conducted with items seized in support of the charges laid.

    Coombs attends court today and is charged with aggravated assault and breach of probation. The victim is recovering from injuries sustained.

    The investigation is continuing.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s press encounter on South Sudan

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    [Opening remarks below; full transcript to follow shortly]

    Let me begin by addressing some breaking news – the terrible earthquake that hit parts of Southeast Asia today.

    We send our condolences to the government and peoples of the region. 

    The United Nations system is mobilizing to help those in need.
     
    Ladies and gentlemen of the press,

    I want to focus today on the dramatic and dire situation that is unfolding in South Sudan. 

    All the dark clouds of a perfect storm have descended upon the people of the world’s newest country – and one of the poorest.

    A security emergency – with intensifying clashes; aerial bombing of civilians — including women and children; the presence of external forces; and an ever-growing regional dimension to the conflict.

    Political upheaval – culminating most recently with the arrest of First Vice President Riek Machar.  The peace agreement is in shambles. 

    A humanitarian nightmare – with about three out of four South Sudanese needing assistance, half the population severely food insecure, and cholera breaking out.

    A displacement crisis – with more than one million people crossing the border from Sudan since fighting began there.

    An economic meltdown – with oil revenue plummeting and inflation skyrocketing 300%. 

    Finally, a funding crisis – with much of the already limited humanitarian and development aid drying up. 

    Meanwhile, ethnic and political targeting by security forces – coupled with the spread of misinformation on social media – is lighting the fuse for even worse.

    Let’s not mince words:  what we are seeing is darkly reminiscent of the 2013 and 2016 civil wars, which killed 400,000 people.

    Our UN Mission in South Sudan is working around the clock to ease tensions – engaging all parties and boosting protection of civilians.  But we face operational limitations. 

    For the sake of the long-suffering people of South Sudan, it is time for dialogue and de-escalation.

    The Horn of Africa is already in turmoil and cannot afford another conflict.  Nor can the people of South Sudan.

    To the leaders of that country, I say: 

    End the politics of confrontation. Release detained military and civilian officials now.  Fully restore the Government of National Unity. 

    And vigorously implement the promises you made through your commitments to the peace agreement – which is the only legal framework to peaceful, free and fair elections in December 2026.

    I also urge the regional and international community, as guarantors of the peace agreement, to speak with one voice in support of the peace process and against any attempts to undermine it.

    I just spoke with the Chairperson of the African Union Commission this morning. 

    We fully support the AU initiative to deploy the Panel of the Wise – as well as the efforts of the Special Envoy of President Ruto of Kenya.

    We will be working in close cooperation with the AU and with IGAD.

    The people of South Sudan are close to my heart. 

    On my very first visit as High Commissioner for Refugees, I was several days with South Sudanese refugees – and years later accompanied them across the border finally on their way home.

    I will never forget the decency at their very core.

    They had such enormous hopes and aspirations. 

    But unfortunately, not the leadership they deserve.

    At this critical hour, the people of South Sudan need an infusion of support. 

    Diplomatic and political support for peace. 

    And financial support for lifesaving aid. 

    South Sudan may have fallen off the world’s radar, but we cannot let the situation fall over the abyss. 

    Now more than ever, the leaders of South Sudan must hear a clear, unified and resounding message:

    Put down the weapons.  Put all the people of South Sudan first. 

    Thank you.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Premier Pillai urges federal action on bail reform

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Premier Pillai urges federal action on bail reform
    jlutz
    March 25, 2025 – 1:03 pm

    On March 18, 2025, Yukon Premier Ranj Pillai joined Canada’s Premiers in sending a letter to Prime Minister Mark Carney urging the federal government to take immediate action on bail reform and to strengthen public safety measures. The letter, which builds on past efforts by the Yukon and other provinces and territories, calls for comprehensive legislative changes to address critical issues in Canada’s bail system.

    While the Government of Yukon believes that legal experts are best placed to advise on issues of criminal law, there is widespread agreement across provinces and territories that evidence-based reform is needed for Canada’s bail system. Careful consideration of the broader impact on public safety and individual rights must be considered, but so must the experiences of victims of crime, their families and Yukon communities.

    The letter commended the federal government’s amendments introduced through Bill C-48, but notes that while these changes represent progress, they do not fully address the ongoing risk posed by violent and repeat offenders released on bail.

    Key points of the letter include the need for:

    • swifter action: The Government of Yukon was pleased to see that in response to previous calls from the Premiers for bail reform, the federal government committed to amending the Criminal Code to address the bail system in the December 2024 Fall Economic Statement. The Government of Yukon urges the Government of Canada to move forward with these efforts as soon as possible.
    • enhanced data monitoring: The letter stresses the need for the Department of Justice Canada to allocate resources to support provinces and territories in collecting, analyzing and reporting reliable data on bail and probation, including to monitor the effectiveness of the legislative changes brought into force through C-48. Improved data collection and sharing is a part of the Government of Yukon’s improvements to repeat offender management within the territory.
    • shared responsibility: The Premiers’ letter acknowledges that while provincial and territorial governments are actively addressing interconnected issues such as poverty, homelessness, addiction, trauma and mental health, the federal government must lead in enacting meaningful legislative reform in criminal law, over which it has exclusive jurisdiction.

    Additionally, the Government of Yukon is continuing to focus on public safety by:

    • increasing funding for the RCMP by $5.2 million in Budget 2025–26, bringing the total investment in the RCMP for the upcoming fiscal year to $47 million. This increased funding will result in the creation of eight new RCMP positions, including new officers for specialized teams, permanent funding for two officer positions with Car 867 and two additional officers for the Whitehorse detachment. The funding in this year’s budget also supports modernized equipment for safer policing and public accountability. This funding is subject to legislative approval.
    • leading work with the City of Whitehorse, the Aboriginal Community Safety Planning Initiative and the Canadian Centre for Safer Communities to develop a multi-year Community Safety and Wellbeing Plan for Whitehorse, including issues in the downtown core. This roadmap will identify local safety concerns, set priorities and outline actionable steps to reduce risk and vulnerability, while encouraging active community engagement throughout the process.
    • implementing action items outlined in the Downtown Whitehorse Safety Response Action Plan to create a safe, vibrant and inclusive downtown for all.
    • partnering with organizations like Safe at Home Society to renovate properties and launch supportive housing programs that offer safe, stable housing along with wrap-around services to support vulnerable populations.
    • working with the Whitehorse Chamber of Commerce and industry partners to launch SafeBiz, the Whitehorse Community Safety Pilot Program, to address concerns about crime, theft and the escalation of workplace violence impacting the Whitehorse business community. With funding from the Government of Yukon, the SafeBiz program offers businesses free security assessments and recommendations, safety and de-escalation training and resources to help businesses improve their security measures.
    • encouraging Yukoners to report criminal activity to the RCMP or to Crimestoppers. Yukoners can also submit complaints about certain illegal activities occurring at properties to SCAN, the Safer Communities and Neighbourhoods Unit, a complaint-driven process to disrupt illegal activities and improve community safety.

    The Government of Yukon reaffirms its commitment to public safety and continues to call on the federal government to act swiftly to help the provinces and territories better protect communities. 

    Delays in criminal justice system and bail reform compromise the safety of our communities. Alongside the other provinces and territories, our government has repeatedly raised concerns about shortcomings in the criminal justice system to federal counterparts. This letter is another step in our efforts to stop criminal activity, protect Yukoners and Yukon businesses and make our communities safer for everyone. 

    Premier Ranj Pillai

    Public safety is a top priority for our government. We are leading innovative approaches to enhance safety in our communities. The Yukon stands ready to work with all levels of government to implement data-driven, evidence-based and effective reforms to our criminal justice system.

    Minister of Justice and Attorney General Tracy-Anne McPhee

    Media contact

    Laura Seeley
    Cabinet Communications
    867-332-7627
    laura.seeley@yukon.ca  

    News release #:

    25-133

    Related information:

    Funding and investment for Yukon RCMP in Budget 2025–26
    Get updates on the Downtown Whitehorse Safety Response Action Plan
    SafeBiz: Whitehorse Community Safety Pilot Program
    Report a suspicious property or activity in your neighbourhood

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: NEWS: Sanders Announces Senate Votes to Block Arms Sales to Israel

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Vermont – Bernie Sanders

    WASHINGTON, March 27 – Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt) today released the following statement announcing his intention to bring to the Senate floor two Joint Resolutions of Disapproval (JRDs) to block the sale of certain offensive U.S. weaponry to Israel:

    Next week, I will force Senate votes on two Joint Resolutions of Disapproval I have introduced to block certain offensive arms sales to Israel. These sales, proposed by the Trump Administration, would provide $8.8 billion in bombs and other munitions to Prime Minister Netanyahu’s extremist government to continue its destruction of Gaza. Netanyahu has clearly violated U.S. and international law in this brutal war, and we must end our complicity in the carnage.  

    No humanitarian aid has entered Gaza in more than three and a half weeks, since Israeli authorities announced a complete blockade – that’s no food, water, medicine, or fuel since the start of March. Blocking humanitarian aid is morally abhorrent and a clear violation of both the Geneva Convention and the Foreign Assistance Act. 

    This war has been conducted almost entirely with American weapons and some $18 billion in U.S. taxpayer dollars. Israel has dropped U.S.-provided 2,000-pound bombs into crowded neighborhoods, killing hundreds of civilians to take out a handful of Hamas fighters, and made little effort to distinguish between civilians and combatants. These actions are immoral and illegal. The latest Trump sales provide almost $8.8 billion more in U.S. bombs and other munitions, including more than 35,000 massive 2,000-pound bombs. 

    The United States must not continue to supply endless amounts of military aid and weaponry to the Netanyahu government. It is particularly unconscionable while President Trump and Israeli officials openly talk of forcibly displacing millions of people from Gaza to make way for what Trump calls a “Riviera.” There is a name for such a policy — ethnic cleansing — and it’s a war crime. 

    Hamas started this war with its brutal terrorist attack on October 7, 2023, which killed 1,200 innocent people and took 250 hostages. Israel had a right to respond against Hamas. But Netanyahu’s extremist government has instead waged an all-out war against the entire Palestinian people. Out of a population of 2.2 million, more than 50,000 Palestinians have been killed and more than 112,000 have been injured – 60 percent of whom are women, children, and elderly people. In the last week alone, eight aid workers have been killed in Gaza, bringing the total to 399. Israel’s bombardment has damaged or destroyed 92 percent of the housing in Gaza, and devastated the civilian infrastructure and the health care system. Every single one of Gaza’s 12 universities has been bombed, as have hundreds of schools. 

    Congress must act to block these arms sales.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 47 million health workers and advocates call for cleaner aid to curb pollution deaths

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI

    The Second WHO Global Conference on Air Pollution and Health co-hosted by the World Health Organization and Colombia, in the city of Cartagena, brought together over 700 participants from 100 countries – including heads of state, ministers, scientists, and civil society groups — to accelerate action to curb what’s increasingly described as a full-scale health emergency. 

    “It is time to move from commitments to bold actions,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. 

    “To achieve clean air, we need urgent actions on all fronts: financial investment in sustainable solutions, such as in clean energy and sustainable transport, technical enforcement of WHO global air quality guidelines, and social commitment to protect the most vulnerable in our most polluted regions.” 

    The shared goal? A 50 per cent reduction in the health impacts of air pollution by 2040. 

    Countries including Brazil, Spain, China, and the United Kingdom laid out national roadmaps, while the Clean Air Fund pledged an additional $90 million for climate and health programmes. 

    Cities which are part of the C40 network, including London, vowed to strengthen air quality monitoring and push for greater investment in clean air strategies. 

    A health crisis hidden in plain sight 

    According to WHO, air pollution is responsible for seven million premature deaths annually and is now the second leading global risk factor for disease, after hypertension. 

    “Today air pollution is the first risk factor for disease burden,” said Maria Neira, WHO’s Director of Environment, Climate Change and Health. “It’s the number one risk factor for getting sick.” 

    The burden is heaviest in countries with fast-growing cities and weak regulatory frameworks. But Neira pointed out that the economic costs and health toll are rising globally. “Those chronic diseases are costing us well – to our health system and to our hospitals,” she said. 

    Despite the grim statistics, WHO leaders say solutions are at hand. Neira cited China’s progress in cutting emissions while continuing to grow economically. “At one point they demonstrated that you can reduce air pollution while still maintaining economic growth,” she said. “This argument that in order to tackle the causes of climate change, air pollution and environmental health, you need to invest and you don’t obtain benefits immediately – that’s not correct.” 

    Climate and health emergency 

    Indeed, air pollution is not just a public health issue but a key driver and symptom of the climate crisis. The burning of fossil fuels which feeds air pollution also releases greenhouse gases – adding to global warming. 

    “Climate change causes and air pollution causes overlap,” said Neira. “We have a lot to gain for health, for the economy, and for society, sustainable development, if we accelerate this transition.” 

    She emphasized that clean air solutions – including renewable energy, better urban design, and phasing out fossil fuels – also serve as climate mitigation strategies. 

    “This pollution, this particulate matter we are breathing every day…is coming from different sources, but fundamentally from the combustion of fossil fuels,” she said. “This can be avoided only by accelerating the transition to more renewables; cleaner sources of energy.” 

    © UNICEF/Aliraza Khatri

    Examples from Colombia and Europe 

    Hosts Colombia presented a slate of national initiatives, including cleaner fuels, zero-emission public transit, and a target to reduce carbon emissions 40 per cent by 2030. 

    “Air pollution claims more victims than violence itself. Poisoning our air costs lives in silence – this conference reinforces our determination to implement policies for both the environment and the health of our people,” said Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro. 

    He stressed the importance of smarter regulation and bridging the inequality gap with indigenous peoples, local and rural communities. 

    In Europe, where air pollution still causes 300,000 premature deaths annually, lawmakers are moving toward stricter regulation. “Pollution is an invisible pandemic. It is a slow-motion pandemic,” underscored Javier López, Vice President of the European Parliament’s Environment Committee. 

    The European Union recently adopted a new Air Quality Directive, halving legal air pollution thresholds and aiming to reduce pollution-related deaths by 30 per cent by 2030. “We have decided to come up with the air quality directive, which is part of the European Green Package,” Mr. López said. 

    Regional model, global lessons 

    Officials from the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) also took part in Cartagena, highlighting the Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution as one of the most successful multilateral environmental agreements to date. 

    “The Air Convention…is a multilateral environmental agreement that was adopted in 1979 to address air pollution that crosses national borders,” said policy officer Carolin Sanz Noriega.  

    Since its adoption, the convention has expanded to 51 parties and achieved deep emissions cuts across the region. “Reducing emissions of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides by 40 to 80% from 1990 levels in the UNECE region, and for more than 30% for particulate matter,” Ms. Sanz Noriega said. 

    She emphasized that the agreement’s success lies in its binding commitments, robust science, and long-standing trust-building mechanisms. “Countries implement the convention because it really brings benefits. It brings health benefits, environmental benefits, crop benefits. It has co-benefits for climate.” 

    Through the Forum for International Cooperation on Air Pollution, UNECE is now working with countries in Latin America, Africa, and Asia to share scientific tools and regulatory approaches. 

    But a major challenge, especially in the Global South, remains technical capacity.  

    “We need to make sure that the countries are able to monitor air quality. That’s the first step,” Neira said. “In Africa, unfortunately, we are still missing a lot of monitoring capacity…You cannot manage what you cannot measure.” 

    Prescribing clean air 

    The health sector provided one of the key takeaways of the conference. With millions of medical professionals and individuals already backing the WHO campaign, delegates emphasized that clean air must be recognized as central to disease prevention.  

    “We have 47 million signatures from health professionals, from patients, from advocates, from institutions, saying ‘I want to prescribe clean air’,” Neira said.  

    “I don’t want to treat the patients with diseases caused by exposure to toxic air. I want to make sure that my patients will not be exposed and therefore they will not develop those diseases.” 

    As the conference wrapped up, delegates left Cartagena emboldened with new partnerships, data, and policy options – but also a resounding moral imperative. 

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI USA News: Remarks by Vice President Vance at American Dynamism Summit

    Source: The White House

    class=”has-text-align-center”>Waldorf Astoria

    Washington, D.C.

    9:16 A.M. EDT
     
         THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Good morning, everybody.  How we doing?  (Applause.)
     
    It’s — it’s great to be here.  Thanks to — to everybody for having me today — in particular, Ben and Marc.  And I just got to say hello to Ben and Katherine backstage.  But I know — I know, apparently, Marc has the flu right now.  So, Marc, wherever you are — I think I had the same flu, like, a few weeks ago.  It sucks.  But I’m sure — I’m sure you’ll get through it.
     
    And it’s great to — to be with you all, and it’s great to talk about the importance of American dynamism and what our administration is going to do to support so many of the country’s most groundbreaking and compelling companies.
     
    I know that you guys are working hard every single day.  And I think it’s pretty good news — right? — that, as of a couple of months ago, you have an administration that’s working with you and facilitating your hard work instead of making it harder to innovate, which is, I think, what the last administration did — though, in defense of Joe Biden, he was asleep most of the time.  I don’t think he totally realized what he was doing, but it certainly didn’t make it easier — his administration did not — for our innovators.
     
    Now, as some of you may have seen — and I talked about this with Ben backstage — I spoke at a conference in Paris last month, where my message to a group of CEOs and foreign leaders was that we should embrace the future head-on.  We shouldn’t be afraid of artificial intelligence and that, particularly for those of us lucky enough to be Americans, we shouldn’t be fearful of productive new technologies.  In fact, we should seek to dominate them.  And that’s certainly what this administration wants to accomplish.
     
    I suspect that most of you in this room are of like mind, and if you’re not, I don’t know why the hell you’re at the American dynamism conference.  (Laughter.)  But I — I received some pushback from people who are worried about the disruptive effects of AI. 
     
    You know, one journalist suggested the speech highlighted the tension between the, quote, “techno-optimists” and the “populist right” of President Trump’s coalition. 
     
    And today, I’d like to speak to these tensions as a proud member of both tribes.  And let me put it simply: While this is a well-intentioned concern, I think it’s based on a faulty premise.  This idea that tech-forward people and the populists are somehow inevitably going to come to a loggerheads is wrong.
     
    I think the reality is that, in any dynamic society, technology is going to advance, of course. 
     
    And speaking as a Catholic, I think back to Pope John Paul II’s opening lines of his encyclic- — e- — (coughs) — excuse me — encyclical “Laborem exercens.”  Quote, “Through work, man must earn his daily bread and contribute to the continual advance of science and technology and, above all, to elevating unceasingly the cultural and moral level of the society within which he lives,” end quote.
     
    Now, I quote the Holy Father not only because I’m a fan of his but also because he rightly understood that in a healthy economy, technology should be something that enhances, rather than supplants, the value of labor.
     
    And I think there’s too much fear that AI will simply replace jobs rather than augmenting so many of the things that we do.
     
    Now, in the 1970s, if you go back a little ways, many feared that the automated teller machine — what we call the “ATM” — would replace bank tellers.  In reality, the advent of the ATM made bank tellers more productive, and you have more people today working in customer service in the financial sector than you had when the ATM was created.  Now, they’re doing slightly different jobs, of course, yes.  They’re doing more interesting tasks also, and, importantly, they’re making more money than they were in the 1970s.
     
    Now, when we innovate, we do sometimes cause labor market disruptions.  That has — that happens.  But the history of American innovation is that we tend to make people more productive, and then we increase their wages in the process.  And I think all of us believe that’s a good thing.
     
    Now, after all, who would claim that man was made less productive by the invention of the transistor or the metal lathe or the steam engine?
     
    Real innovation makes us more productive, but it also, I think, dignifies our workers.  It boosts our standard of living.  It strengthens our workforce and the relative value of its labor.
     
    And, as Americans, all of us should be particularly proud of our extraordinary heritage — I think it is American heritage — of inventing things and of our nation’s status to this day as the world’s foremost driver of research and development.
     
    But all of this, the role that technology plays in a labor market, and whether we greet innovative breakthroughs with excitement or with trepidation depends on the purpose of our economic system in the first place.  And I think this is where the populists have an important point.
     
    It should be no surprise that when we send so much of our industrial base to other countries, we stop making interesting new things right here at home.
     
    Look, for example, at shipbuilding.  Now, if you go back to World War II, America constructed thousands of so-called Liberty ships to carry troops, cargo, and other things, building them at a pace of three ships every two days — three ships every two days.
     
    Now we build about five commercial ships across an entire year in the United States of America.  And as a result, the United States today accounts for 0.1 percent — one tenth of one percent — of global shipbuilding. 
     
    China, on the other hand, now makes more commercial ships than the rest of the world combined.  In fact, one of Beijing’s state-owned firms built more commercial ships just last year than all of America has produced since the end of World War II.
     
    So, while we remain the leader in technology and innovation, I think there are troubling signs on the horizon.  And I raise all this to ask: Does this sound like a regime — I’m speaking of China — that will pass up on the opportunity to use AI, or any other technology, to advance their own interests and further undermine the interests of their rivals?  I think the answer is obvious, and that’s why, America, we’ve got to be tech-forward.
     
    Yes, there are concerns.  Yes, there are risks.  But we have to be leaning into the AI future with optimism and hope, because I think real technological innovation is going to make our country stronger.
     
    So, deindus- — deindustrialization poses risks both to our national security and our workforce.  It’s important because it affects both.  And the net result is dispossession, for many in this country, of any part of the productive process.  And when our factories disappear and the jobs in those factories go overseas, American workers are faced not only with financial insecurity, they’re also faced with a profound loss of personal and communal identity.
     
    And so, to come full circle on this tension — alleged tension between the populists and the techno-optimists, I can understand a reaction of skepticism when we talk about the revolutionary potential of new invention and artificial intelligence and all the other incredible technologies that you guys are working, but I think that that tension is a little overstated. 
     
    And so, I’m going to come back to what’s sort of dividing some of the tech optimists and the populists on our side. 
     
    I think the populists, when they look at the future, and when they compare it to what’s happened in the past, I think a lot of them see alienation of workers from their jobs, from their communities, from their sense of solidarity.  You see the alienation of people from their sense of purpose.  And importantly, they see a leadership class that believes welfare can replace a job and an application on a phone can replace a sense of purpose. 
     
    Now, I remember a Silicon Valley dinner in particular, back when I was in — in my tech days, where my wife and I were sitting around talking to some of the leaders of — of the important technology firms of the United States.  And this was probably in 2016 or 2017.  And I was talking about my real worry that we were heading in a direction where America could no longer support middle-class families working on middle-class wages.  And importantly, that even if you had enough economic dynamism to provide the wealth to ensure those people could, you know, afford to buy a house and afford their food and so forth, that even if you replace the financial element of their jobs, you would destroy something that was dignified and purposeful about work itself.
     
    And I remember one of the tech CEOs who was there that — you know, CEO — you would know his name if I mentioned it.  He was the CEO of a — of a multibillion-dollar company.  He said, “Well, I’m actually not worried about the loss of purpose when people lose their jobs.”  And I said, “Okay, well, what do you think is going to replace that sense of purpose?”  And he said, “Digital, fully immersive gaming.”  (Laughter.)
     
    And then my — my wife texted me underneath the table and said, “We have to get the hell out of here.  These people are effing crazy.”  (Laughter.)
     
    Now, I don’t think that, of course, that CEO’s views are representative of — of most people in this room, but when I think about the — the — a lot of the workers, based on what they’ve seen in the past, are very worried about the future, because, frankly, their leadership has failed to serve them.
     
    And then I think about this from the perspective of a lot of the tech optimists.  I think a lot of the tech optimists, they see overregulation.  They see stifling innovation.  I mean, you guys are builders.  They are builders.  And while they may sympathize with those who lost a job, they’re much more frustrated that the government won’t allow them to build the jobs of the future.
     
    And they know that as hard as it is to build a business in digital media, it’s still harder to build one in robotics or life sciences or energy, in what we call the world of atoms.  They see a government that makes their lives harder, and they mistrust anyone who looks to that government for aid.
     
    And what I’d propose is that each group — our workers, the populace on the one hand, the tech optimists on the other — have been failed by this government — not just the government of the last administration but the government, in some ways, of the last 40 years, because there were two conceits that our leadership class had when it came to globalization. 
     
    The first is assuming that we can separate the making of things from the design of things.  The idea of globalization was that rich countries would move further up the value chain, while the poor countries made the simpler things.
     
    You would open an iPhone box, and it would say “designed in Cupertino, California.”  Now, the implication, of course, is that it would be manufactured in Shenzhen or somewhere else.  And, yeah, some people might lose their jobs in manufacturing, but they could learn to design or, to use a very popular phrase, learn to code.
     
    But I think we got it wrong.  It turns out that the geographies that do the manufacturing get awfully good at the designing of things.  There are network effects, as you all well understand.  The firms that design products work with firms that manufacture.  They share intellectual property.  They share best practices.  And they even sometimes share critical employees.
     
    Now, we assumed that other nations would always trail us in the value chain, but it turns out that as they got better at the low end of the value chain, they also started catching up on the higher end.  We were squeezed from both ends.  Now, that was the first conceit of globalization.
     
    I think the second is that cheap labor is fundamentally a crutch, and it’s a crutch that inhibits innovation.  I might even say that it’s a drug that too many American firms got addicted to.  Now, if you can make a product more cheaply, it’s far too easy to do that rather than to innovate.
     
    And whether we were offshoring factories to cheap labor economies or importing cheap labor through our immigration shyste- — system, cheap labor became the drug of Western economies. 

         And I’d say that if you look in nearly every country, from Canada to the UK, that imported large amounts of cheap labor, you’ve seen productivity stagnate.  I don’t think that’s — that’s not a total happenstance.  I think that the connection is very direct.
     
    Now, one of the debates you hear on the minimum wage, for instance, is that increases in the minimum wage force firms to automate.  So, a higher wage at McDonald’s means more kiosks.  And whatever your views on the wisdom of the minimum wage — I’m not going to comment on that here — companies innovating in the absence of cheap labor is a good thing. 

         I think most of you are not worried about getting cheaper and cheaper labor.  You’re worried about innovating, about building new things, about — the old formulation of technology is doing more with less.  You guys are all trying to do more with less every single day.
     
    And so, I — I’d ask my friends, both on the — the tech optimist side and on the populist side, not to see the failure of the logic of globalization as a failure of innovation.  Indeed, I’d say that globalization’s hunger for cheap labor is — is a problem precisely because it’s been bad for innovation. 
     
          Both our working people — our populists — and our innovators gathered here today have the same enemy.  And the solution, I believe, is American innovation, because, in the long run, it’s technology that increases the value of labor. 

    Innovations like the American system and the interchangeable parts revolution it sparked, or Ford’s moving assembly line that skyrocketed the productivity of our workers — that’s how American industry became the envy of the world.
     
    And that’s what I really want to talk about today: why innovation is key to winning the worldwide manufacturing compe- — competition, to giving our workers a fair deal, and to reclaiming our heritage via America’s great industrial comeback. And I believe that’s what we’re on the cusp of, a great American industrial comeback.
     
    Because innovation is what increases wages.  It’s what protects our homelands, and I know we have a lot of defense technology companies here.  It’s what saves troops’ lives on the battlefield.
     
    And I know everyone here today largely agrees.  It’s why we have some of the greatest inno- — inventors and thinkers in energy; precision machining; countless critical, high-value industries just in this room. 
     
    And I think the other thing that unites all of you is that you’re all builders.  And I — and I use that word deliberately.
     
    I was very moved by Marc’s manifesto from a few years ago about America.  We are a nation of builders.  We make things.  We create things.
     
    Each of you came to this summit not because you developed some flash-in-the-pan application, but because you’re building something very real.  You’re raising new factories.  You’re turning profits back into R & D.  And you’re creating new, good-paying jobs for your fellow Americans. 
     
    And this is why I’m such huge fans of yours — of Ben’s and Marc’s and of the entire endeavor — and that we recognize now in our administration is the time to align our work interests with those of all of you.  It’s time to align the interests of our technology firms with the interests of the United States of America writ large.
     
    Now, all of you, in your own ways, have answered that call.  After all, there’s nothing forcing anyone to be in the room today.  Each one of you could have set up headquarters in Southeast Asia or China, I’m sure, and you would’ve done quite well for yourselves financially.
     
    But you’re here, I hope, because you love your country.  You love its people and the opportunities that it’s given you, and you recognize that building things, our capacity to create new innovations in the economy cannot be a race to the bottom.
     
    Now, America is not going to win the future by ditching child labor laws or paying our workers less than Chinese or Vietnamese laborers.  We don’t want that, and it’s not on the table.
     
    We can only win by doing what we always did: protecting our workers and supporting our innovators, and doing both of those things at the same time.
     
    And so, I want to talk a little specifics here.  The Trump Administration’s great plan for staging the great American manufacturing comeback is simple.  You’re making interesting new things here in America?  Great.  Then we’re going to cut your taxes.  We’re going to slash regulations.  We’re going to reduce the cost of energy so that you can build, build, build.
     
    Our goal is to incentivize investment in our own borders — in our own businesses, our own workers, and our own innovation.  We don’t want people seeking cheap labor.  We want them investing and building right here in the United States of America.
     
    And so, if you’ll allow it, I’d like to talk about a few ways that the Trump Administration is already pursuing a pro-innovation economy that allows our workers to thrive and our companies to outcompete their foreign peers — in short, an economy that is vibrantly America first, that serves Americans from all walks of life and of every kind.
     
    Now, first, President Trump is starting with and is dead serious about rearranging our trade and tariff regime internationally. 
     
    We believe that tariffs are a necessary tool to protect our jobs and our industries from other countries, as well as the labor value of our workers in a globalized market.  In fact, combined with the right technology, they allow us to bring jobs back to the United States of America and create the jobs of the fucur- — future. 
     
    Just look in the past few months at the auto industry as an important example.  When you erect a tariff wall around a critical industry like auto manufacturing and you combine that with advanced robotics and lower energy costs and other tools that increase the productivity of U.S. labor, you give American workers a multiplying effect.  Now that, in turn, allows firms to make things here at a price-competitive basis.
     
    Our president gets that, which is why last month we posted 9,000 new auto jobs after many, many years of stagnation or even decline in the auto sector.  It’s why, just weeks in, we already have new plant or production announcements from Honda, from Hyundai, and Stellantis worth billions of dollars and thousands of additional jobs on top of the ones that were already created.
     
    Now, this takes work.  It took, in the president’s first term, the president ripping up NAFTA and creating a new U.S. deal for American manufacturers in North America.  But there’s important work, and we’re going to do it.
     
    Now, second — second, all of this is why the president is approaching the issue of illegal immigration as aggressively as he has, because he knows that cheap labor cannot be used as a substitute for the productivity gains that come with economic innovation. 
     
    And so, we’ve cracked down on illegal immigration at the border, where the results speak for themselves.  Last month, migrant crossings were down 94 percent to their lowest number all time, and that happened just in two months of serious border enforcement.
     
    Thanks to President Trump’s leadership, last month, for the first time in over a year, the majority of job gains went to American citizens born on U.S. soil, and that’s important.  For the first time in over a year, the majority of job creation actually went to American citizens.
     
    Third, this administration is focused on reducing our input costs for our manufacturers and for everybody else.  Achieving energy an- — abundance — and I know Doug Burgum was here earlier; will be here later — is top of mind.  Because when we look at some of the most exciting applications of new technologies, we realize it’s going to take a lot of power to keep them running. 
     
    And we’re — we’re thrilled to have our friends from the United Arab Emirates, a number of the business leaders and government leaders, in town this week for meetings with our government.  And one of the things they consistently hammer upon — it’s something that unfortunately too few of our European allies tend to get — is that if you want to lead in artificial intelligence, you have got to be leading in energy production.
     
    So, we are going to set the pace there, and we are going to lead from the front.
     
    Now, we are already seeing, the good news is, signs of progress, even just a couple of months in.  Gas and diesel prices are dropping.  The cost of a barrel of U.S. crude is way down.  And last Wednesday, the administration took major steps to make energy even cheaper and liberate our companies from stifling environmental regulations. 
     
    Now, that is great, but, of course, there’s a lot more work we have to do over the next four years.  Getting the tax bill right is especially critical for all of you and for all of your workers.  We know how important it is to restore 100 percent bonus depreciation for capital investments, as well as full expensing for R & D.  Again, we want people to invest in America, and we’re going to make sure the tax code reflects that.
     
    In order to build on the success of the original tax law, meaning the tax law from the president’s first administration, our administration is working to broaden some provisions that are critical to the industrial base, like expanding full expensing to cover factory construction.  For business owners, including manufacturers, making the 2017 tax cuts permanent will provide further co- — confidence and predictability to invest in new technology and equipment, hire more American workers, and grow all of your businesses. 
     
    And we have a lot more to do, but the country is already starting to see the payoff of this administration’s bold economic agenda.  For producers and consumers alike, inflation is finally starting to come down.  Core CPI last week dropped to its lowest number since April of 2021.  And when it comes to the labor market, last month’s jobs report showed a massive reversal: 10,000 new manufacturing jobs created, where the previous year we had lost over 100,000 manufacturing jobs. 
     
    As you may have heard the president say, in less than two months since he’s took office, he’s already secured more than $1.7 trillion in new investments across the United States.  That’s hundreds of thousands of new jobs in manufacturing, AI, other hard tech sectors, and more. 
     
    So, we think there’s a lot to be excited about.  There’s a lot that we’re excited about, and we certainly hope that you guys are excited too. 
     
    But the fundamental premise, the fundamental goal of President Trump’s economic policy is, I think, to undo 40 years of failed economic policy in this country.  For far too long, we got addicted to cheap labor — both overseas and by importing it into our own country — and we got lazy. 
     
    We overregulated our industries instead of supporting them.  We overtaxed our innovators, instead of making easier for them to build their great companies, and we made it way too hard to build things and invest things in the United States of America. 

         That stopped two months ago, and it will continue to stop, and we’ll continue to fight for American workers and the American businesses that hire them and that support them. 
     
    So, I want to thank you all for two things.  Number one, I want to thank you all for doing what you do.  Again, you could have chosen the easy path.  Every single person in this room — as the president would say, “You’re all very high IQ” — you’re some of the most talented people in the United States of America.  You chose to build a business right here in the United States of America, and for that, I’m grateful. 
     
    But the second thing I want to say is that I think you’re not just building your own business.  I think that you are part of a great American industrial renaissance.  Whether it’s the war of the future, the jobs of the future, the economic prosperity of the future, we believe that we must build it right here in the United States of America. 
     
    So, thank you all for building.  Thank you all for building in America.  And thank you all for building the kind of society that I want to raise my children in. 
     
    God bless you all.  Thanks for having me.  (Applause.) 
     
                             END                    9:40 A.M. EDT

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Armed Raleigh Drug Trafficker Sentenced to 15 Years

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    RALEIGH, N.C. – A Raleigh man was sentenced Thursday to 15 years in prison for cocaine trafficking and firearms possession. On December 5, 2024, Linwood Davis pled guilty to conspiracy to distribute and possess with the intent to distribute 500 grams or more cocaine, possession with intent to distribute 500 grams or more cocaine, and possession of a firearm in furtherance a drug trafficking crime.

    According to court documents and other information presented in court, in June of 2023, law enforcement identified Davis as a source of supply of cocaine in the Raleigh area. After conducting multiple controlled purchases involving Davis, law enforcement executed a search warrant at his residence on November 3, 2023.  Law enforcement recovered over 1,000 grams of cocaine, approximately $44,470 in U.S. currency, and two firearms, both with large capacity magazines, from Davis’s house.

    Davis has five previous felony drug convictions (2003, 2004, 2007 and 2013) and two previous felony convictions for eluding arrest with a motor vehicle (2003 and 2004).

    Daniel P. Bubar, Acting U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina made the announcement after sentencing by U.S. District Judge Terrence W. Boyle. The Raleigh Police Department and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives investigated the case and Assistant U.S. Attorney Casey L. Peaden prosecuted the case.

    Related court documents and information can be found on the website of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina or on PACER by searching for Case No. 5:24-CR-263-BO-RN.

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    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: By The Numbers: Federal Health Funding Cuts

    Source: US State of New York

    overnor Kathy Hochul today shared a breakdown of the Trump administration’s sweeping federal cuts to New York State’s health programs, and how these cuts to health funding will affect New Yorkers. The amount of funding lost will have a devastating impact statewide on programs that ensure the safety and well-being of people in New York, gutting over $360 million in financial resources toward mental health and addiction services, and health departments across the State.

    “Slashing funding for public health, suicide prevention and addiction services is just plain cruel, and it’s going to hurt everyday New Yorkers most,” Governor Hochul said. “Here’s the sad truth: there is no State in the nation that has the resources to backfill these sweeping cuts. It’s up to New York’s elected officials who serve in the House majority to stand up and fight back.”

    New York State Department of Health Commissioner Dr. James McDonald said, “It is disappointing these grants were terminated so impulsively without any advance notice and without consideration for the people we serve. We were poorly prepared as a nation for the last pandemic. I see the same pattern occurring now, where decisions are made without consideration for the public’s health and well-being. These grants were preparing us to be healthier for the next pandemic. These investments allowed New York to develop strategies that prevent chronic disease, improve nutrition and find problems before they started.”

    Office of Addiction Services and Supports Commissioner Dr. Chinazo Cunningham said, “These sweeping federal cuts to health and human services threaten critical addiction funding streams that support prevention, harm reduction, treatment, and recovery services, putting lives at risk and straining the providers working tirelessly on the frontlines of this public health crisis. OASAS remains committed to protecting and expanding access to life-saving services, and will work to mitigate the damage caused by these harmful cuts.”

    Office of Mental Health Commissioner Dr. Ann Sullivan said, “For many years, the federal government has been a trusted and valued partner in efforts to provide critical mental health services and supports to New Yorkers, many living in traditionally marginalized communities and under difficult socioeconomic conditions. These drastic cuts will likely slow, and in some instances, halt the fantastic progress our federally funded programs have made and continue to make across our state. We have come too far to reverse course on mental health, which is why our federal legislators owe it to New York to challenge these cuts however possible.”

    Federal Cuts by the Numbers:

    Department of Health
    DOH expects to lose over $300 million in funding for organizations across the State.

    • This funding supports many activities that are core to public health functioning, including virus surveillance, outbreak response, electronic data exchange, public dashboards, infection prevention activities in hospitals and nursing homes, laboratory reporting, program operations, and support to local health departments. The backbone of the State’s public health infrastructure will be weakened significantly due to reduced virus surveillance and reporting systems that can no longer provide communities and families with real-time information on developing outbreaks, laboratory support and testing, data collection and analysis, public-facing dashboards, data and analytics.
    • Losing this funding will shutter multiple areas of work that are largely seen as foundational components of the Department’s response to emerging infectious diseases. These cuts will also eliminate the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention’s COVID-19 Health Disparities Grant, which funded 135 subcontractors to support community-based work addressing health disparities in New York, such as mental health, maternal and infant health, and food security.

    Office of Addiction Services and Supports
    OASAS expects to lose $40 million total in funding, which will result in significant cuts to addiction and prevention services, treatment supports and access to resources for individuals struggling with substance use. This work includes, but is not limited to:

    • Transitional housing to help provide short-term housing and case management for individuals leaving OASAS residential treatment or correctional facilities who cannot otherwise access permanent housing.
    • Support for programs, access to treatment, recovery, and other basic services that keep people connected to care in their communities.
    • Expansion of outpatient clinics to offer medication for addiction treatment and to purchase and outfit mobile medication units to bring services where they are needed.
    • Administering and implementing Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) which is a comprehensive public health approach to identify those at risk of developing substance use disorders and deliver early intervention and treatment services to individuals who exhibit habits of risky use of alcohol and other substances.

    Office of Mental Health
    OMH expects to lose $27 million total in funding for programs and services for individuals experiencing mental health and/or substance use needs. These programs were intended to allow individuals in need of care to remain in their homes, connected to their natural support systems during treatment. The loss of this funding will result in an increased reliance on emergency services and hospital-based care with fewer community resources and supports for our most vulnerable New Yorkers, including:

    • Crisis Stabilization and Crisis Residence Programs to provide urgent treatment to individuals experiencing an acute mental health and/or substance use crisis, and a safe place for the stabilization of psychiatric symptoms and support for children and adults.
    • Adult Assertive Community Treatment Teams (ACT) serving individuals with serious mental illness who are in danger of losing their housing/becoming homeless, are homeless, and/or have histories of involvement with the criminal justice system, and Children and Youth Assertive Community Treatment Teams (ACT) for youth who are returning home from inpatient settings or residential services, at risk of entering such settings, or have not adequately engaged or responded to treatment in more traditional community-based services.
    • Grants to expand and improve upon the mobile crisis services statewide, including 9-8-8 crisis call centers. These call centers have relied on this funding to ensure they have capacity to connect callers experiencing emotional distress to the compassionate care of trained counselors.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Mortgage Broker That Ran a Ponzi Scheme, Fraudulently Acquired CARES Act SBA Loans, and Filed a False Tax Return is Sentenced to Federal Prison

    Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) State Crime Alerts (b)

    PROVIDENCE, RI – A Rhode Island mortgage broker who ran a Ponzi scheme with investors’ monies causing millions of dollars in losses, who fraudulently obtained more than $160,000 in COVID-19 pandemic-related SBA loans, and who failed to pay more than $140,000 in taxes due the IRS was sentenced today to more than four years in federal prison and was ordered to pay restitution to his victims, announced Acting United States Attorney Sara Miron Bloom.

    Joseph Giuttari, owner and operator of Hybrid Capital Group, LLC, THE FENS CO., LLC, and Realty Funding Advisors, LLC, was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Melissa R. DuBose to 55 months of incarceration to be followed by three years of supervised release. Additionally, Giuttari was ordered to pay a fine of $20,000 and to pay restitution to victims of his Ponzi scheme, to SBA loan programs, and to the IRS totaling $4,579,130.95.

    Mr. Giuttari pleaded guilty on October 31, 2024, to charges of wire fraud, theft of government property, and filing a false tax return.  The day after his guilty plea he engaged in brokerage activities in violation of his condition of release.  Upon discovery of his activities, the Court revoked its order of release and remanded him to the custody of the U.S. Marshal pending sentencing.

    Court documents reflect that Joseph Giuttari purported to match borrowers seeking short-term loans with private lenders seeking secured investments in real estate. As part of the scheme, Giuttari served as the clearing house for funds between the borrowers and the investors. In executing his scheme, Giuttari directed investors and closing attorneys to send all or a portion of the loan proceeds directly to him through his multiple business entities and business bank accounts. Instead of forwarding these funds to borrowers as represented to the investors, Giuttari used the money personally or to repay earlier investors who were seeking a return on their investments.

    Additionally, Giuttari fraudulently acquired $167,800 in COVID-19 pandemic Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL) for Hybrid Capital Group and THE FENS CO that he was not entitled to receive, and he falsely stated on his 2019 U.S. Individual Income Tax Return that his total income was $22,176, when in fact it was at least $541,000, thus failing to pay $140,102 due the IRS.

    The case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Sandra R. Hebert.

    The matter was investigated by the FBI, Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation, and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Office of Inspector General.

    ###

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Former Avon, New York, Police Trainee Pleads Guilty to Possession of Child Pornography and Cyberstalking

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

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

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

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

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

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

    # # # #

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: District Man Indicted on Felony Charges for Strangulation and Kicking of Pregnant Woman on New Year’s Day

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

                WASHINGTON – Byron Ajanel, 24, of Washington, D.C., was indicted on March 26, 2025 on felony charges for strangulation, assault with significant bodily injury, and threats stemming from his violent attack on his pregnant former girlfriend, U.S. Attorney Edward R. Martin, Jr. and Chief Pamela Smith, of the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) announced. 

               Ajanel is scheduled to be arraigned on May 13, 2025, at a hearing before the Honorable Judith Pipe. 

               According to the government’s evidence, on January 1, 2025, the defendant got into an argument with the victim at her house in DC in front of  their one-year-old daughter.  The argument escalated into a physical assault that included the defendant kicking the victim into a wall, strangling her with both hands around her neck, punching her in the face, and shoving his foot into her jaw.  While he was attacking her, he repeatedly threatened to kill her.  At the time of the attack, the defendant was aware that the victim was pregnant with their second child.

               The defendant’s charges include strangulation, which the D.C. Council’s Secure D.C. Omnibus Amendment Act of 2024 made a felony offense.  Strangulation is widely recognized as one of the most lethal forms of intimate partner violence.  A major strangulation study in San Diego, which is frequently cited, found: “Many victims suffer internal injuries, including permanent brain damage.  Signs and symptoms do exist and can be documented even without visible injury… Most abusers do not strangle to kill.  They strangle to show they can kill.  Victims often suffer major long-term emotional and physical impacts. Surviving victims are much more likely to die later if their abuser has strangled them.”  The study also noted that “…..the odds of becoming a victim of attempted homicide increased by 700%, and the odds of becoming a homicide victim increased by 800%, among women who had been strangled by their partner.”

                This case is being investigated by the Metropolitan Police Department. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Ariel Lieberman.

               An indictment is merely an allegation and all defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Leader of Fentanyl Trafficking Organization Sentenced to 10 Years in Prison

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    Drug trafficking organization operated in Southeastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island

    BOSTON – A Providence, R.I. man was sentenced yesterday in federal court in Boston for leading a drug trafficking organization (DTO) operating in Southeastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island.

    Estarlin Ortiz-Alcantara, 38, was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge Allison D. Burroughs to 10 years in prison, to be followed by five years of supervised release. The defendant is subject to deportation upon completion of the imposed sentence. In December 2023, Ortiz-Alcantara pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute and to possess with intent to distribute 400 grams or more of fentanyl and one count of possession with intent to distribute 400 grams or more of fentanyl. Ortiz-Alcantara was charged in July 2022 and subsequently indicted by a federal grand jury in August 2022.

    Between approximately February 2021 and July 2022, Ortiz-Alcantara managed a DTO that distributed fentanyl in Southeastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island. As part of his DTO’s operations, Ortiz-Alcantara controlled a stash house in Fall River to store, process and distribute fentanyl and employ numerous individuals who assisted with mixing, packaging and distributing fentanyl. During a search of Ortiz-Alcantara’s stash house in July 2022, more than 12 kilograms of fentanyl, as well as items consistent with running a fentanyl business, including blenders, a hydraulic press and baggies were seized.

    United States Attorney Leah B. Foley; Stephen Belleau, Acting Special Agent in Charge of the Drug Enforcement Administration, New England Division; New Bedford Police Chief Paul Oliveira; and Fairhaven Police Chief Michael J. Myers made the announcement today. Special assistance was provided by the Massachusetts State Police; Homeland Security Investigations; Bristol County Sherriff’s Office; and the Fall River, Taunton, Attleboro, Scituate, Yarmouth, Providence (R.I.) and West Warwick (R.I.) Police Departments. Assistant U.S. Attorney John T. Mulcahy of the Criminal Division prosecuted the case.

    This effort is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) operation. OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level criminal organizations that threaten the United States using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multi-agency approach. Additional information about the OCDETF Program can be found at https://www.justice.gov/OCDETF
     

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Global: My documentary Motherboard follows my first 21 years of motherhood – these films about single mums inspired me

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Victoria Mapplebeck, Professor in Digital Arts, Royal Holloway University of London

    On a warm and sunny May bank holiday in 2003, I had one of those rare days that truly changes your life forever. I sat in my bathroom, hands shaking as two pink lines emerged on the pregnancy test I was holding.

    I was 38, single and broke. This pregnancy was the result of a brief relationship which had only amounted to four dates. Shell-shocked as I was, I laughed out loud in a moment of joy I knew there was no coming back from. Nine months later I gave birth to my son Jim.

    My old Nokia still holds the text thread of the three years I was in touch with Jim’s dad. My messages began “I had a great time last night”, and ended “Have you got the results yet?” He had requested a paternity test when Jim was two. A week later we both received the results. The probability that he was Jim’s biological dad was 99.99%. This news prompted a final reply from Jim’s dad: “Yes, I got the results … I’m moving to Spain.”

    A clip from the author’s film, Motherboard.

    We didn’t hear from him again for over a decade. Unable to combine motherhood with my previous career as a TV director, I quit my job overnight. I got a job teaching filmmaking and was out of the film industry for over a decade.

    I began filming my son Jim as he grew up. I recorded hundreds of hours of footage, capturing each twist and turn in Jim’s life, from the thumbs-up he gave me during my first scan, to his first day at college.

    Jim is 21 now. Filmed over 20 years, my feature documentary Motherboard charts the highs and lows of solo motherhood. It explores how Jim and I navigated him meeting his dad for the first time at 13, closely followed by my breast cancer diagnosis and Jim’s party-hard late teens, when tempers frayed and doors slammed.

    When I was making Motherboard I burnt through any books, films and TV that I could find, exploring solo motherhood. Many repeated the same old tabloid cliches and movie tropes of single mums. They were victims or martyrs, their only moment of joy watching the sun set over their estate before the bailiffs turned up.


    Looking for something good? Cut through the noise with a carefully curated selection of the latest releases, live events and exhibitions, straight to your inbox every fortnight, on Fridays. Sign up here.


    In I’ll Show Myself Out: Essays on Midlife and Motherhood (2022), author and comic Jessi Klein writes that: “Motherhood as a story, is so infrequently told, because the world tells us that what mothers do is unremarkable and unimportant.” She goes on to explore the structure of the hero’s epic journey in Hollywood blockbusters, in which the (usually male) hero embarks on a quest and returns home transformed.

    Klein turns this formula on its head. “Motherhood is a hero’s journey, it’s not a journey outwards to the most fantastic, farest-flung places, but a journey inwards, downwards to the deepest parts of your strength.”

    My own film, Motherboard, and several of the films that inspired me, follow the trope of the hero’s journey. But the key difference is that the director is often the hero and the author of her own story. The following films and TV series capture the pain, happiness, chaos and comedy of the hero’s journey that is motherhood.

    1. Lollipop (2024)

    Director Daisy-May Hudson recently developed her own experiences of being homeless with her mum and younger sister into her feature drama debut. Lollipop tells the story of Molly, a young single mum who loses custody of her kids after a short stay in prison. The joy of the film is that it’s the polar opposite to the broken single mums we see in Ken Loach’s Ladybird, Ladybird (1994) and Cathy Come Home (1966).

    Daisy-May Hudson was named as a ‘breakthrough’ director by Bafta in 2015.

    In Hudson’s entirely female cast, Molly and her best mate Amina are fierce single mums who transform the obstacles they face into laugh-out-loud moments of comedy. These are single mums that are flawed, impulsive, powerful, funny and, most importantly, believable.

    2. Better Things (2016)

    Better Things is a TV series, written by and starring Pamela Adlon, based on her own experiences of being a single mum to her three teenage daughters in LA. There’s a great scene in the final series where Adlon’s character, Sam, is being examined by her doctor who asks her if she’s stressed out because she has “too many errands to run”.

    Pamela Adlon and the cast of Better Things discussing the show.

    She replies:

    “No, no. Errands are, like, groceries and going to the post office, it’s the real mum stuff … Soccer club sign-ups and dance classes and tutors and tuition payments and parent-teacher conferences and schools and camps that I have to get them into, mean girl issues with my youngest at school and birth control with my oldest and cruelty from my middle daughter. And then there’s my own mom, who is driving me nuts … And I am definitely going through menopause. So, yeah, Dr. Babu, it’s, like – it’s a lot.”

    3. Boyhood (2014)

    Richard Linklater’s Boyhood often comes up when critics are reviewing Motherboard. It’s a film I love. Filmed over a decade, it depicts the childhood and adolescence of Mason Evans (played by Ellar Coltrane).

    The trailer for Boyhood.

    “I always described it as a film about growing up”, Linklater told the Guardian, “But it’s also a film about parenting”. Linklater was probably the first director I encountered whose character of a single mum (played by Patricia Arquette) felt real to me.

    Patronising empowerment

    I listened to a podcast recently in which Adlon challenged the words that are often used to describe Better Things. “Brave”, “raw” and “vulnerable” come up constantly.

    Critics and audiences often tell me that I’m brave. It can feel condescending. I’ve never heard the word attributed to Linklater’s Boyhood. What sets myself and Adlon apart from Linklater, is that we are both single mothers ourselves.

    As politicians continue to obsess over the recent statistic that “more boys have smartphones than dads”, families with absent fathers will continue to be seen as tragic and flawed. But single mothers are not a problem to be solved. Lollipop, Better Things and Motherboard are all proof of Klein’s belief that “a mother’s heroic journey is not about how she leaves … but about how she stays”.

    Victoria Mapplebeck received funding for Motherboard from OKRE

    ref. My documentary Motherboard follows my first 21 years of motherhood – these films about single mums inspired me – https://theconversation.com/my-documentary-motherboard-follows-my-first-21-years-of-motherhood-these-films-about-single-mums-inspired-me-253059

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: We analyzed racial justice statements from the 500 largest US companies and found that DEI officials really did have an influence

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Donald T. Tomaskovic-Devey, Professor of Sociology and Director of the Center for Employment Equity, UMass Amherst

    In 2020, American businesses responded to an unprecedented wave of racial justice protests with an equally unprecedented surge in corporate commitments. Even as President Donald Trump was calling protesters “terrorists,” companies in industries across the U.S. pledged donations, launched diversity initiatives and issued statements in support of equity and inclusion.

    As social scientists who study corporate political behavior, we, like many others, wondered whether this wave of corporate statements signaled a true commitment to racial justice or whether it was just symbolic. Some skeptics suggested that corporate statements about racial justice were just window dressing. Still others worried that corporations were becoming “woke” and distracted from making profits.

    These concerns have taken on new meaning as the attack on diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, has become a cornerstone of the new administration. When Donald Trump returned to office, two of his first acts were to ban DEI in federal government employment and overturning 60 years of affirmative action mandates on firms that do business with the government.

    This made us wonder: Were the DEI efforts of recent years actually associated with greater corporate commitments to racial justice? Or was it just more political theater?

    To try to better understand what was happening in corporate America, we collected every racial justice statement made by a Fortune 500 firm in response to the 2020 murder of George Floyd and Black Lives Matter protests.

    We found that most firms stayed silent, while others made only weak symbolic responses. Just 1 in 5 made strong commitments, pledging resources and structural changes to their business practices, such as revamping hiring policies or funding racial justice organizations.

    For that 20%, however, commitments could be substantial.

    Take Microsoft, for example. Just 10 days after Floyd’s murder, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella sent an internal memo condemning police brutality and urging employees to take action. He also announced that Microsoft would donate $1.5 million to racial justice organizations. Microsoft then pledged to invest US$150 million in diversity and inclusion efforts and to establish a $50 million fund to support Black-owned business partners. Microsoft also committed to doubling its Black-owned suppliers by 2023 and Black senior executives by 2025.

    The impact of the DEI professional network

    DEI professionals help companies manage the diversity of their workforces by promoting fairness in treatment and social inclusion. Their basic job is to ensure that workplaces are respectful to all employees. The rise of this job title signals a managerial shift from tolerating cultural diversity to promoting broad inclusion. Some DEI practices – for example, diversity training focused on discrimination – can lead to backlash, research has shown. But inclusive practices, such as ensuring mentoring for everyone, simply tend to foster better workplaces.

    This made us wonder what distinguished the minority of firms that made more robust commitments to racial justice from the others. Our hunch was that when firm leadership discussed how to react to the Black Lives Matter protests, companies that already had DEI professionals with influential voices took stronger action.

    To test our hypothesis, we first searched globally for all DEI job titles in all large firms in LinkedIn. LinkedIn profiles provide the most recent 10 jobs a person holds, so we can identify when and at what firm people had DEI jobs. LinkedIn has proven to be a reliable source of career data for corporate professionals and is especially appropriate for a new and growing job title such as DEI.

    The general picture is clear.

    There was a rapid rise in DEI positions in the U.S., with a big jump in 2020, followed by declines in 2022, when our data ends. Among Fortune 500 companies, however, only about half had any DEI professionals. DEI roles were growing rapidly, but they were far from universal in the largest corporations.

    We also discovered that there was a set of firms central to the global DEI professional network. These firms were a source of future DEI staff for other companies. We measured centrality within the DEI network as the number of people in a firm’s DEI workforce that once worked in other prominent firms in the DEI network. Network centrality is a common way social scientists measure influence in groups.

    To be clear, these weren’t companies that specialize in DEI, but rather had hired DEI staff to help run their core business. The most central firms to the DEI professional network included some of the country’s largest banks, consulting firms and corporations, such as IBM, Johnson & Johnson and General Electric. These firms are also more likely to have made longer and larger investments in DEI staff than other firms.

    Based on prior studies of influence in social networks, we suspected that when a firm’s DEI staff were recruited from these prominent firms in the DEI network, they would have more influence over corporate decisions on how to respond to the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests. We found that the 20% of firms that made strong racial justice comments had much more prominent DEI staff than those that remained silent or made only symbolic statements. This finding has held up in multiple statistical models, where we have controlled for other factors that might be of relevance to making strong racial justice commitments.

    DEI staff, it appears, were influential when the national conversation turned to racial justice. Conversely, we also found that firms with politically conservative CEOs were much more likely to remain silent in the face of Black Lives Matter protests.

    The future of DEI?

    We wondered whether the association of DEI professionals and stronger racial justice commitments was stable, or perhaps just a fleeting result of strong mass protest in 2020. So we examined a second instance of corporations taking a stance. In 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court was considering the constitutional status of affirmative action practices in college admissions. Before the Supreme Court made its ruling, many firms sought to weigh in to influence the result by submitting legal briefs documenting the reasons why they thought the court should rule in favor of affirmative action.

    We found the same kinds of patterns of corporate support for affirmative action in 2022 as we did from the earlier protests in 2020. A total of 46 firms in the Fortune 500 publicly supported affirmative action. Once again, there is a strong relationship between the prominence of DEI professionals and taking action on racial justice policy. Those firms with greater prominence in the DEI network in 2020 were significantly more likely to sign onto a friend-of-the-court briefing in 2022.

    When firms make stronger investments in DEI work, and their DEI professionals are more central to the national DEI network, those DEI professionals were more influential in producing stronger racial justice commitments. This reflects long-term firm investments and the development of a robust, influential DEI staff.

    But only 20% of firms made strong commitments, while the vast majority were pretty silent in the face of national calls for racial justice. DEI roles had begun to drop after 2021, even before Trump’s election, and the current political attack on DEI will be chilling. There was already evidence in 2023 that some major firms were hiring fewer minority employees across their workforces. The influence of DEI professionals was never widespread and is likely now in decline. But we suspect that this decline will be fastest among the firms that were never really committed to racial justice and have particularly conservative CEOs.

    What about responses to the new political environment? As of March 2025, only 31 of the Fortune 500 signaled that they planned to roll back their DEI efforts or eliminate them altogether. Eleven firms publicly defended their DEI efforts, nine of which were among the strong racial justice responders in 2020. None of the firms that were silent in 2020 have defended DEI so far this year.

    So far among the Fortune 500, 92% of firms have remained largely silent about their DEI intentions. Perhaps the most interesting are Amazon, Meta, Google, Target, Ford and Walmart – all firms that made strong racial justice pledges in 2020 but have joined the DEI backlash this year. However, other firms have resisted these trends. The future of equal opportunity in U.S. employment will likely depend, at least in part, on how these silences and defenses are worked out in firms’ internal human resource practices and public commitments.

    This research was supported by the Center for Employment Equity at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst and the W. K. Kellogg Foundation..

    Jorge Quesada Velazco and Kevin L. Young do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. We analyzed racial justice statements from the 500 largest US companies and found that DEI officials really did have an influence – https://theconversation.com/we-analyzed-racial-justice-statements-from-the-500-largest-us-companies-and-found-that-dei-officials-really-did-have-an-influence-249999

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: Want to stay healthier and fulfilled later in life? Try volunteering

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Cal J. Halvorsen, Associate Professor of Social Work, Washington University in St. Louis

    New volunteers get trained in Lexington, Ky., to help out at CASA of Lexington in April 2023. AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel

    As gerontologistssocial scientists who study aging populations – we envision a future in which older people leave a doctor’s visit with a prescription to go volunteer for something.

    Does that sound far-fetched? There’s scientific research backing it up.

    Good for your health

    While spending more than a dozen years researching what happens when older adults volunteer with nonprofits, including churches, we’ve found that volunteers consider themselves to be in better health than their peers who don’t. In addition, their blood pressure is lower, and they appear to be aging more slowly than other people of the same age.

    Other researchers have found that volunteering is associated with a lower risk of having a heart attack.

    The mental health benefits are just as striking.

    Volunteering is tied to having fewer symptoms of depression and being more satisfied with your life. It often brings an instant boost in mood – along with a deeper sense of meaning and purpose.

    Even engaging in what’s known as “informal helping” – lending a hand to friends, neighbors or community members in need, without getting paid or participating in an organized program – can help you in similar ways.

    There are also health benefits for those who start volunteering much earlier in life.

    Children and teens who volunteer tend to have better health and lower levels of anxiety and fewer behavioral problems than those who don’t volunteer.

    Changing demographics

    The number of U.S. adults at least 62 years old – the earliest age at which you can claim Social Security retirement benefits – has grown by nearly 35 million since 2000, while the number of children and teens under 18 has fallen by nearly 1.5 million. There are now about 76 million Americans over 62 and 71 million under 18.

    This change has been gradual. Following a long-term demographic shift, record numbers of Americans are reaching retirement age.

    Benefits for society and the economy

    The benefits of volunteering aren’t just for the volunteers themselves.

    The total value of the hours of unpaid work volunteers put in totals an estimated US$170 billion each year, according to AmeriCorps, the federal agency focused on national and community service.

    And participating in community service programs can lead to better job prospects for volunteers, that same agency has found.

    AmeriCorps Seniors, which focuses on engaging volunteers ages 55 and older, runs programs that offer major benefits to their communities. These include the Foster Grandparent program, which connects older adult mentors to children, and the Senior Companion program, which connects volunteers to older adults seeking some help to continue living independently in their own homes.

    A current AmeriCorps Seniors pilot program is helping adults 55 and up, who can have more trouble landing new jobs than younger people, gain new job skills through their community service.

    People of all ages can get together through volunteering. Some organizations intentionally encourage this kind of intergenerational cooperation, including CoGenerate and Generations United.

    Rebuilding communities

    Researchers have also found that volunteering may increase trust within a community, especially when it brings together people from different backgrounds.

    It can strengthen “social cohesion,” a term researchers use to describe how much people bond and help each other, and reduce prejudice.

    Volunteers’ views on social issues may change through their work, too: More than 4 in 5 adults over 55 who tutored public school students to strengthen their reading skills in the national Experience Corps program, for example, stated that their views on public education evolved as a result. Those volunteers expressed more support for public education and said they’d be more likely to vote in favor of spending on schools.

    An American pastime

    Our findings are backed by science, but they also have roots in American history.

    Alexis de Tocqueville – a French philosopher and diplomat who arrived in the United States in 1831 to study the new nation’s penal system – was so impressed by the scale of volunteering in the U.S. that he wrote about it in his 1835 book “Democracy in America.”

    Tocqueville observed that “Americans of all ages, all conditions, all minds” were likely to unite in many kinds of groups or associations.

    More recently, former U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy has said that volunteering can strengthen communities, and that “community is a powerful source of life satisfaction and life expectancy.”

    If you aren’t volunteering today, here are a few ideas to help you begin.

    Start small. Try joining an organization or association in your community, taking part in neighborhood cleanups or volunteering at your local senior center, animal shelter or museum. Love gardening? You can take care of local parks, conservation areas, community gardens and more.

    Once you’re ready for a bigger commitment, consider becoming a mentor through programs such as OASIS Intergenerational Tutoring or Big Brothers Big Sisters.

    And consider a more extensive level of commitment to organizations or causes you care deeply about. This might include joining a nonprofit board of directors, volunteering more hours, or taking on a volunteer leadership role.

    At a time when trust is eroding and divisions seem insurmountable, volunteering offers something rare: an evidence-backed way to reconnect with communities, institutions and each other.

    Reach out to your favorite nonprofit, visit Volunteer.gov or VolunteerMatch.org, or connect with a nonprofit resource center, a regional United Way or a community foundation to find volunteer opportunities near you.

    Cal Halvorsen is a Senior Research Fellow at CoGenerate. He received funding from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute to examine the longitudinal effects of volunteering on cardiovascular disease biomarkers.

    Seoyoun Kim receives funding from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute to examine the longitudinal effects of volunteering on cardiovascular biomarkers.

    ref. Want to stay healthier and fulfilled later in life? Try volunteering – https://theconversation.com/want-to-stay-healthier-and-fulfilled-later-in-life-try-volunteering-252585

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: The UK has a lot of people out of work because of mental illness – but listening to those affected reveals that’s rarely the whole story

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Annie Louise Irvine, Research Affiliate, King’s College London

    ARMMY PICCA/Shutterstock

    What is going on in the UK when it comes to the massive rise in benefit claims related to mental health? It’s complicated, that much is certain.

    Understanding the causes of mental health-related economic inactivity and what to do about it is at the top of the UK government’s policy agenda. It recently set out plans in a green paper to improve access to effective employment support for people with mental health problems. At the same time, controversial reforms to health and disability benefits were central to Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s spring statement.

    As a social researcher, listening closely to people’s lived experiences has taught me that while their distress is genuine, significant and at times severe, it is rarely the whole story of what is constraining their ability to find and stay in work.

    Mental distress is almost invariably bound up in other challenging circumstances that also pose barriers to work – issues such as homelessness, violence and abuse, caring commitments, lone parenthood, poverty, involvement with the criminal justice system, and the obstacles caused by inflexible employers and insecure work.

    This has made me wonder if the system’s very narrow focus on health as a barrier to work is part of the problem.

    It’s not that the mental health conversation has gone too far – but it may have become too narrow. While it is essential to respond to people’s distress, we can’t understand their capacity for work, or support their steps back into employment, unless we pay attention to all the other factors that limit their opportunities for work.

    The work capability assessment (WCA) was introduced 17 years ago to determine how far and in what ways someone’s disability, illness or health condition limits them from working. Since then, welfare support has been narrowed down to questions of obligation and conditionality – with health as the central focus.

    But this narrow approach, and the exclusive link between ill health and work-related obligations, has crowded out the full range of challenges, constraints and contingencies that affect people’s capacity for work. When health is the only thing the system is interested in, it’s the only thing claimants can discuss.

    So now, with the UK government’s plan to scrap the WCA and introduce a new kind of “support conversation”, there is an opportunity to bring this broader range of factors back into the picture.

    In a positive shift, the government has recognised that discussions about work need to include a better understanding of people’s goals and aspirations, and that these conversations should also facilitate access to support for debt, housing, careers, training and social connection.

    How this might be done is a question that needs careful thought and experimentation. The government is seeking responses on how this “support conversation” should be designed and delivered.

    In a recent workshop, we explored the opportunities and challenges that might arise from a more holistic approach to assessing capacity for work. Participants in our workshop felt there was potential for more positive experiences and effective support.

    But they also envisaged risks both for claimants and welfare services, including the potential for claimants to be retraumatised, as well as extra admin and the possibility of raising unrealistic expectations.

    Better support for people who want to work

    As the government’s Pathways to Work green paper recognises, there are many people for whom formal paid employment may never be possible. But there are some people in the health-related benefits group who would like to work.

    In my most recent research project, I met people living with mental health difficulties and neurodivergence who were keen to work but felt frustrated at the lack of personalised support. Here are a few examples of what they told me:

    In my experience, they don’t help you, they just tell you to do this, that and the other. But they’re not supporting you through the process of finding a job. They’re just throwing these jobs at you. (female, 26)

    I do want to work. It’s just, I want to be able to work and then keep the job. And right now, I just I don’t feel like I’ve got the right things in place to help me with that … I don’t want to use it as just an excuse … What I want is: ‘Oh, I’ve got ADHD, can you please take that into account?’ (male, 33)

    I really don’t know what [job] to go for … A lot of my issues have been connected to frustration and feeling stuck, and not being able to find a pathway into sustainable employment – and things related to education. It’s all kind of linked in a bundle (male, 38)

    Shifting the balance towards personalised and holistic support is a step in the right direction. But the spectre of welfare conditionality, and the threat of sanctions if someone is unable to fulfil work-related activities, will always be a block on engaging those who might be able to work, given the appropriate time and support.

    While the green paper describes sanctions as a “last resort”, it does not go far enough on removing compliance from people’s encounters with the system.

    Mental ill health is often part of a bigger picture of challenging circumstances including lone parenthood or poverty.
    Alena Ozerova/Shutterstock

    The goal should be to make a safe space for people to go beyond the health conversation. The new “support conversation” must allow people to talk about their health and non-health constraints, and the full range of support they need to move into appropriate work.

    We do need to talk about mental health – the reality of people’s distress must never be undermined. But we need to talk about more than just mental health, and approach people’s work-related challenges with an appreciation that mental health problems rarely arise out of nowhere. We cannot understand capacity for work without understanding people’s wider social context.

    Lastly, we really need to ditch the “any job” approach. It is the fit of a particular workplace and particular job with a person’s unique life circumstances that makes the difference as to whether work is feasible, fulfilling and sustainable.

    Annie Louise Irvine has received research funding from the Economic and Social Research Council. She is affiliated with the ESRC Centre for Society and Mental Health, the University of York School for Business and Society, and serves as a non-executive Director for the organisation Better Connect.

    ref. The UK has a lot of people out of work because of mental illness – but listening to those affected reveals that’s rarely the whole story – https://theconversation.com/the-uk-has-a-lot-of-people-out-of-work-because-of-mental-illness-but-listening-to-those-affected-reveals-thats-rarely-the-whole-story-252891

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Homeless, HIA and Telecare services switching to council

    Source: City of Wolverhampton

    Customers will be able to access all the services as normal, with new email and phone contact details as follows:

    The new arrangements aim to realise operational benefits while continuing to deliver a seamless customer service.

    Improvements for customers include a new face to face offer alongside the introduction of a new housing advice service.

    This follows public consultation that identified residents want more face to face advice and support to help them stay in their accommodation.

    The new model is also in line with councils up and down the country having to manage rising costs and a huge increase in demand for Temporary Accommodation.  

    Councillor Steve Evans, the council’s Deputy Leader and Cabinet Member for City Housing, said: “We need to prevent more people losing their homes and through quality advice and support we will be able to offer that.

    “The proposed Housing Advice and Homeless Prevention Service will manage the growing demand and improve residents’ ability to make well informed decisions regarding their housing options.

    “We would like to thank Wolverhampton Homes for helping thousands of residents over the years and we have worked closely with them to make the transition to the remodelled service as smooth as possible.”

    The transfer of the HIA and Telecare from Wolverhampton Homes to the council will provide the opportunity to streamline services and give the council greater oversight on the delivery of the housing adaptations service, which impacts on services within the council such as adult social care, children’s services and occupational health.

    Councillor Evans added: “Wolverhampton Homes has been a key partner in the review of the HIA and Telecare and is supportive of the services being transferred to the council.

    “The transfer will further simplify the ability for all services involved in both policy development and assessment and delivery of adaptations to work under one governance framework ensuring quick and timely decision making when needed as well as further encouraging a shared knowledge and resource base.

    “The delivery of adaptations and telecare are an integral part of council functions and services. The council’s ability to ensure that elderly, vulnerable and disabled persons have access to aids, adaptations and technology supports people in remaining in their homes and will likely have a positive impact on their health and wellbeing, In addition, it also alleviates the pressures on health and social care services by reducing hospital admissions and the need for long term care both in and outside of the home.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: FDA Grants Marketing Authorization of First Home Test for Chlamydia, Gonorrhea and Trichomoniasis

    Source: US Department of Health and Human Services – 3

    For Immediate Release:
    March 28, 2025

    Today, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted marketing authorization to Visby Medical for the Visby Medical Women’s Sexual Health Test. This is the first diagnostic test for chlamydia, gonorrhea and trichomoniasis that can be purchased without a prescription and performed entirely at home. The test is intended for females with or without symptoms and delivers results in approximately 30 minutes.
    “Home tests can give people information about their health from the privacy of their home. This can be particularly important for sexual health tests for which patients may experience fear or anxiety, possibly resulting in delayed diagnosis or treatment,” said Courtney Lias, Ph.D., director of the Office of In Vitro Diagnostic Devices in the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health. “Expanding access to tests for sexually transmitted infections is an important step toward earlier and increased diagnosis, which can result in increased treatment and reduced spread of infection.”
    According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Sexually Transmitted Infections (STI) Surveillance Report, more than 2.2 million cases of chlamydia and gonorrhea were diagnosed and reported in the U.S. in 2023. Additionally, it is estimated that trichomoniasis is the most prevalent nonviral STI worldwide, affecting approximately 2.6 million people in the U.S., according to the CDC’s treatment guidelines. Typically, all three infections can be treated with antibiotics, but if left untreated, can cause serious health complications for patients, including infertility.
    The Visby Medical Women’s Sexual Health Test is a single use, at home test, that includes a collection kit (self-collected vaginal swab) and a powered testing device, which communicates securely to the Visby Medical App, which displays results when the test is complete.In individuals with and without symptoms, the Visby Medical Women’s Sexual Health Test correctly identified 98.8% of negative and 97.2% of positive Chlamydia trachomatis samples, 99.1% of negative and 100% of positive Neisseria gonorrhoeae samples and 98.5% of negative and 97.8% of positive Trichomonas vaginalis samples.
    Individuals with positive results for any of the three infections should seek medical care. Individuals with symptoms, recent exposure to an STI or other concerns despite a negative result should contact their health care provider for additional testing.
    As with many other tests, the risks associated with this test are mainly the possibility of false positive and false negative test results. False negative test results can result in delays to effective treatment and spread of infection to other persons. False positive results could lead to unnecessary treatment and/or a delay in receiving a correct diagnosis and appropriate treatment.
    The FDA reviewed this test under the FDA’s De Novo premarket review pathway, a regulatory pathway for low- to moderate-risk devices of a new type. Along with this De Novo authorization, the FDA is establishing special controls that define the requirements related to labeling and performance testing. When met, the special controls, in combination with general controls, provide a reasonable assurance of safety and effectiveness for tests of this type. This action creates a new regulatory classification, which means that subsequent devices of the same type with the same intended use may go through FDA’s 510(k) premarket notification process, whereby devices can obtain marketing authorization by demonstrating substantial equivalence to a predicate device, which may save a developer time and expense compared to other review pathways.
    This announcement follows last year’s authorization of the first at-home syphilis test, as well as the authorization of the first diagnostic test for chlamydia and gonorrhea with at-home sample collection in 2023, which was the first FDA-authorized test with at-home sample collection for any sexually transmitted infection other than HIV.
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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: TWO ZACHARY MEN SENTENCED TO FEDERAL PRISON FOR THEFT OF TWELVE FIREARMS

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

     Acting United States Attorney April M. Leon announced that U.S. District Judge John W. deGravelles sentenced Keyshawn Newman, age 24, of Zachary, Louisiana, to 39 months in federal prison and Ransom Parker, age 27, of Zachary, Louisiana, to 70 months in federal prison following their convictions for theft of firearms from a business licensed to engage in the business of dealing in firearms. The Court further sentenced both men to serve three years of supervised release following their terms of imprisonment.

    According to admissions made as part of their guilty pleas, on June 19, 2023, the owner of Thompson Creek Sporting Goods observed four individuals wearing masks and hoodie-type sweatshirts via live-feed surveillance footage from a camera mounted on the outside rear of his business. The owner contacted the Jackson Police Department, who responded to the store. Prior to police arrival, the owner received an alarm notification indicating that the front door had been breached.

    The first responding officer arrived shortly after the alarm notification and observed four suspects run from the business carrying firearms. The suspects were observed running in different directions and were dropping firearms as they ran. As more police officers arrived in the area, they set up a perimeter and began searching the area for the suspects. Twelve firearms were taken from the store’s inventory. A total of ten firearms were located on the ground at various locations in the directions that the suspects fled.

    On-scene investigators were notified that a maintenance worker at East Mental Hospital located a suspicious male inside the powerhouse station of the facility, which was approximately six miles from the store. Officers located the individual and identified him as Newman. Newman ultimately admitted to being involved with the burglary.

    Parker was subsequently identified by two co-defendants as being involved in the burglary and was the driver of the vehicle used. Parker ultimately admitted to participating in the burglary and driving the vehicle.

    The twelve firearms recovered were identified as a CMMG, model MK4, 4.6×30 caliber pistol; Armalite, model M-15, 5.56 caliber rifle; Arsenal, model SAM-5, 5.56 caliber rifle; Diamondback, model DB-15, 5.56 caliber rifle; Diamondback, model DB-15, 5.56 caliber rifle; Hi-Point, model 1095, 10mm caliber rifle; Radom, model Sporter, 7.62×39 caliber rifle; Riley Defense, model RAK74, 5.45×39 caliber rifle; Rock Island Armory, model VR80, 12-gauge shotgun; Ruger, model LC Carbine, 5.7×28 caliber rifle; Ruger, model AR556, 300 Blackout caliber rifle; and a Diamondback, model DB-15, 5.56 caliber rifle.

    This matter was investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, Jackson Police Department, and East Feliciana Sheriff’s Office and was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Eli J. Abad. 

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Spring Statement heralds further boost to growth in Scotland

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Spring Statement heralds further boost to growth in Scotland

    Scottish Secretary welcomes Chancellor’s £2.2billion defence budget boost to create more jobs and opportunities in the sector as part of Plan for Change

    Growth is central to the Spring Statement announcements and Plan for Change, as Sec of State Ian Murray championed at the signing of the Argyll & Bute Growth Deal recently

    Chancellor Rachel Reeves this week pledged a new era of security and national renewal as she delivered a Spring Statement to kickstart economic growth, protect working people and keep Britain safe. 

    Scottish Secretary Ian Murray has welcomed her measures, including a £2.2 billion increase in the UK-wide defence budget for 2025-26, on top of £2.9 billion announced at Autumn Budget.

    Mr Murray said:

    We are living in an increasingly insecure world, and the extra £2.2 billion for defence – on top of the £2.9 billion announced at Autumn Budget – will make Britain stronger and safer. This is a huge boost for Scotland’s world-leading defence sector, which delivers Scottish economic growth and more highly-skilled jobs. The increase will also mean better homes for our military personnel and families, including the thousands based in Scotland. 

    Today’s announcements underpin the great strides being made by the UK Government in achieving stability in our public finances. There have been three interest rate cuts since the general election. Next week the increase in the minimum wage will mean a pay rise for hundreds of thousands of workers in Scotland and our employment rights legislation will deliver the biggest upgrade in workers’ rights in a generation. 

    The Spring Statement also delivered an extra £28 million for the Scottish Government. That is on top of their £4.9 billion extra from the budget, creating a record £47.7 billion settlement for 25/26, announced at the Autumn Budget. This is the biggest budget settlement in the history of devolution and an end to austerity. The Scottish Government must now use that wisely – to improve Scotland’s failing public services.” 

    This latest defence boost builds on the Chancellor’s recent visit to Babcock in Rosyth where she also announced that UK defence exporters would benefit from a £2 billion increase to UK Export Finance lending capacity. 

    Her Spring Statement underlines that growth is at the heart of the UK Government’s Plan for Change with £13 billion of additional capital spend allocated alongside the defence funding boost.

    It follows the Budget in the autumn where it was announced that the Scottish Government will be provided with a £47.7 billion settlement in 2025/26 – the largest in real terms in the history of devolution. This includes an additional £3.4 billion through the Barnett formula, with £2.8 billion for day-to-day spending and £610 million for capital investment.  

    The measures announced this week top up these Barnett consequentials by a further £28 million in 2025/26.

    The Scottish Government continues to receive over 20% more per person than equivalent UK Government spending in the rest of the UK, translating into over £8.5 billion more in 2025-26. Block Grant funding from 2026-27 onwards will be confirmed at Phase 2 of the Spending Review, which concludes on 11 June 2025. The Chief Secretary to the Treasury will meet with his counterparts from the devolved governments to discuss their priorities ahead of its conclusion.

    Updates to this page

    Published 28 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA News: Making the District of Columbia Safe and Beautiful

    Source: The White House

    class=”has-text-align-left”>By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, it is hereby ordered:

    Section 1.  Purpose.  As the Federal capital city, Washington, D.C., is the only city that belongs to all Americans and that all Americans can claim as theirs.  As the capital city of the greatest Nation in the history of the world, it should showcase beautiful, clean, and safe public spaces. 
    America’s capital must be a place in which residents, commuters, and tourists feel safe at all hours, including on public transit.  Its highways, boulevards, and parks should be clean, well-kept, and pleasant.  Its monuments, museums, and buildings should reflect and inspire awe and appreciation for our Nation’s strength, greatness, and heritage.  Our citizens deserve nothing less.

    Sec2.  Policy.  It is the policy of the United States to make the District of Columbia safe, beautiful, and prosperous by preventing crime, punishing criminals, preserving order, protecting our revered American monuments, and promoting beautification and the preservation of our history and heritage. 

    Sec3.  Making the District of Columbia Safe by Fighting Crime.  (a)  My Administration shall work closely with local officials to share information, develop joint priorities, and maximize resources to make the District of Columbia safe.  Such coordination shall occur through the D.C. Safe and Beautiful Task Force (Task Force), which is hereby established by this order.  The Task Force shall be chaired by the Assistant to the President and Homeland Security Advisor or his designee, and shall otherwise include representatives from the following departments, agencies, or components, selected as such department, agency, or component determines:
     (i)     the Department of the Interior;
    (ii)    the Department of Transportation;
    (iii)   the Department of Homeland Security;
    (iv)    the Federal Bureau of Investigation;
    (v)     the United States Marshals Service;
    (vi)    the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives;
    (vii)   the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia;
    (viii)  the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Maryland; and
    (ix)    the United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Virginia.
    The Chairman of the Task Force may also select other departments, agencies, or components to participate as he deems necessary.  Representatives of such other departments, agencies, or components shall be selected as such department, agency, or component determines.
    (b)  The Task Force may, to the extent permitted by law, request operational assistance from and coordinate with the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia (MPD), Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, United States Park Police, Amtrak Police, and other Federal and local officials as appropriate. 
    (c)  The Task Force shall coordinate to ensure effective Federal participation in the following tasks:
    (i)     directing maximum enforcement of Federal immigration law and redirecting available Federal, State, or local law enforcement resources to apprehend and deport illegal aliens in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area;
    (ii)    monitoring the District of Columbia’s sanctuary-city status and compliance with the enforcement of Federal immigration law;
    (iii)   providing assistance to facilitate the prompt and complete accreditation of the District of Columbia’s forensic crime laboratory;
    (iv)    in collaboration with its leadership and union, providing MPD with assistance to facilitate the recruitment, retention, and capabilities of its police officers and to facilitate work with Federal personnel, resources, and expertise to reduce crime; 
    (v)     collaborating with appropriate local government entities to provide assistance to increase the speed and lower the cost of processing concealed carry license requests in the District of Columbia;
    (vi)    reviewing and, as appropriate, revising Federal prosecutorial policies on seeking pretrial detention of criminal defendants to ensure that individuals who pose a genuine threat to public safety are detained to the maximum extent permitted by law;
    (vii)   collaborating with appropriate local government entities to provide assistance to end fare evasion and other crime within the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority system; and
    (viii)  deploying a more robust Federal law enforcement presence and coordinating with local law enforcement to facilitate the deployment of a more robust local law enforcement presence as appropriate in areas in or about the District of Columbia, including in such areas as the National Mall and Memorial Parks, museums, monuments, Lafayette Park, Union Station, Rock Creek Park, Anacostia Park, the George Washington Memorial Parkway, the Suitland Parkway, and the Baltimore-Washington Parkway, and ensuring that all applicable quality of life, nuisance, and public-safety laws are strictly enforced, such as those prohibiting assault, battery, larceny, graffiti and other vandalism, unpermitted disturbances and demonstrations, noise, trespassing, public intoxication, drug possession, sale, and use, and traffic violations, including as prescribed by Executive Order 13933 of June 26, 2020 (Protecting American Monuments, Memorials, and Statues and Combating Recent Criminal Violence), which was reinstated by Executive Order 14189 of January 29, 2025 (Celebrating America’s 250th Birthday).
    (d) The Task Force shall report to me as necessary through the Assistant to the President and Homeland Security Advisor regarding safety in the District of Columbia, and the tasks set forth in subsection (c) of this section.  As part of this reporting, the Attorney General, in consultation with the Task Force, shall assess whether public-safety circumstances in the District of Columbia require additional executive action. 

    Sec4.  Making the District of Columbia Beautiful.  (a)  The Secretary of the Interior, in consultation with the Attorney General, the Secretary of Transportation, the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia, the Administrator of General Services, the National Capital Planning Commission, and the heads of such other executive departments or agencies and local officials as the Secretary of the Interior deems appropriate, shall develop and implement a program to beautify and make safe and prosperous the District of Columbia.
    (b)  The program under subsection (a) of this section shall include, at a minimum, the following elements as appropriate and consistent with applicable law:
    (i)    a coordinated beautification plan for Federal and local facilities, monuments, land, parks, and roadways in and around the District of Columbia;
    (ii)   restoration of Federal public monuments, memorials, statues, markers, or similar properties that have been damaged or defaced, or inappropriately removed or changed, in recent years;
    (iii)  removal of graffiti from commonly visited areas, with local assistance;
    (iv)   proposals to ensure Federal buildings or lands adequately uplift and beautify public spaces and generate in the citizenry pride in and respect for our Nation;
    (v)    a coordinated Federal and local approach to ensure the cleanliness of public spaces, sidewalks, parks, highways, roads, and transit systems in and around the District of Columbia; and
    (vi)   the encouragement of private-sector participation in coordinated beautification and clean-up efforts in the District of Columbia. 
    c)  The Secretary of the Interior shall immediately issue a directive to the National Park Service requiring prompt removal and cleanup of all homeless or vagrant encampments and graffiti on Federal land within the District of Columbia subject to the National Park Service’s jurisdiction, to the maximum extent permitted by law.

    Sec5.  General Provisions.  (a)  Nothing in this order shall be construed to impair or otherwise affect:
    (i)   the authority granted by law to an executive department or agency, or the head thereof; or
    (ii)  the functions of the Director of the Office of Management and Budget relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals.
    (b)  This order shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and subject to the availability of appropriations.
    (c)  This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.
     

      
                                   DONALD J. TRUMP
     
     
     
     
    THE WHITE HOUSE,
        March 27, 2025.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Enact Releases 2024 Sustainability Report

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    RALEIGH, N.C., March 28, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Enact Holdings, Inc. (Nasdaq: ACT) (Enact) today announced the release of its 2024 Sustainability Report covering the calendar year 2024.

    This report continues Enact’s transparency on its progress in areas vital to its sustainability pillars, priorities identified as critical to Enact’s long-term success by internal and external stakeholders. This year’s report provides new insights into Enact’s approach to sustainability with spotlights on additional facets of Enact’s sustainability initiatives, such as our third party risk management program, professional development programs, and Hurricane Helene relief response.

    “On behalf of the Enact team, I am pleased to share our 2024 Sustainability Report,” said Rohit Gupta, President and CEO of Enact. “Enact remains committed to helping build stronger communities through homeownership, philanthropy, and volunteerism and we know that our continued growth and profitability are contingent in part on our continued focus on sustainability. This year’s report shows the areas where we’re focusing and the progress we’re making as we continue to deliver for all of our stakeholders.”

    Enact’s 2024 Sustainability Report is available on Enact’s Investor Relations website at https://ir.enactmi.com/sustainability.

    Safe Harbor Statement
    This communication contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements may address, among other things, our expected financial and operational results, the related assumptions underlying our expected results, guidance concerning the future return of capital and the quotations of management. These forward-looking statements are distinguished by use of words such as “will,” “may,” “would,” “anticipate,” “expect,” “believe,” “designed,” “plan,” “predict,” “project,” “target,” “could,” “should,” or “intend,” the negative of these terms, and similar references to future periods. These views involve risks and uncertainties that are difficult to predict and, accordingly, our actual results may differ materially from the results discussed in our forward-looking statements. Our forward-looking statements contained herein speak only as of the date of this press release. Factors or events that we cannot predict, including risks related to an economic downturn or a recession in the United States and in other countries around the world; changes in political, business, regulatory, and economic conditions; changes in or to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (the “GSEs”), whether through Federal legislation, restructurings or a shift in business practices; failure to continue to meet the mortgage insurer eligibility requirements of the GSEs; competition for customers; lenders or investors seeking alternatives to private mortgage insurance; an increase in the number of loans insured through Federal government mortgage insurance programs, including those offered by the Federal Housing Administration; and other factors described in the risk factors contained in our most recent Annual Report on Form 10-K and other filings with the SEC, may cause our actual results to differ from those expressed in forward-looking statements. Although Enact believes the expectations reflected in such forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions, Enact can give no assurance that its expectations will be achieved and it undertakes no obligation to update publicly any forward-looking statements as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise, except as required by applicable law.

    About Enact Holdings, Inc.
    Enact (Nasdaq: ACT), operating principally through its wholly-owned subsidiary Enact Mortgage Insurance Corporation since 1981, is a leading U.S. private mortgage insurance provider committed to helping more people achieve the dream of homeownership. Building on a deep understanding of lenders’ businesses and a legacy of financial strength, we partner with lenders to bring best-in class service, leading underwriting expertise, and extensive risk and capital management to the mortgage process, helping to put more people in homes and keep them there. By empowering customers and their borrowers, Enact seeks to positively impact the lives of those in the communities in which it serves in a sustainable way. Enact is headquartered in Raleigh, North Carolina.

    This press release was published by a CLEAR® Verified individual.

    The MIL Network