Demonstrators participate in a rally in Sanaa, Yemen, on March 17, 2025. On Monday, tens of thousands of people gathered in a massive rally in Sanaa, protesting against U.S. airstrikes in northern Yemen that have led to dozens of deaths. [Photo/Xinhua]
The U.S. military launched a new wave of airstrikes on Yemen, targeting several sites in and around the Red Sea port city of Hodeidah Monday evening, Houthi-run al-Masirah TV said.
“One airstrike targeted the Al-Arj area in Bajil district, east of the city, while another series of airstrikes hit and destroyed the Al-Habashi iron factory in the Salif district, northwest of the city,” the TV channel reported.
Residents described the airstrikes as extremely violent with explosions heard from miles away.
There were no immediate reports of casualties or the extent of the damage.
On Monday, thousands of people gathered in a massive rally at Sabeen Square in the Houthi-held Yemeni capital Sanaa, protesting against U.S. airstrikes in northern Yemen that have led to dozens of deaths.
Demonstrators, with many carrying snipers and Kalashnikov rifles, chanted slogans denouncing the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump, which ordered the airstrike campaign on Houthi targets starting Saturday evening.
“Death to America, death to Israel,” protesters cried at the square decorated by huge billboards showing the group’s leader, and other leaders from what the group called the “resistance axis.”
Addressing the crowd, Mohammed Ali al-Houthi, head of the group’s supreme revolutionary committee, said the group views the U.S. operations as “aggression and terrorism, and we will confront escalation with escalation.”
Over the past two days, dozens of Houthi-controlled military sites, as well as dozens of residential houses, have been targeted and bombed by U.S. fighter jets across Sanaa, and several other northern and western provinces under Houthi control.
Many families have fled the capital for fear of their lives.
According to the latest statement from the Houthi-run Health Ministry, the death toll from the U.S. airstrikes has increased to 53, including five children and two women. Search operations under the rubble of residential buildings were still ongoing.
In a televised speech Sunday, Houthi leader Abdulmalik al-Houthi threatened to launch attacks targeting U.S. naval and commercial ships if the U.S. military continued to conduct airstrikes on Houthi-held areas.
The White House on Sunday said in a televised statement that the U.S. military targeted and killed several senior Houthi leaders during the airstrikes. The Houthi group has yet to comment.
The U.S. airstrikes began Saturday evening as Trump vowed to continue air attacks until the Houthis stopped attacking international shipping lines and ships.
He also warned the Houthis that if they do not stop their attacks “starting today … hell will rain down upon you like nothing you have ever seen before.”
The renewed conflict comes after Israel halted the entry of goods and supplies into Gaza on March 2, coinciding with the end of the first phase of the ceasefire agreement.
On Tuesday, the Houthi group announced that it would resume launching attacks against any Israeli ship in the Red Sea, Arabian Sea, the Gulf of Aden, and the Bab al-Mandab Strait until the crossings of the Gaza Strip are reopened and aid allowed in.
From November 2023 to Jan. 19, the Houthi group launched dozens of drone and rocket attacks against Israel-linked ships and Israeli cities to show solidarity with Palestinians amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas conflict. The attacks later expanded to include U.S. and British ships after the U.S.-British navy coalition started to intervene, launching air raids and missile strikes against Houthi targets to deter the group.
Honduran National Police officers and rescue teams from the Honduran government work in rescue operations after a small plane crashed into the sea, on Roatan island, Honduras, on March 17, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
At least six people were killed after a small plane lost control and crashed on Monday evening upon taking off from Roatan Island in northern Honduras, said Octavio Pineda, minister of Infrastructure and Transportation of Honduras.
The plane carried 18 people, including 15 passengers and three crew members, said the official.
The aircraft lost power upon takeoff and fell into the sea some 1 km from the side of the airstrip, Miroslava Cerpas, the presidential commissioner of the National 911 Emergency System of Honduras told Xinhua.
The aircraft of the Lanhsa company was carrying out a local flight from the Juan Manuel Galvez International Airport in Roatan to the city of La Ceiba.
The Israeli army conducted on Tuesday intense airstrikes on the northern and central Gaza Strip, marking the most violent escalation since the ceasefire, according to local sources and eyewitnesses.
Palestinian medical and security sources told Xinhua that Israeli warplanes launched raids of unprecedented scale, triggering successive explosions in several areas of northern and central Gaza.
The sources said that the Israeli army has killed over 200 Palestinians in the coastal enclave.
In an initial statement, the Palestinian Civil Defense said that Israeli aircraft targeted homes, mosques, schools and shelters, resulting in significant casualties.
“Our crews are facing great difficulties due to the size and number of targets being struck simultaneously,” the civil defense added.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office announced early Tuesday that Netanyahu and the country’s Defense Minister Israel Katz had ordered the military to “operate against Hamas with increasingly powerful military force.”
According to the statement, the move followed what it described as Hamas’s “repeated refusal to release hostages” and rejection of proposals presented by U.S. envoy Steve Witkoff and other mediators.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) was conducting “extensive strikes” on Hamas targets, it said.
The statement added that the strikes are being carried out under an operational plan presented by the IDF over the weekend and approved by the political leadership.
Katz warned in a separate statement that if Hamas does not release all hostages, “the gates of hell will open in Gaza,” and Hamas will encounter the Israeli military “with an intensity they have never known before.”
Israel’s state-owned Army Radio said that the move indicated the fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, which took effect on Jan. 19, “has collapsed.”
The Israeli army killed at least 200 Palestinians and wounded dozens more during the intensifying airstrikes on various places in Gaza, the Hamas-run government media office said Tuesday.
In a press statement, the office said that the Israeli raids targeted densely populated residential areas in the south, north and center of the Strip, as well as camps for displaced persons.
“The strikes caused significant material damage and left dozens trapped under the rubble, while rescue teams faced severe challenges in reaching the victims due to the ongoing bombardment,” it said.
The past few hours have witnessed a sharp military escalation, with Israeli warplanes launching successive raids on residential neighborhoods in Gaza City, the southern city of Khan Yunis and the town of Jabalia in the north.
Palestinian eyewitnesses told Xinhua that they heard powerful explosions that echoed throughout the Strip as civil defense crews rushed to pull victims from beneath the debris.
Medical sources in Gaza said that hospitals are operating beyond capacity amid a severe shortage of medical supplies, making it increasingly difficult to treat heavy casualties.
Ambulance services have been disrupted as the ongoing airstrikes have destroyed roads and infrastructure, further complicating rescue efforts.
The latest escalation comes after Israel announced the resumption of attacks on Gaza, citing Hamas’s rejection of U.S.-brokered proposals to extend the first phase of the ceasefire agreement.
Hamas, in turn, accused Israel of violating the ceasefire that took effect on Jan. 19 and called on mediators to pressure Israel to halt the military campaign.
At least 42 people have died over the past three days as tornadoes, dust storms and other severe weather events wreaked havoc across eight states in the U.S. Midwest and South, according to reports from local authorities in these states.
The U.S. National Weather Service received about 80 tornado reports between Friday and Sunday and dozens of them have been confirmed, including an EF-4 tornado with wind speeds reaching 190 miles per hour in Arkansas.
In the past three days, Missouri reported 12 storm-related fatalities; Kansas recorded eight, who were killed in a 50-vehicle crash due to a massive dust storm; and Mississippi reported six.
Multiple deaths due to tornadoes, destructive gusts, dust storms, storm-related wildfires and heavy rainfall were also reported in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Alabama, and North Carolina.
Footages circulating on social media and eyewitness accounts illustrate the immense destruction caused by the storms. Hundreds of homes and buildings were damaged while tens of thousands of households and businesses were left without power after storms battered their communities.
In Alabama, a school bus was hurled onto a middle school roof and a mobile home were ripped from its foundations and smashed to the ground.
In North Carolina, a fallen tree crashed into a home on Sunday, killing two children.
The storm system weakened on Monday and is moving eastward. However, the National Weather Service warned that heavy rainfall poses a flooding threat for parts of the East Coast while the central U.S. faces extremely dry conditions, raising wildfire risks.
Source: The Conversation – UK – By Craig Jackson, Professor of Occupational Health Psychology, Birmingham City University
US astronauts Sunni Williams and Barry Wilmore have been stranded in low earth orbit onboard the International Space Station for nine months. They are now finally due to return to Earth. Their planned return from their one week mission was abandoned due to concerns with the return vehicle, the Boeing Starliner-1, and this resulted in them being in space for 290 days.
Wilmore and Williams do not hold the record for the longest stay in orbit, which belongs to cosmonaut Valeri Polyakov, who spent 437 continuous days on the Soviet Mir space station. Nine other US astronauts have spent more than 200 days each in orbit during a single spaceflight – but Wilmore and Williams do hold the record for the longest unplanned spaceflight among US astronauts. Could the unplanned nature of their extended trip produce effects not seen in other planned long-term spaceflights?
The risks and hazards of space flight are well understood by Nasa and referred to as “RIDGE” – short for Radiation, Isolation and confinement, Distance from Earth, Gravity effects and hostile Environments. Aerospace medicine takes such issues seriously.
Some physical effects include blood clots and pooling, reductions in bone density, poor digestion, lower nutrient absorption, musculoskeletal atrophy (muscle and bone loss), and poorer cardiovascular function due to reduced blood pumping in zero gravity. Other impacts include changes to the eyeballs due to the pooling of fluids, pooled cerebrospinal fluid around the skull area, and a semi-permanent feeling of congestion.
The reduced sense of smell may be a blessing, as many space capsules develop an unpleasant smell. Physical effects from fluids can be improved, but not entirely negated, by cuff compression (a fabric sleeve that compresses an area of the body) to relieve pain and swelling. Musculoskeletal atrophy can be reduced with the help of an aerobic treadmill and resistive exercises to help maintain the muscles and cardiovascular function.
Exposure to radiation is a serious concern, and longer exposures can increase the likelihood of astronauts developing some cancers later in life. The health of Wilmore and Williams will be monitored for many years to come.
While stranded, Wilmore and Williams will have been providing vital data to help measure the impacts of prolonged stays – every bladder and bowel movement they had will have been weighed and checked for any signs of illness and to monitor changes brought about by their unplanned extension.
On their return to Earth, they will require gentle physiotherapy to regain muscle function and strength, and for cardiovascular rehabilitation, paced carefully due to the physical fatigue and limitations they will suffer for a few weeks. Dizzy spells, reduced muscle function, and visual disturbances will be common and even walking will take some practice. Their skin will be “baby soft” after nine months of not having their clothes rub against their bodies.
Of more interest may be the psychological challenges they face, from their concerns over the “near miss” by not returning to Earth in the vehicle they arrived in because Nasa decided it was too risky, through to having to live in confined quarters with others for so long, with a lack of privacy, and enforced companionship.
Behaviour in others that was initially a minor annoyance can quickly become serious sources of stress and irritation during enforced confinement. Astronauts are selected and screened based on temperament, personality, aptitude and their ability to cope when things go wrong. A problem solving mentality and a will to live, coupled with an ability to follow commands and maintain order in the most difficult of circumstances are what makes astronauts better than most of us.
They are trained to cope under any situation, such as crash-landings in deserts, or technical failures on board the spacecraft. But despite excellent training, human fallibility and failings will emerge given time.
Astronaut training also instils the importance of resilience, despite the most trying circumstances, and they will have been trained to keep their fears and anxieties hidden for the benefit of the mission. It might only be after their return that Wilmore and Williams may express their relief. Depression and anxiety can be common after returning to Earth according to others who have been there, with Buzz Aldrin admitting it happened to him and others in his 1973 autobiography Return to Earth.
Keeping busy will have helped keep worries away. Nasa
They may have experienced feelings of abandonment and questioned why they could not be rescued sooner, or may have developed an understandable lack of trust in technology, and a lack of faith in their fellow mission crew members. They will no doubt have missed important dates with their families, experienced homesickness and possibly even questioned if they could last until rescued.
Video-link contact with family will have kept them going but will have also been painful and difficult at the same time. Knowing that their families are worried about them, yet equally unable to do anything about it must have been particularly difficult. Although keeping themselves busy as a distraction will have helped, there would have been downtime when their worries must have been almost overwhelming.
Sleep disturbances and the inability to get regular sleep to allow their brains to rest will have led to cumulative fatigue – both physical and mental. Some astronauts struggle to ever get used to sleeping in space – resulting in lack of performance in the sufferer.
Being stranded on the ISS and unable to get back home while being able to see home fly by with every rotation of the Earth presents a unique form of frustration. One positive effect reported by many astronauts is the “overview effect” where a sense of peace and oneness with the planet is experienced when viewing the Earth from a whole new perspective. The overview effect seems to have a permanent impact, staying with astronauts for the rest of their lives.
A complication in understanding any psychological effects of spaceflight is that many astronauts hope to continue their careers and have more missions, and therefore may not be honest about any negatives they experienced. With Nasa planning missions to Mars at some point in the future, the unique experiences of Wilmore and Williams will be useful to behavioural scientists planning such future missions and trying to understand the best psychological characteristics for selecting astronauts for long term spaceflights.
Craig Jackson does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Boston, MA., March 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Draganfly Inc. (NASDAQ: DPRO) (CSE: DPRO) (FSE: 3U8A) (“Draganfly” or the “Company”), an award-winning, industry-leading drone solutions and systems developer, is excited to announce it was selected by Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) Aeronautics Division for and, successfully completed a demonstration for the simulated delivery of medical supplies for use in support of home-based healthcare.
The medical delivery demonstrations took place between August and October 2024 and involved three selected companies, including Draganfly.
“This medical delivery demonstration underscores the value of drones for many operational needs,” said Transportation Secretary and CEO Monica Tibbits-Nutt, “Drones already have proven useful with operations, including MBTA track corridor inspections, MassDOT Highway bridge inspections, overhead project evaluations, and other needs. We continue to assess the use of drones for other purposes in the future.”
“This demonstration project underscores our commitment to exploring the use of drones to meet critical needs, such as the timely and cost-effective delivery of supplies and devices for healthcare and emergency management, across the Commonwealth,” said MassDOT Aeronautics Acting Administrator Denise Garcia.
“We are grateful to have been selected for this groundbreaking pilot project,” said Cameron Chell, President and CEO of Draganfly. “Our drone technology has the potential to revolutionize the delivery of medical supplies, providing timely and cost-effective solutions for home-based healthcare and emergency responses. This collaboration with MassDOT Aeronautics underscores our credibility and commitment to advancing public safety and healthcare through innovative drone solutions.”
Draganfly’s participation in the Drone Medical Delivery Pilot is a testament to its capabilities, reputation and dedication to providing drone solutions that define industry standards, empowering global organizations, to save time, money, and lives.
About Draganfly
Draganfly Inc. (NASDAQ: DPRO; CSE: DPRO; FSE: 3U8A) is the creator of quality, cutting-edge drone solutions, software, and AI systems that revolutionize how organizations can do business and service their stakeholders. Recognized as being at the forefront of technology for over 24 years, Draganfly is an award-winning industry leader serving the public safety, agriculture, industrial inspections, security, mapping, and surveying markets. Draganfly is a company driven by passion, ingenuity, and the need to provide efficient solutions and first-class services to its customers around the world with the goal of saving time, money, and lives.
For more information on Draganfly, please visit us at www.draganfly.com.
This release contains certain “forward looking statements” and certain “forward-looking information” as defined under applicable securities laws. Forward-looking statements and information can generally be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as “may”, “will”, “expect”, “intend”, “estimate”, “anticipate”, “believe”, “continue”, “plans” or similar terminology. Forward-looking statements and information are based on forecasts of future results, estimates of amounts not yet determinable and assumptions that, while believed by management to be reasonable, are inherently subject to significant business, economic and competitive uncertainties and contingencies. Forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements with respect to the project’s ability to revolutionize the delivery of medical supplies, providing timely and cost-effective solutions for home-based healthcare and emergency responses. Forward-looking statements and information are subject to various known and unknown risks and uncertainties, many of which are beyond the ability of the Company to control or predict, that may cause the Company’s actual results, performance or achievements to be materially different from those expressed or implied thereby, and are developed based on assumptions about such risks, uncertainties and other factors set out here in, including but not limited to: the potential impact of epidemics, pandemics or other public health crises, including the COVID-19 pandemic, on the Company’s business, operations and financial condition; the successful integration of technology; the inherent risks involved in the general securities markets; uncertainties relating to the availability and costs of financing needed in the future; the inherent uncertainty of cost estimates; the potential for unexpected costs and expenses, currency fluctuations; regulatory restrictions; and liability, competition, loss of key employees and other related risks and uncertainties disclosed under the heading “Risk Factors“ in the Company’s most recent filings filed with securities regulators in Canada on the SEDAR website at www.sedar.com and with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) on EDGAR through the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. The Company undertakes no obligation to update forward-looking information except as required by applicable law. Such forward-looking information represents managements’ best judgment based on information currently available. No forward-looking statement can be guaranteed and actual future results may vary materially. Accordingly, readers are advised not to place undue reliance on forward-looking statements or information.
As a young climate advocate, I have always believed that speaking up can change the world. That when we raise our voices for our planet, people will listen. That when we fight for a future where clean air and water are not privileges but rights, justice will be on our side. But this lawsuit against Greenpeace International and Greenpeace entities in the USA by Energy Transfer feels like a punch to the gut—a brutal reminder that those who destroy our home will stop at nothing to silence those who protect it.
This is not just a lawsuit. It is an attack on our future. A warning shot aimed at every single person who dares to challenge the greed that fuels the climate crisis. If they can go after Greenpeace with a $300 million lawsuit, what is stopping them from coming after me? Or you? Or the millions of young people who refuse to stand by as our future is stolen from us?
We are running out of time. The climate crisis is already here. It is in the super typhoons that rip through our homes, tearing apart walls and washing away entire neighborhoods. It is in the unbearable heat that suffocates our cities, turning streets into furnaces and claiming lives in deadly heat waves. It is in the rising seas swallowing entire communities, forcing families to abandon the lands their ancestors called home. It is in the devastating droughts that turn fertile lands into wastelands, leaving nothing but cracked earth and dying crops. It is in the raging wildfires that reduce forests to ash and choke the air with smoke.
Yet instead of holding polluters accountable, they are trying to silence those who fight to protect what little we have left.What kind of world does that leave us with? One where speaking the truth is punished? Where corporations decide who gets to thrive and who gets left behind? Where the next generation inherits nothing but disasters, displacement, and destruction?
I refuse to accept that. We refuse to accept that.
This case is not just about Greenpeace. It is about every young person who dreams of a future worth living in. It is about our right to fight for that future without fear. It is about ensuring that the voices of the youth are not drowned out by the wealth and power of those destroying our planet.
But let me be clear: we are not alone. We are millions, standing shoulder to shoulder, refusing to be silenced. They can try to intimidate us, but they cannot break us. And we will keep fighting—because we have no other choice. This is our home. This is our future. And we will defend it with everything we have.
We stand with Greenpeace. We stand with every environmental defender. We stand for justice, for truth, and for a world where young people are not punished for caring about the only planet we have.
To everyone reading this: Stand with us. Speak up. Take action—share this message, join the movement, and demand accountability. Our voices, our actions, and our solidarity are stronger than their fear tactics. The future belongs to those who refuse to be silenced. And we will not be silenced.
The fight is far from over. Stand with us, raise your voice, and make it clear: those who seek to silence us will never succeed. We will speak. We will fight. And we will win—because justice demands it, and the planet we call home is worth fighting for.
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
News story
Members of the Committee on Fuel Poverty reappointed
Caroline Flint (chair), Gordon McGregor, Belinda Littleton and Anthony Pygram have been reappointed to the Committee on Fuel Poverty (CFP).
Caroline Flint has been reappointed to the Committee on Fuel Poverty (CFP) in the role of Chair. This reappointment took effect from 31 January 2025 and will last for 3 years.
Belinda Littleton, Anthony Pygram and Gordon McGregor have also been reappointed to the Committee. Gordon McGregor’s reappointment takes effect from 17 May 2025 for 2 years. Belinda and Anthony’s reappointments each take effect from 3 May 2025 for 3 years.
The Committee on Fuel Poverty advises on the effectiveness of policies aimed at reducing fuel poverty and encourages greater co-ordination across the organisations working to reduce fuel poverty.
Biographies
Caroline Flint
Caroline has a wealth of experience in politics as a Labour MP for Don Valley, from 1997-2019. She was the first woman MP for Don Valley and a Minister in 5 government departments, developing legislation and leading major policy initiatives, before serving in Her Majesty’s Opposition Shadow Cabinet from 2010 to 2015. During her significant political career, she led the Smoke Free England legislation, led Opposition strategy on energy market reform and climate change, has contributed to multiple All-Party Parliamentary Groups and committees, including the Commons Public Accounts Committee and Intelligence and Security Committee.
Caroline was appointed chair of Humber Teaching NHS Foundation Trust in 2021 and has been re-appointed for a second term. She was a member of the UK Commission on COVID Commemoration which reported to the government on how our collective experience of the pandemic should be remembered. Caroline is an Advisory Board member for the thinktank Reform, works with Dods delivering training on how government and Parliament works and is a broadcaster and commentator on news and current affairs. She won Celebrity Mastermind in 2021 with her specialist subject the movie ‘Alien’ raising money for the National Association for Children of Alcoholics (NACOA). She lives in Doncaster.
Belinda Littleton
Belinda Littleton works for National Grid and is currently Head of Asset Engineering Assurance, Electricity Transmission. She is a Chartered Engineer and a Fellow of the Institute of Engineering and Technology. Belinda’s work at National Grid has included:
leading a team of specialists to deliver appropriate system upgrades that provide value to the consumer during the clean energy transition
focusing on enabling a net zero future that doesn’t leave anyone behind
setting out National Grid’s strategic perspective on the decarbonisation of transport
Previously working as an economist at Ofgem, Belinda looked at the impact of the smart meter rollout on vulnerable customers.
Belinda has also previously worked at PwC. During this time she worked with the former Department of Energy and Climate Change to develop their Household Energy Efficiency Strategy considering the carbon reduction contribution that could be made by households.
Belinda is passionate about designing inclusivity into future policy that delivers against net zero commitments within the UK.
Anthony Pygram
Anthony Pygram is a regulatory expert. He was the Director of Conduct and Enforcement at Ofgem (where, amongst other things, he oversaw the development of Ofgem’s Consumer Vulnerability Strategy). He was subsequently a specialist adviser to the House of Lords Industry and Regulators Committee for its Ofgem and net zero inquiry, and more recently a Senior Manager at the Payment Systems Regulator.
Anthony is Lay Vice President and a member of the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal, a Lay Member of the Regulatory Board of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of England and Wales, and the independent Chair of the Code Change Committee for the non-household water market.
Gordon McGregor
Gordon has worked for over 3 decades in the energy and utilities sector. He has a depth of experience working in retail, distribution, generation and corporate management. Most recently, he has helped lead a number of highly innovative companies that have a strong focus on energy efficiency, renewables and clean technology.
Gordon was a founding member of the Electricity Association Taskforce on Fuel Poverty, working on how energy regulation and industry structures could improve energy efficiency and affordability. Throughout his career, he has helped design energy efficiency programmes, developed affordable payment approaches, created social action initiatives and has helped design tariffs that help priority and vulnerable customers. He has also been involved in market design and managed the implementation of regulations to support new renewable targets. As a director of a vertically integrated utility, he helped lead the transition from a largely fossil fuel based portfolio towards a lower carbon alternative.
Gordon is Chief Sustainability and Digital Officer for Sweco UK & Ireland, a leading European engineering and architecture consultancy. Gordon also sits on the Natural Environmental Research Council and is a member of the UKRI Advisory Board for Building a Green Future.
If approved the details of the plan, such as the design of public footpaths, layout, appearance, landscaping, lighting and noise mitigation measures, will be subject to extensive community engagement by the developer and scrutinised by planners under reserved matters, before any works start on site.
The land was formally a coal mine and was later used as a landfill site before becoming a public open space in the 1990s.
The indicative masterplan, submitted by Goold Estates, would see 14.5 acres retained as public open space, and a distribution warehouse, new offices, 270 parking spaces (including 14 disabled bays and 42 electric vehicle charging bays), 60 lorry parking bays, and vehicular access off Neachells Lane developed on the eastern 16.5 acres of the site near industrial land comprising the Travis Perkins builders’ yard and other commercial units.
The developer would be required to maximise the hundreds of job opportunities and apprenticeships for East Park residents, as well as make a Section 106 contribution of £150,000 for a children’s play area in the vicinity and £550,000 for improvements and facilities in East Park to compensate for the loss of nature conservation habitat and of Millennium Forest planting.
Access to the site has been considered in line with the current highways layout and the proposed gyratory improvement scheme to address congestion and safety, which was in the pipeline before the Goold Estates scheme came forward – and remains under consideration as a separate planning application.
City of Wolverhampton Council Cabinet Member for City Development, Jobs and Skills, said: “The proposal going to Planning Committee next week is only an outline plan, with the finer details to be determined later if it is approved.
“If the scheme gets the green light, it will deliver significant financial investment and hundreds of jobs for local people. The loss of open space and the environmental impact would also be mitigated by other gains for the East Park community.
“But make no mistake, should this outline planning application be approved by Planning Committee, there will need to be extensive community engagement by the developer to ensure the detailed plan addresses people’s concerns appropriately.”
On a sunny morning in late February, a group of students from the UConn Forest Crew work through the sugar maple stand, affixing taps and lines to the trees, and then running them back to a storage tank.
They are working alongside Tom Worthley, a UConn Extension forestry educator, preparing the sugar bush for the upcoming sap season. The group is preparing the trees for the warm days and cold nights that prompt the sugar maple trees (Acer saccharum) to produce sap for transformation into maple syrup’s golden goodness.
Each gallon of maple syrup requires about 40 gallons of sap, creating a hive of activity for the weeks-long sap season each year.
“I’m involved because of the student experience and to promote trees and forests to people around the state, creating materials like maple syrup that link people to the resource. There’s also a lot of satisfaction that comes from having something you grew or made and can enjoy later,” Worthley says.
Connecticut is in the heart of the sugar maple range and ranks eleventh nationally in maple syrup production. The UConn Sugar House is one of many throughout the state offering a high-quality and delicious product each year.
Maple syrup production in the United States increased in 2024, with the highest yield from the past 25 years, due in part to an increased number of taps and favorable weather conditions.
Despite strong promotional campaigns from Vermont, New York, and Canada, once sap is syrup, it’s basically impossible to tell where it came from. As long as the sugar producer uses high-quality production methods, all of these syrups will taste about the same.
“All the more reason to support Connecticut maple producers,” says Worthley.
The timeless tradition began with Indigenous cultures in North America, who moved their families to a sugar bush, or stand of sugar maple trees, in late winter as the snow began to melt.
The sap’s sweetness was likely discovered by sap icicles on the trees, and this led to collecting sap for use throughout the year. Without pots for boiling, the Indigenous people made three types of sugar instead, and later the tradition evolved to syrup production.
UConn’s sugar house is tucked in behind the Farm Services buildings, near where the Woodsmen Teams maintain their timber mill and practice yard.
Extension professionals, faculty from the Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, and UConn students have made syrup here for over 30 years, preparing the next generation of maple producers and selling their syrup to support the sugar house and equipment.
“Our student-run maple program illustrates one of the great benefits that the UConn Forest provides to our campus community, the hands-on, practical educational experiences that our students can engage in,” says Robert Fahey, Goerge F. Cloutier Professor in Forestry. “Through work experiences and internships we are able to provide training that gives our students the technical skills they need as well as real-world experience conducting and managing forest-related activities such as maple-syrup production, creating value-added wood products, and trails and recreation management.”
UConn students boiling maple sap for syrup (Contributed photo)
For some students, this is just one element of their “forest education.”
“It’s exciting to learn what the forest is capable of, how we utilize forests, and that it’s not just by cutting them down,” says Zach Placzek ’25 (CAHNR). Placzek’s desire to protect the forest led him to seek certification to fight fires, and he is working with the UConn fire chief to help establish a controlled burn operation to control invasive species in a recently harvested area of the forest.
The 2,100-acre UConn Forest has several sugar bushes, and the students rest a sugar bush and use another at times as part of their forest stewardship. Sugar maple trees thrive on north facing slopes with deep soils, and while the UConn Forest has several such locations, Worthley also mentions growing more sugar maple trees, and perhaps developing or cultivating a stand closer to the sugar house.
“The ability to produce maple syrup locally in Connecticut is one of the many positive benefits created by living in a well-forested state” says Amy Harder, associate dean for Extension. “Many producers also benefit from integrating agritourism into their operations so the public can see, smell, and taste the entire experience – something my family loves to do!”
Sap runs just below the bark on sunny days, dripping from the taps into the buckets or lines affixed to each tree. Once the sap really starts running, the students need to empty the tank at the sugar bush daily. It’s transported back to the sugar house on campus in their 60-gallon transfer tank and pumped into another tank outside the sugar house. Gravity feeds the sap into the evaporator inside the house.
The wood-fired pans are heated to 219 degrees Fahrenheit, boiling the water out of the sap, with steam rising through the vent in the sugar house’s roof. Sap becomes syrup as the water evaporates and the sugar content increases. Next, it’s filtered to remove any solids and then reheated to over 180 degrees Fahrenheit. Bottles are carefully filled with the 180-degree sap and turned upside down to seal the lids.
Maple syrup comes in four colors, Golden, Amber, Dark, and Very Dark. Lighter syrup – golden and amber – is from early sap and has a milder flavor. The lighter colors are often the syrup of choice for breakfast foods, added to coffee, or drizzled over ice cream. Later season sap is darker because it has more sugars in it, and the sugars make the darker syrup with its robust flavor. Many people use darker syrups for baking and cooking, although some prefer this flavor on breakfast foods.
Sap season wraps up by the end of March, sometimes earlier if the weather warms faster than expected. The students clean the equipment and conduct any needed repairs or maintenance on the equipment before storing it for next year. UConn’s 30-year-old evaporator is in its last season, and the off-season challenge this year is fundraising to replace it.
“For myself, being a researcher and doing a lot of outreach work with the local professional foresters, I find immense value in having this living lecture hall to teach from,” says Amanda Bunce, a Ph.D. student studying tree biomechanics and silviculture. “Students do much better learning in the real thing than from a classroom, and I find it so much easier to share my own enthusiasm for ecology when we’re out in it.”
Find a Sugar House near you in Connecticut by visitingConnecticut Grown.
This work relates to CAHNR’s Strategic Vision areas of Advancing Adaptation and Resilience in a Changing Climate and Fostering Sustainable Landscapes at the Urban-Rural Interface.
When Marlena Edmonson, a social worker and elementary school counselor from Indiana, considered running for political office, she thought she needed to be an expert in economics or political science if she wanted to throw her hat into the ring.
Joshua Levin ’25 (MSW), a student at the UConn School of Social Work, had toyed with the idea of running for office, but felt like he needed more information on how to actually run an effective campaign.
Also a student at UConn, Quinn Meehan ’26 (MSW) is passionate about making things like political social work, campaigning, and being involved in politics more accessible for those living with disabilities.
And Kashmir Flood, a Master of Social Work student at the Columbia University School of Social Work, sees herself incorporating political work and social work practice together in some way – whether by running for office herself or supporting candidates in the future.
For many of the 130 social workers and students who traveled to Hartford on the first weekend in March and spent two days in a chilly, windowless conference room at the Downtown Marriott hotel in Hartford, the idea of launching, running, or participating in a campaign for political office had seemed like a daunting task.
How do you get started?
Why are the rules so complicated?
And, if I run for office, will I really have to call people on the phone to ask them for money?
But travel they did, from 20 different states and the District of Columbia – some coming from as far as California, New Mexico, Iowa, and Arkansas – to take part in the 29th iteration of the Campaign School for Social Workers, presented by the Nancy A. Humphreys Institute for Political Social Work and to learn, step-by-step, the ins and outs of running a political campaign at any level of government.
Founded in 1995 by the late former UConn School of Social Work dean, Nancy A. Humphreys, her namesake institute works to increase the political participation and power of social workers and the communities they serve.
Since 1996, the Campaign School has trained thousands of social workers, students, and faculty from both the U.S. and abroad on what it’s like to get involved in politics as volunteers, staff, advocates, and candidates; to navigate systemic barriers; and to uphold the social work profession’s values and code of ethics while participating in the political process.
Charles Lewis, founder and director of the Congressional Research Institute for Social Work and Policy in Washington D.C.; Kimberly Hardy, second vice chair of the North Carolina Democratic Party and president of the Society for Spirituality and Social Work; Connecticut State Representative Cristin McCarthy Vahey; and Tanya Rhodes Smith, outgoing director of the Nancy A. Humphreys Institute for Political Social Work at UConn, speak at a panel during Humphreys Institute Campaign School, held on March 7 and 8, 2025. (Thomas Rettig/UConn Photo)
Despite the typical public perception of what social workers do, notes the Humphreys Institute’s outgoing director Tanya Rhodes Smith, social work was founded as a political profession and has always been committed to not only working with individuals, but also to working on solutions to the complex issues impacting the communities that they serve.
And a big part of that is, and always has been, the profession’s active and visible role in the political process.
“Democracy reflects the priorities of those who show up,” Rhodes Smith told the participants on the first day of this year’s Campaign School, “and hint: it’s a small group of people. So, it matters who votes, who holds office, who works on campaigns, and who donates money.”
The skills that make someone a great social worker, Rhodes Smith explained, also make someone a great candidate, and learning how to take part in politics and campaigning is as much about developing leadership skills as it is figuring out financing rules and putting out yard signs.
She also warned that Day One of campaign school would be “like drinking out of a firehose.”
“But we’re going to teach you to live your life as a candidate, so that you will be ready when you decide or are asked to run or serve by others,” Rhodes Smith said.
Have a Plan. Write it Down.
“Close your eyes,” ordered Kate Coyne-McCoy, the person who’s been holding that proverbial firehose at nearly every Campaign School.
“Imagine you’re back in grade school, and you take the bus to your friend Susie’s house, and you go in, and you call your mother, and you say, ‘Mom, I’m at Susie’s and I just invited myself to dinner.’ If you’re like my mother, there’s an audible gasp. You don’t invite yourself to dinner,” Coyne-McCoy continued.
“Now, open your eyes. It’s 2025. You’re not just going to invite yourself to dinner. When you get there, you’re going to ask for money.”
Coyne-McCoy is a social worker who has trained more than 9,000 individuals to run for elected office, is a former Congressional candidate herself, and served as the chief trainer for the Harvard Square to the Oval Office program at Harvard University’s Kennedy School.
And fundraising, she told the participants, is the barrier to most candidacies – the thing you don’t want to do more than anything.
“You cannot get elected to anything if you don’t have the money to communicate with the people you need to,” Coyne-McCoy said. “I know that 90 percent of you are sitting here saying, ‘Nope.’ You can – you all can. But are you willing to do it?”
Though this year marked Coyne-McCoy’s final Campaign School training, she didn’t try to ease the water pressure from her firehose of information. Day One was a nonstop onslaught starting with becoming a candidate, ending with volunteer recruitment, and covering everything in between.
The depth and breadth of the material was surprising to some of the attendees.
“I was afraid it would be more local, and not enough of the others,” said Edmonson, who is interested in running for federal office. “But I feel like I got what I needed.”
You cannot get elected to anything if you don’t have the money to communicate with the people you need to. I know that 90 percent of you are sitting here saying, ‘Nope.’ You can – you all can. But are you willing to do it? — Kate Coyne-McCoy
“I didn’t think it was to be this amount of information at this level of expertise,” Meehan said. “I didn’t think it was going to be complete experts in the field, from so many different organizations, and so, that was really what impressed me.”
Early on in the day, Coyne-McCoy – who spent all of Day One on her feet, roaming around the room while barreling through her training materials and engaging the participants as they peppered her with questions and hypothetical scenarios – explained that it doesn’t matter what office someone is running for: They need to a have a campaign plan and write it down.
That plan needs to include details on their campaign team, their fundraising and budget, messaging, research, and their timeline.
Over the rest of the day, she’d periodically quiz the participants on these essentials.
“What’s the most important part about campaign planning?” she’d call out.
As the day went on, the chorus of voices that responded grew stronger and louder as they’d answer back.
“Have a plan. Write it down.”
The day also included a messaging component where the participants worked to craft their own personal story, a 90-second pitch that explained why they were running and why someone should vote for them – something not just valuable on a campaign, but also in their lives and as social workers.
“Telling your story is about you,” Coyne-McCoy explained. “It’s the thing you should do when you walk into a job interview. It’s what you would do when you walk into a legislator’s office.”
A few participants shared their stories, including a young woman who beat addiction and wants to see those who lack access to health care find the services they need.
And a teacher who saw the lack of resources her students experienced and saw how it made them feel – as though they didn’t matter.
And a social worker and teenage mother who wants her peers to join her in consistently upholding the values and ethics of the social work profession.
That code of ethics – a set of standards set forth by the National Association of Social Workers – was a consistent theme of this year’s Campaign School, Rhodes Smith said, because whether seeking to serve in local, state, or federal office, the code can be applied to help social workers navigate all types of challenges, including conflicts with values that might occur in politics.
“Politics and campaigns exist in a partisan context, but the code rises above party,” she said, “and it’s our superpower and guide through every sticky situation or ethical dilemma.”
‘Any one of you could do it’
The firehose of Day One gave way to a quieter, more thoughtful approach on Day Two, where discussions started a day dedicated to processing everything learned the day before and figuring out how participants might apply it in their own lives.
In-depth discussions with social workers serving in various elected offices were encouraging but realistic about what it means to both run for and hold office.
“We need to demystify how to run for office,” said Justin Roias, a city councilor in Providence. “It feels complicated, and that feels intentional. There’s a lot of things hidden that you need to learn yourself. But once you do, you’ll get there.”
“When I think about local politics, I think about cultivating future leaders,” said Kai Belton, a state representative from Middletown. “And then, I’m looking in this room full of social workers, and I’m like, oh my god, this is amazing. I can’t tell you how many of my colleagues up at the legislature say, ‘Kai, we need more social workers up here.’
UConn Social Work Student Jacob Pierce – with Tanya Rhodes Smith, outgoing director of the Nancy A. Humphreys Institute for Political Social Work – at the Humphreys Institute Campaign School on March 7, 2025. (Thomas Rettig/UConn Photo)
“There are so many people who want to see you win, and you will have the support that you need. I think that this looks intimidating, but it’s really not, and I think that any one of you could do it.”
Discussions with community organizers and panelists looking to navigate power imbalances and improve representation in politics stressed the importance of perseverance.
“Embrace the long game,” encouraged Katrina Huff-Larmond, a city councilor in Randolf, Massachusetts. “We have to understand that what we are fighting for is not going to happen tomorrow. And there’s so much work we need to do in the community, it’s going to take time. We can’t give up.”
The day concluded as participants revisited their personal stories – with some choosing to share and present them while standing at the podium before their peers – and with a challenge from Rhodes Smith: To share what their next step would be when they left campaign school.
Edmonson plans to get in touch with a local official to talk about her potential future campaign.
Meehan wants to work with a co-organizer to help mobilize people with disabilities and help them register to vote, especially people living in institutions.
Others plan to attend local board or city council meetings, volunteer, get involved.
For Flood, the weekend helped her find the connection and encouragement that she needed.
“I knew it would make me want to think about ways that I could find myself in social work and politics,” Flood said, “but it just really solidified for me that, ok, this is really what I want to do. And I didn’t think I could have any more fire in my belly than I do now. So, I’m so happy and really excited.”
And Levin, who said he plans refer back to his notes from the weekend for a while to come, said anyone considering committing the time to go to Campaign School should, “Do it.”
“It’s so easy to convince ourselves to not do something,” Levin said. “There’s always going to be 1,000 reasons to not do something, but that one reason is definitely more important.”
The Scottish Government must act to extend vital renter protections that are set to expire on April 1st, says Scottish Green MSP Maggie Chapman.
In March 2024 the then Green Minister, Patrick Harvie, introduced a temporary rent adjudication system which followed a freeze on most in-tenancy rents. This potentially allows rent increases to be limited to no higher than 12% if a tenant applies to a rent officer for a decision.
At the time, the Scottish Government said the rent adjudication system would support the transition away from the rent cap and to the forthcoming system of Rent Control Areas, protecting renters from excessively large increases which could be experienced with a sudden move to open market rent levels.
Ms Chapman said:
“At a time when living costs are soaring, it is vital that we control the ridiculous rent hikes that far too many people are experiencing.
“These protections have played an important role in guarding renters from rogue landlords who have shown they cannot be trusted. If they are lifted it will mean even higher costs that will plunge some people and families into totally avoidable poverty.
“Everyone deserves a stable and affordable roof over their heads – a place to call home. By removing protections we are leaving tenants at the mercy of a broken housing market. Do SNP Ministers really want to do that to their constituents?
“With two weeks to go, I hope that they will reconsider and that they will extend these protections to give peace of mind to renters who are already having their finances stretched from all directions.”
Ms Chapman added:
“Homes are for living in and not for profiteering. The forthcoming Housing Bill could be a milestone for renters rights, but we need to ensure that we are protecting people here and now and stopping the kind of hikes that have caused so much misery for so long.”
Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments
News story
Update on Lay Members on the Security Vetting Appeals Panel
An update on the term of four Lay Members who sit on the Security Vetting Appeals Panel.
Four Lay Members on the Security Vetting Appeals Panel (SVAP) have had their terms extended until 31st March 2027.
The Lay Members are Claire Stokes, James Barron, Nicholas Griffin and Sally Berlin, whose terms were due to finish on 31st March 2025. Their terms have been extended for continuity of board expertise.
The Security Vetting Appeals Panel reviews decisions to refuse or withdraw National Security Vetting and the process involved. You can find out more about what the Panel does here.
The Panel currently has 15 sitting members: a Chair, a Deputy Chair and 13 Lay Members.
There are no statutory limits on the number of terms a Lay Member can serve. However, the Governance Code for Public Appointments sets out that no individual should serve in a single role for more than two terms or ten years.
Claire Stokes was Risk Management Lead Partner for PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) and is currently an Independent Contractor with PwC Global.
James Barron is a former senior civil servant and prior to retirement was Chief Executive of the Office of Parliamentary Counsel.
Nicholas Griffin QC founded the QEB Hollis Whiteman Public Law Group and is the head of Chambers’ Business and Human Rights Group. He is Trustee of Anti-Slavery International; UK Anti-Doping board member and Former Assistant Commissioner for the Boundary Commission for England.
Sally Berlin is Director of Casework Operations at the Criminal Cases Review Commission.
Further enhancing protections for social housing tenants.
Social housing residents in Scotland will be given greater protection against issues of disrepair in their homes such as damp and mould through the introduction of Awaab’s Law.
Awaab’s Law is named after two-year-old Awaab Ishak who died in 2020 after being exposed to mould in his home in Rochdale.
The Scottish Government intends to introduce amendments to the Housing (Scotland) Bill that will broaden Ministers’ powers to impose timeframes on social landlords to investigate disrepair and start repairs, through regulation, following engagement with the sector.
The regulations will build on provisions already in the Bill on strengthening tenants’ rights and Scotland’s existing legal protections for social tenants such as the Scottish Housing Quality Standard and the Right to Repair Scheme.
Social Justice Secretary Shirley-Anne Somerville said:
“Introducing timescales and expectations for repairs aims to make sure this never happens to a child or their family ever again.
“Everyone in Scotland deserves the right to live in a warm, safe and secure home, free from disrepair. We already have a strong set of rights and standards that have been improving in Scotland.
“However, these measures will go even further and give power and confidence to tenants that any issues identified and repairs started in a timely manner, so any issues do not have a detrimental impact on their health.
“Our Housing Bill already contains proposals to improve tenants’ rights, and these measures will strengthen those even further to make sure their home is safe for them and their families.”
Registered social landlords are required to meet the Scottish Housing Quality Standard (SHQS) which requires housing to be free from rising or penetrating damp, to have satisfactory ventilation and meet minimum energy efficiency standards.
Just like the social rented sector, the Scottish Government is committed to and will consider how to implement Awaab’s Law for private tenants, using existing powers, after engagement with the private rented sector.
Fundamental changes to Armed Forces processes to better support Women in UK Defence
As part of a series of changes to eradicate unacceptable behaviours in the military a new Tri-Service complaints unit for the Armed Forces has been announced.
New initiatives to tackle unacceptable behaviours in the military to be introduced at pace.
Changes include a new specialist Tri-Service team for taking the most serious complaints, such as bullying, discrimination and harassment, outside the single Service chain of command.
MOD creates a central Violence Against Women and Girls Taskforce, to drive cultural improvements
Progress comes as Armed Forces Commissioner Bill continues through Parliament as part of the Government’s Plan for Change
As part of a series of changes to eradicate unacceptable behaviours in the military, and step-up support for women across UK Defence, a new Tri-Service complaints unit for the Armed Forces has been announced.
The new team will be independent of the single Service chain of command to provide individuals with greater confidence and help ensure that the most serious complaints are dealt with quickly, fairly and in a standardised way across the Armed Forces. Building on the change in 2022 when complaints were taken out of the direct chain of command, providing greater independence and confidence.
The change will see Bullying, Harassment, Discrimination related service complaints dealt with by a team outside the commands of the Royal Navy, British Army and Royal Air Force.
This builds on the successes of the tri-service approach to sexual offending, within the Defence Serious Crime Command which was set up in 2022.
In addition, the Ministry of Defence will set up a Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG) Taskforce, led centrally by Minister Carns to cohere and drive the work to change culture from the heart of the department. Minister Carns will be supported by a network of regional champions who will help raise awareness of and tackle violence against women and girls across the military, and a Defence Voices Panel – a challenge group made up of service personnel and civil servants to provide honest feedback and lived experiences.
The Minister for Defence People and Veterans Al Carns will set out these new measures before the House of Commons Defence Select Committee later today. He will give evidence alongside Service chiefs.
Minister for Veterans and People Alistair Carns said:
This government was elected on a manifesto of change, and we are delivering for Defence. I am personally committed to ensuring that we do everything within our power to root out unacceptable behaviour and ensure that the Armed Forces is a place where everyone can thrive.
Women in the armed forces play a vital role in our keeping our nation safe. This is not just a matter of basic justice and equality, it is essential to military effectiveness.
Our people have spoken, and we have listened. We are moving at pace to create a new Tri-Service Complaints team to take the most serious complaints out of the chain of single Service command for the first time and to launch a central taskforce to give this issue the attention and focus it deserves.
The MOD’s VAWG Taskforce will include regional support network, trained on topics including domestic violence and sexual offending. These roles will use a network of multidisciplinary experts to support Armed Forces personnel, including healthcare providers, social workers, and HR advisors and will link into the Victim Witness Care Unit. These measures are part of the government’s commitment to improving Service life and renewing the contract with those who serve and have served and support this government’s foundation of strong national security.
The government introduced the Armed Forces Commissioner Bill in November – the first ever independent champion for serving personnel and their families. The Bill has passed through the House of Commons and is now in Committee Stage in the Lords. The Commissioner will be a direct point of contact for serving personnel and their families to raise issues which impact Service life. They are expected to be appointed by the end of 2025. With powers to visit Defence sites unannounced and commission reports, the Commissioner will hold Defence to account and drive improvements to Service life.
The government is committed to standing up for those who serve the nation. At the end of July, the Armed Forces received the largest pay rise in over 20 years, and in December the MOD struck a landmark deal to bring the military housing estate back into public ownership to enable additional investment into homes for military families and deliver savings for taxpayers.
Ambitions are high as UK celebrates a year in Horizon Europe
Hundreds of researchers, business leaders and academics gather at the Oval in London to mark a year of UK success in Horizon – and plan for much more.
Hundreds of researchers, business leaders and academics gather at the Oval in London to mark a year of UK success in Horizon – and plan for much more
£80 billion Horizon Europe programme is the world’s largest international research endeavour, and an important part of the UK’s relationship with Europe
International research collaboration is a key driver of economic growth, and the government’s Plan for Change
More than 500 of the UK’s leading researchers, businesspeople and scientists will gather at London’s Oval today (Tuesday 18 March) to celebrate the successes that have already been delivered since the UK associated to the Horizon Europe programme, last year. They’ll also hear advice from industry experts, European diplomats, and leading academics on how to seize the opportunities for funding and collaboration that Horizon offers, with £80 billion up for grabs through the programme.
Initial signs suggest UK association is trending in the right direction. Recent ERC Synergy Grants saw awards made to 18 UK-hosted projects, the second highest number. Horizon is giving British researchers and innovators access to funding, so they can tackle some of the biggest issues facing society, from breakthroughs in healthcare, to putting AI to work across the economy. All of this stands to unleash growth and create jobs in high-potential new industries, all of which supports the growth goals at the heart of the government’s Plan for Change.
In 2025, the government is doubling down on its efforts to help the UK’s brightest minds access the opportunities on offer through Horizon, through a new PR blitz, networking events in Italy, Germany and Spain for British businesspeople and researchers, and grants to help cover the businesses cover the cost of attending R&D events across Europe.
Science Minister Lord Vallance, who will speak at today’s Showcase, said:
Science is stronger when we work together with others, and as new technologies like AI develop rapidly international collaboration on research is more important than ever before.
Investing in R&D unlocks the door to more productive businesses, highly skilled and paid jobs, economic growth, and innovations that improve our lives and health. We need to go even further to seize the opportunity our association to Horizon represents and then reap the benefits.
Besides Lord Vallance’s keynote, attendees at the Showcase will also hear from UKRI’s International Champion Professor Christopher Smith, DSIT’s Chief Scientific Adviser Professor Chris Johnson, and Cyril Robin-Champigneul from the EU’s delegation to the UK. That will be supplemented by sessions with experts from the UKRI on how to build the best bids for Horizon grants, and networking opportunities.
DSIT Chief Scientific Adviser Professor Chris Johnson said:
Over the last year we’ve seen some initial green shoots of recovery when it comes to UK participation in Horizon Europe. Events like today are an important chance to build on that positive momentum, and learn from the experience of those who’ve already been successful in building bids for funding.
In 2025 and beyond, we want more researchers and businesses to seize the benefits of Horizon, to accelerate the discoveries that will boost our economy, and deliver new technologies that will improve all our lives.
UKRI International Champion Professor Christopher Smith said:
Today’s gathering at the Oval is a testament to the extraordinary progress we’ve made since associating to the Horizon Europe programme. The collaboration and innovation fostered through Horizon Europe are driving breakthroughs that will shape our future, from healthcare advancements, to climate monitoring, to AI integration across industries.
As we look ahead, it’s crucial that we continue to leverage these opportunities to work collaboratively with our international partners, advancing research, fostering innovation, and supporting our vibrant research community.
Businesses up and down the country are already carrying out cutting-edge R&D thanks to Horizon backing, as well as building consortia with partners in countries ranging from Canada to South Korea, and beyond.
We know from recent history that the UK can be a leader in this area. We have 4 of the top 10 universities in the world, and the second-highest number of Nobel prize winners globally. A quarter of projects in which the UK participated, funded through Horizon Europe’s predecessor, were UK-led.
Further information, including practical support on how to apply, is available on the Horizon Hub – found on Innovate UK and UK Research and Innovation websites. UKRI also host regular events that help guide businesses and researchers through the opportunities on offer and the application process.
Potential applicants can find Horizon Europe calls (funding opportunities) open to UK-based applicants using the European Commission’s funding and tender opportunities portal. They can apply for Horizon Europe funding through the European Commission’s funding and tenders portal, where the original funding call is found. More information on how to submit applications are available on the European Commission’s website.
City of Wolverhampton Council is working with West Midlands 5G (WM5G) and neighbouring authorities to show how Technology Enabled Care (TEC) can improve the lives of hundreds of city residents.
As part of the project sensor devices and voice activated wireless technologies including fall detectors, smart speakers, smart doorbells and remote monitoring sensors, are being used in people’s homes to support individual care needs.
The trial programme is funded by the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) under the 5G Innovation Region scheme and focuses on eligible care and support needs of 3 groups – people aged 65 and over, people with learning disabilities and people with physical disabilities.
More than 250 referrals have been made in Wolverhampton since the start of the trial in September 2024.
This is benefitting the region by reducing hospital admissions, optimising carer visits, and enabling proactive care through advanced monitoring and predictive analytics.
Now the West Midlands has secured additional funding to stay at the forefront of the UK’s digital revolution.
The extension of the project will support regional and national scaling, expanding TEC to more local authorities, strengthening collaboration with NHS Integrated Care Boards (ICBs).
It will also enable the development of a business case, procurement framework, and programmes to support culture change and drive long term transformation.
Councillor Jasbir Jaspal, Cabinet Member for Adults and Wellbeing at City of Wolverhampton Council, said: “It’s an exciting time for social care in Wolverhampton.
“We’re just getting started with technology enabled care solutions, and we are already seeing positive impacts on culture change and our residents’ wellbeing.
“We strongly believe, and have seen evidence, of how technology enabled care can help vulnerable adults in our city live independently at home, support social workers and carers, tackle pressures on the NHS by reducing bed blocking and hospital admissions, and make a shift from reactive to proactive care.
“Thanks to this funding extension, we are looking forward to supporting many more people over the coming months.”
Councillor Obaida Ahmed, Cabinet Member for Digital and Community at City of Wolverhampton Council, said: “We are driven by digital to make positive changes across our service areas by utilising technology and this is a prime example of how that is making an impact in the real world.
“The extension of this project is great news and helps ensure everyone is able to get connected and benefit from digital devices to make a difference to their everyday lives.”
A compelling case for creating a new Greater Norwich Council has been set out as part of the biggest overhaul of local government in half a century.
The new report, which will be considered by councillors at a meeting this evening (18 March), sets out the case for why there is a need to create a new Greater Norwich Unitary Council as part of a three-unitary model to cover the whole of Norfolk.
Mike Stonard, leader of Norwich City Council, said: “Greater Norwich is unique within Norfolk, a distinct urban entity with different needs, challenges and opportunities to its largely rural hinterland. Its economy and demography are unlike any other part of the county.
“It is the economic and cultural capital of the region and it drives growth. That is why Greater Norwich needs its own single council, where people who live and work here, who understand the city, and who really know their local communities, can represent the interests of their residents.
“A single unitary council for Greater Norwich would coordinate all key services and ensure better outcomes for citizens, to improve their lives, including coordinated improvements in education, social care, children’s services, and housing, and coordinating with the local NHS. In this way, it would be better able to tackle inequalities, improve educational attainment, develop workplace skills, improve health, and ensure better life opportunities for citizens, all of which would improve their health, wellbeing and quality of life.
“It would also be able to adopt an integrated transport plan to make getting into and around the city easier, coordinating all modes of transport so that they work together better for people.”
The new report is based around four interdependent pillars – economic ambition, enhancing public service delivery, financial resilience and connectivity. It also demonstrates the ambition of being a stable, sustainable and effective 21st century local council which can deliver from day one – and for the next 50 years.
Further details show Greater Norwich to be a high growth city, home to 31 per cent of Norfolk’s businesses and with a diverse and increasing talent pool. Greater Norwich is a £9.9 billion economy, supporting 158,000 jobs and 10,500 businesses.
The case for a Greater Norwich follows on from work across all seven of Norfolk’s district council partners which set out why a three-unitary model is the best solution for Norfolk.
Other benefits of a Greater Norwich Unitary Authority:
secure strategic economic growth, based around Norwich’s distinct dynamic, productive, and inclusive economy, while supporting the wider region of Norfolk to prosper
harnessing the city’s unique opportunities for regeneration and renewal to build a thriving net zero economy
promoting the city centre as a hub for innovation and creativity
be a sustainable authority, able to transform and deliver high-quality public services
be strongly positioned to create public services that are not only fit for today’s challenges but will last into the future
prioritise creating access to high-quality, health-promoting jobs
capitalise on Norwich’s unique strengths, including the academic excellence of its universities, through joint working with the city’s education institutions, cultural heritage, and strong local networks
allow a future Norfolk and Suffolk Mayoral Combined County Authority to capitalise on powers and funding, accelerating the rate of delivery and powering up the region
A full proposal will be developed and submitted to Government by 26 September.
Residents from the Smithdown community are coming together for a vibrant celebration of music, food, and culture, creating a welcoming space to share and celebrate heritage.
The event will be held at Picton Children’s Centre, Earle Road, L7 6HD on Saturday, 22nd March at 12 – 2:30pm.
Led by Liverpool City Council’s Neighbourhoods team, Picton Children’s Centre and in collaboration with local businesses and support services, this event aims to bring neighbours closer, foster connections, and celebrate diversity.
Food will be provided by the charity Asylum Link, with takeaway boxes available for Muslim residents who are fasting during Ramadan.
In addition to the festivities, there will be services offering advice and support in areas such as housing, health, and leisure.
The Smithdown community celebrates its diversity sending a clear message that division and hate have no place in Liverpool. This upcoming event builds on that spirit of solidarity, reinforcing the commitment to unity.
Cllr Laura Robertson-Collins, Liverpool City Council’s Cabinet Member for Communities, Neighbourhoods and Streetscene said: “This event is a celebration of unity, culture, and the power of community. Everyone is welcome to join and be part of this meaningful day.
Liverpool remains a place where people from different ethnic, cultural, and religious backgrounds come together, embracing their differences and building lasting friendships.”
Cllr Liz Parsons, Centre Coordinator for Picton and Kensington Children’s Centres, highlighted the importance of building a strong and inclusive community. She stated: “We’re really excited to be bringing everyone together but we know that supporting community unity goes beyond one event, it’s about fostering a lasting sense of belonging and pride in our local area.
“By embracing and celebrating diversity, we strengthen connections, build meaningful relationships, and create a more resilient, united community.”
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
Opened after major renovation office“My Documents” of the Arbat district. It is located at the address: Sivtsev Vrazhek lane, house 20. In the renovated premises it has become even more convenient to receive government services.
“We strive to make the process of receiving government services as comfortable as possible for every Moscow resident. Today, after a major overhaul, another government services center was opened. The updated office in the Arbat district has become more spacious and bright due to a modern approach to organizing space, a corporate style in the interior and new furniture. A separate office for informal marriage registration and a play area for visitors with children have appeared here. The center has been improved for the comfortable stay and movement of people with limited mobility,” said Alexander Grebenkin, Deputy Director for Infrastructure and Security of Moscow Government Services Centers.
For people with disabilities, there is a lifting platform at the entrance, an adapted reception area and an extended reception window.
“As part of the major repairs at the public services center, the roof and facade were repaired, the stained glass windows were replaced, through which more natural light will enter the premises. The space was also zoned, which allowed for a more rational and comfortable placement of employees, and due to this, the width of the passages was increased, which will provide evacuation routes that meet fire safety standards. The entrance groups were put in order: new doors were installed, the railings and handrails at the ramp for people with limited mobility were replaced, which is lined with non-slip tiles, and the canopies over the central porch and emergency exit were updated. In addition, as part of the work to adapt the center for people with limited mobility, a vertical platform was installed for wheelchair users,” said the First Deputy Head of the Moscow City Department of Major Repairs.
In the office, city residents can not only fill out the necessary documents, but also use computers with free access to receive electronic services and other additional services. For example, take photos for documents, print them or make a copy, make payments, including state fees, using terminals in the hall or at the reception window.
In the comfortable waiting area, visitors can fill out an application, charge their phone, drink coffee and relax. In the book exchange area, anyone can leave their book and take another one or scan QR codes with links to interesting works by popular authors.
The My Documents government services center in the Arbat district is open daily from 08:00 to 20:00.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
Almost three thousand units of new modern equipment will appear in 51 schools that will open this year after modernization under the city program “My school”. Digital microscopes, mini-farms, 3D printers and much more will be supplied to educational institutions. This was reported by the capital’s Department of Education and Science.
“The large-scale modernization program “My School” is ongoing in Moscow. This year, another 51 renovated buildings will open, where more than 35 thousand children will study. At the same time, not only the infrastructure and appearance of the buildings will change, but also their content. The schools will have modern equipment: 11 types of new educational equipment will be delivered, including laser engravers, CNC machines and digital microscopes,” the press service of the capital reported.
The capital’s schools, which will be updated by the beginning of the next school year, will have digital and stereoscopic microscopes that will allow studying microorganisms and cells. The learning process will become more visual, and children will develop an interest in biology and chemistry from an early age. Several such devices are already in School No. 1190, which opened after modernization in 2024. Using them, children conduct experiments, get acquainted with living organisms, and can even document their discoveries with photos and videos.
The updated buildings will also feature kits for assembling quadcopters and robots. In this way, children will master the basics of electronics, mechanics and programming. For example, they are already used by students of School No. 281, which was modernized last year. During lessons and additional classes, children learn the basics of programming, prototyping and 3D modeling, as well as develop logical thinking and learn to solve technical problems. Schoolchildren not only assemble robots, but also program them.
The guys who are interested in engineering will use laser cutting and engraving machines, as well as 3D printers and scanners. With their help, schoolchildren will create three-dimensional models and work with various materials, such as wood, plastic, fabric and fiberglass. This will help develop spatial thinking and creativity, and will also introduce young Muscovites to modern technologies that are used in industry and design.
“After modernization, our school got a laser engraver and a CNC milling machine. Thanks to them, kids learn to create products from wood, plastic and steel in technology classes. Children’s imagination is limitless, and such equipment is best suited for implementing the most original ideas. My students create plywood boxes, other three-dimensional objects, souvenirs and crafts,” said Maria Kuznetsova, a technology teacher at School No. 281.
To make biology lessons even more interesting, mini-greenhouses will be installed in classrooms, allowing flowers to be grown both traditionally and without soil. Students will be able to observe plant growth, analyze the influence of various factors on their development, and conduct their own research. With the help of digital geography laboratories, children will study the atmosphere, soil, water environment, and climate processes. For example, they will be able to measure humidity levels, air temperature, and other parameters.
The implementation of the largest modernization project in the history of the capital, “My School”, began in 2024. As part of the Moscow Mayor’s program, school spaces are being updated: they are becoming more modern and functional. Work has already been completed in four buildings. These are schools No. 1514 on Akademika Chelomeya Street (building 6a), No. 1190 on Pyatnitskoye Shosse (building 25, building 3), No. 281 on Kominterna Street (building 4, building 1) and No. 37 on Michurinsky Prospekt (building 42). The city plans to update up to 100 educational buildings annually.
Providing schools with modern high-tech equipment helps to optimize the educational process and meets the objectives of the project “All the best for children” of the national project “Youth and Children”.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
In 2024, more than 4.5 thousand trees were planted on 24 major Moscow highways. Almost the same amount of work is planned for this year. One of the main greening sites will be Leninsky Prospekt, said Sergei Sobyanin in his blog.
“Green walls of trees protect city residents from dust and noise coming from the roadway. Large spreading lindens and elms, apple and bird cherry trees, oaks and birches give a unique charm to any, even the most ordinary street. That is why we are actively landscaping the outbound highways and other major streets of Moscow, where until recently there was a clear lack of greenery,” the Moscow Mayor noted.
The straight and wide Leninsky Prospekt stretches for 14 kilometers — from the Garden Ring to the Moscow Ring Road (MKAD). It is quite difficult to green it in one year. In addition, the metro is currently being built in the middle part of the highway. Nevertheless, from 2021 to 2023, almost 1.6 thousand trees were planted on Leninsky Prospekt, mainly in areas closer to the MKAD.
In 2025, they plan to carry out comprehensive landscaping of the historical part of Leninsky Prospekt — between the Garden Ring and Gagarin Square, where over 400 trees will be planted. Most of them will appear on wide sidewalks and create a green wall between the roadway and the facades of residential buildings. Some of the trees will decorate Kaluga Square and Gagarin Square, which will become more comfortable thanks to this.
“For Leninsky Prospekt, we chose mature trees aged 20–35 years, four to eight meters high: linden trees “Pallida” and elms “Novy Gorizont”. They adapt perfectly to the peculiarities of the Moscow climate: they steadfastly endure harsh winters and hot summers, and are resistant to strong winds,” Sergei Sobyanin emphasized.
Planting work began about two weeks ago. You will be able to admire the result quite soon.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
Since 2020, almost 80 schools and kindergartens have been built in the Novomoskovsky Administrative District using budgetary and extra-budgetary funds. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Urban Development Policy and Construction Vladimir Efimov.
“Over the past five years, 79 educational facilities have been built in the Novomoskovsky Administrative District using budgetary and extra-budgetary funds, 62 of which were built by developers. The total area of all the buildings constructed is about 700 thousand square meters. They have created more than 12.2 thousand preschools and over 27.6 thousand school places. In 2024 alone, seven kindergartens and the same number of schools were built in this district. Among them are four large schools, each designed for more than a thousand students,” Vladimir Efimov noted.
Comfortable conditions for learning and development are created in new schools and kindergartens. Safe materials are used for finishing the premises in modern buildings, and bright color solutions are used in architecture.
“The city strives for harmonious development, therefore educational facilities are being built next to new residential buildings. Thus, last year a school for 1.2 thousand students appeared in the Shcherbinka district. The total area of the building was 18.2 thousand square meters. It was equipped with universal and specialized classrooms, laboratory and research complexes, robot classes, sports and assembly halls. A stadium with a mini-football field, universal courts for basketball and volleyball, and a long jump area was built on the adjacent territory,” said the Minister of the Moscow Government, Head of the Moscow Department of Urban Development Policy
Earlier, Sergei Sobyanin said that since 2011, 1,118 social infrastructure facilities have been built in Moscow, including 648 schools and kindergartens.
The construction of social facilities in the capital corresponds to the goals and initiatives of the national project “Infrastructure for life”.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
Street lighting and architectural and artistic illumination in the capital have been switched to summer mode, reported the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Housing and Public Utilities and Improvement Petr Biryukov.
“The daylight hours are increasing, so we have made the necessary changes to the schedule of the city’s outdoor lighting. Street lighting and architectural and artistic lighting of buildings have been switched to summer mode – now they are turned on later and turned off earlier,” said Pyotr Biryukov.
The specialists of the network control center of JSC United Energy Company are guided by the level of natural light and the established schedule. Sensors record the light flux in real time and, when a certain threshold is reached, send a corresponding signal. At the same time, in some cases, for example in cloudy weather, dispatchers can adjust the schedule, turning on the lighting earlier.
Architectural and artistic lighting is turned on simultaneously with outdoor lighting, but is turned off gradually: at 23:00 – on residential buildings, at 00:00 – on administrative buildings, at 01:00 – at the entrances to the metro, and at 03:00 – on bridges in the center of the capital.
Petr Biryukov emphasized that over the past 13 years, the level of illumination in Moscow has doubled, and the number of buildings with illumination has quadrupled. There are more than a million lamps in operation in the city, and thanks to the use of energy-saving technologies, electricity consumption is reduced.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering – Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering – Creating a digital twin of a highway
On March 13, the hackathon of the Automobile and Road Faculty “Transport and Logistics” was held at SPbGASU. Students of St. Petersburg School No. 625 with advanced study of mathematics named after Hero of the Russian Federation V. E. Dudkin took part in it. Together with the ADF, the admissions committee of our university organized the hackathon.
“This is a career guidance event. We wanted to show the kids what professions there are and what problems ordinary representatives of these professions solve. We also wanted to show that physics and mathematics are not just abstract subjects. An engineer needs to know them in order to apply them in his work to solve typical problems,” explained ADF Dean Andrey Zazykin.
The hackathon participants united into four project teams, each of which received its own technical task. Having familiarized themselves with the workplace, materials and equipment, having undergone safety training, the guys, under the guidance of mentors – teachers and students of the Automobile and Road Engineering Faculty, began generating ideas and creating prototypes.
One of the teams created a prototype of an AGV cart. This is an unmanned transport platform that provides automated transportation of goods around the warehouse. The guys assembled a cart platform for moving goods, created, tested and calibrated a program in the Trik Studio software, and showed the robot in action. The work was supervised by fourth-year undergraduate students of the ADF Daniil Parfeni and Mark Druzhinin.
Another team, led by the head of the department of technical operation of vehicles Igor Chernyaev, developed a planning solution for a fleet of electric buses. To do this, they needed the ability to analyze and 3D modeling skills. The guys got the initial data for the calculations from textbooks, tables, and characteristics of electric buses.
Another team’s task was to implement the Digital Twin technology on the streets of St. Petersburg. The schoolchildren created a digital twin of a road – a high-precision digital map of the route, which collects data on the condition of the road and traffic on it in real time. The guys worked in domestic software under the guidance of Yana Goncharova, an assistant at the Department of Transport Systems and Road and Bridge Construction, and Elena Sorokina, a senior lecturer at this department.
A team of schoolchildren determines effective methods for interaction between earthmoving and transport machines and the working environment
The fourth team identified effective methods of interaction between earthmoving and transport machines and the working environment. To do this, they conducted a series of experiments with changing the angle of the bucket under the guidance of senior lecturer of the Department of Ground Transport and Technological Machines Igor Vorozheikin.
Young researchers prepared presentations of their projects and spoke to members of the expert jury, which, together with Andrey Zazykin, included the head of the department of land-transport technological machines Elena Kurakina and associate professor of the department of transport systems and road and bridge construction Egor Golov. The jury assessed how well the pre-project analysis was carried out, the rationale for the chosen solution, the achievement of the set goals (teamwork, obtaining a result in accordance with the project goals), the logical structure, the clarity and design of the presentation, the team’s performance, and the completeness of the topic. All four teams received diplomas and gifts.
We asked guests to share their impressions of the hackathon and the university.
Elena Popova, Deputy Director of School No. 625 for Educational and Training Work, noted: “The children’s interest in this practice-oriented event is very high. They gain new knowledge, make something with their own hands, and then systematize and present the results of their work.”
“The event was very interesting, and the tasks were not easy. The mentor helped us, explained, gave ideas. And the team tried, everyone wanted to win. It was an interesting experience,” said tenth-grader Arseniy Bryukhov.
“I like the university: this is not my first time here, it’s like coming home. The people here are friendly, they will always tell you, give you advice, explain. It’s cozy, warm, homey,” shared 11th grade student Ekaterina Nikiforova.
Andrey Zazykin reported on plans to create a specialized class at school No. 625. Currently, the only motor transport class in our city is being implemented by SPbGASU at school No. 334. Its students receive knowledge in robotics, information technology, car repair, organization of passenger and freight transportation, and ensuring road safety.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
The IV Moscow Fashion Week is ending in the Central Exhibition Hall “Manezh”, which brought together Russian and foreign designers, students of specialized universities and other representatives of the industry. During the event, a professional showroom was opened, a market of Russian designers was held, and fashion shows took place.
This is an important event not only in the fashion industry, but also in the cultural life of the city: the week also included the World Fashion Shorts short film festival and an extensive educational program.
Member of the Moscow Fashion Week expert council, president of the Russian Association of Fashion Industry Participants Tatyana Belkevich noted that this time the designers approached participation with a greater understanding of the expert group’s requirements. This was facilitated by the holding of thematic lectures and the experience of past fashion weeks, where the current participants gained a lot of useful knowledge and understood how to properly present their brands on the catwalk.
“Now we can safely say that we have an industry not just of clothing and fashion production, which is tuned to the end consumer, but also a design industry. This is very clearly visible and can be seen in many collections. Those brands that were just starting out last fashion week have shown themselves very well this season. Experience is growing enormously. The demand for Russian brands is also growing. According to research, in 2024, 73 percent of consumers chose Russian brands with both their hearts and wallets,” said Tatyana Belkevich.
One of the participants of the opening of the IV Moscow Fashion Week was the brand of designer Igor Andreev. In the new collection, he focused on the modern Russian style, demonstrating a commitment to the folk, original and local. The public was presented with many knitted whole products or elements built into images. The podium itself was decorated with structures in the form of Russian window frames.
“Young designers are very actively exploiting the Russian cultural code in their works,” added Tatyana Belkevich. “This is wonderful, because it is really in our blood and it should be used. Famous designers, of course, also use ethnicity, some elements of the cultural code in their collections, but very carefully, very precisely, not like the youth, who have not yet taken flight and really want to make accents.”
Every year, lectures popularizing the Russian fashion industry and talking about the interaction of domestic designers, artists, models and industry specialists with great fashion houses are held as part of the fashion week. According to the curator of the Moscow Fashion Week lecture hall, fashion expert Anna Rykova, the lectures are designed for a wide range of listeners with the aim of popularizing the topic of fashion. Experts talk about the industry as a whole – as a large cultural layer not only in Russia, but also in the world, about how fashion influences people’s tastes and preferences, how it shapes business, reflects cultural, political and economic events, and reacts to various changes. The program includes lectures on the mark that domestic designers and artists have left on world fashion, national costumes and crafts.
“I think that Moscow has probably acquired its own stylistic face recently. Moscow remains less a city associated with strong luxury and more with individuality. It is generally accepted that we have a capital and a cultural capital, St. Petersburg. I think that any capital is cultural and directly connected with fashion. Fashion is connected with culture, culture is connected with fashion – these are two components that are absolutely impossible to separate at the moment. Therefore, culture is fashionable,” says Anna Rykova.
More than 180 brands (including over 100 from the capital) from 27 regions of Russia, including Moscow, Ivanovo, Leningrad, Nizhny Novgorod, Tambov and Tyumen regions, Krasnodar and Primorsky Krai, the republics of Buryatia, Dagestan, Komi, Sakha (Yakutia) and Tatarstan, are taking part in Moscow Fashion Week. Designers from China, Indonesia, South Africa, Turkey, India and other countries are also presenting their collections to a wide audience.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –
Resettlement under the renovation program affected 95 districts of the capital. Residents of old houses are moving to new modern apartments. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Urban Development Policy and Construction Vladimir Efimov.
“Resettlement under the renovation program has already affected over 203 thousand residents from more than 1.2 thousand old houses in 95 districts of the capital. In seven of them, Muscovites were offered comfortable housing for the first time last year. The city then sent the corresponding letters to citizens from the Ostankinsky, Altufevsky, Meshchansky, Levoberezhny, Sokolinaya Gora districts, as well as Bekasovo and Voronovo. About five thousand people have started resettling in these districts in a year,” Vladimir Efimov noted.
Since the renovation program began, the first to move were residents of two buildings in Severnoye Izmailovo. They received offers of equivalent apartments in February 2018. By the end of that year, the renovation program affected 15 districts, and now their number has increased more than sixfold.
“In the Lyublino district, about 9.9 thousand people from 51 houses have begun resettlement. In Severnoye Izmailovo, almost 7.8 thousand city residents from 41 old buildings received offers of new apartments, in the Mozhaisk district – more than 4.4 thousand people from 31 houses,” said the Minister of the Moscow Government, Head of the Department of City Property
The houses that were resettled under the renovation program are being dismantled. New buildings with accompanying infrastructure are being erected on the vacated sites.
As of today, in the Lyublino district, residents of 35 old houses have moved into new apartments under the renovation program, clarified the Minister of the Moscow Government, Head of the Department of Urban Development Policy Vladislav OvchinskyAccording to him, 29 houses in Severnoye Izmailovo and Mozhaisk district have been resettled, their residents have already celebrated housewarming in modern residential complexes. Apartments under the renovation program are handed over for occupancy with a ready-made improved finish, which allows residents to move into them immediately, without wasting time on additional repairs.
Previously Sergei Sobyanin said on the implementation of the renovation program in the Eastern Administrative District.
The renovation program was approved in August 2017. It concerns about a million Muscovites and provides for the resettlement of 5,176 houses. Earlier, Sergei Sobyanin ordered to increasethe pace of implementation of the renovation program has doubled.
Moscow is one of the leaders among regions in terms of construction volumes. High rates of housing construction correspond to the goals and initiatives of the national project “Infrastructure for life”.
Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.
Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect
MISSISSAUGA, Ontario, March 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Mike Matthews, Executive Vice President of Asset Strategy and Operations at Alectra Utilities, has been awarded the esteemed “Chair’s Citation Award” by the Electricity Distributors Association (EDA). This award recognizes Mike’s outstanding leadership, dedication and contributions to Ontario’s electricity sector over his 35-year career.
Presented in memory of Dr. Robert H. Hay, the “Chair’s Citation Award” acknowledges individuals who have demonstrated exceptional service to the EDA and the electricity industry. Mike was celebrated for his commitment to advancing grid modernization, fostering industry collaboration, and driving innovation.
“Mike has been influential in shaping the evolution of Ontario’s electricity industry,” said Brian Bentz, President and Chief Executive Officer, Alectra Inc. “His leadership, technical expertise, and dedication to strengthening our grid have not only benefited Alectra but have also helped drive meaningful progress across the sector. This recognition is well deserved and we congratulate Mike on this outstanding achievement.”
Throughout his career, Mike has played a key role in major industry milestones, including the creation of Alectra Utilities in 2017 through the merger of five utilities. Over eight years at Alectra, he provided meaningful leadership in capital planning, grid modernization and developing Alectra’s distribution system plan – a cornerstone of the company’s future cost-of-service rate applications.
Mike has also made significant contributions to the EDA, serving on the Board of Directors and as Chair of the Upper Canada District Executive. His leadership as Chair of the EDIST Organizing Committee from 2015 to 2022 helped shape one of the industry’s most important technical conferences, fostering dialogue on emerging technologies and best practices.
Beyond his professional accomplishments, Mike has been a dedicated community leader, volunteering for 17 years with the Markham Waxers Minor Hockey Association. His passion for mentorship and community service has positively impacted young athletes and families in the region.
“I am deeply honoured to receive this award from the EDA,” said Mike Matthews, Executive Vice President of Asset Strategy and Operations, Alectra Utilities. “Throughout my career, I’ve had the privilege of working with incredible colleagues, partners and industry leaders. This recognition reflects the collective efforts of so many dedicated individuals working to advance our industry.”
Alectra congratulates Mike Matthews for his contributions in shaping the future of the energy sector.
About Alectra Inc. Family of Companies
Serving more than one million homes and businesses in Ontario’s Greater Golden Horseshoe area, Alectra Utilities is now the largest municipally-owned electric utility in Canada, based on the total number of customers served. We contribute to the economic growth and vibrancy of the 17 communities we serve by investing in essential energy infrastructure, delivering a safe and reliable supply of electricity, and providing innovative energy solutions.