Category: KB

  • MIL-OSI USA: Hoeven Statement on Confirmation of Scott Bessent as Secretary of the Treasury

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for North Dakota John Hoeven
    01.27.25
    WASHINGTON – Senator John Hoeven issued the following statement after the U.S. Senate confirmed Scott Bessent to serve as Secretary of the U.S. Department of the Treasury.
    “Scott Bessent has the skills and experience necessary to lead the Treasury Department. We look forward to working with Secretary Bessent and President Trump to extend the tax cuts for American families and businesses, tackle inflation, grow our economy and get our nation’s fiscal house in order.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI China: Harbin Ice-Snow World receives more than 2 million visitors in over one month

    Source: People’s Republic of China – State Council News

    Harbin Ice-Snow World receives more than 2 million visitors in over one month

    Updated: January 28, 2025 08:23 Xinhua
    People visit the Harbin Ice-Snow World in Harbin, northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province, Jan. 23, 2025. As of 10 p.m. Sunday, the bustling Harbin Ice-Snow World had received more than 2 million visitors since it opened on Dec. 21, 2024. As the city’s iconic landmark, the Harbin Ice-Snow World, with this year’s edition, the largest in its history, boasts 1 million square meters, up from last year’s 800,000 square meters. More than 300,000 cubic meters of ice and snow were used in its construction. [Photo/Xinhua]
    People experience ice slide at the Harbin Ice-Snow World in Harbin, northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province, Jan. 23, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Jan. 23, 2025 shows a night view of Harbin Ice-Snow World in Harbin, northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province. [Photo/Xinhua]
    A tourist poses for photos at the Harbin Ice-Snow World in Harbin, northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province, Jan. 23, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    Tourists take selfies at the Harbin Ice-Snow World in Harbin, northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province, Jan. 23, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    People visit the Harbin Ice-Snow World in Harbin, northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province, Jan. 23, 2025. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Jan. 23, 2025 shows a night view of Harbin Ice-Snow World in Harbin, northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province. [Photo/Xinhua]
    An aerial drone photo taken on Jan. 26, 2025 shows a night view of Harbin Ice-Snow World in Harbin, northeast China’s Heilongjiang Province. [Photo/Xinhua]

    MIL OSI China News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: PM emphasises importance of growth in 2025

    Source: New Zealand Government

    For the Government, 2025 will bring a relentless focus on unleashing the growth we need to lift incomes, strengthen local businesses and create opportunity.
    Prime Minister Christopher Luxon today laid out the Government’s growth agenda in his Statement to Parliament.
    “Just over a year ago this Government was elected by the people of New Zealand with a mandate to change course. Since then, we have made big changes and we are seeing promising signs of success, with inflation dropping and remaining low, interest rates starting to fall, and wages continuing to rise,” Mr Luxon says.
    “Business and consumer confidence is rising and average mortgage interest rates have now fallen for the first time in more than three years. Wages are rising faster than inflation, supporting a recovery in household incomes. Growth is also expected to resume, reaching 2.1 per cent in 2025 according to Treasury’s latest forecasts in the Half Year Economic and Fiscal Update. 
    “We need to act now to strengthen growth and productivity – both in the very near term and over the years to come.
    “In 2025, we will take action to end the culture of no – whether that’s through Fast Track, comprehensive RMA reform, rewriting our health and safety laws, enabling more mining, allowing our farmers to grow their businesses with much less red tape, or other changes designed to promote more growth and investment. 
    “In this Government’s first year in office we made tough decisions to ease the cost of living and laid the foundations for a stronger economy, rising incomes and more opportunities for New Zealanders to get ahead. 
    “This year we will continue to build on this early progress to make sure these green shoots of recovery grow into lasting improvements that benefit all New Zealanders,” Mr Luxon says.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: 19-2025: Further Information Regarding Changes to Import Conditions for New and Aged/Used Oversize Tyres

    Source: Australia Government Statements – Agriculture

    28 January 2025

    Who does this notice affect?

    This notice is of relevance to importers, manufacturers, customs brokers, agents and associated biosecurity industry participants involved in the importation of new and aged/used oversize tyres.

    What has changed?

    As per import industry advice notice…

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: 20-2025: Services Restored: Tuesday 28 January 2025 – BICON external website

    Source: Australia Government Statements – Agriculture

    28 January 2025

    Who does this notice affect?

    All clients required to use the department’s Biosecurity Import Conditions System (BICON) – external website.

    Information

    Between 10:06 and 10:53 on Tuesday 28 January 2025 (AEDT) the BICON external website was experiencing an unplanned outage.

    This issue has since been resolved, and BICON external website users can now access these services as normal.

    Action

    No action required. The department…

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-Evening Report: What’s the difference between a food allergy and an intolerance?

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Jennifer Koplin, Group Leader, Childhood Allergy & Epidemiology, The University of Queensland

    Feel good studio/Shutterstock

    At one time or another, you’ve probably come across someone who is lactose intolerant and might experience some unpleasant gut symptoms if they have dairy. Maybe it’s you – food intolerances are estimated to affect up to 25% of Australians.

    Meanwhile, cow’s milk allergy is one of the most common food allergies in infants and young children, affecting around one in 100 infants.

    But what’s the difference between food allergies and food intolerances? While they might seem alike, there are some fundamental differences between the two.

    What is an allergy?

    Australia has one of the highest rates of food allergies in the world. Food allergies can develop at any age but are more common in children, affecting more than 10% of one-year-olds and 6% of children at age ten.

    A food allergy happens when the body’s immune system mistakenly reacts to certain foods as if they were dangerous. The most common foods that trigger allergies include eggs, peanuts and other nuts, milk, shellfish, fish, soy and wheat.

    Mild to moderate signs of food allergy include a swollen face, lips or eyes; hives or welts on your skin; or vomiting. A severe allergic reaction (called anaphylaxis) can cause trouble breathing, persistent dizziness or collapse.

    What is an intolerance?

    Food intolerances (sometimes called non-allergic reactions) are also reactions to food, but they don’t involve your immune system.

    For example, lactose intolerance is a metabolic condition that happens when the body doesn’t produce enough lactase. This enzyme is needed to break down the lactose (a type of sugar) in dairy products.

    Food intolerances can also include reactions to natural chemicals in foods (such as salicylates, found in some fruits, vegetables, herbs and spices) and problems with artificial preservatives or flavour enhancers.

    Lactose intolerance is caused by a problem with breaking down lactose in milk.
    Pormezz/Shutterstock

    Symptoms of food intolerances can include an upset stomach, headaches and fatigue, among others.

    Food intolerances don’t cause life-threatening reactions (anaphylaxis) so are less dangerous than allergies in the short term, although they can cause problems in the longer term such as malnutrition.

    We don’t know a lot about how common food intolerances are, but they appear to be more commonly reported than allergies. They can develop at any age.

    It can be confusing

    Some foods, such as peanuts and tree nuts, are more often associated with allergy. Other foods or ingredients, such as caffeine, are more often associated with intolerance.

    Meanwhile, certain foods, such as cow’s milk and wheat or gluten (a protein found in wheat, rye and barley), can cause both allergic and non-allergic reactions in different people. But these reactions, even when they’re caused by the same foods, are quite different.

    For example, children with a cow’s milk allergy can react to very small amounts of milk, and serious reactions (such as throat swelling or difficulty breathing) can happen within minutes. Conversely, many people with lactose intolerance can tolerate small amounts of lactose without symptoms.

    There are other differences too. Cow’s milk allergy is more common in children, though many infants will grow out of this allergy during childhood.

    Lactose intolerance is more common in adults, but can also sometimes be temporary. One type of lactose intolerance, secondary lactase deficiency, can be caused by damage to the gut after infection or with medication use (such as antibiotics or cancer treatment). This can go away by itself when the underlying condition resolves or the person stops using the relevant medication.

    Whether an allergy or intolerance is likely to be lifelong depends on the food and the reason that the child or adult is reacting to it.

    Allergies to some foods, such as milk, egg, wheat and soy, often resolve during childhood, whereas allergies to nuts, fish or shellfish, often (but not always) persist into adulthood. We don’t know much about how likely children are to grow out of different types of food intolerances.

    How do you find out what’s wrong?

    If you think you may have a food allergy or intolerance, see a doctor.

    Allergy tests help doctors find out which foods might be causing your allergic reactions (but can’t diagnose food intolerances). There are two common types: skin prick tests and blood tests.

    In a skin prick test, doctors put tiny amounts of allergens (the things that can cause allergies) on your skin and make small pricks to see if your body reacts.

    A blood test checks for allergen-specific immunoglobulin E (IgE) antibodies in your blood that show if you might be allergic to a particular food.

    Blood tests can help diagnose allergies.
    RossHelen/Shutterstock

    Food intolerances can be tricky to figure out because the symptoms depend on what foods you eat and how much. To diagnose them, doctors look at your health history, and may do some tests (such as a breath test). They may ask you to keep a record of foods you eat and timing of symptoms.

    A temporary elimination diet, where you stop eating certain foods, can also help to work out which foods you might be intolerant to. But this should only be done with the help of a doctor or dietitian, because eliminating particular foods can lead to nutritional deficiencies, especially in children.

    Is there a cure?

    There’s currently no cure for food allergies or intolerances. For allergies in particular, it’s important to strictly avoid allergens. This means reading food labels carefully and being vigilant when eating out.

    However, researchers are studying a treatment called oral immunotherapy, which may help some people with food allergies become less sensitive to certain foods.

    Whether you have a food allergy or intolerance, your doctor or dietitian can help you to make sure you’re eating the right foods.

    Victoria Gibson, a Higher Degree by Research student and Research Officer at the School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work at the University of Queensland, and Rani Scott-Farmer, a Senior Research Assistant at the University of Queensland, contributed to this article.

    Jennifer Koplin receives funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. She is a member of the Executive Committee for the National Allergy Centre of Excellence (NACE), which is supported by funding from the Australian government. She was a named investigator on a grant from Sanofi Regeneron for unrelated research and has received a research award from the Stallergenes Greer Foundation.

    Desalegn Markos Shifti is supported by a Postdoctoral Fellowship funded through the Centre for Food Allergy Research Centre of Research Excellence.

    ref. What’s the difference between a food allergy and an intolerance? – https://theconversation.com/whats-the-difference-between-a-food-allergy-and-an-intolerance-243685

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Tax Issues – Overwhelming support for Capital Gains Tax welcomed – TJA

    Source: Tax Justice Aotearoa (TJA)

    28 January 2025 – A new survey showing strong support for a capital gains tax among workers has been welcomed by Tax Justice Aotearoa (TJA).

    TJA chair Glenn Barclay said the latest Council of Trade Unions (CTU) Te Kauae Kaimahi Mood of the Workforce survey showed almost 90 per cent of respondents were in favour of a capital gains tax.

    “We welcome this result, which shows almost universal support for a capital gains tax among workers,” Mr Barclay said.

    The CTU survey asked  “Should a greater share of public services such as health and education be paid for by taxing non-income profit via a capital gains tax?” – with 87.7% answering in favour.

    “It supports what we know from public surveys held last year – and shows support is growing, with our own survey in 2023 finding 62 per cent of respondents thought all income should be taxed the same way, regardless of how it is earned.

    “A capital gains tax is now widely accepted as the tax we need to have, because we are so far out of step with the rest of the developed world when it comes to taxing capital gains.

    “Aotearoa is an outlier internationally, in that we do not tax capital gains in a comprehensive way – and this latest survey shows it’s no longer a political taboo.

    “However, a capital gains tax is not the silver bullet for our unfair and unjust tax system.

    “There are other options – such as wealth tax and excess profits taxes – that Aotearoa needs to consider in order to adequately fund public services, including health and education – and to help address inequality and challenges arising from climate change.”

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Minns Government moves to ban gambling advertising from trains

    Source: New South Wales Government 2

    Headline: Minns Government moves to ban gambling advertising from trains

    Published: 28 January 2025

    Released by: Minister for Gaming and Racing, Minister for Transport


    The Minns Government has moved to ban gambling advertising on public transport in NSW.

    The prohibition applies to Transport owned and controlled assets, including internal and external advertising on trains, metro, buses, light rail, train stations, and ferry terminals.

    Transport operates one of the largest portfolios of advertising assets across Australia. This includes 798 advertising boards at Sydney train stations, 49 road facing digital billboards, adverts on up to 3,711 urban buses, 76 trams and across the Tangara train fleet.

    The ban extends to all casino, lottery, and online betting advertising

    The NSW Government will now work with multiple advertising contract holders to implement the required changes over the next 12 months.

    Transport’s advertising suppliers must ensure that all advertising material complies with all applicable laws, accepted industry standards and codes of conduct established by the advertising industry for example, the Australian Association of National Advertisers (AANA) Advertiser Code of Ethics and AANA Code of Ethics Practice Note.

    There are also additional rules that apply to Transport’s contract holders. These include a ban on political advertising on all assets, which applies equally to all political parties. 

    Where assets are not owned by Transport (e.g. bus stops, retail outlets or nearby private property), the NSW Government will work with the relevant entitles to see how their advertising can align with the gambling advertising ban.

    This is the latest in a suite of reforms introduced by the Minns Labor Government to reduce gambling harm. The reforms include:

    • reducing the statewide gaming machine entitlement cap in June 2023
    • banning political donations from clubs with electronic gaming machines on 1 July 2023
    • reducing the cash input limit on new gaming machines from $5,000 to $500 on 1 July 2023
    • banning all external gambling signage in venues on 1 September 2023
    • banning the placement of any signage or advertising relating to gaming machines either on, or visible from an ATM or EFTPOS terminal with cash withdrawal facilities and introduced Responsible Gambling Officers for venues with more than 20 machine entitlements, on 1 July 2024
    • requiring Automatic Teller Machines (ATMs) or EFTPOS terminals that allow cash withdrawals to be  placed at least 5m from the entry to a gaming room and not be visible from any machine or entry to a gaming room, from 1 January 2025
    • established an Independent Panel to conduct a trial of cashless gaming in pubs and clubs throughout 2024
    • committing $100 million to harm minimisation – investing in research, treatment, services and reform.

    Minister for Transport Jo Haylen said:

    “Gambling advertising has been a common sight on our public transport for a couple of years now, and I’m pleased our Government is taking action to remove it.  Parents are rightly worried about the impact it has on their kids, so its not something that we think that needs to be on our transport network.”

    “With over 3,500 buses, close to 800 advertising assets at train stations, as well as advertising on light rail and trains, Transport’s advertising contracts are vast. Because of the scale it will take some time to implement this change, but we will be working closely with our contract partners over the next 12 months to get this done.”

    Minister for Gaming and Racing David Harris said:

    “Removing gambling advertising from public transport is another demonstration of the Minns Labor Government’s commitment to reducing gambling harm in NSW.

    “This move will reduce the public’s exposure to gambling advertising and builds on the suite of reforms the government has introduced over the past 20 months to reduce harmful impacts of gambling.”

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: Roadmap needed to navigate the edtech landscape

    Source: Australian Education Union

    28 January 2025

    The burgeoning national edtech market must be built around high-quality resources to establish a resilient baseline for the rapid infiltration of digital resources and learning applications, say Professor Leslie Loble AM and Dr Kelly Stephens, from University of Technology (UTS) Sydney Centre for Social Justice and Inclusion.

    Loble and Stephens are the authors of a new research paper, Towards high quality in Australian educational technology, which raises concerns about the dark side of artificial intelligence (AI), including data sovereignty and safety, equity and inclusion, inherent bias, and commercial interests.

    The paper addresses concerns about public school resourcing and teacher workloads, roles and relationships with students, and generative artificial intelligence (GenAI), which is capable of mimicking human content, ideas and data, adds a layer of complexity.

    Despite the rapid growth of the market and the proliferating number of publicly available edtech apps, which number around 500,000 on Apple and Google, with more still marketed directly to schools, there is “no independent, comprehensive source of information about the quality of digitally enabled education resources in Australia”, the paper says.

    “Schools, teachers, students and their parents can find themselves having to navigate a confusing market without the time, information, or technical expertise they need to answer critical questions like:

    • -Are these tools aligned to the Australian curriculum (or local variants) and to evidence-backed approaches to teaching and learning?
    • -Are they designed to benefit the full range of learners?
    • -Who owns the data and what does that mean for data sovereignty and safety?
    • -Is there evidence that they work, and for whom?

    “In worst-case scenarios, edtech is not only ineffectual, but dangerous,” the paper says.

    Stephens says robust quality assurance (QA) can alleviate burden from teachers and schools, who should not have responsibility for making detailed and sometimes technical judgements about
    a resource’s fitness for purpose.

    The need for GenAI literacy and training for leaders, teachers, support staff, students, parents, guardians and policymakers was among the 25 recommendations of a federal parliamentary committee report, Study buddy or influencer, released in September.

    GenAI “presents exciting opportunities and yet high-stakes risks for the Australian education system”, the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Employment, Education and Training acknowledged following its inquiry into the use of GenAI.

    The recommendations included providing funding to set up virtual and physical hubs to provide expert and technical advice and support to institutions, regulating edtech companies and developers through a system-wide risks-based legal framework, and expediting the implementation of the Australian Framework for GenAI in Schools (released in January).

    Loble was an expert advisory panel member for the inquiry and is Chair of the Australian Network for Quality Digital Education (ANQDE), a cross-industry leadership group.

    “The good news is that the recommendations are substantively aligned with our QA report, and the committee has specifically called out the need to address the digital and educational divide, as well as safety and security,” she says.

    “They recognise the existing risks of these tools, which we need to mitigate, but also the risk of doing nothing – we need to be alert to both to avoid worsening Australia’s learning divide.”

    Quality assurance can support systems by providing a national process and avoiding unnecessary duplication of effort by states and territories. But states would still be able to “run their own ruler over a resource” if they wanted to assure themselves of alignment with any particular state-based criteria.

    “National quality standards mean this would be a less resource-intensive process if all the fundamentals have already been assessed,” she says.

    NSW Teachers Federation deputy president Amber Flohm agrees it would be “untenable to simply assume that school leaders, teachers and support staff possess the technical expertise, time, and resources to manage these risks on their own”.

    “Sufficient and effective regulation and scrutiny by education systems and government is the only way to ensure educational integrity, privacy and ethical concerns are balanced against commercial interests as the use of edtech and generative artificial intelligence becomes more widespread,” Flohm says.

    From trial to tool

    From Term 4, public teachers in NSW will have access to the department of education’s endorsed NSWEduChat GenAI tool, initially trialled for students in response to statewide bans on ChatGPT last year.

    The department says the trials, conducted in 50 schools, showed the tool could save time by producing student resources and automating administrative tasks, “giving teachers more time to focus on personalised learning and student interactions”.

    “NSWEduChat does not replace the valuable work of our teachers, it helps them to save time, tailor their resources, and focus on their critical work in the classroom,” says education minister Prue Car.

    Flohm says NSWEduChat was initially designed to assist with student tasks such as essay writing, and collect data on equity and data privacy, but cautions against the de-professionalisation of teachers.

    “When it comes to professional tools for teacher use, available technology should not determine what the solution is and then work back to the problem. Rather teachers should work out what they want AI to do to support their work,” she says.

    “The capacity of GenAI to create immediate lesson plans is obvious, and no doubt attractive to a time-poor profession. However, understanding how syllabus, curriculum and the associated pedagogies interact to benefit the growth of students’ knowledge and skills is the core of teachers’ intellectual labour, and this must never be reduced or outsourced to technology.”

    Testing the tools

    Though work is being done at all levels, national standards are needed, and teachers must be brought in to help with evaluation. They will need to ensure GenAI tools align with their schools’ needs, including student literacy and learning levels and backgrounds, and that teacher knowledge and skill is used to turn data into effective classroom practice.

    Dr Kelly Stephens says there is “currently nothing in the way of national standards, apart from ESA’s Safe Technology for Schools program, recently updated for GenAI”.

    She says evaluation is benefiting from reviews across diverse fields, including by teachers, edtech and learning media experts, child development scholars, instructional designers, K-12 subject matter experts, and school technology leaders.

    “Our consultations with teachers have suggested that rather than diminishing the importance of teacher professionalism, edtech highlights it.

    “This might include using an online curriculum application to help cater to a very broad range of learning levels in a classroom and rely on their breadth and depth of subject expertise to provide point-in-time support and monitoring of student progress,” says Stephens.

    “Or using generative image software to improve engagement with school and learning, build digital literacy and super-charge English language acquisition by recent migrants and refugees.”

    Equity and inclusion must remain a significant priority in the evaluation process, particularly as GenAI has the potential to increase disadvantage through cost, literacy and digital access.

    “If we drop our guard on this, there is every chance that better resourced students, families, schools and systems will be better equipped to assess, explore, and benefit from existing and emerging digital tools,” says Stephens.

    “This absolutely requires adequate and equitable resourcing at the school level. It also invites governments to consider how best to use other levers at their disposal, to bend the market toward equity, such as quality standards and procurement processes.”

    Statewide challenges

    AEU Victorian Branch vice president, secondary, Marino D’Ortenzio warns that despite the national framework for GenAI, there are different views on its use and implementation between jurisdictions in Australia. “For example, in NSW AI is permitted to be used to create newsletters, whereas in Victoria this is explicitly forbidden in the Victorian government school system policy.”

    D’Ortenzio says that as GenAI and machine learning systems become ubiquitous, system-wide training will be vital to prepare staff adequately and schools must be given the means to analyse impact on teacher workload.

    “We recognise that GenAI is here and, that students and teachers are using it. This means our approaches to learning tasks have already begun to alter. Teachers must be at the centre of decisions relating to AI and pedagogy in schools as it expands in its scope and use,” he says.

    “We know of schools that are changing the way they approach tasks to ensure that GenAI does not give students who use it an advantage. Some are returning to hand-written assessment pieces. Others are setting tasks that assume GenAI is going to be used, by getting students to identify how they might ask a GenAI model to produce a result, and then analysing the result to examine where they are flawed.

    “The department of education and training must be accountable for the implementation, use and decisions of GenAI in schools. This accountability should be set out in clear, publicly available guidelines for schools and their communities.”

    D’Ortenzio also says commercial businesses who see an opportunity for profit making must be deprioritised behind educational programs, pedagogical models, student development and student achievement.

    Ad-hoc regulation

    Use of AI technology in Queensland remains ad-hoc and regulation of platforms and guidelines for digital technology have not kept pace with change, says Queensland Teachers’ Union honorary vice president Josh Cleary.

    “There is an urgent need for the profession to adopt a decision-making framework and ensure there is industrial consultation that addresses the full suite of legal, professional and educational issues,” he says.

    When the Queensland Department of Education began consultation in 2020 it assumed teachers would familiarise themselves with new digital technologies outside of working hours.

    “The QTU successfully negotiated an allocation of additional funds for the purpose of releasing teachers to undertake training. The rollout of the professional training was not perfect, but the approach to consultation between the parties has significantly improved,” he says.

    Excessive data entry and unreasonable quantities of email are two common examples of work intensification that detract from teachers’ time to plan, implement, and evaluate effective teaching and learning practices, and the use of AI has so far added to teacher workloads rather than allow teachers to focus on what they do best: teaching students.

    “A future-focused pedagogy might use GenAI technology as a platform, but classrooms should not become subordinate to technology’s use. Teachers must be given training to help them ensure students learn to maintain a critical awareness of information and make discerning choices about the use of GenAI,” Cleary says.

    This article was originally published in the Australian Educator, Summer 2024

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Lexington Man Sentenced for for Trafficking in Fentanyl and Carfentanil

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

     

    LEXINGTON, Ky. – A Lexington man, Eugene Laron Fishback, 32, was sentenced on Monday, by U.S. District Chief Judge Danny C. Reeves, to 40 years in prison, for five counts of drug trafficking.

    In June 2024, following a four-day trial and approximately 90 minutes of deliberation, the jury found Fishback guilty of conspiracy to distribute 400 grams or more of fentanyl and 10 grams or more of carfentanil.  Fishback was also convicted of two counts of possession with intent to distribute fentanyl and carfentanil, and two counts of possession with intent to distribute fentanyl.

    According to testimony at trial, between July 1, 2022 and December 7, 2023, Fishback conspired with others to distribute fentanyl and carfentanil.  On October 11, 2023, Fishback and his girlfriend, Tedi Hawkins, were evicted from their Lexington apartment.  During a court ordered eviction, Fayette County Constables and members of the Lexington Police Department found plastic bags in the apartment, which contained over 7,000 fentanyl tablets, and four semi-automatic pistols, ammunition, and large capacity clips.  Fishback and Hawkins later relocated to another apartment complex and came under DEA and Lexington Police Department investigation.

    A federal search warrant was executed on the new residence, in December 2023.  Execution of that warrant resulted in the seizure of more than 1,000 additional fentanyl tablets and a quantity of carfentanil.  Fishback was later arrested from his vehicle, which contained another 1,000 fentanyl tablets and more than 10 grams of carfentanil.   

    After Hawkins had entered a guilty plea, Fishback attempted to convince her to withdraw that guilty plea, during a recorded jail call.

    At the time of his indictment on these federal charges, Fishback had four pending state felony indictments in Fayette County. Additionally, Fishback has a number of prior felony convictions.

    Under federal law, Fishback must serve 85 percent of his prison sentence.  Upon Fishback’s release from prison, he will be under the supervision of the U.S. Probation Office for five years. 

    Carlton S. Shier, IV, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Kentucky; Jim Scott, Special Agent in Charge, DEA, Louisville Field Division; Phillip J. Burnett, Jr., Commissioner of the Kentucky State Police; and Chief Lawrence Weathers, Lexington Police Department, jointly announced the sentence.

    The investigation was conducted by DEA, KSP, and Lexington Police Department, with assistance from the Fayette County Constable’s Office Third District. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Roger West and Brittany Baker are prosecuting the case on behalf of the United States.  

    — END —

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: San Antonio Man Sentenced to Federal Prison for Possessing Dozens of Machinegun Conversion Devices

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

    SAN ANTONIO – A San Antonio man was sentenced today to 71 months in prison for one count of possession of a machinegun.

    According to court documents, Aden Ethan Cantu aka Glock Mayne, 21, unlawfully possessed multiple machinegun conversion devices, also known as switches. In total, Cantu was held accountable for the unlawful possession of 94 switches and other machinegun conversion devices, which he had been trafficking throughout the San Antonio community. Cantu was arrested Dec. 15, 2023 and has remained in federal custody. He pleaded guilty to the charge Sept. 25, 2024.

    “The possession of a machinegun conversion device is illegal,” said U.S. Attorney Jaime Esparza for the Western District of Texas, “These devices are very often paired with stolen firearms and used in other criminal endeavors, and this sentence reinforces the message that trafficking these devices will not be tolerated in our community.”

    The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives investigated the case.

    Assistant U.S. Attorney John Fedock prosecuted the case.

    ###

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: ON THE JOB FOR MICHIGAN: Port Director Paul LaMarre Emphasizes Senator Peters’ Efforts to Deliver Results for Port of Monroe

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Michigan Gary Peters
    Published: 01.27.2025
    On the Job Video Series Highlights Senator Peters’ Efforts to Help Constituents and Communities Across Michigan

    WASHINGTON, DC – In a new video from U.S. Senator Gary Peters’ (MI) office, Captain Paul LaMarre III, Director of the Port of Monroe and President of the American Great Lakes Ports Association, emphasizes Peters’ efforts to help support the Port of Monroe and position it for long-term success. The video is part of the On the Job for Michigan series, which highlights Peters’ leadership and advocacy on behalf of constituents and communities across Michigan.  
    “Senator Peters has supported the Port of Monroe, not just from our efforts to create Michigan’s first marine container terminal, which will be known as Michigan’s Maritime Gateway, but he also championed a number of grant efforts that have led to improved infrastructure and equipment that will put the port at the cutting edge of the next generation of Great Lakes shipping,” said LaMarre.  

    Watch Captain LaMarre’s On the Job for Michigan video here. You can also see the video posted on X/Twitter. 
    “The Port of Monroe is a critical resource for our Michigan manufacturers and our partners across the Great Lakes Region,” said Senator Peters. “I’ll continue to work alongside Captain LaMarre to help strengthen operations and ensure the Port of Monroe continues to play an important role in transporting the commodities and products that families and businesses rely on every day.” 
      During his time in the Senate, Peters has prioritized strengthening Michigan’s shipping ports, including the Port of Monroe. Since 2020, Peters has helped to secure nearly $13 million in grant funding for the port, including investments to expand cargo capacity, purchase new crane equipment and upgrade cargo screening infrastructure. In 2024, LaMarre testified during a Commerce Subcommittee field hearing convened by Peters to examine the impact of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law on Michigan’s transportation infrastructure. In 2021, Peters toured the Port of Monroe with Customs and Border Protection officials to discuss cargo clearance challenges facing the port.  
    Peters has also worked alongside LaMarre and other stakeholders to support Michigan’s maritime workforce. In 2023, Peters’ bipartisan Changing Age-Determined Eligibility to Student Incentive Payments (CADETS) Act was signed into law, expanding the Student Incentive Payment Program eligibility age for financial assistance to cadets who attended one of the six State Maritime Academies and commit to a post-graduation service obligation to include any qualified student who will meet the age requirements for enlistment in the U.S. Navy Reserve at their time of graduation.  
     

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Information session about work on Highway 14, Idlemore has been postponed

    The information session planned for Sooke to share details about work at the intersection of Highway 14 and Idlemore Road has been postponed.

    A new date for the session will be announced as soon it is as available.

    The ministry is consulting with Saseenos Elementary school and stakeholders to ensure the design details for the improved intersection support the needs of the community. The aim of the project is to increase safety and ease the flow of traffic for drivers, pedestrians and people cycling or rolling in the area.

    The information session was scheduled for Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025, at Saseenos Elementary school.

    Learn More:

    More information about the project can be found here: https://gov.bc.ca/highway14idlemore

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Photo and Video Chronology — January 23 & 24, 2025 — Inactive vents at Kīlauea summit

    Source: US Geological Survey

    Kīlauea summit eruption has been paused since 4:30 a.m. HST January 23. Resumption of activity possible beginning in 4-5 days at current inflation rates.

    January 24, 2025 — Kīlauea summit overflight

    On the morning of January 24th, USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory scientists conducted an overflight of Kīlauea summit to capture thermal and surficial imagery of the December 2024 to January 2025 paused eruption. This video compilation shows aerial views of Halema’uma’u captured during the overflight. 
    The north vent that was erupting during episode five of the recent Kīlauea summit eruption has a small patch of lava that was weakly spattering during the morning of February 24, 2025. USGS photo by J. Barnett.

    January 17, 2025 – UAS video of spattering eruptive vents in Halema‘uma‘u

    On Friday, January 17, USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) geologists flew an uncrewed aircraft system (UAS, or “drone”) into Halema‘uma‘u crater to capture this close-up video of spattering at the two active vents of the ongoing Kīlauea summit eruption. Friday’s UAS flight was conducted with the permission of Hawai‘i Volcanoes National Park, owing to HVO’s mission to monitor active volcanoes in Hawaii, assess their hazards, issue warnings, and advance scientific understanding to reduce the impacts of eruptions. Unauthorized launching, landing, or operating of a UAS from or on lands and waters administered by the National Park Service is prohibited under 36 CFR Closures & Public Use.

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  • MIL-OSI USA: The science of the “X-ray vision” that reveals the magma beneath Yellowstone

    Source: US Geological Survey

    Yellowstone Caldera Chronicles is a weekly column written by scientists and collaborators of the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory. This week’s contribution is from Scott K. Johnson, Science Communication Associate at EarthScope Consortium.

    Jeopardy is unique for its question-to-the-answer format, with contestants using a clue like “this animal starred in a 1975 Steven Spielberger film and can constantly regrow lost teeth” to correctly respond “what is a shark?” The geophysical techniques that allow us to image the magma beneath Yellowstone―as in a recent study that provided a view of multiple separate magma reservoirs― work similarly. These studies are often of great public interest, producing visuals that are (relatively) easy to understand. But how exactly do they work?

    This example shows areas where seismic waves travel more quickly in blue, and slower areas in red, beneath the western United States. Faults are black lines, and blue line is the San Andreas Fault. You can explore the data at any depth beneath the surface with EarthScope’s velocity model viewer (https://observablehq.com/@earthscope/emc-horizontal-slicer).  

    Seeing below the surface is the realm of tomography―in medical imaging, the “CT” in “CT scan” stands for Computed Tomography―which can be done in several ways. The most common method uses shaking measured by seismometers to reveal variations in the physical properties of the Earth.

    The similarity to Jeopardy is that these techniques work backwards―what we call “inversion.” Because we can’t directly take a measuring tape underground and inspect a magma reservoir, we have to rely on the fact that this magma reservoir can affect measurements of other things, like seismic waves that pass through. If we knew exactly what was underground, we could pretty clearly predict its effect on the seismic waves reaching nearby seismometers. But instead, the inverse solution is to take the pattern of measured seismic waves and work backwards to find a plausible model of the conditions underground that would cause that pattern.

    It’s a bit like working out where a traffic jam is occurring in town based solely on how late each of your coworkers arrives home at the end of the workday. Knowing that they all left work at 5:15, and knowing which part of town each one was headed for, you could probably figure out where the slowdown is based on the fact that two people were delayed 15 minutes, one was delayed 5 minutes, and one experienced no delay at all.

    In fact, a common method of seismic tomography involves measuring the travel time for seismic waves from earthquakes and noting where they arrive at seismometers “late.” This allows us to map out regions of rock where seismic waves travel more quickly or more slowly. That information can then be turned into estimates of physical properties like temperature, rock type, density, or the presence (and amount) of magma. The more seismometers recording data and the more earthquakes that are measured, the better the resolution of the map.

    The same idea can be applied in other ways to seismic data. We can look at the details of the wiggles on the seismometer rather than just their arrival time, for example, seeing which areas of the Earth dampen the seismic waves and which ring like a bell. Or we can replace the earthquake with another source of shaking energy, like a truck-mounted piston that thumps the ground, the constant background din of a busy highway, or even the global noise created by ocean waves. Through different approaches, we can image something local, like a magma reservoir, or we can image the entire planet―this is how we know about the properties of the mantle, outer core, and inner core of the Earth.

    Schematic showing magma storage beneath Yellowstone caldera. Nested calderas resulting from the Huckleberry Ridge Tuff, Mesa Falls Tuff, and Lava Creek Tuff caldera forming eruptions are shown as solid black, green, and orange lines, respectively. C1 and C2 represent bodies of basaltic magma and C3 and C5-C7 represent rhyolitic magma bodies beneath Yellowstone caldera. Magnetotelluric stations occupied during experiment are shown as magenta triangles. Sour Creek and Mallard Lake resurgent domes are shown as purple lines. The locations of Lower Geyser Basin (LGB), Norris Geyser Basin (NGB), and Hot Springs Basin (HSB) are shown. Figure is from Bennington et al., “The progression of basaltic–rhyolitic melt storage at Yellowstone Caldera.” Nature 637:8044 (2025), 97-102.

    The recent image of Yellowstone’s magma system was created from yet another kind of data. Instead of using seismometers that measure shaking, magnetotelluric instruments were used to measure the electrical conductivity beneath the ground.

    The Sun’s energy and also lightning around the world induce electrical and magnetic fields within the Earth, but the strength of these fields varies from place to place depending on the conductivity of the material beneath the surface. And since measurements at different frequencies relate to the conductivity at different depths, we can collect quite a lot of information through magnetotelluric measurements. Magma has a much higher conductivity than solid rock, so the magnetotelluric technique is of obvious use around volcanoes.

    The inversion in the case of magnetotelluric data works out the 3-D pattern of conductivity underground that can explain the measurements made at the surface. And again, the more surface measurements you have close together, the more detailed the 3-D image becomes.

    All kinds of tomography have been employed at Yellowstone to give us a much richer understanding of the magma system that lies beneath the ground. Similar studies have been done at other volcanoes as well—like Mount St. Helens. Even on a much smaller scale, these techniques have been used to image the hot-water “plumbing” beneath individual geysers in Yellowstone, giving us insights into the reasons for their behavior.

    Permanent monitoring networks of instruments like seismometers around Yellowstone help make this possible―sometimes supplemented by temporary additions of even more instruments for higher-resolution imaging. The end result is a better understanding of what the system looks like beneath the surface, how it works, and how it may behave over time, which is critical to the mission of keeping people out of harm’s way―out of jeopardy, you might say.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Considering current ecosystem condition in restoration planning

    Source: US Geological Survey

    The SAGE Wildlife Research Group consists of a large team of research scientists with an interest in conservation and management of wildlife and their ecosystems. Broadly, research involves understanding animal-habitat relationships, with an emphasis on conservation ecology and population demography, and a focus on shrubland, alpine, and grassland ecosystems. We are addressing the effects of…

    Learn More

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: New study finds deer hunting can help keep chronic wasting disease in check

    Source: US Geological Survey

    BOZEMAN, Mont. — Hunting greater numbers of male deer can slow the spread of chronic wasting disease, a lethal wildlife disease, according to a new study by the U.S. Geological Survey and the Wyoming Game and Fish Department.

    Chronic wasting disease is caused by a misfolded protein called a prion, and infection leads to neurological problems, starvation, and eventually, death. The disease affects animals in the deer family, including deer, elk and moose. Chronic wasting disease is 100% lethal and highly contagious. It has rapidly spread across the U.S. since it was first discovered in the 1960s. It is now found in at least six countries, four Canadian provinces and 35 U.S. states.

    Distribution of Chronic Wasting Disease in North America, updated January 23, 2025. Chronic wasting disease has been detected in free-ranging cervids in 36 U.S. states and four Canadian provinces and in captive cervid facilities in 22 states and three provinces.

    Chronic wasting disease outbreaks are a serious concern for wildlife managers because members of the deer family are economically, culturally and ecologically important. The disease has been implicated in declines of deer and elk in several states, including in Wyoming mule deer herds where the number of animals infected can exceed 50%. The disease spreads easily through the environment from infected deer droppings, urine and saliva, and there are no vaccines or treatments, making it difficult to control. One potential tool is hunting, which might reduce the number of infected animals within a population and slow down the spread of the disease. Many states are now working to increase hunting levels in an effort to slow the spread of disease. However, hunting-based strategies are not always effective and can be controversial. Despite the interest in this management tool, there is still little real-world evidence of its effectiveness.

    The study’s authors examined chronic wasting disease trends in 10 different mule deer herds across central and eastern Wyoming, which varied in hunting pressure. They analyzed 20 years of data gathered by Wyoming Game and Fish Department to understand whether increasing hunting pressure was effective at controlling the disease.

    “We found that harvesting a high proportion of the adult males in the herd – around 40% every year for 20 years, is expected to keep chronic wasting disease infections at low numbers,” said Wynne Moss, lead author and USGS scientist. If this high level of hunting pressure is applied consistently (over 20 years), less than 5% of the males on average are expected to be infected. On the other hand, a lower level of hunting pressure, such as 20% of adult males harvested per year, would result in a much higher prevalence of around 30% infected.

    Mule deer buck in southwest Wyoming. (Photo: Tom Koerner/USFWS)

    The study also showed that harvesting a high number of males over a shorter period – 3 years in a row — still slowed the rate of disease spread within a population but was not as effective as harvesting high numbers over a multiple decades.

    “Our results suggest that the use of hunting is a promising, scientifically supported way to manage chronic wasting disease; however, it is important to note that this approach is more likely to slow the disease down than eradicate it,” said Paul Cross, co-author on the study and USGS scientist. “This study provides important evidence about the effects of hunting on wildlife disease management for deer.”

    The paper was published January 21 in Ecological Applications.

    Learn more about chronic wasting disease.

    # # # 

    The USGS provides science for a changing world. Learn more at www.usgs.gov or follow us on Facebook @USGeologicalSurvey, YouTube @USGS, Instagram @USGS, or X (formerly Twitter) at @USGS.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Seafloor Seismographs Rapidly Deployed Following Major Earthquake Offshore Northern California

    Source: US Geological Survey

    The rapid response ocean bottom seismograph fleet, jointly developed and maintained by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution and USGS, was swiftly deployed after a major earthquake hit Northern California and the Pacific Northwest. The quick deployment of these instruments will enable the collection of the high-value data needed to produce the most accurate and useful hazard assessment.  

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: COLUMN: Senator Davenport: A Warm Welcome to the 2025 Legislative Session

    Source: US State of Georgia

    By: Sen. Gail Davenport (D – Jonesboro)

    The 2025 Legislative Session is officially underway! On Monday, January 13, the Georgia General Assembly reconvened under the Gold Dome, marking the start of this year’s legislative session and the beginning of a new biennium. This legislative session, I am once again fighting for policies that create a more equitable and inclusive Georgia. 

    I am honored to now serve the residents of Senate District 17 after previously serving the residents of Senate District 44. I want to extend a warm greeting to my new constituents in Henry County and my longstanding constituents in Clayton County. It is my privilege to serve as your senator, and I am committed to addressing the issues and concerns of our communities at the state level.  

    I am pleased to continue serving on the Senate Committees on Appropriations, State Institutions and Property, Natural Resources and the Environment, Retirement and the Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Overview Committee this legislative session. 

    The first week of a new biennium is always filled with important events and meaningful connections. This year was no exception, with highlights including the annual Eggs & Issues Breakfast and Governor Kemp’s ‘State of the State’ address, where we accounted for the perspectives of our local businesses and citizens. These gatherings remind us of the collaborative spirit needed to address our communities’ challenges. 

    On Thursday, January 16, Governor Brian P. Kemp delivered his annual State of the State address to a joint session of the Senate and House chambers. While I welcome some of his proposals, including pay raises for teachers, state employees, and first responders and efforts to strengthen our healthcare workforce, I believe we must go further. We must ensure every Georgian has access to affordable healthcare, expand opportunities for quality public education, invest in renewable energy solutions and tackle the growing need for affordable housing across the state. These priorities are essential for creating a Georgia where every family can thrive.

    I am proud to have co-sponsored several resolutions and bills during our first week, including Senate Bill 19, sponsored by Senator David Lucas (D–Macon). The Brady Law Regulations would create a ten-day waiting period for the purchase or transfer of firearms and address the gun violence epidemic in recent legislation.  

    The second week of our Legislative Session was quite unconventional due to a winter storm that halted operations across our entire state for nearly the entire week. Leaders from state agencies will instead present their budgetary needs to legislators in the weeks to come before our House and Senate Appropriations Chairmen help lead the decision-making process on how funding is allocated for the next year. 

    Budget Week is not just about providing funding; it’s about best serving the state of Georgia through state programs like public education, health services, and infrastructure repairs.  This is our chance to advocate for funding that reflects the needs of working families, invests in underserved communities and ensures every Georgian has the resources they need to build a better future. 

    Speaking of our future, I want to invite students between 12 and 18 to serve as Senate Page. This opportunity allows students to participate in the state legislative process at our State Capitol for a day. Interested students may apply for the program by following the link here.  

    Thank you for trusting me to represent you under the Gold Dome. Your voice matters, and I encourage you to share your ideas and concerns as we work together to build a stronger, fairer Georgia. 

    # # # #

    Sen. Gail Davenport represents the 17th Senate District which includes portions of Clayton and Henry County.  She may be reached by phone at 404.463.5260 or by email at Gail.Davenport@senate.ga.gov

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

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: CanREA celebrates successful bids in Nova Scotia Green Choice Program’s expanded RFP

    Source: – Press Release/Statement:

    Headline: CanREA celebrates successful bids in Nova Scotia Green Choice Program’s expanded RFP

    CanREA congratulates members and Indigenous partners for their successful bids in the Nova Scotia Green Choice Program’s expanded 625 MW wind RFP. 

    Ottawa, January 27, 2025—The Canadian Renewable Energy Association (CanREA) congratulates its members RES, ABO Energy, SWEB, and Glooscap Energy (Glooscap First Nation), as well as all the other Indigenous partners, Eskasoni, Potlotek, We’koqma’q L’nue’kati, Wagmatook, Paq’tnkek and Pictou Landing First Nations, for their successful bids in the Nova Scotia Green Choice Program RFP, as announced today by Energy Minister Trevor Boudreau.

    The resulting projects will deliver 625 MW of wind, nearly double the original call for 350 MW, which was launched in 2023.

    “Our members are ready to support the energy transition and help grow Nova Scotia’s new green economy,” said Jean Habel, CanREA’s Senior Director for Quebec and Atlantic Canada. “We are especially pleased that Nova Scotia’s RFP was expanded from 350 MW to 625 MW. All Nova Scotians will benefit from these new wind projects, which will supply affordable, clean and reliable renewable energy starting in late 2028.”       

    The Green Choice Program is unique in allowing participating customers to purchase up to 100% of the electricity they use from local renewable energy sources. It is part of Nova Scotia’s 2030 Clean Power Plan, aiming to reach 80% renewable energy by 2030 by adding a substantial amount of wind, solar and energy storage into the Nova Scotia’s grid.  

    “These new wind energy projects will contribute to sustainable development in Nova Scotia,” said Habel. “They will significantly reduce greenhouse gases by adding more renewable energy to the provincial grid, and what’s more they will create economic opportunities in communities, ensure the protection of the environment, and help enhance Reconciliation, as each wind farm is co-owned by one or more Mi’kmaw community.”      

    CanREA is eager to continue working with the government and all stakeholders to ensure the success of this unique program, as a priority of our Atlantic Network.  

    Quotes 

    “Our members are ready to support the energy transition and help grow Nova Scotia’s new green economy.”  

    “We are especially pleased that Nova Scotia’s RFP was expanded from 350 MW to 625 MW. All Nova Scotians will benefit from these new wind projects, which will supply affordable, clean and reliable renewable energy starting in late 2028.”            

    “These new wind energy projects will contribute to sustainable development in Nova Scotia. They will significantly reduce greenhouse gases by adding more renewable energy to the provincial grid, and what’s more they will create economic opportunities in communities, ensure the protection of the environment, and help enhance Reconciliation, as each wind farm is co-owned by one or more Mi’kmaw community.”  
    —Jean Habel, Senior Director for Quebec and Atlantic Canada, Canadian Renewable Energy Association (CanREA) 

    For media inquiries or interview opportunities, please contact:

    Communications  Canadian Renewable Energy Association  communications@renewablesassociation.ca  

    About CanREA

    The Canadian Renewable Energy Association (CanREA) is the voice for wind energy, solar energy and energy storage solutions that will power Canada’s energy future. We work to create the conditions for a modern energy system through stakeholder advocacy and public engagement. Our diverse members are uniquely positioned to deliver clean, low-cost, reliable, flexible and scalable solutions for Canada’s energy needs. For more information on how Canada can use wind energy, solar energy and energy storage to help achieve its net-zero commitments, consult “Powering Canada’s Journey to Net-Zero: CanREA’s 2050 Vision.” Follow us on  LinkedIn and X. Subscribe to our newsletter here. Become a member here. Learn more at renewablesassociation.ca.   

    The post CanREA celebrates successful bids in Nova Scotia Green Choice Program’s expanded RFP appeared first on Canadian Renewable Energy Association.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-Evening Report: NZ-Kiribati fallout: Maamau govt minister says ‘impacts to be felt by the people’

    By Lydia Lewis, RNZ Pacific Bulletin editor/presenter

    Kiribati President Taneti Maamau was unable to meet New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters because he had “a pre-planned and significant historical event”, a Cabinet minister in Kiribati says.

    Alexander Teabo, Education Minister in Maamau’s government, told RNZ Pacific that “it is important for the truth to be conveyed accurately” after the “diplomatic tiff” between the two nations was confirmed by Peters as reported.

    Maamau is currently in Fiji for his first state visit to the country.

    Peters said New Zealand could not commit to ongoing monetary aid in Kiribati after three cancelled or postponed visits in recent months.

    A spokesperson from Peters’ office said the Deputy Prime Minister’s visit to Tarawa was set to be the first in over five years and took a “month-long effort”. However, the NZ government was informed a week prior to the meeting that Maamau was no longer available.

    His office announced that, as a result of the “lack of political-level contact”, Aotearoa was reviewing its development programme in Kiribati. It is a move that has been described as “not the best approach” by Victoria University’s professor in comparative politics Dr Jon Fraenkel.

    Minister Teabo said that Peters’ visit to Kiribati was cancelled by the NZ government.

    “It is correct that the President was unavailable in Tarawa due to a pre-planned and significant historical event hosted on his home island,” he said.

    Date set ‘several months prior’
    “This important event’s date was established by the Head of the Catholic Church several months prior.”

    He said Maamau’s presence and support were required on his home island for this event, and it was not possible for him to be elsewhere.

    Teabo pointed out that Australia’s Deputy Prime Minister was happy to meet with Kiribati’s Vice-President in a recent visit.

    “The visit by NZ Foreign Minister was cancelled by NZ itself but now the blame is on the President of Kiribati as the reason for all the cuts and the impacts to be felt by the people.

    “This is unfair to someone who is doing his best for his people who needed him at any particular time.”

    ‘Tried several times’ – Luxon
    The New Zealand aid programme is worth over NZ$100 million, but increasingly, Kiribati has been receiving money from China after ditching its diplomatic ties with Taiwan in 2019.

    Prime Minister Christopher Luxon said the country was keen to meet and work with Kiribati, like other Pacific nations.

    Luxon said he did not know whether the lack of communication was due to Kiribati and China getting closer.

    “The Foreign Minister has tried several times to make sure that as a new government, we can have a conversation with Kiribati and have a relationship there.

    “He’s very keen to meet with them and help them and work with them in a very constructive way but that hasn’t happened.”

    New Zealand’s Minister of Defence Judith Collins agrees with Peters’ decision to review aid to Kiribati.

    Collins said she would talk to Peters about it today.

    “I think we need to be very careful about where our aid goes, how it’s being used and I agree with him. We can’t have a disrespectful relationship.”

    This article is republished under a community partnership agreement with RNZ.

    MIL OSI AnalysisEveningReport.nz

  • MIL-OSI USA: Tillis Introduces Legislation to Protect Law Enforcement Officers

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for North Carolina Thom Tillis
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Senator Thom Tillis recently reintroduced the Protect and Serve Act and the Justice for Fallen Law Enforcement Act, legislation to protect law enforcement officers and create strong federal penalties for criminals who target law enforcement officers.
    “Law enforcement officers in North Carolina and across the country are heroes who risk their lives every day to protect our communities,” said Senator Tillis. “Those who commit senseless acts of violence against law enforcement officers must be held accountable for their actions, which is why I am proud to reintroduce these bills that create federal penalties for criminals who target law enforcement. They put their lives on the line to protect us, and we should do the work in Congress to protect them.”  
    “The attack on officers in San Antonio, Texas on January 22, during which seven officers were shot as they responded to a call for help, once again highlights the dangerous profession law enforcement officers have and the risks they face when serving and protecting their communities,” said Bill Johnson, Executive Director, National Association of Police Organizations. “The shooting of those seven brave officers is just adding to the ever-increasing number of officers being shot in the line of duty. NAPO is calling on Congress to take up and pass the Protect and Serve Actand the Justice for Fallen Law Enforcement Act to demonstrate that the killing or the attempted killing of our nation’s law enforcement officers is unacceptable and those who commit these heinous crimes must be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. We thank Senator Tillis for his longstanding commitment to and support for the law enforcement community.”
    “We believe the Senate needs to act now and pass the Protect and Serve Act,” said Patrick Yoes, President, National Fraternal Order of Police. “This would be a strong show of support for the men and women in the line of fire and send a clear message to those who would seek to do them harm.” 
    Background: 
    The Protect and Serve Act would give federal prosecutors more tools to go after those who deliberately target law enforcement officers by creating a federal crime to knowingly cause, or attempt to cause, bodily injury to a law enforcement officer. Offenders are subject to imprisonment for up to 10 years. An offender could receive a life sentence if a death results from the offense, or the offense includes kidnapping, attempted kidnapping, or attempted murder.
    The Justice for Fallen Law Enforcement Act would create a criminal penalty for the murder of a federal, state, and local enforcement officer of life imprisonment or the death penalty. In addition, it would create a criminal penalty for assault resulting in serious injury to a federal, state, and local law enforcement officer of 20 years in prison. Lastly, it would require a study after 36 months to report to House and Senate Judiciary Committees about prosecutions as the result of the act. 
    The National Fraternal Order of Police reported that as of midnight of December 31, 2024 there were 342 officers shot in the line of duty in 2024. Of those officers shot, 50 of them were killed. In 2024, there were 61 ambush-style attacks on law enforcement officers. These ambush-style attacks resulted in 79 officers shot, 18 of whom were killed.
    The Protect and Serve Act is endorsed by The National Fraternal Order of Police and The National Association of Police Organizations.  
    Full text of the Protect and Serve Act is available HERE.
    Full text of the Justice for Fallen Law Enforcement Act is available HERE.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Duckworth, Daines, Cruz, Hirono Renew Bipartisan Push to Better Protect Parents Traveling with Breast Milk

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Illinois Tammy Duckworth
    January 27, 2025
    [WASHINGTON, D.C.] – Today, U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth (D-IL) reintroduced bipartisan legislation to make it easier for parents to safely embark on air travel with breast milk and breastfeeding supplies. The Bottles and Breastfeeding Equipment Screening (BABES) Enhancement Act, co-led by U.S. Senators Steve Daines (R-MT), Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Mazie K. Hirono (D-HI), would require the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) to clarify and regularly update guidance on the safe handling of breast milk and breastfeeding supplies, baby formula and other related products in consultation with nationally recognized maternal health organizations. This reintroduction comes after the bipartisan legislation passed the Senate by unanimous consent late last year in the 118th Congress.
    “Far too often, traveling moms are mistreated and wrongfully denied access to their breast milk and the breastfeeding equipment they need to pump and feed their babies,” said Senator Duckworth. “Ensuring that the TSA keeps its employees up to speed on their own policies and updates those policies as necessary is the least we can do to help parents travel through airports with the dignity and respect they deserve. After our bipartisan legislation passed the Senate by unanimous consent last Congress, I’m proud to work with Senators Daines, Cruz and Hirono to reintroduce the bill, and I’ll continue to do everything I can to get this done for traveling moms everywhere.”
    “Supporting moms and families will always be one of my top priorities. I’m proud to join my colleagues in supporting this bipartisan legislation that will make it easier for mothers to safely and easily travel with breast milk and formula for their babies, and I’ll continue to fight for ways to support our families in Montana and across America,” said Senator Daines.
    “Far too often, families traveling with infants and young children are subjected to inconsistencies when going through TSA’s screening, causing inconveniences that can make traveling together even more difficult. This simple legislation to update the TSA’s compliance guidance for the 3-1-1 liquids will help families travel without added hassles,” said Senator Cruz.
    “On any given day, thousands of families travel by air with milk and the supplies they need to keep their babies fed,” said Senator Hirono. “The BABES Enhancement Act will require TSA to clarify and regularly update its guidance on handling breast milk and baby formula, helping to ensure that parents and their young children can travel with peace of mind. I’m glad to join my colleagues in reintroducing this legislation to keep families and their children safe and healthy.”
    The bipartisan BABES Enhancement Act would help keep breastfeeding parents and their kids safe and healthy while traveling by air. Mishandled breast milk can become contaminated, which puts children at risk. Moreover, parents who lactate typically need to breastfeed or pump once every few hours. Failure to do so can result in a clogged milk duct, or a painful infection called mastitis. The legislation would better protect families by requiring TSA to:
    Issue guidance promoting the hygienic handling of any breast milk, baby formula and other infant nutrition products, as well as accessories required to preserve these products;
    Consult with nationally recognized maternal health organizations in establishing and communicating this guidance; and
    Update guidance every five years to respond to emerging needs of parents and to account for developments in technology.
    This legislation would also direct an independent government watchdog to conduct an audit of compliance with TSA screening policies for passengers traveling with breast milk and other infant nutrition products, providing lawmakers with information related to violations of policies. U.S. Representative Eric Swalwell (D-CA-14) is the lead sponsor of bipartisan companion legislation in the U.S. House of Representatives.
    “As a husband and father, my wife and I know how challenging traveling can be for new parents. TSA screening is already stressful enough without the added anxiety and humiliation of having your breast milk or formula heavily scrutinized and mistreated,” said Congressman Eric Swalwell. “The BABES Act will ensure TSA handles these screenings with care, consulting maternal health experts to establish proper hygienic standards while maintaining robust security measures. This bill is about giving parents peace of mind so they can focus on their families while they travel.”
    A copy of the bill text is available on the Senator’s website.
    Duckworth has been a strong advocate in ensuring moms receive the dignity and respect they deserve while traveling. In 2022, Duckworth pressed TSA Administrator David Pekoske for improved treatment of new mothers and Americans with disabilities from employees of the TSA. That same year, Duckworth also called on TSA to address inconsistent implementation of the 3-1-1 Liquids Rule Exemption travel policy for breast milk and formula at airport security checkpoints as well as ensure new moms and their infants can travel safely without fear of harassment.
    Duckworth has also championed several policies that help make air travel easier for new moms. Her bipartisan Friendly Airports for Mothers (FAM) Improvement Act, which was signed into law in 2020, is helping ensure our small airports across the country support new moms and promote breastfeeding-friendly environments. The legislation builds on Duckworth’s success in enacting a law that ensures all large and medium airports provide a clean, private space where moms can breastfeed or pump. As a result of her legislation, O’Hare and Midway Airports both installed free-standing lactation pods.
    -30-

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Africa – Millions at Risk as Conflict Escalates in Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo: PHR

    Source: Physicians for Human Rights (PHR)

    January 27, 2025 – In response to the escalating conflict in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), the following quote is attributable to Sam Zarifi, JD, executive director of PHR:

    “Civilians in DRC are again caught between regional rivals fighting for power and mineral resources, and hundreds of thousands of people have been displaced in recent weeks alone, adding to the seven million already forced to flee due to this crisis. The conflict in DRC has been ignored for too long – DRC and Rwanda must work together, with assistance from their neighbors, the African Union, and the United Nations, to ensure the civilian population is protected and has access to vital aid.  

    “PHR calls on all combatants to comply with international humanitarian law and international human rights law. Fighters must also respect and protect the area’s many internally displaced persons (IDP) camps, which are acutely vulnerable. Bombs have already fallen on some IDP sites while the M23 has reportedly forced residents to flee other camps. The M23 and Rwandan Defense Forces (RDF) have ordered the demolition of all displaced persons camps. International actors must surge humanitarian aid to the region, as millions of people are facing a humanitarian crisis.  

    “We are also alarmed by emerging reports of indiscriminate attacks impacting health care facilities and personnel, including rockets and gunshots that hit facilities connected to the Masisi General Referral hospital in North Kivu province, as well as attacks on hospitals in Goma like Hospital de la Charité and Hospital Virunga. Health workers must be protected as they respond to the mounting health care needs of their communities, including urgent threats from malaria, measles, and mpox.

    “Massive attacks on the region by the M23, which has been found by the UN to be under the control of Rwanda, threaten a human rights and humanitarian catastrophe.  The entire Kivu region could very quickly come under control of a militia that has been widely documented as responsible for atrocities over many years.

    “PHR recently published research documenting the health and human rights emergency in eastern DRC, including a ‘massive influx of cases’ of conflict-related sexual violence against children and adults. PHR has worked in DRC for the past 14 years to support survivors of conflict-related sexual violence and to help end impunity for these crimes. The ongoing escalation in the conflict has drastically heightened the risk of conflict-related sexual violence in the days ahead.”

    Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) is a New York-based advocacy organization that uses science and medicine to prevent mass atrocities and severe human rights violations.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Duckworth, Durbin Statement On Trump’s Mass Deportation Actions In Chicago

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Illinois Tammy Duckworth
    January 26, 2025
    [WASHINGTON, D.C.] – U.S. Senator Tammy Duckworth and U.S. Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin (D-IL), Ranking Member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, (D-IL) today issued the following statement after President Donald Trump’s administration started mass deportation actions in and around Chicago: 
    “We can all agree that we must remove any dangerous individuals from our country who are here illegally. But the mass deportation actions being undertaken by President Trump’s administration go far beyond those important goals. These actions have the potential to sweep up Dreamers who came to the United States as children, Veterans who have served our nation, and essential workers who care for our family members, build our homes, and ensure we have food on our tables.
    “Instead, we should focus on deporting those who pose a danger to our country. And we should give the rest a chance to earn legal status. They would have to register with the government, pay their dues, and submit to background checks. 
    “We stand with the immigrant community in Chicago and across the country, and our offices and caseworkers are ready to help those who are improperly caught up in these raids.”
    Last month, as Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Durbin held a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing entitled “How Mass Deportations Will Separate American Families, Harm Our Armed Forces, and Devastate Our Economy.” The hearing examined the consequences of mass deportations, as well as stressed the need to shift congressional efforts toward sensible solutions that bring order to the border and provide a path to citizenship to longtime residents with no serious criminal convictions.
     
    -30-

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Risch, Britt Introduce Bill to Finish Southern Border Wall, Eliminate Taxpayer-funded Entitlement Benefits for Illegal Immigrants

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Idaho James E Risch
    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senators Jim Risch (R-Idaho) and Katie Britt (R-Ala.) introduced the WALL Act to finish construction of the southern border wall and protect American families.
    “Now is the time to finish the southern border wall. The WALL Act helps President Trump complete what he started in his first term and does it all without adding a dime to our national debt,” said Risch. “For the last four years, millions of illegal immigrants flooded across our southern border, exploiting open-border policies and wasting vast sums of taxpayer dollars. Those days are over.”
    “President Donald Trump and the Republican majorities in the House and Senate have not just a mandate but an obligation to secure the border and protect American families,” said Britt.“The United States needs a completed border wall—it is just common sense to have a physical barrier in place to ensure only lawful entry into our country. The WALL Act would ensure the completion of America’s border wall without raising taxes on U.S. citizens or increasing the national debt by a single penny. It would accomplish this by eliminating taxpayer-funded entitlement benefits for illegal aliens, which would further deter illegal migration.”
    The WALL Act would appropriate $25 billion to finish building a wall on our southern border without raising taxes on U.S. citizens or increasing the national debt. It would be funded by closing loopholes and eliminating taxpayer-funded entitlements and tax benefits for people who are in the U.S. illegally. The bill also imposes monetary fines on people who enter the country illegally or overstay their visas. The Joint Committee on Taxation estimated in 2018 that enacting the provisions in this bill would save $33 billion of taxpayer dollars over ten years.
    Risch and Britt are joined by U.S. Senators Ted Cruz (R-Texas), John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), Mike Rounds (R-S.Dak.), and Roger Wicker (R-Miss.) in introducing the legislation.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Senator Coons statement of support for Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Delaware Christopher Coons
    WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Chris Coons (D-Del.) released the following statement announcing that he would vote to confirm Scott Bessent as the next Secretary of the U.S. Department of the Treasury:
    “I support Mr. Bessent’s nomination to lead the Department of the Treasury because of his decades of experience in the financial sector and his conviction that American strength is built on a stable, innovative, and growing economy. While I disagree with many of his policy positions, particularly his support for extending tax cuts for the wealthy and President Trump’s tariff threats, I hope that he will focus the Treasury Department on bringing down costs for middle-class Americans. I am particularly encouraged by his commitment to continue U.S. investment in international financial institutions, which are essential tools for advancing global prosperity and demonstrating U.S. leadership.”  

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Ernst Names Small Business of the Week, Myers Tree Farm

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Joni Ernst (R-IA)
    RED OAK, Iowa – U.S. Senator Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), Chair of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, today announced her Small Business of the Week: Myers Tree Farm of Des Moines County. Throughout the 119th Congress, Chair Ernst plans to recognize a small business in every one of Iowa’s 99 counties.
    “For over 35 years, Myers Tree Farm has rooted itself in the Sperry community, sprucing things up with their variety of houseplants, succulents, and home decor,” said Chair Ernst. “Home to over 5,000 Christmas trees, this family-owned and operated small business continues to bring holiday joy to families across Iowa!”
    In 1987, Robert and Patti Myers planted a group of Christmas trees on an acre of land in hopes to sell them and pay for their kids college education. After Chad graduated from Iowa State University in 1993 with a degree in horticulture, he joined the business full-time and eventually took over with his wife. The couple expanded Myers Tree Farm to include full-service landscaping and a potting shed that houses flowers, garden and vegetable plants, and succulents. In 2019, the Myerses fully renovated their barn to host weddings ceremonies. The business hosts an annual Fourth of July fireworks celebration that attracts over 5,000 people to the family farm. This year, Myers Tree Farm will celebrate 38 years in Iowa. 
    Stay tuned as Chair Ernst recognizes more Iowa small businesses across the state with her Small Business of the Week award.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Section 106 affordable housing: call for next level support to new clearing service as registrations near 300 in first 50 days

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Home builders and providers looking to sell or buy homes, built as part of Section 106 planning agreements, urged to maximise use of new service.

    Nearly 300 organisations from across England have signed up to the new Section 106 Affordable Housing Clearing Service to help unlock delivery.

    More than 70 housebuilders have registered to provide details of affordable homes they have planning permission to build, alongside private homes, but have been unable to find a buyer for.

    They join 140 Registered Providers (RPs) and more than 70 Local Authorities (LAs) who have already registered for the service as potential buyers, and are viewing available information about potential opportunities on a regular basis.

    Registered users, especially sellers, are urged to continue their support by providing crucial details in addition to basic registration information; such as site location, construction progress, number of homes and types of tenure.

    It is hoped the service, created and managed by Homes England in response to sector feedback, will play its part in facilitating and accelerating the sale of uncontracted and unsold affordable homes across England, excluding London.

    Homes England Chief Customer Officer Ian Workman, said:

    This is a relatively simple but potentially impactful service that means greater visibility of opportunities to get affordable homes sold and occupied. I would urge house builders in particular to register and add as much detail as they can.

    Over 200 registered providers and local authorities have already signed up, and regularly checking for potential opportunities to acquire homes for the communities they serve.

    Listening, acting and working hand-in-glove with partners is fundamental, if we are to move forward and find solutions together to the challenges the sector is facing.  I am grateful to all those who have helped to shape this service so far, with promising early signs of uptake.

    Housing Minister, Matthew Pennycook, said:

    We recognise the challenge posed by the reduced appetite of registered providers of social housing to buy affordable homes delivered under section 106 agreements.

    The new clearing service we have worked in partnership with Homes England to establish will help improve the functioning of the market and unblock the delivery of section 106 affordable housing.

    Hundreds of developers and providers have already come forward to engage with this new service and real progress is being made as a result.

    Cllr Adam Hug, LGA housing spokesperson said:

    Councils urgently want to deliver more affordable housing including those affordable homes agreed in Section 106 agreements with developers in local planning applications.

    This service is a positive step to promoting stalled sites to registered providers of affordable housing, and the LGA encourages all local authorities to engage with it. But it is just one tool which will help bring forward more affordable housing. Much more needs to be done.

    Kate Henderson, Chief Executive of the National Housing Federation, says:

    This clearing service is a welcome tool in tackling the current issue in the delivery of Section 106 affordable homes. Building new relationships between developers and social housing providers is important in overcoming the immediate challenges, as well as helping developers to understand the requirements of housing associations in the future.

    Housing associations are facing significant competing financial pressures, which is also impacting their ability to both buy Section 106 homes and build other new affordable homes. In the longer term, housing associations are committed to working in partnership with the government on a long-term housing strategy to rebuild their capacity and deliver more much needed social and affordable homes.

    Notes to editors

    1. Homes England is the government’s homes and regeneration agency. We drive the creation of more high-quality homes and thriving places so that everyone – no matter their background – has a place to live and thrive. We work in partnership with thousands of public and private bodies including local authorities, home builders, developers, affordable housing providers, commercial real estate companies  and financial institutions to make this happen. For more information visit: Homes England – GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
    2. A Section 106 agreement is a planning obligation that requires developers to contribute to local infrastructure and community facilities, such as affordable housing, schools, parks, or transport improvements, as a condition of planning permission.
    3. For more information about the service or to register visit: The Section 106 Affordable Housing Clearing Service – GOV.UK
    4. The service does not include London, where the Greater London Authority has responsibility for affordable housing delivery.
    5. For further information or interview requests please contact media@HomesEngland.gov.uk or 0207 874 8262.

    Updates to this page

    Published 28 January 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Pension reforms to go further to unlock billions to drive growth and boost working peoples’ pension pots

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Working people and businesses are set to benefit from new rules that will give more flexibility over how occupational defined benefit pension schemes are managed, as the government continues to remove blockages that are inhibiting its growth agenda that will improve lives of working people across the UK.

    • Prime Minister and Chancellor to tell leading CEOs that Britain is back and open for business.
    • Changes to pension rules will allow trapped surplus funds to be invested in the wider economy, fuelling economic growth.
    • Move is part of government action to remove blockages that are stopping growth – from regulation to planning processes.

    Working people and businesses are set to benefit from new rules that will give more flexibility over how occupational defined benefit pension schemes are managed, as the government continues to remove blockages that are inhibiting its growth agenda that will improve lives of working people across the UK. 

    Hosting a meeting with leaders of Britain’s biggest businesses in the City of London today (Tuesday 28 January), the Prime Minister and the Chancellor will set out the details of changes and tell some of the country’s leading CEOs that Britain is back and open for business.

    At the roundtable, the PM and Chancellor will outline how restrictions will be lifted on how well-funded, occupational defined benefit pension funds that are performing well will be able to invest their surplus funds. 

    This follows action taken by the government last week to bring a renewed focus on growth from some of the UK’s biggest regulators, a shake-up to legal challenges on planning applications, and new “brownfield passports” to speed up housing in commuter hotspots.

    Prime Minister, Keir Starmer said: 

    The number one mission of my government is to secure growth, drive higher living standards for everyone, and get more money into people’s pockets.

    To achieve the change our country needs requires nothing short of rewiring the economy. It needs creative reform, the removal of hurdles, and unrelenting focus. Whether it’s how public services are run, regulation or pension rules, my government will not accept the status quo. Today’s changes will unlock billions of investment, pushing forward in delivering my Plan for Change.

    Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves said:

    I know this government and businesses are united on growth being the top priority for our economy, which is why I am fighting every day to tear down the biggest barriers to growth, taking on regulators, planning processes and opposition to this urgent mission.

    The Prime Minister and Chancellor will tell CEOs from some of the UK’s most successful companies that that the government is seeking to create the best possible conditions for the private sector to thrive. They will promise to work in partnership with businesses, to deliver high-quality jobs across the country, and the economic growth that will fund the schools, hospitals and roads that we all rely on.

    Pension trustees and the sponsoring employers could then use this money to increase the productivity of their businesses – to boost wages and drive growth or unlock more money for pension scheme members. 

    High growth and more productive businesses boost the size of the economy which in turn will fund our vital public services.

    This more efficient approach demonstrates that the government has been listening to business, and will give businesses more flexibility, allowing trapped surplus funds to be invested into the wider UK economy, or given to scheme members as additional benefits.

    Where trustees agree to share a portion of scheme surplus with a sponsoring employer, the employer may choose to invest these funds in their core business, for example to purchase equipment or supplies, and/or provide additional benefits to members of the pension scheme.

    Approximately 75% of schemes are currently in surplus, worth £160 billion, but restrictions have meant that businesses have struggled to invest them.

    These reforms build on the Chancellor’s Mansion House reforms which will create pension megafunds as part of the biggest set of pension reforms in decades, unlocking billions of pounds of investment in exciting new businesses and infrastructure and local projects.     

    Over £1.1 trillion is held by pension funds in the UK and defined contribution pension schemes are set to manage £800 billion worth of assets by the end of the decade. This Government is determined to encourage these pension funds to deliver investment and drive economic growth – which is the only way to make people better off.    

    Jonathan Lipkin, Director of Policy, Strategy & Innovation at the Investment Association said:

    Unlocking surplus capital from defined benefit schemes has the potential to both boost UK growth by opening up investment opportunities for companies and their stakeholders, as well as the possibility of higher pensions for scheme members. With around £1.1 trillion in assets, defined benefit schemes already make a significant contribution to the funding of the UK economy and public services. 

    With the right guardrails in place, the government’s proposals could help channel more funding into the economy, by enabling schemes to invest more widely and take on greater risk, while allowing for members to receive an uplift to pension benefits.

    Zoe Alexander, Director of Policy and Advocacy at the Pensions and Lifetime Saving Association, said: 

    The PLSA backs surplus release, with the right protections in place to ensure member benefits are secure. Surpluses could be used to increase DB scheme benefits or could be redirected to fund contributions to sponsoring employers’ defined contribution workplace schemes.

    Lowering the legislative threshold for allowing returns of surplus could potentially encourage trustees, in conjunction with their employers, to adopt a more ambitious mindset and take on slightly riskier investment strategies for their DB assets, including greater investment in UK assets.

    Patrick Heath-Lay, Chief Executive Officer for The People’s Pension, said:

    It is positive news to see the government is looking at the pension industry as a whole. This will help unlock more of the £2.9trillion that is held in UK pension savings, to benefit savers and the economy alike.

    We look forward to other pension schemes following our plans and outlining how they will invest in private markets.

    The roundtable discussion will focus on the government’s partnership approach to growth with business, including how regulation can better support the Growth Mission, and the role of business in achieving the UK’s ambitions in AI which the Prime Minister unveiled earlier this month. Every regulator has a role to play in the Growth Mission and the Chancellor is hosting a series of roundtables with the 17 regulators that the Prime Minister wrote to in December, to discuss their proposals to support growth in the coming year. 

    The meeting with CEOs comes days after the Chancellor’s return from the World Economic Forum, where she pitched Britain’s investment credentials and let global business leaders know that the UK is open for business again. She championed early reforms to planning, pensions, and regulation that make it easier to do business in Britain and remove barriers investors from overseas face.

    On Wednesday, the Chancellor will make a speech where she will set out plans to push through further planning reforms to get Britian building again, rip up regulatory barriers so we can encourage more investment into the UK and announcements to boost trade and investment.

    The government will set out the details of the surplus policy in its response to the Options for Defined Benefits consultation, due this Spring.

    Further information: 

    • Currently DB scheme surplus can only be accessed where schemes passed a resolution by 2016, so not all schemes can access surplus even if trustees and sponsors both want to do so. 
    • Legislative changes could enable all DB schemes to change their rules to permit surplus extraction where there is trustee-employer agreement. This allows trustees to assess the suite of options available in striking a deal with employers on how best scheme members can also benefit – linked to improving member outcomes. 
    • Trustees have an overarching fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of their members. When considering surplus extraction, trustees must fund the scheme and invest its assets in a way that leads to members receiving their full benefits.

    Updates to this page

    Published 28 January 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom