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Category: KB

  • MIL-OSI USA: Attorney General Bonta Continues Supporting HUD’s Efforts to Fight Housing Discrimination

    Source: US State of California

    Monday, October 21, 2024

    Contact: (916) 210-6000, agpressoffice@doj.ca.gov

    OAKLAND — As part of a coalition of 19 attorneys general, California Attorney General Rob Bonta announced joining an amicus brief before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in support of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) Discriminatory Effects Rule. The rule imposes liability under the federal Fair Housing Act (FHA) for housing practices that may appear neutral but in reality are discriminatory and have a “disparate impact” on certain populations. The insurance industry — specifically, the Property Casualty Insurers Association of America — is challenging the rule and appealing the trial court’s March 2024 decision granting summary judgment in favor of HUD. Attorney General Bonta also joined an amicus brief in support of the rule on October 17, 2023 before the trial court in this case.  

    “Housing discrimination has no place in our country. While we have made progress in combatting this problem, there is still more work to do,” said Attorney General Bonta. “My office has previously supported the Biden-Harris Administration’s defense of the Discriminatory Effects Rule in court, and we are continuing to back them today. Individuals should be able to bring disparate-impact claims to remedy ongoing discrimination in the insurance industry.” 

    In the amicus brief, the coalition of attorneys general argues that: 

    • Despite the enactment of the FHA, vestiges of residential segregation persist in American social life, and the discriminatory effects doctrine, including disparate-impact liability, is a crucial tool to fight ongoing housing discrimination — whether intentional or unintentional. 
    • Discrimination in homeowner’s insurance can take many forms — such as offering insurance policies with inferior coverage, ignoring interested customers, and imposing different terms and conditions based on neighborhood — and disparate-impact claims have helped to redress discrimination in the homeowner’s insurance market. 
      • For instance, Black plaintiffs recently brought a class action lawsuit against State Farm for its use of algorithms that “allegedly resulted in statistically significant racial disparities in how the insurer processed claims.” According to the plaintiffs, Black claimants had to wait longer to receive payouts as compared to white claimants. The court ruled that the claimants had successfully stated a disparate-impact claim under the FHA. 
    • While the insurance industry argues that state insurance laws categorically shield homeowner’s insurers from federal disparate-impact liability, the attorneys general underscore that federal law and state insurance laws like California’s work together to prohibit both intentional and disparate-impact discrimination.
    • The availability of a disparate-impact claim under the FHA was reinforced by the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2015 decision in Texas Department of Housing & Community Affairs v. Inclusive Communities Project, Inc.

    A separate challenge to the Discriminatory Effects Rule was brought by the National Association of Mutual Insurance Companies and remains pending before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. On July 11, 2024, Attorney General Bonta joined an amicus brief supporting the rule in that separate challenge.  

    In filing today’s amicus brief, Attorney General Bonta joins the attorneys general of Arizona, Colorado, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington.

    A copy of the amicus brief can be found here.

    # # #

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: First American Bank Invests in the Miami Community with New Branch Location

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Conveniently Located Near Key Landmarks, New Branch Enhances Services for Hialeah Customers

    MIAMI, Oct. 21, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — First American Bank is moving their Hialeah branch from 611 W 49th Street Hialeah, FL to a newly designed location at 1437 W 49th Street. “The new branch provides space to accommodate our growing team and better support our customers with the personal attention and comprehensive financial services they deserve,” said Guillermo Diaz-Rousselot, First American Bank’s Miami market President.

    After 40-plus years in Hialeah, the Bank purchased this new location—just a few blocks away—cementing their presence in the Miami community. The branch will open on Monday, October 21, 2024, with Ismael Manuel Gil as Vice President and Market Manager.

    “The great part about this move,” shared Gil, “is that we will be more centrally located, and closer to the Westland Mall, Miami Dade College, and the Palmetto expressway, making it more convenient for current customers and further increasing our appeal to new ones.”

    As a leading financial institution with more than $7 billion in assets, First American Bank is committed to helping customers move confidently forward by providing personalized assistance and supporting community development. “This new location allows us to enhance our clients’ banking experience, including providing tailored solutions, business referrals, and account-opening services for foreign nationals,” Gil added.

    The network of Florida branches is led by Rodolfo Lleonart, Executive Vice President, and supported by various teams of specialists, including Brian Hagan, Florida Market President for Commercial Lending; John Olsen, Executive Vice President for Commercial Real Estate; Karina Valido, Vice President and Private Client Advisor for Wealth Management; and Joel De Jesus, SBA Assistant Program Manager for SBA loans.

    “We are proud to continue providing banking services and solutions to the Hialeah community that we so appreciate,” said Lleonart. “We look forward to seeing our valued customers and guests visit our new branch location.”

    Contact Hialeah Market Manager Ismael Manuel Gil at (786) 457-3937 or igil@firstambank.com.

    About First American Bank

    First American Bank is a full-service bank with $7 billion in assets and 60 branches and offices serving Miami, Tampa, Chicago, and Milwaukee. They are committed to creating solutions, providing exceptional customer service, and providing unmatched expertise in commercial banking, wealth advisory, and personal finance solutions.

    First American Bank is a Member FDIC.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/d32320bf-26ed-4df7-8535-92ab3686c3c5

    The MIL Network –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Homicide investigation following death of Baby Ru reaches one year mark

    Source: New Zealand Police (District News)

    Today marks the one year anniversary of the death of an infant in Lower Hutt who has come to be known as Baby Ru.

    This was a callous homicide in which the victim was a defenceless child, and we are determined to get justice for Baby Ru and provide closure for his whānau and the wider community.

    There has been a dedicated Police investigation team working tirelessly through a huge amount of evidence for a year now.

    This work is incredibly painstaking, and meticulous care must be made to ensure all information is recorded and nothing important is missed.

    We believe that the people who know what happened to Baby Ru must surely have it weighing on their conscience.

    We urge you – lighten your load, do the right thing, and tell us what you know.

    We continue to thank everyone who has contacted Police with information and we will continue to investigate every possible lead and piece of information we receive, no matter how small.

    If you can assist with our enquiries please contact Police via 105 online reporting quoting file number 231022/1708, or anonymously through Crimestoppers.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    Note to Media: photo of Baby Ru has been provided by Ru’s whānau

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Digitorial_Elevate Your Everyday Moments with the Samsung Galaxy Z Series

    Source: Samsung

    The mobile industry continues to evolve rapidly, introducing new trends and technologies that shape our lives, and Samsung has redefined what is possible from a smartphone by pioneering the foldables category. Samsung’s best foldables yet meet the unique needs of every user and now enhanced by the power of Galaxy AI, they deliver an experience like never before.
     
    If you’re looking for a device that turns ordinary moments into extraordinary ones, the Galaxy Z Series is your ultimate companion. With the Galaxy Z Fold6 and Galaxy Z Flip6, Samsung has ushered in a new era of mobile technology, driven by Galaxy AI features that enhance everyday interactions, how you work, create, and stay entertained. With the powerful on-device and cloud-based AI, users can enjoy intuitive experiences while keeping their personal information secure.
     

     
    Seamless searching experience – imagine you’re at a café, enjoying your favourite drink, and you spot an interesting book on a nearby table. With the Circle to Search feature, simply take a picture of the book cover, circle it on your screen, and the Galaxy Z Series will instantly fetch relevant information, reviews, and even nearby bookstores that sell it. A feature that brings a new level of convenience, allowing you to explore and connect with your surroundings effortlessly.
     

     
    Galaxy AI has also enhanced barrier-free communication on the Galaxy Z Series. Travelling abroad? The Interpreter feature[1] is a game-changer. Just point your camera at a menu or a street sign, and the Galaxy Z Fold6 or Z Flip6 will translate the text in real time, making your travel experience smoother and more enjoyable. No more fumbling with translation apps or struggling to communicate; the world is now at your fingertips.
     
    The Galaxy Z Series is your passport to communication, working as your personal interpreter. Thanks to Galaxy AI’s Interpreter, you can translate live conversations to remove language barriers using either dual screen or listening mode for easy understanding, whether having a one-on-one conversation or listening during a lecture.
     

     
    The Galaxy Z Fold6 is also a gaming powerhouse that promises to elevate your experience to new heights with its impressive features and collaborations with top game developers. You can game harder and longer with a powerful 4400 mAh battery and the large 7.6-inch screen, which offers up to 2,600nit brightness for vivid graphics supported by Ray Tracing for more immersive gaming.
     
    The foldable form factor brings a whole new way of interacting with your device, and the S Pen gives you quick access to new Smart select and Sketch to image features, ensuring fast and easy drawing, writing and translating to expand the S Pen experience.
     
    These are just some of the ways the new foldables can make your life easier. Samsung’s Galaxy Z Series is not just about innovation; it’s also about aesthetic appeal and durability. With a sleek design featuring a straight edge and symmetrical construction, the Galaxy Z Fold6 and Z Flip6 are the slimmest and lightest Galaxy Z Series smartphones yet. The new cover screen ratio on the Galaxy Z Fold6 offers a more natural bar-type viewing experience and better grip when folded, making it comfortable to use and carry.
     
    Moreover, Samsung has engineered the most durable Galaxy Z Series yet, equipped with a Dual Rail Hinge and strengthened Folding Edge for enhanced resistance to physical impact. The improved layers on the main screen help minimise the visibility of the crease, ensuring a smoother visual experience. With an Armor Aluminum frame and Corning® Gorilla® Glass Victus® 2, these devices are built to withstand the rigors of daily life.
     
    Switching to the Galaxy Z Series has never been easier. Buy now and get up to 15% off the Galaxy Buds3 and/or Watch7, plus 50% off additional covers[2]. (terms and conditions apply). Until 30 September 2024, trade in your qualifying device and enjoy up to R15 000 off your new Galaxy Z Fold6 or Z Flip6[3]. Plus, until 31 October 2024, you can protect your device with a one-year Samsung Care+ protection plan

    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: High-level visit to the Busia One Stop Border Post (OSBP) and study tour on the impact of the East African Community (EAC) on fostering regional…

    Source: African Development Bank Group
    What:          High-level visit to the Busia One Stop Border Post (OSBP) and study tour on the impact of the East African Community (EAC) on fostering regional trade and integration, and empowering women traders
    Who:           African Development Bank Group and Mano River Union (MRU) Secretariat

    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Samsung Care+ for the Galaxy Z Fold6 & Z Flip6: Your New Device, Protected

    Source: Samsung

    With the much anticipated Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6 and Z Flip6 now in stores, it’s reasonable for shoppers to expect an enhanced level of care tailored to the unique needs of foldable devices.
     
    The Standard Samsung Care+ plan offers essential protection for your Samsung Galaxy device, including one claim within a year, coverage for both the inner and outer screen in case of damage, eligibility for battery replacement upon claim (subject to inspection), and repairs conducted by Samsung-authorized technicians using genuine Samsung parts.
     
    Save R1000: Pay only R999 for 1 year screen protection
    To provide customers with unparalleled peace of mind, Samsung is offering a significant discount on its Samsung Care+ plan for a limited time. From July 10-to-31 October 2024, Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6 and Z Flip6 owners can purchase a 12-month Standard Samsung Care+ plan for just R999, representing a substantial R1000 saving on the regular R1999 price. This offer is only valid for 30 days from the date of purchase. To activate, visit https://www.samsung.com/za/offer/samsung-care-plus/.
     
    Customers can also opt for the Premium Samsung Care+ plan, offering expanded coverage beyond the Standard plan. This includes additional protection for the screen, motherboard, liquid damage, and battery replacement (subject to repair inspection). Customers have the flexibility to choose between a two or three-year plan and can select from either a one-time or monthly payment option, starting from R169 per month.
     

     
    Buy the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold6 and Z Flip6 now and get an accessories voucher of up to R2000 (Terms and Conditions apply). Additionally, you could receive up to R15 000 when you trade in your qualifying device towards the purchase of your new Galaxy Z Fold6 or Z Flip6.
     
     

    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Virginia Man Pleads Guilty to Interstate Threat

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

    Ahead of the Threat Podcast: Episode Zero

    Welcome to Ahead of the Threat, the FBI’s new podcast miniseries that brings together an FBI cyber executive and a private sector chief information security officer. Join Bryan Vorndran, assistant director of the FBI’s Cyber Division, and Jamil Farshchi, a strategic engagement advisor for the FBI who also works as an executive vice president and CISO of Equifax, as they discuss emerging cyber threats and the enduring importance of cybersecurity fundamentals. Featuring distinguished guests from the business world and government, Ahead of the Threat will confront some of the biggest questions in cyber: How will emerging technology impact corporate America? How can corporate boards be structured for cyber resilience? What does the FBI think about generative artificial intelligence? Listen to new episodes biweekly and stay Ahead of the Threat.

    Charity and Disaster Fraud

    Charity fraud scams can come in many forms: emails, social media posts, crowdfunding platforms, cold calls, etc. They are especially common after high-profile disasters. Always use caution and do your research when you’re looking to donate to charitable causes.

    RYAN JAMES WEDDING

    Conspiracy to Distribute and Possess with Intent to Distribute Controlled Substances; Conspiracy to Export Cocaine; Continuing Criminal Enterprise; Murder in Connection with a Continuing Criminal Enterprise and Drug Crime; Attempt to Commit…

    Capitol Violence

    The FBI is seeking to identify individuals involved in the violent activities that occurred at the U.S. Capitol and surrounding areas on January 6, 2021. View photos and related information here. If you have any information to provide, visit tips.fbi.gov or call 1-800-CALL-FBI.

    MIL Security OSI –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Neshoba County Man Sentenced to Over 11 Years in Prison for Shooting a Tribal Member on the Choctaw Indian Reservation

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

    Jackson, Miss.  – A Neshoba County man was sentenced to 138 months in federal prison for assault with intent to do bodily harm and use of a firearm during a crime of violence on the Choctaw Indian Reservation.

    According to court documents, in September 2022, Jessie James Clay, Jr., 42, used a handgun to shoot a tribal member, causing serious bodily injury, at a residence in the Pearl River Community of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians.   

    Clay was indicted by a federal grand jury in January 2023, and he pled guilty on July 18, 2024.

    United States Attorney Todd W. Gee of the Southern District of Mississippi and Special Agent in Charge Robert Eikhoff of the Federal Bureau of Investigation made the announcement.

    The Choctaw Police Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation investigated the case.

    Assistant U.S. Attorneys Kevin J. Payne and Brian K. Burns prosecuted the case.

    MIL Security OSI –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Statement from the Mayor of London

    Source: Mayor of London

    The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: “I respect the decision made by the jury today following a full examination of a large amount of evidence – including video from the incident. 

    “In London, we police by consent. When anyone loses their life following contact with the police, it’s important that it is properly and thoroughly investigated, which is what’s happened in this case.

    “Firearms officers work under the most extraordinary pressure, carrying with them unique responsibilities and often putting themselves in harm’s way to protect others. 

    “I understand the impact Chris Kaba’s death has had on London’s communities and the anger, pain and fear it has caused. I send my heartfelt sympathies to Chris Kaba’s family, friends and the wider community once again.  

    “There’s clearly still a wider lack of trust in the police, particularly within the Black community, that needs to be addressed. As Mayor, I will continue to work with the Government to support and hold the Metropolitan Police to account to ensure any lessons are learnt and the Met commands the trust of all Londoners as we build a safer London for everyone.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Security News: Atlanta Attorney Pleads Guilty in Syndicated Conservation Easement Tax Scheme

    Source: United States Department of Justice 2

    A Georgia man pleaded guilty last week to obstructing the IRS related to his participation in the promotion of abusive syndicated conservation easement tax shelters.

    According to court documents and statements made in court, Vi Bui was an attorney and partner at Sinnott & Co., an Atlanta-based company. Beginning in at least in 2012 and continuing through at least May 2020, Bui participated in a scheme to defraud the IRS by organizing, marketing, implementing and selling illegal syndicated conservation easement tax shelters created and organized by Jack Fisher, Sinnott and others. For their involvement in the scheme, Fisher and Sinnott were convicted at trial and in January sentenced to 25 and 23 years in prison, respectively.

    The scheme entailed the creation of partnerships that would purchase land and land-owning companies and then donate conservation easements over that land or the land itself. Appraisers would allegedly generate fraudulent and inflated appraisals of the conservation easements. The partnerships then claimed a charitable contribution tax deduction based on the inflated value of the conservation easement, resulting in a fraudulent tax deduction flowing to the wealthy clients who purchased units in the partnership. Many of these clients joined the tax shelters after the donation of the interest in land and after the close of the relevant tax year. Bui knew that, to make it appear that the participants had timely purchased their units in the tax shelters, Fisher, Sinnott and others backdated and instructed others to falsify documents, including subscription agreements, checks and other documents. And in at least one instance, Bui falsified documents himself.

    Bui anticipated that the syndicated conservation easement transactions would be audited. To deceive the IRS, Bui and others took steps to make the partnerships appear as legitimate real estate development companies. They would create and disseminate lengthy documents disguising the true nature of the transaction, institute sham “votes” for what to do with the land that the partnership owned despite knowing that outcome was predetermined and falsify paperwork, such as appraisals and subscription agreements.

    In one instance, when investigators conducted an undercover operation in 2018, Bui, believing that the IRS was auditing an individual’s 2014 tax return, prepared false documents that made it appear that the materials were executed before the purported donation of the conservation easement in 2014 and before the 2014 tax returns had been filed.

    Bui earned substantial income for his role in the illegal scheme. He also used the fraudulent tax shelters to evade his own taxes, filing false personal tax returns from 2013 through 2018 that claimed false tax deductions from the illegal syndicated conservation easement tax shelters.

    Bui is scheduled to be sentenced on Feb. 13, 2025, and faces a maximum penalty of three years in prison. Bui also faces a period of supervised release, restitution and monetary penalties. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

    To date, in addition to the convictions of Fisher and Sinnott noted above, nine additional defendants have pleaded guilty to criminal conduct related to the syndicated conservation easement tax shelter scheme, including appraiser Walter Douglas “Terry” Roberts, accountants Stein Agee; Corey Agee, CPA; Ralph Anderson, CPA; James Benkoil, CPA; Victor Smith, CPA; William Tomasello, CPA; Herbert Lewis,  CPA; and Attorney Randall Lenz.

    Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General Stuart M. Goldberg of the Justice Department’s Tax Division, U.S. Attorney Ryan K. Buchanan for the Northern District of Georgia and Chief Guy Ficco of the IRS Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) made the announcement. They also thanked U.S. Attorney Dena J. King for the Western District of North Carolina for her office’s assistance.

    IRS-CI and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service investigated the case.

    Trial Attorneys Richard M. Rolwing, Parker Tobin, Jessica Kraft and Nicholas J. Schilling Jr., of the Justice Department’s Tax Division and Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher Huber and deputy chief of the complex frauds section for the Northern District of Georgia  are prosecuting the case.

    MIL Security OSI –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Security News: Justice Department Issues Comprehensive Proposed Rule Addressing National Security Risks Posed to U.S. Sensitive Data

    Source: United States Department of Justice 2

    Note: Read the Department’s fact sheet on this matter here.

    The Justice Department today issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) to implement President Biden’s Executive Order 14117 (the E.O.) of Feb. 28, “Preventing Access to Americans’ Bulk Sensitive Personal Data and United States Government-Related Data by Countries of Concern.” The E.O. addresses the national security threat posed by the continued effort of certain countries of concern to access and exploit certain kinds of Americans’ sensitive personal data. The President charged the Justice Department with the responsibility of establishing and implementing this new national security regulatory program to address these risks. On March 5, the Department’s Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) was published in the Federal Register. Informed by extensive stakeholder outreach and careful consideration of comments the NPRM addresses public comments received on the ANPRM and proposes a rule to establish this new program and implement the E.O.

    This comprehensive proposed rule would implement the E.O. by establishing categorical rules for certain data transactions that pose an unacceptable risk of giving countries of concern or covered persons access to government-related data or bulk U.S. sensitive personal data. Among other things, the proposed rule identifies classes of prohibited and restricted transactions, identifies countries of concern and classes of covered persons to whom the proposed rule applies, identifies classes of exempt transactions, explains the Department’s methodology for establishing bulk thresholds, provides the Department’s initial assessment of economic and other regulatory impacts, establishes processes to issue licenses authorizing certain prohibited or restricted transactions, issue advisory opinions, and designate covered persons, and addresses recordkeeping, reporting, and other due-diligence obligations for covered transactions.

    The Justice Department’s National Security Division requests public comment on the proposed rule within 30 days of its publication in the Federal Register. The Department seeks comments on the proposed rule from industry, trade association groups, civil society, subject-matter experts, organizations and entities potentially affected by the proposed rule, and others with interest in the rule or expertise on data security and cybersecurity. The public may submit written comments on the NPRM at http://www.regulations.gov.

    The proposed rule is tailored to address the specific national security risks stemming from access by countries of concern and covered persons to Americans’ bulk sensitive personal data and certain sensitive U.S. government-related data. These measures complement the United States’ commitment to promoting an open, global, interoperable, reliable, and secure internet; protecting human rights online and offline; supporting a vibrant, global economy by promoting cross-border data flows that are required to enable international commerce and trade; and facilitating open investment.

    As previewed in the ANPRM, the proposed rule does not authorize the imposition of generalized data localization requirements to store Americans’ bulk sensitive personal data or U.S. Government-related data or to locate computing facilities used to process such data in the United States. As also previewed in the ANPRM, the proposed rule also does not broadly prohibit U.S. persons from engaging in commercial transactions, including exchanging financial and other data as part of the sale of commercial goods and services with countries of concern or covered persons, or impose measures aimed at a broader decoupling of the substantial consumer, economic, scientific, and trade relationships that the United States has with other countries. To reflect this, the NPRM proposes a new exemption for telecommunications services, provides further clarity on exemptions regarding financial services and intra-corporate-group transfers that were previewed in the ANPRM, and seeks public comment on a new proposed exemption for clinical-trial data.

    The proposed rule’s prohibitions and restrictions are consistent with other access restrictions on sensitive personal data that have been imposed in other contexts, including for transactions reviewed by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) and the Committee for the Assessment of Foreign Participation in the U.S. Telecommunications Services Sector (Team Telecom). As the ANPRM previewed, the proposed rule exempts several classes of data transactions from the scope of its prohibitions and restrictions, including certain personal communications, financial services, corporate group transactions, transactions authorized by Federal law and international agreements, investment agreements subject to a CFIUS action, telecommunication services, biological product and medical device authorizations, clinical investigations, and others.

    As explained in the NPRM, countries of concern can use their access to these types of data to engage in malicious cyber-enabled activities and malign foreign influence activities, bolster their military capabilities, and track and build profiles on U.S. individuals (including members of the military and other Federal employees and contractors) for illicit purposes such as blackmail and espionage. Countries of concern can also exploit this data to collect information on activists, academics, journalists, dissidents, political opponents, or members of nongovernmental organizations or marginalized communities to intimidate them, curb political opposition, limit freedoms of expression, peaceful assembly, or association, or enable other forms of suppression of civil liberties.

    The proposed rule would require vendor agreements, employment agreements, and investment agreements that qualify as restricted transactions to comply with the separately proposed security requirements that have been developed by the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency (CISA) in coordination with the Justice Department. These proposed security requirements require U.S. persons engaging in a restricted transaction to comply with organizational and system-level requirements, such as ensuring that basic organizational cybersecurity policies, practices, and controls are in place, and data-level requirements, such as data minimization and masking, encryption, and privacy-enhancing techniques. CISA is concurrently making these proposed security requirements available for public comment at http://www.regulations.gov.

    MIL Security OSI –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: 35 Years Ago: STS-34 Sends Galileo on its Way to Jupiter

    Source: NASA

    On Oct. 18, 1989, space shuttle Atlantis took off on its fifth flight, STS-34, from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida. Its five-person crew of Commander Donald E. Williams, Pilot Michael J. McCulley, and Mission Specialists Shannon W. Lucid, Franklin R. Chang-Díaz, and Ellen S. Baker flew a five-day mission that deployed the Galileo spacecraft, managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, to study Jupiter. The astronauts deployed Galileo and its upper stage on their first day in space, sending the spacecraft on its six-year journey to the giant outer planet. Following its arrival at Jupiter in December 1995, Galileo deployed its atmospheric probe while the main spacecraft entered orbit around the planet, studying it in great detail for eight years.
    Left: The STS-34 crew of Mission Specialists Shannon W. Lucid, sitting left, Franklin R. Chang-Díaz, and Ellen S. Baker; Commander Donald E. Williams, standing left, and Pilot Michael J. McCulley. Middle: The STS-34 crew patch. Right: The Galileo spacecraft in Atlantis’ payload bay in preparation for STS-34.
    In November 1988, NASA announced Williams, McCulley, Lucid, Chang-Díaz, and Baker as the STS-34 crew for the flight planned for October 1989. Williams and Lucid, both from the Class of 1978, had each flown once before, on STS-51D in April 1985 and STS-51G in June 1985, respectively. Chang-Díaz, selected in 1980, had flown once before on STS-61C in January 1986, while for McCulley and Baker, both selected in 1984, STS-34 represented their first spaceflight. During their five-day mission, the astronauts planned to deploy Galileo and its Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) on the first flight day. Following the Galileo deployment, the astronauts planned to conduct experiments in the middeck and the payload bay.
    Left: Voyager 2 image of Jupiter. Middle: Galileo as it appeared in 1983. Right: Illustration of Galileo’s trajectory from Earth to Jupiter.
    Following the successful Pioneer and Voyager flyby missions, NASA’s next step to study Jupiter in depth involved an ambitious orbiter and atmospheric entry probe. NASA first proposed the Jupiter Orbiter Probe mission in 1975, and Congress approved it in 1977 for a planned 1982 launch on the space shuttle. In 1978, NASA renamed the spacecraft Galileo after the 17th century Italian astronomer who turned his new telescope toward Jupiter and discovered its four largest moons. Delays in the shuttle program and changes in the upper stage to send Galileo from low Earth orbit on to Jupiter resulted in the slip of its launch to May 1986, when on Atlantis’ STS-61G mission, a Centaur upper stage would send the spacecraft toward Jupiter.
    The January 1986 Challenger accident not only halted shuttle flights for 31 months but also canceled the Centaur as an upper stage for the orbiter. Remanifested onto the less powerful IUS, Galileo would require gravity assist maneuvers at Venus and twice at Earth to reach its destination, extending the transit time to six years. Galileo’s launch window extended from Oct. 12 to Nov. 21, 1989, dictated by planetary alignments required for the gravity assists. During the transit, Galileo had the opportunity to pass by two main belt asteroids, providing the first closeup study of this class of objects. Upon arrival at Jupiter, Galileo would release its probe to return data as it descended through Jupiter’s atmosphere while the main spacecraft would enter an elliptical orbit around the planet, from which it would conduct in depth studies for a minimum of 22 months.
    Left: The Galileo atmospheric probe during preflight processing. Middle: The Galileo orbiter during preflight processing. Right: Space shuttle Atlantis arrives at Launch Pad 39B.
    The Galileo atmospheric probe arrived at KSC on April 17 and the main spacecraft on May 16, following which workers joined the two together for preflight testing. Meanwhile, Atlantis returned to KSC on May 15, following the STS-30 mission that deployed the Magellan spacecraft to Venus. The next day workers towed it into the Orbiter Processing Facility to prepare it for STS-34. In KSC’s Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB), workers began stacking the Solid Rocket Boosters (SRB) on June 15, completing the activity on July 22, and then adding the External Tank (ET) on July 30. Atlantis rolled over to the VAB on Aug. 22 for mating with the ET and SRBs. Galileo, now mated to its IUS, transferred to Launch Pad 39B on Aug. 25, awaiting Atlantis’ arrival four days later.
    The next day, workers placed Galileo into Atlantis’ payload bay and began preparations for the Oct. 12 launch. The Terminal Countdown Demonstration Test took place on Sept. 14-15, with the astronauts participating in the final few hours as on launch day. A faulty computer aboard the IUS threatened to delay the mission, but workers replaced it without impacting the planned launch date. The five-member astronaut crew arrived at KSC Oct. 9 for final preparations for the flight and teams began the countdown for launch. A main engine controller problem halted the countdown at T minus 19 hours. The work required to replace it pushed the launch date back to Oct. 17. On that day, the weather at the pad supported a launch, but clouds and rain at the Shuttle Landing Facility several miles away, and later rain at a Transatlantic (TAL) abort site, violated launch constraints, so managers called a 24-hour scrub. The next day, the weather cooperated at all sites, and other than a brief hold to reconfigure Atlantis’ computers from one TAL site to another, the countdown proceeded smoothly.
    Left: STS-34 astronauts pose following their Sept. 6 preflight press conference. Middle: Liftoff of Atlantis on the STS-34 mission. Right: Controllers in the Firing Room watch Atlantis take to the skies.
    Atlantis lifted off Launch Pad 39B at 12:53 p.m. EDT on Oct. 18. As soon as the shuttle cleared the launch tower, control shifted to the Mission Control Center at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, where Ascent Flight Director Ronald D. Dittemore and his team of controllers, including astronaut Frank L. Culbertson serving as the capsule communicator, or capcom, monitored all aspects of the launch. Following main engine cutoff, Atlantis and its crew had achieved orbit. Forty minutes later, a firing of the two Orbital Maneuvering System (OMS) engines circularized the orbit at 185 miles. The astronauts removed their bulky Launch and Entry Suits (LES) and prepared Atlantis for orbital operations, including opening the payload bay doors.
    Left: Galileo and its Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) in Atlantis’ payload bay, just before deployment. Middle: Galileo and its IUS moments after deployment. Right: Galileo departs from the shuttle.
    Preparations for Galileo’s deployment began shortly thereafter. In Mission Control, Flight Director J. Milton Heflin and his team, including capcom Michael A. Baker, took over to assist the crew with deployment operations. The astronauts activated Galileo and the IUS, and ground teams began checking out their systems, with the first TV from the mission showing the spacecraft and its upper stage in the payload bay. Lucid raised Galileo’s tilt table first to 29 degrees, McCulley oriented Atlantis to the deployment attitude, then Lucid raised the tilt table to the deploy position of 58 degrees. With all systems operating normally, Mission Control gave the go for deploy.
    Six hours and 20 minutes into the mission, Lucid deployed the Jupiter-bound spacecraft and its upper stage, weighing a combined 38,483 pounds. “Galileo is on its way to another world,” Williams called down. The combination glided over the shuttle’s crew compartment. Williams and McCulley fired the two OMS engines to move Atlantis a safe distance away from the IUS burn that took place one hour after deployment, sending Galileo on its circuitous journey through the inner solar system before finally heading to Jupiter. The primary task of the mission accomplished, the astronauts prepared for their first night’s sleep in space.
    STS-34 crew Earth observation photographs. Left: The Dallas-Ft. Worth Metroplex. Middle left: Jamaica. Middle right: Greece. Right: The greater Tokyo area with Mt. Fuji at upper left.
    For the next three days, the STS-34 astronauts focused their attention on the middeck and payload bay experiments, as well as taking photographs of the Earth. Located in the payload bay, the Shuttle Solar Backscatter Ultraviolet experiment, managed by NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, measured ozone in the Earth’s atmosphere and compared the results with data obtained by weather satellites at the same locations. The comparisons served to calibrate the weather satellite instruments. Baker conducted the Growth Hormone Concentrations and Distributions in Plants experiment, that investigated the effect of the hormone Auxin in corn shoot tissue. Three days into the mission, she placed plant canisters into a freezer to arrest plant growth and for postflight analysis. Chang-Díaz and Lucid had prime responsibility for the Polymer Morphology experiment, developed by the 3M Company. They used a laptop to control experiment parameters as the hardware melted different samples to see the effects of weightlessness. Baker conducted several medical investigations, including studying blood vessels in the retina, changes in leg volume due to fluid shifts, and carotid blood flow.
    Left: The Shuttle Solar Backscatter Ultraviolet experiment in Atlantis’ payload bay. Middle: Ellen S. Baker, right, performs a carotid blood flow experiment on Franklin R. Chang-Díaz. Right: Chang-Díaz describes the Polymer Mixing experiment.
    Left: The STS-34 crew poses on Atlantis’ fight deck. Middle: Atlantis touches down at Edwards Air Force Base in California. Right: The STS-34 astronauts pose in front of Atlantis.
    On Oct. 23, the astronauts awakened for their final day in space. Because of high winds expected at the primary landing site at Edwards Air Force Base (AFB), managers moved the landing up by two revolutions. In preparation for reentry, the astronauts donned their orange LESs and closed the payload bay doors. Williams and McCulley oriented Atlantis into the deorbit attitude, with the OMS engines facing in the direction of travel. Over the Indian Ocean, they fired the two engines for 2 minutes 48 seconds to bring the spacecraft out of orbit. They reoriented the orbiter to fly with its heat shield exposed to the direction of flight as it encountered Earth’s atmosphere at 419,000 feet. The buildup of ionized gases caused by the heat of reentry prevented communications for about 15 minutes but provided the astronauts a great light show. The entry profile differed slightly from the planned one because Atlantis needed to make up 500 miles of cross range since it returned two orbits early. After completing the Heading Alignment Circle turn, Williams aligned Atlantis with the runway, and McCulley lowered the landing gear. Atlantis touched down and rolled to a stop, ending a 4-day 23-hour 39-minute flight, having completed 79 orbits of the Earth. Following postlanding inspections, workers placed Atlantis atop a Shuttle Carrier Aircraft, a modified Boeing-747, and the combination left Edwards on Oct. 28. Following refueling stops at Biggs Army Airfield in Texas and Columbus AFB in Mississippi, Atlantis and the SCA arrived back at KSC on Oct. 29. Workers began to prepare it for its next flight, STS-36 in February 1990.
    Left: An illustration of Galileo in orbit around Jupiter. Right: Galileo’s major mission events, including encounters with Jupiter’s moons during its eight-year orbital study.
    One hour after deployment from Atlantis, the IUS ignited to send Galileo on its six-year journey to Jupiter, with the spacecraft flying free of the rocket stage 47 minutes later. The spacecraft’s circuitous path took it first to Venus on Feb. 10, 1990, back to Earth on Dec. 8, 1990, and again on Dec. 8, 1992, each time picking up velocity from the gravity assist to send it on to the giant planet. Along the way, Galileo also passed by and imaged the main belt asteroids Gaspra and Ida and observed the crash of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 onto Jupiter. On Dec. 7, 1995, the probe plummeted through Jupiter’s dense atmosphere, returning data along the way, until it succumbed to extreme pressures and temperatures. Meanwhile, Galileo entered orbit around Jupiter and far exceeded its 22-month primary mission, finally plunging into the giant planet on Sept. 21, 2003, 14 years after leaving Earth. During its 35 orbits around Jupiter, it studied not only the planet but made close observations of many of its moons, especially its four largest ones, Ganymede, Callisto, Europa, and Io.
    Left: Galileo image of could formations on Jupiter. Right: Closeup image of terrain on Europa.
    Of particular interest to many scientists, Galileo made 11 close encounters with icy Europa, coming as close as 125 miles, revealing incredible details about its surface. Based on Galileo data, scientists now believe a vast ocean lies beneath Europa’s icy crust, and heating from inside the moon may produce conditions favorable for supporting life. NASA’s Europa Clipper, launched on Oct. 14, 2024, hopes to expand on Galileo’s observations when it reaches Jupiter in April 2030.
    Enjoy the crew narrated video of the STS-34 mission. Read Williams‘ recollections of the STS-34 mission in his oral history with the JSC History Office.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: The UK is committed to ensuring that technological progress serves as a force for peace: UK statement at the UN Security Council

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 3

    Statement by UK Permanent Representative to the UN Ambassador Barbara Woodward at the UN Security Council meeting on the impact of scientific developments on international peace and security.

    Location:
    United Nations, New York
    Delivered on:
    21 October 2024 (Transcript of the speech, exactly as it was delivered)

    I’d like to highlight three points.

    First, we share the view that the Council must remain ahead of emerging threats. As the briefers noted, advances in neurotechnology, engineering biology and artificial intelligence offer significant potential but also create risks that can impact on international peace and security. This is particularly true as these advances intersect, causing a compounding effect. 

    In future, quantum technologies may break the most advanced cryptographic encryption threatening secure communications and information systems that underpin peace and humanitarian operations. While human augmentation technologies, such as exoskeletons, that can facilitate quicker and more efficient decision-making on the battlefield and may be exploited by malicious actors. 

    Today, AI is already being weaponised by state and non-state actors to spread disinformation at scale.

    The UK is actively working to counter the impacts of disinformation through data-driven tools and localised information verification systems including through the AI Summit series that was launched in Bletchley last year and to which Korea and France have already alluded. 

    So we endorse the briefers recommendations for the Council to deepen its collaboration with the scientific community and to systematically incorporate scientific analysis into reports and briefings on existing Council files. 

    Second, many scientific and technological advancements are dual use. So there is a role for this Council to promote the development of national, regional and international governance approaches that enable economic growth and development while mitigating risks to security. 

    It is essential that technologies are researched, developed and deployed responsibly and ethically, in accordance with international law, including international human rights and humanitarian law.

    Third, the Council can prevent emerging threats before they escalate by better integrating scientific tools into decision-making. Developing capabilities for early warning through data analytics, as the UK has done through support for the AU’s early warning mechanism and the UN’s Complex Risk Analytics Fund, can enable the Council to better anticipate risks and make timely, informed decisions.

    In conclusion, President, the UK remains committed to ensuring that technological progress serves as a force for peace and security, not instability.

    Updates to this page

    Published 21 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Welch Joins Warren, Schakowsky in Pushing to Require Law-Breaking Drug Companies to Reinvest Profits in NIH & FDA for Medical Research

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Peter Welch (D-Vermont)
    Medical Innovation Act applies to pharmaceutical companies who are found guilty or are accused of breaking the law and settle with the federal government.
    WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Senator Peter Welch (D-Vt.) joined U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and U.S. Representative Jan Schakowsky (D-IL-09) in introducing the Medical Innovation Act of 2024, which would require large pharmaceutical companies that are accused of breaking the law and settle with the federal government to reinvest a small percentage of their profits into the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). 
    “The Medical Innovation Act is a commonsense way to advance more medical research by holding shady pharmaceutical companies accountable when they break the law,” said Senator Welch. “I led this bill as a member of the House and am fighting today with my colleagues Senator Warren and Representative Schakowsky to maintain America’s leadership in biomedical science.” 
    “Big Pharma shouldn’t be able to defraud the federal government and get away with just a slap on the wrist,” said Senator Warren. “This bill will help us save lives by ensuring giant drug companies that enter into settlement agreements with the federal government chip in to fund the next generation of medical research.” 
    “For too long, drug companies that rely on federally-funded research to develop their blockbuster drugs have gotten away with defrauding consumers and taxpayers,” said Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky. “The Medical Innovation Act would make it more difficult for these drug companies to game the system by requiring them to provide a share of their profits to increase investments in biomedical research at the National Institutes of Health and the Food and Drug Administration. We can continue to be a leading force in medical innovation and this legislation will help ensure that we have the means to cure diseases and save lives.” 
    In 2023, the NIH only had funds for 23% of the applications it received, contributing to a huge medical innovation gap. At the same time, pharmaceutical companies have been accused of defrauding Medicare and Medicaid, marketing drugs for unapproved uses, illegally incentivizing doctors to prescribe drugs, lying about the safety of their drugs, and violating other criminal and civil laws. The companies have settled many of these claims with the federal government, treating the fines as a cost of doing business. Most recently, Teva Pharmaceuticals agreed to pay the Justice Department $450 million to settle a set of lawsuits alleging that the company defrauded Medicare and conspired with other drug-makers to illegally inflate the prices of two generic drugs. Between 2019 and October 2024, the Department of Justice pursued new actions against or settled cases with at least 40 pharmaceutical companies.  
    The Medical Innovation Act would:  
    Require pharmaceutical companies accused of breaking the law to reinvest a small percentage of their profits in NIH and FDA. These payments would increase with the severity of the settlement penalty, and would only be required of companies that rely on federally-funded research to develop billion-dollar, “blockbuster” drugs.   
    Invest in life-saving medical innovation through the NIH and FDA. Payments collected through this bill would be used to develop treatments and diagnostics to address unmet medical needs; support research grants for early career scientists; research diseases that disproportionately contribute to federal health care spending; and advance basic biomedical research, among other uses. 
    Promote sustained investments in biomedical research. To ensure that the Act results in a net increase in funding for medical research, money from the supplemental settlement fees would only be available in years that annual appropriations for NIH and FDA are equal to or greater than appropriations for the agencies in the prior fiscal year.     
    Senator Welch introduced the Medical Innovation Act as a Member of the House of Representatives in the 114th Congress alongside Senator Warren and they have pushed for the legislation since 2015. The Medical Innovation Act is cosponsored this Congress by Senators Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.).  
    This bill is endorsed by the National Women’s Health Network, AIDS United, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Society of Behavioral Medicine, Families USA, Public Citizen, and the Massachusetts Medical Society.  
    View the bill text of the Medical Innovation Act.   
    Read more about the Medical Innovation Act.  

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Pierce County business owner must pay $360K for scamming local gas station owners

    Source: Washington State News

    Kevin Wilkerson and his companies illegally charged tens of thousands of dollars for shoddy work that increased the risk of underground fuel leaks

    TACOMA — On Friday, a Pierce County judge ordered a local business owner to pay more than $360,000 in penalties and restitution for unlawfully charging gas station owners for unfinished, unnecessary, or shoddy work on underground fuel storage tanks. The order is the result of a consumer protection lawsuit filed by Attorney General Bob Ferguson’s Wing Luke Civil Rights Division.

    The judgment includes full restitution, plus interest, for nine gas station owners — all but one of whom identify as Korean or South Asian — who were scammed by Kevin Wilkerson and his companies, Northwest Environmental Services and Core Environmental Group. Wilkerson collected payment from the small businesses for work he did not perform or performed so poorly the businesses had to pay thousands more to other companies for the same services. In many cases, Wilkerson stopped responding to the owners of the gas stations when they attempted to contact him and refused to refund what they paid.

    “My office stands up for Washington small businesses that follow the rules and contribute to our economy,” Ferguson said. “Wilkerson and his companies not only took advantage of Washingtonians trying to follow the rules, he put their livelihoods at risk. We are committed to protecting hardworking small businesses from bad actors who prey on them.”

    An Olympia gas station owner, who immigrated to the U.S. 40 years ago, told the Attorney General’s Office: “(Wilkerson) took my money and then didn’t respond to me and made excuses. I trusted him. He was supposed to be an expert in the field. He was supposed to know what he’s doing. If he had said something needed to be done, I listened and asked him to do it because I relied on his word. Instead, (Wilkerson) and NES did work they were not qualified to do and cost me thousands of dollars in the process.”

    Wilkerson’s unlawful conduct affected small businesses in Pierce, King, Snohomish, Thurston, Grays Harbor and Lewis counties.

    Wilkerson’s unlawful conduct violated the state Consumer Protection Act. On Friday, Pierce County Superior Court Judge Clarence Henderson, Jr., found that Wilkerson violated the law and ordered Wilkerson to pay a total of $360,741, which includes $195,000 in enhanced civil penalties for harming individuals in Washington based on their national origin. Wilkerson must pay nine gas station owners a total of $165,741, amounting to full restitution plus interest.

    Moreover, Wilkerson and his companies must cease all unlawful conduct or face further penalties from the court.

    Wilkerson’s companies advertise maintenance services for underground storage tanks, which are used by gas stations across Washington to store fuel. There are approximately 8,700 underground storage tanks located at more than 3,400 sites statewide. Gas stations, which are primarily independently owned and operated, are responsible for periodic testing, maintenance and servicing for underground storage tanks. Service providers for this maintenance work must be certified, follow state regulations, and report the services they perform to the state Department of Ecology, which enforces regulations for underground storage tanks. Despite advertising a “skilled and certified in-house team” that “performs to the highest of standards,” Wilkerson and his companies have been taking advantage of small business owners since at least 2015, including:

    • Accepting payment for services that were not completed or only partially completed;
    • Completing services that violated regulations and exposed customers to liability for environmental damages;
    • Misrepresenting certifications to customers;
    • Persuading gas station owners to purchase and install unnecessary equipment and make unnecessary, expensive repairs; and
    • Telling gas station owners they had submitted required documentation to Ecology when they had not.

    In one instance, an Indian gas station owner in Toledo paid Wilkerson a $50,000 deposit to install new underground fuel storage tanks at his gas station. Six months later, the business owner learned that Wilkerson had not applied for the permits and, as a result, the work could not begin on time. The gas station owner had already purchased two new underground tanks, each capable of holding 25,000 gallons of fuel. With nowhere to install them, the owner had to pay an additional $7,000 to store them above ground behind the gas station. The gas station owner has hired a different contractor to complete the work, which will not be done until summer 2025. As a result, the business will lose a significant portion of monthly sales until then. The court ordered Wilkerson to repay the business owner $94,119 for this and other shoddy work, an amount that includes 12 percent interest. 

    In another instance, a Korean gas station owner in Olympia paid Wilkerson nearly $9,000 for upgrades to the gas station’s cathodic protection system, which protects underground storage tanks from corrosion to prevent underground fuel leaks. Wilkerson performed the work without proper certification and never returned to do required testing to ensure the system was working properly. When the gas station owner paid another service provider to come out to do the required testing, the system failed. The owner discovered Wilkerson had used incorrect parts and had to pay to have all the work redone. Wilkerson stopped responding to the gas station owner and never refunded the money he was paid for the shoddy work. The court ordered Wilkerson to repay the business owner $13,163, which includes 12 percent interest.

    While the restitution provided by the court on Friday is limited to the nine impacted business owners who submitted declarations to the court, the Attorney General’s Office believes more businesses may have been harmed by Wilkerson’s conduct. Business owners who wish to report harm from Wilkerson or his companies should contact the Attorney General’s Office at civilrights@atg.wa.gov or toll-free by calling 1-833-660-4877 and selecting option 1. 

    Assistant Attorneys General Emily C. Nelson and Alyssa P. Au, Investigator Rebecca Pawul, and Paralegal Logan Young handled the case for Washington.

    Ecology asks Attorney General to investigate Wilkerson’s repeat violations

    The Attorney General’s Office filed the lawsuit against Wilkerson in March after the state Department of Ecology requested the office’s intervention. For years, Wilkerson repeatedly violated state regulations and disregarded penalties from Ecology.   

    Ecology received repeated complaints over many years from gas station owners and operators regarding Wilkerson. He faced multiple complaints for shoddy work that increased the risk of environmental damages, such as underground fuel leaks.

    Despite the penalties, Wilkerson remains undeterred. Ecology continues to receive new complaints about similar conduct by Wilkerson.

    To report a complaint to Ecology’s underground storage tank program, email tanks@ecy.wa.gov or call the UST Hotline at 800-826-7716.

    Anyone who believes they are the victim of unfair or deceptive business practices should file a complaint with the Attorney General’s Office: https://www.atg.wa.gov/file-complaint

    Read the Korean translation of this press release here. 

    Read the Punjabi translation of this press release here.

    -30-

    Washington’s Attorney General serves the people and the state of Washington. As the state’s largest law firm, the Attorney General’s Office provides legal representation to every state agency, board, and commission in Washington. Additionally, the Office serves the people directly by enforcing consumer protection, civil rights, and environmental protection laws. The Office also prosecutes elder abuse, Medicaid fraud, and handles sexually violent predator cases in 38 of Washington’s 39 counties. Visit http://www.atg.wa.gov to learn more.

    Media Contact:

    Brionna Aho, Communications Director, (360) 753-2727; Brionna.aho@atg.wa.gov

    General contacts: Click here

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Radium Hot Springs Aquacourt: Federal Infrastructure Investment Completion and 75th Anniversary of Kootenay National Park

    Source: Government of Canada News

    Federal Infrastructure Investment Completion and 75th Anniversary Kootenay National Park.

    Renovations and improvements

     

    From 2016 to early 2024, Parks Canada completed $29 million in federally funded infrastructure updates at the Radium Hot Springs Aquacourt to improve safety while modernizing and enhancing the visitor experience. Special attention was taken to hire local contractors wherever possible to ensure that the local community, for whom the hot springs are a primary economic driver, continued to benefit while construction was underway.

    This work was part of a strategic effort to preserve the historical significance of the site while improving its facilities to meet contemporary standards of comfort and to improve accessibility. This included updates to the bathing pools and amenities. Upgrades to technology were also achieved.

    ·  Infrastructure Improvements: The Aquacourt infrastructure was upgraded to ensure safety and efficiency. This included updates to plumbing, electrical systems, mechanical systems and some structural enhancements to prolong the lifespan of the facility. These improvements also support conservation with the incorporation of green technologies.

    ·  Accessibility Enhancements: Efforts were made to improve accessibility for all those who visit. This involved installing and upgrading handrails and lifts and improving entry and exit to the site. The facility can now better accommodate individuals with mobility challenges.

    ·  Aesthetic and Comfort Upgrades: The interior and exterior of the Aquacourt underwent renovations to enhance the aesthetic appeal and comfort of the facility. This included renovating the restaurant, gift shop, and change rooms.

    ·  Environmental Sustainability: Measures were taken to promote environmental sustainability during the renovation process by installing energy-efficient geothermal energy systems to reduce the Aquacourt’s carbon footprint. Structural upgrades to culverts under the building have also safeguarded nearby fish habitats.

                                                                                                                  -30-

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Hobbs Administration Issues Cease & Desist to Prevent Illegal Development in Rio Verde Foothills Lacking Assured Water Supply

    Source: US State of Arizona

    Actions Shut Down Developer Exploiting Loopholes to Profit At Expense of Arizonans

    PHOENIX – This week, the Arizona Department of Real Estate (ADRE) took action to prevent illegal subdividing, also known as “wildcat development,” in Rio Verde Foothills east of Scottsdale. Governor Hobbs previously directed the ADRE to prevent illegal developments that evade Arizona’s consumer protection requirements to the fullest extent allowed under current law.  

    This week ADRE sent a Cease & Desist Order against a real estate developer, and today that Order was recorded with the Maricopa County Recorder. In the Order, the Department alleges the developer group failed to obtain a subdivision public report, which among other statutory requirements, in an AMA requires a certificate of assured water supply from the Arizona Department of Water Resources or a written commitment of water service from a designated provider.

    “Today I am glad to report the Arizona Department of Real Estate has taken swift action to prevent what it believes is a blatant evasion of consumer protection and water security laws,” said Governor Katie Hobbs. “Rio Verde Foothills has suffered enough as a result of bad apple developers skirting the law and building without first securing a water supply. While we can take action in this case, our laws still fall short of offering true solutions that protect consumers. We must take legislative action to crack down on the loopholes being exploited by developers to profit at the expense of everyday Arizonans.”

    This investigation and enforcement action from the Hobbs Administration is part of the Governor’s commitment to protect the water supplies of all Arizonans. Governor Hobbs has prioritized preventing development that circumvents Arizona’s real estate and water laws, and puts Arizonans at risk. By recording the Cease & Desist, ADRE will prevent the final sale of homes until a reliable, 100-year water supply has been identified and proven as a part of the project’s public report.

    This investigation was conducted in collaboration with the Attorney General’s Office, and is part of the Executive Branch’s coordination on efforts to protect Arizona consumers.

    “Protecting consumers from unscrupulous developers is a top priority for the Attorney General’s Office,” said Attorney General Kris Mayes. “My office remains firmly committed to holding accountable those who violate state law and put Arizonans at risk, especially in areas like Rio Verde Foothills where water is limited. We will continue to work closely with the Arizona Department of Real Estate and the Governor’s Office to protect Arizona consumers.”

    “ADRE is charged with protecting Arizona’s property owners and the public in real estate transactions. Arizona’s laws require certain disclosures to ensure prospective purchasers understand, among other limitations or available resources, whether there is water available and what water sources the potential buyer may expect.  Education of developers is key but when subdivision Public Report requirements are not followed, buyers are exposed to an unacceptable risk,” stated Commissioner Susan Nicolson.

    In 2023, Governor Hobbs signed Senate Bill 1432, after working across party lines to secure a water solution for the Rio Verde Foothills area, following her veto of an unworkable, partisan bill. Governor Hobbs also charged her Water Policy Council with identifying solutions to the long-standing challenge of wildcat development, which resulted in a slate of consensus recommendations. Unfortunately, real solutions were not introduced by the legislature, and citizens in Rio Verde Foothills and elsewhere remain vulnerable to loopholes that can be exploited to skirt Arizona’s development and water laws. 

    More information regarding the Governor’s Water Policy Council Recommendations can be found here.

     

     

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Significant federal infrastructure improvements completed at Radium Hot Springs in Kootenay National Park

    Source: Government of Canada News

    Upgrades and repairs to beloved Aquacourt ensures the future of this heritage building.

    Upgrades and repairs to beloved Aquacourt ensures the future of this heritage building.

    October 21, 2024            Radium Hot Springs, British Columbia             Parks Canada

    The Radium Hot Springs Aquacourt, located in Kootenay National Park, hosts more than 200,000 visitors each year. The hot mineral waters that flow from the ground have drawn people to this place since time immemorial. These hot springs were known and used, both recently and historically, by the Ktunaxa and Secwépemc people for their therapeutic properties. They are sacred places of healing and rejuvenation.

    Today, the Honourable Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Environment and Climate Change and Minister responsible for Parks Canada, announced the completion of a federal infrastructure project to update and renew the Radium Hot Springs Aquacourt building of approximately $29 million. Members of the community marked the completion of the renovations at an event that also recognized the 75th anniversary of the start of construction of the Aquacourt. Building the Aquacourt was the first major construction project undertaken in the western national parks following the Second World War. The upgrades means that the Radium Hot Springs Aquacourt now offers a modern, safe, accessible and inclusive experience for visitors and community members alike.

    Investments in the Radium Hot Springs Aquacourt modernized the mechanical and electrical systems, including the installation of energy-efficient technology to leverage geothermal energy from the hot springs. The building was made more resilient to climate change through upgrades to the cold pool that help protect it from flooding and improve visitor safety. The installation of culverts under the building direct water flow to protect the foundation from erosion while safeguarding nearby fish habitats. The renovated restaurant, gift shop, and change rooms will support improved visitor experiences, along with a new rooftop sundeck and upgraded accessibility features including handrails, lifts, and improvements to the site entry and exit.

    Through infrastructure investments, the Government of Canada protects and conserves national treasures, while supporting local economies and contributing to growth in the tourism sector. By investing in the Radium Hot Springs Aquacourt, a Classified Federal Heritage Building, the Government of Canada is ensuring that future generations can continue to connect with nature in Kootenay National Park for years to come. These repairs and improvements ensure public safety and positive visitor experiences, support Parks Canada conservation efforts by incorporating green technologies and safeguarding natural habitats, strengthen climate resilience and protect built heritage in Canada. 

                                                                                                             -30-

    Hermine Landry
    Press Secretary     
    Office of the Minister of Environment and Climate Change
    873-455-3714
    hermine.landry@ec.gc.ca

    Lindsay McPherson
    External Relations Manager
    Lake Louise, Yoho, Kootenay Field Unit
    Parks Canada
    867-678-5667
    Lindsay.McPherson@pc.gc.ca

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Justice Department Issues Comprehensive Proposed Rule Addressing National Security Risks Posed to U.S. Sensitive Data

    Source: US State of North Dakota

    Proposed Rule Would Establish New Program to Implement Executive Order to Prevent Access to Americans’ Sensitive Personal Data by Russia, Iran, China, and Other Countries of Concern

    Note: Read the Department’s fact sheet on this matter here.

    The Justice Department today issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) to implement President Biden’s Executive Order 14117 (the E.O.) of Feb. 28, “Preventing Access to Americans’ Bulk Sensitive Personal Data and United States Government-Related Data by Countries of Concern.” The E.O. addresses the national security threat posed by the continued effort of certain countries of concern to access and exploit certain kinds of Americans’ sensitive personal data. The President charged the Justice Department with the responsibility of establishing and implementing this new national security regulatory program to address these risks. On March 5, the Department’s Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) was published in the Federal Register. Informed by extensive stakeholder outreach and careful consideration of comments the NPRM addresses public comments received on the ANPRM and proposes a rule to establish this new program and implement the E.O.

    This comprehensive proposed rule would implement the E.O. by establishing categorical rules for certain data transactions that pose an unacceptable risk of giving countries of concern or covered persons access to government-related data or bulk U.S. sensitive personal data. Among other things, the proposed rule identifies classes of prohibited and restricted transactions, identifies countries of concern and classes of covered persons to whom the proposed rule applies, identifies classes of exempt transactions, explains the Department’s methodology for establishing bulk thresholds, provides the Department’s initial assessment of economic and other regulatory impacts, establishes processes to issue licenses authorizing certain prohibited or restricted transactions, issue advisory opinions, and designate covered persons, and addresses recordkeeping, reporting, and other due-diligence obligations for covered transactions.

    The Justice Department’s National Security Division requests public comment on the proposed rule within 30 days of its publication in the Federal Register. The Department seeks comments on the proposed rule from industry, trade association groups, civil society, subject-matter experts, organizations and entities potentially affected by the proposed rule, and others with interest in the rule or expertise on data security and cybersecurity. The public may submit written comments on the NPRM at http://www.regulations.gov.

    The proposed rule is tailored to address the specific national security risks stemming from access by countries of concern and covered persons to Americans’ bulk sensitive personal data and certain sensitive U.S. government-related data. These measures complement the United States’ commitment to promoting an open, global, interoperable, reliable, and secure internet; protecting human rights online and offline; supporting a vibrant, global economy by promoting cross-border data flows that are required to enable international commerce and trade; and facilitating open investment.

    As previewed in the ANPRM, the proposed rule does not authorize the imposition of generalized data localization requirements to store Americans’ bulk sensitive personal data or U.S. Government-related data or to locate computing facilities used to process such data in the United States. As also previewed in the ANPRM, the proposed rule also does not broadly prohibit U.S. persons from engaging in commercial transactions, including exchanging financial and other data as part of the sale of commercial goods and services with countries of concern or covered persons, or impose measures aimed at a broader decoupling of the substantial consumer, economic, scientific, and trade relationships that the United States has with other countries. To reflect this, the NPRM proposes a new exemption for telecommunications services, provides further clarity on exemptions regarding financial services and intra-corporate-group transfers that were previewed in the ANPRM, and seeks public comment on a new proposed exemption for clinical-trial data.

    The proposed rule’s prohibitions and restrictions are consistent with other access restrictions on sensitive personal data that have been imposed in other contexts, including for transactions reviewed by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) and the Committee for the Assessment of Foreign Participation in the U.S. Telecommunications Services Sector (Team Telecom). As the ANPRM previewed, the proposed rule exempts several classes of data transactions from the scope of its prohibitions and restrictions, including certain personal communications, financial services, corporate group transactions, transactions authorized by Federal law and international agreements, investment agreements subject to a CFIUS action, telecommunication services, biological product and medical device authorizations, clinical investigations, and others.

    As explained in the NPRM, countries of concern can use their access to these types of data to engage in malicious cyber-enabled activities and malign foreign influence activities, bolster their military capabilities, and track and build profiles on U.S. individuals (including members of the military and other Federal employees and contractors) for illicit purposes such as blackmail and espionage. Countries of concern can also exploit this data to collect information on activists, academics, journalists, dissidents, political opponents, or members of nongovernmental organizations or marginalized communities to intimidate them, curb political opposition, limit freedoms of expression, peaceful assembly, or association, or enable other forms of suppression of civil liberties.

    The proposed rule would require vendor agreements, employment agreements, and investment agreements that qualify as restricted transactions to comply with the separately proposed security requirements that have been developed by the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency (CISA) in coordination with the Justice Department. These proposed security requirements require U.S. persons engaging in a restricted transaction to comply with organizational and system-level requirements, such as ensuring that basic organizational cybersecurity policies, practices, and controls are in place, and data-level requirements, such as data minimization and masking, encryption, and privacy-enhancing techniques. CISA is concurrently making these proposed security requirements available for public comment at http://www.regulations.gov.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Banking: Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra: Faster and More Intelligent Than Ever Before

    Source: Samsung

    Samsung Electronics unveiled the Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra on September 26.
    The Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra features a large screen equipped with Dynamic AMOLED 2X technology for an optimal AI experience. The Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra also boasts an impressive, improved chipset. Upgrades include an 18% increase in CPU, 28% increase in GPU and 14% increase in NPU performance compared to its predecessor, the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra.
    The experience is further enhanced with Dialogue Boost — an AI-powered feature that amplifies voices over unwanted noise in videos — so that users can immerse themselves in what they’re viewing with ultra-clear audio.
    Samsung Newsroom explored how Dialogue Boost works and compared the benchmark test results of the Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra and the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra in the videos below.

    MIL OSI Global Banks –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra: Faster and More Intelligent Than Ever Before

    Source: Samsung

    Samsung Electronics unveiled the Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra on September 26.
    The Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra features a large screen equipped with Dynamic AMOLED 2X technology for an optimal AI experience. The Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra also boasts an impressive, improved chipset. Upgrades include an 18% increase in CPU, 28% increase in GPU and 14% increase in NPU performance compared to its predecessor, the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra.
    The experience is further enhanced with Dialogue Boost — an AI-powered feature that amplifies voices over unwanted noise in videos — so that users can immerse themselves in what they’re viewing with ultra-clear audio.
    Samsung Newsroom explored how Dialogue Boost works and compared the benchmark test results of the Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra and the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra in the videos below.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Congresswoman Kat Cammack Responds To FDA Response On H.R. 1750 & Florida Citrus Industry

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congresswoman Kat Cammack (R-FL-03)

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — Following the Food & Drug Administration’s (FDA) response regarding H.R. 1750, the Defending Domestic Orange Juice Production Act of 2023 introduced by Rep. Scott Franklin (R-FL-18), Rep. Cammack raised several important issues central to the Florida citrus industry. 

    During an Energy & Commerce Committee hearing earlier this summer, Rep. Cammack raised issues about the state of Florida citrus and the need to adjust the BRIX level in the Standard of Identity (SOI) with FDA Deputy Commissioner for Human Foods Jim Jones. During the conversation, she reinforced the importance of passing H.R. 1750, which would alleviate the burden for the industry, especially when the FDA’s been sitting on a petition that was sent to them over two years ago. 

    The FDA assured that it was working diligently to publish a proposed rule to amend the SOI due to the lack of health risks with the proposal. Congresswoman Cammack looks forward to seeing the addition of the proposed rule as part of the Fall 2024 Unified Agenda based on follow-up from the FDA. This will also provide the FDA’s projected timeframe for publication of a rule. 

    “Florida’s citrus producers who depend on this prized domestic commodity need relief now,” said Rep. Cammack. “We appreciate the FDA’s focus and look forward to finding any available path to changing the out-of-date standard as quickly as possible.”

    View Congresswoman Cammack’s remarks during the Energy & Commerce Committee on September 10, 2024 here.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Bybit Card Expands Cashback Options to Include BTC and ETH

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, Oct. 21, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Bybit, the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency exchange by trading volume, is thrilled to announce the expanded cashback program for its signature Bybit Card. In addition to the current option to receive cashback in USDT, Bybit Card users may opt to receive BTC or ETH cashback for the first time, enabling holders to increase BTC or ETH holdings and potentially capture market upside when prices go up.

    The limited-time offer is an innovative Bybit Card feature to introduce more rewards options into the mix, rotating different tokens with each campaign. From now until the rewards pool is fully unlocked, users who are bullish on BTC or ETH can potentially boost their holdings through everyday spendings with their Bybit Card. 

    Receiving cashback in these two dominant cryptocurrencies takes just three steps: 

    1. Signing up for the Bybit Card (if available in the user’s region)
    2. Loging in and selecting BTC or ETH as the preferred cashback option via the Cash Rewards page
    3. Spending with the Bybit Card for daily purchases and reveiving up to 10% cashback

    Tailored to the diverse needs of the crypto community, the Bybit Card is positioned to provide flexibility with both crypto cashback or stablecoin (USDT) cashback. This allows users to align their rewards strategy with their financial goals:

    • BTC or ETH cashback goes to the user’s crypto portfolios with every swipe, capturing potential market gains for crypto optimists and fans of the classic pair. 
    • USDT cashback offers more predictable rewards, providing a potential option for users who prioritize stability over market exposure

    “Bybit’s vision for an integrated financial future centers on delivering convenience, meeting real-world consumer needs, and providing seamless access to crypto assets,” said Joan Han, Sales and Marketing Director at Bybit. “With our expanded cashback options, users can now grow their BTC and ETH holdings through everyday spending. We believe the new feature is a value-add for our users, transforming the Bybit Card from a simple payment tool into a gateway for users to participate in the market’s potential upside.”

    The Bybit Card empowers users to offramp their crypto in daily spendings. Featuring instant access to over 90 million Mastercard merchants worldwide and Bybit’s support for a wide array of tokens, the card also offers a generous tiered cashback program, with rewards ranging from 2% to 10%.

    The feature is available for eligible Bybit Card users in applicable regions only. Terms and conditions apply: Bybit Card – BTC/ETH Crypto CashBack

    #Bybit / #TheCryptoArk

    About Bybit

    Bybit is the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency exchange by trading volume, serving over 50 million users. Established in 2018, Bybit provides a professional platform where crypto investors and traders can find an ultra-fast matching engine, 24/7 customer service, and multilingual community support. Bybit is a proud partner of Formula One’s reigning Constructors’ and Drivers’ champions: the Oracle Red Bull Racing team.

    For more details about Bybit, please visit Bybit Press. 

    For media inquiries, please contact: media@bybit.com

    For more information, please visit: https://www.bybit.com

    For updates, please follow: Bybit’s Communities and Social Media

    Discord | Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn | Reddit | Telegram | TikTok | X | Youtube

    Contact

    Head of PR
    Tony Au
    tony.au@bybit.com

    The MIL Network –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Remarks as Prepared for Delivery by First Lady Jill  Biden at the Unveiling of the Reimagined White  House Public  Tour

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    The Rose Garden
    Have any of you ever walked through a museum and wanted to touch one of the displays?
    Have you ever heard a recording from years ago and suddenly it feels like you’re in that room—like the present and the past are coming together?
    Have you ever seen a picture of someone famous, and it’s helped you understand that person a little better?
    That’s what was on my mind when creating this updated White House tour.
    Today, with you, we are unveiling a reimagined White House tour experience.
    Thank you for joining me and welcome to the White House!
    As a teacher for 40 years, I know that we all learn in different ways.
    Some of us learn through hearing something. Some of us through seeing or feeling something.
    So, we added dynamic, flexible, and tactile tools of learning that let you follow your curiosity.
    Now, you can do all the things that you’ve always wanted to do in a museum.
    We made replicas, so that you can feel the features of some of the sculptures’ faces and touch the shining fabric on the furniture in the Blue Room. 
    You can now hear President Roosevelt’s fireside chats in the room in which he recorded them—so you can feel as if you are there beside him.
    We added screens and information, so you can read about what you see in each of the rooms.
    One of my favorite parts of this new tour is walking past those glowing pictures in the Colonnade, going around the corner, and coming to that model of the White House on the wall. 
    It changes every couple seconds, so you can see all the renovations that have taken place over the years.
    You may not know this, but the White House didn’t always have running water or electricity. So, they had to open up the walls and add it!
    That’s what you’ll learn on this tour. The rendering tells you that story: who added each piece of the house and when.
    Serving as your First Lady has been an honor.
    Being able to bring friends into the house is special—and that’s what we’re doing today—sharing it with all of you.
    So many people put months of hard work into this project.
    I’m grateful to Paul Buccieri and the History Channel, the National Park Service, the White House curators and Executive Residence Staff, ESI Design, the White House Historical Association, and presidential libraries staff for all their work.
    To preserve our history, we must teach it.
    We learn from the wisdom of the past and weave it into our future. And, as you walk through this house, I hope you’ll feel the history here. It’s your history—and it lives in each of you, connecting you to those who have walked here before you and to each other.
    One of the things that makes this house so special is that it belongs to the American people.
    And as your First Lady, it’s been a privilege to share it with all of you and keep opening the doors wider and wider.
    Thank you. 
    Like the Grand Canyon or Yosemite, the White House is a national park.
    And I’m grateful to the National Park Service who work so hard to preserve and protect it for all of you.
    They help make sure the White House is a place where you can be inspired and learn.
    So, please help me welcome, National Park Service Director, Chuck Sams.
    ***
    Thank you, Alysha.
    Teaching isn’t just a job, it’s a calling. And we can all see that you were called to this profession for a reason. I’m so glad you answered that call. 
    I’m grateful to everyone here for spending some of your day with us—for being a part of this moment.
    And after you leave here, keep telling the world what you learned here. Keep exploring new parts of our history—keep that wisdom with you as you shape the future of our nation. And maybe one day, we’ll see one of your portraits hanging here, watching over the next generation of students.
    Thank you. And enjoy the new tour!

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Banking: Promoting financial inclusion through technological innovation in the Americas

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Technology is rapidly changing how the financial system interacts with end users. Internet and smartphone coverage are rising, while physical access points to the financial system (eg bank branches) have declined. In this new environment, a plethora of new options in payments, credit, insurance and wealth management is supporting financial inclusion. Emerging market and developing economies are closing gaps with advanced economies in this regard.

    Increasing financial inclusion requires actions by the public and private sector, with central banks being a key player. Some are participating directly in their national financial inclusion strategies. Others are improving their retail payment systems and introducing immediate availability of fund transfers on a 24×7 basis. Experiences in the Americas, eg with Brazil’s Pix, show the dramatic potential of fast payment systems to support inclusion.

    Going forward, one of the most challenging areas is cross-border payments. Yet the potential for greater integration in the Americas is great. The BIS remains committed to supporting dialogue among central banks and encouraging disruptive innovations in financial and payment systems through its committees, its research and the BIS Innovation Hub. As we look to the future, integration of fast payment systems across the Americas, similar to in the BIS Innovation Hub Project Nexus, could hold significant potential.

    MIL OSI Global Banks –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA News: Remarks as Prepared for Delivery by First Lady Jill  Biden at the Unveiling of the Reimagined White  House Public  Tour

    Source: The White House

    The Rose Garden

    Have any of you ever walked through a museum and wanted to touch one of the displays?

    Have you ever heard a recording from years ago and suddenly it feels like you’re in that room—like the present and the past are coming together?

    Have you ever seen a picture of someone famous, and it’s helped you understand that person a little better?

    That’s what was on my mind when creating this updated White House tour.

    Today, with you, we are unveiling a reimagined White House tour experience.

    Thank you for joining me and welcome to the White House!

    As a teacher for 40 years, I know that we all learn in different ways.

    Some of us learn through hearing something. Some of us through seeing or feeling something.

    So, we added dynamic, flexible, and tactile tools of learning that let you follow your curiosity.

    Now, you can do all the things that you’ve always wanted to do in a museum.

    We made replicas, so that you can feel the features of some of the sculptures’ faces and touch the shining fabric on the furniture in the Blue Room. 

    You can now hear President Roosevelt’s fireside chats in the room in which he recorded them—so you can feel as if you are there beside him.

    We added screens and information, so you can read about what you see in each of the rooms.

    One of my favorite parts of this new tour is walking past those glowing pictures in the Colonnade, going around the corner, and coming to that model of the White House on the wall. 

    It changes every couple seconds, so you can see all the renovations that have taken place over the years.

    You may not know this, but the White House didn’t always have running water or electricity. So, they had to open up the walls and add it!

    That’s what you’ll learn on this tour. The rendering tells you that story: who added each piece of the house and when.

    Serving as your First Lady has been an honor.

    Being able to bring friends into the house is special—and that’s what we’re doing today—sharing it with all of you.

    So many people put months of hard work into this project.

    I’m grateful to Paul Buccieri and the History Channel, the National Park Service, the White House curators and Executive Residence Staff, ESI Design, the White House Historical Association, and presidential libraries staff for all their work.

    To preserve our history, we must teach it.

    We learn from the wisdom of the past and weave it into our future. And, as you walk through this house, I hope you’ll feel the history here. It’s your history—and it lives in each of you, connecting you to those who have walked here before you and to each other.

    One of the things that makes this house so special is that it belongs to the American people.

    And as your First Lady, it’s been a privilege to share it with all of you and keep opening the doors wider and wider.

    Thank you. 

    Like the Grand Canyon or Yosemite, the White House is a national park.

    And I’m grateful to the National Park Service who work so hard to preserve and protect it for all of you.

    They help make sure the White House is a place where you can be inspired and learn.

    So, please help me welcome, National Park Service Director, Chuck Sams.

    ***

    Thank you, Alysha.

    Teaching isn’t just a job, it’s a calling. And we can all see that you were called to this profession for a reason. I’m so glad you answered that call. 

    I’m grateful to everyone here for spending some of your day with us—for being a part of this moment.

    And after you leave here, keep telling the world what you learned here. Keep exploring new parts of our history—keep that wisdom with you as you shape the future of our nation. And maybe one day, we’ll see one of your portraits hanging here, watching over the next generation of students.

    Thank you. And enjoy the new tour!

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Promoting financial inclusion through technological innovation in the Americas

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    Technology is rapidly changing how the financial system interacts with end users. Internet and smartphone coverage are rising, while physical access points to the financial system (eg bank branches) have declined. In this new environment, a plethora of new options in payments, credit, insurance and wealth management is supporting financial inclusion. Emerging market and developing economies are closing gaps with advanced economies in this regard.

    Increasing financial inclusion requires actions by the public and private sector, with central banks being a key player. Some are participating directly in their national financial inclusion strategies. Others are improving their retail payment systems and introducing immediate availability of fund transfers on a 24×7 basis. Experiences in the Americas, eg with Brazil’s Pix, show the dramatic potential of fast payment systems to support inclusion.

    Going forward, one of the most challenging areas is cross-border payments. Yet the potential for greater integration in the Americas is great. The BIS remains committed to supporting dialogue among central banks and encouraging disruptive innovations in financial and payment systems through its committees, its research and the BIS Innovation Hub. As we look to the future, integration of fast payment systems across the Americas, similar to in the BIS Innovation Hub Project Nexus, could hold significant potential.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: Jasper’s wildfire recovery is challenged by its unique land classification and the approaching winter

    Source: The Conversation – Canada – By Jack L. Rozdilsky, Associate Professor of Disaster and Emergency Management, York University, Canada

    On July 24, 2024, one-third of the structures in Jasper, Alta. were destroyed when the Jasper Complex Wildfire burnt an estimated 32,722 hectares.

    As a researcher of disaster and emergency management, I visited Jasper in October to observe disaster recovery efforts there.

    The Municipality of Jasper and its federal partners are actively managing the recovery. The municipality has submitted an application for $73.14 million in expenditures for reimbursement from Alberta’s provincial Disaster Recovery Program.

    For those outside of the disaster zone, the message is that Jasper still exists and it is open for business. In the meantime, visitors need to be aware that residents are facing daunting tasks in a recovery effort that will take not months but years.

    Visiting Jasper

    As I approached Jasper from the south, through the fire-scarred Jasper National Park, I was first struck by what visually appears as a wasteland of burnt sticks in a black, brown and grey landscape.

    Burned trees in Jasper National Park landscape.
    (J. Rozdilsky), CC BY

    Proceeding into Jasper, the landscape transforms into the disfigured skeletal remains of noncombustible portions of structures — the buildings have been reduced to piles of charred, rusting and decomposing objects in vast debris fields.

    However, portions of Jasper’s built environment did survive the fire, and it is entirely possible to spend time in some parts of the town that remained intact rather than looking like a burnt-out war zone.

    Clean-up challenges

    A very visible and immediate challenge to Jasper’s practical recovery is the removal of debris.

    A streetlamp lies on the ground in Jasper, outside what remains of the Wicked Cup Café.
    (J. Rozdilsky), CC BY

    Work is underway to expedite bulk debris removal action. The action would work by removing debris across multiple properties at the same time by using one contractor.

    One of the challenges of removing the debris is the rapid approach of winter. November sees the most snowfall in Jasper, with an average snowfall of 135 millimetres.

    Despite best efforts being made, if large tracts of disaster debris become frozen in place over winter, such a situation will impede recovery progress in 2025.

    In addition to health hazards and special worker safety related to fire debris, improper management of disaster debris can impede the timely recovery of the affected area.

    Land classification

    Less visible, but nonetheless important, challenges facing disaster recovery in Jasper are unfolding policy dilemmas related to a very nuanced land tenure situation. Rules of land tenure define how access is granted to rights to use, control and transfer land, as well as associated responsibilities and restraints.

    From the public administrative perspective, Jasper is not your typical Canadian town. It is formally a provincially classified specialized municipality that exists within the boundaries of federally administered national park lands governed under the National Parks Act.

    The situation means disaster recovery will take place under a unique set of rules governing everything from land use decisions to one’s right to reside in Jasper. In Jasper, residents own their homes, but not the property they sit on; the Crown is the only landowner in the park.

    Until an amendment to the Canada Parks Act known as Bill C-76 received royal assent on Oct. 3, 2024, Jasper’s local government did not have the ability to exercise control over its own land use and planning. Under Bill C-76, the Municipality of Jasper will formally take authority over specific elements of land-use planning and development that were previously held by Parks Canada.

    However, this nuanced land tenure situation in Jasper will complicate recovery. Unanticipated consequences of overlapping interests will occur as several parties in Jasper are allocated different rights to the same parcel of land.

    Collective recovery

    A sign that Jasper was moving in the right direction was evidenced by a municipally based public information campaign consisting of posters in the town centre. The headline on the poster was “We’re in this together.”

    A poster for a public information campaign addressing residents and visitors to Jasper.
    (J. Rozdilsky), CC BY

    The left column of the poster addresses Jasper residents, while the righthand side speaks directly to visitors. Visitors were advised to “ask us about our town, the park and our community. Try not to ask us what we lost in the fire.”

    The “We’re in this together” theme related to recovery applies beyond local affairs. For those far outside of Jasper, now is the time to support the town’s unique role as a national asset, facilitating access of 2.5 million visitors yearly to Canadian natural areas.

    For Jasper’s disaster recovery, we are indeed all in this together.

    Jack L. Rozdilsky receives support for research communication and public scholarship from York University. He also has received research support from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.

    – ref. Jasper’s wildfire recovery is challenged by its unique land classification and the approaching winter – https://theconversation.com/jaspers-wildfire-recovery-is-challenged-by-its-unique-land-classification-and-the-approaching-winter-241135

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Wyden, Merkley Announce Nearly $3 Million Loan for High Speed Internet in Oregon

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator Ron Wyden (D-Ore)
    October 21, 2024
    The USDA ReConnect Loan will benefit residents of Clackamas County
    Washington D.C.— U.S. Senators Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley today announced a federal loan of $2.8 million for Clear Creek Communications to expand high-speed internet access to households, businesses and farms in Clackamas County.
    “It is more important now than ever to have reliable access to the internet, especially for rural Oregonians who need access to emergency services, telehealth appointments, school research and more,” Wyden said. “Just last year, I worked with Commerce Secretary Gina Raimundo to fix broadband maps that have since provided Oregonians nearly $700 million to modernize and expand broadband services in rural parts of our state. I applaud this new $2.8 million federal loan for Clackamas County, and I am committed to building on the successes we have had getting more federal resources for rural broadband services.”
    “It is critical for individuals, families, and small businesses in every corner of Oregon to have access to affordable, reliable, high-speed internet,”?Merkley said.?“This federal support?will boost the broadband access needed in Clackamas County to better support stronger, more connected rural Oregon communities.”?  
    This investment from the USDA’s ReConnect Loan Program will go to Clear Creek Communications to deploy fiber broadband that will provide high-speed internet to 102 people, three businesses and five farms in Clackamas County. 
    “This project will start to add Redland members to the national fiber footprint,” said Clear Creek Communications President Jay Henke. “It will also better support the growing number of internet-connected devices the average subscriber has in their home today like smartphones, tablets, gaming systems, health trackers and doorbell cameras.” 
    Wyden and Merkley have both advocated for more resources to expand access to broadband services in rural Oregon. In June 2023, Wyden announced $689 million in federal funding from the U.S. Dept. of Commerce after Wyden successfully fought to fix inaccurate Federal Communications Commission maps. In August 2023, Wyden and Merkley announced $25.7 million to bring broadband to homes and businesses in Marion, Lane, Benton and Lincoln counties. In June 2024, Wyden and Merkley announced $25 million to help local organizations, cooperatives and Tribes expand affordable, high-speed internet projects in rural communities throughout Oregon and nationwide. 

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 24, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Cortez Masto Visits Nevada Businesses and Communities in Esmeralda and Mineral Counties, Highlights Efforts to Support Local Tourism and Clean Energy Industries

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Nevada Cortez Masto
    Reno, Nev. – U.S. Senator Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) met with local businesses and communities in Esmeralda and Mineral Counties discuss her work to create more good-paying jobs and support the tourism and clean energy industries in rural Nevada. Cortez Masto has now visited all seventeen Nevada counties this year.
    “It was great to visit Goldfield and Luning to see firsthand how our tourism and clean energy industries are helping drive economic growth,” said Senator Cortez Masto. “Preserving Nevada’s cultural sites and addressing our climate challenges head-on are key to supporting our rural communities, and I will continue to make it a priority to visit all our counties in Nevada every year to make sure I’m delivering for every part of our state.”
    In Goldfield, Senator Cortez Masto visited the Goldfield Historic High School, a site that dates back to the early 1900s and remains an economic driver for the town. Cortez Masto and local small business owners discussed improvements and restoration efforts to preserve this critical piece of the Silver State’s cultural heritage. A champion of the Nevada’s economy, Cortez Masto is pushing legislation to support key tourism and outdoor industries in every corner of Nevada through economic development.
    In Luning, Senator Cortez Masto met with Ormat Technologies and toured a geothermal energy facility to highlight their work creating more good-paying clean energy jobs and bringing 21st century solutions to our climate challenges. Nevada is the second largest producer of geothermal energy in the nation and has one of the largest amounts of untapped geothermal resources in the country. Senator Cortez Masto has worked hard in the Senate to support our renewable energy economy. Her Geothermal Energy Opportunities Act was signed into law to make it easier to develop geothermal resources on some public lands, and she recently introduced bipartisan legislation to accelerate geothermal investments in Nevada.
    Senator Cortez Masto is a champion for Nevada’s rural communities, working across the aisle to deliver for families. In the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, she secured funding for rural schools and over $460 million for broadband. She also made sure the law included her legislation to help rural counties with internet access at local schools and streamline federal broadband funding to improve internet access for rural areas.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    January 24, 2025
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Twenty Twenty-Five

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