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Category: Natural Disasters

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Amid fragile ceasefire, violence in southern Syria brings Druze communities’ complex cross-border ties to the fore

    Source: The Conversation – USA (3) – By Asher Kaufman, Professor of History and Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame

    Druze from Syria hug relatives from the Israeli Druze community before crossing the border in the Israeli-controlled Golan Heights on July 17, 2025. AP Photo/Leo Correa

    A fragile ceasefire was put in place in southern Syria on July 19, 2025, after days of violence between Druze militias and Bedouin tribes that drew in government forces and prompted Israeli strikes on the capital, Damascus, as a warning to pull back from Druze areas. The United States helped broker the latest agreement, fearing a spillover of violence to other parts of Syria.

    The conflict’s quick escalation brings to the fore multiple layers of politics and identity in the region – particularly among the Druze, who form an important minority in several countries and make up about 2% of Israel’s population. As a historian of the Middle East, I have researched Druze cross-border communal ties and followed closely their predicaments since the start of the Syrian civil war in March 2011.

    Bedouin fighters deploy in Mazraa village on the outskirts of Sweida, as smoke rises from clashes with Druze militias, on July 18, 2025.
    AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed

    Cross-border brotherhood

    The Druze are a monotheistic religious community that split from a branch of Shiite Islam in the 11th century. Today, they live mainly in three countries: Lebanon, Syria and Israel, with a small presence in northern Jordan.

    Despite their geographical dispersion, they have managed to retain a strong sense of communal identity. One of the most important creeds of their faith is “protection of brothers of the faith.”

    Another article of faith that helps to buttress shared communal solidarity is belief in reincarnation: that with physical death, the soul is transferred to the body of a newly born Druze.

    Although Druze history shows that the community is not always united, the belief in and practice of cross-border solidarity is very strong. According to their popular saying, “the Druze are like a copper tray. Wherever you hit it, the whole tray reverberates.”

    National identity

    After World War I, the creation of the modern states in the Middle East divided the Druze community between Syria, Lebanon and the British mandate of Palestine, which is now Israel.

    A young member of the Druze community in the Golan Heights waves to Syrian Druze clerics while they cross the border back to Syria on March 15, 2025.
    AP Photo/Leo Correa

    In Israel, they have largely integrated into the Jewish state. Like Jewish citizens, Druze men are required to serve in the military, and many have attained leadership positions in the security sector and politics.

    A popular cliché has developed about their “blood oath” with the Jewish state. In a July 15 statement, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz cited Israel’s “deep covenant of blood with our Druze citizens” and their connections to Druze in Syria.

    Their integration has been marred by discrimination, a prime example of which is the 2018 law that defines Israel as the nation-state for Jews. Still, many retain a strong sense of Israeli identity that sets them apart from Arab Palestinian citizens of Israel.

    An additional Druze community lives in the Golan Heights, territory that Israel seized from Syria in 1967 and has occupied since. Most Druze there declined to receive Israeli citizenship, and remained loyal to Syria until the outbreak of the civil war there. Since then, there has been a notable change in their relationship with Israel, marked by increased numbers who have acquired Israeli citizenship.

    Druze communities elsewhere in the region have also adopted aspects of their countries’ culture, including Arab nationalism and Syrian or Lebanese national sentiments. Still, cross-border solidarity among Druze has remained strong – and often resurfaced in times of crisis.

    War in Syria

    When the Syrian civil war erupted in March 2011, Syrian Druze were targeted at times by both the Assad regime, which pressured them to support it, and by Islamist rebel groups that regarded them as infidels. The Druze straddled a fine line throughout the war, seeking, not always successfully, to be left on their own.

    In 2015, that tension came to a boiling point. Druze regions throughout Syria became sites of military confrontations, involving Druze militias, the Syrian army and opposition fighters.

    Israeli Druze organized mass rallies in support of their brothers in Syria and called on the Israeli government to intervene. Israel, in turn, protected Syrian Druze villages close to its border with Syria in the Golan Heights. The Israeli government covertly supported Druze areas deeper in Syria, and sent clear messages to combatants on all sides not to harm the Druze.

    Since the fall of the Assad regime in Damascus in December 2024, Ahmad al-Sharaa, the new Syrian leader, has attempted to bring divided and ruined Syria together under his authority.

    However, religious and ethnic minorities have been highly suspicious of the new government. Many of its members hail from al-Sharaa’s own militia during the civil war, Hayat Tahrir al Sham, which targeted religious minorities and enforced its own interpretation of Islam on the population under its control.

    Spiraling crisis

    The most recent violence took place in Mount Druze, a region in Sweida province that is home to most of the community in Syria. It was sparked by an incident where a local Bedouin band robbed and killed a Druze man. The incident quickly became a catalyst for major fighting between Druze, Bedouins and dispatched units of the Syrian army.

    Syrian government forces in Mazraa village, on the outskirts of Sweida, pass by a dead Druze militia fighter on July 14, 2025.
    AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed

    State security forces tried to impose their authority, but in the process killed scores of Druze. They also violated Druze cultural norms by filming the forced shaving of Druze men’s mustaches, including respected religious men, and posting the clips on social media. According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, more than 1,100 people have been killed in the fighting.

    The fragile agreement that the Sweida Druze signed with the new government in May, as part of the government’s efforts to solidify authority over the divided country, collapsed following these incidents.

    Befitting the saying about the reverberation of the copper tray, Israeli Druze immediately mobilized, joined by Druze in the Golan Heights. Hundreds crossed the border to Syria. Many called on the government in Jerusalem to intervene, though others were opposed.

    On July 16, the Israeli military targeted the Syrian army by striking Damascus – sending a clear threat to al-Sharaa. Israel also struck military targets in southern Syria.

    Later that day, the Syrian government reached a ceasefire agreement with the Druze in Sweida, which collapsed soon after. On July 19, following more fighting and violence – and mediation by the United States, Turkey and Jordan – a new ceasefire was put in place, though new fighting has been reported.

    A changing Middle East

    Even before these recent incidents, Israel became a key player in post-Assad Syria by occupying areas close to their shared border. Now, Israel has deepened its involvement by defending the Druze population in the country – as many Israeli Druze had hoped it would since the start of the civil war in 2011.

    Apart from supporting the Druze, Israel’s military actions are also tied to its efforts to project power amid the tectonic shifts in the Middle East since the Hamas attacks on Oct. 7, 2023. In Syria, it seeks to guarantee its influence on the reshaping of the country after civil war. Domestically, Netanyahu is interested in prolonging Israel’s state of emergency, as it extends the survival of his far-right and unpopular government. Syria provides him with another front to maintain this state of emergency.

    For many Israeli Druze, meanwhile, this still-unfolding episode constitutes another example in their history of seeking to protect their brothers in faith. Among Druze in the Middle East, they are uniquely positioned, with many serving in the region’s most powerful military.

    On July 19, Israel’s public broadcaster, Kan news, reported that 2,000 Israeli Druze, including reserve soldiers, signed a petition that said: “we are getting ready to volunteer to fight alongside our brothers in Sweida. It is our time to defend our brothers, our land and our religion.”

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

    – ref. Amid fragile ceasefire, violence in southern Syria brings Druze communities’ complex cross-border ties to the fore – https://theconversation.com/amid-fragile-ceasefire-violence-in-southern-syria-brings-druze-communities-complex-cross-border-ties-to-the-fore-261337

    MIL OSI –

    July 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Sir Jon Cunliffe: Speech on the Independent Water Commission final report

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Speech

    Sir Jon Cunliffe: Speech on the Independent Water Commission final report

    Chair of the Independent Water Commission spoke at the London Museum of Water & Steam

    Thank you for coming today to this wonderful museum.

    We are at one of the birthplaces of the British water industry, one which predates the Victorian age. The Grand Junction Waterworks Company was actually formed in 1811, while the Napoleonic war was still raging, to supply clean drinking water from the junction of the grand union canal in Paddington to households for Londoners. In need of cleaner sources of water, the company moved its operation to Kew, then outside London in 1838, and built this magnificent pumping station with its huge steam engines to pump the water to London. As London grew and needed more water, the company grew and became more profitable until, in 1905, it was taken over by the Metropolitan Water Board along with several other private water suppliers to provide a unified public water supply system for London.  

    The reliable supply of water that is clean and safe to drink – or to give it the description the Victorians put into law and that we still use today, the supply of water that is “wholesome”, is a prerequisite of modern life and it is something that we have become used to and take for granted. 

    And the same is true of that other prerequisite of modern life, effective sanitation. 20 years after this pumping house opened, London experienced the ‘Great Stink’ of 1858. After years of suffering a cesspit and sewer system that could not cope with London’s growth, with the Thames a “pestiferous and reeking abomination” to quote a newspaper of the time, a decision to close the cesspits followed by a hot dry summer brought matters to a head as the Thames became, to quote Disraeli, “a Stygian pool reeking with ineffable and intolerable horrors”. Parliament, literally disabled by the stench, woke up and finally acted. It gave clear direction to the newly formed London Board of Works which in turn adopted the plan of its chief engineer, Joseph Bazalgette. Over the next 15 years, he oversaw the construction of over 1,100 miles of sewers and massive pumping stations that transformed the health of London.   

    I have more than once thought of the ‘Great Stink’ when leading the Independent Commission on Water over the last 9 months. While today we enjoy safe water and clean sanitation to a level that would have been unimaginable 165 years ago, there are many parallels:  a system under huge pressure from economic and population growth, years of discussion and competing plans as the problem grew, government that did not give clear direction, a level of pollution in our waterways that the public will not tolerate and a point at which it became apparent to all that a fundamental reset was needed. And actually, there is a parallel there – that a bonus for Bazalgette was blocked because it was deemed to too high. 

    Today the Commission publishes its report which I hope will contribute to that ‘reset’ that the Government has committed to and that we sorely need. The report is long and detailed – some 460 pages with 88 recommendations covering everything from strategic direction and planning to regulator reform to the water industry supply chain. In an earlier speech I paraphrased Tolstoy to observe that ‘while all are unhappy with the current situation, everyone is unhappy in his own way’. Now, looking at the length and scope of the final report I wonder if we have written a Russian novel in response!   

    But I would defend that length and scope on two grounds. First, and most obviously, the Terms of Reference set asked the Commission to answer these questions, which we have tried to do. But second, and more importantly, if we are to achieve the water sector we need, we need to look at all the factors that have contributed to our ‘Great Stink’ moment and recognise that those factors, if not addressed, will hamper us going forward. 

    The water industry, of course, is at the heart of this. And the industry, as a whole, has not met public expectations or maintained public trust in recent years. Some companies have manifestly acted in their private interest but against the public interest. That must be prevented in future. But the industry does not exist in a vacuum. It sits within a framework of law and regulation that operates under the strategic direction of government. And it is not the only demand on our water systems, or the only contributor to the current state of our waterways. 

    The Commission’s report is long and detailed with multiple recommendations because – as I have said – there is no one, single reform, no matter how radical, that will deliver what is needed: we need to act on all of the failures that have brought us to the present pass. 

    Now, you will be very relieved to hear that I do not intend here to go through all 460 pages and 88 recommendations. But I will highlight, if you permit me, the main themes of the report and pull out some of key recommendations.   

    First, we need truly strategic direction from government. Barely a week goes by without someone calling for ‘a strategy’ from you, so it is important to set out I mean by this and the challenges it will entail.   

    We need to guide the use and development of our water systems and the restoration of our water environment as a whole and over the longer term. We need to chart a path for the delivery of the environmental improvements that the public want to see: to restore ecosystems and sustain our precious waterways for decades to come. However, there are many competing demands on our water systems. Demands to abstract water, demands to discharge into water and demands to enjoy water for recreation.   

    Only government can set the overall objectives for water and the timescale for achieving them. Only government can set the broad priorities, balance demands when they compete and coordinate the different elements of the system. And only government can decide who should pay and how much the nation can afford. It is relatively easy to set down a list of objectives. Effective strategic governance and guidance is much, much harder. It requires striking difficult balances, making difficult choices, and taking a long-term view.   

    In the report we recommend government in England and government in Wales produce a National Water Strategy. We set out in detail what it should cover, how it should be produced, and how it should be enshrined in statute to ensure consistent direction can be maintained over the long term. I have no illusions that it will be easy to produce: to govern is to choose but to govern is hard. But, as with the ‘Great Stink’ in 1858, without such direction from the very top, we will not achieve the change we need. 

    To connect that high level strategy to action, we need to learn how to manage and plan for water as a system or rather, as a set of regional water systems. Our river basins, aquifers and coasts and the demands upon them constitute complex systems and they need to be managed as such. The water industry, agriculture, transport, local development and land use, and environmental regulation all affect the regional water system and the water catchments that it comprises. 

    As many respondents to the Commission observed, we are very poor at system planning for water. There are huge, confusing and overlapping planning processes for water industry processes – the industry produces at least nine plans in a process that costs hundreds of millions. These plans drive water industry investment. But there are no such processes driving action in the other sectors that have an impact on the water system. And some water industry plans are not connected to local government development plans or to local voices or those sectors that also have an impact.   

    Opportunities for local government, agriculture, and water companies and other actors to work together are missed. Opportunities, for example, to implement sustainable drainage schemes that avoid storm water overloading our sewers and causing sewage spills into rivers, or opportunities to balance the nutrient loads that cause such unsightly and destructive algae to bloom in water bodies. And heavy engineering – concrete – solutions to environmental problems are pursued despite local preference for more natural solutions.   

    Drawing on experience from other countries, the Commission is recommending that regional water system planning bodies are established in England and a national system planner is established in Wales. These would not be advisory bodies or ‘talking shops’.  Rather, they would take over the role played by the Environment Agency and Natural Resources Wales at present with real authority over water industry investment and real influence over other funding streams that can be directed achieving regional water system objectives, such as agricultural grants.   

    To be clear, this would not be the creation of a new level of bureaucracy. Rather it would bring existing functions together on a regional water system basis, in England, and a national basis in Wales. It would streamline existing planning processes (the current water industry processes will be streamlined into two plans – one for drinking water and one for wastewater) and most importantly, it would link local development to water system investment, avoiding the situations we see at present where housing and economic development projects are blocked because the regional water systems cannot cope with them. 

    Alongside strategic direction and regional water system planning, the legislative framework for water is key a part of determining the overall framework for the management of water in England and Wales. The current framework has driven great improvements in certain areas. Drinking water and sanitation standards are now world-leading. Bathing water quality has considerably improved. But the current framework is also complex, inconsistent and out of date and highly prescriptive. The Commission has therefore recommended that it be reviewed to bring the legislation up to date, particularly with regard to the Water Framework Directive which sets the high-level objectives for the environmental quality of water bodies.   

    The Water Framework Directive sets a target to be achieved by 2027 – at a minimum – and the review will need to consider what targets should be set for after that date. We recommend, however, that the government use the opportunity to consider the scope of the legislation. One area in which we see there is a strong case for broadening the scope of the legislation is to include public health, given the increase in the recreational use of water in recent years.  We recommend in England and Wales the Chief Medical Officers are asked to chair task forces to consider how to effectively bring public health into the water quality legislation.    

    Over the last 9 months I have heard consistent criticism not of the ambition of the environmental legislation, which must be preserved in any review,  but about the inflexibility that requires and drives regulators to focus on narrow, engineering solutions rather than being able to take a broader view of  overall environmental and other benefits such as may be found in nature based solutions. We recommend also that the review should aim to make the legislation less prescriptive and provide for ‘constrained discretion’ to enable regulators and local system planning bodies to take decisions in the round on how best to meet environmental objectives. 

    Strategic guidance, systems planning and legislation – they can set the broad framework. But delivering the outcomes we want for water depends most importantly on having not just the right strategy, legislation and plans. It depends crucially on having the right regulators, regulators that command public confidence and industry respect, regulators that have the capacity and the capability to do their job effectively.  And, most important in the Commission’s view, in the same way as strategic guidance, system planning and legislation,  a structure of regulation that can focus on the water system in the round.    

    Our assessment is that the current environmental and economic regulators have not achieved what is needed and will not achieve what is needed. There are many reasons for this. It is clear that the Environment Agency has not had the resources, the people, skills, technology to hold the water industry and other sectors that impact the water environment to account. And it is beginning to change I am pleased to say. We’re calling for reform of Operator Self Monitoring – moving from water company sampling to digitalised, automated systems – ensuring real-time, accurate data. Crucially, this must sit alongside tightened enforcement of abstraction limits, sludge management, and drinking-water standards.  

    And on the economic side, for much of the last 20 years, Ofwat was encouraged to regulate with a lighter touch and to focus on keeping bills down. And it did not have the powers or the capability to supervise the financial structure of much of the industry, which allowed some companies and their owners to take decisions which reflected their private interests but badly damaged both their companies and in the longer term the public interest. We are seeing some of the consequences of that failure to defend the public interest in the news every day. I will return later to this question of how in an industry of private monopoly companies the private interest can be brought into alignment with the public interest and whether the regulator has sufficient powers to ensure that this happens. 

    When the water industry was privatised Ofwat was established to protect consumers from monopoly power by setting the prices that the water companies charge, to incentivise investment, and to create proxies for competition through financial incentives to drive efficiency. In line with other privatised utilities, Ofwat’s approach to regulation was built around econometric modelling of the notionally efficient company to provide the benchmarks for setting prices and financial incentives and sanctions. And the decades immediately following privatisation, investment and efficiency grew. The quality of treated wastewater and bathing water have improved. There has been a 41% decrease in leakage in England since privatisation, driven particularly in the 1990s. 

    But in more recent decades performance of the industry has plateaued as the public goods demanded of the water industry have grown. In response Ofwat has developed and intensified its use of econometric tools and industry wide benchmarks. The Commission recognises the motivation behind this. But our assessment is that this has taken this approach beyond the limits of its effectiveness and, indeed, to a point where it may have become counterproductive in terms of the performance of the industry as a whole and its ability to attract investment.   

    In the Commission’s view, it is important to have an objective framework for setting prices and incentives based on modelled outputs and based on comparability between companies, this approach alone, no matter how aggressively pursued, cannot drive the improvement of the sector to deliver the public goods that are necessary nor to attract the. There needs to be a fundamental rebalancing of the approach to economic regulation and oversight of water companies towards a closer, judgment-based, supervisory engagement with individual water companies. This will require an equally fundamental shift in capability and also in regulatory culture, which in the Commission’s view has become too adversarial on both sides. 

    The Commission’s report sets out how a new ‘duty to supervise’ should be enshrined in statute, how a judgement based supervisory approach might be implemented and the expert capability it would need in financing and engineering that would be necessary. We also make several important recommendations as to how the price review process – which should be retained alongside and informed by supervisory engagement – might be simplified and reformed. These include changes to the framework of delivery incentives, the allocation of bill revenues to infrastructure renewal, operational maintenance and enhancement expenditure, to the calculation of the return on capital and debt and to the appeals process.    

    While changes to economic regulation are necessary, however, they will not address the fragmented regulatory landscape for the water industry. Water companies’ costs, investments, plans and performance are overseen by four regulators at present in England – Ofwat, the Environment Agency, Natural England and the Drinking Water Inspectorate. Each has a different focus, different objectives and different requirements that overlap and are often in tension. The Environment Agency determines much of the industry’s investment needs but the industry’s revenues are determined by Ofwat. Companies can be sanctioned by both Ofwat and the EA for the same pollution incidents. Funding of maintenance and infrastructure renewal are the responsibility of Ofwat but the environmental consequences of ageing infrastructure are the responsibility of the EA, as we saw from the report that was published last week. 

    The regulatory structure at privatisation was set up with separate regulators. As the overlaps have grown and the environmental and other standards have been raised, the need for coordination and resolution of different objectives has grown. 

    The Commission has not approached the option of major structural change lightly. It is never an easy option. I am all too aware, after many years in the public service, of the costs and risks of breaking up and reforming institutional structures. These costs and risks go beyond the financial: they include the human costs of organisational change, the deflection of management time and focus, the risk of dropping the ball on key objectives, and the breaking up of internal synergies and the need to create new interfaces between organisations.   

    The Commission has looked hard at potential for coordination mechanisms to address the tensions and overlaps we have identified.  Our conclusion, however, is that if the primary objective is securing the reset and long-term change that we need in the water sector, we need an integrated regulator for water. 

    The Commission recommends, therefore, that in England, Ofwat, the water related environmental protection functions of the EA, the Drinking Water Inspectorate, and the water related function of Natural England, be brought together into a new integrated Regulator for Water. For Wales, which has a different institutional structure, we recommend that the economic regulatory functions now carried out for Wales by Ofwat be transferred to a Welsh economic regulation function located in Natural Resources Wales.  

    The new regulator for water will become responsible for Ofwat’s current duties and roles to protect consumers. But, in line with its Terms of Reference, the Commission has also looked at the broader arrangements for vulnerable customers and those for consumer redress and consumer advocacy currently carried out by CCW.  

    We have to recognise that the cost of producing water and wastewater services is likely to increase over the medium and longer term as the industry has to replace ageing assets, respond to higher environmental and public health standards and continue to adapt to the challenges of rising population growth and climate change.  Against that likely background of rising costs and rising bills, there is a need for a stronger safety net for the most vulnerable who are exposed to water poverty. Water companies already operate social tariffs, spreading the cost of supporting vulnerable customers across their customer base. But the effects of higher costs of water in different parts of the country have different impacts and there is already significant variation in bills that vulnerable customers pay, even taking into account local social tariffs.   

    It is for government to decide whether and how far to equalise support for the vulnerable in different parts of the country and it is for government to decide to what extent this should be done through water bills as part of a national social tariff, or through other means of support such as the social security system. It is of course for elected government rather than the Commission to decide between those options. The Government has now taken the powers to introduce a national social tariff, and in line with our assessment that stronger support will be needed for the most vulnerable, the Commission recommends that such a tariff be implemented. However, we make no recommendation on the design, the level of support and the degree to which there should be cross subsidy between customers of different water companies. These are highly distributional decisions, and such decisions are not for technocrats but for government to make.  

    We have also made a number of recommendations on consumer redress and consumer advocacy. On redress, unlike other regulated sectors, there is no mandatory dispute mechanism for customers.  The Commission believes that water company customers should have the protection of a statutory ombudsman as exists, for example, in energy. And given the CCW’s expertise in this area, the Commission recommends it be upgraded to become the Ombudsman for Water, with Citizens Advice, which has proved to be a powerful consumer advocate and advisory service for customers in other regulated sectors, taking over the role of consumer advocacy for water customers.  

    In addition, changes we have recommended to the water company Price Review process will also allow appeals against the price determination to be brought by consumers as well as by water companies – again as is possible in other regulated sectors. 

    Taken as a whole, the changes the Commission proposes should lead to more effective, joined-up regulation and stronger protections for consumers. In the Commission’s judgement, if implemented effectively, they will address the shortcomings in regulation that lie at the heart of the poor performance, underinvestment and the failure to protect the public interest that we have seen over recent years. 

    Regulation must be a key line of defence to protect the public interest. A system of private regulated monopoly utilities – as I have said – will only work if private interests of water companies and their owners are aligned with the public interest in the production of public goods.  That is the job of regulation, economic and environmental, to ensure that alignment so that companies are incentivised to produce public goods and avoid public harms.   

    But, taking the sector as a whole, water companies themselves and their owners must bear a large part of the responsibility for the failures we have seen. Water companies are private companies and their owners are entitled to a return on their investment. But those returns must not come at the expense of the public interest. Water companies operate under licence and the public purpose of their operations is inherent in those licences. Sadly, we have over recent decades seen examples in which companies have pursued their short term private interest at the expense of the public interest and of the long term resilience of the company. 

    A large number of the responses to the Commission’s Call for Evidence expressed disquiet and concern at the inclusion of the profit motives in the provision of water. And I do understand the concerns raised by many about profit in the provision of water and wastewater given some of the experiences we’ve heard. Some proposed nationalisation or municipalisation or the transfer of for-profit water companies to not-for-profit or similar models. The Commission considered these in line with our Terms of Reference which focus on a privately owned regulated sector and rule out nationalisation or the purchase of companies with public funds for transfer to other ownership models.  

    But we also examined the performance of different ownership and operational models, public and private, in other jurisdictions. We published our initial analysis in the Call for Evidence, and we invited respondents to submit further analysis and evidence. We have refined our analysis and have published it in full in the final report. I have to say, on the data and comparable metrics available, the truth is that we did not see evidence of a causal link between ownership models and a range of environmental and other performance indicators. 

    We took from this work two conclusions. First, the regulatory model is key to performance and we need to address regulation. Second, where companies are privately owned it is the business model of the owners, the level of return they seek on their investment, their time horizon for that return, their preference for dividends or capital gain and their willingness to invest further in their company for a fair return. Those are the things that make the difference.   

    At privatisation it was envisaged that water companies would be owned by long-term investors looking for relatively low risk, low return investments as might be expected form a regulated monopoly utility.  Investment vehicles have changed markedly since privatisation. Many investors, including institutional investors, now prefer private, whether listed or unlisted, it remains the case that the industry and the public interest is best served by long term, low risk, low return investors. 

    The changes to regulation, particularly to economic regulation, are intended in part to lower regulatory risk and to reduce the variability of returns that deter such investors. The Commission has also recommended that Government make the stability of the regulatory system an objective in the National Water Strategy and that maintaining the investability of the sector becomes one of the duties of new regulator for water.    

    But, just as we need to attract longer term investors to the sector with more predictable regulation, we will need to ensure that owners and managers do not act against the public interest and damage the financial resilience of companies.  

    So the Commission is recommending giving the new regulator the power where necessary to block changes of ownership, to set gearing levels and, in certain circumstances, to give direction to the ultimate controller of the company.  These powers exist in other regulated sectors and they are necessary guardrails in water.  We are also recommending making the public purpose of companies clear in the licence condition, bringing company governance in line with the governance code for listed companies and bringing in a statutory for the very senior management cadre, drawing on the experience of the senior managers regime in the financial sector.   

    I am, you will be pleased to hear, coming to the end.  I hope it will not seem like a Russian novel of a report.  The final area that all these changes have to address – from strategic guidance to planning to regulation to company performance – is the health of our water industry infrastructure and of the resilience of our water and wastewater systems.   

    We simply do not know the overall health of the system.  Ofwat last oversaw a full assessment over 20 years ago.  The asset health measures used in price reviews have been backward-looking, measuring past failure rates to determine and fund the amount and the rate of renewal and other capital maintenance necessary to keep the system operating.  Much of water industry infrastructure is underground and very difficult to assess and different companies have different ways of assessing asset health.  Not all water company assets are mapped. 

    We do not know whether enough replacement and renewal has been funded and carried out over the past.  But there is strong evidence that we may be considerably behind the game.   

    When the Scottish regulator switched from using backward-looking indicators, similar to those Ofwat have used, to a forward-looking in-depth assessment, the conclusion was that there had been material underfunding of capital maintenance. Other countries replace and renew at much faster rates than we have maintained.  And, as we heard last week from the Environment Agency, infrastructure failure is a major reason for the pollution incidents we are seeing.   

    So, the Commission is recommending that a forward-looking assessment of our infrastructure is carried out and that national resilience standards are developed for water. 

    The massive steam pumping engines that filled this engine house operated for over a hundred years and were retired only when steam gave way to diesel and electricity. A couple of weeks ago I visited a much more modern pumping engine hall, just over 50 years old filled with electric pumps that supply drinking water for one third of Londoners.  It is a single point of failure for the water supply of all of Canary Wharf. And it is on its last legs. A £400m project to replace the entire facility has finally been approved and work is about to begin on the replacement.  Given the limited space and need to keep the facility operating, it is a hugely complex project that will take at least 7 years. 

    I raise this example not merely to contrast the standard of Victorian engineering with its more modern successors, absolutely humbling though that is.  It is also an example of the forethought, timescale, planning and funding necessary to ensure that our water infrastructure continues to serve us into the future, and of the dangers of a patch and mend approach. 

    I started this speech with the Great Stink of 1858 and the reset it triggered.  Change did not happen overnight; it took Bazalgette over 15 years to complete his sewer network and for London’s health to be transformed.  I hope, following our own Great Stink moment, that the recommendations in the Commission’s report will launch the reset that is required. Likewise, change will not happen overnight, and trust will take time to come back.  But I very much hope we are now at the beginning of the road. 

    Finally, it has been a real privilege to lead this work, and as I conclude I would like to thank the Commission Advisory Group for their help, their insight and support and, most of all, the amazingly committed and hard-working Commission Secretariat team for all they’ve done.  Any credit for this report goes to them; any criticism resides with me.   

    Thank you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 21 July 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    July 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: St. Petersburg Felon Sentenced To Over 17 Years For Possessing Ammunition

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

    Tampa, Florida – U.S. District Judge Steven D. Merryday has sentenced Wayne Lamar Davis (55, St. Petersburg) to 17 years and 6 months in federal prison for possessing ammunition as a convicted felon. Davis was found guilty following a bench trial in March 2025.

    According to statements made in court, Davis committed a traffic infraction while driving two young children to school on the morning of March 8, 2024. When the St. Petersburg Police Department officer who conducted a traffic stop attempted to detain Davis, Davis violently resisted, slipped out of his shirt and shorts, and fled on foot in his underwear. The officer apprehended Davis after a brief foot chase, locating a loaded firearm in a bag that Davis had retrieved from his vehicle. Davis received an enhanced sentence pursuant to the Armed Career Criminal Act based on prior state convictions for robbery, aggravated assault, and resisting an officer with violence and a prior federal conviction for conspiring to possess with the intent to distribute cocaine.   

    This case was investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the St. Petersburg Police Department. It was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney David P. Sullivan.

    This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. On May 26, 2021, the Department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results.

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Security: Martin Man Sentenced to Nearly Five Years in Federal Prison for Illegal Possession of a Firearm

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

    RAPID CITY – United States Attorney Alison J. Ramsdell announced today that U.S. District Judge Camela C. Theeler has sentenced a Martin, South Dakota, man convicted of Possession of a Firearm by a Prohibited Person. The sentencing took place on July 14, 2025.

    Aloysius Mousseau, 23, was sentenced to four years and eight months in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release, and ordered to pay a $100 special assessment to the Federal Crime Victims Fund.

    Mousseau was indicted for Possession of a Firearm by a Prohibited Person by a federal grand jury in January 2025. He pleaded guilty on April 22, 2025.

    In November 2024, officers with the Rapid City Police Department found Mousseau with a pistol.  Mousseau gave a false name and age to law enforcement. Mousseau had been convicted for crimes punishable beyond a year in prison. Possessing any firearm after such conviction is a felony offense.

    This case is part of Operation Take Back America, a nationwide initiative that marshals the full resources of the Department of Justice to repel the invasion of illegal immigration, achieve the total elimination of cartels and transnational criminal organizations (TCOs), and protect our communities from the perpetrators of violent crime. Operation Take Back America streamlines efforts and resources from the Department’s Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETFs) and Project Safe Neighborhood (PSN). Through PSN, the District of South Dakota seeks to bring together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce gun violence and make our neighborhoods safer for everyone.

    This case was investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives and the Rapid City Police Department. Assistant U.S. Attorney Benjamin Schroeder prosecuted the case.

    Mousseau was immediately remanded to the custody of the U.S. Marshals Service. 

    MIL Security OSI –

    July 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Latest Crypto News: InvroMining Launches Dual-System Free BTC Cloud Mining APP

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    New York City, NY, July 21, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — InvroMining, the world’s leading cloud mining service platform, today announced the launch of a new dual-system (iOS/Android) free cloud mining APP to provide global users with a legal, compliant, safe, efficient, and zero-threshold cryptocurrency mining experience. This innovative application not only supports Bitcoin (BTC), but is also compatible with mainstream crypto assets such as Ripple (XRP), Dogecoin (DOGE), Litecoin (LTC), Ethereum (ETH), and supports multi-currency mining.

    What is InvroMining ?
    InvroMining is a world-leading legal and compliant cloud mining platform, focusing on providing users with zero-threshold, environmentally friendly, safe and flexible digital asset mining services.
    Users do not need to purchase mining machines or technical knowledge, they can start mining with one click through the mobile APP and settle their earnings in real time. The platform supports mainstream currencies such as BTC, XRP, ETH, USDT, and has been listed on the Google App Store, providing services to more than 180 countries around the world.

    Compliance-driven, creating a globally trusted mining experience
    As the crypto industry continues to increase its demands for security and transparency, InvroMining insists on compliance-driven development and adopts multiple security measures such as bank-level security protection, McAfee security protection, and Cloudflare firewall to ensure the security of user funds and data.
    At the same time, the platform achieves full transparency of the profit distribution process through blockchain smart contracts. Users can track the mining process in real time and enjoy the trust guarantee brought by decentralization.

    Core function highlights: zero threshold mining + intelligent income scheduling
    Free registration and free computing power: New users will receive a free computing power package upon registration.
    Artificial Intelligence Mining Scheduling: InvroMining’s exclusive AI technology dynamically optimizes computing power allocation based on mining pool performance and market changes to increase profitability.
    Green Data Center: Environmentally friendly mining farms are deployed globally. Global mining farms use renewable energy (wind power, solar power), which is environmentally friendly and low-carbon, to achieve green mining.
    Around-the-clock operation: Mining services are available 24/7, and earnings are settled in real time.
    Multi-currency withdrawal: supports mining and withdrawal of popular currencies such as BTC, XRP, ETH, USDT, LTC, SOL, DOGE, etc., which is flexible and convenient.

    How to participate in InvroMining to earn potential profits?
    InvroMining allows users around the world to participate in cryptocurrency mining in the simplest way. No mining machines or technology are required. All you need is a mobile phone to start a legal, compliant, and zero-threshold mining journey.
    Step 1: Register and claim your rewards
    Visit InvroMining.com or download the InvroMining APP (iOS / Android supported).
    Complete the registration and get $15 in free computing power rewards immediately without any upfront investment.
    Sign in daily to receive extra computing power rewards and increase mining revenue.

    Step 2: Top up or directly use the free computing power
    You can use the computing power given by registration to start free mining directly.
    If you want to get higher potential returns, you can choose to recharge mainstream cryptocurrencies such as BTC, XRP, DOGE, ETH, LTC, USDT, etc. InvroMining supports multi-currency mining.

    Step 3: Select the contract and start mining
    The platform provides a variety of mining contracts, including short-term experience contracts and long-term strategy contracts.
    【contract】
    Click ” One-click Mining ” and InvroMining ‘s AI intelligent scheduling system will automatically optimize the allocation of computing power to ensure maximum profits.
    Mining tasks will run 24/7 in the green data center.

    Contract Project Investment Amount Contract Period Proceeds at maturity
    New User Experience Contract USD 100 2 days $100 + $8
    SCP Miner DR7 $500 5 days $500 + $31.5
    Antminer S21 Hydro $ 1000 10 days 1000 + $ 135
    WhatsMiner M60S $ 3000 15 days 3000 + $ 652.5
    BOMBAX EZ100-PRO 500 0 USD 20 days 5000 + $ 1550
    Antminer E11 $ 10,000 30 days 10,000 + $ 5,100

    ( Please visit the official website for more details )

    Step 4: Profit Settlement and Withdrawal
    All profits are automatically settled through blockchain smart contracts, and are credited in real time, which is safe and transparent.
    Supports multi-currency withdrawals (BTC, XRP, USDT, etc.), which can be transferred to your exchange or wallet at any time .

    Dual systems fully cover the entire industry, allowing users around the world to enjoy cloud mining
    InvroMining’s new APP is now online, supporting iOS/Android platforms, providing localized language support and a simple and intuitive operating interface for global users, making it easy for novices to get started.

    Safety and compliance to protect user rights
    InvroMining not only has a strict security architecture and protection system, but also has passed industry compliance audits and complies with regulatory requirements in multiple jurisdictions, becoming a cloud mining solution trusted by users around the world.

    About InvroMining
    InvroMining is the world’s leading legal and compliant cloud mining platform, dedicated to providing global users with zero-threshold, transparent, safe and efficient digital asset mining services. The platform was established in 2016 and is headquartered in the UK. It currently serves more than 180 countries around the world and has more than 8 million users , becoming one of the most trusted cloud mining brands.

    With the release of the InvroMining dual-system APP, the cloud mining industry has officially entered a new stage of compliance and convenience. The platform not only provides a safe and transparent mining model for global users, but also further promotes the popularization and application of mainstream crypto assets. For more details , please visit invromining.com .

    Experience legal, safe and environmentally friendly cloud mining now!
    Visit invro mining .com to download the APP, start your zero-threshold mining journey, and share the wealth opportunities in the blockchain era .

    Attachment

    • InvroMining

    The MIL Network –

    July 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Royal Welsh Show: ‘After countless U-turns, Labour must now also reverse its tax raid on Welsh farms’ – Plaid Cymru

    Source: Party of Wales

    Ann Davies MP and Llyr Gruffydd MS say UK Government should introduce a wealth tax instead of ‘targeting those who sustain our rural communities’

    On the first day of the Royal Welsh Show, Plaid Cymru’s Westminster Agriculture Spokesperson Ann Davies MP has today called on the UK Government to reverse its planned changes to Agricultural Property Relief, warning that the policy will do “lasting harm” to Welsh family farms.

     

    Speaking from Llanelwedd, Ms Davies said that after repeated policy reversals, it is time for Labour to “add this damaging farm tax to the list.”

     

    Plaid Cymru’s Agriculture spokesperson in the Senedd, Llyr Gruffydd MS, said that most Welsh farmers are “cash poor” and that “many live a hand-to-mouth existence”.

     

    The UK Government plans to introduce a cap on Agricultural and Business Property Relief from April 2026, meaning family farms valued above that threshold could face inheritance tax for the first time in 40 years. Despite claims that only 500 farms per year will be affected, Welsh farming unions warn that the vast majority of productive family farms in Wales could fall into scope due to rising land, machinery and asset values.

     

    From the financial implications of restrictions and testing requirements to limit the spread of the Bluetongue virus, to the effects of prolonged dry and warm weather on crops and pasture, the new inheritance tax rules will be introduced amidst mounting financial pressures on farmers.

     

    Plaid Cymru is calling for:

     

    • A Wales-specific impact assessment that includes tenant and generational family farms

     

    • Protection for active food-producing family farms from inheritance tax

     

    • The introduction of a tax on extreme wealth – targeting assets worth over £10 million

     

    Ann Davies MP said:

    “After countless U-turns, Labour must now add its damaging farm tax to the list. Changes to Agricultural Property Relief represent a deeply unfair policy that targets the people who feed us, care for our land, and sustain our rural communities. It will do lasting harm to Welsh family farms.

    “It is a policy based on the assumption that farmers are rich – that is fundamentally wrong in Wales, where our upland farmers are guardians of the land and make very little profit. The UK Government admits it has done no Wales-specific assessment. That’s unacceptable, and it must change immediately.

    “Plaid Cymru believes that those with the broadest shoulders should pay their fair share. But the UK Government’s policy is too broad brush and targets the wrong people. Instead, the introduction of a tax on extreme wealth – a 2% tax on assets worth over £10 million – could raise over £20 billion a year. That is the fair and progressive way to fund public services and address inequality.

    “The Royal Welsh Show is a chance to celebrate everything our farmers contribute. But because of this policy, they’re anxious about their ability to continue producing food into the future. With Bluetongue requirements and intense drought intensifying already significant financial pressures on farmers, Labour must reverse course – and they must do it now.”

     

    Llyr Gruffydd added:

    “Most of our family farms are cash poor and many live a hand-to-mouth existence. They don’t have the capital to shoulder this huge tax burden.

    “Whilst it’s right to target those who buy land for tax avoidance purposes, our working family farms must not be caught in the crossfire. We have urged the Government to look at alternative approaches such as a clawback system that’s used successfully in other countries. This would only tax land if it’s subsequently sold within a specific number of years after inheritance.

    “Sadly, the Chancellor’s policy will force already struggling businesses to sell off their land, making them less sustainable in the future. Plaid Cymru will fight the family farm tax all the way.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    July 22, 2025
  • Russia says it favours new round of peace talks with Ukraine, highlights gulf between them

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The Kremlin said on Monday that Moscow was in favour of a new round of peace talks between Russia and Ukraine but the two sides’ positions were diametrically opposed so there was a lot of diplomatic work to be done.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Saturday that Kyiv has sent Moscow an offer to hold another round of peace talks this week, and that he wants to speed up negotiations for a ceasefire.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that as soon as there was a definitive understanding of the date for the next round of talks then Moscow would announce it.

    “There is our draft memorandum, there is a draft memorandum that has been handed over by the Ukrainian side. There is to be an exchange of views and talks on these two drafts, which are diametrically opposed so far,” Peskov said.

    Ukraine and Russia have held two rounds of talks in Istanbul, on May 16 and June 2, that led to the exchange of thousands of prisoners of war and the remains of dead soldiers. But the two sides have made no breakthrough towards a ceasefire or a settlement to end almost three and a half years of war.

    (Reuters)

    July 22, 2025
  • Russia says it favours new round of peace talks with Ukraine, highlights gulf between them

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The Kremlin said on Monday that Moscow was in favour of a new round of peace talks between Russia and Ukraine but the two sides’ positions were diametrically opposed so there was a lot of diplomatic work to be done.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Saturday that Kyiv has sent Moscow an offer to hold another round of peace talks this week, and that he wants to speed up negotiations for a ceasefire.

    Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that as soon as there was a definitive understanding of the date for the next round of talks then Moscow would announce it.

    “There is our draft memorandum, there is a draft memorandum that has been handed over by the Ukrainian side. There is to be an exchange of views and talks on these two drafts, which are diametrically opposed so far,” Peskov said.

    Ukraine and Russia have held two rounds of talks in Istanbul, on May 16 and June 2, that led to the exchange of thousands of prisoners of war and the remains of dead soldiers. But the two sides have made no breakthrough towards a ceasefire or a settlement to end almost three and a half years of war.

    (Reuters)

    July 22, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Digitorial_Awesome Intelligence: How AI is Changing the Way You Use Your Smartphone with the Galaxy A56 5G & A36 5G

    Source: Samsung

    Samsung’s latest Galaxy A series marks a bold step into the AI-powered mobile future. With the introduction of the Galaxy A56 5G and Galaxy A36 5G, Samsung is bringing what it calls “Awesome Intelligence” directly to users’ fingertips. These new models offer futuristic features designed for everyday use – making advanced AI experiences more accessible than ever before.
     
    What Samsung has done with these devices is make AI accessible — not as a gimmick, but as a true daily companion. Whether it’s discovering something cool online, cleaning up your pics, or getting the perfect snap on the first try, Awesome Intelligence is all about helping you do more, better, and faster.
     
    These devices aren’t just about better specs — they’re about smarter experiences. Here’s a look at three AI-powered features changing the way you interact with your phone daily.
     
    Circle to Search: When Curiosity Strikes, You’re Covered
    We’ve all been there. You’re scrolling Instagram or TikTok, and someone’s wearing an outfit you love or using a gadget you need in your life. But there’s no tag, no caption, no clue.
     
    Circle to Search is one of the most powerful and practical AI tools on the Galaxy A56 5G and A36 5G. Just press and hold the home button, circle what you’re curious about – a shoe, a landmark, a makeup product — and boom, instant Google-powered search results, right on your screen. Or say you spot a streetwear hoodie you like as you’re scrolling through your newsfeed. Instead of playing detective, you ‘Circle to Search’ it and get links related to the item online — all without leaving the app. Less switching, more discovering.
     

     
    This is not just next-gen browsing. This is instant, intuitive discovery built into your daily scrolling.
     
    Object Eraser: Fix Your Photos in a Tap
    Let’s be honest — the perfect shot is often ruined by someone walking into frame at the wrong time or a random object in the background. In the past, that meant either retaking the photo (if possible), using a third-party app, or just learning to live with it.
     
    With Object Eraser, those days are gone. Tap on the unwanted element in your photo — maybe it’s a photo bomber, a random shadow, or a messy pile of stuff in the background. The AI does the rest, removing the distraction and blending the image naturally.
     

     
    You’re snapping a photo at the beach. It’s an epic time out, your outfit’s fire, but there’s a stranger walking their dog in the background. One tap with Object Eraser and it’s like they were never there.
     
    Object Eraser makes every shot Insta-worthy — no filters, no stress.
     
    Enhanced Camera AI: Bring Out Your Creativity
    The Galaxy A56 5G and A36 5G come equipped with a 50MP main lens, a 10-bit HDR selfie camera, and in the case of the A56 5G, an ultra-wide 12MP lens and enhanced Nightography — but it’s the AI doing the behind-the-scenes magic that levels up every shot.
     
    AI isn’t just helping take photos — it’s helping you take better ones by automatically adjusting lighting and contrast to suit your scene, recognising different subjects (like people, pets, or food) and optimising settings on the fly, and smoothing low-light noise for cleaner night shots.
     
    When you’re out for a night with friends, and the lighting in the club is, well, not ideal, there’s no need to panic because there’s a solve. But with AI-enhanced Nightography and selfie optimisation, your photos come out looking sharp, balanced, and ready to post. No edits needed.
     
    And for the group shots, the Galaxy A56 5G offers Best Face — a clever AI tool that lets you select the best expressions from a burst of photos and merge them. No more “let’s take one more” because someone blinked or looked away.
     

     
    One of the best parts is that you’re getting all this in stylish, powerful devices with immersive Super AMOLED displays, long-lasting 5000mAh batteries, and fast, reliable 5G connectivity — all wrapped in a design that’s built to last with IP67 water and dust resistance.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Digitorial_Awesome Intelligence: How AI is Changing the Way You Use Your Smartphone with the Galaxy A56 5G & A36 5G

    Source: Samsung

    Samsung’s latest Galaxy A series marks a bold step into the AI-powered mobile future. With the introduction of the Galaxy A56 5G and Galaxy A36 5G, Samsung is bringing what it calls “Awesome Intelligence” directly to users’ fingertips. These new models offer futuristic features designed for everyday use – making advanced AI experiences more accessible than ever before.
     
    What Samsung has done with these devices is make AI accessible — not as a gimmick, but as a true daily companion. Whether it’s discovering something cool online, cleaning up your pics, or getting the perfect snap on the first try, Awesome Intelligence is all about helping you do more, better, and faster.
     
    These devices aren’t just about better specs — they’re about smarter experiences. Here’s a look at three AI-powered features changing the way you interact with your phone daily.
     
    Circle to Search: When Curiosity Strikes, You’re Covered
    We’ve all been there. You’re scrolling Instagram or TikTok, and someone’s wearing an outfit you love or using a gadget you need in your life. But there’s no tag, no caption, no clue.
     
    Circle to Search is one of the most powerful and practical AI tools on the Galaxy A56 5G and A36 5G. Just press and hold the home button, circle what you’re curious about – a shoe, a landmark, a makeup product — and boom, instant Google-powered search results, right on your screen. Or say you spot a streetwear hoodie you like as you’re scrolling through your newsfeed. Instead of playing detective, you ‘Circle to Search’ it and get links related to the item online — all without leaving the app. Less switching, more discovering.
     

     
    This is not just next-gen browsing. This is instant, intuitive discovery built into your daily scrolling.
     
    Object Eraser: Fix Your Photos in a Tap
    Let’s be honest — the perfect shot is often ruined by someone walking into frame at the wrong time or a random object in the background. In the past, that meant either retaking the photo (if possible), using a third-party app, or just learning to live with it.
     
    With Object Eraser, those days are gone. Tap on the unwanted element in your photo — maybe it’s a photo bomber, a random shadow, or a messy pile of stuff in the background. The AI does the rest, removing the distraction and blending the image naturally.
     

     
    You’re snapping a photo at the beach. It’s an epic time out, your outfit’s fire, but there’s a stranger walking their dog in the background. One tap with Object Eraser and it’s like they were never there.
     
    Object Eraser makes every shot Insta-worthy — no filters, no stress.
     
    Enhanced Camera AI: Bring Out Your Creativity
    The Galaxy A56 5G and A36 5G come equipped with a 50MP main lens, a 10-bit HDR selfie camera, and in the case of the A56 5G, an ultra-wide 12MP lens and enhanced Nightography — but it’s the AI doing the behind-the-scenes magic that levels up every shot.
     
    AI isn’t just helping take photos — it’s helping you take better ones by automatically adjusting lighting and contrast to suit your scene, recognising different subjects (like people, pets, or food) and optimising settings on the fly, and smoothing low-light noise for cleaner night shots.
     
    When you’re out for a night with friends, and the lighting in the club is, well, not ideal, there’s no need to panic because there’s a solve. But with AI-enhanced Nightography and selfie optimisation, your photos come out looking sharp, balanced, and ready to post. No edits needed.
     
    And for the group shots, the Galaxy A56 5G offers Best Face — a clever AI tool that lets you select the best expressions from a burst of photos and merge them. No more “let’s take one more” because someone blinked or looked away.
     

     
    One of the best parts is that you’re getting all this in stylish, powerful devices with immersive Super AMOLED displays, long-lasting 5000mAh batteries, and fast, reliable 5G connectivity — all wrapped in a design that’s built to last with IP67 water and dust resistance.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: HBT Financial, Inc. Announces Second Quarter 2025 Financial Results

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Second Quarter Highlights

    • Net income of $19.2 million, or $0.61 per diluted share; return on average assets (“ROAA”) of 1.53%; return on average stockholders’ equity (“ROAE”) of 13.47%; and return on average tangible common equity (“ROATCE”)(1) of 15.55%
    • Adjusted net income(1) of $19.8 million; or $0.63 per diluted share; adjusted ROAA(1) of 1.58%; adjusted ROAE(1) of 13.87%; and adjusted ROATCE(1) of 16.02%
    • Asset quality remained strong with nonperforming assets to total assets of 0.13% and net charge-offs to average loans of 0.12%, on an annualized basis
    • Net interest margin increased 2 basis points to 4.14% and net interest margin (tax-equivalent basis)(1)increased 3 basis points to 4.19%

    BLOOMINGTON, Ill., July 21, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — HBT Financial, Inc. (NASDAQ: HBT) (the “Company” or “HBT Financial” or “HBT”), the holding company for Heartland Bank and Trust Company, today reported net income of $19.2 million, or $0.61 diluted earnings per share, for the second quarter of 2025. This compares to net income of $19.1 million, or $0.60 diluted earnings per share, for the first quarter of 2025, and net income of $18.1 million, or $0.57 diluted earnings per share, for the second quarter of 2024.

    J. Lance Carter, President and Chief Executive Officer of HBT Financial, said, “During the second quarter of 2025, our team continued to deliver consistently strong earnings with adjusted net income(1) of $19.8 million, or $0.63 per diluted share. This was driven by an increase in adjusted pre-provision net revenue(1) of 5.2%, compared to the first quarter of 2025. Adjusted ROAA(1) was 1.58% and adjusted ROATCE(1) was 16.02% for the second quarter while our net interest margin on a tax equivalent basis(1) increased 3 basis points to 4.19%. Our strong profitability coupled with an improvement in our accumulated other comprehensive income due to lower interest rates resulted in a $0.59 increase in our tangible book value per share(1) to $16.02, an increase of 3.8% for the quarter and 17.4% over the last 12 months.

    Our balance sheet remains strong as all capital ratios increased during the quarter and asset quality remained stable with nonperforming assets to total assets of only 0.13%. We saw a decrease in loans during the quarter as seasonal paydowns on grain elevator lines of credit caused a decrease in commercial and industrial loans and a higher amount of property sales caused higher payoffs in several other portfolios. We expect to see loan growth return in the third quarter of 2025 due to higher loan pipelines at the end of the second quarter than at the end of the first quarter and fewer payoffs projected.

    Our credit discipline, strong profitability and solid balance sheet give us confidence that we are prepared for a variety of economic and interest rate environments. Our capital levels and operational structure support attractive acquisition opportunities should the right opportunity arise.”
    ____________________________________
    (1) See “Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” below for reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to their most closely comparable GAAP financial measures.

    Adjusted Net Income

    In addition to reporting GAAP results, the Company believes non-GAAP measures such as adjusted net income and adjusted earnings per share, which adjust for acquisition expenses, branch closure expenses, gains (losses) on closed branch premises, realized gains (losses) on sales of securities, mortgage servicing rights fair value adjustments, and the tax effect of these pre-tax adjustments, provide investors with additional insight into its operational performance. The Company reported adjusted net income of $19.8 million, or $0.63 adjusted diluted earnings per share, for the second quarter of 2025. This compares to adjusted net income of $19.3 million, or $0.61 adjusted diluted earnings per share, for the first quarter of 2025, and adjusted net income of $18.1 million, or $0.57 adjusted diluted earnings per share, for the second quarter of 2024 (see “Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” tables below for reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to their most closely comparable GAAP financial measures).

    Net Interest Income and Net Interest Margin

    Net interest income for the second quarter of 2025 was $49.7 million, an increase of 2.0% from $48.7 million for the first quarter of 2025. The increase was primarily attributable to improved yields on debt securities and lower funding costs which were partially offset by a decrease in average loan balances.

    Relative to the second quarter of 2024, net interest income increased 5.6% from $47.0 million. The increase was primarily attributable to lower funding costs, improved yields on debt securities, and higher average loan balances. Additionally, a $0.5 million increase in nonaccrual interest recoveries and loan fees contributed to the increase in net interest income.

    Net interest margin for the second quarter of 2025 was 4.14%, compared to 4.12% for the first quarter of 2025, and net interest margin (tax-equivalent basis)(1) for the second quarter of 2025 was 4.19%, compared to 4.16% for the first quarter of 2025. The increase was primarily attributable to improved yields on debt securities, which increased 11 basis points to 2.60%, and lower funding costs, which decreased 3 basis points to 1.29%.

    Relative to the second quarter of 2024, net interest margin increased 19 basis points from 3.95% and net interest margin (tax-equivalent basis)(1) increased 19 basis points from 4.00%. The increase was primarily attributable to lower funding costs, higher yields on interest-earning assets, and an increase in nonaccrual interest recoveries and loan fees. The increase in the contribution of nonaccrual interest recoveries and loan fees accounted for 4 basis points of the increase in net interest margin.
    ____________________________________
    (1) See “Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” below for reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to their most closely comparable GAAP financial measures.

    Noninterest Income

    Noninterest income for the second quarter of 2025 was $9.1 million, a 1.8% decrease from $9.3 million for the first quarter of 2025. The decrease was primarily attributable to changes in the mortgage servicing rights (“MSR”) fair value adjustment, with a $0.8 million negative MSR fair value adjustment included in the second quarter 2025 results compared to a $0.3 million negative MSR fair value adjustment included in the first quarter 2025 results. Partially offsetting this decrease were seasonal increases in card income of $0.2 million and gains on sale of mortgage loans of $0.2 million.

    Relative to the second quarter of 2024, noninterest income decreased 4.9% from $9.6 million. The decrease was primarily attributable to changes in the MSR fair value adjustment, with a $0.8 million negative MSR fair value adjustment included in the second quarter 2025 results compared to a $0.1 million negative MSR fair value adjustment included in the second quarter 2024 results. Partially offsetting the decrease was a $0.2 million increase in wealth management fees.

    Noninterest Expense

    Noninterest expense for the second quarter of 2025 was $31.9 million, nearly unchanged from the first quarter of 2025. A $0.6 million decrease in salaries expense, which was impacted by seasonal variations in vacation accruals, was largely offset by a $0.4 million increase in other noninterest expense and a $0.3 million increase in employee benefits expense, primarily driven by higher medical benefit costs.

    Relative to the second quarter of 2024, noninterest expense increased 4.6% from $30.5 million. The increase was primarily attributable to a $0.7 million increase in employee benefits expense, primarily driven by higher medical benefit costs, a $0.3 million increase in other noninterest expense, and a $0.2 million increase in bank occupancy expense, primarily due to planned building maintenance and upgrades.

    Income Taxes

    During the second quarter of 2025 our effective tax rate increased to 27.0% when compared to 25.2% during the first quarter of 2025. This increase was primarily related to $0.3 million of additional tax expense related to the nonrecurring reversal of a stranded tax effect included in accumulated other comprehensive income, in connection with the maturity of a derivative designated as a cash flow hedge during the second quarter of 2025. Additionally, the first quarter of 2025 included a $0.2 million tax benefit from stock-based compensation that vested during the quarter.

    Loan Portfolio

    Total loans outstanding, before allowance for credit losses, were $3.35 billion at June 30, 2025, compared with $3.46 billion at March 31, 2025, and $3.39 billion at June 30, 2024. The $113.6 million decrease from March 31, 2025 was primarily attributable to $72.0 million of paydowns from property sales, a seasonal reduction of $25.1 million in grain elevator lines of credit included in the commercial and industrial segment, and additional payoffs across other segments. These reductions were partially offset by draws on existing loans in the construction and development segment and new originations to existing customers. Additionally, increases in the multi-family and commercial real estate – non-owner occupied segments were primarily due to completed projects being moved out of the construction and land development category.

    Deposits

    Total deposits were $4.31 billion at June 30, 2025, compared with $4.38 billion at March 31, 2025, and $4.32 billion at June 30, 2024. The $78.1 million decrease from March 31, 2025 was primarily attributable to higher outflows for tax payments by depositors and lower balances maintained in existing retail accounts which were partially offset by higher public funds balances.

    Asset Quality

    Nonperforming assets totaled $6.5 million, or 0.13% of total assets, at June 30, 2025, compared with $5.6 million, or 0.11% of total assets, at March 31, 2025, and $8.8 million, or 0.17% of total assets, at June 30, 2024. Additionally, of the $5.6 million of nonperforming loans held as of June 30, 2025, $1.9 million were either wholly or partially guaranteed by the U.S. government. The $0.9 million increase in nonperforming assets from March 31, 2025 was primarily attributable to higher nonperforming loan balances in the commercial and industrial and the construction and land development segments.

    The Company recorded a provision for credit losses of $0.5 million for the second quarter of 2025. The provision for credit losses primarily reflects a $1.0 million increase in required reserves driven by changes in the economic forecast; a $0.8 million increase in required reserves resulting from changes in qualitative factors; a $1.2 million decrease in required reserves driven by changes within the portfolio; and a $0.1 million decrease in specific reserves.
    The Company had net charge-offs of $1.0 million, or 0.12% of average loans on an annualized basis, for the second quarter of 2025, compared to net charge-offs of $0.4 million, or 0.05% of average loans on an annualized basis, for the first quarter of 2025, and net charge-offs of $0.7 million, or 0.08% of average loans on an annualized basis, for the second quarter of 2024. Charge-offs during second quarter of 2025 were primarily recognized in the commercial and industrial and one-to-four family residential segments.

    The Company’s allowance for credit losses was 1.24% of total loans and 741% of nonperforming loans at June 30, 2025, compared with 1.22% of total loans and 825% of nonperforming loans at March 31, 2025. In addition, the allowance for credit losses on unfunded lending-related commitments totaled $3.1 million as of June 30, 2025, compared with $3.2 million as of March 31, 2025.

    Capital

    As of June 30, 2025, the Company exceeded all regulatory capital requirements under Basel III as summarized in the following table:

        June 30, 2025   For Capital
    Adequacy Purposes
    With Capital
    Conservation Buffer
             
    Total capital to risk-weighted assets   17.74 %   10.50 %
    Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets   15.60     8.50  
    Common equity tier 1 capital ratio   14.26     7.00  
    Tier 1 leverage ratio   11.86     4.00  
                 

    The ratio of tangible common equity to tangible assets(1) increased to 10.21% as of June 30, 2025, from 9.73% as of March 31, 2025, and tangible book value per share(1) increased by $0.59 to $16.02 as of June 30, 2025, when compared to March 31, 2025.

    During the second quarter of 2025, the Company repurchased 135,997 shares of its common stock at a weighted average price of $21.30 under its stock repurchase program. The Company’s Board of Directors has authorized the repurchase of up to $15.0 million of HBT Financial common stock under its stock repurchase program, which is in effect until January 1, 2026. As of June 30, 2025, the Company had $12.1 million remaining under the stock repurchase program.
    ____________________________________
    (1) See “Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” below for reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to their most closely comparable GAAP financial measures.

    About HBT Financial, Inc.

    HBT Financial, Inc., headquartered in Bloomington, Illinois, is the holding company for Heartland Bank and Trust Company, and has banking roots that can be traced back to 1920. HBT Financial provides a comprehensive suite of financial products and services to consumers, businesses, and municipal entities throughout Illinois and eastern Iowa through 66 full-service branches. As of June 30, 2025, HBT Financial had total assets of $5.0 billion, total loans of $3.3 billion, and total deposits of $4.3 billion.

    Non-GAAP Financial Measures

    Some of the financial measures included in this press release are not measures of financial performance recognized in accordance with GAAP. These non-GAAP financial measures include adjusted net income, adjusted earnings per share, adjusted ROAA, pre-provision net revenue, pre-provision net revenue less charge-offs (recoveries), adjusted pre-provision net revenue, adjusted pre-provision net revenue less charge-offs (recoveries), net interest income (tax-equivalent basis), net interest margin (tax-equivalent basis), efficiency ratio (tax-equivalent basis), adjusted efficiency ratio (tax-equivalent basis), the ratio of tangible common equity to tangible assets, tangible book value per share, adjusted ROAE, ROATCE, and adjusted ROATCE. Our management uses these non-GAAP financial measures, together with the related GAAP financial measures, in its analysis of our performance and in making business decisions. Management believes that it is a standard practice in the banking industry to present these non-GAAP financial measures, and accordingly believes that providing these measures may be useful for peer comparison purposes. These disclosures should not be viewed as substitutes for the results determined to be in accordance with GAAP; nor are they necessarily comparable to non-GAAP financial measures that may be presented by other companies. See our reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to their most directly comparable GAAP financial measures in the “Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” tables.

    Forward-Looking Statements

    Readers should note that in addition to the historical information contained herein, this press release contains, and future oral and written statements of the Company and its management may contain, “forward-looking statements” within the meanings of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Forward-looking statements generally can be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology such as “will,” “propose,” “may,” “plan,” “seek,” “expect,” “intend,” “estimate,” “anticipate,” “believe,” “continue,” or “should,” or similar terminology. Any forward-looking statements presented herein are made only as of the date of this press release, and the Company does not undertake any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements to reflect changes in assumptions, the occurrence of unanticipated events, or otherwise.

    Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from these forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to: (i) the strength of the local, state, national and international economies and financial markets (including effects of inflationary pressures and supply chain constraints); (ii) effects on the U.S. economy resulting from the threat or implementation of, or changes to, existing policies and executive orders including tariffs, immigration policy, regulatory or other governmental agencies, foreign policy and tax regulations; (iii) the economic impact of any future terrorist threats and attacks, widespread disease or pandemics, acts of war or other threats thereof (including the Russian invasion of Ukraine and ongoing conflicts in the Middle East), or other adverse events that could cause economic deterioration or instability in credit markets, and the response of the local, state and national governments to any such adverse external events; (iv) new and revised accounting policies and practices, as may be adopted by state and federal regulatory banking agencies, the Financial Accounting Standards Board or the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board; (v) changes in local, state and federal laws, regulations and governmental policies concerning the Company’s general business and any changes in response to bank failures; (vi) the imposition of tariffs or other governmental policies impacting the value of products produced by the Company’s commercial borrowers; (vii) changes in interest rates and prepayment rates of the Company’s assets; (viii) increased competition in the financial services sector, including from non-bank competitors such as credit unions and fintech companies, and the inability to attract new customers; (ix) technological changes implemented by us and other parties, including our third-party vendors, which may have unforeseen consequences to us and our customers, including the development and implementation of tools incorporating artificial intelligence; (x) unexpected results of acquisitions, which may include failure to realize the anticipated benefits of acquisitions and the possibility that transaction costs may be greater than anticipated; (xi) the loss of key executives and employees, talent shortages and employee turnover; (xii) changes in consumer spending; (xiii) unexpected outcomes or costs of existing or new litigation or other legal proceedings and regulatory actions involving the Company; (xiv) the economic impact on the Company and its customers of climate change, natural disasters and of exceptional weather occurrences such as tornadoes, floods and blizzards; (xv) fluctuations in the value of securities held in our securities portfolio, including as a result of changes in interest rates; (xvi) credit risks and risks from concentrations (by type of borrower, geographic area, collateral and industry) within our loan portfolio (including commercial real estate loans) and large loans to certain borrowers; (xvii) the overall health of the local and national real estate market; (xviii) the ability to maintain an adequate level of allowance for credit losses on loans; (xix) the concentration of large deposits from certain clients who have balances above current FDIC insurance limits and who may withdraw deposits to diversify their exposure; (xx) the ability to successfully manage liquidity risk, which may increase dependence on non-core funding sources such as brokered deposits, and may negatively impact the Company’s cost of funds; (xxi) the level of nonperforming assets on our balance sheet; (xxii) interruptions involving our information technology and communications systems or third-party servicers; (xxiii) the occurrence of fraudulent activity, breaches or failures of our third-party vendors’ information security controls or cybersecurity-related incidents, including as a result of sophisticated attacks using artificial intelligence and similar tools or as a result of insider fraud; (xxiv) the effectiveness of the Company’s risk management framework, and (xxv) the ability of the Company to manage the risks associated with the foregoing as well as anticipated. Readers should note that the forward-looking statements included in this press release are not a guarantee of future events, and that actual events may differ materially from those made in or suggested by the forward-looking statements. Additional information concerning the Company and its business, including additional factors that could materially affect the Company’s financial results, is included in the Company’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    CONTACT:
    Peter Chapman
    HBTIR@hbtbank.com 
    (309) 664-4556

    HBT Financial, Inc.
    Unaudited Consolidated Financial Summary
             
        As of or for the Three Months Ended   Six Months Ended June 30,
    (dollars in thousands, except per share data)   June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
        2025       2024  
    Interest and dividend income   $ 63,919     $ 63,138     $ 62,824     $ 127,057     $ 124,785  
    Interest expense     14,261       14,430       15,796       28,691       31,069  
    Net interest income     49,658       48,708       47,028       98,366       93,716  
    Provision for credit losses     526       576       1,176       1,102       1,703  
    Net interest income after provision for credit losses     49,132       48,132       45,852       97,264       92,013  
    Noninterest income     9,140       9,306       9,610       18,446       15,236  
    Noninterest expense     31,914       31,935       30,509       63,849       61,777  
    Income before income tax expense     26,358       25,503       24,953       51,861       45,472  
    Income tax expense     7,128       6,428       6,883       13,556       12,144  
    Net income   $ 19,230     $ 19,075     $ 18,070     $ 38,305     $ 33,328  
                         
    Earnings per share – diluted   $ 0.61     $ 0.60     $ 0.57     $ 1.21     $ 1.05  
                         
    Adjusted net income (1)   $ 19,803     $ 19,253     $ 18,139     $ 39,056     $ 36,212  
    Adjusted earnings per share – diluted (1)     0.63       0.61       0.57       1.23       1.14  
                         
    Book value per share   $ 18.44     $ 17.86     $ 16.14          
    Tangible book value per share (1)     16.02       15.43       13.64          
                         
    Shares of common stock outstanding     31,495,434       31,631,431       31,559,366          
    Weighted average shares of common stock outstanding, including all dilutive potential shares     31,588,541       31,711,671       31,666,811       31,649,766       31,734,999  
                         
    SUMMARY RATIOS                    
    Net interest margin *     4.14 %     4.12 %     3.95 %     4.13 %     3.95 %
    Net interest margin (tax-equivalent basis) * (1)(2)     4.19       4.16       4.00       4.18       3.99  
                         
    Efficiency ratio     53.10 %     53.85 %     52.61 %     53.47 %     55.40 %
    Efficiency ratio (tax-equivalent basis) (1)(2)     52.61       53.35       52.10       52.97       54.83  
                         
    Loan to deposit ratio     77.75 %     78.95 %     78.39 %        
                         
    Return on average assets *     1.53 %     1.54 %     1.45 %     1.53 %     1.34 %
    Return on average stockholders’ equity *     13.47       13.95       14.48       13.70       13.46  
    Return on average tangible common equity * (1)     15.55       16.20       17.21       15.87       16.03  
                         
    Adjusted return on average assets * (1)     1.58 %     1.55 %     1.45 %     1.56 %     1.45 %
    Adjusted return on average stockholders’ equity * (1)     13.87       14.08       14.54       13.97       14.63  
    Adjusted return on average tangible common equity * (1)     16.02       16.36       17.27       16.18       17.42  
                         
    CAPITAL                    
    Total capital to risk-weighted assets     17.74 %     16.85 %     16.01 %        
    Tier 1 capital to risk-weighted assets     15.60       14.77       13.98          
    Common equity tier 1 capital ratio     14.26       13.48       12.66          
    Tier 1 leverage ratio     11.86       11.64       10.83          
    Total stockholders’ equity to total assets     11.58       11.10       10.18          
    Tangible common equity to tangible assets (1)     10.21       9.73       8.74          
                         
    ASSET QUALITY                    
    Net charge-offs (recoveries) to average loans *     0.12 %     0.05 %     0.08 %     0.09 %     0.03 %
    Allowance for credit losses to loans, before allowance for credit losses     1.24       1.22       1.21          
    Nonperforming loans to loans, before allowance for credit losses     0.17       0.15       0.25          
    Nonperforming assets to total assets     0.13       0.11       0.17          
                                     

    ____________________________________

    (1) See “Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” below for reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to their most closely comparable GAAP financial measures.
    (2) On a tax-equivalent basis assuming a federal income tax rate of 21% and a state tax rate of 9.5%. 

    HBT Financial, Inc.
    Unaudited Consolidated Financial Summary
    Consolidated Statements of Income
     
      Three Months Ended   Six Months Ended June 30,
    (dollars in thousands, except per share data) June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
        2025       2024  
    INTEREST AND DIVIDEND INCOME                  
    Loans, including fees:                  
    Taxable $ 53,156     $ 53,369     $ 52,177     $ 106,525     $ 104,103  
    Federally tax exempt   1,215       1,168       1,097       2,383       2,191  
    Debt securities:                  
    Taxable   7,434       6,936       6,315       14,370       12,519  
    Federally tax exempt   457       469       521       926       1,118  
    Interest-bearing deposits in bank   1,544       1,065       2,570       2,609       4,522  
    Other interest and dividend income   113       131       144       244       332  
    Total interest and dividend income   63,919       63,138       62,824       127,057       124,785  
    INTEREST EXPENSE                  
    Deposits   12,835       12,939       14,133       25,774       27,726  
    Securities sold under agreements to repurchase   —       22       129       22       281  
    Borrowings   30       109       121       139       246  
    Subordinated notes   469       470       469       939       939  
    Junior subordinated debentures issued to capital trusts   927       890       944       1,817       1,877  
    Total interest expense   14,261       14,430       15,796       28,691       31,069  
    Net interest income   49,658       48,708       47,028       98,366       93,716  
    PROVISION FOR CREDIT LOSSES   526       576       1,176       1,102       1,703  
    Net interest income after provision for credit losses   49,132       48,132       45,852       97,264       92,013  
    NONINTEREST INCOME                  
    Card income   2,797       2,548       2,885       5,345       5,501  
    Wealth management fees   2,826       2,841       2,623       5,667       5,170  
    Service charges on deposit accounts   1,915       1,944       1,902       3,859       3,771  
    Mortgage servicing   1,042       990       1,111       2,032       2,166  
    Mortgage servicing rights fair value adjustment   (751 )     (308 )     (97 )     (1,059 )     (17 )
    Gains on sale of mortgage loans   459       252       443       711       741  
    Realized gains (losses) on sales of securities   —       —       —       —       (3,382 )
    Unrealized gains (losses) on equity securities   23       8       (96 )     31       (112 )
    Gains (losses) on foreclosed assets   14       13       (28 )     27       59  
    Gains (losses) on other assets   (128 )     54       —       (74 )     (635 )
    Income on bank owned life insurance   167       164       166       331       330  
    Other noninterest income   776       800       701       1,576       1,644  
    Total noninterest income   9,140       9,306       9,610       18,446       15,236  
    NONINTEREST EXPENSE                  
    Salaries   16,452       17,053       16,364       33,505       33,021  
    Employee benefits   3,580       3,285       2,860       6,865       5,665  
    Occupancy of bank premises   2,471       2,625       2,243       5,096       4,825  
    Furniture and equipment   575       445       548       1,020       1,098  
    Data processing   2,687       2,717       2,606       5,404       5,531  
    Marketing and customer relations   1,020       1,144       996       2,164       1,992  
    Amortization of intangible assets   694       695       710       1,389       1,420  
    FDIC insurance   551       562       565       1,113       1,125  
    Loan collection and servicing   360       383       475       743       927  
    Foreclosed assets   67       5       10       72       59  
    Other noninterest expense   3,457       3,021       3,132       6,478       6,114  
    Total noninterest expense   31,914       31,935       30,509       63,849       61,777  
    INCOME BEFORE INCOME TAX EXPENSE   26,358       25,503       24,953       51,861       45,472  
    INCOME TAX EXPENSE   7,128       6,428       6,883       13,556       12,144  
    NET INCOME $ 19,230     $ 19,075     $ 18,070     $ 38,305     $ 33,328  
                       
    EARNINGS PER SHARE – BASIC $ 0.61     $ 0.60     $ 0.57     $ 1.21     $ 1.05  
    EARNINGS PER SHARE – DILUTED $ 0.61     $ 0.60     $ 0.57     $ 1.21     $ 1.05  
    WEIGHTED AVERAGE SHARES OF COMMON STOCK OUTSTANDING   31,510,759       31,584,989       31,579,457       31,547,669       31,621,205  
                                           
    HBT Financial, Inc.
    Unaudited Consolidated Financial Summary
    Consolidated Balance Sheets
               
    (dollars in thousands) June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
    ASSETS          
    Cash and due from banks $ 25,563     $ 25,005     $ 22,604  
    Interest-bearing deposits with banks   170,179       186,586       172,636  
    Cash and cash equivalents   195,742       211,591       195,240  
               
    Interest-bearing time deposits with banks   —       —       520  
    Debt securities available-for-sale, at fair value   773,206       706,135       669,055  
    Debt securities held-to-maturity   481,942       490,398       512,549  
    Equity securities with readily determinable fair value   3,346       3,323       3,228  
    Equity securities with no readily determinable fair value   2,609       2,629       2,613  
    Restricted stock, at cost   4,979       5,086       5,086  
    Loans held for sale   2,316       2,721       858  
               
    Loans, before allowance for credit losses   3,348,211       3,461,778       3,385,483  
    Allowance for credit losses   (41,659 )     (42,111 )     (40,806 )
    Loans, net of allowance for credit losses   3,306,552       3,419,667       3,344,677  
               
    Bank owned life insurance   24,320       24,153       24,235  
    Bank premises and equipment, net   68,523       67,272       65,711  
    Bank premises held for sale   140       190       317  
    Foreclosed assets   890       460       320  
    Goodwill   59,820       59,820       59,820  
    Intangible assets, net   16,454       17,148       19,262  
    Mortgage servicing rights, at fair value   17,768       18,519       18,984  
    Investments in unconsolidated subsidiaries   1,614       1,614       1,614  
    Accrued interest receivable   20,624       22,735       22,425  
    Other assets   37,553       38,731       59,685  
    Total assets $ 5,018,398     $ 5,092,192     $ 5,006,199  
               
    LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY          
    Liabilities          
    Deposits:          
    Noninterest-bearing $ 1,034,387     $ 1,065,874     $ 1,045,697  
    Interest-bearing   3,272,144       3,318,716       3,272,996  
    Total deposits   4,306,531       4,384,590       4,318,693  
               
    Securities sold under agreements to repurchase   556       2,698       29,330  
    Federal Home Loan Bank advances   7,240       7,209       13,734  
    Subordinated notes   39,593       39,573       39,514  
    Junior subordinated debentures issued to capital trusts   52,879       52,864       52,819  
    Other liabilities   30,702       40,201       42,640  
    Total liabilities   4,437,501       4,527,135       4,496,730  
               
    Stockholders’ Equity          
    Common stock   329       329       328  
    Surplus   297,479       297,024       296,430  
    Retained earnings   341,750       329,169       290,386  
    Accumulated other comprehensive income (loss)   (32,739 )     (38,446 )     (54,656 )
    Treasury stock at cost   (25,922 )     (23,019 )     (23,019 )
    Total stockholders’ equity   580,897       565,057       509,469  
    Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity $ 5,018,398     $ 5,092,192     $ 5,006,199  
    SHARES OF COMMON STOCK OUTSTANDING   31,495,434       31,631,431       31,559,366  
                           
    HBT Financial, Inc.
    Unaudited Consolidated Financial Summary
               
    (dollars in thousands) June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
               
    LOANS          
    Commercial and industrial $ 419,430   $ 441,261   $ 400,276
    Commercial real estate – owner occupied   317,475     321,990     289,992
    Commercial real estate – non-owner occupied   907,073     891,022     889,193
    Construction and land development   310,252     376,046     365,371
    Multi-family   453,812     424,096     429,951
    One-to-four family residential   451,197     455,376     484,335
    Agricultural and farmland   271,644     292,240     285,822
    Municipal, consumer, and other   217,328     259,747     240,543
    Total loans $ 3,348,211   $ 3,461,778   $ 3,385,483
                     
    (dollars in thousands) June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
               
    DEPOSITS          
    Noninterest-bearing deposits $ 1,034,387   $ 1,065,874   $ 1,045,697
    Interest-bearing deposits:          
    Interest-bearing demand   1,097,086     1,143,677     1,094,797
    Money market   831,292     812,146     769,386
    Savings   568,971     575,558     582,752
    Time   774,795     787,335     796,069
    Brokered   —     —     29,992
    Total interest-bearing deposits   3,272,144     3,318,716     3,272,996
    Total deposits $ 4,306,531   $ 4,384,590   $ 4,318,693
                     
    HBT Financial, Inc.
    Unaudited Consolidated Financial Summary
       
      Three Months Ended
      June 30, 2025   March 31, 2025   June 30, 2024
    (dollars in thousands) Average Balance   Interest   Yield/Cost *   Average Balance   Interest   Yield/Cost *   Average Balance   Interest   Yield/Cost *
                                       
    ASSETS                                  
    Loans $ 3,417,582     $ 54,371   6.38 %   $ 3,460,906     $ 54,537   6.39 %   $ 3,374,058     $ 53,274   6.35 %
    Debt securities   1,217,386       7,891   2.60       1,204,424       7,405   2.49       1,187,795       6,836   2.31  
    Deposits with banks   160,726       1,544   3.85       120,014       1,065   3.60       211,117       2,570   4.90  
    Other   12,519       113   3.66       12,677       131   4.19       12,588       144   4.60  
    Total interest-earning assets   4,808,213     $ 63,919   5.33 %     4,798,021     $ 63,138   5.34 %     4,785,558     $ 62,824   5.28 %
    Allowance for credit losses   (42,118 )             (42,061 )             (40,814 )        
    Noninterest-earning assets   270,580               276,853               283,103          
    Total assets $ 5,036,675             $ 5,032,813             $ 5,027,847          
                                       
    LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY                                  
    Liabilities                                  
    Interest-bearing deposits:                                  
    Interest-bearing demand $ 1,125,787     $ 1,569   0.56 %   $ 1,120,608     $ 1,453   0.53 %   $ 1,123,592     $ 1,429   0.51 %
    Money market   813,531       4,463   2.20       807,728       4,397   2.21       788,744       4,670   2.38  
    Savings   569,193       374   0.26       569,494       370   0.26       592,312       393   0.27  
    Time   780,536       6,429   3.30       784,099       6,719   3.48       763,507       7,117   3.75  
    Brokered   —       —   —       —       —   —       38,213       524   5.51  
    Total interest-bearing deposits   3,289,047       12,835   1.57       3,281,929       12,939   1.60       3,306,368       14,133   1.72  
    Securities sold under agreements to repurchase   1,420       —   0.05       8,754       22   1.02       30,440       129   1.70  
    Borrowings   7,225       30   1.70       12,890       109   3.41       13,466       121   3.60  
    Subordinated notes   39,582       469   4.76       39,563       470   4.82       39,504       469   4.78  
    Junior subordinated debentures issued to capital trusts   52,871       927   7.03       52,856       890   6.83       52,812       944   7.18  
    Total interest-bearing liabilities   3,390,145     $ 14,261   1.69 %     3,395,992     $ 14,430   1.72 %     3,442,590     $ 15,796   1.85 %
    Noninterest-bearing deposits   1,044,539               1,045,733               1,043,614          
    Noninterest-bearing liabilities   29,486               36,373               39,806          
    Total liabilities   4,464,170               4,478,098               4,526,010          
    Stockholders’ Equity   572,505               554,715               501,837          
    Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity $ 5,036,675             $ 5,032,813             $ 5,027,847          
                                       
    Net interest income/Net interest margin (1)     $ 49,658   4.14 %       $ 48,708   4.12 %       $ 47,028   3.95 %
    Tax-equivalent adjustment (2)       548   0.05           545   0.04           553   0.05  
    Net interest income (tax-equivalent basis)/
    Net interest margin (tax-equivalent basis) (2) (3)
        $ 50,206   4.19 %       $ 49,253   4.16 %       $ 47,581   4.00 %
    Net interest rate spread (4)         3.64 %           3.62 %           3.43 %
    Net interest-earning assets (5) $ 1,418,068             $ 1,402,029             $ 1,342,968          
    Ratio of interest-earning assets to interest-bearing liabilities   1.42               1.41               1.39          
    Cost of total deposits         1.19 %           1.21 %           1.31 %
    Cost of funds         1.29             1.32             1.42  
                                             

    ____________________________________

    * Annualized measure.

    (1) Net interest margin represents net interest income divided by average total interest-earning assets.
    (2) On a tax-equivalent basis assuming a federal income tax rate of 21% and a state income tax rate of 9.5%.
    (3) See “Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” below for reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to their most closely comparable GAAP financial measures.
    (4) Net interest rate spread represents the difference between the yield on average interest-earning assets and the cost of average interest-bearing liabilities.
    (5) Net interest-earning assets represents total interest-earning assets less total interest-bearing liabilities. 

    HBT Financial, Inc.
    Unaudited Consolidated Financial Summary
     
      Six Months Ended
      June 30, 2025   June 30, 2024
    (dollars in thousands) Average Balance   Interest   Yield/Cost *   Average Balance   Interest   Yield/Cost *
                           
    ASSETS                      
    Loans $ 3,439,124     $ 108,908   6.39 %   $ 3,372,640     $ 106,294   6.34 %
    Debt securities   1,210,941       15,296   2.55       1,200,871       13,637   2.28  
    Deposits with banks   140,483       2,609   3.75       189,207       4,522   4.81  
    Other   12,597       244   3.93       12,787       332   5.22  
    Total interest-earning assets   4,803,145     $ 127,057   5.33 %     4,775,505     $ 124,785   5.25 %
    Allowance for credit losses   (42,089 )             (40,526 )        
    Noninterest-earning assets   273,193               280,676          
    Total assets $ 5,034,249             $ 5,015,655          
                           
    LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY                      
    Liabilities                      
    Interest-bearing deposits:                      
    Interest-bearing demand $ 1,123,212     $ 3,022   0.54 %   $ 1,125,638     $ 2,740   0.49 %
    Money market   810,645       8,860   2.20       800,714       9,467   2.38  
    Savings   569,343       744   0.26       601,768       836   0.28  
    Time   782,307       13,148   3.39       714,003       13,042   3.67  
    Brokered   —       —   —       60,181       1,641   5.48  
    Total interest-bearing deposits   3,285,507       25,774   1.58       3,302,304       27,726   1.69  
    Securities sold under agreements to repurchase   5,067       22   0.89       31,448       281   1.80  
    Borrowings   10,042       139   2.79       13,235       246   3.73  
    Subordinated notes   39,573       939   4.79       39,494       939   4.78  
    Junior subordinated debentures issued to capital trusts   52,864       1,817   6.93       52,804       1,877   7.15  
    Total interest-bearing liabilities   3,393,053     $ 28,691   1.71 %     3,439,285     $ 31,069   1.82 %
    Noninterest-bearing deposits   1,045,133               1,040,007          
    Noninterest-bearing liabilities   32,404               38,457          
    Total liabilities   4,470,590               4,517,749          
    Stockholders’ Equity   563,659               497,906          
    Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity $ 5,034,249               5,015,655          
                           
    Net interest income/Net interest margin (1)     $ 98,366   4.13 %       $ 93,716   3.95 %
    Tax-equivalent adjustment (2)       1,093   0.05           1,128   0.04  
    Net interest income (tax-equivalent basis)/
    Net interest margin (tax-equivalent basis) (2) (3)
        $ 99,459   4.18 %       $ 94,844   3.99 %
    Net interest rate spread (4)         3.62 %           3.43 %
    Net interest-earning assets (5) $ 1,410,092             $ 1,336,220          
    Ratio of interest-earning assets to interest-bearing liabilities   1.42               1.39          
    Cost of total deposits         1.20 %           1.28 %
    Cost of funds         1.30             1.39  

    ____________________________________
    (1) Net interest margin represents net interest income divided by average total interest-earning assets.
    (2) On a tax-equivalent basis assuming a federal income tax rate of 21% and a state income tax rate of 9.5%.
    (3) See “Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures” below for reconciliation of non-GAAP financial measures to their most closely comparable GAAP financial measures.
    (4) Net interest rate spread represents the difference between the yield on average interest-earning assets and the cost of average interest-bearing liabilities.
    (5) Net interest-earning assets represents total interest-earning assets less total interest-bearing liabilities. 

    HBT Financial, Inc.
    Unaudited Consolidated Financial Summary
               
    (dollars in thousands) June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
               
    NONPERFORMING ASSETS          
    Nonaccrual $ 5,615     $ 5,102     $ 8,425  
    Past due 90 days or more, still accruing   9       4       7  
    Total nonperforming loans   5,624       5,106       8,432  
    Foreclosed assets   890       460       320  
    Total nonperforming assets $ 6,514     $ 5,566     $ 8,752  
               
    Nonperforming loans that are wholly or partially guaranteed by the U.S. Government $ 1,878     $ 1,350     $ 2,132  
               
    Allowance for credit losses $ 41,659     $ 42,111     $ 40,806  
    Loans, before allowance for credit losses   3,348,211       3,461,778       3,385,483  
               
    CREDIT QUALITY RATIOS          
    Allowance for credit losses to loans, before allowance for credit losses   1.24 %     1.22 %     1.21 %
    Allowance for credit losses to nonaccrual loans   741.92       825.38       484.34  
    Allowance for credit losses to nonperforming loans   740.74       824.74       483.94  
    Nonaccrual loans to loans, before allowance for credit losses   0.17       0.15       0.25  
    Nonperforming loans to loans, before allowance for credit losses   0.17       0.15       0.25  
    Nonperforming assets to total assets   0.13       0.11       0.17  
    Nonperforming assets to loans, before allowance for credit losses, and foreclosed assets   0.19       0.16       0.26  
                           
      Three Months Ended   Six Months Ended June 30,
    (dollars in thousands) June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
        2025       2024  
                       
    ALLOWANCE FOR CREDIT LOSSES                  
    Beginning balance $ 42,111     $ 42,044     $ 40,815     $ 42,044     $ 40,048  
    Provision for credit losses   595       496       677       1,091       1,237  
    Charge-offs   (1,252 )     (665 )     (870 )     (1,917 )     (1,097 )
    Recoveries   205       236       184       441       618  
    Ending balance $ 41,659     $ 42,111     $ 40,806     $ 41,659     $ 40,806  
                       
    Net charge-offs $ 1,047     $ 429     $ 686     $ 1,476     $ 479  
    Average loans   3,417,582       3,460,906       3,374,058       3,439,124       3,372,640  
                       
    Net charge-offs to average loans *   0.12 %     0.05 %     0.08 %     0.09 %     0.03 %
                                           

    ____________________________________

    * Annualized measure.

      Three Months Ended   Six Months Ended June 30,
    (dollars in thousands) June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
        2025     2024
                       
    PROVISION FOR CREDIT LOSSES                  
    Loans $ 595     $ 496   $ 677   $ 1,091   $ 1,237
    Unfunded lending-related commitments   (69 )     80     499     11     466
    Total provision for credit losses $ 526     $ 576   $ 1,176   $ 1,102   $ 1,703
                                   
    Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures –
    Adjusted Net Income and Adjusted Return on Average Assets
        Three Months Ended   Six Months Ended June 30,
    (dollars in thousands)   June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
        2025       2024  
                         
    Net income   $ 19,230     $ 19,075     $ 18,070     $ 38,305     $ 33,328  
    Less: adjustments                    
    Gains (losses) on closed branch premises     (50 )     59       —       9       (635 )
    Realized gains (losses) on sales of securities     —       —       —       —       (3,382 )
    Mortgage servicing rights fair value adjustment     (751 )     (308 )     (97 )     (1,059 )     (17 )
    Total adjustments     (801 )     (249 )     (97 )     (1,050 )     (4,034 )
    Tax effect of adjustments (1)     228       71       28       299       1,150  
    Total adjustments after tax effect     (573 )     (178 )     (69 )     (751 )     (2,884 )
    Adjusted net income   $ 19,803     $ 19,253     $ 18,139     $ 39,056     $ 36,212  
                         
    Average assets   $ 5,036,675     $ 5,032,813     $ 5,027,847     $ 5,034,249     $ 5,015,655  
                         
    Return on average assets *     1.53 %     1.54 %     1.45 %     1.53 %     1.34 %
    Adjusted return on average assets *     1.58       1.55       1.45       1.56       1.45  
                                             

    ____________________________________

    * Annualized measure.

    (1) Assumes a federal income tax rate of 21% and a state tax rate of 9.5%.

    Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures –
    Adjusted Earnings Per Share — Basic and Diluted
        Three Months Ended   Six Months Ended June 30,
    (dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)   June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
        2025     2024
                         
    Numerator:                    
    Net income   $ 19,230   $ 19,075   $ 18,070   $ 38,305   $ 33,328
                         
    Adjusted net income   $ 19,803   $ 19,253   $ 18,139   $ 39,056   $ 36,212
                         
    Denominator:                    
    Weighted average common shares outstanding     31,510,759     31,584,989     31,579,457     31,547,669     31,621,205
    Dilutive effect of outstanding restricted stock units     77,782     126,682     87,354     102,097     113,794
    Weighted average common shares outstanding, including all dilutive potential shares     31,588,541     31,711,671     31,666,811     31,649,766     31,734,999
                         
    Earnings per share – basic   $ 0.61   $ 0.60   $ 0.57   $ 1.21   $ 1.05
    Earnings per share – diluted   $ 0.61   $ 0.60   $ 0.57   $ 1.21   $ 1.05
                         
    Adjusted earnings per share – basic   $ 0.63   $ 0.61   $ 0.57   $ 1.24   $ 1.15
    Adjusted earnings per share – diluted   $ 0.63   $ 0.61   $ 0.57   $ 1.23   $ 1.14
                                   
    Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures –
    Pre-Provision Net Revenue, Pre-Provision Net Revenue Less Net Charge-offs (Recoveries),
    Adjusted Pre-Provision Net Revenue, and Adjusted Pre-Provision Net Revenue Less Net Charge-offs (Recoveries)
        Three Months Ended   Six Months Ended June 30,
    (dollars in thousands)   June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
        2025       2024  
                         
    Net interest income   $ 49,658     $ 48,708     $ 47,028     $ 98,366     $ 93,716  
    Noninterest income     9,140       9,306       9,610       18,446       15,236  
    Noninterest expense     (31,914 )     (31,935 )     (30,509 )     (63,849 )     (61,777 )
    Pre-provision net revenue     26,884       26,079       26,129       52,963       47,175  
    Less: adjustments                    
    Gains (losses) on closed branch premises     (50 )     59       —       9       (635 )
    Realized gains (losses) on sales of securities     —       —       —       —       (3,382 )
    Mortgage servicing rights fair value adjustment     (751 )     (308 )     (97 )     (1,059 )     (17 )
    Total adjustments     (801 )     (249 )     (97 )     (1,050 )     (4,034 )
    Adjusted pre-provision net revenue   $ 27,685     $ 26,328     $ 26,226     $ 54,013     $ 51,209  
                         
    Pre-provision net revenue   $ 26,884     $ 26,079     $ 26,129     $ 52,963     $ 47,175  
    Less: net charge-offs     1,047       429       686       1,476       479  
    Pre-provision net revenue less net charge-offs   $ 25,837     $ 25,650     $ 25,443     $ 51,487     $ 46,696  
                         
    Adjusted pre-provision net revenue   $ 27,685     $ 26,328     $ 26,226     $ 54,013     $ 51,209  
    Less: net charge-offs     1,047       429       686       1,476       479  
    Adjusted pre-provision net revenue less net charge-offs   $ 26,638     $ 25,899     $ 25,540     $ 52,537     $ 50,730  
                                             
    Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures –
    Net Interest Income (Tax-equivalent Basis) and Net Interest Margin (Tax-equivalent Basis)
        Three Months Ended   Six Months Ended June 30,
    (dollars in thousands)   June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
        2025       2024  
                         
    Net interest income (tax-equivalent basis)                    
    Net interest income   $ 49,658     $ 48,708     $ 47,028     $ 98,366     $ 93,716  
    Tax-equivalent adjustment (1)     548       545       553       1,093       1,128  
    Net interest income (tax-equivalent basis) (1)   $ 50,206     $ 49,253     $ 47,581     $ 99,459     $ 94,844  
                         
    Net interest margin (tax-equivalent basis)                    
    Net interest margin *     4.14 %     4.12 %     3.95 %     4.13 %     3.95 %
    Tax-equivalent adjustment * (1)     0.05       0.04       0.05       0.05       0.04  
    Net interest margin (tax-equivalent basis) * (1)     4.19 %     4.16 %     4.00 %     4.18 %     3.99 %
                         
    Average interest-earning assets   $ 4,808,213     $ 4,798,021     $ 4,785,558     $ 4,803,145     $ 4,775,505  
                                             

    ____________________________________

    * Annualized measure.

    (1) On a tax-equivalent basis assuming a federal income tax rate of 21% and a state tax rate of 9.5%. 

    Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures –
    Efficiency Ratio (Tax-equivalent Basis) and Adjusted Efficiency Ratio (Tax-equivalent Basis)
        Three Months Ended   Six Months Ended June 30,
    (dollars in thousands)   June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
        2025       2024  
                         
    Total noninterest expense   $ 31,914     $ 31,935     $ 30,509     $ 63,849     $ 61,777  
    Less: amortization of intangible assets     694       695       710       1,389       1,420  
    Noninterest expense excluding amortization of intangible assets   $ 31,220     $ 31,240     $ 29,799     $ 62,460     $ 60,357  
                         
    Net interest income   $ 49,658     $ 48,708     $ 47,028     $ 98,366     $ 93,716  
    Total noninterest income     9,140       9,306       9,610       18,446       15,236  
    Operating revenue     58,798       58,014       56,638       116,812       108,952  
    Tax-equivalent adjustment (1)     548       545       553       1,093       1,128  
    Operating revenue (tax-equivalent basis) (1)     59,346       58,559       57,191       117,905       110,080  
    Less: adjustments to noninterest income                    
    Gains (losses) on closed branch premises     (50 )     59       —       9       (635 )
    Realized gains (losses) on sales of securities     —       —       —       —       (3,382 )
    Mortgage servicing rights fair value adjustment     (751 )     (308 )     (97 )     (1,059 )     (17 )
    Total adjustments to noninterest income     (801 )     (249 )     (97 )     (1,050 )     (4,034 )
    Adjusted operating revenue (tax-equivalent basis) (1)   $ 60,147     $ 58,808     $ 57,288     $ 118,955     $ 114,114  
                         
    Efficiency ratio     53.10 %     53.85 %     52.61 %     53.47 %     55.40 %
    Efficiency ratio (tax-equivalent basis) (1)     52.61       53.35       52.10       52.97       54.83  
    Adjusted efficiency ratio (tax-equivalent basis) (1)     51.91       53.12       52.02       52.51       52.89  
                                             

    ____________________________________
    (1) On a tax-equivalent basis assuming a federal income tax rate of 21% and a state tax rate of 9.5%.

    Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures –
    Ratio of Tangible Common Equity to Tangible Assets and Tangible Book Value Per Share
    (dollars in thousands, except per share data)   June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
                 
    Tangible Common Equity            
    Total stockholders’ equity   $ 580,897     $ 565,057     $ 509,469  
    Less: Goodwill     59,820       59,820       59,820  
    Less: Intangible assets, net     16,454       17,148       19,262  
    Tangible common equity   $ 504,623     $ 488,089     $ 430,387  
                 
    Tangible Assets            
    Total assets   $ 5,018,398     $ 5,092,192     $ 5,006,199  
    Less: Goodwill     59,820       59,820       59,820  
    Less: Intangible assets, net     16,454       17,148       19,262  
    Tangible assets   $ 4,942,124     $ 5,015,224     $ 4,927,117  
                 
    Total stockholders’ equity to total assets     11.58 %     11.10 %     10.18 %
    Tangible common equity to tangible assets     10.21       9.73       8.74  
                 
    Shares of common stock outstanding     31,495,434       31,631,431       31,559,366  
                 
    Book value per share   $ 18.44     $ 17.86     $ 16.14  
    Tangible book value per share     16.02       15.43       13.64  
                             
    Reconciliation of Non-GAAP Financial Measures –
    Return on Average Tangible Common Equity,
    Adjusted Return on Average Stockholders’ Equity and Adjusted Return on Average Tangible Common Equity
        Three Months Ended   Six Months Ended June 30,
    (dollars in thousands)   June 30,
    2025
      March 31,
    2025
      June 30,
    2024
        2025       2024  
                         
    Average Tangible Common Equity                    
    Total stockholders’ equity   $ 572,505     $ 554,715     $ 501,837     $ 563,659     $ 497,906  
    Less: Goodwill     59,820       59,820       59,820       59,820       59,820  
    Less: Intangible assets, net     16,782       17,480       19,605       17,130       19,970  
    Average tangible common equity   $ 495,903     $ 477,415     $ 422,412     $ 486,709     $ 418,116  
                         
    Net income   $ 19,230     $ 19,075     $ 18,070     $ 38,305     $ 33,328  
    Adjusted net income     19,803       19,253       18,139       39,056       36,212  
                         
    Return on average stockholders’ equity *     13.47 %     13.95 %     14.48 %     13.70 %     13.46 %
    Return on average tangible common equity *     15.55       16.20       17.21       15.87       16.03  
                         
    Adjusted return on average stockholders’ equity *     13.87 %     14.08 %     14.54 %     13.97 %     14.63 %
    Adjusted return on average tangible common equity *     16.02       16.36       17.27       16.18       17.42  

    ____________________________________

    * Annualized measure.

    The MIL Network –

    July 21, 2025
  • Bedouin civilians evacuate Syria’s Sweida as tense truce holds

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Hundreds of Bedouin civilians were evacuated from Syria’s predominantly Druze city of Sweida on Monday as part of a U.S.-backed truce meant to end fighting that has killed hundreds of people, state media and witnesses said.

    With hundreds reported killed, the violence in the southern province of Sweida has posed a major test for interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa, drawing Israeli airstrikes last week and deepening fissures in a country fractured by 14 years of war.

    A ceasefire took hold on Sunday as interior ministry security forces deployed on Sweida’s outskirts. Interior Minister Anas Khattab said on Sunday the truce would allow for the release of hostages and detainees held by the warring sides.

    On Monday morning, ambulances, trucks and buses ferried hundreds of Bedouin civilians including women, children and wounded people out of Sweida to nearby displacement camps, Reuters footage showed.

    The initial batch included some 300 Bedouins, and a second group of about 550 civilians will be evacuated within the next 24 hours if the situation remains calm, said Shoaib Asfour, a member of the Syrian security forces overseeing the evacuation.

    The next phase would see the evacuation of Bedouin fighters detained by Druze militias and the transfer of bodies of Bedouins killed in the fighting, Asfour said.

    Syria’s state news agency said a total of 1,500 Bedouins would be evacuated from Sweida city.

    Citing Ahmed al-Dalati, head of Syria’s internal security forces in Sweida, state media said those forces would also facilitate the return to Sweida of others displaced from it.

    According to the United Nations, at least 93,000 people have been uprooted by the fighting – most of them within Sweida province but others to Daraa province to the west, or north to the countryside around the capital Damascus.

    The U.N. said on Sunday that humanitarian convoys with medical supplies had been waiting to enter Sweida for two days but were not granted access. It said only a convoy of the Syrian Arab Red Crescent had been allowed to enter.

    PRESSURES ON SYRIA’S MOSAIC

    The Druze are a small but influential minority in Syria, Israel and Lebanon who follow a religion that is an offshoot of a branch of Islam. Some ultra-conservative Sunni Muslims deem Druze beliefs to be heretical.

    Citing the goal of protecting the Druze and keeping southern Syria demilitarized, Israel attacked government forces last week in the south and struck the defence ministry in Damascus.

    Washington, which has expressed support for Damascus since Sharaa met U.S. President Donald Trump in May, said it did not approve of Israel’s strikes.

    U.S. envoy Tom Barrack said on Monday the Syrian government needed to be held accountable. “They also need to be given the responsibility that they’re there to do,” he said, speaking on a visit to Beirut.

    Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz defended Israel’s attacks on government targets, saying they were “the only way to stop the massacre of Druze in Syria”.

    The fighting began a week ago with clashes between Bedouin and Druze fighters. Damascus sent troops to quell the fighting, but they were drawn into the violence and accused of widespread violations against the Druze.

    Residents of Sweida said friends and neighbours were shot at close range in their homes or in the streets by Syrian troops, identified by their fatigues and insignia.

    Luna Albassit, a Druze activist in the town of Shahba in Sweida province, said the situation after so much bloodshed remained tense despite the end to clashes late on Sunday.

    “People were killed in the streets, in their homes, they were humiliated and it was in the name of the state,” she said.

    Hamzah Mustafa, Syria’s information minister, told Reuters last week that the Damascus government strongly condemned all abuses and rejected sectarian violence in all its forms.

    Interim President al-Sharaa has promised to protect the rights of Druze and hold to account those who committed violations against “our Druze people”.

    He has blamed the violence on “outlaw groups”.

    After Israel bombed Syrian government forces in Sweida and hit the defence ministry in Damascus last week, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu demanded the demilitarisation of southern Syrian territory near the border, stretching from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights to the Druze Mountain, east of Sweida.

    He also said Israel would protect the Druze.

    (Reuters)

    July 21, 2025
  • Israel sends tanks into Gaza’s Deir Al-Balah, raising concerns among hostages’ families

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    Israeli tanks pushed into southern and eastern areas of the Gazan city of Deir Al-Balah for the first time on Monday, an area where Israeli sources said the military believes some of the remaining hostages may be being held.

    Gaza medics said at least three Palestinians were killed and several were wounded in tank shelling that hit eight houses and three mosques in the area, and which came a day after the military ordered residents to leave, saying it planned to fight Hamas militants.

    The raid and bombardment pushed dozens of families who had remained to flee and head west towards the coastal area of Deir Al-Balah and nearby Khan Younis.

    In Khan Younis, earlier on Monday, an Israeli airstrike killed at least five people, including a man, his wife, and their two children, in a tent, medics said.

    There was no immediate Israeli comment on the Deir Al-Balah and Khan Younis incidents.

    Israel’s military said it had not entered the districts of Deir Al-Balah subject to the evacuation order during the current conflict and that it was continuing “to operate with great force to destroy the enemy’s capabilities and terrorist infrastructure in the area.”

    Israeli sources have said the reason the army has so far stayed out is that they suspect Hamas might be holding hostages there. At least 20 of the remaining 50 hostages in captivity in Gaza are believed to be still alive.

    Families of the hostages expressed their concern for their relatives and demanded an explanation from the army of how it would protect them.

    HUNGER CRISIS

    The military escalation comes as Gaza health officials warned of potential “mass deaths” in the coming days due to mounting hunger, which has killed at least 19 people since Saturday, according to the territory’s health ministry.

    Health officials said hospitals were running out of fuel, food aid, and medicine, risking a halt to vital operations.

    Health ministry spokesperson, Khalil Al-Deqran, said medical staff have been depending on one meal a day, and that hundreds of people flock to hospitals every day, suffering from fatigue and exhaustion because of hunger.

    At least 67 people were killed by Israeli fire on Sunday as they waited for UN aid trucks to enter Gaza.

    Israel’s military said its troops had fired warning shots towards a crowd of thousands of people in northern Gaza to remove what it said was “an immediate threat.”

    It said initial findings suggested reported casualty figures were inflated, and it “certainly does not intentionally target humanitarian aid trucks.”

    The new raid and escalating number of fatalities appeared to be complicating ceasefire talks between Hamas and Israel that are being mediated by Qatar and Egypt, with U.S. backing.

    A Hamas official told Reuters on Sunday that the militant group was angered over the mounting deaths and the hunger crisis in the enclave, and that this could badly affect ceasefire talks underway in Qatar.

    Israel and Hamas are engaged in indirect talks in Doha aimed at reaching a 60-day truce and hostage deal, although there has been no sign of breakthrough.

    UNRWA, the U.N. refugee agency dedicated to Palestinians, said in a post on X on Monday, it was receiving desperate messages from Gaza warning of starvation, including from its own staff as food prices have increased 40-fold.

    “Meanwhile, just outside Gaza, stockpiled in warehouses UNRWA has enough food for the entire population for over three months. Lift the siege and let aid in safely and at scale,” it said.

    Israel’s military said on Sunday that it “views the transfer of humanitarian aid into the Gaza Strip as a matter of utmost importance, and works to enable and facilitate its entry in coordination with the international community.”

    The war began when Hamas-led militants stormed into Israel on October 7, 2023, killing 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages back to Gaza, according to Israeli tallies.

    The Israeli military campaign against Hamas in Gaza has since killed more than 58,000 Palestinians, according to health officials, displaced almost the entire population and plunged the enclave into a humanitarian crisis.

    (Reuters)

    July 21, 2025
  • Centre rolls out key strategies to ensure sustainability, competitiveness of coal sector

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The central government has outlined a set of measures aimed at making the coal sector more sustainable and competitive, while aligning with global climate commitments. Despite the growing push towards renewables like solar and wind, coal continues to play a dominant role in India’s energy mix, meeting 55% of the country’s energy needs. With the world’s fifth-largest coal reserves, India is adopting a multi-pronged strategy to modernise the sector, enhance environmental compliance, and reduce dependence on imports.

    Greening and efficiency initiatives

    To reduce the ecological footprint of coal mining, Coal and Lignite PSUs have intensified reclamation and afforestation efforts around operational mines. Under various greening initiatives, plantations and bio-reclamation work are being carried out across mining sites.

    Coal PSUs are also adopting energy efficiency measures — such as replacing conventional lighting with LED systems, deploying energy-efficient appliances, using electric vehicles, and introducing energy-saving technologies like super fans and auto timers in street lighting.

    In a significant sustainability push, mine water is being treated and reused for purposes ranging from irrigation and community water supply to firefighting, underground sprinkling, and fish farming. Several MoUs have also been signed with state governments to expand treated mine water supply to local communities.

    Additionally, coal companies are making productive use of overburden (OB) — the soil and rock removed during mining. By extracting sand from OB for construction, PSUs have commissioned nine plants, including four OB processing and five OB to M-Sand plants. This move not only curbs river sand mining but also aids groundwater recharge and reduces environmental degradation.

    Shift towards cleaner technologies

    To reduce pollution and fuel consumption, coal PSUs have been upgrading transportation infrastructure under the First Mile Connectivity (FMC) projects. These projects focus on mechanized coal handling and transport systems, reducing reliance on diesel and cutting emissions.

    The sector is also deploying blast-free technologies such as Surface Miners, Continuous Miners, and Rippers to eliminate the need for drilling and blasting — significantly reducing dust and noise pollution.

    Meanwhile, coal companies are investing in clean energy alternatives, including renewable power projects and clean coal technologies like coal gasification and coal bed methane (CBM). Participation in the Green Credit Programme launched by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CC) further reflects the sector’s green commitment.

    Reducing coal iImports and boosting domestic production

    In a written reply to the Rajya Sabha, Union Coal and Mines Minister G. Kishan Reddy said coal imports have declined from 264.5 million tonnes (MT) in 2023–24 to 243.6 MT in 2024–25. This reduction comes in the backdrop of efforts to increase domestic coal output and reduce reliance on imports.

    Key measures include faster allocation of coal blocks, encouraging private participation, and streamlining approval processes. Public sector undertakings are also adopting digital solutions and advanced mining technologies to ramp up production.

    An Inter-Ministerial Committee (IMC) has been formed to promote coal import substitution. The IMC is working with import-based power plants to assess and address their coal needs using domestic supply channels. Some of these plants have already indicated their preferred suppliers from Coal India Limited’s (CIL) subsidiaries.

    Coal evacuation and transportation are being improved with the construction of new railway lines and expanded FMC projects, aimed at enhancing supply chain efficiency.

    With these integrated measures, the government aims to maintain coal’s competitiveness in India’s energy mix while advancing sustainability and reducing environmental impact.

    July 21, 2025
  • IMD predicts week-long rain spree in southern, central India; Delhi-NCR to witness light showers till July 23

    Source: Government of India

    Source: Government of India (4)

    The India Meteorological Department (IMD) on Monday predicted heavy to very heavy rainfall over multiple regions in southern and central India across the country in the next few days. Western Himalayan Region and adjoining plains, eastern and central India regions are expected to receive intense precipitation.

    States including Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, and Uttarakhand are also expected to receive heavy rainfall over the next 3–4 days, while Gangetic West Bengal, Odisha, and Jharkhand are expected to witness similar conditions from July 23 to 27.

    Southern and western coastal regions – including Kerala, Karnataka, coastal Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Konkan & Goa, central Maharashtra, Vidarbha, and Chhattisgarh – are also bracing for heavy rains over the next 5–7 days.

    The IMD has issued specific alerts for very heavy rainfall on July 21 over Jammu & Kashmir, Punjab, and coastal Andhra Pradesh. Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand are expected to receive intense rainfall on July 21 and 22, while the Konkan region, Goa, and the ghat areas of Maharashtra are likely to see continued heavy showers until July 27.

    In the past 24 hours, isolated places in Jammu & Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Odisha, Gangetic West Bengal, Jharkhand, and Tripura recorded heavy to very heavy rainfall (ranging between 7–20 cm).

    Delhi-NCR Weather Update

    For Delhi-NCR, the IMD has predicted generally cloudy skies with light to moderate rainfall accompanied by thunderstorms and lightning from July 21 to 23. Maximum temperatures are expected to range between 31–34°C, slightly below normal. The capital may experience very light rain on July 24 with partly cloudy skies, and temperatures could rise slightly to 34–36°C.

    Winds in the region are expected to vary in direction and speed over the forecast period, predominantly from the southeast to southwest, with speeds ranging from 8 to 20 kmph during different times of the day.

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Relief funds available to farmers

    Source: Hong Kong Information Services

    Local farmers who suffered serious losses caused by the recent Typhoon Wipha can register for assistance from an emergency relief fund from July 22 to 30.

    The Agriculture, Fisheries & Conservation Department made this announcement today and explained that its preliminary investigation had revealed that about 300 hectares of farmland in the New Territories were affected by Typhoon Wipha.

    An appropriate amount of the relief fund will be released to affected farmers according to established criteria, it added.

    Affected farmers who need to apply for the fund can register in person at the department’s Agricultural Extension Office at 5/F, Yuen Long Government Offices, or submit their applications online.

    Enquiries can be made by calling 2476 2424 during office hours.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Why it can be harder to sleep during the summer

    Source: Anglia Ruskin University

    By Timothy Hearn, Anglia Ruskin University

    As the days stretch long and the sun lingers late into the evening, most of us welcome summer with open arms. Yet for a surprising number of people, this season brings an unwelcome guest: insomnia.

    For these people, summer is a time of tossing and turning, early waking – or simply not feeling sleepy when they should. Far from just being a nuisance, this seasonal insomnia may chip away at mood, concentration and metabolic health.

    But why does insomnia spike in summer — and more importantly, what can be done about it? The answer lies in the light.

    Every tissue in the body owns a molecular “clock”. However, these clocks take their cue from a central timekeeper – the brain’s suprachiasmatic nucleus. This cluster of about 20,000 neurons synchronises the myriad cellular clocks to a near 24-hour cycle.

    It uses the external light detected by the eyes as a cue, driving the release of two different hormones: melatonin, which makes us sleepy and a pre-dawn surge cortisol to help us wake.

    In winter, this light cue is short and sharp. But in June and July, daylight can stretch on for 16 or 17 hours in the mid‑latitudes. That extra dose matters because evening light is the most potent signal for pushing the central timekeeper later. In summer melatonin shifts by roughly 30 minutes to an hour later, while dawn light floods bedrooms early and kills the hormone off sooner.

    This can have a big effect on the amount of sleep we get. One study monitored the sleep of 188 participants in the lab on three nights at different times of the year. The researchers found that total sleep was about an hour shorter in summer than winter.

    Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep — the sleep stage most strongly linked to emotional regulation and the consolidation of emotionally charged memories — accounted for roughly half the sleep loss in summer.

    The same team later tracked 377 patients over two consecutive years and showed that sleep length and REM sleep began a five‑month decline soon after the last freezing night of spring. Sleep length shrank by an average of 62 minutes, while REM decreased by about 24 minutes. Slow-wave sleep – the phase most critical for tissue repair, immune regulation and the consolidation of factual memories – reached its annual low around the autumn equinox.

    Both studies took place in a city bathed in artificial light – suggesting that even in modern environments our sleep remains seasonally affected.

    Big population surveys echo these findings. Among more than 30,000 middle‑aged Canadians, volunteers interviewed in midsummer said they slept eight minutes less than those interviewed in midwinter. The summer interviewees also reported greater insomnia symptoms in the fortnight after the autumn clock change – suggesting the abrupt time shift exacerbates underlying seasonal misalignment.

    One study also compared the effect of summer sleep in people living at very different latitudes – such as near the equator, where there’s little change in day length in the summer, and near the Arctic circle, where the differences are extreme. The study found that for people living in Tromsø, Norway, their self-reported insomnia and daytime fatigue rose markedly in summer. But for people living in Accra, Ghana (near the equator), these measures barely budged.

    This show just how strongly daylight – and the amount of daylight hours we experience – can affect our sleep quality. But it isn’t the only culprit of poor summertime sleep.

    Temperature is another factor that can spoil sleep during the summer months.

    Just before we fall asleep, our core body temperature begins a steep descent of roughly 1°C to help us fall asleep. It reaches its lowest point during the first half of the night.

    On muggy summer nights this can make falling asleep difficult. Laboratory experiments show that even a rise from 26°C to about 32°C increases wakefulness and reduces both slow-wave and REM sleep.

    Different people are also more vulnerable to summer insomnia than others. This has to do with your unique “chronotype” – your natural preference to rise early or sleep late.

    Evening chronotypes – “night owls” – already lean towards later bedtimes. They may stay up even later when it stays bright past 10pm. Morning chronotypes, on the other hand, may find themselves waking up even earlier than they normally do because of when the sun rises in the summer.

    Mood can amplify the effect. Research found people who suffered with mental health issues were more likely to experience difficulty sleeping in summer.

    Chronic anxiety, alcohol use and certain prescription drugs — notably beta blockers, which suppress melatonin — can all make sleep more elusive in summer.

    Reclaiming summer sleep

    Happily, there are many ways of fixing the issue.

    • Get some morning sunshine. Try to step outside within an hour of waking up – even if it’s just for 15 minutes. This tells the clock that the day has begun and nudges it to finish earlier that evening.

    • Create an artificial dusk. Around two hours before bed, close the curtains, turn off the lights and reduce the intensity of your phone screen’s blue light to help your melatonin rise on time.

    • Don’t let the dawn light in. Being exposed to the dawn light too early will wake you up. Blackout curtains or a contoured eye-mask can ensure you don’t wake before you’re rested.

    • Keep things cool. Fans, breathable cotton or linen sheets or a lukewarm shower before bed all help the body to achieve that crucial one-degree drop in core temperature needed to get a good night’s sleep.

    The deeper lesson here from chronobiology is that humans remain, biologically speaking, seasonal animals. While our industrialised lives flatten the calendar, our cells still measure day length and temperature just as plants and migratory birds do.

    By adapting and aligning our habits with those light signals, we might just be able to recapture some sleep – even during the warmer months.

    Timothy Hearn, Senior Lecturer in Bioinformatics, Anglia Ruskin University

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

    The opinions expressed in VIEWPOINT articles are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of ARU.

    If you wish to republish this article, please follow these guidelines: https://theconversation.com/uk/republishing-guidelines

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: How AI helps to solve a big problem with small earthquakes

    Source: US Geological Survey

    Yellowstone Caldera Chronicles is a weekly column written by scientists and collaborators of the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory. This week’s contribution is from Alysha Armstrong, graduate student at the University of Utah Department of Geology and Geophysics.

    Although they mostly go unnoticed by humans, small earthquakes occur much more frequently than large earthquakes, and knowing more about these tiny seismic events can help us better understand the earthquake hazard and geological processes occurring in a region. Using conventional methods to measure the magnitude of small earthquakes in Yellowstone, however, can be challenging. But perhaps Artificial Intelligence (AI) approaches offer a solution.  After all, AI is already helping to refine earthquake location procedures in Yellowstone. 

    Earthquake magnitudes are calculated from the energy released by the earthquake as recorded by a seismometer. In Yellowstone, the University of Utah Seismograph Stations (UUSS) operates a network of seismometers to monitor earthquakes in the area. Generally, magnitude measurements for a single earthquake are made at several stations in the network independently, and the estimates are then averaged into the final magnitude that is reported. Accurately computing magnitude values for small earthquakes becomes challenging when 1) there are not enough measurements, or 2) earthquakes are happening close together. This is a particular problem during swarms of small earthquakes because the signals from individual seismic events can overlap. Usually, this can be fixed by a seismic analyst after they locate the earthquake, but not always! About 2% of the earthquakes in the UUSS catalog do not have a magnitude computed, likely because of a combination of these issues, so the value is reported as -9.99. To solve this problem, let’s reach into our AI toolkit!

    Example of a Yellowstone seismic waveform recorded at station YMC (at Maple Creek in the northeast part of Yellowstone National Park) with earthquakes for which a magnitude could not be determined. The magnitude was therefore set at -9.99 in the University of Utah Seismograph Stations catalog. The gold area highlights one event, but there are several others close by. The entire window is ~1 minute long. The close occurrence of several earthquakes in such a short time window and their small magnitude values make it a challenge to calculate an earthquake magnitude for any of these events.

    Most people are likely familiar with complicated “deep learning” models, like ChatGPT, that accept and output complex data like long text sequences and images. The deep learning models we use in processing small earthquakes are similar, and they take ground motion data from seismometers as the input. Deep learning models like these are a type of machine learning, which describes algorithms that learn patterns in a dataset to estimate values of interest for new data. The models learn the patterns during a training phase, in which the model is provided with examples—sort of like a test with an answer key. After training, the model can accept inputs it has never seen before and estimate the output, given what it learned from the training data.

    A map of the stations operating in the Yellowstone region between 2012 and 2024 shown as triangles with fill and edge colors indicating whether they are used to calculate magnitudes using traditional approaches, artificial intelligence methods, or both. Many more stations can be used with the AI magnitude method, allowing for more small-magnitude values to be computed. The black dots show the locations of the earthquakes cataloged by the University of Utah Seismograph Stations that were used to train the AI models.

    There is also a somewhat simpler, though still powerful, type of machine learning that relies on human-defined features that describe the data instead of the more complicated, raw data to make predictions. In a recent study, UUSS scientists used this method to train models to calculate earthquake magnitudes based on short windows of data, so it won’t generally be a problem if earthquakes are close together. 

     In the new approach, the UUSS scientists trained one machine learning model for each station in the Yellowstone region using data from the UUSS earthquake catalog. Each model uses features describing the earthquake signal—such as the amplitude—and the location of the earthquake to estimate a magnitude value. The new method makes better use of the available data by accounting for multiple types of seismic waves, and the method also can take advantage of data from more seismic stations because of the rigorous training step. The net result is that there are up to 4 times as many measurements available to calculate a magnitude. Like in the conventional approach, these measurements are combined to determine a final magnitude. 

    The new method will ultimately complement, and not replace, the traditional approach for magnitude calculations. This is because traditional methods work very well most of the time (except for these small, nearby events), and because the machine learning approach does have its limitations, mostly because the models are only going to work well for earthquakes that are similar to the training dataset. So, for example, a model may fail to estimate the magnitude of an earthquake occurring near Hebgen Lake if it saw very few training examples from that area. Similarly, if most training examples were greater than M0.5, the model may perform poorly when applied to earthquakes with a magnitude less than 0.5. Combining predictions from multiple station models can help us to remove and identify poor magnitude estimates, but it can be challenging to know when the models are uncertain. In the future, UUSS scientists plan to expand the approach to not only provide a magnitude, but also an assessment of the confidence in that magnitude.

    These machine learning methods are at the current cutting edge of seismology, and Yellowstone provides the perfect location to train and test the new approaches!

    MIL OSI USA News –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Emergency relief fund for farmers affected by Typhoon Wipha

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    Emergency relief fund for farmers affected by Typhoon Wipha 
         An AFCD spokesman said today (July 21) that an appropriate amount of the relief funding would be released to affected farmers according to established criteria.
     
         The department’s preliminary investigation has revealed that about 300 hectares of farmland in the New Territories were affected by Typhoon Wipha.
     
         “After each typhoon or natural disaster, AFCD staff will inspect farmland areas in the New Territories to assess the resultant damage. Depending on the extent of the damage, the department may launch an operation to provide some relief to affected farmers,” the spokesman said.
     
         Affected farmers who need to apply for the fund can submit their applications in person at the Agricultural Extension Office of the AFCD at 5/F, Yuen Long Government Offices, 2 Kiu Lok Square, Yuen Long, or submit their applications online (www.afcd.gov.hk/english/agriculture/agr_loan/agr_loan_erf/agr_loan_erf.htmlIssued at HKT 18:00

    NNNN

    CategoriesMIL-OSI

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: VIDEO: Criminal Illegal Alien with Lengthy Rap Sheet Ambushes and Shoots CBP Officer in New York City

    Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency

    Headline: VIDEO: Criminal Illegal Alien with Lengthy Rap Sheet Ambushes and Shoots CBP Officer in New York City

    A witness of the attack—believed to be an attempted robbery—states that she and the victim were sitting on the rocks by the water when 2 subjects on a scooter drove up to them and the passenger got off the back and approached them with a firearm drawn

    The off-duty CBP officer responded by withdrawing his own firearm in self defense

    The CBP officer was shot in his right arm and left cheek

    Thankfully, the officer is in stable condition at the hospital

    Video of the attack is below

    Image

    One of the assailants is Miguel Francisco Mora Nunez, a criminal illegal alien from the Dominican Republic

    He illegally entered the United States on April 4, 2023, and was released by the Biden Administration into the country

    Image

    This criminal illegal alien’s rap sheet includes:  

    On October 11, 2023, the New York City Police Department (NYPD) arrested and charged Nunez with felony grand larceny, petit larceny, and reckless driving

    On October 01, 2024, the NYPD arrested and charged Nunez with 2nd and 3rd degree assault

    On November 30, 2024, the NYPD arrested Nunez for criminal contempt

    On January 13, 2025, he was again attested for criminal contempt

    On February 21, 2025, the Leominster Police Department in Massachusetts issued a criminal warrant for Nunez for armed robbery with a firearm

    After failing to show up for his immigration hearing a judge issued Nunez a final order of removal on November 6, 2024

    “This violent criminal illegal alien had multiple run-ins with NYPD for assault and felony grand larceny before he ambushed and shot a CBP officer

    The Biden Administration arrested this criminal illegal alien at the border and chose to release him into our country to terrorize Americans

    We are thankful that our brave law enforcement officer is in stable condition,” said Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin

    “Sanctuary city politicians allowed this to happen

    This suffering is a direct result of lawless sanctuary city policies

    Under President Trump and Secretary Noem, DHS will flood the zone in sanctuary cities and remove these criminals one by one

    We will not be deterred: if you break America’s laws we will hunt you down, arrest you, and deport you

    ”   

    The other suspect remains at large

    Anonymous tips may be reported on this form and via the toll-free ICE tip line, (866) 347-2423

      
    # # #

    MIL OSI USA News –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Six Months of Keeping America Safe Under President Trump and Secretary Noem

    Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency

    Headline: Six Months of Keeping America Safe Under President Trump and Secretary Noem

    lass=”text-align-center”>DHS has accomplished more in six months than most Administrations achieve in an entire term
    WASHINGTON – In just six months, President Trump and Secretary Noem have delivered the American people a long list of victories in their mission to secure the homeland and Make America Safe Again

     
    Under their leadership, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has closed the southern border, removed violent criminal illegal aliens, restored law and order to our immigration system, supported Americans in times of crisis, revolutionized our Coast Guard to meet the challenges of the 21st Century, and kept Americans safe

     
    Secured the Southern Border 

    On day one, President Trump declared a national emergency at the southern border

        
    President Trump immediately reinstated “Remain in Mexico” and ended catch-and-release

     
    Daily border encounters have plunged by 93% since President Trump took office

    Under President Trump’s leadership, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) has located over 10,000 unaccompanied children

    Migrants are turning BACK before they even reach our border— migration through Panama’s Darien Gap is down 99%

    President Trump—with $46

    5 billion from the Big Beautiful Bill—is finishing the border wall

    DHS already has more than 85 miles either planned or under construction with funding from the prior year, in addition to hundreds of miles that are now planned to be funded by the bill

     President Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill also includes over $5 billion for new technology and border surveillance

    With the Big Beautiful Bill, CBP will get the resources they need to keep America safe, including $4

    1 billion to hire additional personnel, including 5,000 more customs officers and 3,000 new Border Patrol agents

    In June, Customs and Border Protection (CBP) had the lowest number of nationwide encounters in CBP history at 25,228

    The number of nationwide apprehensions in June was also a historic low of just 8,024

       
    Notably, on June 28, Border Patrol recorded only 136 apprehensions across the entire Southwest Border—the lowest single-day total in agency history

    And in both May and June, U

    S

    Border Patrol reported zero parole releases—reinforcing the Administration’s commitment to ending catch-and-release policies

    Removed the Worst of the Worst Illegal Aliens  

    The Trump Administration empowered our brave men and women in law enforcement to use common sense to do their jobs effectively

     
    DHS returned to using the term “illegal alien” which is the statutory language

    President Trump will not allow political correctness to hinder law enforcement

     
    The Trump administration has arrested more than 300,000 illegal aliens in 2025 alone

    70% of ICE arrests are criminal illegal aliens with criminal charges or convictions

         
    The Big Beautiful Bill will allow ICE to arrest and remove even more criminal aliens by providing $14

    4 billion for removals, 10,000 new ICE agents, 80,000 new ICE beds, and a $10,000 signing bonus for new ICE agents

    This will help ICE achieve as many as 1 million deportations per year

    As part of 287(g), DHS partnered with the State of Florida and opened Alligator Alcatraz, giving the Trump administration the capability to lock up some of the worst scumbags who entered the country illegally under the previous administration

    The new facility expands facility and bed space by the thousands

    Operation Tidal Wave, the first 287(g) enforcement operation coordinated with state and federal law enforcement partners, resulted in over 800 arrests

    President Trump and Secretary Noem are empowering state and local law enforcement to get these criminal illegal aliens off our streets

    DHS has secured more than 800 signed agreements with state and local partnerships under 287(g)

        
    At the direction of President Trump, CBP and ICE began widescale immigration enforcement operations in sanctuary city Los Angeles and southern California

    The month-long operation resulted in arresting some of the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens

    In July, federal law enforcement officers executed criminal warrant operations at marijuana grow sites in Carpinteria and Camarillo

    At least 14 migrant children have been rescued from potential exploitation, forced labor and human trafficking

    Federal officers also arrested at least 361 illegal aliens from both sites in Carpinteria and Camarillo

    After weeks of delays by activist judges, the Department of Homeland Security finally deported eight barbaric, violent criminal illegal aliens to South Sudan

    Delivering Justice for Victims of Illegal Immigration  

    President Trump and Secretary Noem reopened the Victims of Immigration Crime Engagement (VOICE) office, which was shuttered by the Biden Administration

    President Trump and Secretary Noem are standing up for the victims of illegal alien crime and ensuring they have access to much needed resources and support they deserve

    Incentivizing Historic Self-Deportations 

    President Trump ended the CBP One app that allowed more than one million aliens to illegally enter the U

    S

    The Trump Administration replaced this disastrous program with the CBP Home app, which has a new self-deportation reporting feature for aliens illegally in the country

    President Trump launched Project Homecoming through a presidential EO

    The United States is also offering any illegal alien who uses the CBP Home App a stipend of $1,000 dollars, paid after their return to their home country has been confirmed through the app

    So far, tens of thousands of illegal aliens have used the app to self-deport

     
    In addition to offering CBP Home, DHS announced illegal aliens who self-deport through the app will receive forgiveness of any civil fines or penalties for failing to depart the United States

     DHS also made CBP Home more user friendly by eliminating certain steps and making it easier than ever for illegal aliens to self-deport

    DHS and DOJ are enforcing our immigration laws and fining illegal aliens who do not depart when they are supposed to

    So far, nearly 10,000 fine notices have been issued by ICE

    Restoring Common Sense to America’s Legal Immigration System 

    President Trump ended the broad abuse of humanitarian parole and returned the program to a case-by-case basis

    As part of this effort, Secretary Noem terminated the Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela parole programs

    Following victory at the U

    S

    Supreme Court, DHS began sending termination notices in June, informing the illegal aliens both their parole is terminated, and their parole-based employment authorization is revoked – effective immediately

    DHS has returned the Temporary Protected Status immigration program to its original status: temporary

    No longer will this program be abused and exploited by illegal aliens

    Secretary Noem rescinded the previous administration’s extension of Venezuelan, Haitian, Nicaraguan, Honduran, and Afghan TPS

    Secretary Noem terminated Harvard University’s Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP) certification—meaning Harvard can no longer enroll foreign students and existing foreign students must transfer or lose their legal status—for fostering violence, antisemitism, and coordinating with the Chinese Communist Party

    It is a privilege, not a right, for universities to enroll foreign students and benefit from higher tuition to help pad their multibillion-dollar endowments

    Harvard University repeatedly abused this privilege and even stonewalled DHS’s request for information

    Initiating a Golden Age in American Air Travel 

    Secretary Noem terminated the politically motivated Quiet Skies Program, which since its existence has failed to stop a single terrorist attack while costing US taxpayers $200 million a year

    The program, under the guise of “national security,” was used to target political opponents and benefit political allies

    TSA ended the “shoes-off” travel policy, allowing passengers traveling through domestic airports to keep their shoes on while passing through security screening at TSA checkpoints

    This change will drastically decrease passenger wait times at our TSA checkpoints, leading to a more pleasant and efficient passenger experience

    The Trump administration fully implemented REAL ID enforcement measures nationwide—a law signed 20 years ago

    REAL ID helps ensure that travelers are who they say they are and prevents fraud by criminals, terrorists, and illegal aliens

    Most travelers have not even noticed a difference because nearly 94% of travelers are already REAL ID compliant

    Secretary Noem ended collective bargaining for the Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) Transportation Security Officers, which constrained TSA’s chief mission to safeguard our transportation systems

    Fixing Disaster Relief for the 21st Century 

    The Federal Emergency Management Agency is now shifting from bloated, DC-centric dead weight to a lean, deployable disaster force that empowers state actors to provide relief for their citizens

    The old processes are being replaced because they failed Americans in real emergencies for decades

    President Trump has established the FEMA Review Council to provide recommendations on how to best conduct disaster relief at the federal level

     
    Under Secretary Noem’s leadership, the FEMA Review Council is developing a comprehensive plan for necessary change

    DHS has empowered state and local governments to lead disaster relief efforts without interference from the federal government

    Provided Rapid and Effective Support to Flood Victims in Texas 

    Within moments of the flooding in Texas, DHS assets, including the U

    S

    Coast Guard (USCG), CBP Border Search, CBP BORSTAR, and FEMA personnel surged into unprecedented action alongside Texas first responders for search and rescue operations

    FEMA deployed 311 staffers delivering critical intelligence, aerial imagery, and shelter for 171 survivors

    Combined state and federal rescue efforts evacuated and rescued over 1,500 people

    Getting CISA Back on Mission 

    Under the Biden Administration, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency (CISA) censored free speech and targeted Americans

    Under President Trump’s direction, DHS closed CISA’s politically weaponized offices and fired those responsible for abusing their power

    CISA is now back on-mission: Protecting Americans and critical infrastructure from cyberthreats

    CISA is shifting away from an all-hazards approach to a risk-informed approach, prioritizing resilience and action over mere information sharing

     
    CISA personnel are deployed across 10 regions in support of all 56 states/territories

     
    CISA is also on the front lines of defending America from cyberattacks

     
    CISA partnered with the FBI and NSA to ensure state and local governments have information and resources necessary for protection

    CISA is also providing security support for next year’s FIFA World Cup

    Secretary Noem discontinued the Critical Infrastructure Partnership Advisory Council (CIPAC) as a part of the implementation of President Trump’s Executive Order 14217, Commencing the Reduction of the Federal Bureaucracy, and removed members of the Cyber Safety Review Board (CSRB), which CISA oversees

    Revolutionizing the Coast Guard 

    When President Trump came back into office, the Coast Guard faced its greatest readiness crisis since World War II because the Biden Administration left it underfunded and neglected

    President Trump’s order to surge Coast Guard assets to our maritime border changed the game

    In the first few months of the Trump Administration, the Coast Guard seized more cocaine and other illegal drugs than during the entirety of 2024

    For the first time in years, the Coast Guard expects to exceed its recruiting goals

    In Fiscal Year 2025, the Coast Guard has brought in more than 4,250 recruits – 1,200 more than the same time last year

    That’s 108% over the goal

    Under Biden, the Coast Guard fell short of its recruiting goals four years straight

    Under President Trump and Secretary Noem, the Coast Guard is unleashing “Force Design 2028,” a revolutionary new blueprint that will make the Coast Guard more agile, more capable, and more responsive than ever before

    Standing up for the American taxpayer 

    The United States Coast Guard (USCG) eliminated an ineffective information technology (IT) program, saving nearly $33 million, and is now focusing resources where they’re most needed to protect our homeland

     
    USCG partially terminated a wasteful Offshore Patrol Cutter (OPC) contract with Eastern Shipbuilding Group (ESG), which has been slow to deliver four OPCs, harming U

    S

    defense capabilities

    The Trump Administration stopped aliens on the Terror Watchlist from receiving Medicaid benefits

         
    Secretary Noem cancelled CISA’s expensive headquarters project, saving taxpayers over half a billion dollars

    To stop policies that were magnets for illegal immigration, DHS froze all funding to non-governmental organizations that facilitate illegal immigration and announced a partnership with the U

    S

    Department of Housing and Urban Development to ensure taxpayer dollars do not go to housing illegal aliens

     
    ###  

    MIL OSI USA News –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Microsoft Releases Guidance on Exploitation of SharePoint Vulnerability (CVE-2025-53770)

    News In Brief – Source: US Computer Emergency Readiness Team

    CISA is aware of active exploitation of a new remote code execution (RCE) vulnerability enabling unauthorized access to on-premise SharePoint servers. While the scope and impact continue to be assessed, the new Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE), CVE-2025-53770, is a variant of the existing vulnerability CVE-2025-49706 and poses a risk to organizations. This exploitation activity, publicly reported as “ToolShell,” provides unauthenticated access to systems and enables malicious actors to fully access SharePoint content, including file systems and internal configurations, and execute code over the network. 

    CISA recommends the following actions to reduce the risks associated with the RCE compromise: 

    • For information on detection, prevention, and advanced threat hunting measures, see Microsoft’s Customer Guidance for SharePoint Vulnerability and advisory for CVE-2025-49706. Organizations are encouraged to review all articles and security updates published by Microsoft on July 8, 2025, relevant to the SharePoint platform deployed in their environment.
    • Monitor for POSTs to /_layouts/15/ToolPane.aspx?DisplayMode=Edit
    • Conduct scanning for IPs 107.191.58[.]76, 104.238.159[.]149, and 96.9.125[.]147, particularly between July 18-19, 2025.
    • Update intrusion prevention system and web-application firewall rules to block exploit patterns and anomalous behavior. For more information, see CISA’s Guidance on SIEM and SOAR Implementation.
    • Implement comprehensive logging to identify exploitation activity. For more information, see CISA’s Best Practices for Event Logging and Threat Detection.
    • Audit and minimize layout and admin privileges.

    For more information on this vulnerability, please see Eye Security’s reporting and Palo Alto Unit42’s post.

    Note: This Alert may be updated to reflect new guidance issued by CISA or other parties.

    Organizations should report incidents and anomalous activity to CISA’s 24/7 Operations Center at Report@cisa.gov or (888) 282-0870.  

    Disclaimer:  

    The information in this report is being provided “as is” for informational purposes only. CISA does not endorse any commercial entity, product, company, or service, including any entities, products, or services linked within this document. Any reference to specific commercial entities, products, processes, or services by service mark, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise, does not constitute or imply endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by CISA. 

    MIL OSI USA News –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Burnet County Disaster Recovery Center Opens July 20

    Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency

    Headline: Burnet County Disaster Recovery Center Opens July 20

    Burnet County Disaster Recovery Center Opens July 20

    AUSTIN, Texas – A Disaster Recovery Center will open Sunday, July 20, in Burnet County to offer face-to-face help to survivors who had damage or losses from the severe storms and flooding in Central Texas

    Homeowners, renters and eligible non-residents may receive FEMA assistance for losses not covered by insurance

    Survivors with homeowner’s or renter’s insurance should first file a claim with their insurance company as soon as possible

    If your policy does not cover all your damage expenses, you may be eligible for federal assistance

    The Disaster Recovery Center is located at:Burnet Community Center401 E

    Jackson St

    Burnet, TX 78611Hours: 8 a

    m

    to 7 p

    m

    dailyFEMA and the U

    S

    Small Business Administration are supporting the Texas Division of Emergency Management, which is leading efforts to help survivors apply for federal disaster assistance

    Center specialists can also identify potential needs and connect survivors with local, state and federal agencies as well as nonprofit organizations and community groups

     Disaster Recovery Centers are accessible to people with disabilities and those with access and functional needs

    They are also equipped with assistive technology

    If you need a reasonable accommodation or an American Sign Language interpreter, call 833-285-7448 (press 2 for Spanish)

    You have until Thursday, Sept

    4, to apply for FEMA disaster assistance

    Here’s how:The fastest way to apply is online at DisasterAssistance

    govYou may also use the FEMA mobile appCall the FEMA Helpline at 800-621-3362

     Lines are open from 6 a

    m

    to 10 p

    m

    CT daily

    If you use a relay service, captioned telephone or other service, you can give FEMA your number for that service

    Helpline specialists speak many languages

    Press 2 for Spanish

    Visit any Disaster Recovery Center to receive in-person assistance

    To find one close to you, use your ZIP code to search FEMA

    gov/DRC

    To view an accessible video on how to apply, visit What You Need to Know Before Applying for FEMA Assistance

    For the latest information about the Texas recovery, visit fema

    gov/disaster/4879

    Follow FEMA Region 6 on social media at x

    com/FEMARegion6 and at facebook

    com/FEMARegion6
    toan

    nguyen
    Sat, 07/19/2025 – 21:09

    MIL OSI USA News –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: St. Louis County Disaster Recovery Centers to Close July 24

    Source: US Federal Emergency Management Agency

    Headline: St

    Louis County Disaster Recovery Centers to Close July 24

    St

    Louis County Disaster Recovery Centers to Close July 24

    ST

    LOUIS – The two Disaster Recovery Centers in St

    Louis County are scheduled to close permanently on Thursday, July 24 at 7 p

    m

    The three Disaster Recovery Centers in the City of St

    Louis are staying open

    At all locations, FEMA and the U

    S

    Small Business Administration are helping impacted residents with their disaster assistance applications, answering questions, and uploading required documents

    St

    Louis County Locations – Closing July 24LOCATIONSHOURS OF OPERATIONSt

    Louis County Library                  Mid-County Branch7821 Maryland Ave

    Clayton, MO 63105Monday–Thursday: 8 a

    m

    – 7 p

    m

    Friday: 8 a

    m

    -5 p

    m

    Saturday: 9 a

    m

    – 4 p

    m

    Sunday: ClosedClosing Permanently: Thursday, July 24   St

    Louis County LibraryPrairie Commons Branch                        915 Utz Ln

    Hazelwood, MO 63042Monday–Thursday: 8 a

    m

    – 7 p

    m

    Friday: 8 a

    m

    -5 p

    m

    Saturday: 9 a

    m

    – 4 p

    m

    Sunday: ClosedClosing Permanently: Thursday, July 24You can visit any Disaster Recovery Center, no matter where you are staying now

    Three additional Disaster Recovery Centers are open in St

    Louis City to assist residents and businesses affected by the May 16 tornado and storms

     St

    Louis City Locations – Staying OpenLOCATIONSHOURS OF OPERATIONUnion Tabernacle M

    B

    Church626 N

    Newstead Ave

    St

    Louis, MO 63108Monday-Friday: 8 a

    m

    -7 p

    m

                         Saturday: 9 a

    m

    -4 p

    m

     Sunday: ClosedUrban League Entrepreneurship and    Women’s Business Center 4401 Natural Bridge Ave

    St

    Louis, MO 63115Monday-Friday: 8 a

    m

    -7 p

    m

    Saturday: 9 a

    m

    -4 p

    m

     Sunday: ClosedSumner High School — Parking Lot4248 Cottage Ave

    St

    Louis, MO 63113Monday-Friday: 8 a

    m

    -7 p

    m

    Saturday: 9 a

    m

    -4 p

    m

     Sunday: ClosedTo save time, please apply for FEMA assistance before coming to the Disaster Recovery Center

    Apply online at DisasterAssistance

    gov or by calling 1-800-621-3362

     If you are unable to apply online or by phone, someone at the Disaster Recovery Center can assist you

     The FEMA application deadline for the May 16 disaster is August 11, 2025

    If your home or personal property sustained damage not covered by insurance, FEMA may be able to provide money to help you pay for home repairs, a temporary place to live, and replace essential personal property that was destroyed

    sara

    zuckerman
    Fri, 07/18/2025 – 20:30

    MIL OSI USA News –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: NSU hosted the first economic quest “Knowledge — Money”

    Translation. Region: Russian Federal

    Source: Novosibirsk State University –

    An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    On July 10, Novosibirsk State University hosted a fascinating economic quest, “Knowledge — Money,” in which 65 high school students from different schools in Novosibirsk took part. It was not just an intellectual challenge, but also a real immersion into the world of economics, where knowledge, logic, and teamwork become the key to success.

    The quest was organized by the public organization “Laboratory of Economics and Business” with the support of Faculty of Economics, NSU, the “First” movement and the low-rise eco-quarter “Spectrum”.

    —The Laboratory of Economics and Business was created three years ago. Our mission is to develop schoolchildren’s interest in economics and to form a culture of systems thinking. The first event we held last year was a course of lectures and interactive seminars “Basics of Economics and Business for Schoolchildren”. Instead of the planned 20 people, more than 60 took part in it. We realized that schoolchildren have a huge interest in economics and new educational formats. This is how the idea of a quest was born, which we decided to hold in the summer, — said Dmitry Markov, a lecturer in the Department of Management of the Faculty of Economics of NSU, head of the laboratory.

    The participants united into 14 teams, each of which went through 13 stations in four thematic “economic laboratories” in three hours. At each station, the teams passed tests on knowledge, logic and ingenuity, solved problems of varying difficulty levels and earned points. The maximum for each station was 100 points, and at the end the strongest team was determined.

    1. Systems Analysis Laboratory

    The children were given tasks that clearly demonstrated the importance of a systematic approach to solving problems. A crossword, a fillword, and a Japanese puzzle called “Bridges” — all of this forced the participants to think logically, find patterns and relationships. And most importantly, it helped them better understand how economic processes are structured in reality.

    2. Laboratory of Economic Intuition

    Here, participants encountered economic puzzles, asset turnover tasks, and cases that required filling in missing terms. These tasks helped participants not only remember the terms, but also understand how they work in the context of business and finance.

    3. Business Analytics Lab

    It turned out to be the most difficult — and, perhaps, the most educational. The kids had to understand the financial statements of the Magnit retail chain, pass tests on formal logic, and solve numerical problems that are used when hiring in large financial companies. This gave the schoolchildren the opportunity to “try on” the role of a business analyst and understand how interesting and in-demand this profession is.

    4. Bipolar Laboratory

    This lab turned out to be the most creative and memorable. Participants had to not only think, but also act:

    Assemble a product according to the technical specifications from a construction set. Assemble a puzzle from the logos of famous brands and compare them with the companies’ missions. Restore the system by analogy with the game “Tetris”. Assemble slides with company analytics to create a complete picture.

    These tasks developed not only logic and economic thinking, but also teamwork skills, attentiveness and creativity.

    Each laboratory had its own curators, who were students from the Faculty of Economics of NSU.

    Artem Bezrukov commanded the business analytics laboratory.

    — Three stations: calculation tasks, a logic storm and a hellish quiz on financial reporting. I thought that my stations would be the hardest for the participants, but the guys turned out to be great! We were especially impressed with the financial reporting of Magnit. We compared profitability, revenue, turnover — like analysts with real cases! Honestly, I thought that out of 100 points our maximum would be 50, but I was pleasantly surprised by other results!) I admit, the logic test turned out to be the most tricky. Only two teams were able to solve it 100 out of 100! Apparently, numbers are closer to them than puzzles.) Even my fifth-graders learned to calculate profitability! — said Artem.

    Kira Kurmasheva was responsible for the bipolar laboratory.

    —We had a great time and enjoyed it as much as the quest participants. Our lab had the most stations — four. All the tasks in my lab were interactive, the kids were asked to assemble a flower from a construction set, restore economic slides, assemble puzzles with logos of famous companies, and solve a riddle. All the tasks were quite easy, but very interesting. Our lab had the highest average score for the quest.

    I am very glad that our event attracted so many children from all over the region. During the game, I received a lot of positive feedback about the quest. I hope that I will participate in many more similar projects from the laboratory of economics and business! – Kira shared.

    As a result, all teams completed all stations, showed good results and acquired valuable skills. The winner of the quest was the team “EkoMi”, which scored the highest number of points.

    All participants were awarded raffle tickets and delicious pizza, which was a pleasant end to a busy but exciting day.

    Here’s what the event participants thought about the quest.

    Taisiya Gershun, 8th grade, OC “Gornostay”:

    — Although I was never particularly interested in economics, the quest even made me think about enrolling in the economics department! An interesting format that helps to apply knowledge from economics in practice. During the quest, you learn to work together and make decisions quickly. It was especially interesting to solve economic puzzles and solve different problems. At the end, there was an announcement of the winners and pizza!!

     

    Vladimir Rimmer, 9th grade, Lyceum No. 130:

    — My mother signed me up for the quest, for which I am very grateful to her. I got a lot of new emotions, made new acquaintances. I really liked the idea itself, the organization and, of course, the surprise in the form of pizza after the end. If I were to rate the quest on a ten-point scale, it would definitely be 10 out of 10!

     

    Daria Rakova, 9th grade, OC “Gornostay”:

    — Overall, the event was interesting and useful. The tasks were varied, you had to think and act. I especially liked two things: bridges and a crossword puzzle. These logic tasks are just super, and everything was exciting with the team. Overall, I spent my time usefully, learned something new and laughed.

     

    The Laboratory of Economics and Business is already drawing up a plan for future events, where schoolchildren not only gain new knowledge, but also come into contact with university life.

    — The guys spent the whole day at NSU, got to know the university, its teachers and students better. We are sure that many of them will choose NSU as the place of their admission and further education, — Dmitry Markov emphasized.

     

    Please note: This information is raw content obtained directly from the source of the information. It is an accurate report of what the source claims and does not necessarily reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    .

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Development Bureau and relevant departments proactively follow up on relief work after passage of Typhoon Wipha

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

    A spokesman for the Development Bureau today (July 20) said that its departments and relevant departments are making all-out efforts to carry out relief work after the passage of Typhoon Wipha, with a view to enabling the community to resume normalcy as soon as possible.
     
    As at 8pm today, the Government’s 1823 Call Centre and the Fire Services Department received 286 and 425 reports of fallen trees respectively. In order to remove fallen trees affecting carriageways and footpaths as early as possible, prior to the issuance of Strong Wind Signal No. 3 by the Hong Kong Observatory, the Highways Department has commenced inspections of carriageways across the territory to immediately remove fallen trees when necessary.
     
    During the passage of Typhoon Wipha, five reports of collapsed scaffolding were received as at 7pm. Among these, the Housing Department removed the scaffolding affecting Choi Hung Road at around 3pm and is making arrangement to dismantle the scaffolding collapsed on Wah King Street near Wah Fu Estate. The Architectural Services Department is striving to remove the scaffolding collapsed on Siu Sai Wan Road, with a view to resuming traffic soonest. There are two separate scaffoldings collapsed at private housing estates at Cloud View Road, North Point and Tin Hau Temple Road respectively. The former is affecting the outdoor carpark of the estate while the latter is affecting Tin Hau Temple Road. The Buildings Department (BD) is proactively following up with relevant owners’ corporations and the scaffolding affecting Tin Hau Temple Road will be removed as soon as possible.
     
    As at 6pm, the BD received 21 reports of building-related incidents, which mainly involve unstable windows. The BD is following up on 15 cases and has referred the remaining six cases to relevant departments for follow up.
     
    As at 8pm, the Drainage Services Department (DSD) has received seven confirmed cases of flooding at Lam Kam Road in Tai Po, Lung Cheung Road near Lung Cheung Mall, Lung Cheung Road near Ngau Chi Wan Village, Tai Hom Road in Wai Tai Sin, Clear Water Bay Road in Sai Kung, Chuk Yuen Road in Wong Tai Sin, and Ko Chiu Road in Yau Tong. The aforementioned cases have been resolved.
     
    As storm surge might lead to a rise in sea levels and increase the flooding risk in the area of Tai Po Market, the DSD made early preparation and implemented various flood prevention measures last night (July 19), including installing temporary water-filled flood barriers near Kwong Fuk Bridge along Lam Tsuen River in Tai Po, and placing water pumps in the vicinity of Tai Po Market and Sam Mun Tsai New Village. No report of flooding at the aforementioned locations has been received so far.
     
    Moreover, Typhoon Wipha did not result in any landslide incidents.
     
    The spokesman said the relevant departments have commenced a new round of special inspections after the issuance of Strong Wind Signal No. 3 by the Hong Kong Observatory to inspect roadside trees, structures (including external walls and signboards), slopes and construction sites, etc. to identity locations with potential risks after the passage of strong wind to ensure public safety. The Government urges members of the public to remain vigilant when going outdoors, and avoid staying under trees, signboards or structures with signs of concrete spalling, as well as in the vicinity of slopes. They may call the Government’s 1823 hotline to report dangerous trees, slopes and structures.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Typhoon Wipha roundup

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

    As Typhoon Wipha is moving away from Hong Kong, the Hong Kong Observatory issued the Strong Wind Signal No. 3 at 7.40pm today (July 20). It replaced the No. 8 Southeast Gale or Storm Signal at 4.10pm today.
     
    As at 7pm today, the Home Affairs Department has opened 34 temporary shelters in various districts and 277 people have sought refuge at the shelters.
     
    As at 8pm today, the Government’s 1823 Call Centre and the Fire Services Department received 286 reports and 425 reports of fallen trees respectively, while the Drainage Services Department has received seven confirmed flooding cases. In addition, no report of landslide has been received so far.
     
    According to the Hospital Authority, as at 7.40pm today, 33 people (18 men and 15 women) have been injured during the typhoon period and received medical treatment at the Accident and Emergency Department of public hospitals.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Typhoon Wipha situation report (6)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

    The Hurricane Signal No. 10 issued by the Hong Kong Observatory at 9.20am today (July 20) remains in force.
     
    The Home Affairs Department has so far opened 34 temporary shelters in various districts and 242 people have sought refuge at the shelters.
     
    As at 2pm today, the Government’s 1823 Call Centre and the Fire Services Department received 117 reports and 246 reports of fallen trees respectively. No report of landslide or flooding has been received so far.
     
    According to the Hospital Authority, as at 2pm today, 13 males and eight females have sought medical treatment at the Accident and Emergency Departments at public hospitals so far during the typhoon period.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Typhoon Wipha situation report (5)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

    The Hurricane Signal No. 10 issued by the Hong Kong Observatory at 9.20am today (July 20) remains in force.
     
    The Home Affairs Department has so far opened 34 temporary shelters in various districts and 234 people have sought refuge at the shelters.
     
    As at 12 noon today, the Government’s 1823 Call Centre and the Fire Services Department received 76 reports and 164 reports of fallen trees respectively. No report of landslide or flooding has been received so far.
     
    According to the Hospital Authority, as at 12 noon today, seven males and seven females have sought medical treatment at the Accident and Emergency Departments at public hospitals so far during the typhoon period.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    July 21, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Typhoon Wipha situation report (2)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region – 4

         The Hong Kong Observatory replaced the No. 8 Northeast Gale or Storm Signal by the Increasing Gale or Storm Signal No.9 at 7.20am today (July 20).

         The Home Affairs Department has so far opened 34 temporary shelters in various districts and 198 people have sought refuge at the shelters.

         As at 8am today, the Government’s 1823 Call Centre and the Fire Services Department received two reports and 11 reports of fallen trees respectively. No report of landslide or flooding has been received so far.

         According to the Hospital Authority, as at 8am today, one male has sought medical treatment at the Accident and Emergency Departments at public hospitals so far during the typhoon period.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News –

    July 21, 2025
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