Category: Politics

  • MIL-OSI USA: Attorney General Bonta: We Must Protect EMTALA and Ensure Access to Emergency Care for All Americans

    Source: US State of California

    OAKLAND — California Attorney General Rob Bonta today co-led a coalition of 24 attorneys general in filing an amicus brief before the en banc court of the Ninth Circuit, supporting the Biden administration’s challenge to Idaho’s near-total ban on abortion. In an amicus brief filed in United States of America v. Idaho, the multistate coalition supports the U.S. government’s argument that the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA), a federal law, requires hospitals to provide necessary abortion care to pregnant people experiencing medical emergencies. The coalition further argues that Idaho’s ban not only endangers the lives and health of pregnant individuals in the state but would have serious repercussions on the health systems of other states, and urges the Court to uphold the lower court’s preliminary order prohibiting enforcement of Idaho’s ban to the extent it conflicts with EMTALA.

    EMTALA ensures that no one is denied access to emergency medical care, including abortion care, and this federal law is more imperative than ever following the overturn of Roe v. Wade,” said Attorney General Bonta. “That’s why I, alongside attorneys general nationwide, are reaffirming our unwavering commitment to safeguarding access to emergency medical care for all Americans with today’s amicus brief. Abortion care is healthcare, and at the California Department of Justice, we will pursue every legal avenue to protect EMTALA and ensure that medical decisions remain between patients and their doctors.” 

    Every hospital in the United States that operates an emergency department and participates in Medicare is subject to EMTALA. Under the law, emergency departments are required to provide all patients who have an emergency medical condition with the treatment required to stabilize their condition. EMTALA’s requirement extends to abortion care, which is sometimes necessary to stabilize a pregnant individual experiencing an emergency medical condition. Under Idaho’s radical abortion ban, which came into effect after the U.S. Supreme Court’s June 2022 decision overturning Roe v. Wade, healthcare providers face criminal prosecution and loss of their license for providing this medically necessary care. 

    In today’s amicus brief, the multistate coalition supports the federal government’s case arguing that:

    • Decades of federal guidance and court precedent have held that stabilizing treatment under EMTALA includes emergency abortion care, and states have relied on that determination to protect their residents’ health and safety.
    • Preventing medical providers from performing abortions needed to treat emergency medical conditions threatens the health and lives of pregnant patients. Many pregnancy and miscarriage complications are emergency medical conditions requiring time-sensitive stabilizing treatment that can include abortion. In an emergency, any failure to provide, or delays in providing, necessary abortion care can put at risk the pregnant patient’s life or health.
    • If Idaho hospitals do not provide the emergency abortion care required by EMTALA, patients, if they have time, will be forced to turn to out-of-state hospitals and providers, adding strain to other states’ emergency departments that are already struggling with overcrowding, long wait times, and staff shortages. The added strain will cause more delays and threaten the safety and health of all patients who need emergency care.

    Last month, California sued Providence St. Joseph Hospital, enforcing the crucial right to emergency abortion care under California state law, while the scope of federal protections for such care under EMTALA is litigated in the federal courts.  As litigation about EMTALA proceeds, states like California rely on their own state laws to protect pregnant patients.

    Today’s amicus brief was led by the attorneys general of California and New York, who were joined by the attorneys general of Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawai’i, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin, and the District of Columbia.

    A copy of the brief is available here.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Change happens – and why central banks care

    Source: Bank for International Settlements

    It is a great pleasure for me to join you today. Many thanks to the staff at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia for the invitation. 1

    BIS Innovation Hub

    Today I want to talk about change and central banks. But before I begin, allow me to briefly introduce the BIS Innovation Hub. The Bank for International Settlements supports central banks in their pursuit of monetary and financial stability by fostering international cooperation. The Innovation Hub was created five years ago and can be described as a joint venture between the BIS and the central banks who host our seven centres. The Innovation Hub has almost 100 people working together across the world. Our mandate is to follow and explore new technology and, when suitable, develop public goods. And to do that we research technologies and challenges that matter to central banks by building proofs of concept or prototypes. In more than 30 projects to date, we have collaborated with central banks and other partners to demonstrate the art of the possible. Currently, tokenisation and artificial intelligence are important areas for us, where we have multiple projects under way. Another crucial area is ensuring the integrity and safety in the financial system by exploring possible improvements to services like payments. Again, we aim to demonstrate the art of the possible. Adopting some of the technologies or implementing the outcomes of our projects is not up to us. Ultimately, countries’ authorities decide what becomes reality in their jurisdictions.

    So why am I here? Well, when I was asked to join you here at the Philadelphia Fed, I immediately said yes. Maybe too fast, because the organisers kept asking me what I wanted to announce. I had to disappoint them. This is not a public service announcement. I am not trying to sell you anything. What I want to do in the next 10 minutes is explain why central banks care about change and innovation – and why that matters to us all.  

    Technology and change

    Let me start with innovation and change, for which I will look to Adam Smith. Who better? The Wealth of Nations was published about 250 years ago. And Adam Smith uses the example of moving goods by road or by ship. Canal companies were the big techs of the day. They could move things faster and cheaper, and only the most niche products chose the horse and cart. Yet 100 years later, the transport network and – by extension the industrial capacity of Britain – was totally unrecognisable.

    What changed? In that time, railways happened. Or more accurately, innovation changed how railways were used. There were railways when Adam Smith was writing. But they were small, private and horse-drawn. He did not even mention them as a contender to roads and ships. But 50 years of innovation in steam engines – to make them smaller, faster and more efficient – would make railways far superior to canals. Following some smaller private railways, the first public railway – from Liverpool to Manchester – opened in 1830. At that time, there were about 125 miles of railways in England. Over the next 40 years, this grew to 13,000 miles. Canals were dead in the water.

    Was the change smooth, clearly predictable and always rational and obvious? No. Was it just the technology advantages that catalysed the change? No. It was many things. Financial innovations meant that investments in railways were easier. Yet this also created a financial bubble. Early safety regulations reassured a sceptical public – but not before some terrible accidents. Competition drove further innovation but resulted in a grossly inefficient network. When agreement on a standardised width of railway gauge was eventually brokered, network effects could be enhanced. The standard adopted was George Stephenson’s 4 feet, 8 1⁄2 inches, which spread across England and internationally. I have been told the United States uses it too.

    But why am I telling you a story about something that happened in England hundreds of years ago? Well first, I enjoy history. But second, because it is a great example of how technologies change. Do you see any parallels with today? Railways did not just “win” overnight. They were initially less efficient than canals. Canal owners saw the threat and organised resistance. Yet railways improved faster than canals could – at least once steam engines became technologically and commercially viable. Investment played a significant role in this. So, at times, did safety regulations and politics. There were battles about which standards should be used. And importantly, change driven by technology and innovation is not an elegant dance. It is a race and a tussle and sometimes a mess.

    To really make the point, allow me one more historical example closer to home. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York recently published an article about when securities markets scrapped paper in the 1960s and ’70s. At that time, IBM and Honeywell were in a race to develop more powerful computers. And stockbrokers were racing one another to use them for competitive advantage. The winners of that race went on to dominate securities markets for decades because they bought out the failing houses that could not operate their computers as effectively. And the digital infrastructures they created, based on the paper processes before them, are the ones we use now. And they are the same infrastructures now experimenting with tokenisation and are maybe on the cusp of another change.

    Understanding change

    How do industries and society manage these huge changes? Almost all industries have regulations of various kinds to ensure safety, competition and transparency – standards with a large or small “s” that are adhered to. Yet finance has something that planes, trains and automobiles do not. Finance has central banks. And why do they care about innovation and change?

    First, for monetary analysis. For central banks to set interest rates to stabilise prices they have to understand the economy. The data collection and analysis of credit, demand, output, supply, costs, prices and labour markets all roll up to into determining monetary policy. And innovation can have a huge impact. AI is an obvious example. But digitalisation more broadly has had and will continue to have a fundamental impact on the global economy. For effective policymaking, central banks need to understand where things are heading. So they must follow and explore innovation and its implications. 

    Second, central banks care about innovation because of their oversight role. For prudential supervision of banks and market infrastructure, it is necessary to understand how technology is being used and the effect of any large changes. Financial stability analyses are increasingly concerned with how financial and operational risks interact. Technology is a significant variable in that analysis.

    Third, central banks do not just think; within their mandate, they act. To deliver on their monetary policy objectives, they decide where interest rates need to be. And then they act through their market operations to make that happen. Central banks want safe settlement and so they offer it – by operating payment systems to safely and reliably move substantial amounts of money every day. And they provide banknotes.

    It is because central banks act that they are really part of any change – not on the sidelines or just observing, but really involved. As part of the financial ecosystem, central banks offer settlement in central bank money, which is the safest settlement asset possible and a pillar of a stable and robust financial system. And this is what makes them so different from a regulator in any other space. To put it very simply, if central banks think technology is changing, they need to consider and adapt as well. And they need to change operations and systems that require the highest possible resilience from cyber threats and operational risk. That puts a very different slant on any decision and perhaps adds some caution. It might also add some practicality. And importantly for an economist, it gives central banks skin in the technology game – and the right incentives.

    Incentives matter. Trust in money is grounded on two things. The first is the central bank’s monetary policy framework and operational independence. The second is the competence to carry out its role. And that competence increasingly means the ability to use technology better. To do that we experiment. We collaborate. We get involved. But our role is not to win or to profit or to tell the private sector how to run their business. The private sector will always know what customers need and want better than the public sector. But it is also important to have the public sector involved, with public policy objectives such as stability, safety, interoperability and compliance.

    BIS and international cooperation

    To close I want to talk about how these themes of technology, change and incentives play out internationally. Central banks are different from one another. But I have spoken for almost 10 minutes about their interests and incentives as a homogeneous group. And if I can do that, they must be similar enough to cooperate.

    The BIS’s job is to help and guide central bank cooperation. Given what I have said, that should be easy. But collaboration is not always simple. Yet, with the right governance and communications, building knowledge by running projects together could reap great rewards for central banks.

    Our projects are “just” a first look at what is possible. Projects are not a commitment. Some of the questions like whether there is a need for central bank digital currency or digital identity can only be answered politically. The central bank is one of many advisers on a decision that should be made with other players in our societies. That is right and that is normal. Yet the fact remains, for good policymaking on any subject, you need understanding. And with technology, you need to experiment and collaborate to obtain that understanding. 

    So, I thank you again for the invitation and attention. I will close with a quote from Adam Smith: “I have never known much good done, by those who affected to trade for the public good.” Eerily, he foresaw a version of what US president Ronald Reagan famously highlighted as the nine most terrifying words: “I’m from the government and I’m here to help.” The BIS Innovation Hub has a mandate to explore technology and to develop public goods. But others ultimately decide what could be changed. Our job is to learn and advise them so that when change happens, it can happen for the better.

    Thank you for listening.  


    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Africa: IMF isn’t doing enough to support Africa: billions could be made available through special drawing rights

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Kevin P. Gallagher, Professor of Global Development Policy and Director, Global Development Policy Center, Boston University

    At the 2021 UN Climate Summit, Barbados prime minister Mia Mottley called for more and better use of special drawing rights (SDRs), the International Monetary Fund’s reserve asset.

    The special drawing right is an international reserve asset created by the IMF. It is not a currency – its value is based on a basket of five currencies, the biggest chunk of which is the US dollar, followed by the euro. It is a potential claim on the freely usable currencies of IMF members. Special drawing rights can provide a country with liquidity.

    Countries can use their special drawing rights to pay back IMF loans, or they can exchange them for foreign currencies.

    As Mottley is the newest president of the Climate Vulnerable Forum and Vulnerable Group of 20 (V20) finance ministers, which represents 68 climate-vulnerable countries that are among those with the most dire liquidity needs, including 32 African countries, her call would be directly beneficial to African countries.

    In August 2021, as the shock from the COVID-19 pandemic battered their economies, African countries received a lifeline of US$33 billion from special drawing rights. This amounts to more than all the climate finance Africa receives each year, and more than half of all annual official development assistance to Africa.

    This US$33 billion did not add to African countries’ debt burden, it did not come with any conditions, and it did not cost donors a single cent to provide.

    IMF members can vote to create new issuances of special drawing rights. They are then distributed to countries in proportion to their quotas in the IMF. Quotas are denominated in special drawing rights, the IMF’s unit of account.

    Quotas are the building blocks of the IMF’s financial and governance structure. An individual member country’s quota broadly reflects its relative position in the world economy. Thus, by design, the poorest and most vulnerable countries receive the least when it comes to quotas and voting shares.

    Special drawing rights cannot solve all of Africa’s economic challenges. And their highly technical nature means they are not always well understood. But at a time when African countries are facing chronic liquidity challenges – most countries in the region are spending more on debt service payments than they are on health, education, or climate change – our new research shows that special drawing rights can play an important role in establishing financial stability and enabling investments for development.

    Financial stability includes macroeconomic stability (such as low inflation, healthy balance of payments, sufficient foreign reserves), a strong financial system and resilience to shocks.

    African leaders are approaching a critical year-long opportunity: in November, the first Group of 20 (G20) summit will convene (with the African Union in attendance as a member for the first time). Then in December South Africa assumes the G20 presidency.


    Read more: South Africa will be president of the G20 in 2025: two much-needed reforms it should drive


    As African leaders advocate for reforms to the international financial architecture, maximising the potential of special drawing rights should be a central component of their agenda.

    The problem

    African countries’ finances are facing tough times. External debt in sub-Saharan Africa has tripled since 2008. The average government is now spending 12% of its revenue on external debt service. The COVID-19 pandemic, Russia’s war in Ukraine, and rises in interest rates and the prices of commodities, like food and fertiliser, have all contributed to this trend.

    Debt restructuring mechanisms have also proved inadequate. Countries like Zambia and Ghana got stuck in lengthy restructurings. Weak institutional capacity and poor governance also impede efficient use of public resources.

    At the same time, African economies need to increase investment to advance development, support a young and growing population, develop climate resilience and take advantage of the opportunity presented by the energy transition.

    To meet the resources for a just energy transition and the attainment of the UN 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, investment in climate and development will have to increase from around 24% of GDP (the average for Africa in 2022) to 37%.

    Special drawing rights have proved to be an important tool in addressing these challenges. Research by the IMF and others shows that African countries significantly benefited from the special drawing rights they received in 2021 to stabilise their economies. And this happened without worsening debt burdens or costing advanced economies any money, particularly as they cut development aid.

    However, advanced economies exercise significant control over the availability of special drawing rights. The IMF’s quota system determines both voting power and their distribution. Advanced economies control most of the IMF’s quotas.

    The advanced economies made the right decision in 2021 and in 2009 to issue new special drawing rights and the time has come again.

    The solution

    African and other global south leaders need to make a strong case for another issuance of special drawing rights at the IMF and World Bank meetings in Washington.

    In addition to a new issuance of special drawing rights, advanced economies still need to be pressured to re-channel the hundreds of billions of special drawing rights sitting idle on their balance sheets into productive purposes.

    The 2021 allocation of special drawing rights amounted to US$650 billion in total. But only US$33 billion went to African countries due to the IMF’s unequal quota distribution. Meanwhile advanced economies with powerful currencies and no need for special drawing rights received the lion’s share.

    The African Development Bank has spearheaded one such proposal alongside the Inter-American Development Bank. Under this plan, countries with unused special drawing rights could re-channel them to the African Development Bank as hybrid capital, allowing the bank to lend around $4 for each $1 of special drawing rights it receives.

    The IMF approved the use of special drawing rights as hybrid capital for multilateral development banks in May. But it set an excessively low limit of 15 billion special drawing rights across all multilateral development banks.

    Even so, advanced economies have been slow to re-channel special drawing rights. The close to $100 billion that have been re-channelled – mostly to IMF trust funds – is meaningful.

    But it still falls short of what should have been re-channelled.

    In the long term, IMF governance reforms are needed to avoid a repeat of the inefficient distribution of special drawing rights.


    Read more: The World Bank and the IMF need to keep reforming to become fit for purpose


    As African countries rightly push to change shortcomings of the international financial architecture, new special drawing rights issuances should be at the centre of such a strategy. The IMF’s 2021 special drawing rights issuance showed the tool’s scale and importance. And special drawing rights re-channelling has had positive effects in easing debt burdens and freeing up financing to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.

    With 2030 approaching and the window shrinking for climate action, global leaders should be using all the tools at their disposal, including special drawing rights, to build a more resilient future.

    – IMF isn’t doing enough to support Africa: billions could be made available through special drawing rights
    – https://theconversation.com/imf-isnt-doing-enough-to-support-africa-billions-could-be-made-available-through-special-drawing-rights-241428

    MIL OSI Africa

  • MIL-OSI Global: California’s governor blocked landmark AI safety laws. Here’s why it’s such a key ruling for the future of AI worldwide

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Irfan Mehmood, Associate Professor in Business Analytics and AI, University of Bradford

    Anggalih Prasetya / Shutterstock

    In a world where artificial intelligence is rapidly shaping the future, California has found itself at a critical juncture. The US state’s governor, Gavin Newsom, recently blocked a key AI safety bill aimed at tightening regulations on generative AI development.

    The Safe and Secure Innovation for Frontier Artificial Intelligence Models Act (SB 1047) was seen by many as a necessary safeguard on the technology’s development. Generative AI covers systems that produce new content in text, video, images and music – often in response to questions, or “prompts”, by a user.

    But Newsom said the bill risked “curtailing the very innovation
    that fuels advancement in favour of the public good”. While agreeing the public needs to be protected from threats posed by the technology, he argued that SB 1047 was not “the best approach”.

    What happens in California is so important because it is the home of Silicon Valley. Of the world’s top 50 AI companies, 32 are currently headquartered within the state. California’s legislature therefore has a unique role in efforts to ensure the safety of AI-based technology.

    But Newsom’s decision also reflects a deeper question: can innovation and safety truly coexist, or do we have to sacrifice one to advance the other?

    California’s tech industry contributes billions of dollars to the state’s economy and generates thousands of jobs. Newsom, along with prominent tech investors such as Marc Andreessen, believes too many regulations could slow down AI’s growth. Andreessen praised the veto, saying it supports “economic growth and freedom” over excessive caution.

    However, rapidly advancing AI technologies could bring serious risks, from spreading disinformation to enabling sophisticated cyberattacks that could harm society.
    One of the significant challenges is understanding just how powerful today’s AI systems have become.

    Generative AI models, like OpenAI’s GPT-4, are capable of complex reasoning and can produce human-like text. AI can also create incredibly realistic fake images and videos, known as deepfakes, which have the potential to undermine trust in the media and disrupt elections. For example, deepfake videos of public figures could be used to spread disinformation, leading to confusion and mistrust.

    AI-generated misinformation could also be used to manipulate financial markets or incite social unrest. The unsettling part is that no one knows exactly what’s coming next. These technologies open doors for innovation – but without proper regulation, AI tools could be misused in ways that are difficult to predict or control.

    Gavin Newsom said the bill could stifle innovation.
    Sheila Fitzgerald / Shutterstock

    Traditional methods of testing and regulating software fall short when it comes to generative AI tools that can create artificial images or video. These systems evolve in ways that even their creators can’t fully anticipate, especially after being trained on vast amounts of data from interactions with millions of people, such as ChatGPT.

    SB 1047 sought to address this concern by requiring companies to implement “kill switches” in their AI software that can deactivate the technology in the even of a problem. The law would also have required them to create detailed safety plans for any AI project with a budget over US$100 million (£77.2m).

    Critics said the bill was too broad, meaning it could affect even lower-risk projects. But its main goal was to set up basic protections in an industry that’s arguably moving faster than lawmakers can keep up with.

    California as a global leader

    What California decides could affect the world. As a global tech leader, the state’s approach to regulating AI could set a standard for other countries, as it has done in the past. For example, California’s leadership in setting stringent vehicle emissions standards through the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA), and its early regulation of self-driving cars, have influenced other states and countries to adopt similar measures.

    But by vetoing SB 1047, California may have sent a message that it’s not ready to lead the way in AI regulation. This could leave room for other countries to step in – countries that may not care as much as the US about ethics and public safety.

    Tesla’s CEO, Elon Musk, had cautiously supported the bill, acknowledging that while it was a “tough call”, it was probably a good idea. His stance shows that even tech insiders recognise the risks AI poses. This might be a sign the industry is ready to work with policymakers on how best to regulate this new breed of technology.

    The notion that regulation automatically stifles innovation is misleading. Effective laws can create a framework that not only protects people, but allows AI to grow sustainably. For example, regulations can help ensure that AI systems are developed responsibly, with considerations for privacy, fairness and transparency. This can build public trust, which is essential for the widespread adoption of AI technologies.

    The future of AI doesn’t have to be a choice between innovation and safety. By implementing reasonable safeguards, we can unlock the full potential of AI while keeping society safe. Public engagement is crucial in this process. People need to be informed about AI’s capabilities and risks to participate in shaping policies that reflect society’s values.

    The stakes are high and AI is advancing rapidly. It’s time for proactive action to ensure we reap the benefits of AI without compromising our safety. But California’s killing of the AI bill also raises a wider question on the increasing power and influence of tech companies, given they raised objections that subsequently led to its veto.

    The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. California’s governor blocked landmark AI safety laws. Here’s why it’s such a key ruling for the future of AI worldwide – https://theconversation.com/californias-governor-blocked-landmark-ai-safety-laws-heres-why-its-such-a-key-ruling-for-the-future-of-ai-worldwide-240182

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: BFI London Film Festival 2024 – a cinema academic’s look at the year ahead on the big screen

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Louis Bayman, Associate Professor in Department of Film Studies, University of Southampton

    This year’s London Film Festival boasted 254 feature and short films, with an all-time high of 44% of the films screened by female and non-binary directors. But the festival’s most newsworthy event concerned a film that wasn’t screened at all.

    To the dismay of its director, Havana Marking, the documentary Undercover: Exposing the Far Right was cancelled at the last minute with festival staff citing safety concerns in the wake of the summer riots. The documentary seeks to expose the political influence of a shadowy US-UK network that promotes racist scientific views. Although it missed out on its opportunity for a theatrical showing, the film is now airing on Channel 4 and is receiving good reviews.

    Like all festivals, there were prizes to be won and the festival jury awarded best feature film to Memoir of a Snail. This is the first time that a stop-motion animation has won the award. Directed by Adam Elliot and featuring the voice of Succession star Sarah Snook, the jury praised it as “emotionally resonant and constantly surprising”, adding that it “tackles pertinent issues such as bullying, loneliness and grief head-on.”




    Read more:
    Overtly handmade and so very moving: Adam Elliot’s Memoir of A Snail is a stop motion triumph


    This may turn out to be an unpopular decision with critics, given how many of them complained about the emotional nature of the festival’s opening night gala film, Steve McQueen’s wartime drama Blitz. McQueen’s genius for realising the restrictive nature of particular historical moments is always achieved with a special intensity, whether with Irish political prisoners in Hunger or the pre-emancipation US of 12 Years a Slave.

    Blitz takes as its setting three days in London in 1940, featuring a child who manages to flee evacuation and has to find his way through a bombed-out London back home to his mother. The film even alludes to Charles Dickens as the boy tries to dodge the ne’er-do-wells of the city streets.

    The boy is bi-racial and the film’s representation of the Black life of the city is a corrective to more commonplace images of a monocultural wartime Britain. But its family drama conjures more pathos than is usual for McQueen. The film thus revises, if not destroys, the myth of national unity that has grown up around the blitz. It incorporates racial and class divisions but the critical consensus seemed to be that its sentimentality let the film down.

    Alternatively, The Apprentice, the true story of the rise of Donald Trump under the tutelage of cutthroat lawyer Roy Cohn, showed considerable restraint depicting its uniquely polarising protagonist. The film finds Trump dodging lawsuits in the crisis-ridden New York of the 1970s, only to prosper in the greed-is-good real estate boom of the 1980s.

    Sebastian Stan’s Trump avoids caricature, almost garnering affection before eventually becoming the babbling fountain of profound vacuity that we recognise today. With excellent performances from Jeremy Strong as Cohn and Maria Bakalova as Ivana Trump the film succeeds most as a revisitation of the iconic images of New York’s modern history through the prism of Trump. This revisitation occurs first in its retro imitation of early Martin Scorsese films and then with the grain of a boardroom melodrama shot on VHS.

    The festival also included some righteously powerful political denunciations.

    The Seed of the Sacred Fig deserves special mention as an acutely powerful portrait of a family undergoing the increasingly suspenseful stirrings of rebellion amid the “women, life, freedom” protests in Iran.

    I’m Still Here, a return to directing from City of God’s Walter Salles, presents the intersection of the personal and the political in a very different way. The film tells the true story of the leftwing congressman Rubens Paiva’s disappearance by the Brazilian military dictatorship in 1971 and the heartbreaking tension of his family’s life-long search for answers.

    Other notable returns from veteran directors included Mike Leigh’s depiction of the struggles of mental illness in Hard Truths, a blend of social realism and fairytale set in Gravesend, and Pedro Almodóvar’s first English-language film The Room Next Door. Two films that achieved a particular buzz among festival attendees and that are set to achieve a wide general release are Anora, Sean Baker’s comedy drama about a mismatched marriage between a lapdancer and a Russian oligarch’s son, and Conclave, set around the choosing of a new Pope starring Ralph Fiennes and Stanley Tucci.

    I had some personal favourites of the films that garnered fewer headlines. The first is All We Imagine As Light, an allusive portrait of the dislocating effects of modern city life among three female friends in Mumbai. Another is Four Mothers, a remake of the Italian comedy Mid-August Lunch transposed to Ireland. Featuring an aspiring writer whose friends go on holiday and leave their elderly mothers for him to look after, its blend of humour and sensitivity achieves exquisite delicacy.

    And finally, The Surfer wins my award for the cinema’s potential for delirious incoherence. Set entirely in a car park overlooking a beach, this comedy-thriller-folk horror explores suburban aspirational masculinity through a characteristically demented star turn by Nicolas Cage.



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


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

    ref. BFI London Film Festival 2024 – a cinema academic’s look at the year ahead on the big screen – https://theconversation.com/bfi-london-film-festival-2024-a-cinema-academics-look-at-the-year-ahead-on-the-big-screen-242049

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI Global: IMF isn’t doing enough to support Africa: billions could be made available through special drawing rights

    Source: The Conversation – Africa – By Kevin P. Gallagher, Professor of Global Development Policy and Director, Global Development Policy Center, Boston University

    At the 2021 UN Climate Summit, Barbados prime minister Mia Mottley called for more and better use of special drawing rights (SDRs), the International Monetary Fund’s reserve asset.

    The special drawing right is an international reserve asset created by the IMF. It is not a currency – its value is based on a basket of five currencies, the biggest chunk of which is the US dollar, followed by the euro. It is a potential claim on the freely usable currencies of IMF members. Special drawing rights can provide a country with liquidity.

    Countries can use their special drawing rights to pay back IMF loans, or they can exchange them for foreign currencies.

    As Mottley is the newest president of the Climate Vulnerable Forum and Vulnerable Group of 20 (V20) finance ministers, which represents 68 climate-vulnerable countries that are among those with the most dire liquidity needs, including 32 African countries, her call would be directly beneficial to African countries.

    In August 2021, as the shock from the COVID-19 pandemic battered their economies, African countries received a lifeline of US$33 billion from special drawing rights. This amounts to more than all the climate finance Africa receives each year, and more than half of all annual official development assistance to Africa.

    This US$33 billion did not add to African countries’ debt burden, it did not come with any conditions, and it did not cost donors a single cent to provide.

    IMF members can vote to create new issuances of special drawing rights. They are then distributed to countries in proportion to their quotas in the IMF. Quotas are denominated in special drawing rights, the IMF’s unit of account.

    Quotas are the building blocks of the IMF’s financial and governance structure. An individual member country’s quota broadly reflects its relative position in the world economy. Thus, by design, the poorest and most vulnerable countries receive the least when it comes to quotas and voting shares.

    Special drawing rights cannot solve all of Africa’s economic challenges. And their highly technical nature means they are not always well understood. But at a time when African countries are facing chronic liquidity challenges – most countries in the region are spending more on debt service payments than they are on health, education, or climate change – our new research shows that special drawing rights can play an important role in establishing financial stability and enabling investments for development.

    Financial stability includes macroeconomic stability (such as low inflation, healthy balance of payments, sufficient foreign reserves), a strong financial system and resilience to shocks.

    African leaders are approaching a critical year-long opportunity: in November, the first Group of 20 (G20) summit will convene (with the African Union in attendance as a member for the first time). Then in December South Africa assumes the G20 presidency.




    Read more:
    South Africa will be president of the G20 in 2025: two much-needed reforms it should drive


    As African leaders advocate for reforms to the international financial architecture, maximising the potential of special drawing rights should be a central component of their agenda.

    The problem

    African countries’ finances are facing tough times. External debt in sub-Saharan Africa has tripled since 2008. The average government is now spending 12% of its revenue on external debt service. The COVID-19 pandemic, Russia’s war in Ukraine, and rises in interest rates and the prices of commodities, like food and fertiliser, have all contributed to this trend.

    Debt restructuring mechanisms have also proved inadequate. Countries like Zambia and Ghana got stuck in lengthy restructurings. Weak institutional capacity and poor governance also impede efficient use of public resources.

    At the same time, African economies need to increase investment to advance development, support a young and growing population, develop climate resilience and take advantage of the opportunity presented by the energy transition.

    To meet the resources for a just energy transition and the attainment of the UN 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, investment in climate and development will have to increase from around 24% of GDP (the average for Africa in 2022) to 37%.

    Special drawing rights have proved to be an important tool in addressing these challenges. Research by the IMF and others shows that African countries significantly benefited from the special drawing rights they received in 2021 to stabilise their economies. And this happened without worsening debt burdens or costing advanced economies any money, particularly as they cut development aid.

    However, advanced economies exercise significant control over the availability of special drawing rights. The IMF’s quota system determines both voting power and their distribution. Advanced economies control most of the IMF’s quotas.

    The advanced economies made the right decision in 2021 and in 2009 to issue new special drawing rights and the time has come again.

    The solution

    African and other global south leaders need to make a strong case for another issuance of special drawing rights at the IMF and World Bank meetings in Washington.

    In addition to a new issuance of special drawing rights, advanced economies still need to be pressured to re-channel the hundreds of billions of special drawing rights sitting idle on their balance sheets into productive purposes.

    The 2021 allocation of special drawing rights amounted to US$650 billion in total. But only US$33 billion went to African countries due to the IMF’s unequal quota distribution. Meanwhile advanced economies with powerful currencies and no need for special drawing rights received the lion’s share.

    The African Development Bank has spearheaded one such proposal alongside the Inter-American Development Bank. Under this plan, countries with unused special drawing rights could re-channel them to the African Development Bank as hybrid capital, allowing the bank to lend around $4 for each $1 of special drawing rights it receives.

    The IMF approved the use of special drawing rights as hybrid capital for multilateral development banks in May. But it set an excessively low limit of 15 billion special drawing rights across all multilateral development banks.

    Even so, advanced economies have been slow to re-channel special drawing rights. The close to $100 billion that have been re-channelled – mostly to IMF trust funds – is meaningful.

    But it still falls short of what should have been re-channelled.

    In the long term, IMF governance reforms are needed to avoid a repeat of the inefficient distribution of special drawing rights.




    Read more:
    The World Bank and the IMF need to keep reforming to become fit for purpose


    As African countries rightly push to change shortcomings of the international financial architecture, new special drawing rights issuances should be at the centre of such a strategy. The IMF’s 2021 special drawing rights issuance showed the tool’s scale and importance. And special drawing rights re-channelling has had positive effects in easing debt burdens and freeing up financing to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.

    With 2030 approaching and the window shrinking for climate action, global leaders should be using all the tools at their disposal, including special drawing rights, to build a more resilient future.

    Abebe Shimeles received funding from African Economic Research Consortium. He is affiliated with Institute of Labor Studies, IZA

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

    ref. IMF isn’t doing enough to support Africa: billions could be made available through special drawing rights – https://theconversation.com/imf-isnt-doing-enough-to-support-africa-billions-could-be-made-available-through-special-drawing-rights-241428

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects: new advice page on Good Design

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The Planning Inspectorate has published a brand-new advice page on Good Design.

    This advice explains why good design is important, what success might look like and how it might be delivered in applications for Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects. It is aimed mainly at applicants but will benefit all participants in the Planning Act 2008 process.

    Advice on Good Design is available under the heading Advice on design and technical matters within our advice collection.

    Our phased approach to advice updates

    As previously communicated, we are updating our advice collection in three phases. The first set of updated advice (phase one) was published in August 2024. The second set of updated advice (phase two) was published in September 2024.

    Our new advice on Good Design is published in advance of the third set of updated advice (phase 3) which is now expected to follow next year.

    The Planning Inspectorate will issue further news on the progress of this work in due course.

    Updates to this page

    Published 23 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Call for evidence: An inspection of General Maritime

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration invites anyone with knowledge and experience of General Maritime to submit evidence for the inspection.

    The Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration has begun an inspection of General Maritime, with the aim of identifying what improvements Border Force is able to make in the short-term (18-24 months) within existing resources, including through efficiencies, reorganisation, and reprioritisation. 

    For the purposes of this inspection, ‘General Maritime’ is understood to include: 

    • (a) all non-scheduled (not on a regular route) international maritime traffic arriving at an un-canalised location (one with no customs or immigration controls or no port approval, for example small harbours, marinas, beaches) 

    • (b) scheduled un-canalised international non-passenger services, whether commercial or pleasure 

    and encompasses yachts, tugs, rigid-hull inflatable boats (RHIBs), motorboats and small fishing vessels, as well as larger vessels where (a) or (b) apply. 

    This inspection will focus on: 

    • the levels of General Maritime-related operational activity nationally and regionally  

    • Border Force’s resourcing of General Maritime operational activity  

    • the outcomes from operational activity  

    • stakeholder engagement  

    • the ‘Submit a Pleasure Craft Report’ (sPCR) process  

    • a review of the previous ICIBI recommendations for Project Kraken 

    This call for evidence will remain open until Thursday 7 November 2024. 

    The Independent Chief Inspector invites anyone with knowledge and experience of General Maritime to submit evidence to inform this inspection and would be pleased to hear both what is working well and what could be improved. Submissions touching on any and all areas of interest, including those that may not be mentioned above, are therefore welcome. 

    Please note that the ICIBI’s statutory remit does not extend to investigating or making decisions about individual cases. This remains a Home Office responsibility. However, the Independent Chief Inspector can take an interest in individual cases to the extent that they illustrate or point to systemic problems. 

    Please also note that the information you submit may be quoted in the final inspection report. However, it is the ICIBI’s practice not to name sources and to anonymise as much as possible any examples or case studies. 

    Please click here to email your submission to the Independent Chief Inspector. 

    Data Protection 

    Information on how we process personal data submitted in response to a call for evidence can be found in the ICIBI privacy information notice available on the ICIBI website. 

    David Bolt, Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration 

    23 October 2024

    Updates to this page

    Published 23 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Forum for Regeneration revived

    Source: City of Plymouth

    Plymouth Regeneration Forum has been re-formed and revitalised after a hiatus of five years to help the city work together to face development challenges and opportunities.

    The forum was set up in the early 2000s off the back of the Mackay Vision and in recognition of the role partners play in turning that vision for the city into a reality.

    The forum has been revived by the Council and legal firm Womble Bond Dickinson as a way to catch up with key investors, landowners and other development stakeholders and to discuss planning issues affecting the city.  It comprises architects, surveyors, developers, funders and planners active in and committed to Plymouth.

    The intent is to facilitate better relationships between the Council and the development industry through genuine partnership and collaborative approaches to deliver service excellence within the city.

    The last meeting was in 2019 and in the intervening years there has been a pandemic, lockdowns, Brexit, several prime ministers, a change of government as well as huge and enduring pressures on developers due to massive increases in construction costs and a skills shortage.

    The forum is about a two-way exchange of ideas and information. It is a chance to discuss relevant planning issues affecting the city and to act as an opportunity to be kept informed of the work that the Council is doing as well as hearing from the development industry about issues that are relevant to the Council.

    Councillor Mark Coker, Cabinet Member with responsibility for planning said: “So much has happened in the last few years and there are so many bold, exciting and taunting challenges for councils and developers with the new Government setting out its intentions to speed up the delivery of much needed homes

    “This can only be a good thing for the city. We are all committed to a better Plymouth and this will help strengthen relationships to provide a better business and investment climate in Plymouth.”

    The knowledge and know-how of forum members will help the Council develop workable planning, regeneration, design, transport and net zero policies that will help deliver the much-needed increase in pace of development activity in Plymouth, but ensuring quality is also at the heart of progress.

    At the first revived meeting, Paul Barnard, Service Director for Strategic Planning and Infrastructure at the Council, gave progress updates on public realm and transport projects, Plan for Homes 4 and planning application trends and performance. Paul said: “With the massive pressure for new homes, further planning reforms on the horizon and acute challenges in development capacity and viability, the need for collaboration has never been greater. I think is a great move for the city.”

    Christopher Stephens, Managing Associate at Womble Bond Dickinson said: “We are thrilled to have been able to support the Council in bringing the highly regarded Regeneration Forum back to the Plymouth business landscape.

    “This provides the Council with an opportunity to present their vision of, and priorities for, the city and for the delegates there is an opportunity to stress test those principles and to talk about possible constraints to delivery. I felt we had a very good first session with excellent content delivery and robust discussion. We look forward to supporting Plymouth City Council in future and on a regular basis.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: City Plan 2030 nearing adoption

    Source: Scotland – City of Edinburgh

    Our bold plan for sustainable development in the Capital has passed another milestone after the Planning Committee agreed it today (Wednesday, 23 October).

    This follows Scottish Ministers giving Council the go ahead to adopt the plan with minor changes. It will now be considered for final approval at Council on Thursday 7 November.  

    Cllr James Dalgleish Planning Convener said:

    “I’m delighted that Committee has agreed our bold and ambitious City Plan 2030.  It will allow us to guide sustainable development across Edinburgh after being considered by all councillors in a couple of weeks.

    “When approved, it will help us meet the very real challenges of climate change and population growth. The plan will help us use brownfield land where we can rather than using precious greenfield field sites and after declaring a housing emergency last year it is very important it proposes to increase the affordable housing requirement for new development to 35%.”

    Published: October 23rd 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Security: U.S. Attorney Announces Office’s District Election Officers for November 2024 General Election

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    PITTSBURGH, Pa. – United States Attorney Eric G. Olshan announced that Assistant United States Attorneys (AUSAs) Jeffrey R. Bengel and Nicole A. Stockey will lead the efforts of his Office in connection with the Justice Department’s nationwide Election Day Program for the upcoming November 5, 2024, general election. AUSAs Bengel and Stockey have been appointed to serve as the District Election Officers (DEOs) for the Western District of Pennsylvania, and, in that capacity, are responsible for overseeing the District’s handling of election day complaints of voting rights concerns, threats of violence to election officials or staff, and election fraud, in consultation with Justice Department Headquarters in Washington.

    United States Attorney Olshan said: “Every citizen must be able to vote without interference or discrimination and to have that vote counted in a fair and free election. Similarly, election officials and staff must be able to serve without being subject to unlawful threats of violence. The Department of Justice will always work tirelessly to protect the integrity of the election process.”

    The Department of Justice has an important role in deterring and combatting discrimination and intimidation at the polls, threats of violence directed at election officials and poll workers, and election fraud. The Department will address these violations wherever they occur. The Department’s longstanding Election Day Program furthers these goals and also seeks to ensure public confidence in the electoral process by providing local points of contact within the Department for the public to report possible federal election law violations.

    Federal law protects against such crimes as threatening violence against election officials or staff, intimidating or bribing voters, buying and selling votes, impersonating voters, altering vote tallies, stuffing ballot boxes, and marking ballots for voters against their wishes or without their input. It also contains special protections for the rights of voters, and provides that they can vote free from interference, including intimidation, and other acts designed to prevent or discourage people from voting or voting for the candidate of their choice. The Voting Rights Act protects the right of voters to mark their own ballot or to be assisted by a person of their choice (where voters need assistance because of disability or inability to read or write in English).

    United States Attorney Olshan stated: “The franchise is the cornerstone of American democracy. We all must ensure that those who are entitled to the franchise can exercise it if they choose, and that those who seek to corrupt it are brought to justice. In order to respond to complaints of voting rights concerns and election fraud during the upcoming election, and to ensure that such complaints are directed to the appropriate authorities, AUSAs Bengel and Stockey will be on duty in this District while the polls are open and can be reached by the public by calling (412) 644-3500.”

    In addition, the FBI will have special agents available in each field office and resident agency throughout the country to receive allegations of election fraud and other election abuses on election day. The local FBI field office can be reached by the public at (412) 432-4000.

    Complaints about possible violations of the federal voting rights laws can be made directly to the Civil Rights Division in Washington, D.C., by complaint form at https://civilrights.justice.gov/ or by phone at 800-253-3931.

    United States Attorney Olshan said: “Ensuring free and fair elections depends in large part on the assistance of the American electorate. It is important that those who have specific information about voting rights concerns or election fraud make that information available to the Department of Justice.”

    In the case of a crime of violence or intimidation, please call 911 immediately and before contacting federal authorities. State and local police have primary jurisdiction over polling places, and almost always have faster reaction capacity in an emergency.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI: Craft Appoints Technology and Supply Chain Luminaries to Advisory Board

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 23, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Craft, the supply chain resilience company, is proud to announce the launch of its Advisory Board with appointments of senior leaders and industry luminaries with deep technology, procurement, and supply chain experience across key global market sectors. Craft’s advisory board will provide strategic guidance and support to enhance Craft’s supply chain resilience offerings, advance its market position and help drive continued growth and innovation.

    Craft’s Advisory Board members include:

    • Chris Caine: President of the Center for Global Enterprise and former vice president at IBM
    • Karen Evans: Managing director at the Cyber Readiness Institute and former chief information officer at Department of Homeland Security
    • Mike Corbo: Former chief supply chain officer at Colgate-Palmolive, member of the board of directors at WK Kellogg Co
    • Roger Goulart: Executive vice president of alliances and business development at Coupa, former vice president of alliances at SuccessFactors, Salesforce and Okta
    • Sasha Pailet Koff: Former senior vice president, supply chain data analytics and automation at Dell Technologies and serves as co-chair of the Digital Supply Chain Institute (DSCI). Former vice president, supply chain technology at Johnson & Johnson
    • Elvire Régnier-Lussier: Former global vice president at Unilever, former chief purchasing officer at L’OCCITANE Group, and serves as ambassador of the UNESCO chair towards a culture of economic peace

    “Today marks a significant milestone for Craft — it underscores our dedication to leadership in supply chain resilience and to our commitment in helping customers address key challenges across a wide spectrum of risk domains including foreign influence, cybersecurity vulnerability, financial stability, ESG, and regulatory compliance,” said Ilya Levtov, CEO of Craft. “The advisory board’s extensive leadership and global management experience will serve as a valuable resource as Craft moves into its next phase of growth. We are honored to welcome such a distinguished group of industry leaders and look forward to advancing the industry together.”

    “Advanced technologies like AI are reshaping supply chain operations. With this comes tremendous opportunity to impact procurement strategies and resilience. Craft is well positioned to lead the future of supplier risk management by providing advanced technologies that deliver the strongest data foundation, risk monitoring, and collaborative workspace to gain greater visibility into supplier risk and optimize value chain strategies across teams,” said Sasha Pailet Koff, newly appointed Craft advisory board member. “With Craft’s insight and emerging solutions, procurement and supply chain teams will have the potential to evolve into strategic partners, enhancing resilience across the entire enterprise. I’m thrilled to work with Craft and my fellow advisory board members to help shape this new era of modern supplier risk management.”

    Craft is the intelligent supply chain resilience platform that enables organizations to know your suppliers, protect against disruptions; and optimize supply chain strategies. With Craft organizations can confidently navigate regulatory environments, uphold ethics, and drive business continuity and growth.

    For more information about Craft.co and its new Advisory Board, please visit www.craft.co or contact press@craft.co .

    About Craft.co
    Craft illuminates the path to global supply chain resilience. It empowers businesses to strengthen their supplier networks and supply chains with the industry’s most reliable and comprehensive data fabric and advanced risk mitigation engine. Craft’s user-friendly platform offers 360-degree visibility to explore and evaluate supplier networks, AI-driven insights to detect and mitigate disruptions, and collaborative tools to enhance supply chain strategies. Procurement and supply chain professionals can confidently navigate regulatory environments, adhere to ethical standards, and ensure business continuity. Headquartered in San Francisco, CA, Craft assists commercial and governmental organizations worldwide in creating more resilient supply chains. For more information about Craft, visit www.craft.co.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Discovering Rome’s hidden treasures with an AI virtual assistant

    Source: Microsoft

    Headline: Discovering Rome’s hidden treasures with an AI virtual assistant

    On a sunny Monday morning in late September, a river of travelers flowed slowly through the Piazza della Rotonda. The focal point of the piazza is the Pantheon, the nearly 2,000- year-old temple to all the Roman gods, and is one of the city’s most popular landmarks.

    Fronted by imposing rows of Corinthian columns, it merits the attention it draws. Nearly every visitor slowed down for a photo or selfie, vainly attempting to capture its perfect proportion in pixels.

    Antonio Preiti, himself a citizen of Rome, was also using his smartphone in front of the Pantheon. He opened a conversation with a simple question: Is there a quiet, historic place nearby where we can have lunch?

    A virtual tour guide named Julia, commissioned by the city of Rome and powered by Microsoft Azure OpenAI Service using GPT-4o, responded that the Piazza Mattei, also known as the Turtle Square, was just 15 minutes away on foot. There we would find another place typical of Rome, with layers that traverse thousands of years. Preiti and two companions set off, following Julia’s directions.

    The AI virtual assistant is the brainchild of Preiti and the government of Rome, which is preparing to greet as many as 35 million extra visitors in 2025 for the celebration of the Catholic Jubilee. The name Julia was chosen, Preiti says, “because it is short, fairly common across many languages and it has a deep connection to Rome and its history. Julia is a typically Roman name: Julius Caesar’s daughter was named Giulia, Augustus’s daughter was named Giulia, and one of the oldest families in Rome had the Latin name ‘gens Julia’.”

    Working with Microsoft and NTT DATA, a global provider of business and technology services, and Intellera, a consulting company in the Accenture Group, the city hopes that Julia will create a quiet revolution in how visitors experience the city. By equipping travelers with a trusted guide, the city wants to enrich their experiences beyond the typical tourist circuit, all while easing congestion around the most popular sites.

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Advancing biodiversity with AI

    Source: Microsoft

    Headline: Advancing biodiversity with AI

    The health of our society is deeply intertwined with the health of our planet. While much of the global conversation around the environment focuses on the devastating impacts of climate change, it is crucial to recognize that climate and biodiversity are part of a broader ecological system. The loss and degradation of nature is both a result of and a contributor to climate disruption, as healthy ecosystems play a vital role in regulating the climate. Since 1970, global wildlife populations have plummeted by 70%. And in the last century, nearly 500 vertebrate species have been lost forever. 

    This week, leaders from around the world are gathering for COP16, a United Nations conference in Cali, Colombia, to drive actions to reverse this trend. COP16 will focus on advancing global efforts to implement the UN Biodiversity Plan, which highlights the critical role that companies must play in building a nature-positive world. 

    Microsoft is committed to helping the world drive progress on the UN Biodiversity Plan. Using our technology, investment, and voice, we work to advance the protection and restoration of nature.  Microsoft will be participating in COP16 to share our work and learnings, participate in high-level meetings and panel discussions, and perhaps most importantly, listen, to explore what more we can do to tackle this critical challenge together. 

    Leveraging AI to Boost Biodiversity  

    At Microsoft, we believe we must use technology that matches the scale and complexity of the challenges we face. Given the vastness and complexity of Earth’s ecosystems, AI is emerging as an indispensable conservation tool. AI can empower us with the speed and scale necessary to analyze and better understand Earth’s biodiversity. 

    Technology can not only coexist with nature but help it thrive. One such example is Project Guacamaya, which combines the power of AI with satellite imagery, wildlife imagery, and acoustic data to monitor deforestation and protect biodiversity in the Amazon. Nearly five million acres of the Amazon were deforested in 2022, a 21% increase from the previous year. Thanks to Project Guacamaya, a joint effort of the CinfonIA Research Center at Universidad de los Andes, Instituto SINCHI, Instituto Humboldt, Planet Labs PBC and Microsoft AI for Good Lab, AI is helping protect this tremendous natural resource.   

    YouTube Video

    One aspect of Project Guacamaya involves using AI to identify bird and non-bird sounds in the Amazon. The project has so far analyzed more than 100,000 sounds and achieved over 80% reliability in species identification. Because AI offers real-time analysis, this tool allows researchers and conservationists to respond quickly and effectively to ecological shifts. As Zhongqi Miao, AI for Good Lab’s lead bioacoustics research scientist, noted, “By converting sounds from nature into measurable data, AI helps monitor wildlife populations and track changes in ecosystems.”  

    Building AI and Conservation Skills 

    It’s imperative that the global workforce be prepared to address the biodiversity crisis. This means training more green talent. A LinkedIn study found that the share of green talent in 48 evaluated countries increased by a median of 12.3% between 2022 and 2023. This is promising progress, but we must increase the momentum: the same study found that only one in eight workers around the world has at least one green skill, such as those related to solar power or electric vehicles.  

    We also need to ensure that our green workforce can leverage technology to advance sustainability. Applying advanced AI models in real-world conservation scenarios can be challenging due to their complexity and the need for specialized knowledge. That’s why researchers involved with Project Guacamaya released Pytorch Wildlife, an open-source platform available on GitHub designed for creating, modifying, and sharing powerful AI conservation models.  

    Pytorch Wildlife’s intuitive, user-friendly interface, accessible through local installation or Hugging Face, enables users to detect and classify animals in images and videos. With an emphasis on usability and accessibility, Pytorch Wildlife can be used by individuals with limited or no technical background. It also offers a modular codebase to simplify feature expansion and further development. 

    Strengthening Corporate Investments in Nature 

    In 2020, Microsoft launched a new ecosystems and biodiversity initiative in which we pledged to protect more land than we use while leveraging our voice, tools, and investments to protect and restore ecosystems. We know that our efforts alone won’t be enough to drive the pace and scale of progress needed. When it comes to advancing biodiversity and sustainability, governments, the science community, NGOs, and the private sector all have a vital role to play.   

    Other Microsoft efforts to boost biodiversity in Latin America include projects to restore and protect freshwater ecosystems in São Paulo; drive wetland restoration through on-the-ground efforts, public policy advocacy, collective action, and scientific research in Chile; restore traditional wetland agriculture methods to conserve Lake Xochimilco and the Axolotl; and protect 236,000 acres in the biodiversity hotspot of Belize’s Maya Forest.  

    Our nature-based carbon removal investments, including those with Mombak and BTG Pactual, are also aligned with our commitment to become carbon negative by 2030. Our agreement with BTG Pactual, which is the largest known carbon dioxide removal credit transaction to date, is part of BTG Pactual’s $1 billion reforestation and restoration strategy in Latin America. Parties interested in learning more should join us for a panel discussion with BTG Pactual at the Bloom 24 event in Cali, Colombia, on October 25. 

    Through our $1 billion Climate Innovation Fund, we support innovative solutions that can provide scaled positive impact for people and the planet across our four sustainability pillars: carbon, water, waste, and ecosystem. The companies in our portfolio are pairing cutting-edge technologies and datasets with the latest in Internet of Things (IoT), machine learning, and cloud computing, to create data-driven solutions that enable better decision-making and action for natural ecosystems. Our recent investments include: 

    • Yard Stick – a soil carbon monitoring, reporting, and verification (MRV) company that has created an innovative soil carbon IoT device, paired with data analytics and insights to measure and track soil carbon at farm scale.
    • Vibrant Planet – a prioritization system for land management restoration efforts.
    • Farmland LP – an investment management firm that buys conventional farmland and transitions it to organic farmland, utilizing regenerative agriculture practices.    

    Lessons for the Future 

    Over the last four years, we have made progress in contributing to a nature-positive world. However, our journey has not been without challenges. There is more to do and more to learn. It can be difficult for companies to invest holistically in ecosystem health because they often lack the knowledge, tools, and incentives needed to do so. Recently, we collaborated with an international team of experts to explore what is needed to overcome these challenges. In this whitepaper, we outline eight important lessons:  

    1. Build incentives to invest in ecosystem health: Establish mechanisms that recognize and reward companies for investing in nature-based solutions that improve ecosystem health and ensure local community benefits and stewardship. 
    2. Agree on science-based standards for ecosystem health: Civil society and companies need to collaborate with scientists to agree on corporate standards for characterizing how sustainability investments affect ecosystem health. 
    3. Make science accessible and build capacity to use it: All actors need to use the best available science to evaluate ecological and social risks, design projects that enhance ecosystem health, and assess it effectively.   
    4. Accept tradeoffs and work to minimize them: While not all sustainability benefits can be maximized at once, strategic planning can reduce negative impacts and optimize positive outcomes.  
    5. Innovate to derisk investment: Nature-based investments face risks from the variability of natural systems; better tools are needed to understand, insure, and manage these risks. 
    6. Expand blended finance: Combining public and private capital can reduce financial risks to private investors and attract more investment into nature-based solutions. 
    7. Invest beyond capital: While funding is vital, projects and startups also need strategic support, including expertise, long-term demand signals, and market access. 
    8. Leverage AI for scale, speed, and reliability: AI can help companies prioritize ecosystem health by enabling cheaper, more effective measurement, trade-off analysis, and risk management.  

    The challenges facing our ecosystems are substantial, but so too are the resources at our disposal. Our COP16 convening in Cali ahead of COP30 in Brazil next year will help bring much-needed global focus to this critical topic in a vibrant part of our planet – known for its unparalleled biodiversity and its important role in regulating climate patterns and safeguarding ecosystems globally. We are looking forward to continuing to explore ways we can collectively take action and leverage technology to protect and preserve ecosystems for generations to come.   

    Tags: AI, AI for Earth, AI for Good, AI for Good Labs, biodiversity, Climate Innovation Fund, Environment, Environmental Sustainability, sustainability

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Canada: NICHI announces Atlantic recipients of funding to advance critical Indigenous housing projects in urban, rural and northern areas and address urgent and unmet needs

    Source: Government of Canada News

    News release

    October 23, 2024 — Halifax Regional Municipality, Traditional Unceded Mi’kmaw Territory, Nova Scotia — Indigenous Services Canada

    Today, National Indigenous Collaborative Housing Incorporated (NICHI) Chief Executive Officer John Gordon and Minister of Indigenous Services and Minister responsible for FedNor, Patty Hajdu, announced the recipients of NICHI’s expression of need process to address the critical need for safe and affordable urban, rural and northern Indigenous housing projects in Atlantic Canada.

    Today’s announcement includes more than $33.5 million in funding for 6 projects in Atlantic Canada led by:

    • Wenjikwom Housing Commission Soc
    • Tawaak Housing Association (2 projects)
    • Native Council of PEI
    • Happy Valley-Goose Bay
    • Ksalsuti Wellness Resources

    Through the national process, $277.8 million out of a total funding amount of $281.5 million is being distributed to 75 projects across the country aimed at building more than 3800 units. This funding was provided to Indigenous Services Canada through Budget 2022 and was distributed by NICHI, applying its “For Indigenous, By Indigenous” approach. NICHI brings together Indigenous-led housing, homelessness, and housing-related service delivery organizations to provide lasting solutions that address diverse housing inadequacies, including homelessness for Indigenous Peoples living in urban, rural and northern areas.

    Over 171,000 Indigenous Peoples in urban, rural and northern areas off reserve are in core housing need according to the 2021 Census. Indigenous Peoples continue to experience core housing needs at a significantly higher rate than non-Indigenous people—with the gap between them being exacerbated by the housing and homelessness crisis and by inadequacies in distinctions-based funding.

    Through a For Indigenous, By Indigenous approach to Indigenous housing that recognizes Indigenous organizations are best placed to understand the needs of their communities, Indigenous Services Canada is striving to close this gap by 2030.

    Access to safe and affordable housing is critical to improving health and social outcomes and to ensure a better future for Indigenous communities. This funding initiative is part of the Government of Canada’s commitment to address the social determinants of health and advance self-determination in alignment with the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Articles 21 and 23.

    Quotes

    “Indigenous housing providers deserve Indigenous advocacy at the national level. By securing this investment and developing a For Indigenous, By Indigenous funding process, NICHI is putting Indigenous people back in charge of housing policy for our people and communities. The overwhelming expression of need we received in our application process—totalling $2 billion across 447 applications—demonstrates that the work is far from over—but today, we’re excited to announce funding that will make a positive impact in the lives of Indigenous peoples in Atlantic Canada.”

    John Gordon
    Chief Executive Officer, National Indigenous Collaborative Housing Incorporated

    “In true partnership with Indigenous Peoples, we are getting more homes built, faster. Communities know best what they need, which is why these projects follow a By Indigenous, For Indigenous approach. We will always be there for communities as they take the lead to build homes; it’s a matter of fairness.”

    The Honourable Patty Hajdu
    Minister of Indigenous Services

    “NICHI’s remarkable achievement in swiftly delivering $277.8 million underscores its unwavering commitment to advancing Indigenous housing nationwide. As a new organization, NICHI’s expedient action demonstrates unparalleled dedication and catalytic impact in transforming community housing landscapes. We commend NICHI for its pivotal role in driving forward this transformative initiative.”

    Lisa Ker
    Acting Executive Director for the Community Housing Transformation Centre

    “With thousands of years of collective experience, urban, rural, and northern Indigenous housing providers have the capacity, know-how, and shovel-ready projects to address the challenge. NICHI has shown that it can deliver funding programs swiftly, fairly, and responsibly.”

    Margaret Pfoh
    President, Canadian Housing and Renewal Association

    Quick facts

    • On June 8, 2023, the Government of Canada announced that the National Indigenous Collaborative Housing Inc. (NICHI) would deliver $281.5 million in immediate funding over two years to address the urgent, unmet needs of Indigenous Peoples living in urban, rural and northern areas.

    • NICHI held its expression of need process from late November 2023 to January 12, 2024, and funding was allocated to 75 non-profit, Indigenous-led housing organizations by an objective, unbiased Project Selection Advisory Council, which prioritized urgent and unmet housing need in Indigenous communities across the country. Currently, $3.7 million of the total funding amount remains to be allocated.

    • The National Indigenous Collaborative Housing Inc. (NICHI) is an Indigenous-led national housing organization working to ensure that all Indigenous people across Canada have access to supports and services that provide safe, affordable, secure and dignified housing.

    • Support for projects will include funding for acquisitions of new properties and buildings, construction of new facilities, repairs and renovations, housing-related training, growing organizational capacity and administration costs.

    Associated links

    Contacts

    For more information, media may contact:

    Jennifer Kozelj
    Press Secretary
    Office of the Honourable Patty Hajdu
    Minister of Indigenous Services and Minister responsible for FedNor
    Jennifer.Kozelj@sac-isc.gc.ca

    Media Relations
    Indigenous Services Canada
    media@sac-isc.gc.ca
    819-953-1160

    Justin Prest
    Manager, Communications and Public Relations
    National Indigenous Collaborative Housing Inc.(NICHI)
    jprest@nichihousing.com
    1-873-455-5557

    Stay connected

    Join the conversation about Indigenous Peoples in Canada:

    X: @GCIndigenous
    Facebook: @GCIndigenous
    Instagram: @gcindigenous
    Facebook: @GCIndigenousHealth

    You can subscribe to receive our news releases and speeches via RSS feeds. For more information or to subscribe, visit www.isc.gc.ca/RSS.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Canada: One year of services at Lethbridge Recovery Community

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Alberta’s government is proudly building the Alberta Recovery Model, a system of care that helps people overcome the disease of addiction and supports them in their pursuit of recovery. The province is focused on expanding services that offer prevention, intervention, treatment and recovery. Increased capacity and reduced barriers remain a top priority, which is why Alberta is building 11 recovery communities. The Lethbridge Recovery Community opened one year ago and has provided more than 110 Albertans with long-term addiction treatment.

    Construction on the Lethbridge Recovery Community began in spring 2022. The 50-bed facility had a total capital investment of $19 million and opened its doors in September 2023. Clients of the recovery community receive life-saving addiction treatment at no cost and can stay for up to one year if their situation requires. The average length of stay at the Lethbridge Recovery Community is about four months.   

    “The Lethbridge Recovery Community is a place of hope and healing. It stands as an example of our government’s focus on long-term wellness and recovery. With the Alberta Recovery Model, we are helping people overcome the disease of addiction, rebuild their lives and reconnect with their family, community and culture.”

    Dan Williams, Minister of Mental Health and Addiction

    “We refuse to give up on Albertans suffering from addiction, and we refuse to give up on our communities. Recovery is possible, and facilities like this are making that clear. I am proud to have this treatment centre in our community and am excited about the impact it has had and will continue to bring.”

    Nathan Neudorf, MLA for Lethbridge-East

    At each of the recovery communities the province has built or will build, residential treatment focuses on mental health and wellbeing, individual and group therapy, development of healthy habits and social skills, employment training and other supports that put people on a pathway of success. These programs help Albertans become healthy members of society.  

    The Lethbridge Recovery Community is operated by Fresh Start Recovery and serves men 18 years of age or older. Their next-door facility supports women in their pursuit of recovery as well.

    “Over this past year, we’ve seen lives change. These personal journeys reflect a shared dedication to holistic recovery and creating a stronger, more resilient community. With the support of the Government of Alberta and community partners, this shared effort has been proven to bring people together and build real pathways of hope.”

    Bruce Holstead, executive director, Fresh Start Recovery

    Three recovery communities are currently operational in Red Deer, Lethbridge and Gunn. Eight more are in progress or under construction. Five of these are in partnership with Indigenous communities: Blood Tribe, Siksika Nation, Tsuut’ina Nation, Enoch Cree Nation and the Métis Nation within Alberta. Calgary, Grande Prairie and Edmonton will also be home to recovery communities.

    “I’m coming to see that entering treatment is only the start. With the support of the staff and the community here, I’m beginning to face my past and make real changes. Recovery is giving me the tools I need for this journey, and I’m genuinely excited to keep growing and moving forward with their help.” 

    Sean P., client, Lethbridge Recovery Community

    “The recovery community changed my life. From the moment I entered treatment, I found a supportive environment that felt like home. I return for weekly alumni and milestone meetings, welcoming new members. Whenever I need to reconnect, I know I can return, confident that support is always available, and I no longer feel alone.” 

    Tony C., alumni, Lethbridge Recovery Community

    Alberta’s government is making record investments and removing barriers to recovery-oriented supports for all Albertans regardless of where they live or their financial situation. In addition to adding more than 10,000 publicly funded addiction treatment spaces, the province has expanded access to the Virtual Opioid Dependency Program, which provides same-day access to life-saving treatment medication.

    Quick facts:

    • Albertans struggling with opioid addiction can contact the Virtual Opioid Dependency Program (VODP) by calling 1-844-383-7688, seven days a week, from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily. VODP provides same-day access to addiction medicine specialists. There is no wait list.

    Related information

    • Alberta Recovery Model
    • Recovery communities

    Related news

    • Opening doors to recovery in southern Alberta (Sept. 21, 2023)

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: OSCE Presence in Albania organizes 10th annual Media Development Forum

    Source: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe – OSCE

    Headline: OSCE Presence in Albania organizes 10th annual Media Development Forum

    Representatives from media, public institutions, academics, and civil society gather at the OSCE Presence in Albania’s 10th annual Media Development Forum, Tirana, 23 October 2024. (OSCE) Photo details

    Representatives from local media, public institutions, academics, and civil society gathered at the OSCE Presence in Albania’s 10th annual Media Development Forum, a key event focused on the future of media freedom and integrity in the country.
    Ambassador Michel Tarran, Head of the OSCE Presence in Albania, opened the forum with a commitment to fostering a structured dialogue between Albania’s institutions and its media sector. He said: “Building on last year’s discussions, the OSCE Presence is willing and remains committed to supporting the structured dialogue between Albania’s institutions and its media sector. For this purpose, we avail not only the resources we have at disposal at the OSCE Presence in Albania but also from the broader set of OSCE institutions that are specialized in democratization and media affairs. We believe that this dialogue will foster a more collaborative environment where public officials and media professionals can work together to strengthen press freedom and find solutions that work in the Albanian context.”
    Opening remarks were also delivered by Ambassador Silvio Gonzato, Head of the Delegation of the European Union in Albania, and Philippe Tremblay, Director of the Office of the OSCE’s Representative on Freedom of the Media, through a video address.
    The forum facilitated discussions on the intersection of media policy and journalist safety, highlighting the importance of aligning with European standards while exploring how to enhance protections for journalists. Participants emphasized the need for continued reforms to strengthen the media landscape and ongoing efforts to further communication between the media and government institutions.
    Another key focus was the current state of media ownership in Albania and its impact on journalistic independence. The increasing concentration of media ownership raised concerns about the impartiality of information that the public receives, with discussions centred on strategies to promote transparency and media pluralism.
    The relationship between the media and the judiciary was another relevant and intertwining topic. Participants explored ways to improve communication and collaboration between journalists and judicial authorities, aiming to foster a more supportive environment for accurate reporting.
    By bringing together diverse stakeholders, the Media Development Forum aimed to enhance cooperation among public institutions, media organizations, and civil society, ultimately working towards a more vibrant and secure media environment in Albania.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Security: St. Cloud Man Sentenced to Ten Years in Prison for Attempting to Entice a Child to Engage in Sexual Activity

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

    Ahead of the Threat Podcast: Episode Zero

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

    Charity and Disaster Fraud

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

    RYAN JAMES WEDDING

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

    Capitol Violence

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

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: ‘Operation Not Forgotten’ Shines New Light on Indian Country Cases

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

    Ahead of the Threat Podcast: Episode Zero

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

    Charity and Disaster Fraud

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

    RYAN JAMES WEDDING

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

    Capitol Violence

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

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Dmitry Patrushev held a meeting of the Government Commission on the protection of Lake Baikal

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Previous news Next news

    Dmitry Patrushev held a meeting of the Government Commission on the protection of Lake Baikal

    Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Patrushev held a meeting of the Government Commission on Lake Baikal Protection. The event was attended by the heads of three regions belonging to the Baikal Natural Territory, State Duma deputies, and representatives of relevant departments.

    “This water body is a unique natural resource of our country and plays a major socio-economic role in the development of nearby regions. Therefore, of course, preserving Lake Baikal is an important state task that requires a comprehensive approach and close cooperation of all interested parties,” said Dmitry Patrushev.

    In particular, it was noted that the reconstruction of the Bolsherechensky fish hatchery in Buryatia will almost double the artificial reproduction of the Baikal omul, one of the main symbols of the lake. Work on the facility should be completed by the end of this year.

    The government commission meeting also discussed the issue of construction and modernization of treatment facilities in the Baikal natural territory. Within the framework of the national project “Ecology”, activities are being implemented in three regions – Zabaikalsky Krai, Irkutsk Region and the Republic of Buryatia – a total of six facilities.

    In addition, the participants considered the issue of developing tourism infrastructure on Baikal. The Ministry of Economic Development has developed a corresponding draft “road map”, which provides for the creation of conditions for increasing visitor numbers to the Baikal natural territory. “It is important to understand how these activities are linked to the need to reduce the load on the lake’s ecosystem,” said Dmitry Patrushev.

    The draft road map for the development of tourism infrastructure on Lake Baikal must be submitted to the Government for approval by December 20.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Marat Khusnullin took part in the government hour in the State Duma

    Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Government of the Russian Federation – An important disclaimer is at the bottom of this article.

    Previous news Next news

    Marat Khusnullin took part in the government hour in the State Duma

    During the government hour held in the State Duma, Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin delivered a report in which he spoke about the key areas of the new comprehensive national project “Infrastructure for Life”, as well as measures aimed at improving the quality of housing and communal services.

    “At the request of the President, we are currently completing the development of a comprehensive national project – “Infrastructure for Life”, in which one of the main blocks will be the modernization of the communal infrastructure. Over the decades, a considerable number of problems have accumulated there, including the depreciation of the main fund. However, all of them should be considered much more broadly than just the repair of individual objects. Within the framework of the new national project, we intend to create a regulatory and legislative framework, where we will outline a detailed “road map” for housing and communal services. Another very important issue regarding the industry is social. We must clearly verify how we will protect the population here. Government support measures also need to be updated,” said Marat Khusnullin.

    The Deputy Prime Minister added that it is also extremely important to increase the level of executive discipline at the local level. According to him, the modernization of housing and communal services should become a priority for each region in the coming decades.

    In addition, it is necessary to update the general plans and schemes for heat, water supply and sanitation, take additional measures to attract extra-budgetary investments, and build a system of more precise control over the fulfillment of social obligations to citizens in terms of housing and communal services.

    The Deputy Prime Minister noted the high level of communication between the State Duma, the Government and relevant departments, as well as the systematic approach to joint work, including on the current national projects “Housing and Urban Environment” and “Safe High-Quality Roads”.

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Security: U.S. Attorney Tessa M. Gorman Names District Election Officer

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

    Ahead of the Threat Podcast: Episode Zero

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

    Charity and Disaster Fraud

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

    RYAN JAMES WEDDING

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

    Capitol Violence

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

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Europe: ASIA/MYANMAR – National Human Rights Commission wants to mediate in the civil war

    Source: Agenzia Fides – MIL OSI

    Yangon (Agenzia Fides) – “The process of dialogue and mediation in the civil conflict in Myanmar is important and urgent for many reasons: to stop the army’s cruelty against the civilian population, which is before everyone’s eyes; to enable the nation to resume a social life with education, health and development, otherwise it is heading towards the abyss,” says Joseph Kung Za Hmung, a Catholic from Yangon, educator and founder of the country’s first private Catholic university, “St. Joseph University” in Yangon, to Fides. Joseph Kung Za Hmung has been involved for years in public relations (with the Catholic news portal ‘Gloria news Journal’) and in rural development programs, and has headed the NGO “Community Agency for Rural Development” since 2004. Joseph Kung has now been appointed as a Christian representative to the Burmese government’s Myanmar National Human Rights Commission (members are appointed by the current government according to the Constitution), which is to play the role of an “independent observer” who monitors the human rights situation in the country and makes recommendations to the executive.In September, the military junta reappointed the eleven members of the commission (with a five-year term), choosing academics and people who belong to civil society and not the military or government apparatus. “The members of the commission come from society, they know the fighting people’s defense forces and have contacts with them, so that the commission can now take on a bridging function and be a body that can help to initiate a dialogue and mediation process.Opening a channel is crucial for the entire nation today. Dialogue must also be held with the junta. There are also attempts at mediation from outside the country, for example within ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) with the participation of countries such as Indonesia and Thailand,” said the Catholic.Looking realistically at the situation on the ground, Kung notes that “everyone must agree to a ceasefire because the whole country would benefit from it, primarily the suffering civilian population and the internally displaced persons, whose numbers continue to grow. The nation is in a state of exhaustion. If the popular forces come to the negotiating table, they can reiterate their demand for civilian rule. The popular forces and ethnic militias now control an estimated 75% of the country, while the central areas and major cities are defended by the army, which remains very strong and has heavy weapons. Dialogue and the search for common ground is in everyone’s interest,” he notes.The call for dialogue between the warring parties also came from the last ASEAN meeting, where the organization of a peace conference was proposed. The President of the Federation of Asian Bishops’ Conferences and Archbishop of Yangon, Cardinal Charles Maung Bo, who is currently in the Vatican for the World Synod of Bishops, recalled the dramatic conflict in his country and expressed his heartfelt hope that “a path of reconciliation will be found”, calling for “a dialogue table for peace”. Meanwhile, the head of Myanmar’s military junta, General Min Aung Hlaing, called on ethnic rebel militias to participate in peace talks and reiterated this call on the ninth anniversary of the signing of the 2015 national ceasefire agreement.The newly appointed Myanmar National Human Rights Commission had the opportunity in recent days to visit the prison in Yangon, which houses 12,000 prisoners. The commission examined the conditions and needs of the prisoners and made recommendations to the government. The situation of Rohingya prisoners is noteworthy, many of whom have already served their sentences but are still imprisoned because they cannot return to their homeland in the war-torn Burmese state of Arakan. In addition to prisoners imprisoned for ordinary crimes, the prison also houses political prisoners who are opponents of the regime. The commission recommended that political prisoners be treated in the same way as other prisoners and called for them to be included in the amnesty or sentence reduction measures that are often issued on national holidays. (PA) (Agenzia Fides, 23/10/2024)

    Share:

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Westminster launches latest round of Community Priorities Programme funding | Westminster City Council

    Source: City of Westminster

     

    Provider Name 

     Amount awarded

    Project Name 

    Project Description

     

    Individual Provider  

    £10,000

    Westminster Throws 

    Judo project offering structured activities to promote physical fitness, mental well-being, and community development among children in Westminster.

     

    Happy Lizzy​  

    £32,000

    Happy Hub Holiday Clubs & ​ Wild Kittens Wild Cats 

    Holiday clubs every school holiday. During the Summer the club is for children aged 7 and over. Play, explore, plant gardens, build LEGO, learn chess and hold community events.

     

    WECH​ 

    £28,960 (Health and Well-being project)

    £28,960 (Foodbank)

    £13,816 (Welfare Benefits Service)

    The Maida Hill Foodbank, Maida Hill Health & Well- Being Project​​, Harrow Road Welfare Benefits Service  

    Sustain the weekly Foodbank from Nov 24 for a year, to continue providing food to 50 families per week for 46 weeks, benefiting at least 300 families over the year. approx. Also engaging 15 residents as volunteers and support staff.

    sustain delivery of the health and well-being activities.

     

    Next Generation CIC​ 

    £31,040

    Next Gen Intense Mentoring/ Business mentoring​  

    We aim to work with 50 young people (ages 11-25) and their support networks, focusing on those at risk or involved in SYV. Our goal is to encourage them to pursue their dreams and career aspirations while steering them away from antisocial behaviour. We take a holistic mentoring approach, emphasizing diverse career pathways, particularly entrepreneurship.
     

     

    The Flourish Group​ 

    £30,000

    Creativity Calling​  

    Creativity Calling’ is the first project of its kind in London. At its core are the Flourish-Banks, that act like food banks only donating and distributing art and craft materials to those that need them. Circular and sustainable, Flourish-Bank ‘bins’ positioned throughout Westminster allow the community to donate unwanted creative resources to be redistributed.

     

    The Pepper Pot Centre ​ 

    £30,000

    Harrow Road Elderly African and Caribbean Health & Wellbeing Project​  

    Stimulate Creativity: encourage participants to express themselves through art and creative materials.

     

    Westbourne Park Family Centre​ 

    £16412.80

    £10,000

    Parent Power​ & Westbourne Park Pantry

    A 36-week programme to help young people to tackle issues on bullying, boundaries, stop & search, drugs and alcohol, peer pressure and gangs (Parent Power).

    The pantry stocks a range of fresh, cupboard essentials and toiletries (fruit, vegetables, dairy, pasta, rice, cereals, toilet paper, soap etc.) The pantry provides a service for those impacted by the cost-of-living crises and may not qualify for a food bank, or who prefer to choose their food selection.

     

    Paddington Arts​ 

    £24,000

    Every Child Matters​  

    Dance activities for age groups 6-10; 11-15; 16-22, Emotional support programme for age 8 – 18, Wellbeing programme for girls’ group, Health advice and signposting for children and families.

     

    The Grove Think Tank​ 

    £38,000

    Westbourne Holistic & Development Project​  

    Boxing and basketball sessions for young people targeting 24-30 participants.

     

    In Deep​ 

    £24923.86

    In – Deep music therapy for children with send​ & Music Therapy &   Art therapy for People with SEND 

    free weekly group music therapy sessions in Edward Wilson Primary School, senior street, w2 for children with special needs.

     

    Abundance Arts​ 

    £21,000

    Community Unity – SEND Wellbeing, Music and Art project​  

    Interactive drumming and percussion games and stories incorporating basic sign language, enhancing sensory engagement and communication skills, including multicultural music, sign language, performances and community events.

     

    Fun4over 50’s 

    £41819.32

    Zumba Gold Over 50’s & Fun Social Events​  

    Zumba Gold: specialised version of Zumba fitness program designed for older adults or those with physical limitations including community events.

     

    Urban wise​ 

    £27397.60

    Discover and Share!​  

    Project consists of some short arts, culture and heritage courses, discovery walks and visits to places of cultural interest to build connections between people.

     

    Blind Aid​ 

    £25,365

    Reducing isolation and improving wellbeing of blind and visually impaired adults in Westminster​  

    Blind Aid’s flagship Sight Support Project provides free ongoing home-based support to isolated, blind and visually impaired residents of Westminster.

     

    Adebo Stitch​ 

    £29999.40

    Adebo Stitch​  

    Weekly sewing, knitting and crochet sessions for 15-20 participants per week.

     

    Dutch Pot​ 

    £20,736

    Dutch Pot Lunch & Social Club phase 2​ 

    professional wellbeing activities – chair & gentle exercises, special events for birthdays & other special days, signposting & visits from other services in Westminster and a minibus pick up door to door for the most vulnerable operates one day a week. Hand crafts, music, bingo with prizes is the highlight of the day, seaside visits and other places of interest. Cultural dancers & musical entertainers are invited to perform.

     

    London Disability Network​ 

    £35,844

    LDN London Community Hub​  

    We run group activities and workshops for people with learning disabilities.

     

    Kulan Somali Organisation​ 

    £29,985

    SAAXIB​  

    Weekly cultural activities/workshops such as cultural dancing, poetry, singing, cookery activities, telephone befriending service, physical activities and Nutrional meals.

     

    Avenues​ 

    £27,750

    Friday Night Seniors – The Avenues Youth Project​  

    Youth club providing a range of activities designed to enhance health and wellbeing including sports activities – dance, basketball, MMA, table tennis and teq ball. We provide balanced nutritious meals and a space to decompress. Socially the connections are strong, and we frequently run workshops on mental health, sexual health and managing emotions.

     

    Treasure Sports​ 

    £30,000

    Making Westminster Healthier​  

    The main activity of the project is to help uplift the most disadvantaged and vulnerable in Westminster through sports and exercise.

     

    All Stars Youth Club 

    £35,552

    Community Active 

    Kids boxing, female only boxing, Muay Thai and kickboxing.

     

    Adventure Play Hub 

    £16,453.20

    Saturday Play Days at Adventure Play Hub 

    Main activities of the project are to help uplift the most disadvantaged and vulnerable in Westminster through exercise classes as well as financial literacy and community engagement classes for children, young people and female only.

     

    Unfold​ 

    £29,992.66

    Peer Support Groups and Mentoring Programme for Women​ 

    Weekly peer support group for women in the local community in the North of the borough.

     

    Women’s Trust​ 

    £24,000

    Specialist Domestic Abuse Counselling Project​ 

    We offer an initial assessment session (IS) and then up to 18 weekly counselling sessions per client, which is longer than statutory provision (IAPT is usually 6 sessions).

     

    The Floating Classroom​ 

    £12,618.60

    Community Trips on the Floating Classroom (FC)​ 

    We are applying for funding to offer 20 trips on our electric canal barge for community groups and people accessing services provided by organizations.

     

    St Andrew’s Club 

    £55,188

    Active at the Andrew’s – Sports and Physical Activity Programme​ 

    St Andrew’s will support up to 150 children and adults to stay physically active, including football, basketball, yoga and other various physical activities.

     

    Make it Happen​ 

    £7,500

    Carers Mental Health​ 

    Bi-weekly group counselling sessions to provide emotional support and coping strategies. Those session are tailored for Parent Carers and offered by a credited counsellor who is a parent carer herself. The sessions will cover topics such as acceptance, managing feeling, anxiety and low mood. Other topics voted for by parents will be added.

     

    Echo of Hope​ 

    £10,718

    Strive Together​ 

    EOH will bring together leading experts, organization leaders, and housing specialists to offer invaluable advice and workshops.

     

    Individual​ 

    £20,000

    Carlys Angels Stay and Play​ 

    Activities for the stay and play sessions will include outdoor play and exploration, creative arts and crafts, music and movement, storytelling and literacy, physical activities, educational and social play, healthy eating, mindfulness and relaxation and parent engagement. These activities aim to provide a balanced mix of physical, creative, educational and social experiences, supporting children’s overall development and preparing them for future educational settings. I plan to deliver the sessions weekly, dependant on how much funding is awarded, but at least once a week session. Number of participants will be 15-30 to begin with to offer a more personal approach and avoid overwhelming families.

     

    St Vincent’s Family Project​ 

    £20,000

    SVFP Drop-In and Lunch​ 

    Our charity targets young vulnerable families on low incomes. The drop in will provide two main responses to help families affected by this, including the cost of living crises with lots of free activities for children

     

    Individual​ 

    £8,611.26

    Stay Safe Stay Creative​ 

    Intro of the project for 30 minutes, partnership delivery with STREETDOCTORS for 1 hour to empower individuals affected by violence to keep themselves and others safe and in charge of delivering FREE Knife Wound 1st Aid Training. This also include a 1-hour art therapy through artwork craft and outdo of project.

     

    Basch Helps ​ 

    £16,598

    Angel Box​ 

    Emergency relief package which acts to alleviate conditions of distress, deprivation and disadvantage to parents, factors that contribute to social exclusion, self-harm & neglect

     

    Individual​ 

    £14,890

    Happy Feet Haven​ 

    We will offer people a programme of 6 reflexology sessions of 30-mins each. We will register 6 people for each 4-week block and deliver a total of 9 x 4 weeks sessions each year. This means we will be able to provide free reflexology sessions to 54 people each year. After the 30min reflexology session, people will have a 20-min foot spa session which will detoxify the feet and is a very relaxing experience.

     

    Sport 4 Health​ 

    £17,200

    Filipino Women Health and Support Project​ 

    Regular weekly indoor physical and social activities for improving physical health, and for mental wellbeing through creating strong friendship and support networks for Filipino Women. We will provide 2-hour activity sessions twice a week for 30 weeks per year (for 2 years) in both Pimlico South (at St. Gabriel’s Parish House) and Pimlico North (at Queen Mother Sports Centre). Activities (their choice) will include table-tennis, badminton, Pilates/stretching classes, etc and we aim to reach approx. 40 participants – mostly women.

     

    Motivez 

    £15,000

    Sustainable London​ 

    ‘Engage & Inspire’, ‘Empower’ and ‘Unleash’ using a hackathon approach to build community, strengthen confidence and increase feelings of inclusivity. Through 15+ fun activities, intimate fireside chats, team-building activities, site visits, and mentoring led by relatable and inspirational young professionals (volunteers), the students will increase their awareness of how they can solve these issues through STEM.

     

    Well Played​ 

    £17,340

    Well Played Community Hubs​  

    Invited by forthcoming ‘community hubs’ at Charing Cross/Victoria Libraries. Fulfilling established need (having completed community engagement). Increasing social barriers e.g. homelessness, isolation/mental health, increasing confidence/communication skills. Creative Writing with professional poets/writers, queer arts group and family story time.

     

    Individual​ Provider  

    £4,000

    Community Arts & Crafts Through Conversations​  

    Through arts and craft, we allow our participants to express themselves through nonverbal and verbal cues. The activity is also key to bringing the community together. We use mainly preloved materials and encourage sustainability creating sustainable art. This process is scientifically proven to enhance mental health. Single mothers, young adults, ethnic minorities who are less unaware of sustainable living and the public.

     

    WBWT​ 

    £25,000

    Stitch, Shuttle, and Soar​  

    The main activities of the “Stitch, Shuttle, and Soar” project include sewing classes, badminton sessions, 2 summer trips per year, along with two additional day outings for volunteers per year. The sewing classes will cater to 10-15 participants per session, with a total of 40 sessions held throughout the year. These classes provide a creative and cost-saving skill, enhancing mental well-being and community ties. Badminton sessions will host 10-12 participants per session, totalling 60 sessions over 2 years.

     

    Chinese Community Council​ 

    £7,632

    Outreach to the vulnerable​  

    Social “hub” for older Chinese people who either live or work in Chinatown as it is a service-providing charity organisation.   This fact affords us with daily face-to-face interactions with the community and hours spent building organic relationships with the people we serve, consequently developing deep insight into the complex and diverse views of disadvantaged people.  

     

    Bear Fitness​ 

    £29,659.20

    Bear Fitness Street Homelessness Programme​  

    Bear Fitness provides twice weekly fitness classes (~1 hour in length) in The Passage for people experiencing homelessness.

     

    Pro Touch SA CIC​ 

    £37,000

    Inspiring Youths in Health & Wellbeing ​ 

    Physical activities programme, mental health workshops, nutritional education sessions, community engagement events.

     

    Hotel School ​ 

    £30,000

    Hotel School 10-week programme​  

    Hotel School teaches hospitality skills to people experiencing homelessness and those who are vulnerable.

     

    Volta Theatre​ 

    £15,014

    Bright Lights​  

    Provide a 1hr after-school class three times per week, including yoga, pilates bodywork, fitness, stretching, breathing exercises, voice technique, yoga, bodyweight exercises, object-work, visualisation relaxation technique, stress management and performance science theory.

     

    Shop and Donate​ 

    £25,000

    Shop And Donate – Strengthening and Building Resilient Communities​  

    providing residents and families with essential food and goods which will help them with their health, diet and nutrition.  

     

    Individual provider ​ 

    £10,000

    Lunchtime Meals for Homeless​  

    The main activities are: preparing/sourcing the lunchtime meals

     

    Age UK, Westminster​ 

    £15,000

    Maintenance Cognitive Stimulation Therapy (MCST) & Outreach Project​ 

    Over 24-months deliver 2 MCST sessions weekly for Westminster residents aged 60+ and family/carers. Each 2-hour session provides structured, and cognitively stimulating activities.

     

    The Feathers Association​ 

    £40,000

    Community Inclusion Project​ 

    Youth club, cultural events, residentials, vocational traing, including first aid, food sfety, & sports development.

     

    Mala CHERGA Theatre​ 

    £59,732

    Yoga and Dance for Adults and Children ​ 

    Mixed yoga class for men & women in the evenings, yoga class for women only in the mornings.

             49

    Photojournalism Hub CIC​ 

    £19,218

    Seeing the Green​  

    A nine-month project for 20 beneficiaries, each session will include learning documentary photography, followed by practical photography and group activities.

             50

    Creative Futures Ltd (London)​ 

    £20,000

    Community Families​  

    Community Families consists of 8 completely free music sessions every week during term-time for families with children aged 0-4 years old in north Westminster. (Nurture groups)

          51

    London Tigers​ 

    £47,398

    Tigers Connect: Supporting and empowering young people

    Sports to break down barriers of fear and distrust between communities including football, basketball, sports events, mentoring and volunteering activites.

    52

    North Paddington Youth Club​ 

    £40,000

    NPYC Intergenerational Project​  

    Youth club which provides health and fitness sessions and some therapeutic gardening sessions in our brand new 4 story building in Maida Vale.

    53

    Daily Veda​ 

    £22,260

    Little Lotus Meditation and Breathwork Sessions​  

    deliver weekly yoga sessions for 30 children which would consist of 3 x weekly sessions of 10 children per group.

    54

    Earth Living​ 

    £15,000

    Wellbeing Food Drive

    Our project supports over 70 residents who rely on our services, providing full-course meals, massage services for chronic pain relief, providing food parcels as we work with the local food banks to deliver the food parcels to the resident of Westminster.

    55

    Community for all​ 

    £30,000

    C4A’s Community Domino Effect (DE)

    DE is a bespoke culturally appropriate service that celebrates Caribbean culture whilst empowering individuals to make positive choices around health and lifestyle. DE provides a weekly social space that includes dominoes, music and food. It provides vital connections in the community for vulnerable isolated individuals as well as routine in a friendly environment.

    56

    Right at home​ 

    £6,000

    Memory Café for above 65 & carers​  

    The project aims to assist remote, localised communities by organising educational sessions on various subjects such as falls prevention, nutrition, home infection control, art, and chair exercises conducted by our team of senior physiotherapists.

    57

    West London Doulas​ 

    £26,843.5

    Free Birth Preparation Classes​ ​  

    run 8 free, 8 week antenatal courses, for expectant parents. Each weekly session is themed and led by a specialist speaker on that topic. Participants have the opportunity to ask questions and discussion is encouraged. Each session includes yoga and relaxation to promote physical and mental health and wellbeing.  

    58

    Zodiac Arts / Sports4all​ 

    £29487.30

    Bee fit ​  

    Main activities of our project is to enhance health and well-being, community safety, and community development through chair based yoga, hydro swim sessions and windrush workshops.

              59

    7 Spheres 

    £28,976

    Church Street Community Cohesion Project 

    Yoga & Mindfulness and chess club

           60

    Individual 

    £19,010

    Dodge the Laziness 

    Dodgeball sessions for children and young people

            61

    Individual 

    £15,450

    Exploring Themes and Cultures through mosaics 

    Aims to reconnect children through 20 mosaic sessions, offering a fun environment to learn new skills/techniques. The final goal is for children to create a collaborative artwork for donation to hospitals/hospices/care homes.

           62

    Financial Harmony  

    £14,402

    Thrive & Tribe: Building Strong Futures Together  

    Fun workshops for young people to learn about financial concepts like budgeting and credit management.

          63

    Harrow Road Soup Kitchen

    £18,730

     HRSK Mentoring

    Training and mentoring for young people confidence-building, career exploration, and gaining real-world experience.

          64

    Plant Environment  

    £20,250

    What’s Growing On  

    Gardening and environmental awareness for the community

          65

       Cartoon Studios 

    £23,400

    JKCS: Arty and Wellbeing Wednesdays 

    Health and wellbeing workshops and events through art for mum’s, young & vulnerable people.

         66

       Vital Connections 

    £12,600

    “I Am – A Woman’s Voice” 

    67

    ESP Foundation 

    £30,000

    Girls Allowed 

    Sports and wellbeing activities for young girls.

    68

    Family Friends UK 

    £9,898

    Family Friends Befriending 

    Befriending and mentoring service for families from disadvantaged communities.

    69

    Jojays 

    £14,000

    Jojays Community Lunch Club 

    Help the local community improve their physical health and tackle social isolation through healthy meals.

    70

    MEWSO 

    £21,480

    Women’s Circle II 

    Sewing classes and walk & talk sessions for women – predominantly from the middle eastern background.

    71

    PACE 

    £18,984

    PACE Boccia at Beethoven 

    Bespoke physical activity programmes, including coaching in Boccia for all.

    72

    Progressay 

    £4,384

    Girl Power – Football for Girls 

    Football sessions for girls, including information and advice, parent support group and tuition classes

    73

    Queen’s Park Bangladeshi Association 

    £20,222

    Let’s Get Moving! 

    Sports & physical activities programmes to increase participation amongst the BME communities.

    74

    Queen’s Park Community Council 

    £20,000

    Queen’s Park Youth Holiday Camps 

    Youth activities for youths during the school holidays.

    75

    GarmHub

    £15,158

    GarmHubs – Clothes Bank

    Clothes Bank

               

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: More electric vehicle chargers to be installed in Plymouth

    Source: City of Plymouth

    Plymouth will be trialling new ways to support residents who cannot charge their electric vehicles at home as they don’t have access to off street parking.

    An executive decision has been signed to trial different ways for residents to charge their electric vehicles across the city, to support residents who park on street as they don’t have private driveways or garages to charge their vehicles. Currently around 37 per cent of households in Plymouth do not have off street parking and have to travel to charge their car if they own an EV.

    As part of its electric vehicle strategy, the Council is allocating £2.415 million of funding obtained from the government’s Local Electric Vehicle Infrastructure (LEVI) Fund to install:

    • 100 pavement channels to enable residents to run a cable from an electricity supply in their house. This is new for Plymouth and would initially be done on a trial basis.
    • 600 pedestal and/or flush fitting 7kW chargers (servicing 1,200 charging bays).  These will be publicly available chargers installed on streets and in car parks in areas where residents do not have access to off-street parking.

    Many of the existing public EV charge points in Plymouth, are super-fast chargers aimed at those who need to charge their cars quickly. There is however a lack of chargers in residential areas, where residents often wish to charge their cars more cheaply overnight.

    More drivers are making the switch to electric vehicles, with electric vehicles accounting for over 16 per cent of the new UK car market in 2023, according to industry statistics. However, electric vehicle uptake in Plymouth has been slower than the UK average, with only 1.5 per cent of 134,000 registered cars and vans as of mid 2024 compared to over 4.6 per cent across the UK. Affordability and insufficient financial incentives, along with perceived range anxiety have been some of the key barriers to EV uptake in Plymouth.

    Councillor Mark Coker, Cabinet Member for Transport, said: “Electric vehicles are a key component for how we get out and about in the future and it’s great to see that the city is starting to adapt and put this into practice.

    “We already have over 300 parking bays for electric vehicle charging across the city, but we need to make it easier for residents to charge electric vehicles close to home.”

    The Council will review requests from the public for proposals for pavement channels, charge point companies will install charge points across the city. We have divided the city up into 164 areas and all will have charge points.

    Find out more and how to apply for the EV charging trial here: www.plymouth.gov.uk/plymouth-ev-charging-trial

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Canada: Seven companies modernize and expand to drive growth

    Source: Government of Canada News (2)

    Government of Canada support helps businesses in Dartmouth increase agility, competitiveness

    October 23, 2024 · Dartmouth, Nova Scotia · Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency (ACOA)  

    Innovative manufacturing and technology solutions are giving Atlantic Canadian businesses a competitive edge. The Government of Canada is investing to help seven Dartmouth-based companies innovate, modernize and become more efficient.

    Exploring and seizing business opportunities

    Today, Darren Fisher, Member of Parliament for Dartmouth – Cole Harbour, announced that the federal government will invest total contributions of more than $6 million dollars to help seven small and medium-sized businesses scale up and modernize their operations. The announcement was made on behalf of the Honourable Gudie Hutchings, Minister of Rural Economic Development and Minister responsible for ACOA.

    The funding will help Farnell Packaging Incorporated, Ring Rescue Incorporated, Sunrise Foods Incorporated, Sunsel Systems Manufacturing Corporation, Ace Machining Limited, HFX Steel Framing Solutions Inc., and Aurea Technologies Inc. adopt technology, increase productivity and explore new markets.

    For more information on the companies and projects, please see the related backgrounder.

    Today’s announcement further demonstrates the Government of Canada’s commitment to foster innovation, create jobs and strengthen the region’s economy.

    MIL OSI Canada News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Pappas Introduces Bipartisan Bill to Strengthen Law Enforcement Operations at the Southern Border

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Chris Pappas (D-NH)

    Yesterday Representatives Chris Pappas (NH-01), Dave Joyce (OH-14), Juan Ciscomani (AZ-06), and Susie Lee (NV-03)introduced the bipartisan Advanced Border Coordination Act to strengthen law enforcement operations and collaboration at the southern border.

    Building off the successes of state-run fusion centers, this legislation would establish Joint Operation Centers along the southern border to serve as centralized operating hubs tasked with coordinating border operations, information sharing, and workforce training. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has periodically established joint operations hubs to help multiple law enforcement agencies work together to strengthen border security and crack down on transnational criminal activity. 

    “Strengthening border operations coordination will bolster efforts to crack down on drug trafficking, help enforce our immigration laws, and keep our communities safe. I’m helping introduce the Advanced Border Coordination Act, which will do just that,” said Congressman Pappas. “This bipartisan bill would establish joint centers along the southern border to serve as centralized hubs to coordinate border operations between Border Patrol personnel and federal, state, and local law enforcement. I’ll keep fighting to support the work of our law enforcement, provide them the resources they need, and address the root causes of the issues at the southern border.”

    The Advanced Border Coordination Act would help address these national security concerns by: 

    • Directing DHS to establish at least two joint operations centers along the southern border. These hubs would help law enforcement from multiple Federal, State, local and Tribal agencies coordinate their efforts and better work together. 
    • Requiring these centralized hubs to serve as resources to improve field operations and intelligence sharing, help detect and deter criminal activity like drug and human trafficking, and support workforce development and training coordination between participating agencies. 
    • Directing the DHS Secretary to issue an annual report to Congress on the centers’ operational activities and recommendations for coordinated federal actions at the southern border. 

    Participating agencies would include DHS, the Department of Defense, the Department of Justice, other federal agencies as the DHS Secretary determines appropriate, and state, local, and tribal agencies that voluntarily choose to participate.

    The bill has been endorsed by the National Border Patrol Council, National Immigration Forum, the Texas Border Coalition, and the Major Cities Chiefs Association. A companion bill was previously introduced in the Senate by Senators Cortez-Masto (D-NV) and Blackburn (R-TN). 

    Background:

    Pappas has been an ardent supporter of bipartisan efforts to address America’s northern and southern border and has called on House Republican leadership to stop blocking the consideration of legislation to restore order and fix the U.S.’s immigration system that has been broken for decades. 

    Pappas is a cosponsor of the Dignity Act, which is comprehensive, bipartisan legislation to address security and infrastructure challenges at the border, hire additional border patrol personnel, establish new pathways for asylum seekers, and create a path to citizenship.

    In March, Pappas helped launch a new border security task force to focus on the need for comprehensive, bipartisan solutions to address the border and fix the broken immigration system. Later that month, Pappas helped to pass the fiscal year 2024 government funding package, which included a $3.2 billion increase in funding for Customs and Border Patrol (CPB), providing for a record 22,000 agents, including 150 counter-fentanyl officers, and needed investments in fentanyl detection equipment.

    In September 2023, Pappas called on House leadership to advance a supplemental appropriations package that expands fentanyl interdiction capacity and improves border security across the country, including along our northern border.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: DPO’s response to media enquiries on government staff’s use of personal webmail, public cloud storage and web-version of instant messaging services

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         In response to media enquiries on government staff’s use of personal webmail, public cloud storage and web-version of instant messaging services, a spokesman for the Digital Policy Office (DPO) said today (October 23):

         In face of increasingly severe cyber threats, the DPO reminded all bureaux and departments (B/Ds) through the Government’s IT Security Guidelines (the Guidelines) updated in April this year that their staff’s use of personal webmail, public cloud storage and instant messaging services on desktop computers connected to the government internal network will bring potential information security risks, hence the risks must be well managed. In this regard, the DPO has formulated the following security guidelines for the use of desktop computers connected to the government internal network systems:

    (1) Government staff have to obtain approval from department management before using personal webmail, public cloud storage and instant messaging services on desktop computers connected to the government internal network; and

    (2) Based on operational needs, B/Ds can implement different alternatives during the six-month adaptation period after the promulgation of the Guidelines, including providing staff with mobile devices or designated computers that are isolated from the B/Ds’ internal network system, so that they could continue using relevant personal webmail, public cloud storage and instant messaging services, or dedicated application systems developed by the B/Ds. 

         The above-mentioned Guidelines aim to strengthen the security barrier of the government internal information network system, and do not restrict or affect the use of relevant services (including WhatsApp, WeChat and other commonly used instant messaging softwares) by staff through mobile phones, mobile devices or other desktop computers that are independent of the government internal network system. There is no “blanket ban” on the use of relevant communication tools. The requirements of the Guidelines also do not apply to computer systems or communication devices that are not connected to the government internal network, such as on-campus systems in government schools. Relevant organisations can adopt appropriate information security and network security measures based on business needs.

         After the promulgation of the Guidelines in April, the DPO has arranged a number of briefing sessions to introduce the requirements of the Guidelines and technical solutions to B/Ds, and has provided technical advice to facilitate B/Ds’ compliance with the requirements of the Guidelines and formulation of the corresponding implementation plans within six months.

         The DPO will continue to provide appropriate support to B/Ds, including arranging more briefing sessions and sharing technology solutions, and work together to safeguard the government information system and network security.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Belgian National Charged with Attempting to Breach Cockpit and Assaulting Flight Crew Members on March 2024 Flight

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

    NEWARK, N.J. – A Belgian national was arrested today for attempting to breach the cockpit and assaulting flight attendants aboard flight from Newark Liberty International Airport to Zurich, Switzerland, in March 2024, U.S. Attorney Philip Sellinger announced.

    Jan Daeninck, 43, of Belgium, is charged by complaint with one count of interference with flight crew members and attendants by assault and intimidation, one count of assault, and one count of abusive sexual contact on an airplane. He appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge U.S. Magistrate Judge Leda Dunn Wettre in Newark federal court and was released on $100,000 unsecured bond.

    According to documents filed in this case and statements made in court:

    On March 31, 2024, Daeninck was a passenger aboard a Swiss International Airlines flight from Newark to Zurich. Shortly after takeoff, Daeninck walked up to a female flight attendant, grabbed both of her breasts with his hands, shook her, and began yelling at her. After the flight attendant was able to wrest herself away from Daeninck, he then approached and attempted to enter the cockpit, repeatedly striking, kicking and beating the cockpit door. While Daeninck was attempting to gain entrance to the cockpit, a male flight attendant approached Daeninck. After repeatedly striking, punching, and kicking the cockpit door and failing to gain entry to the cockpit, Daeninck assaulted the male flight attendant by repeatedly punching and kicking the flight attendant, striking him in head and upper body with a closed fist. Flight crew members were able to intervene and assist with restraining Daeninck on the floor in the vicinity of the cockpit door for the remainder of the flight. As a result of Daeninck’s actions, the flight turned around and landed back at Newark Liberty International Airport.

    The charge of interfering with flight crew members and attendants carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a maximum fine of $250,000. The charge of assault by beating or striking carries a maximum punishment of one year in prison and a maximum fine of $100,000. The charge of abusive sexual contact carries a maximum sentence of two years in prison and a maximum fine of $250,000.

    U.S. Attorney Sellinger credited special agents of the FBI, under the direction of Acting Special Agent in Charge Nelson I. Delgado in Newark, with the investigation leading to the charge. He also thanked the Port Authority Police Department, under the direction of Edward T. Cetnar, for its assistance.

    The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Michelle L. Goldman of the Office’s General Crimes Unit in Newark.

    The charges and allegations contained in the complaint are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Orange County Supervisor Agrees to Plead Guilty to Bribery Conspiracy Involving $10 Million in COVID Relief Funds

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

    OC Supervisor Andrew Do Admits Receiving More Than $550,000 in Bribe Payments from Funds Meant to Be Used to Provide Meals to Elderly

    SANTA ANA, California – The District One Supervisor on the Orange County Board of Supervisors has agreed to plead guilty to a felony federal charge for accepting more than $550,000 in bribes for directing and voting in favor of more than $10 million in COVID funds to a charity affiliated with one of his daughters, Rhiannon Do, the Justice Department announced today. 

    Andrew Hoang Do, 62, agreed to plead guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit bribery concerning programs receiving federal funds. His plea agreement and information were filed today. He is expected to make his initial appearance in United States District Court in Santa Ana later this month.

    Do is one of five supervisors on the Orange County Board of Supervisors, which is responsible for the county’s $9 billion annual budget. As a county supervisor, Do represents the cities of Cypress, Fountain Valley, Garden Grove, Huntington Beach, La Palma, Los Alamitos, Midway City, Rossmoor, Seal Beach, and Westminster. He has served as a county supervisor since February 2015.

    As part of his plea agreement, Do admitted that in exchange for more than $550,000 in bribes, beginning in 2020, he voted in favor of and directed millions of dollars in COVID-related funds to Viet America Society (VAS), a charity affiliated with his daughter. Do directed and worked together with other county employees to approve contracts with – and payments to – VAS. Do further admitted he acted corruptly and abused his position of trust as a county supervisor.

    “By putting his own interests over those of his constituents, the defendant sold his high office and betrayed the public’s trust,” said United States Attorney Martin Estrada.  “Even worse, the money he misappropriated and accepted as bribe payments was taken from those most in need – older adults and disabled residents. Our community deserved much better. Corruption has no place in our politics and my office will continue to hold accountable officials who cheat the public.”

    “While millions of Americans were dying from COVID-19, Orange County Supervisor Andrew Do was the fox in the hen house personified, raiding millions in federal pandemic relief funds and orchestrating the money intended to feed elderly and ailing residents to instead fill the pockets of insiders, himself and his loved ones all while portraying a public persona of a hometown hero guiding his constituents through the uncertainty and fear of a global pandemic,” said Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer. “No one is above the law in Orange County and these charges should serve as a powerful warning to elected officials everywhere that actions have consequences and justice will be swift and it will be decisive.”  

    “Elected officials have a responsibility to implement programs and policy that will benefit all the people they serve.  Their role is not to squander money, solicit bribes, or to steer funds to organizations or persons, wherein a coordinated effort allows those funds to make their way to family members or friends,” said Akil Davis, the Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office. “Today’s plea is another exclamation point to the FBI’s commitment to ensuring that all local, state, or federal elected and appointed public officials perform their duties with honesty, integrity, and commitment to all the constituents they serve.”

    Shortly after receiving the COVID-related public funds from the county government – funds that were intended to provide meals to the elderly – VAS from April 2021 to February 2024 paid a business identified in court documents as “Company #1” $100,000 or more per month, which totaled approximately $3,804,000. In September 2021, VAS increased its payments to Company #1 from $100,000 to $108,000 per month. Company #1 then began paying Rhiannon Do – Do’s daughter – $8,000 per month, totaling by February 2024 approximately $224,000.

    In his plea agreement, Do admitted that in addition to the $8,000 monthly payments that Company #1 had made to Do’s daughter, in July 2023, Company #1 also transferred a total of $381,500 from the funds it had received from VAS to an escrow company. In July 2023, Do’s daughter used the escrow account funds to purchase a home, in her name, in Tustin for $1,035,000. As part of that transaction, a mortgage for more than $600,000 was obtained by a loan application that contained false information and with fabricated documents. In her related diversion agreement attached as an exhibit to Do’s plea agreement, Do’s daughter admitted her conduct was criminal and violated federal and state law.

    Do also admitted that the $381,500 from Company #1 that his daughter had used to purchase the Tustin house in 2023 was a disguised bribe to him. He also admitted that an additional $100,000 in payments sent to his other daughter, including three $25,000 checks from Company #2 – an air conditioning company that had been paid by VAS – also were bribes to him.

    Some of the bribe funds that had been funneled to his daughters were spent for his direct benefit. For example, during 2022, a total of $14,849 of funds that had been funneled to Do’s daughters was used to make property tax payments for properties in Orange County owned by Do and his wife. Approximately $15,000 was used to pay for one of Do’s credit card bills.

    Do knew that VAS was not providing all the meals for which the county had paid VAS. Instead, much of the funds were used for the benefit of insiders, including to buy real estate in the name of both Do’s daughter and Company #1, bribe payments to both of Do’s daughters, payments to other conspirators, payments to other companies affiliated with VAS’s listed officers, and through hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash withdrawals.

    “Mr. Do had a duty to act in the best interest of the citizens of Orange County. He neglected that duty and misused the financial system to enrich himself,” said Special Agent in Charge Ryan Korner with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Office of Inspector General. “Public corruption degrades the public’s confidence in our political system, and FDIC OIG is proud to work alongside our law enforcement partners to identify and hold accountable individuals who abuse public service for private gain.”

    “Andrew Do was entrusted to ensure taxpayer dollars were used responsibly and for the purposes intended,” said Special Agent in Charge Tyler Hatcher, IRS Criminal Investigation, Los Angeles Field Office. “Instead, when his constituents depended on COVID relief programs, Mr. Do exploited his position on the Orange County Board of Supervisors not only to influence channeling of funds to the Viet America Society, but also to accept bribes that were used to purchase a home, pay property taxes, and even to pay fictitious incomes to family members. Combating public corruption is one of the most important roles federal law enforcement agencies play in our local communities, and we are proud to be a partner during this investigation.” 

    “Today’s actions shows that this elected official used his position of trust for personal gain. He didn’t think he would get caught. He was wrong,” said Adam Shanedling, Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Department of Education Office of Inspector General’s Western Regional Office. “The OIG is proud to have been a part of the task force that investigated this matter and we’ll continue to work with our law enforcement partners to help safeguard the integrity of federal funds.” 

    The plea agreement requires Do to forfeit any assets connected to the bribery scheme, including the Tustin property his daughter purchased in 2023. As part of his daughter’s related diversion agreement, she also agreed to forfeit the Tustin property. The plea agreement requires Do to pay full restitution by paying back the bribe money he and his daughters received, which he has agreed to pay in full before he is sentenced. In August 2022, the government seized more than $2.4 million from VAS’s and Company #1’s bank accounts.

    In a related agreement with the Orange County District Attorney’s Office (OCDA), attached as an exhibit to Do’s plea agreement, Do has agreed to immediately resign from the Orange County Board of Supervisors and to forfeit any pension credit for the time where he participated in the bribery conspiracy.

    Once Do enters his guilty plea, he will face a statutory maximum sentence of five years in federal prison.

    The FBI; the Orange County District Attorney’s Office Bureau of Investigation; the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Office of the Inspector General; IRS Criminal Investigation; and the United States Department of Education Office of the Inspector General investigated this matter.

    This matter is being jointly prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office and OCDA. The prosecution is being led by Assistant United States Attorneys Charles E. Pell, Bradley E. Marrett, and Tara Vavere of the United States Attorney’s Office and Senior Deputy District Attorney Avery T. Harrison and Deputy District Attorneys Anthony J. Schlehner and L.J. Berger of the OCDA.  

    Any member of the public who has information related to this or any other public corruption matter in Orange County is encouraged to send information to the FBI’s email tip line at https://tips.fbi.gov and/or to contact the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office at (310) 477-6565.

    MIL Security OSI