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Category: Transport

  • MIL-OSI USA: Brownley Demands Up-or-Down Vote to Protect Medicaid and Food Assistance

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Julia Brownley (D-CA)

    Washington, DC – Today, Congresswoman Julia Brownley (CA-26) signed a discharge petition to force Speaker Johnson to allow the House to vote on the Hands Off Medicaid and SNAP Act, a bill that would protect Medicaid and food assistance from devastating budget cuts proposed by House Republicans.

    “The proposed Republican budget slashes more than $1 trillion from Medicaid and food assistance – essential programs that millions of Americans rely on every day,” said Congresswoman Brownley. “Families in Ventura County and across the country simply cannot afford these cuts, which would drive up costs and deny access to life-saving health care and basic food assistance. Several Republicans have said they oppose these cuts. If that is true, now is the time for them to prove it. They should join House Democrats in forcing an up-or-down vote to protect these vital programs.”

    In California’s 26th Congressional District alone, the Republican budget puts more than 200,000 people – including 80,000 children and 24,000 seniors – at risk of losing their Medicaid coverage and threatens the food assistance that 35,000 residents rely on.   

    A discharge petition compels a House vote on legislation the Speaker refuses to bring forward. It requires 218 signatures. If five Republicans join all House Democrats in signing the discharge petition, the Hands Off Medicaid and SNAP Act will come to the floor for a vote.

    The Hands Off Medicaid and SNAP Act would protect families by prohibiting Republicans from weaponizing the reconciliation process to cut benefits or remove individuals from Medicaid and SNAP. This would help ensure that tens of millions of Americans continue to have access to essential health care and food assistance.

    Issues: 119th Congress, Healthcare

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Congressman Valadao Introduces Legislation to Modernize the USPS Fleet

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman David G Valadao (CA-21)

    WASHINGTON – Congressman Valadao (CA-22) and Congressman Jim Costa (CA-21) introduced the FAIR Fleets Act. This bipartisan legislation aims at modernizing the United States Postal Service (USPS) vehicle fleet while ensuring both urban and rural communities receive an equitable share of modern, fuel-efficient delivery vehicles.

    “In the Central Valley and rural communities across America, families and businesses depend on the Postal Service,” said Congressman Valadao. “Too often, deliveries are delayed because the USPS lacks the resources to modernize, which is why the FAIR Fleets Act is so important. This bipartisan bill gives USPS the tools to upgrade its aging fleet with more fuel-efficient vehicles—improving reliability and reducing costs—to ensure people receive dependable mail services no matter where they live.”

    “Every American, whether they live in a big city or a rural town, deserves reliable, timely postal service,” said Congressman Costa. “The FAIR Fleets Act ensures that underserved areas, which too often face delays and aging equipment, are given the same level of service as more populated regions. This bill is about fairness and better efficiency in our mail system.” 

    Background:

    The USPS operates one of the world’s largest civilian fleets, with over 230,000 vehicles—many over 30 years old. These vehicles, particularly the Grumman LLV model, are beyond their original intended service life. This drives up maintenance costs and emissions while causing significant service delays, particularly in rural areas.

    The FAIR Fleets Act would:

    • Amend Title 39 of the U.S. Code, requiring the USPS to assess and modernize fleet distribution.
    • Prioritize underserved areas such as rural towns, Tribal lands, and high-poverty urban neighborhoods.
    • Directs the USPS to submit annual reports to Congress detailing vehicle distribution, progress in underserved areas, and further recommendations for service improvements.

    Read the full bill here.

    ###

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: 26 civilians killed, 46 injured in Indian attack on Pakistani civilian settlements

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

    Photo taken with a mobile phone on May 7, 2025 shows a building destroyed in an Indian missile attack in Muzaffarabad, Pakistan-controlled Kashmir. [Photo/Xinhua]

    At least 26 people were killed and 46 others injured after India carried out strikes on six civilian settlements in Pakistan, Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry, director general of the Inter-Services Public Relations, the media wing of the Pakistani army, confirmed during a press briefing on Wednesday.

    MIL OSI China News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: China, US officials to meet on trade this week

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

    Beijing confirmed on Wednesday that its top trade negotiator will meet with his US counterpart during a visit to Switzerland this week but issued a pointed warning: dialogue must be genuine, not a cover for continued pressure and unilateral demands.

    In Washington, US Treasury Department Secretary Scott Bessent and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer announced that they will meet with their Chinese counterparts for talks.

    The conversations mark the first official public engagement between the world’s two largest economies after Trump administration’s decision of imposing hefty tariffs on China imports plunged the two into a trade war.

    In a statement issued early on Wednesday, China’s Ministry of Commerce said that senior US officials have repeatedly signaled adjustments to its tariff measures and conveyed messages through multiple channels, expressing a desire to engage with China on tariffs and related issues.

    “After careful evaluation of these US overtures and on the basis of fully considering global expectations, China’s interests, and the appeals of US industry and consumers, China has decided to re-engage the US,” a spokesman for the Chinese Ministry of Commerce said in the statement.

    The statement said that Vice-Premier He Lifeng, China’s lead representative on economic and trade issues, will hold talks with Bessent during his May 9-12 trip.

    In Washington, Bessent confirmed in an interview that they would meet on Saturday and Sunday.

    But Beijing made clear that it is entering the talks with caution. “If the US wants to talk, our door is always open,” a ministry spokesperson said. “But if you say one thing and do another, or even to attempt to use talks as a cover to continue coercion and extortion, China will never agree, let alone sacrifice its principled position and international fairness and justice to seek any agreement.”

    The spokesperson noted that negotiations must be grounded in “mutual respect, equal consultation and mutual benefit”.

    The ministry’s statement cited an old Chinese saying: “We must not only listen to what they say but also watch what they do,” warning that any future agreement would depend on Washington’s sincerity and actions — not just its words.

    The statement also carries a message to other economies that are engaging with Washington. “Appeasement does not bring peace, and compromise does not earn respect,” it said, adding that only by adhering to principles, fairness, and justice can one truly safeguard interests.

    Ahead of the planned meeting in Switzerland, Bessent said he looked forward to “productive talks”.

    He said the US and China had to de-escalate before they can move forward with trade negotiations.

    “My sense is that this will be about de-escalation, not about the big trade deal, but we’ve got to de-escalate before we can move forward,” Bessent said in an interview on Fox News on Tuesday.

    He also said “the current tariffs and trade barriers are unsustainable, but we don’t want to decouple”.

    In his first 100 days in office since Jan 20, US President Donald Trump has announced sweeping tariffs, starting with a 10 percent blanket duty on all foreign-made imports.

    Dozens of countries received a 90-day pause until July, but tariffs were raised to 145 percent on products from China, which has retaliated by imposing 125 percent levies on US goods.

    Gary Hufbauer, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, said the Switzerland meeting is very important, and that “the news would be warmly welcomed by the financial markets and trading firms”.

    MIL OSI China News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Late Cuiabano strike fires Botafogo past Carabobo

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

    Defender Cuiabano scored in the 91st minute as defending champion Botafogo clinched a 2-1 victory at Carabobo in the Copa Libertadores group stage on Tuesday.

    The Brazilian side took the lead when Argentine goalkeeper Lucas Bruera failed to grasp Cuiabano’s long-range effort and Vitinho was on hand to tap in the rebound.

    Leonardo Aponte put the Venezuelan outfit on level terms with a first-time effort from eight yards after the visitors failed to deal with a corner.

    But Botafogo lifted its tempo in search of a winner and Cuiabano restored his team’s lead by taking a touch to control Allan’s pass before thumping a shot that beat Bruera at his near post.

    The Rio de Janeiro side remains third in Group A and will likely need to win both of its final two group matches – against Estudiantes and Universidad de Chile at home – to advance to the round of 16.

    “I’m happy to have scored but especially to have helped us pick up three points because we know how important it was,” Cuiabano said after the match. “We have a tight-knit group and we will always fight until the end.”

    Meanwhile, Andre Silva scored twice as Sao Paulo cruised to a 2-0 away victory over 10-man Alianza Lima.

    Silva put the visitors ahead just after the half-hour with a low first-time strike following Matheus Alves’ headed flick. The hosts were reduced to 10 men in the 69th minute when Renzo Garces was shown a straight red card for a bad foul on Lucas Moura.

    The Brazilian side put the result beyond doubt as Silva struck a minute from time after combining with Luciano Neves.

    Elsewhere, Argentina’s Racing Club romped to a 4-0 away victory over Colombian side Atletico Bucaramanga.

    Adrian Martinez opened the scoring in the fourth minute when he tapped home after a scramble inside the six-yard box. Santiago Solari doubled the advantage by playing a slick one-two with Martinez before rifling a low shot past goalkeeper Aldair Quintana.

    Santiago Sosa and Martin Barrios added late goals as Racing secured its second win of the campaign.

    MIL OSI China News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Full text of Xi’s signed article in Russian media

    Source: China State Council Information Office

    Chinese President Xi Jinping on Wednesday published a signed article titled “Learning from History to Build Together a Brighter Future” in the Russian Gazette newspaper ahead of his arrival in Russia for a state visit and attendance at the celebrations marking the 80th anniversary of the Victory in the Soviet Union’s Great Patriotic War.

    The following is the full text of the article:

    Learning from History to Build Together a Brighter Future

    H.E. Xi Jinping

    President of the People’s Republic of China

    This year marks the 80th anniversary of the victory of the Chinese People’s War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, the Soviet Union’s Great Patriotic War, and the World Anti-Fascist War. It also marks the 80th anniversary of the founding of the United Nations (UN). In this season when “apple and pear trees are blossoming,” I will soon pay a state visit to Russia and attend the celebrations marking the 80th anniversary of the victory of the Soviet Union’s Great Patriotic War, joining the heroic Russian people in honoring the history and the fallen heroes.

    Ten years ago around this time, I came to Russia to celebrate the 70th anniversary of the victory. During that visit, I made a special arrangement to meet with 18 representatives of Russian veterans who endured the blood and fire of battlefields during the Soviet Union’s Great Patriotic War and the Chinese People’s War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression. Their unyielding resolve and indomitable bearing left an indelible impression on me. In the past few years, General M. Gareyev, Major General T. Shchudlo and other veterans passed away. I pay my deepest tribute to them and to all veterans-from generals to the rank and file-for their extraordinary service and heroic feats in securing the victory over fascists around the world. We will never forget them. Heroes never perish; their noble spirit lives forever.

    During the World Anti-Fascist War, the Chinese and Russian peoples fought shoulder to shoulder and supported each other. In the darkest hours of the Chinese People’s War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, the Soviet Volunteer Group, which was part of the Soviet Air Force, came to Nanjing, Wuhan and Chongqing to fight alongside the Chinese people, bravely engaging Japanese invaders in aerial combat-many sacrificing their precious lives. At the critical juncture of the Soviet Union’s Great Patriotic War, Yan Baohang, a legendary intelligence agent of the Communist Party of China (CPC) who was hailed as the “Richard Sorge of the East,” provided the Soviet Union with primary-source intelligence. In the crucible of the war-torn years, the Soviet Union provided China with large quantities of weapons and equipment. China, for its part, shipped much-needed strategic supplies to the Soviet Union. The two countries jointly established a supply line spanning the treacherous Gobi Desert. It was an international lifeline, vital for our mutual support in fighting fascists. The strong camaraderie between our two nations, forged in blood and sacrifice, surges onward unceasingly, mighty as the Yellow River and the Volga. It is an eternal wellspring nourishing our everlasting friendship.

    Eighty years ago, the forces of justice around the world, including China and the Soviet Union, united in courageous battles against their common foes and defeated the overbearing fascist powers. Eighty years later today, however, unilateralism, hegemonism, bullying, and coercive practices are severely undermining our world. Again humankind has come to a crossroads of unity or division, dialogue or confrontation, win-win cooperation or zero-sum games. In War and Peace, the great writer Leo Tolstoy observed, “History is the life of nations and of humanity.” Indeed, historical memory and truth will not fade with the passage of time. They serve as inspirations that mirror the present and illuminate the future. We must learn from history, especially the hard lessons of the Second World War. We must draw wisdom and strength from the great victory of the World Anti-Fascist War, and resolutely resist all forms of hegemonism and power politics. We must work together to build a brighter future for humanity.

    — We must uphold a correct historical perspective on WWII. China and the Soviet Union were the principal theaters of that war in Asia and Europe respectively. The two countries served as the mainstay of resistance against Japanese militarism and German Nazism, making pivotal contribution to the victory of the World Anti-Fascist War. The Chinese People’s War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression began the earliest and lasted the longest. United as one under the banner of the Chinese united front against Japanese aggression, which was advocated and established by the CPC, the Chinese people launched a relentless struggle against and defeated the brutal Japanese militarists. With immense sacrifice, they carved out an immortal epic of heroic resistance and ultimate victory against Japanese aggression. In the European theater, the Soviet Red Army advanced like an iron tide with unwavering fortitude and valor, crushed Nazi Germany’s ambitions and liberated millions from its brutal occupation, writing an epic of victory in the Soviet Union’s Great Patriotic War.

    History teaches us that light will always overcome darkness, and that justice will ultimately prevail over evil. The International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg and the International Military Tribunal for the Far East condemned the convicted war criminals to perpetual infamy. The justice and integrity of the two landmark trials, their historic significance, and their contemporary relevance stand beyond challenge. Any attempt to distort the historical truth of WWII, deny its victorious outcome, or defame the historic contribution of China and the Soviet Union is doomed to fail. Neither of our two nations will tolerate any act to reverse the course of history-nor will the people of the whole world.

    — We must resolutely uphold the postwar international order. The most significant decision by the international community around the end of WWII was to establish the UN. China and the Soviet Union were among the first to sign the UN Charter. Our permanent membership in the UN Security Council is a product of history, earned through blood and sacrifice. The more turbulent and complex the international situation becomes, the more we must uphold and defend the authority of the UN, firmly uphold the UN-centered international system, the international order underpinned by international law, and the basic norms of international relations based on the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, and steadily promote an equal and orderly multipolar world and a universally beneficial and inclusive economic globalization.

    This year also marks the 80th anniversary of the restoration of Taiwan. Taiwan’s restoration to China is a victorious outcome of WWII and an integral part of the postwar international order. A series of instruments with legal effect under international law, including the Cairo Declaration and the Potsdam Proclamation, have all affirmed China’s sovereignty over Taiwan. The historical and legal fact therein brooks no challenge. And the authority of UN General Assembly Resolution 2758 brooks no challenge. No matter how the situation on the Taiwan island evolves or what troubles external forces may make, the historical trend toward China’s ultimate and inevitable reunification is unstoppable.

    China and Russia have all along firmly supported each other on issues bearing on our respective core interests or major concerns. Russia has reiterated on many occasions that it strictly adheres to the one-China principle, Taiwan is an inalienable part of China’s territory, it opposes any form of “Taiwan independence,” and it firmly supports all measures of the Chinese government and the Chinese people to achieve national reunification. China highly commends Russia’s consistent position.

    — We must firmly defend international fairness and justice. Now, the global deficits in peace, development, security and governance continue to widen unabated. To address these deficits, I have proposed to build a community with a shared future for mankind and put forward the Global Development Initiative, the Global Security Initiative, and the Global Civilization Initiative as a way forward to steer the reform of the global governance system toward greater fairness and justice.

    The world needs justice, not hegemonism. History and reality have proven that to meet global challenges, it is important to uphold the vision of global governance featuring extensive consultation and joint contribution for shared benefit. It is also important to choose dialogue over confrontation, build partnerships over alliances, and pursue win-win cooperation over zero-sum games. It is equally important to practice true multilateralism, accommodate the legitimate concerns of all parties, and safeguard international norms and order. We firmly believe that people around the world will choose to stand on the right side of history and the side of fairness and justice.

    China and Russia are both major countries with significant influence in the world. The two nations are constructive forces for maintaining global strategic stability and for improving global governance. Our bilateral relationship is founded upon a clear historical logic, sustained by strong internal drive, and rooted in profound cultural heritage. Our relationship is neither directed against nor swayed by any third party. Together we must foil all schemes to disrupt or undermine our bonds of amity and trust, and we must not be baffled by transient matters or unsettled by formidable challenges. We must leverage the certainty and resilience of our partnership of strategic coordination to jointly accelerate the shift toward a multipolar world and build a community with a shared future for mankind.

    China and Russia are both great nations with splendid civilizations. The Chinese and Russian peoples are both great peoples defined by heroic legacies. Eighty years ago, our peoples won the anti-fascist war through heroic struggles. Eight decades later today, we must take all necessary measures to resolutely safeguard our sovereignty, security, and development interests. We should be guardians of historical memory, partners in national development and rejuvenation, and champions of global fairness and justice, and work together to forge a brighter future for humanity.

    MIL OSI China News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: Tibetan cultural heritage exhibition returns to Beijing

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

    The second edition of a major Tibetan intangible cultural heritage exhibition opened on April 29 at Beijing’s Beihai Park, featuring over 500 handicrafts and cultural products from Rangtang county in Sichuan province.

    Organizers and guests pose for a group photo at the opening of a Tibetan intangible cultural heritage exhibition in Beihai Park, Beijing, April 29, 2025. [Photo courtesy of the Rangtang Intangible Cultural Heritage Center]

    The exhibition, jointly hosted by the county government and Beijing Tourism Group, runs through early June at the former imperial garden, which is marking its 100th anniversary of opening to the public.

    This year’s exhibition has more than doubled in size, featuring over 500 works in 22 categories compared with last year’s event, which showcased 200 exhibits across 11 categories and drew more than 120,000 visitors.

    The exhibition highlights masterpieces of traditional craftsmanship from Rangtang county in Sichuan’s Aba Tibetan and Qiang autonomous prefecture. Featured works include traditional painting, metalwork, ceramics, weaving and dyeing, embroidery, and wood and stone carving.

    A standout feature of the exhibition is the innovative “Thangka + Porcelain Painting” series, where over a dozen artists skilled in traditional Tibetan Buddhist scroll painting spent three years in Jingdezhen, a world-famous porcelain city in Jiangxi province. There, they merged Thangka art with ceramic techniques to create the “Thousand-Armed, Thousand-Eyed Guanyin” porcelain panel collection.

    Visitors can also watch master artisans demonstrate traditional painting and weaving techniques through live workshops. A new section showcasing contemporary adaptations of Buddhist motifs into fashion accessories aims to attract younger audiences.

    The exhibition is organized by the Rangtang Intangible Cultural Heritage Center, founded by Jamyang Lodro Rinpoche, a national-level inheritor of a Tibetan Buddhist music genre. Starting with a single facility offering free painting classes to disadvantaged children in 2010, the initiative has grown to 47 training centers teaching traditional skills ranging from medicine to ceramics, with additional branches in major cities including Shanghai.

    Jamyang Lodro, founder of the Rangtang Intangible Cultural Heritage Center, speaks to China.org.cn while introducing artworks on display at a Tibetan intangible cultural heritage exhibition in Beihai Park, Beijing, April 30, 2025. [Photo/China.org.cn]

    The remote Rangtang county, once among China’s poorest regions, has turned to its cultural heritage to drive economic development after years of isolation and industrial underdevelopment. The initiative has revived community pride, trained over 1,000 young people, and advanced poverty relief and rural revitalization while promoting heritage preservation and cultural tourism.

    The centers have trained 174 representative inheritors of intangible cultural heritage over the past decade. To provide career opportunities for these artisans, the county has also launched an innovation park that develops heritage-based products ranging from paintings to herbal care items.

    The county now sells Thangka paintings, ceramic art, Tibetan medicinal baths and herbal care items nationally and internationally, generating annual sales exceeding 10 million yuan ($1.4 million). The initiative has boosted incomes for more than 3,000 local farmers and herders.

    The heritage centers have held exhibitions in cities including Beijing, Shanghai, Chengdu and Hangzhou, featuring more than 100 works that blend traditional craftsmanship with modern design. In 2023, the government designated Rangtang as a national pilot zone for cultural industry-driven rural revitalization.

    Jamyang Lodro told China.org.cn that while most students at the centers come from farming and herding families, many have become accomplished artists through specialized training programs lasting up to eight years. The center offers full scholarships and living stipends to ensure students from poor backgrounds can complete their training.

    Rangtang’s centers have partnered with top institutions, including Tsinghua University, Zhejiang University, the Central Conservatory of Music and various museums. These partnerships have broadened students’ skills while connecting Qinghai–Xizang Plateau traditions with the wider world. The trainees now serve as bridges between traditional culture and modern industries, helping integrate ancient arts into the contemporary creative economy.

    Artworks on display at a Tibetan intangible cultural heritage exhibition in Beihai Park, Beijing, April 30, 2025. [Photo/China.org.cn]

    Jamyang Lodro says each piece represents a personal journey: young people who overcame difficult backgrounds to transform their lives through art and tradition.

    “It’s about loving and understanding life itself,” he said, emphasizing his vision of not only nurturing their skills but also their inner being. “They came to know themselves better through these traditional arts and discovered their true selves.”

    He emphasized that Chinese arts must maintain their authenticity when shared internationally. “Through all our works, we clearly show them who we are. We turn inward, not outward. If your artworks merely mimic Western art, international audiences won’t respect you. We have our own philosophy, inner meaning and artistic traditions. We have our own charm. That’s what they respect. From there, we can have cultural dialogue.”

    MIL OSI China News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI China: China main car supplier to Uzbekistan in Q1 2025: report

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

    China was the top supplier of passenger cars to Uzbekistan in the first quarter of 2025, according to a report released on Tuesday by the country’s National Statistics Committee.

    “In January-March 2025, Uzbekistan imported 6,950 passenger cars from abroad, with a total value of 115.1 million U.S. dollars,” said the report.

    It noted that among the partner countries, China ranked first with 5,235 vehicles delivered to Uzbekistan. South Korea was ranked second with 1,425 units, and India third with 144 units.

    In 2024, Uzbekistan imported 74,700 passenger cars, of which approximately 61,000 were supplied by China. 

    MIL OSI China News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Bus crash in Pahurehure

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Police are responding to reports of a school bus crash in Pahurehure, Papakura.

    The crash involves a single bus which collided with a tree on Elliot Street around 8.45am.

    All passengers are off the bus.

    At this stage five people have sustained injuries and will be transported to hospital by ambulance. 

    The remainder have are being treated at the scene.

    The bus is partially blocking the road.

    Police are conducting an examination at the scene and the public is advised avoid the area if possible.

    ENDS.

    Nicole Bremner/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: MSF – Israel’s New INGO Registration Measures Are a Grave Threat to Humanitarian Operations and International Law – 55 Organisations Say

     Source: Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) – Doctors Without Borders

    The undersigned 55 organisations operating in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt) call for urgent action from the international community against new Israeli registration rules for international NGOs. Based on vague, broad, politicised, and open-ended criteria, these rules appear designed to assert control over independent humanitarian, development and peacebuilding operations, silence advocacy grounded in international humanitarian and human rights law, and further entrench Israeli control and de facto annexation of the occupied Palestinian territory.

    For over a year and a half, humanitarian organisations have continued operating despite unprecedented constraints. In 2024, they reached millions of people across the oPt with essential services – from food and water to mobile clinics, legal aid, and education. The new registration rules now threaten to shut this work down. These measures go beyond routine policy. They mark a serious escalation in restrictions on humanitarian and civic space and risk setting a dangerous precedent.

    Under the new provisions, INGOs already registered in Israel may face de-registration, while new applicants risk rejection based on arbitrary, politicised allegations, such as “delegitimising Israel” or expressing support for accountability for Israeli violations of international law. Other disqualifiers include public support for a boycott of Israel within the past seven years (by staff, a partner, board member, or founder) or failure to meet exhaustive reporting requirements. By framing humanitarian and human rights advocacy as a threat to the state, Israeli authorities can shut out organisations merely for speaking out about conditions they witness on the ground, forcing INGOs to choose between delivering aid and promoting respect for the protections owed to affected people.

    INGOs are further required to submit complete staff lists and other sensitive information about staff and their families to Israel when applying for registration. In a context where humanitarian and healthcare workers are routinely subject to harassment, detention, and direct attacks, this raises serious protection concerns.

    These new rules are part of a broader, long-term crackdown on humanitarian and civic space, marked by heightened surveillance and attacks, and a series of actions that restrict humanitarian access, compromise staff safety, and undermine core principles of humanitarian action. They are not isolated but part of a wider pattern that includes:

    Blocking or delaying aid through arbitrary bureaucratic restrictions, logistical obstacles, and complete sieges, denying essential lifesaving supplies to Palestinians.
    Killing more than 400 humanitarian workers in Gaza, injuring and detaining countless others, and repeatedly attacking marked and notified humanitarian premises, facilities or convoys.
    Passing legislation aimed at curtailing the operations of UNRWA, the largest provider of essential services for Palestinians.
    Advancing legislation to impose a tax of up to 80 per cent on foreign government funding to Israeli NGOs, while barring them from seeking recourse through the Israeli court system – including organisations that serve as partners for INGOs to deliver assistance and uphold protections in communities facing displacement, demolitions, or settler violence.
    Suspending work visas for international staff and revoking permits for Palestinians residing in the West Bank to access Jerusalem, severely disrupting operations.

    And now, making INGO registration conditional on political and ideological alignment, undermining the neutrality, impartiality and independence of humanitarian actors.

    Under international humanitarian law, occupying powers are obligated to facilitate impartial humanitarian assistance and ensure the welfare of the protected population. Any attempt to condition humanitarian access on political alignment or penalise organisations for fulfilling their mandate risks breaching this framework. The International Court of Justice (ICJ) ordered Israel to allow unimpeded delivery of humanitarian aid to Gaza in three legally binding provisional measures orders in 2024. Yet, these new rules expand and institutionalise existing barriers to aid.

    We call on States, donors, and the international community to:

    • Use all possible means to protect humanitarian operations from measures that compromise neutrality, independence, and access – including staff list requirements, political vetting, and vague revocation clauses.
    • Take concrete political and diplomatic action beyond statements of concern to ensure unhindered humanitarian access and prevent the erosion of principled aid delivery.
    • Support INGOs and Palestinian and Israeli civil society organisations through legal assistance, diplomatic support, and flexible funding to help mitigate legal, financial, and reputational risks. Donors must defend principled humanitarian and human rights work.

    The undersigned 55 organisations stress that engagement with the registration process to preserve critical humanitarian operations should not be misinterpreted as endorsement of these measures.

    These 55 organisations remain committed to the delivery of humanitarian aid, along with development and peacebuilding services and activities that are independent, impartial, and based on need, in full accordance with international law and the humanitarian principles derived from it. INGOs stand ready to engage with Israeli authorities in good faith on administrative processes but cannot accept measures that penalise principled humanitarian work or expose staff to retaliation. These measures not only undermine assistance in the oPt but also set a dangerous precedent for humanitarian operations globally.

    1. Act Church of Sweden
    2. ActionAid
    3. Alianza / ActionAid Spain (ApS/AAS)
    4. American Friends Service Committee (AFSC)
    5. Anera
    6. Asamblea de Cooperación Por la Paz (ACPP)
    7. Asociación Paz con Dignidad
    8. CARE International
    9. CESVI
    10. Children Not Numbers
    11. Christian Aid
    12. CIDSE – International family of Catholic social justice organisations
    13. Cooperazione Internazionale Sud Sud (CISS)
    14. COSPE
    15. DanChurchAid (DCA)
    16. Danish House in Palestine
    17. Diakonia
    18. Diakonie Katastrophenhilfe
    19. forumZFD
    20. Global Communities
    21. HEKS/EPER
    22. Humanity First UK
    23. Humanity & Inclusion – Handicap International
    24. IM Swedish Development Partner
    25. International Media Support (IMS)
    26. Islamic Relief Worldwide
    27. Japan International Volunteer Center (JVC)
    28. KURVE Wustrow
    29. MedGlobal
    30. Mennonite Central Committee (MCC)
    31. Médecins du Monde (MdM) France
    32. Médecins du Monde (MdM) Spain
    33. Médecins du Monde (MdM) Switzerland
    34. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)
    35. medico international
    36. Middle East Children’s Alliance (MECA)
    37. Movement for Peace (MPDL)
    38. Muslim Aid
    39. Norwegian Church Aid (NCA)
    40. Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA)
    41. Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC)
    42. Oxfam
    43. Pax Christi International
    44. Plan International
    45. Polish Medical Mission Association (PMM)
    46. Première Urgence Internationale (PUI)
    47. Relief International (RI)
    48. Save the Children International (SCI)
    49. Secours Islamique France (SIF)
    50. Terre des Hommes (Tdh) Italia
    51. Terre des Hommes (Tdh) Lausanne
    52. The Center for Mind-Body Medicine
    53. War Child
    54. Weltfriedensdienst e.V. (world peace service)
    55. West Bank Protection Consortium (WBPC).

    MSF is an international, medical, humanitarian organisation that delivers medical care to people in need, regardless of their origin, religion, or political affiliation. MSF has been working in Haiti for over 30 years, offering general healthcare, trauma care, burn wound care, maternity care, and care for survivors of sexual violence. MSF Australia was established in 1995 and is one of 24 international MSF sections committed to delivering medical humanitarian assistance to people in crisis. In 2022, more than 120 project staff from Australia and New Zealand worked with MSF on assignment overseas. MSF delivers medical care based on need alone and operates independently of government, religion or economic influence and irrespective of race, religion or gender. For more information visit msf.org.au  

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Energy Sector – New report reveals 84% of New Zealand’s fossil fuel machines ready for electrification

    The first complete inventory of all the fossil fuel machines in New Zealand has found there are over ten million of them in the country and that 84% could be feasibly replaced with electric machines that are available in the country today.

    Rewiring Aotearoa’s Machine Count report showed that upgrading six million of the most ‘electrifiable’ fossil fuel machines – things like cars, heaters, lawnmowers, road bikes, ovens and stoves – would save the country approximately $8 million every day, or $3.7 billion each year.

    It would also slash 7.5 million tonnes of carbon emissions each year, almost six times the total emissions from domestic aviation in 2023, or more than flying the entire population of Auckland to London and back every year.

    Another 10% of the total – around one million trucks, utes, vans, buses and smaller tractors – could be electrified if more effort was made to bring electric options to New Zealand, while just 6% of the machines – primarily those in heavy industry – require more research and development, or subsidies for them to be cost-effective.

    • Check out the interactive tool with all machines sized by estimated count or emissions here.
    Rewiring Aotearoa’s previous research has shown that many New Zealand homes, farms and businesses can reduce costs and emissions by upgrading their gas appliances, petrol cars and diesel machines to more efficient electric equivalents and running them on renewable electricity from the grid and solar.

    The Machine Count, a project supported by Ara Ake and EECA (Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority), set out to better understand the size of the challenge: how many fossil fuel machines there are in our economy, and how hard they would be to electrify.

    “We always knew there were a lot of them, but now we have a firm idea on the number and on how ‘electrifiable’ they all are,” says Rewiring Aotearoa CEO Mike Casey. “The research shows clearly that an electric transition is both technically possible and cost effective in the vast majority of cases.”

    Daniel Gnoth, Ara Ake’s General Manager of Research and Insights, says the report clearly identifies where the greatest opportunities lie to accelerate New Zealanders efforts to support the country’s electrification journey.

    “This study shows that innovation in energy isn’t just about developing new technologies-it’s about making clean, efficient machines more accessible and easier to adopt. The insights from this study will be incredibly useful for energy innovators to develop new solutions, including commercial and financial models, to accelerate the electrification of fossil fuel powered machines. If we get this right, we won’t just cut emissions-we’ll unlock new services and solutions that can be showcased and exported globally.”

    “It’s been a pleasure to partner with Rewiring Aotearoa on what is a groundbreaking study, both in its ambition and the breadth of its scope.”

    New Zealand’s fossil fuel prices are among the highest in the world, so Casey says shifting from machines that are reliant on expensive foreign molecules to electric machines that run on locally-made electrons is generally a no brainer – “for the economics, for the environment, and for energy security”.

    “Climate change is largely an energy problem. Around 75% of the world’s emissions come from energy and machines use that energy, so solving the problem in practice is about replacing those machines. We figured out how to electrify our cherry orchard near Cromwell and now we don’t use any diesel on the farm. We save tens of thousands on our energy bills each year, we’ve brought our emissions down to almost nothing, and we play a positive role in the energy system. I firmly believe New Zealand could become a demonstration project for the rest of the world and show that solving climate could save us all money.”

    Casey says there were many who said it wouldn’t be possible to run an orchard without diesel. There were many who didn’t believe we would see electric trucks, buses, diggers or loaders. And there are plenty who don’t believe we will see large electric tractors or mining equipment.

    “There are already plenty of electric buses and trucks on the road, huge electric machines are being launched all the time, and we are seeing massive technological advances and cost reductions in the fields of batteries, high-speed charging, solar panels and high temperature heat pumps, so there will definitely be options to explore in your sector.”

    EECA research shows that 36% of New Zealand household non-green appliances are over a decade old. The median age of a car in New Zealand is around 14 years, and businesses are regularly upgrading their fleets and equipment, so there are a whole lot of machines that are set to be replaced in the coming years.

    Megan Hurnard, EECA’s General Manager of Insights, Data and Communications says: “We’re entering a critical investment cycle for the machines that power our economy. As old equipment reaches the end of its life, the choices we make now will shape our energy system for decades. Replacing outdated machines with the same inefficient models risks locking in higher running costs, poor performance, and greater exposure to fuel price volatility. By choosing modern, energy-efficient technologies we can improve affordability, boost productivity, and enhance New Zealand’s energy security.”

    This research is not suggesting that every machine needs to be upgraded right now, but every machine is going to need to be replaced at some point and it’s clear your next purchasing decision should be electric.

    “In saying that, if you are more worried about emissions than economics, it makes sense to replace your fossil fuel machines before they break down,” says Casey. “Some fossil fuel machines can even be turned electric – like our 1990 Hilux, which we recently retrofitted with a 2014 Nissan Leaf motor and battery.”

    Casey says the electric transition is already happening in homes, farms and businesses around the country and the cost savings are driving a lot of that.

    “We believe the economic argument makes this shift inevitable. It makes no sense to use machines that cost more to do the same job – and it makes even less sense when those machines pump out so much pollution. But it’s not happening as fast as it should, and it’s not happening for the people who need it most; the ones who need to reduce their bills or those who need to improve their resilience in the face of worsening weather events.”

    Casey says opening up access to low-interest loans so that everyone – no matter their income – can deal with the higher upfront costs of electric machines and making it easy to upgrade is what will take this “from possible to practical”.

    “We need a range of financial innovations – both from the Government and from the banks – to speed this up. We also need innovations around the process – making it simple and easy for busy parents, renters, and retirees, not just the energy nerds, to benefit from going electric. And it needs to be from the first moment of research all the way through to installation. We’ve counted the machines, we’ve shown it’s feasible to electrify most of them, and we’ll be explaining in more detail how to make it happen and what needs to change in our upcoming policy manifesto.”

    The machine count database is a free, publicly available resource. It is hoped the database and findings will continue to be used and improved by government institutions, academic researchers, and businesses.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Consumer NZ – This Mother’s Day, give the gift of scam protection and digital confidence

    Source: Consumer NZ

    Now is a great time to brush up on digital hygiene or share advice with someone you care about – in your family, workplace or social circle.

    “When it comes to showing someone you care for them, a bunch of flowers is nice – but helping protect them from scams and digital threats might be the most powerful gift you could give,” says Sahar Lone, Consumer NZ’s communications and campaigns manager.

    “Many of us act as unofficial tech support for the mother figures in our lives. Mother’s Day is a great time to sit down together and set up some simple protections or share some tips to the family group chat. It’s a free, practical and genuinely caring gesture.”

    Consumer’s latest Sentiment Tracker results show that 56% of New Zealand households have been targeted by scams in the last year. Notably, high-value losses are growing – 34% of scam victims lost over $1,000, up from 26% last year.

    With scams becoming more sophisticated – from fake parcel tracking texts to the rise of ‘Hi Mum’ impersonation scams – it’s important to have these conversations, says Lone.

    “These chats can feel awkward, but they don’t have to be. One way that works for a lot of people is to tell a story – whether it’s yours or someone else’s – to share, not shame.”
     
    The Financial Crime Prevention Network found people aged 50 years and older are a bit more common in scam victim data, but all age groups are affected.

    “Scams affect New Zealanders of all ages and backgrounds – not just older individuals or those who aren’t tech-savvy. While women are slightly more likely to fall victim, no one is immune” says Lone.

    So, yes, helping your mum with scam protections is a gift to her – but also a way to protect your whole whānau from messy financial fallout.

    Seven tips to share this Mother’s Day.

    Set up two-factor authentication for accounts like banking, email and social media. This extra layer of protection sends a code to your phone or email to log in. Make sure the phone number you give is a mobile – not a landline.

    Use a password manager. These tools store and generate strong passwords, so you don’t have to remember them.

    “You only need to remember one password, the ‘vault’ password,” says Lone. “And if you write it down, don’t label it. Just stash it away somewhere safe.”

    Don’t reuse passwords. A password manager makes it easy to create unique passwords for every site, limiting the amount of thinking you have to do.

    Avoid clicking links in emails or texts. “Even if it looks legit, go to the website directly instead of clicking a link that someone has sent you,” says Lone.

    Check that account names and numbers match. Major banks offer confirmation of payee, a service that can help make sure your money goes to the right person. If there’s a partial match, no match, or other issue, check the details and only pay if you’re sure they’re correct. If you proceed without a full match, you risk sending the money to the wrong account and may never get it back.

    Only buy from trusted sites and check the URL. Scammers often use social media marketplaces and create fake websites. According to the State of Scams in New Zealand 2024 report by New Zealand’s online safety organisation Netsafe and the Global Anti-Scam Alliance, scammers use Gmail, Facebook and WhatsApp as their go-to platforms.

    Make a family scam plan. “My mum and I agreed I’ll never contact her about money in writing, only in person. That gives us both peace of mind,” says Lone.

    And while you’re on the topic, take the opportunity to talk with the whole whānau about how they’d respond to a scam, including the following steps.

    If something feels off, act quickly. Contact your bank, report the incident to the National Cyber Security Centre’s response team, CERT NZ, and if needed, reach out to the police, a lawyer or the Banking Ombudsman Scheme.

    Go to Netsafe or CERT NZ for free scam information and support.

    Sign our Stamp out scams petition and help apply pressure to government to introduce a national scam framework in New Zealand that will hold businesses to account: https://consumernz.cmail19.com/t/i-l-fhildll-ijjdkdttjk-j/

    About Consumer

    Consumer NZ is an independent, non-profit organisation dedicated to championing and empowering consumers in Aotearoa. Consumer NZ has a reputation for being fair, impartial and providing comprehensive consumer information and advice.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Heritage – Welcome to the first Ōtautahi Festival of Archaeology

    Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga and the Christchurch Archaeology Project are joined by the heritage organisations, archaeology companies and museums of Ōtautahi to offer a fantastic range of archaeology themed activities at Te Whare Waiutuutu Kate Sheppard House in honour of New Zealand Archaeology Week.

    Try your hand at excavation, take part in archaeology themed activities and talk to archaeologists about their artefacts and work. Discover what it takes to be an archaeologist in this hands-on free family event.

    The festival is free and open to families and archaeology fans of all ages. Dr Katharine Watson of the Christchurch Archaeology Project says, “This is a chance to bring along any questions for archaeologists about what they do, the things they find, as well as any questions about archaeology as a career.”

    Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga has art activities inspired by experimental archaeology. Make sure to wear old clothes as you might get dirty while practising your excavation skills. Canterbury Museum’s stall will be displaying hands-on collection items and testing your knowledge of middens. Pūtaringamotu Riccarton House & Bush have artefacts discovered onsite, and will be holding story time sessions, complete with magnifying glasses and explorer hats. Test your knowledge of key Māori sites in Ōtautahi via an activity linked to Ngāi Tahu Archive’s Kā Huru Manu online atlas. And bring your library card so you can check out archaeology and history books at Christchurch City Library’s stall.

    There will be professional archaeologists onsite from Christchurch Archaeology Project, Underground Overground and the Department of Conservation. They will be displaying artefacts discovered on recent excavation sites in central Christchurch. Touch and hold these taonga and find out more about what has been discovered under our city. You’ll also have the chance to try on real archaeologist’s gear and equipment.

    Event organiser, Rosemary Baird, Senior Outreach Advisor for Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga, is excited about this new archaeology festival.

    “All our partners have been so creative in coming up with fun ideas for the day. We also have a Junior Archaeologist activity booklet that kids can get stamped at each activity. Once you have four stamps you can create your own Ōtautahi Festival of Archaeology badge with Canterbury Museum’s badge making machine. Event sponsors Charlies are providing free juice pouches for all visitors.”

    Te Whare Waiutuutu Kate Sheppard House suffrage museum will be open to paying visitors between 11am-3pm. The National Portrait Gallery’s exhibtion Background Matters: Portraiture and Place in Aotearoa, is also showing onsite. Entry to the art exhibition is free.

    Event information:

    Date: 11am-3pm, Saturday 10 May.

    Venue: Te Whare Waiutuutu Kate Sheppard House, 83 Clyde Road.

    Cancellation policy: The event is under tent cover and will go ahead unless the weather is very bad. Check the Facebook event or Eventbrite listing for cancellation.

    Cost: Free, koha appreciated.

    Parking: There is no parking onsite. Free parking is available in the University of Canterbury’s Arts Road carpark, which is a 5-minute walk from the property. Otherwise, take the 120 bus, which stops outside on Clyde Road.

    ABOUT HERITAGE NEW ZEALAND POUHERE TAONGA

    Heritage New Zealand Pouhere Taonga is the leading national historic heritage agency for Aotearoa New Zealand, operating as an autonomous Crown Entity. Our mission is to identify, protect, and promote heritage – Kia mōhiotia atu, kia tiakina, kia hāpaingia ā tātau taonga tuku iho.

    We actively engage with communities, foster partnerships, and provide valuable resources to support those who are passionate about exploring, learning, and connecting with our rich cultural heritage. For more information, please visit our website at www.heritage.org.nz

    ABOUT NEW ZEALAND ARCHAEOLOGY WEEK 2025

    This will be the ninth New Zealand Archaeology Week. The New Zealand Archaeological Association is working to increase public awareness and highlight the importance of protecting our archaeological heritage by promoting the work of New Zealand archaeologists both at home and abroad.

    New Zealand Archaeology Week 2025 will comprise of a variety of events around Aotearoa and content shared online. These events are being hosted by consultant archaeologists, museums, heritage organisations and iwi and will include public talks, historic walks, community events and displays across a number of regions.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Parliament Hansard Report – Tuesday, 6 May 2025 – Volume 783 – 001467

    Source: Govt’s austerity Budget to cause real harm in communities

    Question No. 8—Health

    8. Hon Dr AYESHA VERRALL (Labour) to the Minister of Health: Is his first priority as Health Minister still “focusing Health New Zealand on delivering the basics and achieving targets”; if so, why have wait times for first specialist assessment and elective treatments worsened?

    Hon SIMEON BROWN (Minister of Health): Yes, you cannot manage what you don’t measure, and that’s why this Government reinstated health targets: to drive accountability and ensure access to timely, quality healthcare. Too many New Zealanders are waiting too long for first specialist assessments and elective treatments, and addressing this is a priority. Wait-lists have been growing over several years. Despite an increase in elective procedures and first specialist assessments being completed last year, the rate at which people were being referred on to wait-lists continues to outpace the rate at which people were receiving treatment or being seen. However, I’m pleased to inform the member that Health New Zealand advises me that the number of patients waiting for a first specialist assessment in the week ending 13 April has reduced by over 8,000 since the first week of January.

    Hon Dr Ayesha Verrall: How can he expect others to be accountable for targets, if he doesn’t own up that there has been a 6 percent deterioration in first specialist assessments, and a 3 percent deterioration in elective treatments since the change of Government?

    Hon SIMEON BROWN: If we’re going to talk about percentages, we could talk about the 6,500 percent increase in the number of people waiting more than four months for a first specialist assessment when that party was in Government; or we could talk about the 2,500 percent increase in the number of people waiting for an elective treatment more than four months, while that party was in Government. The wait-list ballooned. We’ve put in place targets. Now we’re focusing the system on delivery so that people can get the healthcare they need in a timely and quality manner.

    Hon Dr Ayesha Verrall: Who does he expect to do the additional procedures, when Health New Zealand’s last quarterly workforce report shows 310 fewer nurses and 47 fewer doctors employed in our health system?

    Hon SIMEON BROWN: There are more doctors and more nurses working at Health New Zealand than in 2023. We’re investing in front-line services and we’re focusing on ensuring that we treat the patients and get the timely and quality access to healthcare that is needed. As I said in my primary answer, I’m pleased to inform the member that Health New Zealand advises me that the number of patients waiting for a first specialist assessment in the week ending 13 April has reduced by over 8,000 since the first week of January. That is progress. Because of the huge wait-list that we inherited, it’s going to take time to deliver. I’m focused on delivery.

    Hon Dr Ayesha Verrall: Does he stand by his statement “There is no such thing as a hiring freeze.”, or does he accept that official statistics now show hiring has been frozen?

    Hon SIMEON BROWN: There are more doctors and more nurses working at Health New Zealand today than there were in 2023. We’re investing in front-line health workforces and we’re focusing on delivery. We’re investing $16.68 billion over three Budgets, so we can invest in the front-line services that New Zealanders need.

    Rt Hon Winston Peters: Could the Minister confirm that with the last three answers on the statistical improvements that he gave in those answers, the primary question, or the questioner, was demonstrably, deliberately false?

    Hon SIMEON BROWN: We’re focused on delivery. We’re focused on outcomes. We have more doctors and more nurses working at Health New Zealand today than in 2023. We’re focused on outcomes. As I said in my primary answer, 8,000 fewer people are waiting on the first specialist assessment wait-list for the week ending 13 April than in the first week of January. That’s progress. We inherited massive wait-lists which ballooned under the previous Government, and we are focused on getting patients the care they need.

    Hon Dr Ayesha Verrall: Why did he try to blame senior doctors for longer waits for treatment, when it is his Government’s hiring freeze that means New Zealanders are going without the care they need?

    Hon SIMEON BROWN: I was very clear when it came to the union deciding to go on strike that they should have put the offer that was presented to them a week prior to the strike to their members to vote on, rather than going on a strike which has caused 4,300 elective treatments or first specialist assessments to be delayed. That’s unacceptable. We must put patients first.

    Debbie Ngarewa-Packer: Supplementary.

    SPEAKER: Question No. 9—just waiting for a bit of quiet.

    Debbie Ngarewa-Packer: Supplementary.

    SPEAKER: Oh, supplementary. Debbie Ngarewa-Packer.

    Debbie Ngarewa-Packer: Thank you. How does the ministry’s decision to remove ethnicity as a factor in wait-times align with his targets to reduce wait-times when Māori are still waiting longer for treatment than non-Māori?

    Hon SIMEON BROWN: Our Government is very clear: we are focusing on need and we’re focusing on making sure that we are ensuring that patients get the treatment they need in a timely and quality manner, and that applies to all New Zealanders.

    Debbie Ngarewa-Packer: Point of order. That was a mischaracterisation of the actual question. The question, which is an equity-based, policy-based, needs-based—

    Hon Judith Collins: Just ask the question.

    Debbie Ngarewa-Packer:—addresses Māori and Pacific Islanders, and there wasn’t actually an answer in that—thanks, Judith.

    SPEAKER: Well, the Minister could say the same thing again if he likes.

    Hon SIMEON BROWN: The Government is focusing the health system to treat people based on the needs that they have and ensuring that all New Zealanders can get the access to timely and quality healthcare.

    Debbie Ngarewa-Packer: Supplementary.

    Rt Hon Winston Peters: Supplementary question.

    SPEAKER: Supplementary—Debbie Ngarewa-Packer.

    Rt Hon Winston Peters: How did that go?

    SPEAKER: Because she was faster off her feet.

    Rt Hon Winston Peters: No, she wasn’t.

    SPEAKER: Yes, she was. I’m pretty sure. Debbie Ngarewa-Packer—it was like a blur; you could hardly see it.

    Debbie Ngarewa-Packer: Thank you. How will proposed cuts to Māori and Pacific health and immunisation providers, many of whom serve high needs and hard to reach whānau, achieve his target to increase immunisation rates for children to 95 percent at 24 months?

    Hon SIMEON BROWN: Well, this Government is very much focused on delivering on the basis of need. We continue to invest in providers who serve a variety of communities to ensure that we are reaching out into Māori and Pacific communities so that we can meet those targets. But as I said in the previous answer, we are focusing healthcare delivery on the basis of need so that all New Zealanders can access timely and quality healthcare.

    Rt Hon Winston Peters: Can I ask the Minister as to why on earth he hasn’t consulted with Ayesha Verrall, who’s an absolute expert on medical waiting lists and endless delays?

    SPEAKER: No. Is there another question?

    Debbie Ngarewa-Packer: Yes. How does his decision to cancel bowel cancer screening for Māori and Pasifika from the age of 50 align with his target of faster cancer treatment for 90 percent of patients when these groups have the highest rates of bowel cancer in the country with 18 percent of cases diagnosed under the age of 50?

    Hon SIMEON BROWN: Well, we’re focusing on, as I said, healthcare delivered on the basis of need. We are lowering the age for all New Zealanders to be able to access bowel cancer screening to the age of 58. We are also making targeted investments to target those communities—Māori, Pasifika, Asian communities—where they have lower bowel cancer screening rates, to lift those rates so that we can save as many lives as possible.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Parliament Hansard Report – Equal Pay Amendment Bill — In Committee—Part 1 – 001468

    Source: Govt’s austerity Budget to cause real harm in communities

    HELEN WHITE (Labour—Mt Albert): Thank you, Madam Chair. I was listening really carefully last night. The frustrations of these debates is that often we don’t take the discussion forward, so I want to do a little bit of that today, but I want to make sure that I’m mindful of what you’ve talked about in terms of bringing up new issues.

    One thing that came up last night is the issue of exceptional circumstances on the length of time that people are unable to take a claim. What we haven’t really heard is what is envisaged as exceptional circumstances and where it will apply. So I’ve been thinking about some of the cases I had where I was concerned about inequity and how it would apply in those circumstances. So I’ve got a couple of questions: I might take you through a few scenarios and ask you to explain how the new legislation will work.

    For example, I had one woman—the case has always haunted me. She was on very low pay and she had been a caregiver her entire career. She had actually worn herself out in the job by lifting, and her employer frustrated her employment because she could no longer lift patients. She would have been in her early 60s. So she was basically just given a termination notice over a time. A person like that—are they a person where they might be able to reopen for that group of people who are of that age? So they’re not going to be able to take a case in their late 60s, because they’re going to be terminated from their employment for a long time—are they a person who might have exceptional circumstances applied to them, because their career is ending, and it might end at a time which isn’t necessarily retirement time even?

    So how flexible is the rule going to be in terms of who can reopen the issue because, in fact, their personal circumstances are going to be affected. I heard a lot from the Minister about how we always had to think about the big systems and we weren’t concerned about the individuals. But obviously there’s a real balancing act, and when it comes to something like exceptional circumstances, that is where I’d expect the balancing act to take place.

    Now, a similar issue is one about opt-out provisions, because what I heard the Minister talk about was a system—I think this is clause 15—and this is an issue about who can opt out from a multi-employer claim. So take my woman that I’ve just given you—a real human, a multi-employer claim—with her particular provider of care services. Is that employer able to, halfway through a claim, think, “OK, I want to opt out of this claim.” So she’s relying upon a claim that’s being made by many employers at once, or going through a process with that.

    The employer that was employing her—are they allowed, under this, to actually leave, and, if so, my understanding is they don’t have to provide reasons as to why they leave, but they leave her high and dry because she’s no longer covered by the claim. It says that they’re allowed to leave without providing reasons, but it’s got to be based on reasonable grounds. Well, sorry, how do we know what grounds it’s based on if they never have to provide any reason? What’s the balance, what’s the check-in place that means that her employer can’t just walk away in the middle of something where that is the only process that she’s got, and not have reasonable grounds? How do we know that there are reasonable grounds?

    Then it says—my understanding is that the employer’s decision to opt out cannot be challenged by another party. So is that right? Are we saying that nobody can challenge [Time expired] Sorry, Madam Chair?

    CHAIRPERSON (Barbara Kuriger): Helen White. I’ll let Helen White finish her question, but please can you—

    HELEN WHITE: I’ll move on to one other point—

    CHAIRPERSON (Barbara Kuriger): Yeah, short call.

    HELEN WHITE: I hope that you’ve understood that point.

    I’d also just like to talk about—and I really, really, would genuinely like an answer over the issue of back-pay. What I got didn’t go far enough into the logic of the situation here. If you’ve got an embargo on the authority awarding back-pay, when that happens and somebody can’t award at the end—and my understanding from the Minister’s answer last night is you can still negotiate back-pay—isn’t the reality that we’re going to see more back-pay claims because there’s no stick, there’s nothing where somebody can award it? And so we’re going to have these people who have 10 years to go for their claim and they’re being discriminated against every one of those years, and it’s an accumulation of harm to them—they’re missing out on all the interest, they’re missing out on all the wages over that time, their KiwiSaver’s being affected, etc. And their employer’s going to go, “Well, what is in it for me, because I do not have to give you any form of back-pay, and you’ve missed out for a 10-year period, and all I have to do is commit on the last possible time I can in that process to something that doesn’t discriminate going forward, and then we’re locking in for another 10-year period before you can go for it again, so I can discriminate for the next 10 years.”

    Isn’t that the impact of what is happening, and what I’d like to know from the Minister is: if I’m right, because I’m pretty sure I am, then how is the Minister going to monitor the failure? I suspect what we’ll see is our equity claim change entirely. We’re going to see a wider gap. We’re going to see a wider Pasifika gap, we’re going to see a wider gap in pay. What is going to happen to make sure that if she’s so confident that this isn’t going to cause a problem—what is going to happen in two years? Are we going to see a monitoring of this situation by the Minister to see whether that gap’s growing again, because I’m pretty sure we are going to see a gap growing.

    I appreciate the Minister saying it’s very confusing at the moment because we do deal with this in bargaining, as if it’s illegitimate to deal with in bargaining, but we’re not going to necessarily know. Well, what’s the other side of that coin? What processes are being put in place to look at this gap and measure the gap in other ways so that there can be an intervention, and I’m going to go right back and say, “Is this an exceptional circumstance, where we see the gap?”—where somebody like the woman from AUT, who’s the academic in this area and is measuring the gap, sees the gap grow and says to the Minister, “Actually, it’s happening in this sector.” Is that an exceptional circumstance where we might open again, because it seems to me that New Zealand women are going to pay the price for 10 years and then they’re never going to be able to claim back? And this is going to happen. So there’s going to be an adjustment every 10 years, with weak bargaining power, not strong bargaining power—actually, artificially weakened bargaining power. Because under the old law, under the 1970s law, they could’ve claimed the lot. They could have actually gone out and claimed the lot, and what we’ve done is we’ve robbed them today.

    So can I please have an answer to those various questions? I appreciate the time that I’ve been given. Thank you.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Parliament Hansard Report – Tuesday, 6 May 2025 (continued on Wednesday, 7 May 2025) – Volume 783 – 001469

    Source: Govt’s austerity Budget to cause real harm in communities

    HELEN WHITE (Labour—Mt Albert): Thank you, Madam Chair. I was listening really carefully last night. The frustrations of these debates is that often we don’t take the discussion forward, so I want to do a little bit of that today, but I want to make sure that I’m mindful of what you’ve talked about in terms of bringing up new issues.

    One thing that came up last night is the issue of exceptional circumstances on the length of time that people are unable to take a claim. What we haven’t really heard is what is envisaged as exceptional circumstances and where it will apply. So I’ve been thinking about some of the cases I had where I was concerned about inequity and how it would apply in those circumstances. So I’ve got a couple of questions: I might take you through a few scenarios and ask you to explain how the new legislation will work.

    For example, I had one woman—the case has always haunted me. She was on very low pay and she had been a caregiver her entire career. She had actually worn herself out in the job by lifting, and her employer frustrated her employment because she could no longer lift patients. She would have been in her early 60s. So she was basically just given a termination notice over a time. A person like that—are they a person where they might be able to reopen for that group of people who are of that age? So they’re not going to be able to take a case in their late 60s, because they’re going to be terminated from their employment for a long time—are they a person who might have exceptional circumstances applied to them, because their career is ending, and it might end at a time which isn’t necessarily retirement time even?

    So how flexible is the rule going to be in terms of who can reopen the issue because, in fact, their personal circumstances are going to be affected. I heard a lot from the Minister about how we always had to think about the big systems and we weren’t concerned about the individuals. But obviously there’s a real balancing act, and when it comes to something like exceptional circumstances, that is where I’d expect the balancing act to take place.

    Now, a similar issue is one about opt-out provisions, because what I heard the Minister talk about was a system—I think this is clause 15—and this is an issue about who can opt out from a multi-employer claim. So take my woman that I’ve just given you—a real human, a multi-employer claim—with her particular provider of care services. Is that employer able to, halfway through a claim, think, “OK, I want to opt out of this claim.” So she’s relying upon a claim that’s being made by many employers at once, or going through a process with that.

    The employer that was employing her—are they allowed, under this, to actually leave, and, if so, my understanding is they don’t have to provide reasons as to why they leave, but they leave her high and dry because she’s no longer covered by the claim. It says that they’re allowed to leave without providing reasons, but it’s got to be based on reasonable grounds. Well, sorry, how do we know what grounds it’s based on if they never have to provide any reason? What’s the balance, what’s the check-in place that means that her employer can’t just walk away in the middle of something where that is the only process that she’s got, and not have reasonable grounds? How do we know that there are reasonable grounds?

    Then it says—my understanding is that the employer’s decision to opt out cannot be challenged by another party. So is that right? Are we saying that nobody can challenge [Time expired] Sorry, Madam Chair?

    CHAIRPERSON (Barbara Kuriger): Helen White. I’ll let Helen White finish her question, but please can you—

    HELEN WHITE: I’ll move on to one other point—

    CHAIRPERSON (Barbara Kuriger): Yeah, short call.

    HELEN WHITE: I hope that you’ve understood that point.

    I’d also just like to talk about—and I really, really, would genuinely like an answer over the issue of back-pay. What I got didn’t go far enough into the logic of the situation here. If you’ve got an embargo on the authority awarding back-pay, when that happens and somebody can’t award at the end—and my understanding from the Minister’s answer last night is you can still negotiate back-pay—isn’t the reality that we’re going to see more back-pay claims because there’s no stick, there’s nothing where somebody can award it? And so we’re going to have these people who have 10 years to go for their claim and they’re being discriminated against every one of those years, and it’s an accumulation of harm to them—they’re missing out on all the interest, they’re missing out on all the wages over that time, their KiwiSaver’s being affected, etc. And their employer’s going to go, “Well, what is in it for me, because I do not have to give you any form of back-pay, and you’ve missed out for a 10-year period, and all I have to do is commit on the last possible time I can in that process to something that doesn’t discriminate going forward, and then we’re locking in for another 10-year period before you can go for it again, so I can discriminate for the next 10 years.”

    Isn’t that the impact of what is happening, and what I’d like to know from the Minister is: if I’m right, because I’m pretty sure I am, then how is the Minister going to monitor the failure? I suspect what we’ll see is our equity claim change entirely. We’re going to see a wider gap. We’re going to see a wider Pasifika gap, we’re going to see a wider gap in pay. What is going to happen to make sure that if she’s so confident that this isn’t going to cause a problem—what is going to happen in two years? Are we going to see a monitoring of this situation by the Minister to see whether that gap’s growing again, because I’m pretty sure we are going to see a gap growing.

    I appreciate the Minister saying it’s very confusing at the moment because we do deal with this in bargaining, as if it’s illegitimate to deal with in bargaining, but we’re not going to necessarily know. Well, what’s the other side of that coin? What processes are being put in place to look at this gap and measure the gap in other ways so that there can be an intervention, and I’m going to go right back and say, “Is this an exceptional circumstance, where we see the gap?”—where somebody like the woman from AUT, who’s the academic in this area and is measuring the gap, sees the gap grow and says to the Minister, “Actually, it’s happening in this sector.” Is that an exceptional circumstance where we might open again, because it seems to me that New Zealand women are going to pay the price for 10 years and then they’re never going to be able to claim back? And this is going to happen. So there’s going to be an adjustment every 10 years, with weak bargaining power, not strong bargaining power—actually, artificially weakened bargaining power. Because under the old law, under the 1970s law, they could’ve claimed the lot. They could have actually gone out and claimed the lot, and what we’ve done is we’ve robbed them today.

    So can I please have an answer to those various questions? I appreciate the time that I’ve been given. Thank you.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Murder charge laid in Waiuku homicide

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Police have today charged a man with murder in the Waiuku homicide investigation launched in early April.

    Judith Rose Cunniffe, 54, was located deceased in a vehicle on 11 April.

    A 50-year-old man was arrested at the time and was initially charged with male assaults female.

    Detective Senior Sergeant Kevin Tiernan, of Counties Manukau CIB, says enquiries by the homicide investigation team have been ongoing since that time.

    “The 50-year-old has been remanded in custody since his first appearance, and has today been charged with murder,” he says.

    “He will appear on this charge at his next court appearance in Pukekohe today.”

    Police are not seeking anyone else in connection with the investigation.

    ENDS.

    Jarred Williamson/NZ Police

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Sex life of rare snail revealed

    Source: Police investigating after shots fired at Hastings house

    Date:  07 May 2025

    In the video, a small egg, resembling a tiny hen’s egg, emerges from the neck of the unique land snail.

    DOC has been managing a captive population of the threatened snails in chilled containers in Hokitika since 2006, when mining company Solid Energy started mining their habitat on the Mt Augustus ridgeline on the western side of the Stockton Plateau, near Westport.

    DOC Ranger Lisa Flanagan, who filmed the egg being laid, has been looking after the snails in Hokitika for over 12 years. She says working with the snails isn’t the kind of job she ever imagined herself doing, but it’s constantly providing surprises.

    “It’s remarkable that in all the time we’ve spent caring for the snails, this is the first time we’ve seen one lay an egg. We caught the action when we were weighing the snail. We turned it over to be weighed and saw the egg just starting to emerge from the snail.”

    DOC Senior Science Advisor Kath Walker says having a hard shell in which to retreat from predators and dry conditions is a great strategy for the snails but brings some problems too – how to get sperm from your mate into your shell and any resultant eggs out!

    “Powelliphanta have solved this by having an opening (a genital pore) on the right side of their body just below their head so that the snail only needs to peek out of its shell to do the business.

    “It extends its penis out of this pore and into its mate’s pore, and its mate does the same, simultaneously exchanging sperm, which they can store until they each fertilise the sperm they’ve received to create eggs.

    “As hermaphrodites, they have both male and female genitalia, so although they usually mate with another to cross fertilize their eggs, as carnivores which have to live at relatively low density, being able to occasionally self-fertilise must help with survival of the species.”

    The captive management of Powelliphanta augusta snails has saved these animals from extinction and enabled us to learn more about the lives of these incredible creatures, which are only found in New Zealand.

    Very little was known about the snails when they were taken into captivity, and we are discovering new things all the time, says Lisa.

    “I just love watching their progress each month, weighing them, how their shells develop, and all the interesting things they do.

    “Powelliphanta augusta are slow growing and long lived, not being sexually mature until they are about 8 years old and then laying only around 5 big eggs annually which can take more than a year to hatch. Some of our captive snails are between 25 and 30 years old – in this they’re polar opposites to the pest garden snail we introduced to New Zealand which is like a weed, with thousands of offspring each year and a short life.”

    DOC has established new populations of the snail in the wild and reintroduced them into new and rehabilitated habitat. Work is ongoing to ensure a sustainable population in these areas. A captive population will be managed until there is confidence of the survival of the species in the wild.

    Aotearoa has one of the highest numbers of threatened and at risk species in the world. Once these species are gone, they are gone for good.

    Contact

    For media enquiries contact:

    Email: media@doc.govt.nz

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Name release: Fatal crash, Central Otago

    Source: New Zealand Police

    Police can now name the man who died in a single-vehicle crash on Bannockburn Road on 17 February.

    He was William Booth, 33, from Nevis.

    Police extends our sympathies to his family and friends during this difficult time.

    Enquiries into the crash are ongoing.

    ENDS

    Issued by Police Media Centre

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Unemployment data shows real weakness behind the headline rate

    Source:

    Unemployment data released today by Statistics New Zealand shows ongoing weakness in the labour market, with falling employment, falling hours of work, and nearly half of all workers getting a pay rise less than inflation, said NZCTU Te Kauae Kaimahi Economist Craig Renney.

    “While the unemployment rate number stayed at 5.1%, the number of people working full-time fell by 45,000 while the number working part-time increased by 25,000. People can’t find all the work they need to get by,” said Renney.

    “This data demonstrates that there are now 37,000 more unemployed people than at the last election. Māori unemployment is now at 10.5% and Pacific unemployment is at 10.8%. Employment fell in manufacturing, construction, retail, education, and health care. There are now nearly 3 million fewer hours being worked in the economy.

    “The weakness of current economic growth is also being reflected in the wage data. Total weekly gross earnings rose by less than inflation at 2.4% annually. 41% of workers saw no pay rise at all. It’s clear that workers are struggling to get the wage increases they need to keep up with the cost of living.

    “Youth unemployment continues to rise. There are now 70,700 15–24-year-olds unemployed and 96,600 are not in employment, education or training. There is no plan to help these younger workers, and they are bearing the brunt of employment change.

    “Without changes to the Government’s economic approach, things will likely get worse. In 2022 New Zealand was sixth in the OECD rankings for unemployment. We are now 18th.

    “The Budget this month will likely see forecasts of unemployment rising in the future. It’s time to change course and deliver policies that ensure good work and fair pay for all,” said Renney.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Govt for the rich is failing the unemployed

    Source: It’s time to fix the secondary teacher shortage

    The latest job market statistics show that unemployed people are being failed by a Government more focused on punishing the poor than creating jobs.

    “This Government for the rich is failing unemployed people and fuelling poverty,” says the Green Party’s spokesperson for Social Development and Employment, Ricardo Menéndez March.

    “The economy belongs to us, we can build it for us. We can ensure people have stable employment and incomes instead of slashing jobs and cutting back on support for those trying to find work. 

    “The Ministry of Social Development has recently admitted their frontline capacity is oversubscribed and unable to properly support people due to the punitive sanctions regime the Government has brought in. 

    “There’s no evidence that sanctions work in helping people into jobs, and it’s clear the Government has no plan for supporting those who are struggling the most. 

    “As the unemployment rate remains high, the Government is preparing an austerity Budget and rushing through legislation to stop pay equity claims, while also passing new laws to create more arbitrary sanctions on beneficiaries.

    “All of this is part of the plan to fund tax cuts for the rich and profit from the poverty growing in our communities. 

    “The Green Party will repeal all benefit sanctions and lift income support to ensure unemployed people are supported to find work. We will build an economy that works for all of us, not just a wealthy few. We look forward to sharing this vision with Aotearoa soon with our Green Budget,” says Ricardo Menéndez March.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Global: Choosing singlehood? Here are 5 tips for thriving while being single

    Source: The Conversation – Canada – By Yuthika Girme, Associate Professor, Department of Psychology, Simon Fraser University

    Many people spend their 20s and 30s figuring out who they are and building a life as an independent adult. At the same time, society often tells them they should be looking for love, settling down and starting a family. These milestones are still widely seen as markers of adulthood and success.

    But what does this mean for the growing number of singles in their 20s and 30s?

    In Canada, singlehood among young adults has been steadily increasing. Despite these changing trends, cultural narratives continue to centre romantic relationships as the ideal. Being single is still often seen as a temporary stage, rather than a legitimate or fulfilling way of life.

    As an associate professor, I lead the Singlehood Experiences and Complexities Underlying Relationships lab at Simon Fraser University. My research focuses on understanding when single and coupled people can thrive and be happy.

    Here is what I’ve learned over the years about the experiences of single adults in their 20s and 30s.


    Ready to make a change? The Quarter Life Glow-up is a new, six-week newsletter course from The Conversation’s UK and Canada editions. Every week, we’ll bring you research-backed advice and tools to help improve your relationships, your career, your free time and your mental health – no supplements or skincare required. Sign up here to start your glow-up at any time.


    Singlehood is increasingly common

    In Canada, 59.8 per cent of 25- to 29-year-olds and 37.6 per cent of 30 to 34-year-olds report not being in a married or common-law relationship.

    The proportion of 20- to 34-year-olds who are not in such relationships increased to 60.3 per cent in 2021 from 50.5 per cent in 1996.

    Even among those who eventually want a committed relationship, many are delaying these decisions. The average age of marriage in Canada has increased by almost eight years since the 1970s, to 31.2 years old in 2020 from 23.3 years old in 1971.

    These trends may reflect a variety of factors: a greater focus on career development, wanting to prioritize travel, having difficulties with dating or simply a preference for singlehood during early adulthood.

    They may also reflect an increasing number of people who identify as “single at heart” and consciously choose to remain single because they value their freedom and solitude.

    The pressure to partner persists

    Despite the growing number of people in their 20s and 30s who are single, whether by choice or circumstance, the societal pressure to partner up and settle down persists. This is largely because our society focuses heavily on coupling, marriage and having children.

    Certainly, wanting romantic partnership and a family are common and valid life choices. But placing romantic relationships on a pedestal can come at the expense of singlehood.

    Single people are often viewed as incomplete simply because they do not have a partner. A research study I conducted with colleagues shows that single people often feel excluded, left out and pitied for being single, which can undermine their well-being. They may also face negative stereotypes, such as being seen as selfish, heartless, loners or antisocial.




    Read more:
    Would you be happy as a long-term single? The answer may depend on your attachment style


    These cultural narratives don’t just come from society — single people can internalize them, too, which can have negative consequences.

    In another research study, we examined what we call “relationship pedestal beliefs” — the extent to which people believe they need to be in a romantic relationship to be truly happy. We found that singles who endorse these beliefs are more likely to fear being single, and in turn, report lower life satisfaction.

    How to be a thriving single?

    How can singles lead happy, secure and satisfying lives, despite facing societal messages about the importance of romantic relationships?

    To explore this question, my colleagues and I reviewed the existing literature on singlehood to better understand when singles are coping versus thriving. We found that, while some single people struggle with solo living and the desire to partner, many are happy and thriving.

    Here are some factors associated with happy singlehood:

    1. Feeling secure with yourself. Single people who are secure and feel comfortable trusting and depending on close relationships are some of the happiest singles. They report the highest levels of life satisfaction and emotion regulation skills. Secure singles are open to the idea of romantic partnership, but are also happy and comfortable being single.

    2. Having supportive friendships. Single people tend to invest in their friendships more than partnered people. Single people who invest in their friendships feel like they belong, report higher self-esteem and are happier with their single status.

    Single people tend to invest in their friendships more than partnered people.
    (Shutterstock)
    1. Being able to meet your needs for intimacy. Single people still have sexual and intimacy needs. Research show that when single adults are able to meet these needs, they are happier being single and desire romantic relationships less. At the same time, sexually satisfied singles are more likely to enter romantic relationships over time.

    2. Being older. As people approach their 40s, they are happier with being single. This is likely because singles in midlife learn to invest in their single lives and are less likely to feel the pressure to conform to societal expectations.

    3. Holding values that prioritize freedom, fun and creativity. Research shows single people who personally value freedom, fun and creativity report greater happiness.

    Being single in one’s 20s and 30s can be a prominent time for people to focus on their self-development, careers, aspirations and relationships with family, friends and community. These are important building blocks to a happy live — regardless of whether people lead their lives single or choose to partner.

    Yuthika Girme receives funding from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

    – ref. Choosing singlehood? Here are 5 tips for thriving while being single – https://theconversation.com/choosing-singlehood-here-are-5-tips-for-thriving-while-being-single-254669

    MIL OSI – Global Reports –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Saskatchewan Proclaims Correctional Services Appreciation Day

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    Released on May 6, 2025

    The Government of Saskatchewan has proclaimed May 6, 2025 as Correctional Services Appreciation Day. This day recognizes the hard work and dedication of correctional employees who provide custody, supervision and rehabilitation services to adult and youth offenders in Saskatchewan.

    “Correctional services staff carry out challenging and demanding work every day,” Corrections, Policing and Public Safety Minister Tim McLeod, K.C., said. “Their hard work often goes unnoticed but plays a significant role in helping to keep our communities safe. Today, we take this opportunity to honour these everyday heroes and thank them for their service to the people of Saskatchewan.” 

    Correctional Services encompass a broad range of expertise, programs and positions that collectively work together to rehabilitate offenders, decrease reoffending, support offender reintegration efforts and maintain safety in provincial correctional facilities. There are approximately 2,400 provincial correctional officers, probation officers, facility youth workers and community youth workers in Saskatchewan.

    “From custody to community services, these outstanding employees manage complex situations and help people turn their lives around,” McLeod said. “We recognize their dedication and we thank them for their contribution to safer facilities and communities across the province.”

    To celebrate, local appreciation events will be held in correctional facilities and community corrections offices across the province. Minister McLeod also welcomed Correctional Services employees to the Legislative Building to thank them for their service and to present the Minister’s Award for Excellence. This award is provided annually to acknowledge outstanding work and innovation within Corrections. This year’s award recipients were the team from Paul Dojack Youth Centre for their research and implementation of EQ2. EQ2 is a trauma-informed training and support program designed to help staff build the essential and complex social and emotional regulation skills necessary to successfully rehabilitate at-risk youth. 

    -30-

    For more information, contact:

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Attorney General Alan Wilson defends Second Amendment, urges Supreme Court to hear key gun rights caseRead More

    Source: US State of South Carolina

    (COLUMBIA, S.C.) – South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson today joined 26 states and the Arizona Legislature in filing a friend-of-the-court brief urging the U.S. Supreme Court to hear Wolford v. Lopez, a major Second Amendment case out of Hawaii. The brief, led by Montana and Idaho, asks the Court to overturn a Ninth Circuit ruling that severely limits law-abiding citizens’ right to carry firearms in public spaces. 

    “This case is about ensuring the Second Amendment is not treated as a second-class right,” said Attorney General Wilson. “If left in place, Hawaii’s law sets a dangerous precedent by flipping the burden, presuming carrying a firearm in public is unlawful unless expressly allowed. That directly contradicts our Constitution and threatens to eliminate the public’s right to self-defense in everyday places.” 

    At issue is Hawaii’s Act 52, which broadly prohibits public carry of firearms in so-called “sensitive places,” including parks, beaches, and restaurants serving alcohol. It also bans carrying on private property that is open to the public unless the property owner gives explicit permission. 

    The amicus brief argues that: 

    • The Ninth Circuit’s decision creates a direct split with the Second Circuit, which struck down a nearly identical New York law as unconstitutional.
    • Hawaii’s law is not supported by a historical tradition of firearms regulation as required under Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n v. Bruen (2022).
    • The state’s sweeping restrictions go far beyond what the Founders would have recognized and attempt to sidestep the constitutional right to carry by redefining vast public areas as “sensitive places.”

    “The Constitution guarantees that law-abiding Americans have the right to protect themselves,” Attorney General Wilson continued. “We cannot allow activist courts or overreaching legislatures to strip away those rights through creative legal maneuvers. This case is an opportunity for the Supreme Court to set the record straight.” 

    The coalition urges the Court to grant certiorari and reverse the Ninth Circuit, reinforcing the principle that the Second Amendment protects the right to carry a firearm in public for lawful self-defense. 

    A copy of the amicus brief is available here.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Foreign Investors in Steamboat Springs Marriott Hotels (JF40) Project Obtain Conditional Green Card Approval

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    WASHINGTON, May 06, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — EB5 Capital is pleased to announce the first individual I-526E petition approval for an investor in its Steamboat Springs Marriott Hotels (JF40) project. An I-526E approval is a significant step in the EB-5 immigration process as it qualifies the investor and their eligible immediate family members for conditional permanent residency in the United States. The approved petition was filed in September 2024 and was pending for approximately 7.5 months.

    Steamboat Springs Marriott Hotels (JF40) is the development of a dual-branded Marriott hotel nestled atop Steamboat Mountain in Steamboat Springs, Colorado. The Project consists of a 103-room upscale SpringHill Suites, and a 77-room extended-stay TownePlace Suites. EB5 Capital raised capital from 37 investors, representing a variety of nationalities, to finance a portion of the capital stack. The project is one of 14 hotel developments in EB5 Capital’s portfolio.

    “We are pleased to have received the first I-526E approval for this project so quickly,” said Molly FitzGerald, Vice President of Investor Communications and Engagement at EB5 Capital. “This milestone underscores our commitment to providing exceptional EB-5 qualifying investment opportunities to investors.”

    To date, EB5 Capital has raised investor funds across over 40 EB-5 projects throughout the United States. JF40 is EB5 Capital’s 33rd project which has reached the conditional green card stage for foreign investors going through the EB-5 immigration process. Now that the first petition has been approved, additional I-526E petition adjudications for this project are expected in the coming months.

    About EB5 Capital

    EB5 Capital provides qualified foreign investors with opportunities to invest in job-creating commercial real estate projects under the United States Immigrant Investor Program (EB-5 Visa Program). Headquartered in Washington, D.C., EB5 Capital’s distinguished track record and leadership in the industry has attracted investors from over 75 countries. As one of the oldest and most active Regional Center operators in the country, the firm has raised over $1.3 billion of foreign capital across approximately 45 EB-5 projects. 100% of our investors’ funds are protected by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insurance prior to their deployment into our projects. Please visit www.eb5capital.com for more information.

    Contact:
    Katherine Willis
    Director, Marketing & Communications
    media@eb5capital.com

    The MIL Network –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Xbox showcases Asian and Pacific Islander voices enriching the gaming world

    Source: Microsoft

    Headline: Xbox showcases Asian and Pacific Islander voices enriching the gaming world

    Summary

    • Celebrating API Culture and Creativity: Xbox honors the rich cultural heritage and creativity of Asian and Pacific Islander communities, showcasing how these diverse voices have enriched the gaming world. 
    • Highlighting Games Inspired by API Heritage: Discover games like Tchia and Ecco the Dolphin, which draw inspiration from API cultures and the importance of protecting the environment, providing players with an immersive experience of the Pacific Islands. 
    • Supporting API Creators in Gaming: Xbox continues to support and amplify API voices in the gaming industry, ensuring their stories and contributions inspire future generations and promote a deeper understanding of both cultural heritage and ocean conservation. 

    The Pacific Islands are defined by the deep connection between the land, sea, and the people who call it home. The ocean isn’t just a backdrop; it’s central to the identity, culture, and spiritual life of Pacific Islander communities. However, with rising sea levels threatening these islands, this vital connection is at risk. Coastal erosion, infrastructure damage, and the loss of cultural heritage sites are just a few of the challenges these communities face. 

    Through gaming, we have a unique opportunity to immerse ourselves in these cultures, raise awareness, and foster a collective commitment to preserving them. 

    Games like Ecco the Dolphin provide a way to engage players with environmental themes, teaching the importance of ocean conservation. Released in 1992, Ecco allowed players to experience the wonders of the ocean, while also highlighting the need to protect marine ecosystems. This month, we’re thrilled to share an exclusive interview with Ed Annunziata, where he announces a brand new Ecco the Dolphin game in development and reflects on the inspiration behind Ecco and the game’s lasting impact on environmental storytelling in gaming.

    For creator Ed Annunziata, the goal was simple: “I wanted to create a game that sparked curiosity and respect for the ocean.” 

    Today, games like Tchia, inspired by the creators’ childhood in New Caledonia, carry on that message. The game lets players explore a beautiful island world filled with vibrant landscapes and cultural heritage, offering a unique window into the richness of Pacific Islander life hoping to inspire a deeper understanding of Pacific Islander culture and the need to protect these environments. 

    Xbox is proud to celebrate Asian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month by highlighting games that we hope inspire the next generation to take global action. Together, we can raise awareness and work to preserve these vital cultures and communities for future generations. Join us in creating A Wave of Change. 

    Discover Games Shaped by the Asian and Pacific Islander Community 

    This May, immerse yourself in a curated collection of games that highlight the incredible creativity and storytelling from API developers and creators. These games offer a window into the vibrant cultures of the Pacific Islands and Asian communities, showcasing how their unique perspectives have enriched the gaming world. 

    Check out a few highlights from our full Xbox Game Collections celebrating Asian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month: 

    Tchia  – Join Tchia on her tropical open-world adventure as she sets off to rescue her father from the cruel tyrant, Meavora, ruler of the archipelago. Climb, glide, swim, and sail your boat around beautiful islands as you explore a physics-driven sandbox. Face the fabric soldiers created by Meavora in open encounters where your creativity gives you the edge. Take control of any animal or object you can find, make new friends and jam on your fully playable Ukulele. A poetic coming-of-age story inspired by New Caledonia.
     
    Play Tchia Today

    Windbound – Shipwrecked on an uncharted island, explore, adapt and navigate the land and seas to stay alive. You are a warrior, caught at sea and tossed on to the shores of a mysterious paradise. With no boat, food or tools, just the will to survive, craft tools and weapons to hunt and defend yourself against nature itself. Explore and secrets of the past are revealed.

    Play Windbound Today

    Coral Island – Coral Island is a vibrant, laid-back reimagining of farm sims. Be who you want and experience enchanting island living at your own pace. Live off the land, tend animals, build relationships with a diverse cast of townsfolk, and make the world a more harmonious place.

    Play Coral Island Today

    Summer in Mara – Take care of your own island and explore the ocean in this farming adventure. Summer in Mara mixes farming, crafting and exploring mechanics in a tropical archipelago with a colorful style and strong narrative. Unravel the mystery and find your way home.

    Play Summer in Mara Today

    Discover Movies highlighting Asian and Pacific Islander Cultures on Xbox:

    Moana 2 – Walt Disney Animation Studios’ animated musical reunites Moana and Maui three years later for an expansive new voyage alongside a crew of unlikely seafarers. After hearing from her wayfinding ancestors, Moana must journey into long-lost waters for an adventure. Warning: Some flashing-lights scenes in this film may affect photosensitive viewers. 

    Watch Moana 2 Today

    Raya and the Last Dragon – Walt Disney Animation Studios’ “Raya and the Last Dragon” travels to the fantasy world of Kumandra, where humans and dragons lived together in harmony long ago. But when an evil force threatened the land, the dragons sacrificed themselves to save humanity. Now, 500 years later, that same evil has returned and it’s up to a lone warrior, Raya, to track down the legendary last dragon to restore the fractured land and its divided people. 

    Watch Raya and the Last Dragon Today

    Lilo & Stitch – On the lush and tropical Hawaiian Islands, an independent little girl named Lilo adopts what she thinks is an innocent puppy, completely unaware that he is a mischievous creature who has escaped from a faraway planet. 

    Watch Lilo & Stitch Today

    Big Hero 6 – From Walt Disney Animation Studios comes an action-packed comedy adventure about robotics prodigy Hiro Hamada and his personal companion robot Baymax, who team up with a band of unlikely heroes to save the city of San Fransokyo from a criminal plot. 

    Watch Big Hero 6 Today

    Spotlighting Ecco the Dolphin Creator Ed Annunziata

    Q: Ecco the Dolphin has been praised for raising awareness about ocean conservation. What inspired you to use a video game to communicate such an important environmental message, and what do you hope players take away from their experience in the ocean world you created? 
     
    A: Long ago, back in the 8-bit days, I used to make educational games for the Apple II. I knew even then the potential of games to enlighten. I made a bunch of games in 6502 Assembler, or my favorite, Machine Language.

    Eventually, I got to work on ‘Voyage of the Mimi’, a TV show about a young boy (Ben Affleck at 12) and his grandfather, who studied whale migration on his boat, Mimi. It was a great show, and I got to work on the Apple II science games that went along with it.

    Once I started learning about whales (and making games about them), I became obsessed with the subject matter.

    I read everything I could get my hands on. No internet, only libraries and books that I purchased from bookstores. Like the novel, ‘The Sounding’, by Hank Searls. This story was from the point of view of a sperm whale. I was enthralled by the notion that not only were these creatures sentient but probably as smart as we are! 

    My heart was always in video games, even though I made learning games for a living at the time. I started to dream about a game where you experience life as a dolphin. I chose a dolphin because I figured it’s as close to a person as all the whales. But when I considered the actual play mechanics, I had to prototype it. 

    Q: The Pacific Islander community holds a deep spiritual and practical connection to the ocean, which is central to their culture. How do you think games like Ecco the Dolphin can help players understand the significance of ocean preservation and the cultures that rely on it?

    A: Imagine a culture connected directly to the ocean’s ecosystems over generations. Growing and evolving together, humans contribute to the ecosystem rather than taxing it. Over time, they would learn about all the ocean cycles and how to get into sync with them. Anything that fosters a connection between humans and the ocean should be enthusiastically embraced. 

    Q: As a pioneer in the gaming industry, what role do you think the gaming community plays in raising awareness about global issues like environmental sustainability, particularly when it comes to protecting ocean ecosystems? 

    A: If I may be forthright with my bias about gamers. I feel gamers possess a higher than average IQ than the average human. Not only because they are frequently fully engaged and challenged mentally with real-time systems and information technology, but they are highly socially connected as well. Like the ocean, a gaming community is an ecosystem – games like Ecco can and should be a conduit to join these realms.

    A big part of the game is understanding the ocean as a singular biological system that is made up of systems that interact with each other. This is a complex biological dance that humans can be a part of.  

    I have high expectations of gamers for all the above-stated reasons. But there is something else gamers possess that can make the difference, and that is love. A universal love of games and gaming gives us all something we all share, when games like Ecco reach the hearts of gaming communities, that love can really make things happen in the real world.  

    Q: What does the future hold for gaming’s favorite Dolphin?  

    A: Me and the entire original team are going to Remaster the original Ecco the Dolphin and Tides of Time games. Then we will make a new, third game with contemporary play and GPU sensibilities. Stay tuned to eccothedolphin.com

    Gaming with Impact  

    Rewards members in the United States can earn and donate points to organizations supporting Asian and Pacific Islander communities with Xbox. The organizations below will be available on the Rewards hub: 

    • Asian Americans Advancing Justice | AAJC – AAJC works through strategic policy advocacy, active community education, and impactful litigation to advance the civil and human rights of Asian Americans and to build and promote a fair and equitable society for all. 
    • AAPI Equity Alliance – AAPI Equity Alliance (AAPI Equity) is dedicated to improving the lives of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders through civic engagement, capacity building, and policy advocacy. 
    • Stop AAPI Hate – Stop AAPI Hate advances equity & justice by dismantling systemic racism & building a multiracial movement to end anti-Asian American & Pacific Islander hate through community empowerment, solidarity & advocacy for comprehensive solutions. 

    Xbox players 18 and older can earn Rewards points in various ways, such as playing games, completing Game Pass Quests (terms apply), and purchasing games and other eligible items at the Microsoft Store (exclusions apply). Start earning for impact today and redeem your points for great rewards. Donate your points on the Rewards hub or on the Rewards redeem page. 

    Wallpapers and Dynamic Backgrounds 

    The Xbox Asian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month design is available today as an Xbox wallpaper and dynamic background on console – follow these steps to apply the dynamic background:  

    • Press the Xbox button on your controller to open the guide.  
    • Select Profile & system > Settings > General > Personalization > My background > Dynamic backgrounds.  

    You can choose between Games, Xbox, or Abstract dynamic backgrounds. Choose the background art that you want with the A button. 

    MIL OSI Economics –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Extra care housing scheme is laying the foundations for independent living

    Source: City of Leeds

    Construction work is under way on an extra care housing scheme that will open up new independent living opportunities for older people in Leeds.

    Leeds City Council’s Middlecross development in Armley will provide a total of 65 high-quality and energy efficient apartments for affordable rent by people aged over 55 with care and support needs.

    The homes – which are being built for the council by Morgan Sindall Construction – will complement wider efforts to address a serious shortage of extra care housing in the city.

    Part of Leeds’s Council Housing Growth Programme (CHGP), the scheme will also benefit the Armley community by breathing new life into a two-acre brownfield site that has lain empty for several years.

    And, to mark the start of construction, the council’s executive member for housing, Councillor Jess Lennox, paid a visit to the site to meet some of the project team and see the early progress that has been made there.

    Councillor Lennox was joined by representatives from the West Yorkshire Combined Authority, which has contributed £1.3m from its Brownfield Housing Fund towards the cost of the scheme.

    A further £1.3m has been drawn from Leeds’s commuted sums funding stream, which supports affordable housing delivery using pooled financial contributions paid by developers as part of planning agreements.

    The rest of the funding for the project – due for completion in 2027 – has come from the council’s housing service via Right to Buy receipts and borrowing.

    The scheme’s three-storey apartment building has been designed to encourage everyday social interaction as well as independent living, with a restaurant, a hair salon and an open-plan lounge and coffee bar among the communal spaces that will be available to residents.

    Sustainability and energy efficiency were also key design considerations and, as a result, the building will have high levels of ventilation and insulation while benefiting from features such as ground source heat pumps and roof-mounted solar panels.

    The site for the scheme – which sits between Armley Grove Place and Simpson Grove – was occupied by Middlecross Day Centre until its demolition in 2018.

    Councillor Jess Lennox, Leeds City Council’s executive member for housing, said:

    “It’s great news that construction work is now under way on this important scheme, which will help address the well-documented shortage of affordable extra care housing in Leeds.

    “The Middlecross development highlights the impact of our Council Housing Growth Programme and, by extension, our commitment to ensuring that everyone in Leeds can enjoy the stability and security that comes with a safe, warm and good-quality home.

    “I was really pleased to have the opportunity to visit the site in Armley with partners and see first-hand the progress being achieved by the construction team. All those involved should feel proud of the part they are playing in delivering a scheme that will make a positive difference to people’s lives and the community as a whole.”

    Tracy Brabin, Mayor of West Yorkshire, said:

    “Because of devolution, we’ve been able to invest almost £90m to help unlock over 5,000 new homes, including dozens of affordable and sustainable homes in Armley.

    “Working with Leeds City Council, we’re taking decisive action to tackle the housing crisis and deliver the warm, high-quality homes that local families need, with lower rents and energy bills.

    “Everyone is entitled to a safe and secure roof over their head, so we will work with central government to get the whole of West Yorkshire building, with new freedoms and funding to deliver thousands more homes and create a greener, more vibrant region.”

    Ben Hall, Yorkshire area director for Morgan Sindall, said:

    “We are proud to be playing our part in creating high-quality extra care housing, enabling older people to enjoy later life.

    “It was a pleasure to welcome Councillor Lennox and other stakeholders to our work at Middlecross. We’re looking forward to delivering this much-needed new scheme, which was procured via the SCAPE Construction framework. It will bring significant benefits for the Armley community, both through the completed building and our contribution to the local economy during the build programme.”

    The start of work on the Middlecross scheme follows the opening in 2023 of Gascoigne House, a much-praised extra care development in Middleton that also forms part of the CHGP.

    Other locations where CHGP schemes are currently under construction include Hough Top near Pudsey, Brooklands Avenue in Seacroft and the Ambertons area of Gipton.

    More than 350 new homes have been built via the CHGP since 2018. More than 420 homes have also been acquired as part of the programme, with these properties and the new-builds both playing a crucial role in efforts to ease local affordable housing pressures.

    Furthermore, they have – by increasing the number of appropriate properties available to tenants looking to downsize – helped free up some homes that are best suited to larger families.

    ENDS

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Canada: Province Improves Accessibility, Introduces Updated Plan

    Source: Government of Canada regional news

    The Province’s 2025-2028 Accessibility Plan sets ambitious goals for the next three years and provides an update on progress that’s been made to date.

    The plan, released today, May 6, includes government-wide commitments across eight priority areas including actions to advance accessibility in employment, service delivery, information and communication, and public transportation.

    “We are building on years of hard work and momentum to build a more accessible province for today and generations to come,” said Attorney General and Justice Minister Becky Druhan. “By continuing to innovate, collaborate and lead by example, we will achieve our goal for creating a more accessible Nova Scotia.”

    Progress made on the 2022-2025 plan includes adopting the Built Environment Accessibility Standard, the first of six accessibility standards. The standard will help ensure the spaces where people live, work, learn and play across Nova Scotia can be enjoyed by people with disabilities.


    Quotes:

    “The Government of Nova Scotia is continuing to demonstrate its ongoing commitment to creating an accessible province and delivering services, policies and programs that meet the needs of Nova Scotians with disabilities. The Accessibility Advisory Board will continue to provide advice and recommendations, based on lived experience, that will help advance this important work.”
    — Max Chauvin, Chair, Accessibility Advisory Board


    Quick Facts:

    • this is the third multi-year plan released under the Accessibility Act; it reflects collaboration across all 29 government departments
    • 38 per cent of Nova Scotians over the age of 15 report living with a disability
    • once developed, Nova Scotia’s six accessibility standards will be enacted as regulations under the Accessibility Act
    • standards under development include education, employment, goods and services, public transportation and information and communication

    Additional Resources:

    2025-2028 Accessibility Plan: https://novascotia.ca/accessibility/plan/

    Accessibility Act: https://nslegislature.ca/sites/default/files/legc/statutes/accessibility.pdf

    News release – Nova Scotia’s First Accessibility Standard Addresses Outdoor Spaces, Recreation Buildings: https://news.novascotia.ca/en/2025/03/17/nova-scotias-first-accessibility-standard-addresses-outdoor-spaces-recreation

    More information on accessibility standards in development: https://accessible.novascotia.ca/creating-accessibility-standards

    Access by Design 2030: https://novascotia.ca/accessibility/access-by-design/

    MIL OSI Canada News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Wasserman Schultz, Carter, Krishnamoorthi, Bacon Announce Newly Formed Children’s Safety Caucus

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-23)

    “For my entire professional career, children’s safety has been a top priority. Kids can’t always protect themselves, so looking out for their best interests and creating a safer world is critical. In Florida, drowning prevention is central to this mission,” said Wasserman Schultz. “No tragedy cuts deeper to a parent than losing a child to a preventable death. That’s why I am extremely eager to launch the new, bipartisan Children’s Safety Caucus with my colleagues Buddy Carter, Raja Krishnamoorthi, and Don Bacon. I look forward to collaborating to keep our kids safe with sensible outreach, education, and initiatives.”

    Washington, DC – Today, U.S. Representatives Debbie Wasserman Schultz (FL-25), Earl L. “Buddy” Carter (GA-01), Raja Krishnamoorthi (IL-08), and Don Bacon (NE-02) announced the formation of the bipartisan Children’s Safety Caucus. The caucus will work to find and promote solutions to dramatically reduce preventable childhood deaths and injuries.  

    Avoidable injuries are the number one cause of child fatalities in the United States. In 2022, more than 9,000 families lost a child because of preventable injury. Nearly 5.6 million children are treated in emergency departments for injuries every year. 

    “For my entire professional career, children’s safety has been a top priority. Kids can’t always protect themselves, so looking out for their best interests and creating a safer world is critical. In Florida, drowning prevention is central to this mission,” said Wasserman Schultz. “No tragedy cuts deeper to a parent than losing a child to a preventable death. That’s why I am extremely eager to launch the new, bipartisan Children’s Safety Caucus with my colleagues Buddy Carter, Raja Krishnamoorthi, and Don Bacon. I look forward to collaborating to keep our kids safe with sensible outreach, education, and initiatives.”  

    “As a proud father and grandfather, the protection of children is always at the front of my mind. Avoidable injuries remain the number one cause of child fatalities in the United States, and I am proud to join with my colleagues to create the Children’s Safety Caucus, as we work in a bipartisan fashion to protect America’s kids,” said Carter. “Thank you to Reps. Wasserman Schultz, Krishnamoorthi, and Bacon for joining me in this effort.”

    “As a father and grandfather, I believe there is nothing more important than protecting our children. I’m pleased to help establish the bipartisan Children’s Safety Caucus, where we’ll work together to develop solutions that keep our kids safe,” said Bacon. “Every child deserves the opportunity to grow up in a safe environment, and this caucus will serve as a vital platform to advance solutions that protect our children.”

    “As a father of three, nothing has driven me more in Congress than the mission to make the world safer for our children,” said Krishnamoorthi. “That’s why I’ve taken on Big Tobacco and other special interests by leading Congressional efforts against toxic metals in baby food, predatory vape companies targeting kids, and dangerous car seats. My investigation into booster seat safety led to the introduction of my Booster Seat Safety Act—legislation that applies the American Academy of Pediatrics’ guidelines for the seat and mandates that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration establish rigorous side-impact crash testing standards. I am proud to co-chair the Children’s Safety Caucus to continue fighting for solutions that keep our children safe—whether it’s at home, at school, or on the road.”

    The Children’s Safety Caucus will focus on issue areas like child passenger safety, water safety, and safe sleep issues.  An important goal for the caucus is to host meetings and forums throughout the Congressional session to highlight the need for bipartisan support for children’s safety issues. The caucus will update members of Congress and their staff on relevant legislation, best practices to better inform constituents, and host events to promote child safety. 

    U.S. Statistics on children’s safety: 

    Road

    • 14 kids 12 and under die in motor vehicle crashes each week. Another 2,300 are injured in nonfatal crashes. 
    • Properly used child car seats and booster seats reduce the risk of death by as much as 71%
    • More than half of all car seats are not properly installed.
    • Car Seat Technicians in every state are available to help parents, grandparents, and caregivers properly install their child’s car or booster seat!

    Water

    • Drowning is the leading cause of injury related death among children 1-4.
    • It’s the third leading cause of unintentional injury-related death among children 19 and under.
    • In 2018, there were 918 children under the age of 19 who drowned and over 7,000 more were seen in the emergency room.

    Safe Sleep

    • Unintentional suffocation is the leading cause of injury-related death among children under 1.
    • Nearly 3,500 infants die each year in the U.S. from sleep related infant deaths.
    • Causes of sleep-related infant deaths include suffocation, entrapment, strangulation, and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS).

    ####

    MIL OSI USA News –

    May 7, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Professional standards in the Prison and Probation Service Speech

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Speech

    Professional standards in the Prison and Probation Service Speech

    Lord Timpson, Minister for Prisons, Probation and Reducing Reoffending, sets out how the government is responding to Jennifer Rademaker’s Review into professional standards in HMPPS.

    Thank you, Jennifer, for that introduction, it’s great to be here. 

    Let me start by thanking Emily for hosting us today…  

    And for everything you do to lead by example at High Down. A culture of high professional standards starts at the top – I know you take that incredibly seriously.    

    Thanks to all the staff here today – for the absolutely critical work you do day in, and day out, to protect the public and turn lives around… 

    And to everyone involved in putting this event together. 

    Of course, I also want to thank you, Jennifer, and the people who supported you, for this important report, and for your work as a Non-Executive Director at the Ministry of Justice. I’m fortunate to have you as a colleague. 

    This marks a watershed moment for every part of HMPPS – Prison, Probation and YCS. 

    A wake-up call, and an opportunity to change things for the better, for more than 65,000 staff who work there. 

    I want to start with two stories. Two real life stories, showing two very different faces of the same Service. The first is about a prison officer – I’ll call her Jane. 

    It was a night shift like any other. Things seemed calm – the prison was under control. The kind of shift where officers carry out routine monitoring, and respond to any emergencies.  

    Jane was doing exactly that, focusing on the checks she needed to make. 

    Also on duty that night was a senior colleague. A man in a position of authority. He was a higher rank than Jane. And he had more years in the job than she did. 

    Jane had heard things about him. That he had a reputation. It was, as she put it, “common knowledge” that he could be lecherous. But she’d never had a problem herself… 

    Until that night. 

    It started with the way he looked at her – lingering, unsettling. Then, out of nowhere, he asked: “What’s your bra size?”  

    Jane was taken aback, unsure at first if she’d heard it right.  

    She answered, firmly: “That’s none of your business.” 

    And she walked out of the room. But the man followed her. 

    Cornering her in a nearby kitchen, he grabbed hold of Jane, and forced his tongue into her mouth. Then he groped her. 

    Jane felt trapped. Frightened and powerless. 

    Like so many men in positions of authority who abuse their power like this, he told her that it needed to be their “secret”.  

    Shocked, and shaken, Jane didn’t report what had happened at first. 

    Because he was in charge.  

    Because she didn’t want to rock the boat. 

    Because she loved her job…  

    And she didn’t want to lose it. 

    Eventually, Jane did work up the courage to come forward. Her colleague was sacked, rightly. And he was brought to justice – prosecuted for sexually assaulting Jane, and another officer.  

    He is due to be sentenced soon, and could very well go from patrolling the prison landings, to living on them. His actions were clearly despicable. But Jane’s story begs the question… 

    Why did it take an assault for this man to finally be called out?  

    Why, when he already had a reputation, was he not exposed sooner? 

    Too often, in the Prison and Probation Service, unacceptable behaviour is laughed off as a joke, as lads being lads.  

    The trouble is, when someone says, “it’s just banter”, it becomes harder and harder to call this behaviour out for what it really is:  

    Abuse. Intimidation. And harassment.  

    It’s unacceptable. And this Government will not tolerate it, at all. 

    But I said there were two stories. The second takes us to HMP Frankland – one of our most secure, most challenging prisons.  

    Just last month, three officers there were brutally attacked by an inmate. Stabbed and slashed. A lifechanging, traumatic experience.    

    There’s an investigation underway, so I won’t go beyond what’s been reported publicly…  

    But I can say this: Without the courage and quick thinking of those officers, and their colleagues, who responded, lives would have been lost.  

    And it was a privilege to speak to some of the officers involved myself, when I visited Frankland recently. 

    They ran towards danger, when others would run away. They are true heroes. And our thoughts are with the injured officers as they continue to recover.  

    That kind of bravery isn’t rare in the Service.  

    Our probation officers, too, manage risk constantly, working with dangerous offenders to keep the public safe. 

    These are jobs where heroism happens daily, in environments more stressful, more pressurised, than people could possibly imagine.  

    And I see the same spirit time and again when I visit a prison or a PDU:  

    Dedication. Sacrifice. An unshakeable sense of duty. 

    The question is, then: how do we make this a Service worthy of the heroes at Frankland? Worthy of every hero in the Service? 

    Because behind high prison walls, in PDUs, and offices, away from public eyes, toxic behaviour can all too easily take root and grow – unless we weed it out.   

    Unacceptable behaviour – language, attitudes, and actions – have become normalised, tolerated, and accepted over time.  

    And, as Jennifer’s report shows, bullying, intimidation, and harassment in HMPPS has gone unchecked for far too long. Her findings are deeply sobering: 

    There is a “vacuum of pastoral care” for victims of sexual harassment – too often left to raise concerns with a line manager, who may be well-meaning, but hasn’t been trained to handle the situation sensitively. 

    Little is being done to track complaints, making it almost impossible to get a sense of the scale of the problem… In turn, making it much harder to take meaningful action. 

    And the message is clear: there is a fundamental, devastating, lack of trust in how complaints of bullying, discrimination and harassment are dealt with. 

    Too many staff feel unable to speak out, fearing they won’t be believed…  

    That it will only make matters worse – because the hierarchy above them will close ranks…  

    And that nothing will be done. This isn’t a culture that we should stand for. 

    We must rebuild that trust. And to begin doing so, we need to face up to the realities of the situation as they exist today, and the effect this has on staff:   

    Imagine making a complaint, knowing full well it will be investigated by a senior manager, who is friends with the person harassing you – and they socialise together outside of work, too. 

    Imagine, plucking up the courage to come forward, only to have your complaint passed on to the perpetrator. Or to learn that paperwork about your grievance has been left in a public area, for all to see. 

    Imagine seeing a colleague branded a ‘grass’, for speaking out. 

    Would you want to come forward under those circumstances?  

    Would you have confidence you’d be dealt with fairly? 

    These are just some of the examples laid bare in Jennifer’s report. 

    Last year, one in eight HMPPS staff said that they had been bullied or harassed, or that they’d experienced discrimination. Many said they didn’t feel as though they could come forward, or that they would be punished, if they did. 

    All of this is against a backdrop of damaging newspaper headlines. Stories of inappropriate relationships between staff and inmates, and officers smuggling in contraband and drugs. I know this doesn’t represent the majority of staff in our prisons, but the fact remains: it happens. 

    And unacceptable behaviour isn’t just confined to our prisons. The Inspectorates continue to highlight problems, including racism and discrimination, across the Service. They do a crucial job in highlighting these issues, even if they are, at times, difficult to read. 

    Some of these stories may not make the front pages in the same way, but they are no less devastating. 

    Disabled staff, still struggling to get the basic adjustments they need to do their jobs.  

    Colleagues who have been repeatedly subjected to racist remarks, but keep quiet, because they think nothing will change.  

    And the cost of this isn’t just reputational. It’s human.  

    Unacceptable behaviour breaks people. It drives out good staff, the kind we want to keep in the service. It creates a toxic culture.  

    And it makes it much harder for you to do your jobs – the vital work that turns lives around, cuts crime, and makes our streets safer. 

    That’s why professional standards matter. They cannot simply be words on paper. They must be reflected in how we treat each other, every day. In every team – on every shift. 

    And where those standards aren’t met – our staff – and the public – must know that we’ll take swift and decisive action.  

    To its credit, HMPPS recognised that something needed to be done. That’s why Jennifer was asked to carry out her independent Review in the first place. And I’m delighted both that she agreed to do it, and that we’ve accepted her recommendations in full. 

    But most of all, I’m grateful to all the staff who spoke up – who shared their stories so honestly, openly, and bravely. You are the reason we can move forward. And you are the reason we must. 

    And we have to be honest about the problem: this is about more than just a few bad apples. 

    These are deep rooted cultural issues, and they have been allowed to go on for too long.  

    But this Government takes its duty seriously, and it is acting. 

    So, we will fundamentally change how complaints of bullying, harassment and discrimination are dealt with in our Prison and Probation Service.  

    As Jennifer recommends, and in line with other public services like the Armed Forces, we will create a new unit, sitting jointly between the MoJ and HMPPS, to handle allegations of unacceptable behaviour. And we will fund it in full. 

    Crucially, this unit will be entirely independent, taking complaints away from the line management hierarchy.  

    It means staff can have confidence that their concerns will be dealt with properly, fairly, and in absolute confidence. Not by a manager, who may even be complicit in the behaviour, but by a dedicated team of experts. 

    No more conflicts of interest. No more ‘boys club’ networks. 

    HMPPS is now working closely with the Trade Unions to develop a model for how the unit will work, including how cases will be triaged, investigated, and resolved. And I appreciate their continued engagement, and challenge.  

    And we’re going further. This new unit will be overseen by an independent Commissioner, who will report publicly each year on the unit’s work and how bullying, harassment, and discrimination policies are being applied. 

    This will bring both accountability and progress, as we transform how bullying, harassment and discrimination are dealt with across the Service. 

    It marks a seismic shift, a major departure from what has gone before.  

    But it is only the beginning of how we rebuild the trust that has been lost. 

    As Jennifer recommends, we will introduce new guidance on sexual harassment, which sets out what managers must do in response, and where they can get advice if they are unsure. It makes clear that suspected crimes like sexual assault or rape should be reported to the police, and, crucially, that there is support for victims, and where they can get it. 

    Moving forward, these sensitive cases will be handled by the new specialist joint unit, so victims know they’ll be listened to in confidence, and supported by people who are properly trained to help. 

    We will make better use of data, publishing complaints statistics, and outcomes, to bring greater transparency, while protecting staff confidentiality. The goal is simple: to give more people the confidence to speak up, and that their concerns will lead to action.  

    And we are bringing together the wider professional standards and counter corruption work already underway, so we can spot patterns of unacceptable behaviour earlier…  

    So we can investigate them properly…  

    And so we can dismiss those responsible – the people who tarnish your reputation, and damage public trust. 

    We’re also bolstering the existing Tackling Unacceptable Behaviour Unit. Their work is important, but, as Jennifer sets out in her report, their ‘Climate Assessments’ into the experiences of prison staff haven’t had the intended impact. Too often, staff feel that what they say isn’t acted on. 

    So, last Autumn, we introduced a new, streamlined approach. Reports now happen faster, with a sharper focus on issues and areas for improvement. And a new team is now in place to support prison leaders directly, helping them to turn those insights into real change on the ground.  

    But if we want to build a stronger, safer Prison and Probation Service, we also need to change its culture. Getting that right really matters.  

    Positive culture is the bedrock of every great organisation. The difference between a place where people just work – and a place where they feel proud to belong. 

    And in any good organisation – any resilient, high performing team – that culture is built on trust, fairness, and mutual respect.   

    My own approach as CEO of the Timpson Group was always rooted in a culture of kindness. That meant knowing our people. Looking after them when they had a problem. And treating everyone with dignity – as equals. 

    At Timpson, we won awards for being a great company to work for. And my goal now is just as clear: to make HMPPS a world class organisation – an employer of choice.  

    The kind of place where anyone would want to work. Where staff bring their best, and achieve their best. Where they can come to work every day, knowing their friends and family would be proud. 

    That’s about much more than policy and HR processes. Alone, they won’t fix the problem. What we need is a shift in mindset. Fundamentally changing how we think, and respond, when things go wrong. 

    That brings us back to culture.  

    We need a culture where everyone feels safe to come to work. Where they know – without a doubt – that if they raise a concern, they’ll be heard. Taken seriously. And that action will follow.  

    A culture where high professional standards are modelled throughout the Service. Where we don’t just walk by when behaviour falls short – we step up and challenge it. 

    And a culture where the boundaries are crystal clear. Where there is no doubt about what constitutes unacceptable behaviour. And where there are swift, clear consequences for those who don’t play by the rules. 

    But culture can’t be imposed from above. It doesn’t come from a mission statement, or sit in a strategy. It lives in our day-to-day actions. It’s what we say. What we do. And it has to be lived, and led, by every member of staff, at every level. A shared journey. 

    If people aren’t on board with that – this isn’t the job for them. 

    There is a long road ahead. But we are laying the groundwork for this culture change, and for a safer, more professional workplace.  

    And let me just emphasise – this work is deeply important to me. I see it as a defining part of my job. 

    That starts with improving how we recruit our staff.  

    All good organisations need good people. People who can drive that culture change forward, and become leaders of the future.  

    As Jennifer outlines, that means raising the bar. It means making sure the staff we bring in don’t just have the right skills, but that they share our values – that they bring the integrity and resilience essential for the role.   

    So, we are reviewing recruitment across the whole Service. And, following a successful pilot of ‘values-based’ recruitment in Probation, we’re now looking at how we can roll this approach out across the Prison Service, too. 

    And we are also working with occupational psychologists to study the highest performing Prison officers, identifying what excellence really looks like – to bring more people like them into the Service.  

    Bringing the right people in is vital. But we also need to keep the wrong people out.  

    I’m clear – people who don’t reflect HMPPS values, who don’t have the integrity this job demands, shouldn’t be anywhere near a prison or PDU. Or anywhere else in the Service, for that matter. 

    That’s why we are strengthening vetting. Making it harder for the wrong people to get in, and easier to remove those who breach our high standards. 

    This year, we introduced online digital vetting checks, to flag people who pose a risk – whether that’s through criminal associations, so crime can’t continue behind prison walls, or through views and behaviours that go against everything we stand for, like racism, misogyny or homophobia.  

    We’re also taking the fight to corruption, through our Counter Corruption Unit. 

    Its mission is simple: to detect and prevent corruption right across the Service, and support staff to do the right thing.  

    The Unit works shoulder-to-shoulder with the police and National Crime Agency, taking a more sophisticated, joined up approach to corruption for the minority who cross the line.  

    And HMPPS has funded 20 specialist police investigators, focused on rooting out criminal behaviour. In 2024 alone, the Unit prosecuted 37 staff for involvement in corruption. 

    Finally, we are improving how we train our people.  

    Before I became a Minister, I led an Independent Review of Prison Officer Training. And while there was good work happening, it was clear that the standard seven-week basic training simply wasn’t doing enough to prepare new recruits for the reality of this incredibly tough job.  

    A more structured, longer-term approach, with higher standards might mean that we lose more people along the way. But those who stay will be better equipped – and more likely to thrive. 

    So, I’m pleased (perhaps unsurprisingly, now I’m the Minister!) –  that the review’s recommendations are now being taken forward. 

    The Enable Programme is transforming initial training, so that officers don’t just have the practical skills they need for the job – but the ethical foundations. And more subtle skills too – how to work well together, and be a great colleague. Because by investing in our people, we are investing in the future of the whole Service.   

    Taken together, these changes are a solid first step towards a safer, more professional Service.   

    And I’m grateful to Jennifer, who has agreed to continue working with us as an independent reviewer – to make sure her report is a roadmap for real, lasting change.  

    But let me finish where I started. 

    We should all be very angry that people like Jane – hardworking prison officers who we want to join and remain in the Service – have been subject to the most appalling abuse.  

    And we should all be proud to have officers like those at Frankland – who showed extraordinary courage in the face of great danger.  

    Both of these stories are part of our reality. 

    But it’s the bravery and dedication of the Frankland officers, and many like them across the Service, that should define our future. 

    I want to thank Jennifer again for her thoughtful report, the team that worked with her, and all the staff who bravely shared their experiences.  

    Professionalism is more than a policy. It’s a commitment to a culture of integrity, respect, and accountability. 

    High standards are not optional… 

    For years, others have talked the talk on zero tolerance. 

    Now this Government will walk the walk. 

    This is our moment to set a new standard for the future.  

    To build a culture we can be proud of, and a Prison and Probation Service where anybody would be proud to work. 

    Let’s get it right, and let’s do it together.  

    Thank you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 6 May 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    May 7, 2025
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