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Category: Transport

  • MIL-OSI USA: Biochar and Microbe Synergy: A Path to Climate-Smart Farming

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    Most people probably don’t think about soil as a living thing. But it is filled with millions of tiny organisms that play a critical role in everything soil does – including sequestering carbon.

    Soil contains a diverse array of microorganisms including fungi and bacteria that perform vital functions such as breaking down organic matter, nutrient cycling, and carbon sequestration.

    “Microbes — you may not see them with the naked eye, but that doesn’t mean they’re not important,” says Yogesh Kumar ‘27 (CAHNR), a Ph.D. student in the Department of Natural Resources and the Environment.

    Thanks to these microbes, soil holds onto a tremendous amount of the earth’s carbon. By supporting the functioning of these microorganisms, a substance known as biochar can improve soil’s ability to serve as a much-needed carbon sink.

    Biochar is a charcoal-like substance made by burning organic waste, such as, generated by forestry and agriculture. Biochar has recently emerged as a “Climate-Smart Agriculture” practice given its potential to improve soil health, nutrient and available water holding capacity, resilience, and agricultural sustainability without the negative environmental consequences associated with traditional fertilizers.

    A team in the College of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources is developing a fuller picture of its environmental and agricultural benefits.

    Their recent publication in Biochar highlights how biochar supports soil microbes.

    Kumar is the lead author on the paper. Other authors include Wei Ren, associate professor of natural resources and the environment; Haiying Tao, associate professor of soil nutrient management and soil health; and Bo Tao, assistant research professor of natural resources and the environment.

    The researchers looked at data from hundreds of field studies conducted all around the world to determine biochar’s impact on soil microbes.

    On average, biochar application improved soil microbial biomass carbon (SMBC) by approximately 21%.

    “When we conducted global data analyses, we found how biochar as a stable carbon influences soil features, particularly microbial activities leading to changes in microbial carbon,” Ren says. “That in turn influences soil’s physical and chemical characteristics and carbon storage.”

    A piece of biochar has many tiny pores all over its surface. Microorganisms move into these holes and feed on the carbon, nitrogen, and other essential nutrients the biochar provides. This is especially important in nutrient-deficient soil or soil with a suboptimal pH which would not otherwise be able to support a diverse population of microbes.

    “It provides food, nutrients, and a habitat for those microbes,” Kumar says.

    The researchers also found that biochar is more effective when used in combination with other management practices, like the use of compost or manure.

    By limiting the scope of their analysis to field studies, which take place in real-world conditions, rather than controlled greenhouse environments, this work has clearer and more immediate implications for farmers.

    “That helps us understand the reality of the situation with weather or soil or other environmental factors interacting with biochar,” Ren says.

    This group’s previous work has looked at how biochar impacts other factors like crop yield and greenhouse gas emissions.

    “We want to have a complete understanding of biochar as an effective climate smart agricultural practice,” Ren says.

    Biochar is particularly attractive to farmers in the Northeast, which has smaller operations than other parts of the country, like the Midwest. Biochar is still expensive for farmers to implement, making it difficult to apply at a larger scale.

    “Although biochar is more expensive than other practices, they see the long-term benefits for the savings in water and nutrient inputs and the long-term carbon storage,” Ren says. “In the northeast region, our farmers and our growers have already shown interest.”

    Further, biochar is most effective in climates with an average annual temperature below 59 degrees Fahrenheit and about 20 to 40 inches of rain, like Connecticut and other parts of the region.

    Given this interest, the next steps in this research are to collaborate with local farmers to conduct pilot studies of biochar.

    In addition to supporting field studies, the group is also using this work to develop models that can predict the long-term impacts of biochar on soil health and other key metrics.

    The ultimate goal of this work is to develop a regional bioeconomy in which organic waste is collected, turned into biochar, and reused to grow more crops while keeping the soil healthy.

    “We do want to collaborate with our field scientists, people with diverse backgrounds in climate and land use, and socioeconomics,” Ren says. “We want to propose an interdisciplinary program to promote region bioeconomy development.”

    This work relates to CAHNR’s Strategic Vision area focused on Ensuring a Vibrant and Sustainable Agricultural Industry and Food Supply.

    Follow UConn CAHNR on social media

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Art Exhibition No ‘Joke’ in Asking Hard Questions

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    Sure, in her spare time growing up Krista Mitchell did what any only child might do to keep busy – doodle in a notebook, design a maze like the one in her coloring book, devote hours to reading.

    But Mitchell ’25 (SFA, CLAS) says she often took those projects to the nth degree.

    “I actually made a household newspaper in which I wrote the articles and drew pictures to go with them. I even used to go crazy sending thank you cards to my family. I would do these elaborate drawings on the envelopes to the point that the post office would send them back because they couldn’t read the addresses,” she says. “So, yeah, I’ve always been very creative.”

    There should be no surprise then when, as a high school senior, she used an assignment to make an animal mask as an opportunity to build giant luna moth wings large enough for an adult to wear.

    And that final project for a basic photography class at UConn, of course it became the basis for a presentation at the Humanities Undergraduate Research Symposium last year and the reason she was asked to talk during a Humanities Institute conversation on the loneliness epidemic in the fall.

    You bet, it even got her an on-air interview with Connecticut Public Radio.

    “All of this was absolutely meant to be,” she says. “It all just happened, honestly.”

    In the same way, she sort of fell into her latest project, “Joker Stardust,” an art exhibition on display this week that she says started as a critique of consumerism inspired by the 1980s but eventually morphed into a multilayered project focused on the 1960s and 1970s that asks the question, “Who am I?”

    Well, who is Krista Mitchell?

    Mitchell, a double major in English and art who’ll graduate in December, says she started at UConn planning to exclusively major in English and eventually embark on a career as a journalist or teacher. After all, in high school, she’d had success in various writing contests and people always told her she was a good writer.

    Krista Mitchell ’25 (SFA, CLAS) is a double major in art and English. Her solo art exhibition, “Joker Stardust,” opens March 27 and runs through March 30. (Branaugh Morton/Nutmeg Magazine)

    But that first year in college, she found herself drowning in the largeness of the University and escaped in the safety of her art minor.

    “I took my first art class, Drawing I, and noticed it gave me something I could channel my energy into,” she says. “I felt safe in the small classes where everybody knew who I was, and the teacher actually cared about me. She was the one who said, ‘Krista, there’s something about your artwork that is special. I don’t know what it is, but you have something, and I think you should keep going with it.’ That’s pretty high praise for someone who was just starting.”

    That’s the thing about art, she notes, “People think they can’t do it, but everyone has it in them. You just have to slow down and study your surroundings.”

    A passion for art started to grow inside her, so elevating it to a second major was a no-brainer. She elected the Bachelor of Arts track in the art and art history department over the Bachelor of Fine Arts because it allowed her to generalize her courses, rather than pick a specific concentration.

    If she had to pick, she says, she would have opted for animation and illustration – you might have seen her regular comics and illustrations in The Daily Campus – and that would have been the wrong choice, knowing what she knows now.

    “Doing this project, ‘Joker Stardust,’ has shown me that I would be a painting and drawing major because animation and illustration is more about communicating something for an editorial purpose or storytelling and making characters. My mind doesn’t work like that. I’m more of a conceptual person,” she says.

    She likes the bright colors of pop art, and things another person might describe as being “off” or just a little bit “creepy,” like those baby dolls whose eyelids open when upright and close when reclined.

    She absolutely loves liminal spaces like empty parking lots at night with only the overhead lights illuminated, giving an eerie glow to a familiar place. Candles also are a favorite, if only for the impermanence they represent.

    And, vaporwave, oh vaporwave, the aesthetic that pulls from the 1980s and 1990s is close to her heart, along with fashions from the 1960s and 1970s that she finds at thrift shops and wears around campus: cloth hairbands, chunky-heeled shoes, blazers with pinstriped lapels, and miniskirts.

    “I know what my vision is as an artist, and I’m able to apply it to a lot of different mediums,” she says. “I say that now, but I know in a couple years, I’ll again say, ‘I don’t know who I am,’ because that’s part of being an artist. You go through these phases of ‘Who am I?’ Fortunately, right now, I’m in a phase where I feel confident.”

    But is everything by chance?

    In coming to UConn, Mitchell received the Presidential Scholars Enrichment Award, giving her $2,500 for a project of her choosing. But one must choose carefully, and Mitchell mulled ideas for three years. Publishing a book seemed most logical. Then, she saw an art exhibition last spring from Irene Pham ’24 (SFA), a solo show that included paintings about Pham’s family, immigration, and the mixed feelings she had about the two.

    Mitchell had taken Art 1010, “Foundation: Studio Concepts,” with associate professor John O’Donnell early on in her studies and liked his teaching style. Plus, they share an affinity for vaporwave.

    “I sent him an email with an independent study proposal, explaining I wanted to do an exhibition. It was one of the longest emails I ever wrote, and amazingly he agreed. He hardly knew me, but he did remember me,” she says. “I’m so grateful to him because this has changed my life.”

    O’Donnell suggested she make a series of collages and use her time over the summer of 2024 to purchase panels of varying sizes and rummage second-hand stores for magazines, books, and other items.

    Krista Mitchell ’25 (SFA, CLAS) made this 3-by-3-foot collage for her upcoming art exhibition, “Joker Stardust.” The piece includes doilies that her grandmother made. (Krista Mitchell)

    Mitchell was close with her maternal grandmother, Catherine “Kay” Holloway, who left behind a treasure trove of collections and her own art creations when she died in 2015. Holloway didn’t have any formal art training, but was artistic, and Mitchell says she inherited things like her fondness for antiques and oddities from her.

    With O’Donnell’s advice in mind, Mitchell poured through her grandparents’ home, taking handmade doilies, handwritten sewing patterns, hand drawn five-point stars, among other things like Kewpie dolls, stained curtains, a half-drained Snoopy snow globe, and pink graph paper.

    “The thing with collages,” Mitchell explains, “it’s kind of like you’re going through an archive and taking the history of these objects and putting them in a new story. You’re almost recontextualizing them.”

    She spent at least a hundred hours cutting out pictures from magazines like Ladies’ Home Journal and Reader’s Digest and sorting images of Hummel figurines, angels, and Barbie dolls.

    That way, when winter break came early this year, she could start creating, again with O’Donnell’s words in mind reminding her to choose items intentionally, as if to tell a story, and not just for decoration.

    As she did, questions started swirling in her head: Why am I so much like my grandmother? Why am I like this? Why do I dress like this? Why do I like this stuff? The theme of consumerism muted to make room for concepts like individual creativity, religion, the meaning of life, and what happens after death.

    “I started to think about what this all could mean and what I landed on was one idea,” she says. “Could the belief that there is some sort of greater meaning to life or higher power give people an incentive to create with intention?

    “That’s when I realized I love a lot of this stuff because of the history behind it. My grandmother was very careful about building her collection of seemingly random things. She had her own artistic vision, and she was very intentional with how she did things and how they reflected the story she was trying to tell.

    “Like, I don’t know who owned this, but somebody did before I did,” Mitchell says, tugging at her second-hand jacket. “That’s kind of mysterious and interesting, right? There is something greater that connects me to my grandmother, that connects me to these interests I have, the way I dress, and the aesthetics of these previous time periods.”

    None of the 25 collages are titled, Mitchell says, and that’s intentional because they’re supposed to resemble things one might find at an antique store. As for the title of the show, “Joker Stardust,” that was purposeful, based on a joker card she found at her grandparents’.

    “Is everything around us by chance? Is it a joke or is there some sort of divine power making the world as it is or is it random,” Mitchell asks, adding that “stardust” hearkens to the 1970s David Bowie character Ziggy Stardust.

    As part of the project, she ended up publishing a book, putting her writing skills to use as she penned thoughts on each collage. She has 20 copies of “Joker Stardust” in her possession, some of which will be for sale during the show’s opening Thursday, March 27.

    “My parents have always been very supportive, all through school, helping me with stuff like this project. They’ve always been there, which I’m very grateful for,” she says.

    In the show, Mitchell says she’s placed a mirror, with the idea that you see not just your reflection but also those family members who came before you. How did these people find each other, she asks, because without them there wouldn’t be you.

    And without stardust, there wouldn’t be anything.

    “Joker Stardust” will open Thursday, March 27, in the VAIS Gallery, Room 109, in the Art Building on the Storrs campus. A reception will be held from 4 to 6 p.m. The show will be open Friday, March 28, through Sunday, March 30, from noon to 4 p.m.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: Connecticut’s 2025 Letters About Literature Contest Winners Named

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    UConn’s Neag School of Education, Department of English, and Connecticut Writing Project (CWP), co-sponsors of the 32nd annual Letters About Literature contest, are proud to announce Connecticut’s winners for the 2024-25 academic year.

    Each year, students in grades four through 12 are invited to read a text, broadly defined, and write a letter to the author (living or dead) about how the text affected them personally. Submissions are grouped according to grade level (grades four to six; grades seven and eight; and grades nine to 12).

    All submissions were read and scored by Neag School alumni teacher-volunteers. Of the 679 submissions from Connecticut students this year, 64 were recognized as semi-finalists and received letters of recognition.

    A second set of judges, all pre-service teachers, then read and scored the 64 semi-finalists — twice for each submission — and selected a total of nine winners, three per grade level. Then one student per grade level was named Top Prize. Each of the nine winners will receive a $100 gift card, while the three top prize winners will also be invited to read their letter out loud at a recognition ceremony later in the spring.

    Neag School associate professor Doug Kaufman, CWP interim-director Jane Cook, and Department of English graduate assistant Emmanuel Fasipe served as the contest’s representatives for the state of Connecticut.

    The following are the contest finalists, listed with their respective school’s and teacher’s names, as well as the work of literature that is the focus of their essay, with access to their winning submissions in PDF format.

    Level I (Grades 4-6)

    • Top Prize and Invited Reader: Cam Lansing, Kimberly Harrell (teacher), King Philip Middle School (West Hartford), The Remarkable Journey of Coyote Sunrise by Dan Gemeinhart
    • Winner: AJ Salerno, Kimberly Harrell (teacher), King Philip Middle School (West Hartford), Impossible Creatures by Katherine Rundell
    • Winner: Ben Camacho, Eva Pandiscia (teacher), Sedgwick Middle School (West Hartford), Storm Runner by J.C. Cervantes

    Level II (Grades 7-8)

    • Top Prize and Invited Reader: Cora Chenier, Sara Green (teacher), Portland Middle School (Portland), Harry Potter Series, J.K. Rowling
    • Winner: Aaron Shamshtein, Rachel Drouin (teacher), King Philip Middle School (West Hartford), The Tale of Despereaux by Kate DiCamillo
    • Winner: Evie Allgood, Olivia Hamaoui (teacher), Hamden Hall Country Day School (Hamden), Shadow and Bone by Leigh Bardugo

    Level III (Grades 9-12)

    • Top Prize and Invited Reader: Colin Monahan, Jessica Sobieralski (teacher), Cromwell High School (Cromwell), Tuesdays with Morrie by Mitch Albom
    • Winner: Hunter Lebun-Luo, Katherine Gabbay (teacher), Ridgefield High School (Ridgefield), The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
    • Winner: Carrington Long, Tara Ceresa (teacher), Ridgefield High School (Ridgefield), The Help by Kathryn Stockett

    Letters About Literature Contest Judges

    Alumni, students, and friends of the Neag School of Education and the University of Connecticut judged the Letters About Literature contest submissions earlier this year. The judges selected semi-finalists at each of the three competition levels. Thank you to the first-round contest judges:

    • Aidan Srb
    • Alice Jones
    • Allison Stroili
    • Anna Muharem
    • Christy Rybczyk
    • Daniel Giovinazzo
    • Danielle Pieratti
    • Dorothy Tolchin
    • Emmanuel Fasipe
    • Jane Cook
    • Jennifer DeRagon
    • Jill Kneisl
    • Jill Slayton
    • Joan Muller
    • Joanne Peluso
    • Kelly Andrews-Babcock
    • Laura Milligan
    • Leah Baranauskas
    • Marc Zimmerman
    • Migdalia Gonsalves
    • Mirelinda Dema
    • Natalie Hubert
    • Sonia Ahmed
    • Tara Carlin

    Students in the Neag School and Department of English judged the Letters About Literature semifinalist essays this past month. Thank you to the semifinalist contest judges, who are current students in the Neag School of Education Integrated Bachelor’s/Master’s program with a second major or concentration in English or UConn students majoring in English:

    • Adam Ezedine
    • Alyssa Slamin
    • Ava Peschell
    • Jake Cacace
    • Joseph Miles
    • Kammi Zheng
    • Karen He
    • Kylie Watson
    • Natalia Rojas
    • Shivam Viroja
    • Taylor Rae
    • Vanessa Guerra
    • Yadiel Melendez
    • Yamilet Zavala
    • Yaxi He

    In honor of Jason Courtmanche’s passing, we honor his hard work, dedication, and legacy for many years as the former director of CWP.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: SAIC Announces ReadyOne™ Foundational: Latest Digital Engineering Ecosystem for Accelerated Innovation and Mission Effectiveness

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    RESTON, Va., March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Science Applications International Corp. (NASDAQ: SAIC) has announced the launch of ReadyOne™ Foundational – the company’s commercial-grade solution for a rapidly deployable, cloud-based digital engineering ecosystem that meets the Department of Defense (DoD) Instruction 5000.97 mandate and unique mission requirements of government customers. It is now available on the AWS Marketplace to accelerate deployment and help government avoid developing capabilities that are already commercially available.

    ReadyOne™ Foundational’s built-in digital thread accelerator unifies disparate data, tools and teams in real-time through a configurable, turnkey solution – enabling an out-of-the-box adoption of best practices in digital engineering. This offering grants customers access to a credentialed cloud-based environment that eliminates common DE barriers and is pre-loaded with data-models, software tools and connectors from the outset increasing mission effectiveness and saving costs over an entire lifecycle.

    “As threats to national security continue advancing and evolving, digital engineering is no longer optional for our Department of Defense customers and their mission-critical programs,” said Chris Finlay, Vice President of Innovation at SAIC. “ReadyOne™ Foundational accelerates the transition from traditional, document-based engineering methods to model-based techniques with digitally connected data for a complete digital engineering system for transparent, secure collaboration.”

    The platform’s built-in, tool-agnostic digital thread architecture, powered by Aras Innovator, eliminates vendor lock-in, making it a flexible and cost-effective offering when compared to traditional product lifecycle management (PLM) and digital thread solutions. Organizations can take full ownership of their tools and data by hosting ReadyOne™ Foundational in their own cloud environments, through cloud-to-cloud or on-premises delivery.

    Learn more information about ReadyOne™ Foundational and how it can accelerate your organization’s digital engineering transformation here.

    About SAIC 
    SAIC is a premier Fortune 500® technology integrator focused on advancing the power of technology and innovation to serve and protect our world. Our robust portfolio of offerings across the defense, space, civilian and intelligence markets includes secure high-end solutions in mission IT, enterprise IT, engineering services and professional services. We integrate emerging technology, rapidly and securely, into mission critical operations that modernize and enable critical national imperatives.  

    We are approximately 24,000 strong; driven by mission, united by purpose, and inspired by opportunities. Headquartered in Reston, Virginia, SAIC has annual revenues of approximately $7.4 billion. For more information, visit saic.com. For ongoing news, please visit our newsroom.

    Media Contact: 
    Caralyn Duke
    757.784.4546
    caralyn.duke@saic.com

    The MIL Network –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Early Warning Signs report launch: Speech by Doug Chalmers

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    Early Warning Signs report launch: Speech by Doug Chalmers

    Doug Chalmers spoke at the launch of the Committee’s report, Recognising and Responding to Early Warning Signs in Public Sector Bodies, on 25 March 2025.

    A very warm welcome to the launch of our report ‘Recognising and Responding to Early Warning Signs’, which we are publishing in the 30th anniversary year of the Principles of Public Life. It is wonderful to see so many of you here today.

    I am Doug Chalmers, Chair of the Committee on Standards in Public Life. And I am delighted to welcome a panel with very rich and varied experience of the public sector. I am joined by one of my colleagues on the Committee, Professor Gillian Peele – an academic – who co-led this review with me, Dame Clare Moriarty and Dr Bill Kirkup. Clare is CEO of Citizens Advice, and had a previous distinguished career in the Civil Service where she served as Permanent Secretary of two government departments. And Dr Bill Kirkup, whose background is in healthcare and who has led investigations into failures of maternity services and served as a member of the Hillsborough Independent Panel. 

    In terms of format, I will introduce the report and then invite some reflections from our panellists. Before we open up into a broader Q&A session. 

    Many of you will be aware of the Committee and our work, so I won’t delay us with a lengthy history. The top line is: the Committee is a majority independent body, with cross-party representation. We advise the Prime Minister on ethical standards across public life by conducting reviews into institutions, policies and practices. And we also promote the Principles of Public Life, first set out by the first Chair of the Committee, Lord Nolan, back in 1995. 

    And now to our report. So, what do we mean by ‘early warning signs’? And why do we think organisations in the public sector need to get better at spotting them?

    Early warning signs are any indicators that things might be starting to go wrong. They are hard data, such as customer complaints. And soft data, such as the insights gleaned by a manager ‘walking the floor’ and having informal conversations with staff. These signs can tell us that something is not as it should be – whether that is a policy creating unintended consequences or a project that is not quite going to plan or data analysis revealing an unexpected drop in performance.

    Recent independent inquiries are sadly extreme examples of what can happen when problems escalate to the point where there is a major failure. Grenfell, Infected Blood, Post Office, Windrush, failures in maternity services. First and foremost, there is the human impact – immense suffering, including the tragic and avoidable loss of life in the most serious cases. Secondly the tax-payer bears the cost of expensive inquiries to determine why scandals happened and government compensation schemes then follow. But failures are also bad for the organisations at the centre as they must spend time dealing with the aftermath, inevitably diverting resources from their organisations’ core purposes. And then there is the damage done to the public trust in those bodies, in those institutions.

    Major failings in public life are invariably due to a complex combination of factors. As a Committee we were struck by how often the same themes come up: 

    • a failure to listen to and act on concerns raised by employees and/or the public, 
    • a failure to learn lessons from past mistakes or similar incidents,
    • a failure to identify and share emerging themes that might have alerted the organisation to a developing risk,
    • a failure of the board to have effective oversight of problems. 

    We wanted to draw these themes to the attention of public sector bodies to help them get better at spotting problems at the earliest possible stage – while there is still time to act. To do this, we spoke to people from a range of organisations in the public sector to ask them about their experiences and insights. We spoke to Chief Constables, senior leaders in the NHS, Permanent Secretaries, Chief Executives and Chairs of Public Bodies, departmental sponsorship officials and people such as the Cross Government Complaints Forum and others – and I am delighted to see some of you here today. We also held an open consultation and were grateful for the illuminating responses that we received through that stream.

    The outcome of our review is the report you see before you. It is designed to be a useful resource. As well as sharing insights from the leaders and practitioners we spoke to, we have included ‘20 points for reflection’ to help leaders think deeply about the processes and culture in their organisation and consider whether improvements can be made. But the questions are not only for leaders; they can also help staff at all levels to request that their organisations pay attention to these important matters. 

    Public life is more complex today than ever, with a multitude of public bodies involved in the delivery of public services, as well as contracted private providers. We are not saying that it is easy to spot problems starting to emerge within and between organisations in the same delivery chain – just the sheer volume of correspondence means that is not easy, but that is not a reason not to try. In fact, it’s a reason to try harder!

    To stand a chance of successfully recognising and responding to early warning signs we have found that leaders must do four things. They must realise they have a problem, they must act to address it, they must identify the wider lessons to be learned and they must be diligent in ensuring that those lessons are embedded fully within the organisation. Our report shows that this depends on getting the processes right and in building the right culture.  The two being very firmly interlinked.

    I want to touch briefly on three themes of our report today.

    The first is leadership and culture. The second is information and scrutiny. The third is the public.

    We say in our report that leadership is the most important factor in an organisation that identifies and addresses emerging issues promptly and is willing to learn from mistakes. 

    When you look at scandals in public life, it is often the case that ‘someone knew’. It is the job of leaders to build a culture where everyone has a voice and feels safe to speak up if they spot an early warning sign that something is wrong.

    Leadership matters at all levels – it is the head of the organisation, of course – but it is also really important to recognise that daily interactions with middle managers or with direct reports can have a powerful impact on the culture that develops within the organisation and the expected standards of behaviour.

    It is not enough for leaders to say that they welcome potential problems being brought to their attention early. Good leaders genuinely believe in the benefits of staff raising issues that can help them to fix problems before they escalate. And they demonstrate this through their actions. One of our contributors put this really well – she said, “If you do not take action, people will not come forward. If people do not come forward, you will not be able to take action!”  That interaction throughout all the leadership that affects the culture in public life.

    If leadership really is this important, how can public sector organisations ensure they have leaders with the motivation, character and skills necessary to build open cultures where problems are raised and dealt with? Well, I think they need support and clarity about what is expected of them.

    Leadership training that gives leaders the confidence to deal with problems in the right way might help leaders to feel better prepared when things go wrong and less inclined to ‘sweep things under the carpet’. This should include how to handle a crisis appropriately and how to get comfortable delivering bad news to their own leaders and ministers – and doing it early. Because bad news does not get better with time. Line managers at all levels need training and support so that they are able to create the right atmosphere for their staff to feel safe saying they have made a mistake, or that they feel a project may not be going to plan, and line managers need to know how to handle such challenging conversations.

    When leaders are appointed, the expectation must be set that they will be assessed on how well they address problems and learn from them, rather than on how effective they are at making them go away. 

    And it is important to try to avoid penalising leaders for raising issues. For example, our report talks about how organisations in the public sector are often linked in delivery chains and the importance of information flows and effective relationships in managing these flows up and down the chain. It is important to find ways to support the leadership of organisations that raise issues up and down the chain so that they are not disincentivised from being frank about the problems they are facing in time and money. 

    The second theme is information and scrutiny. 

    Bringing together high-quality data from across an organisation and interpreting it intelligently allows leaders to connect the dots and understand the bigger picture. To do this, organisations need analysts who can triangulate data and spot trends, but they also need their leaders to want to understand what the data is saying about their organisation. Hard data can be a prompt for a leader to ask probing questions and, as one of our contributors put it, “poke in the dusty corners.”  Another contributor told us how she was constantly looking for corroborating evidence or dissonance with the formal paperwork that passed through her desk on a daily basis and where she found dissonance, she would start pulling at the thread to get to the root.

    We have seen some recent high-profile examples of boards that have failed to grasp the significance of red flags and act before it was too late.

    There is no doubt that the quality and timeliness of the information to which a board has access is critical to the exercise of the board’s scrutiny function. But of equal importance is the ability and willingness of the non-executive directors to ask the difficult questions and look beneath the surface. Ensuring a Board has the right balance of skills, backgrounds, experiences and independence of judgment is critical to it providing an effective challenge to the organisation.

    Finally, the third theme I want to touch on today is the public.

    Public sector leaders have a responsibility to lead organisations that put the public first, and this means recognising mistakes, taking swift action to put things right, and when appropriate that means timely and meaningful apologies, learning the lessons and embedding them in the organisation so that the same mistakes do not happen again. 

    Public sector bodies need to be mindful of the power imbalance that exists between them and the users of their services. But public bodies should not only be approachable and responsive when people have cause to complain. They must also be proactive in reaching out to ensure they are hearing about how the public is experiencing their services and open to suggestions to how improvements can be made.

    I hope that opening pitch has given you a feel for the report and whetted a few appetites as people pick up the book in front of them.  We want the report to prompt discussion in organisations, and we look forward to hearing your views today.

    Updates to this page

    Published 26 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: More than 100 transport tunnels will be washed in Moscow after winter

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    Specialists from the city services complex will flush transport tunnels after winter. This was announced by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Housing and Public Utilities and Improvement Petr Biryukov.

    “Large-scale events are planned to flush more than 100 transport tunnels, including such large ones as the North-West, Lefortovo, Volokolamsk, Gagarinsky and Novokutuzovsky tunnel complexes. During the work, one outer lane of traffic will be closed in turn,” noted Pyotr Biryukov.

    Flushing of tunnels is carried out only at positive temperatures at night, from 22:00 to 06:00, or on weekends. This work is planned to be completed by the end of April.

    Using high-pressure devices and special solutions, the craftsmen will wash the parapets and walls of engineering structures, clean the drainage systems, and put in order the inspection and drainage wells of the drainage network. During the work, tunnel washing machines with special brushes for cleaning the walls and watering equipment will be used.

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

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/151819073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Bitget Maintains 213% Reserve Ratio in March 2025 Proof-of-Reserves Update

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    VICTORIA, Seychelles, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Bitget, the leading global cryptocurrency exchange, has released its latest proof-of-reserves report for March 2025, reaffirming its asset transparency and user fund security with a reserve ratio of 213%. The report, timestamped at 10:30 AM (UTC+8) on March 17, shows that the exchange holds more than double the users’ total assets across BTC, ETH, USDT, and USDC.

    The audit, supported by a 27-layer Merkle tree comprising over 37.8 million records, verifies that Bitget possesses sufficient assets to cover all user balances. This month’s report highlights reserve ratios of 332% for BTC, 173% for USDT, 161% for ETH, and 198% for USDC, each significantly exceeding the 100% threshold required to meet user liabilities.

    A reserve ratio exceeding 100% indicates that the platform holds more crypto assets in custody than its users collectively own, acting as a real-time solvency signal. The publication of this data follows increasing calls from both regulators and users for more frequent, mathematically verifiable disclosures from centralized exchanges.

    By adopting cryptographic techniques such as the Merkle tree structure, Bitget enables users to independently verify their balances within the total liabilities without exposing personal account data. This method strengthens user trust by enabling public verification of platform solvency while preserving user privacy.

    “Transparency must be consistent, not occasional. Exchanges carry an obligation to provide users with tools to verify that their funds are held securely and fully accounted for. Bitget’s latest reserve ratio is not just a metric—it’s a signal of operational clarity and a standard the industry should continuously uphold,” said Gracy Chen, CEO at Bitget.

    As regulatory scrutiny intensifies and users become more discerning, frequent and transparent solvency proofs are becoming integral to the survival of centralized platforms. The latest data places Bitget ahead of many major exchanges in terms of capital buffers, offering a substantial margin of security in volatile market conditions.

    With over 20,500 BTC, 197,500 ETH, 2 billion USDT, and 106 million USDC held in custody, Bitget’s holdings remain aligned with its broader objective to provide users with uninterrupted access to their digital assets. The latest Merkle root hash for March 2025—37a20f806f400dcd—can be used by users to confirm their account’s inclusion in the reserve audit.

    The March disclosure continues a monthly cycle of transparent reporting introduced by Bitget following industry-wide failures in 2022. With this sustained publication, the exchange reinforces its operational visibility and bolsters user confidence in custodial safety.

    To view Bitget’s Proof-of-Reserves, please visit here.

    About Bitget

    Established in 2018, Bitget is the world’s leading cryptocurrency exchange and Web3 company. Serving over 100 million users in 150+ countries and regions, the Bitget exchange is committed to helping users trade smarter with its pioneering copy trading feature and other trading solutions while offering real-time access to Bitcoin price, Ethereum price, and other cryptocurrency prices. Formerly known as BitKeep, Bitget Wallet is a world-class multi-chain crypto wallet that offers an array of comprehensive Web3 solutions and features including wallet functionality, token swap, NFT Marketplace, DApp browser, and more.

    Bitget is at the forefront of driving crypto adoption through strategic partnerships, such as its role as the Official Crypto Partner of the World’s Top Football League, LALIGA, in EASTERN, SEA and LATAM markets, as well as a global partner of Turkish National athletes Buse Tosun Çavuşoğlu (Wrestling world champion), Samet Gümüş (Boxing gold medalist) and İlkin Aydın (Volleyball national team), to inspire the global community to embrace the future of cryptocurrency.

    For more information, visit: Website | Twitter | Telegram | LinkedIn | Discord | Bitget Wallet

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

    Risk Warning: Digital asset prices are subject to fluctuation and may experience significant volatility. Investors are advised to only allocate funds they can afford to lose. The value of any investment may be impacted, and there is a possibility that financial objectives may not be met, nor the principal investment recovered. Independent financial advice should always be sought, and personal financial experience and standing carefully considered. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. Bitget accepts no liability for any potential losses incurred. Nothing contained herein should be construed as financial advice. For further information, please refer to our Terms of Use.

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/0f1afe99-dee9-403a-a014-543d1c47fd84

    The MIL Network –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Codego Launches CDG: New Plug-and-Play Devices for Effortless Daily Passive Income

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Dubai, UAE, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The CDG project has officially launched, introducing an innovative solution that enables everyone to earn passive income directly from their homes. With just a compact device, a power outlet, and an internet connection, CDG simplifies earning predictable, reliable, and hassle-free daily income. 

    Earn Daily Rewards Effortlessly

    CDG offers two user-friendly models: CDG Home and CDG Power Home, which provide GPU computing power to a decentralized computing network. In return, device owners receive daily rewards in the form of CDG credits.

    CDG credits operate similarly to loyalty points and can be conveniently exchanged for fiat currency through the easy-to-use CodegoPay app, available on both iOS and Android. Each credit maintains a guaranteed minimum value, ensuring consistent and predictable earnings.

    Why CDG is Different

    The concept of sharing computing resources isn’t new, but CDG’s implementation is uniquely accessible and efficient. CDG devices are incredibly energy-efficient: the CDG Home model consumes just 10 watts, and the powerful CDG Power Home uses only 30 watts. Designed for home use, these devices are compact, quiet, and discreet, seamlessly blending into any living space.

    Device owners begin generating income immediately upon activation. The CDG Home device generates a minimum of $5 per day, while the CDG Power Home offers at least $20 per day. Setup is straightforward, requiring no technical expertise. Simply plug the device in, connect through the CodegoPay app, and instantly start earning.

    Quick Start Guide

    Getting started with CDG is easy:

    1. Download the CodegoPay app (Android or iOS), and open your account to receive your personal IBAN instantly.
    2. Order your preferred CDG device via the app or through an authorized reseller.
    3. Activate your device using CDG credits with a few simple taps. Your daily earnings will be tracked in real time within the app.

    Pricing and Activation

    CDG offers two versatile device models:

    • CDG Home: Priced at $2,500, requiring 10,000 CDG credits for activation. It consumes only 10 watts and delivers daily rewards of 50 CDG credits, valued at a minimum of $5 per day.
    • CDG Power Home: Available for $10,000, requiring 40,000 CDG credits for activation. It consumes just 30 watts, providing daily earnings of 200 CDG credits, equivalent to at least $20 per day.

    Earn Even More with Referrals

    CDG users can further increase their income through a rewarding referral program:

    • Earn €150 cash for every friend who purchases a CDG Home, plus your friend receives a €50 discount.
    • Receive €600 cash for every friend who purchases a CDG Power Home, with your friend enjoying a €200 discount.

    Referral bonuses are paid directly to your bank account via the CodegoPay app.

    Contributing to a Growing Global Network

    By owning a CDG device, users actively contribute to a decentralized GPU network, essential for industries like gaming, artificial intelligence, and mobile services. As the global demand for GPU computing power continues to grow, the potential value of CDG credits increases, providing additional long-term value.

    About CDG and Codego

    The CDG project was developed by Codego, a fintech leader providing secure, comprehensive digital banking solutions. Codego offers core banking, prepaid and debit card issuance, and European IBAN accounts, supporting more than 12 fiat currencies and over 500 cryptocurrencies.

    Thanks to Codego’s advanced financial infrastructure, users enjoy a seamless experience in managing their CDG devices through the CodegoPay app, which includes integrated IBAN accounts, secure real-time earnings tracking, and compliance with the PSD2 regulatory standards.

    Learn more about Codego and the CDG project:

    Codego (Website) | CDG (Website) | X (Twitter) | Instagram | LinkedIn | TikTok

    Discover how CDG transforms passive income generation—simple, efficient, and rewarding from day one.

    The MIL Network –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Xsolis Announces Its Return as Platinum Sponsor of the American Case Management Association (ACMA) National Conference for the 7th Consecutive Year

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    FRANKLIN, Tenn., March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Xsolis, an AI-driven technology company that reduces administrative waste by enabling collaboration between healthcare providers and payers, announces its return as Platinum Sponsor of the American Case Management Association (ACMA) National Conference for the 7th consecutive year. The ACMA National Conference will take place April 3-6 at the Gaylord Rockies Resort & Convention Center in Aurora, Colorado, and features leaders and professionals affiliated with case management and transitions of care.

    “Xsolis continues to support the case management community and the ACMA organization by solving some of the industry’s most pervasive operational issues like staffing shortages and revenue challenges with our AI-driven solutions,” said Joan Butters, co-founder and CEO of Xsolis. “The ACMA National Conference provides unique opportunities for Xsolis leadership to exchange ideas with clients and other leaders who are changing the industry with more efficient authorization processes and payer-provider collaboration.”

    As a Platinum Sponsor, Xsolis will present several opportunities for attendees to engage with its leaders and solutions, including a Platinum Speaking Session, which will be held at Maple 1-2:

    • Friday, April 4, 2025, 3:30 pm MT: Accelerating Concurrent Authorization & Optimizing Length of Stay Timelines Through AI-Powered Health Plan Collaboration featuring Hoa Cooper, RN, DNP, Vice President, Care Management at OSF Healthcare; Matthew Gorman, DO, MBA, Medical Director, Care Management at OSF Healthcare; and Heather Bassett MD, Chief Medical Officer at Xsolis

    Informational in-booth client speaker sessions will also be held at Xsolis Booth 401:

    • Friday, April 4, 2025, 1 pm MT: Southern Star: A Health System’s Rise with AI-Powered Efficiency & Collaborative Care featuring Kayla Long, MSN, RN, ACM, Director of Case Management at UMC Health System
    • Friday, April 4, 2025, 5 pm MT: Optimized Discharge Planning & Length of Stay Management with AI-Powered Insights featuring Hoa Cooper, RN, DNP, Vice President of OSF HealthCare Management
    • Saturday, April 5, 2025, 12 pm MT: AI-Facilitated Payer-Provider Collaboration: Unlocking Efficiency, Coordination, & Improved Results featuring Pam Foster, MBA, MSW, Vice President of Care Coordination at HonorHealth

    Xsolis is also proud to be the Premier Partner of the ACMA Case Management Hero Award, which was established to recognize case management professionals who continually deliver exemplary service for their patients and families, but also face a major life challenge and could benefit from ACMA’s support.

    The ACMA National Conference features exceptional learning opportunities with over 80 practitioner-led breakout sessions, inspiring keynotes and a vast exhibit hall showcasing supporting and affiliated industry companies. The conference is known for quality educational content and is an opportunity to share knowledge, learn and network with nurses, social workers, physicians, health plan and other health care professionals affiliated with case management and transitions of care.

    To learn more about ACMA activities with Xsolis, visit https://www.xsolis.com/2025-acma-national/.

    About Xsolis 

    Xsolis is an AI-driven technology company that reduces administrative waste by enabling collaboration between healthcare providers and payers. Dragonfly®, its AI-driven proprietary platform, is the first and only solution to use real-time predictive analytics to continuously assign an objective medical necessity score and assess the anticipated level of care for every patient, enabling more efficiency across the healthcare system. Xsolis is headquartered in Franklin, Tennessee. For more information, visit www.xsolis.com.

    The MIL Network –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: TransUnion’s TruValidate™ Solutions for Government Assessed FedRAMP Ready

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    CHICAGO, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — TransUnion (NYSE: TRU) announced today it completed a FedRAMP® Ready assessment for TruValidate™ solutions for government, which help public agencies interact with American public users to help protect against fraud.

    The Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP) is a government-wide program that provides a standardized approach to security assessment, authorization and continuous monitoring for cloud products and services.1 Achieving FedRAMP compliance is required by federal contracts employing the use of advanced cloud-based technologies, with a number of states at various levels of adoption as well.

    “Bringing TruValidate’s suite of flexible anti-fraud capabilities to FedRAMP readiness is a critical step,” said Jeffrey Huth, senior vice president of TransUnion’s Public Sector business. “TransUnion is ready to help agencies mitigate the continuously evolving digital and non-digital identity risks, while providing the privacy and security expected by the American public.”

    Some FedRAMP requirements include: 

    • A robust information security audit that examines confidentiality, integrity and availability of cloud-based services in alignment with the National Institute of Standards and Technology Special Publication 800-53 revision 5.
    • Ongoing operations, such as continuous monitoring​, which assesses, tests and authorizes security processes throughout a system’s development lifecycle as security postures may change over time. 

    TransUnion is pursuing FedRAMP Certification with a rapid path forward using mature and tested tooling. Solutions have been assessed by a leading Third-Party Assessment Organization as qualifying for FedRAMP Ready status. 

    TruValidate Identity Verification for government introduces friction-right experiences for constituents applying for and accessing government programs, reducing the amount of time and effort required for legitimate constituents to prove their identity with high assurance. Conversely, this product helps to detect bad actors attempting to defraud government programs and steal benefits and tax refunds from legitimate constituents using its mature Identity Graph that continuously evaluates accuracy.

    “TruValidate is a suite of highly configurable applications,” said Stuart Levy, vice president of Identity for TransUnion’s public sector business. “Underpinned by our unique blend of high assurance telephony, alternative and financial services-based identity data resources these offerings then layer additional capability to conform with NIST identity assurance levels enabling risk-based decisioning, a single application interface and governance that our public sector customers have come to rely upon.”

    TransUnion’s mature data security and compliance infrastructure aligns closely with the needs of these Federal and State agencies, making TruValidate and other TransUnion solutions ideally suited for rapid deployment. Compliance with FedRAMP will further accelerate customer needs to avoid fraud, waste and abuse.

    TruValidate Identity Verification for government is TransUnion’s first product to initiate the FedRAMP authorization process. TransUnion plans to bring more from TruValidate and other solution lines into the FedRAMP process in the near future.

    Learn more about TransUnion’s suite of identity solutions here.

    1www.fedramp.gov

    About TransUnion (NYSE: TRU)
    TransUnion is a global information and insights company with over 13,000 associates operating in more than 30 countries. We make trust possible by ensuring each person is reliably represented in the marketplace. We do this with a Tru™ picture of each person: an actionable view of consumers, stewarded with care. Through our acquisitions and technology investments we have developed innovative solutions that extend beyond our strong foundation in core credit into areas such as marketing, fraud, risk and advanced analytics. As a result, consumers and businesses can transact with confidence and achieve great things. We call this Information for Good® — and it leads to economic opportunity, great experiences and personal empowerment for millions of people around the world. http://www.transunion.com/business

    Contact  Dave Blumberg
      TransUnion
    E-mail   david.blumberg@transunion.com
    Telephone  312-972-6646

    The MIL Network –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: OSS Announces Order from Innovative Medical Imaging OEM

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    ESCONDIDO, Calif., March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — One Stop Systems, Inc. (OSS or the Company) (Nasdaq: OSS), a leader in rugged Enterprise Class compute for artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML) and sensor processing at the edge, today announced a new $500,000 contract from a medical imaging OEM customer that is expected to contribute to revenue throughout 2025.

    Under the terms of the contract, OSS will provide 4U, short-depth-server (SDS) running Enterprise Class NVIDIA GPUs to support a customer’s innovative, FDA cleared, medical imaging technology for Breast Scanning. After this initial order, OSS expects follow-on orders from this medical OEM for next-generation liquid-cooled 3U-SDS that may become standard on all the OEM’s Breast Scanning devices going forward.

    “We are excited to establish a market position with this leading medical OEM customer as they increase production of their advanced breast imaging technology and improve outcomes for the more than 40 million women in the U.S. who get mammograms every year. This contract reflects the growing need across commercial markets for ruggedized, enterprise class compute capabilities. It also highlights our focus on pursuing high-growth, high-margin, and multi-year platform opportunities across both defense and commercial markets. We believe this contract has the potential to contribute over $25 million in cumulative sales over the next five years,” stated OSS President and CEO, Mike Knowles.

    About One Stop Systems
    One Stop Systems, Inc. (Nasdaq: OSS) is a leader in AI enabled solutions for the demanding ‘edge’. OSS designs and manufactures Enterprise Class compute and storage products that enable rugged AI, sensor fusion and autonomous capabilities without compromise. These hardware and software platforms bring the latest data center performance to harsh and challenging applications, whether they are on land, sea or in the air.

    OSS products include ruggedized servers, compute accelerators, flash storage arrays, and storage acceleration software. These specialized compact products are used across multiple industries and applications, including autonomous trucking and farming, as well as aircraft, drones, ships and vehicles within the defense industry.

    OSS solutions address the entire AI workflow, from high-speed data acquisition to deep learning, training and large-scale inference, and have delivered many industry firsts for industrial OEM and government customers.

    As the fastest growing segment of the multi-billion-dollar edge computing market, AI enabled solutions require-and OSS delivers-the highest level of performance in the most challenging environments without compromise.

    OSS products are available directly or through global distributors. For more information, go to www.onestopsystems.com. You can also follow OSS on X, YouTube, and LinkedIn.

    Forward-Looking Statements
    One Stop Systems cautions you that statements in this press release that are not a description of historical facts are forward-looking statements. These statements are based on the Company’s current beliefs and expectations. The inclusion of forward-looking statements should not be regarded as a representation by One Stop Systems or its partners that any of our plans or expectations will be achieved, including but not limited to the potential and/or the results of this commercial program contract, any actual revenue or cumulative sales derived from the contract, the future adoption of technologies or applications, and the expansion of the Company’s offerings and/or relationship with commercial customers. Actual results may differ from those set forth in this press release due to the risk and uncertainties inherent in our business, including risks described in our prior press releases and in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), including under the heading “Risk Factors” in our latest Annual Report on Form 10-K and any subsequent filings with the SEC. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak only as of the date hereof, and the company undertakes no obligation to revise or update this press release to reflect events or circumstances after the date hereof. All forward-looking statements are qualified in their entirety by this cautionary statement, which is made under the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.

    Media Contacts:
    Robert Kalebaugh
    One Stop Systems, Inc.
    Tel (858) 518-6154
    Email contact

    Investor Relations:
    Andrew Berger
    Managing Director
    SM Berger & Company, Inc.
    Tel (216) 464-6400
    Email contact

    The MIL Network –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Address to the National Press Club, Canberra

    Source: Australian Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Industry

    Here we are, back again on Ngunnawal land, gathering at the kind invitation of Maurice and the Board, sponsors and members of the National Press Club.

    But since last time, not just one new President but 2: Trump; and Connell.

    Congratulations Tom on your election, and thanks for your introduction –

    And to everyone here, including the pundits and, on recent form, maybe a couple of protesters again too.

    Last night marked the first time since Ben Chifley was PM and Treasurer, more than 3 quarters of a century ago, that there’ve been 4 budgets in a single term.

    And of the 11 times I’ve spoken here, I think it’s the 4 post‑Budget opportunities I’ve cherished the most.

    Partly because Laura Chalmers comes along, and is here again, she brought Leo last night, and that means a lot to me.

    And also, because they offer us the chance to go behind the Budget a bit, to provide some more of the colour and context.

    Today I want to talk about how our economy is turning a corner, even as global conditions take a turn for the worse.

    Explain how seismic changes in the world validate and vindicate our strategy, rather than undermine it.

    And lay out our government’s economic case for re‑election –

    Based on our progress to here, our plans from here, and the risks posed by our opponents.

    The fourth shock

    First let me sketch the backdrop.

    Twenty years ago, I fronted up for my first of 19 Budget lockups.

    Costello was Treasurer, and the global economy was a very different place.

    In the 2 decades since, half a dozen subsequent Treasurers presided over 3 big economic shocks.

    The first, a financial crisis that became a demand shock.

    The second, a pandemic that became a supply shock.

    The third, an inflationary shock that lingers around the world longer than anyone hoped.

    Escalating trade tensions now risk, if not represent, the fourth big economic shock in just 17 years.

    Now, if you think about the big post‑war global economic story.

    From Bretton Woods in 1945, to the high inflation of the 70s.

    The Washington Consensus that held from the end of the Cold War until the start of the GFC.

    There’s a tendency to talk about economic shocks as punctuation. A break in the flow.

    But the last 20 years prove that global shocks – in one form or another – are chapters in their own right.

    They no longer interrupt the story – they are the story.

    Acknowledgements

    Governing a country like ours in uncertain times like these is a responsibility we accept and an opportunity we cherish.

    Led by the Prime Minister – who is here today.

    His collaborative style of leadership is appreciated by all of us in his team.

    Katy and I told the Cabinet yesterday that we consider ourselves very fortunate to have been so well‑supported by so many ministers, a number of them here today and I thank and acknowledge them again.

    And no Treasurer has ever been more fortunate than me when it comes to the Finance Minister.

    The best colleague I’ve ever had.

    Nothing we’ve done over the course of 4 Budgets would be possible without her calm and composure, her empathy and judgement.

    Katy came to the Treasury thank you dinner on Thursday night.

    I’m told that’s unprecedented – but for us it’s not unusual.

    I’m sure Katy would agree it’s not the most glamorous ritual.

    The pile of pide boxes and a sea of tired eyes sums up the week, and weeks, before.

    But it gives us a chance to say thanks to Steven, Jenny, Glyn and all the officials involved in putting this Budget together.

    That evening, I was reflecting with officials on the time I spent as a public servant, working for Glyn in Queensland.

    He was the first to tell me what it looked like inside the Cabinet Room here in Parliament House.

    Right down to the framed paintings of Australian lorikeets on the walls.

    Those birds have seen and heard a lot!

    I’m told I’ve spent 664 hours in that room this term – which is about 27 days.

    Whenever I’m in there, I try to remember that’s it’s not the birds in the frame or the galahs in the pet shop that really matter.

    We try to ensure those conversations around the cabinet table are shaped by the conversations Australians are having around the kitchen table.

    We know cost of living is front of mind for most Australians and that’s why it’s been front and centre in all 4 budgets.

    No matter how difficult or long the deliberations might be in that room I’m always aware how lucky we are to be in there.

    Treasurers stand there on Budget night on behalf of all who do so much to put our plans into Budgets, and into action.

    ERC ministers who undertake the essential deliberations – 233 of those 664 cabinet room hours were with them.

    Every member of our caucus who all do so much to advocate for the people they represent.

    The staff from our offices and all the public servants.

    Please join me in thanking them.

    Turning a corner

    This Budget makes it clear that the Australian economy is emerging from a global cost‑of‑living crisis in better shape than anywhere else.

    Inflation is down, living standards are rising, real incomes are growing, unemployment is low, interest rates are coming down, debt is down and now growth is gathering pace.

    That combination is exceptional – and not accidental.

    It is the product of the choices we have made.

    Delivering cost‑of‑living relief for every Australian.

    Strengthening Medicare and the services people count on.

    And building a Future Made in Australia.

    The 2 weeks leading into the Budget made clear just how important and urgent this work has been.

    The human and economic costs of Tropical Cyclone Alfred.

    Coming so soon after widespread flooding in north and far north Queensland – with more damaging heavy rains there just last week.

    And now, fresh turmoil in the world – part of this fourth shock.

    All of this vindicates the course we chose 3 years ago.

    And validates the choices we made together.

    Economic case for re‑election

    This is where I want to pay tribute to the Prime Minister.

    The leader Australians see standing with emergency services in disasters brings the same decency to every challenge confronting our nation.

    Anthony’s leadership is defined by his compassion, his optimism – and his determination.

    And he will make our case for re‑election to the Australian people with those same qualities and commitment.

    This election will be about the strong foundations we have laid, the better future we are building – and the risk of our opponents wrecking it all.

    It will be a referendum on Medicare.

    A simple choice between Labor cutting taxes and helping with the cost of living –

    And Peter Dutton’s secret cuts which will make Australians worse off.

    Because he wants to cut everything except income taxes for workers.

    Above all else it will be an election about the economy.

    Labor’s economic case for a second term has 3 parts:

    The progress we have made together in the economy and repairing the budget.

    The work we are doing and the economic plan we are implementing – to boost wages, rebuild living standards, and make our economy more resilient, more competitive and more productive.

    And the deliberate threat and significant danger that the Coalition pose if they form the next government.

    Reason one: progress

    The economic progress documented in the Budget last night belongs to every Australian.

    It’s all the more remarkable against a backdrop of extreme global uncertainty.

    To give you a sense of that, take inflation.

    In the most recent quarterly data, inflation sits at 2.4 per cent – and just now, today’s monthly reading came in the same.

    On election night, in May of 2022, inflation was more than double that and rising.

    So when I stood here after our first Budget in October that year, inflation was nearly triple what it is today.

    In that first Budget, we were talking about how far we had to go together.

    Today, we can point to how far we’ve come.

    We have brought inflation down while encouraging a broader recovery in our economy, now well underway.

    Our fiscal policy helped break the back of inflation when it was at its peak.

    It adjusted to support growth and preserve employment, as inflation came down.

    And we’ve delivered responsible cost‑of‑living relief that has directly taken the pressure off prices.

    Because of this a soft landing is coming into view –

    With growth rebounding, living standards recovering, and the private sector playing a larger role.

    The last financial year saw the highest level of business investment in over a decade.

    Four in every 5 of the million jobs created have been in the private sector.

    25,000 new businesses created each month this term – the highest average on record.

    Real wages and living standards rising again.

    While the gender pay gap is at near record lows and unemployment is at around 4 per cent.

    Treasury expects employment growth this year will be stronger, inflation will come down faster, and participation will stay near its record high for longer compared with the mid‑year update.

    So, our economy isn’t just growing faster, it’s growing in a way which will be stronger, more sustainable and more inclusive too.

    All this, while successfully steering towards a stunning improvement in our fiscal position.

    We inherited a mess and we’re cleaning it up.

    The budget bottom line is $207 billion better off on our watch.

    This is the biggest ever nominal improvement in a single term.

    Turning $135 billion of Liberal deficits into surpluses worth $38 billion – the first back‑to‑back surpluses in 2 decades.

    Almost halving the deficit we inherited for this financial year.

    And improving the budget position every year of the forward estimates, compared to PEFO.

    All this is a deliberate result of our responsibility and restraint.

    Banking the vast majority of revenue upgrades – around 7 of every 10 dollars.

    Restraining spending growth to 1.7 per cent – less than half the average under our predecessors.

    Finding almost $95 billion of savings – more this term than they managed over their last 2 combined, with precisely zero in their last Budget.

    Making real structural reform to secure the future of aged care and the National Disability Insurance Scheme.

    Guaranteeing the choice, dignity and security they bring to millions of Australians.

    And tackling high and rising interest costs.

    Just after coming to government, they were forecast to grow by 14.4 per cent per year.

    After 3 years of responsibility and restraint we’ve managed to cut that to 9.5 per cent.

    A big part of this story is our decision to return the vast majority of revenue upgrades to the bottom line.

    Not only has this improved the budget position by around $250 billion dollars to 2028–29.

    It means we will save about $112 billion in interest payments over the medium term.

    Reason 2: plans

    We don’t see the substantial progress we’ve made on the budget as an end in itself.

    Repairing the budget and rebuilding living standards go hand in hand.

    Our responsible approach has made room for the 5 main priorities of this Budget.

    Helping with the cost of living.

    Strengthening Medicare.

    Building more homes.

    Investing in every stage of education.

    And making our economy stronger, more productive, and more resilient.

    These are essential components of our economic plan.

    To strengthen our resilience in uncertain times.

    To create a more dynamic, competitive economy.

    And to rebuild incomes and living standards.

    Rebuilding living standards

    In this Budget we’re delivering more cost‑of‑living relief for Australians when it’s needed.

    Extending energy bill relief.

    Funding wage increases for care workers.

    Making medicines cheaper.

    Relieving student debt.

    And lowering taxes for every taxpayer.

    The combined benefit for an average household will be more than $15,000 from our 3 rounds of tax cuts and energy bill relief alone.

    Substantial relief while also building the earning capacity of Australians for the future too.

    By improving access to education – so that every Australian gets the chance to work in the jobs of the future.

    By investing in Medicare and expanding bulk billing – minimising out of pocket health costs and time out of work.

    And by moving towards universal early childhood education – so that parents can work more, if they want to.

    These parts of our plan to rebuild living standards are distinct but interlinked.

    Take our tax cut top‑up – a modest but meaningful addition to the tax cuts we’re rolling out already.

    The average annual tax cut, after this year’s and next year’s, is $2,548 or about $50 a week.

    Our tax cuts will:

    Boost incomes by 1.9 per cent within 2 years.

    Support the private sector recovery.

    Increase participation by more than 1.3 million hours –

    With Treasury estimating that 900,000 of these hours will be taken up by women.

    And give people a better start in their careers with the average young worker receiving a tax cut more than twice the size they would have under the Coalition.

    So, our tax cuts provide immediate relief while also boosting participation, aspiration, and Australians’ long‑term earning potential too.

    Resilience

    This focus on improving living standards is a big part of this Budget because it’s the fundamental mission of our government.

    Creating opportunities, and helping people seize them in a world full of churn and change.

    We cannot undo or ignore the shift from globalisation to fragmentation.

    We can determine how we respond.

    That’s what a Future Made in Australia is about.

    It’s a pro‑trade agenda, that puts a premium on private sector investment.

    It rejects self‑sabotaging tariffs and trade barriers, protectionism and isolationism.

    It focuses on how we shore up critical supply chains and become indispensable to new ones.

    This is critical to the jobs of the future.

    And it’s vital to managing uncertainty now.

    $30 billion of projects in sectors like green hydrogen, critical minerals and clean energy manufacturing have been proposed or are in development.

    Our plan is to build on this progress – improving our resilience by unlocking our competitiveness.

    In this Budget we’re facilitating more private investment in renewable energy – our fundamental comparative advantage in the new net zero economy.

    We’re funding research in clean energy technology manufacturing and low carbon liquid fuels – so we can commercialise Australian innovations.

    And we’re making big investments in green metals – leveraging our traditional strength in resources to build new opportunities.

    Reform

    A Future Made in Australia, powered by cleaner and cheaper energy, positions us as an essential part of the global net zero economy.

    This will be critical to our growth prospects.

    But it’s not the only part of our growth agenda.

    We know the foundations of future success start with more competitiveness, and a more productive economy.

    That’s why we’re reforming the payments system, our financial market infrastructure, approvals processes, our foreign investment framework and more.

    It might be unusual to keep the wheels of economic reform turning in a pre‑election Budget, but that’s what we’re doing.

    First, by banning non‑compete clauses for most workers.

    And second, by creating a national licensing scheme for electrical occupations.

    We’re proud of these changes because they show that the way to increase competition and productivity in our economy isn’t with scorched‑earth industrial relations –

    Or making Australians work longer for less.

    It’s with policy that boosts competition, while boosting wages and our workforce at the same time.

    This is a Budget that’s pro‑worker, pro‑growth and pro‑competition.

    Our reform to non‑competes will remove a handbrake on competition and a speedbump to aspiration.

    Most workers will no longer need a lawyer to get a better paying job.

    They won’t need permission from their old boss to become their own boss.

    Instead, we’re empowering them to move jobs and earn more and start businesses if they want to.

    This could add an estimated $5 billion annually to our economy.

    At the same time as average wages for those freed from these restrictions could increase by up to $2,500 a year.

    We’re also boosting competition and backing workers with a new occupational licensing regime for electricians.

    Requiring electricians to get a new license every time they want to work inter‑state is unnecessary, costly red tape.

    We’re making sure a sparky on the Tweed doesn’t need a different licence for a job in Coolangatta.

    Broader licensing reform could lift GDP by up to $10 billion a year.

    Which is why this change will be a template for future reform.

    Reason 3: risk

    Our progress to here, and our plan for what’s ahead, make up 2 parts of our economic case for re‑election.

    The third is the risk that all this could be undone by a Coalition government.

    Usually at this point in Budget week or the electoral cycle, you would set some basic tests for your opponent.

    On this occasion they’ve already failed them.

    The Coalition has put forward the ‘weakest policy offering from an opposition in living memory’, according to industry sources.

    They either don’t have a clue or they won’t come clean.

    But what looks like slapstick comedy masks more sinister intent.

    We know this because Angus Taylor has told us, and the Coalition’s position on key issues has shown us.

    Now, Angus and I don’t agree on much.

    But to give credit where it’s due, he made one insightful point recently when he said ‘the best predictor of future performance is past performance’.

    And – in a dramatic break from usual Coalition internals – Peter Dutton backed him in.

    On this, they are absolutely right.

    Their past performance is no surpluses, more waste and rorts, and more debt.

    Their past performance is middle Australia missing out – with real wages in reverse and living standards falling fast.

    Their past performance is much higher and rising inflation.

    Their past performance is Peter Dutton’s attacks on Medicare.

    But it is not just their record in government that reveals their priorities and what they would do if elected.

    Their recent record in Opposition makes it very clear:

    Australians would be worse off under Peter Dutton.

    When he cuts, Australians will pay.

    Cutting cost‑of‑living help is the only motivation that binds this Coalition clown show together.

    They’ve opposed cuts to student debt and energy bill relief.

    Opposed cheaper childcare and cheaper medicines.

    Opposed more homes and more Urgent Care Clinics.

    Today they voted for higher taxes on Australian workers.

    Australians would be much worse off if Peter Dutton had his way and they’ll be worse off still if he wins.

    This brain snap from Angus Taylor on tax makes that crystal clear.

    It means this parliamentary term finishes like it started:

    Labor helping Australians with the cost of living and Peter Dutton and the Coalition trying to prevent it.

    The Liberals and Nationals have now opposed 3 tax cuts, 3 times in 3 years.

    Instead of working with us to help Australians, they’ve got secret plans to harm them.

    It beggars belief that Peter Dutton says he will make hundreds of billions in cuts, but won’t tell Australians where or how.

    There’s only one reason for that – and people should know about it.

    The Coalition can’t find the $600 billion they need for nuclear, or the billions in cuts they’ve promised, without coming after Medicare again.

    The point I’m making is this.

    When the Australian economy is turning a corner.

    And the global economy is taking a turn for the worse.

    We can’t afford to turn back.

    Not when so little is known about the alternative.

    Conclusion

    I know this tradition is as much about your questions as it is about the Treasurer’s address.

    So let me just share some final thoughts.

    There are familiar rituals and rhythms to Budget week.

    Even after 20 years, you can still get caught up in them.

    But a budget is never about one week, or 5.

    It’s overwhelmingly a program for the years ahead.

    Ours also makes the economic case for re‑election.

    More than that, it spells out our plan for action to build on the progress we’ve made together.

    Now, it’s probably fair to say that over the years and out in the suburbs there’s been a flattening of expectations of what we can achieve through economic policymaking.

    And a narrowing of our collective sense that political leadership can make a real and tangible difference in people’s lives.

    Every one of us has reason to reflect on our role, but also, on whether we can turn it around.

    Because Australians should be proud of all that we have achieved together.

    We are on the cusp of something extraordinary in our economy.

    But something prevents us from saying so.

    Maybe that’s because of Australians’ natural streak of humility.

    Maybe after years of crisis, we’ve trained ourselves to brace for the next one.

    Maybe it’s the erosion of trust in institutions that we see around the world.

    Something that Australia has so far managed to avoid the most extreme fallout from.

    But a big part of it is undoubtedly due to the pressure people are under.

    We get that.

    Because, while we have every reason to be optimistic about the future, we understand that this can often run ahead of
    how people are faring and feeling.

    For many Australians, the pressures of the past few years have been substantial.

    So let me say we don’t just acknowledge that – we’re doing something about it.

    You saw that again in the Budget last night.

    Yes, inflation is coming down, real wages are up, unemployment is low, interest rates have started coming down, the economy is bouncing back.

    But for many people, the gap between working hard and getting ahead still needs eliminating.

    That’s why there’s more work to do.

    It’s why our focus isn’t confined to the national numbers – as important as they are.

    This Budget is about more than turning the corner, it’s a plan for where we go next.

    Not just putting the worst behind us –

    But seizing what’s in front of us.

    In this new world of uncertainty –

    Creating a new generation of prosperity –

    That is stronger, because it is more inclusive –

    In the better future that we’re building together.

    Thanks very much.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: Students and graduates of SPbGASU distinguished themselves at the 10th Architectural and Urban Planning Foresight RBC

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering – Saint Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering – From left to right: Egor Starshov, Daniil Koskov, Ekaterina Zorina, Lyudmila Morshchakova, Gleb Rosin, Ivan Zabavin, Veronika Petrenko, Elena Vorobyova, Anastasia Dedyurina, Yana Golubeva

    Students and graduates of SPbGASU were among the authors of the winning project of the 10th RBC Architectural and Urban Planning Foresight.

    The team included: captain Anastasia Dyadurina (SPbGASU); SPbGASU bachelor’s degree graduates Elena Vorobyova (ITMO University), Ivan Zabavin (ITMO University), Veronika Petrenko (I.E. Repin St. Petersburg Academy of Arts); as well as Ekaterina Zorina (Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University (SPbPU)), Daniil Koskov (European University at St. Petersburg), Lyudmila Morshchakova (SPbPU), Gleb Rosin (Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration), curators Yana Golubeva (MLA architectural bureau) and Egor Starshov (Graduate School of Management of St. Petersburg State University).

    Architectural and urban planning foresight is a research and media project of RBC Petersburg. It is aimed at finding optimal ways to develop urban areas; organizing competent discussions of urban planning issues among leading architects, developers, economists, representatives of the city’s authorities and public organizations; promoting progressive solutions using modern visualization tools.

    The theme of the tenth foresight was “The Petersburg project. A city of the new era with a Petersburg identity.” Six teams participated. Their curators were leading architects and urbanists of Petersburg. The jury also included representatives of universities and development companies. The partners were the RBI Group, Formula City, PSK Group, Bau City Development and L.Buro studio.

    Anastasia Dyadurina is a second-year Master’s student at the Faculty of Architecture. She took part in the RBC 2023–24 foresight on the topic of “Residential agglomeration of the future” – she led the team that won with the project “Neurogarden. Where nature creates the future”. The RBC 2024–25 foresight really interested the student in its topic. “I love St. Petersburg with all my heart, and the opportunity to talk about its identity, present and future, inspired me,” said Anastasia.

    The winning project was called “Capillar City”. It is an ambitious idea to save the Northern capital from the threat of flooding in the context of global warming. The authors suggested looking at the city as a living organism, where each channel and river becomes part of a single life support system; imagine a city where a new network of artificial channels works like a circulatory system, evenly distributing and utilizing excess water.

    The network of artificial canals being created will connect historical reservoirs, turning them into transport arteries. Year-round water trams will run along these “capillaries” – real “blood corpuscles” that ensure uninterrupted movement along three rings: the Small Water Ring around the historical center, the Middle Ring through residential areas, and the Highway Ring around the Ring Road.

    Every corner of the city – from the historical center to new buildings – will receive its share of water and greenery. These canals will give St. Petersburg a new identity, combining history and future into a single harmonious organism.

    The authors are sure that the capillary city is not just an engineering solution. It is a chance to give Petersburg a new impulse to life, protect its unique architecture and ensure a future for generations.

    “I regularly participate in architectural competitions, but the format of foresight is unique: participants are given maximum freedom within the framework of the designated topic. Foresight lasts for six months, teams of students and young specialists from various fields are recruited, from architecture and urban planning to sociology and economics. Each team is assigned a curator, most often a famous architect. In addition, lectures and discussions are held during the competition, including with the participation of top officials of development companies. The competition is aimed at creating a multidisciplinary professional community, where different specialists can look into the future together.

    This year the theme was especially free, there was not even a designated area for design. Our team went through a change of curator, and in the end we managed to collaborate with the founder of the MLA bureau, Yana Golubeva. The team, which initially consisted of 20 people, was reduced to eight by the final. As the captain, I had the task of defining the general vector of the project, developing a concept together with the guys, breaking it down into tasks, distributing them among the participants and preserving the integrity of the project from the idea to the implementation. I am especially glad that I managed to organize the work so that each of the team members revealed their best sides.

    The team and I understood that taking on the task of digging 205 kilometers of canals in St. Petersburg to save it from flooding and to define a new identity for the city was a very ambitious task. We took all the risks and were able to successfully create a project that was highly appreciated by the jury and the public,” said Anastasia Dyadurina. We congratulate the team on their victory and wish them further professional success!

    Project presentation

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

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: About 900 residents of three old houses in Golovinsky district begin to inspect apartments under the renovation program

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: Moscow Government – Government of Moscow –

    In Golovinsky District, they have begun a phased inspection of apartments in two new buildings under the renovation program. Residents of houses on Lavochkina and Onezhskaya streets will move into them. This was reported by the Deputy Mayor of Moscow for Urban Development Policy and Construction Vladimir Efimov.

    “The new buildings handed over for settlement are located at the following addresses: Lavochkina Street, buildings 10a and 8a. About 900 residents of three old buildings on Onezhskaya and Lavochkina Streets will move into them. Some of them have already begun to inspect the apartments. For all questions regarding the move, residents of the houses being resettled can contact the resettlement information center located in the new building on Kronshtadtsky Boulevard. In total, 137 houses are included in the renovation program in the Golovinsky District. More than 32 thousand Muscovites will receive new apartments,” said Vladimir Efimov.

    The first floors of new buildings are non-residential. In the future, social and domestic infrastructure facilities will be opened there, such as pharmacies, private medical clinics, leisure centers for children, shops or cafes.

    “The two residential complexes provide a total of almost 300 apartments with a finished, improved finish according to the standards of the renovation program. Three of them are intended for people with limited mobility: the width of the corridors and doorways has been increased, and special plumbing has been installed. The total area of all apartments in the new buildings is more than 17 thousand square meters. Near the residential complexes there are educational institutions, healthcare facilities, shops, cafes and beauty salons. Residents can also walk to Kronstadt Square, Druzhby Park and the Mikhalkovo Estate,” added the Minister of the Moscow Government, Head of the Moscow Department of Urban Development Policy

    Vladislav Ovchinsky.

    The entrances of new buildings are equipped with rooms for concierges, rooms for strollers and bicycles. Outdoor lighting and video surveillance cameras are installed in the adjacent territory for the safety and comfort of residents.

    As the Minister of the Moscow Government, the head of the capital’s Department of City Property, said Maxim Gaman, the first to inspect apartments in building 10a on Lavochkina Street were about 330 Muscovites who live in building 6, block 1 on the same street. They are expected at the resettlement information center on Kronshtadtsky Boulevard, in building 27, block 1, from March 24. More than 550 residents of old five-story buildings located at the addresses: Onezhskaya Street, buildings 41 and 23, were offered equivalent housing in the new building opposite – in building 8a. They will begin a phased inspection of the new apartments on April 3 and 18, respectively.

    Residents of 150 houses have completed the paperwork for apartments under the renovation program in the Eastern Administrative District

    Muscovites who have full account on the mos.ru portal, can speed up the move and make it more comfortable by using the super service “Moving under the renovation program”. You can use it to register online for apartment inspection, direct electronic copies personal and title documents to prepare the agreement, and then remotely select the date of its signing. In addition, the service allows make an appointment with a notary. This is necessary for the registration of documents for new housing, if among the owners there are minors, incapacitated or partially incapacitated persons. At the stage of resettlement, an application for a free moving assistance — provision of transport and movers for the transportation of things.

    As noted in the capital Department of Information Technology, will help you prepare for the move general instructions, available in the super service “Moving under the renovation program” on the mos.ru portal. With its help, you can find out how the move is organized, get information on the documents required to draw up a contract, and also use links to useful services. If you configure the parameters of the move, the super service will provide the opportunity to read the instructions for a specific life situation.

    Earlier Sergei Sobyanin told on the use of prefab technologies in the construction of houses under the renovation program.

    The renovation program was approved in August 2017. It concerns about a million Muscovites and provides for the resettlement of 5,176 houses. Earlier, Sergei Sobyanin ordered to increasethe pace of implementation of the renovation program has doubled.

    Moscow is one of the leaders among regions in terms of construction volumes. High rates of housing construction correspond to the goals and initiatives of the national project “Infrastructure for life”.

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

    Please Note; This Information is Raw Content Directly from the Information Source. It is access to What the Source Is Stating and Does Not Reflect

    https: //vv.mos.ru/nevs/ite/151789073/

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI: Purpose Investments Inc. Announces Final March 2025 Distribution Rate for Purpose High Interest Savings Fund, Purpose US Cash Fund, Purpose Cash Management Fund, and Purpose USD Cash Management Fund

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    TORONTO, March 26, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Purpose Investments Inc. announced today the final March 2025 distribution rates for Purpose High Interest Savings Fund, Purpose US Cash Fund, Purpose Cash Management Fund, and Purpose USD Cash Management Fund.

    The following table reflects the final distribution amounts for the month of March. Ex-distribution date is March 27, 2025.

    Open-End Fund Ticker
    Symbol
    Final distribution
    per unit
    Record Date Payable Date Distribution
    Frequency
    Purpose USD Cash Management Fund – ETF Units MNU.U US $0.3534 03/27/2025 04/02/2025 Monthly
    Purpose Cash Management Fund – ETF Units MNY $0.2647 03/27/2025 04/02/2025 Monthly
    Purpose High Interest Savings Fund – ETF Units PSA $0.1107 03/27/2025 04/02/2025 Monthly
    Purpose US Cash Fund – ETF Units PSU.U US $0.3375 03/27/2025 04/02/2025 Monthly


    About Purpose Investments Inc.

    Purpose Investments Inc. is an asset management company with more than $23 billion in assets under management. Purpose Investments has an unrelenting focus on client-centric innovation, and offers a range of managed and quantitative investment products. Purpose Investments is led by well-known entrepreneur Som Seif and is a division of Purpose Unlimited, an independent technology-driven financial services company.

    For further information please contact:
    Keera Hart
    Keera.Hart@kaiserpartners.com
    905-580-1257

    Commissions, trailing commissions, management fees and expenses all may be associated with investment fund investments. Please read the prospectus and other disclosure documents before investing. Investment funds are not covered by the Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government deposit insurer. There can be no assurance that the full amount of your investment in a fund will be returned to you. If the securities are purchased or sold on a stock exchange, you may pay more or receive less than the current net asset value. Investment funds are not guaranteed, their values change frequently and past performance may not be repeated.

    The MIL Network –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: GE Healthcare’s new ultrasound system represents significant addition in breast cancer screening space, says GlobalData

    Source: GlobalData

    GE Healthcare’s new ultrasound system represents significant addition in breast cancer screening space, says GlobalData

    Posted in Medical Devices

    GE Healthcare has announced the launch of a new automated whole-breast ultrasound (AWBU) system, designed to enhance cancer screening effectiveness in individuals with dense breast tissue. This advanced imaging technology aims to improve early detection rates and diagnostic accuracy, addressing the challenges posed by dense breasts in traditional mammography. The introduction of GE Healthcare’s new automated whole-breast ultrasound system represents a significant step forward in breast cancer screening, says GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.

    AWBU is a medical imaging technique that automates the acquisition of volumetric ultrasound data of the entire breast. Unlike traditional hand-held ultrasound, AWBU standardizes the imaging process, reducing operator dependency and allowing for consistent and reproducible results. This method enables the visualization of selected scan planes and the display of data as a volumetric image, facilitating comprehensive analysis.

    Graysen Vigneux, Medical Analyst at GlobalData, comments: “For patients with dense breast tissue, where mammography alone may be insufficient, this technology provides a critical additional layer of detection, improving diagnostic accuracy and potentially saving lives.”

    Studies have consistently demonstrated that supplementary ultrasound screening, when added to mammography, increases the detection rate of breast cancer, particularly in women with dense breast tissue. Dense breasts can obscure tumors on mammograms, making additional imaging modalities like AWBU crucial for effective screening.

    GE Healthcare’s new AWBU system offers several advantages over traditional hand-held ultrasound, including standardized imaging and reduced operator dependency. However, it is important to note that some AWBU techniques may employ lower frequency transducers, potentially resulting in lower spatial and contrast resolution compared to hand-held devices.

    Vigneux concludes: “Early detection remains the cornerstone of improving breast cancer outcomes, and for women with dense breast tissue, automated whole-breast ultrasound offers a promising advancement. This technology enhances the ability to identify tumors that might otherwise be missed, leading to earlier intervention and better treatment options.”

    MIL OSI Economics –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: What’s next for corporate net zero? Join GlobalData’s webinar to find out how to adapt your ESG strategy

    Source: GlobalData

    What’s next for corporate net zero? Join GlobalData’s webinar to find out how to adapt your ESG strategy

    Posted in Strategic Intelligence

    Decarbonization has become one of the most disruptive trends across all industries. Virtually every major company in every sector now has a strategy for reaching net-zero greenhouse gas emissions. This impacts their relationships with suppliers, clients, and customers and drives investment in new technologies, says GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.

    Against this backdrop, the GlobalData Strategic Intelligence team invites you to attend its “What next for corporate net zero?” webinar on Thursday, 27 March 2025, at 4pm GMT/12pm EDT.

    During this webinar, Chris Papadopoullos, Principal Analyst, Strategic Intelligence at GlobalData, and Grace Fan, Managing Director, Global Policy Research and Disruptive Themes Research, TS Lombard, will take a deep dive into net zero to find out:

    • The impact of Trump 2.0 on corporate net zero strategies.
    • The biggest emissions challenges facing companies approaching 2030 targets.
    • The emerging strategies and technologies of corporate sustainability leaders.

    Papadopoullos says: “Despite an anti-ESG backlash in the US, major companies have broadly stuck to their environmental goals. However, companies must balance their communications to appease anti-ESG and pro-ESG stakeholders.

    “The main challenges corporates will need to overcome between now and 2030 to achieve emissions targets include trying to find enough renewable energy, decarbonizing artificial intelligence, reducing emissions from agriculture and land use, and finding high-quality carbon offset projects in which to invest.”

    Fan adds: “Although the shape of the green transition is changing as global geopolitics scrambles supply chains and the AI-energy-water nexus adds new stresses on national grids, decarbonization as a structural force is here to stay. This makes it imperative for companies to think beyond the next few years to future-proof their strategies.”

    Register now for GlobalData’s “What next for corporate net zero?” webinar on Thursday 27 March 2025 at 4pm GMT/12pm EDT.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: MPTS 2025 announces first wave of speakers, reveals MBI, a GlobalData company

    Source: GlobalData

    MPTS 2025 announces first wave of speakers, reveals MBI, a GlobalData company

    Posted in MBI

    London, United Kingdom, 26 March 2025 – MPTS (The Media Production & Technology Show), the UK’s leading event for the broadcast and media industry, has unveiled the first wave of speakers and sessions for its highly anticipated 2025 conference program. Taking place on 14-15 May 2025 at Olympia Grand Hall, London, MPTS will once again bring technology and creativity together under one roof, offering a free-to-attend seminar covering all aspects of content creation, production, post-production, distribution, audio, and media technology. The exhibition isorganized by Media Business Insight (MBI) Ltd, a GlobalData company.

    With over 12,000 attendees expected, this year’s event will introduce several new features, including a dedicated AI Zone, exploring the impact of artificial intelligence on the media industry, and a sport-focused speaker series in partnership with Broadcast Sport.

    The initial line-up of sessions includes exclusive behind-the-scenes insights, industry panels, and masterclasses, such as:

    • Strictly Behind the Sparkle – A deep dive into the costumes, hair, and camera direction of Strictly Come Dancing, featuring Series Director Nikki Parsons and Costume Designer Vicky Gill.
    • Masterclass: The Greatest Night in Pop – Senior Colourist Joe Stabb on the award-winning post-production behind this acclaimed documentary.
    • In Conversation With… Jason Bell – The former NFL player and sports broadcaster joins a special discussion on the intersection of sport and media.
    • State of the Nation: UK Studios – A high-level panel on the current and future landscape of UK film and TV studios.
    • AI and the Future of Production – Director & DoP Brett Danton explores the impact of AI on creative workflows.
    • The Power of Sound – Oscar-winning Sound Editor James Mather (Top Gun: Maverick) on crafting immersive audio experiences.

    This first wave of speakers is just the beginning, with many more sessions and speakers to be announced in the coming weeks. The full program will continue to expand, ensuring MPTS 2025 remains the premier event for professionals across the broadcast, production, post-production, and content creation sectors.

    Charlotte Wheeler, Event Director of MPTS, said: “We are thrilled to reveal the first sessions in this year’s seminar program, which will once again offer a platform for innovation, discussion, and collaboration in media production and technology. This is just the beginning, and we are excited to unveil even more thought-provoking sessions and industry-leading speakers in the coming weeks.”

    MPTS 2025 is free to attend, and registration is now open. View the latest program updates here www.mediaproductionshow.com/programme and secure your place at https://forms.reg.buzz/mpts-visitor/programme-press-release.

    MBI is the publisher of market-leading titles including Broadcast, Broadcast Sport, Broadcast Tech, KFTV, The Knowledge and Screen International.

    MIL OSI Economics –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Europe: Press release – Agreement on EU-wide rules to reduce reckless driving while abroad

    Source: European Parliament

    MEPs and the Polish Presidency of the Council agreed on new rules to curb impunity and trigger EU-wide driving disqualifications for reckless drivers.

    A provisional agreement was reached on Tuesday evening between Parliament and Council negotiators on new rules ensuring that the withdrawal of a non-resident’s driving licence is applied across all EU countries.

    Currently, if a driver loses their licence following a traffic offence in a different EU country to the one where the licence was issued, the sanction will only be applicable, in most cases, in the country where the offence was committed and not where it was issued or any other EU member state. According to the agreement agreed by MEPs and the Council, a driving withdrawal, suspension or restriction will be passed on to the EU country which issued the driving licence to enforce the penalty and make sure it is followed across the whole of the EU.

    Triggers for EU-wide penalties

    With the new rules in place, concerned EU countries will have to inform each other, without undue delay, about decisions on driving disqualifications related to the most severe traffic offences – including drink or drug driving, involvement in a fatal traffic accident, or excessive speeding (e.g. driving 50 km/h faster than the speed limit).

    During the negotiations, MEPs managed to convince EU countries to introduce a deadline of 20 working days to inform the driver concerned about a decision on their sanction and on the procedure they can use to challenge it.

    MEPs also secured an obligation for the Commission to assess, five years after the entry into force of the new provisions, whether to expand the set of driving offences triggering the EU-wide application of a sanction and introduce stricter deadlines for information exchange between EU countries to enhance the implementation of new rules.

    Quote

    EP rapporteur Matteo Ricci (S&D, IT) said: “This Directive is a crucial step in ensuring better road safety. By introducing clearer and more timely criteria for suspending driving privileges because of serious violations, this measure protects not only responsible drivers but the entire community. A more effective system of control and sanction will prevent accidents and save lives.”

    Next steps

    The informal agreement on driving disqualification rules still needs to be approved by both the Council and the Parliament.

    MIL OSI Europe News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Public Information Intern

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    Apply here

    Work Location

    Bonn or remote

    Expected duration

    6 months

    Duties and Responsibilities

    Created in December 1999, the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR) is the designated focal point in the United Nations system for the coordination of efforts to reduce disasters and to ensure synergies among the disaster reduction activities of the United Nations and regional organizations and activities in both developed and less developed countries. Led by the United Nations Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction (SRSG), UNDRR has over 150 staff located in its headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, and in regional offices. Specifically, UNDRR guides, monitors, analyses and reports on progress in the implementation of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030, supports regional and national implementation of the Framework and catalyses action and increases global awareness to reduce disaster risk working with U.N. Member States and a broad range of partners and stakeholders, including civil society, the private sector, parliamentarians and the science and technology community.

    The internship is for a maximum period of 6 months. The internship is UNPAID and full-time, in -person. The modality can be handled flexibly. Interns work five days per week under the supervision of the Website Officer in the Content and Channels team. This internship position is located in the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR) in Bonn, Germany. The successful candidate will join three other colleagues from the Content and Channels team on the Bonn UN Campus.

    The Intern will:

    • Perform Internet-based research to identify disaster risk reduction (DRR) content and sources for publication on PreventionWeb.net in English (other languages, if applicable) to extend PreventionWeb’s coverage of country/region, thematic and hazard sections.
    • Enter relevant DRR documents, events, jobs, news and policy into the PreventionWeb’s Drupal content management system for publication on the website (keyword selection, abstract writing in English [other languages, if applicable], and web formatting).
    • Validate and enter relevant DRR source organizations and assist in maintaining their DRR organization profiles.
    • Assist in responding to PreventionWeb user comments and requests by sending appropriate communication and assisting in user experience research activities.
    • Undertake quality control of information as necessary, including analysis of gaps and targeted research.
    • Contribute to the improvement and development of the PreventionWeb editorial guidelines.
    • Identify content for promotion on social media and share it during the dedicated weekly meetings.
    • Assist in preparing social media content by drafting texts and short video scripts and designing cards.
    • Assist in reviewing social media and web analytics to identify and optimize performance of content.
    • Perform online research on topics that may be of interest for various purposes such as social media promotion, presentations and briefs.
    • Store key pieces of information and data on Zotero.
    • Support, and participate in, other information management related tasks and projects matching academic background.

    Qualifications/special skills

    To qualify for an internship with the United Nations, applicants must meet one of the following requirements:

    • Be enrolled in or have completed the final academic year of a first university degree programme (minimum Bachelor’s level or equivalent).
    • Be enrolled in or have completed a graduate school programme (second university degree or equivalent or higher such as Master’s degree or equivalent, Ph.D. or postgraduate degree).
    • Applicants to the UN Internship Programme are not required to have professional work experience. However, a field of study that is closely related to the type of internship that you are applying for is required.
    • Be computer literate in standard software applications.
    • Have strong internet research skills.
    • Knowledge of basic HTML and photo, audio or video editing a plus.
    • Interest in disaster risk reduction issues.
    • Have a demonstrated keen interest in the work of the United Nations and have a personal commitment to the ideals of the Charter.
    • Have a demonstrated ability to successfully interact with individuals of different cultural backgrounds and beliefs, which include willingness to try and understand and be tolerant of differing opinions and views.
    • Applicants must be a student in the final year of the first university degree (bachelor or equivalent), Master’s or Ph.D. Programme or equivalent, or have completed a Bachelor’s, Master’s or PH.D. Programme.

    Do you meet any of the above criteria? If yes, please indicate which one and attach proof to the application. Please note that you will have to provide an official certificate at a later stage.

    Languages

    English and French are the working languages of the United Nations Secretariat. Fluency in spoken and writtten English is required for this internship. Knowledge of French or Spanish is an advantage.

    Additional Information

    Due to the high volume of applications received, only successful candidates will be contacted

    Intern Specific text

    Interns are not financially remunerated by the United Nations. Costs and arrangements for travel, visas, accommodation and living expenses are the responsibility of interns or their sponsoring institutions. Interns who are not citizens or permanent residents of the country where the internship is undertaken, may be required to obtain the appropriate visa and work/employment authorization. Successful candidates should discuss their specific visa requirements before accepting the internship offer.

    No Fee

    THE UNITED NATIONS DOES NOT CHARGE A FEE AT ANY STAGE OF THE RECRUITMENT PROCESS (APPLICATION, INTERVIEW MEETING, PROCESSING, OR TRAINING). THE UNITED NATIONS DOES NOT CONCERN ITSELF WITH INFORMATION ON APPLICANTS’ BANK ACCOUNTS.

    Apply here

    MIL OSI United Nations News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: A Swirl of a Day for Phytoplankton

    Source: NASA

    The Gulf of Oman is a funnel-shaped body of water between Oman and Iran that connects to the Strait of Hormuz and Persian Gulf to the east and the Arabian Sea to the west. It is a busy hub of international shipping and also supports extensive artisanal fisheries that are important to the economies of several countries in the region.
    One notable aspect of the gulf is its frequent blooms of phytoplankton—sharp increases in the population of microscopic plant-like organisms at the base of the aquatic food web. Blooms often occur in a seasonal rhythm when environmental conditions are most conducive to phytoplankton reproduction.
    The largest blooms in this region typically occur in the winter and early spring (January through March) and the summer (June through August), when water temperatures, light conditions, and nutrient availability are favorable. Monsoon winds are a key driver of winter and early spring blooms because they push surface waters away from the coast and cause an upwelling of cool, nutrient-rich water.
    Blooming phytoplankton can produce quite a show when viewed from above, sometimes becoming large enough to be visible from space. For much of February and March, multiple NASA satellites observed a bloom that drifted across the Gulf of Oman and into the Arabian Sea.

    Eddies and currents drew phytoplankton into narrow swirling bands on March 8, 2025, when the OLI (Operational Land Imager) on Landsat 8 captured the images above. The OCI (Ocean Color Instrument) on the PACE (Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, Ocean Ecosystem) satellite acquired similar images on March 8 and March 24, along with measurements of the concentration of chlorophyll in surface waters.
    Like plants on land, phytoplankton use chlorophyll and other light-harvesting pigments to carry out photosynthesis, absorbing carbon dioxide to produce sugars for fuel. Chlorophyll in the water changes the way it reflects and absorbs sunlight, allowing scientists to map the amount and location of phytoplankton.
    The swirls of green likely include Noctiluca scintillans—a type of marine dinoflagellate that has been found here in the past. Though Noctiluca blooms can be beautiful, their presence can have serious consequences for ocean life. Bacteria consume oxygen as they break down the dead phytoplankton, which can cause hypoxia, sometimes depleting oxygen levels enough to kill fish and other marine life.
    Across the wider Arabian Sea, waters have transitioned in recent decades from supporting abundant diatoms—a type of phytoplankton important for the marine food web—to being dominated by Noctiluca. Unlike diatoms, Noctiluca can thrive in waters that are more stratified and contain fewer dissolved nutrients. This shift has had ripple effects, including an increase in jellyfish and salps, and a decline in copepods and finfish.
    NASA Earth Observatory images by Wanmei Liang, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey. Story by Adam Voiland.

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: NASA Cloud Software Helps Companies Find their Place in Space 

    Source: NASA

    Planning space missions is a very involved process, ensuring orbits are lined up and spacecraft have enough fuel is imperative to the long-term survival of orbital assets. Continuum Space Systems Inc. of Pasadena, California, produces a cloud-based platform that gives mission planners everything they need to certify that their space resources can accomplish their goals. 
    Continuum’s story begins at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California. Loic Chappaz, the company’s co-founder, started at JPL as an intern working on astrodynamics related to NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test. There he met Leon Alkalai, a JPL technical fellow who spent his 30-year career at the center planning deep space missions. After Alkalai retired from NASA, he founded Mandala Space Ventures, a startup that explored several avenues of commercial space development. Chappaz soon became Mandala’s first employee, but to plan their future, Mandala’s leadership began thinking about the act of planning itself. 
    Because the staff had decades of combined experience at JPL, they knew the center had the building blocks for the software they needed. After licensing several pieces of software from JPL, the company began building planning systems that were highly adaptable to any space mission they could come up with. Mandala eventually evolved into a venture firm that incubated space-related startups. However, because Mandala had invested considerably in developing mission-planning tools, further development could be performed by a new company, and Continuum was fully spun off from Mandala in 2021. 

    Continuum’s tools are designed to take a space mission from concept to completion. There are three different components to their “mission in a box” — design, build and test, and mission operations. The base of these tools are several pieces of software developed at NASA. As of 2024, several space startups have begun planning missions with Continuum’s NASA-inspired software, as well as established operators of satellite constellations. From Continuum to several startups, NASA technologies continue to prove a valuable foundation for the nation’s space economy.  

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI USA: NASA’s Spirit Rover Gets Looked Over

    Source: NASA

    Technicians do final checks on NASA’s Spirit rover in this image from March 28, 2003. The rover – and its twin, Opportunity – studied the history of climate and water at sites on Mars where conditions may once have been favorable to life. Each rover is about the size of a golf cart and seven times heavier (about 405 pounds or 185 kilograms) than the Sojourner rover launched on the Mars Pathfinder to Mars mission in 1996.
    Spirit and Opportunity were sent to opposite sides of Mars to locations that were suspected of having been affected by liquid water in the past. Spirit was launched first, on June 10, 2003. Spirit landed on the Martian surface on Jan. 3, 2004, about 8 miles (13.4 kilometers) from the planned target and inside the Gusev crater. The site became known as Columbia Memorial Station to honor the seven astronauts killed when the space shuttle Columbia broke apart Feb. 1, 2003, as it returned to Earth. The plaque commemorating the STS-107 Space Shuttle Columbia crew can be seen in the image above.
    Spirit operated for 6 years, 2 months, and 19 days, more than 25 times its original intended lifetime, traveling 4.8 miles (7.73 kilometers) across the Martian plains.
    Image credit: NASA

    MIL OSI USA News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Australia: Arrests – Crime series – Greater Darwin Region

    Source: Northern Territory Police and Fire Services

    The Northern Territory Police Force has arrested five males in relation to a crime series across the Greater Darwin Region overnight.

    Earlier in the night, a group of alleged offenders attended a residence on Westralia Street in Stuart Park, where they gained entry whilst armed via a dog door and subsequently stole two vehicles.

    About 1:15am, police received reports of one of the vehicles ramming a residential gate in Moulden whilst brandishing a machete and hammer, allegedly threatening residents. A short time later the group attended a government facility where the group attempted to damage the gate and security screens.

    The second stolen motor vehicle was recovered in Coconut Grove.

    Around 3am, the group were observed by police CCTV operators within one of the stolen motor vehicles nearby a commercial premises in Fannie Bay. Strike Force Trident members were nearby and a pursuit was initiated after the group failed to follow police directions. The vehicle lost control a short time later and crashed into a power pole at the intersection of Nadpur Street and Dickward Drive. All of the offenders self-extracted from the vehicle and fled by foot into the mangroves whilst additional Strike Force Trident, Darwin general duties and Dog Operations Unit members set up a cordon.

    Patrol Dog Fitzy tracked three of the offenders with the first located hiding up in a tree who surrendered to police without incident. The second was found lying in a pool of water in an attempt to conceal himself and again surrendered upon being discovered. The third was located hiding in thick vegetation and was apprehended by PD Fitzy.

    Patrol Dog Drax deployed from the cordon in a different direction and located articles of clothing from the offenders and as Drax was indicating direction of travel the offender surrendered to a member of Strike Force Trident.

    Patrol Dog Cheeko was also deployed and tracked the fifth offender into thick grassland where he was located hiding in the verge of the mangroves.

    This is another great example of the effectiveness of the Dog Operations Unit in tracking and apprehending offenders involved in violent criminal offending and the close working relationship with SF Trident.

    The five males arrested, aged 13, 14, 15, 16 and 19-years-old were all transported to the Royal Darwin Hospital for medical assessment.

    Strike Force Trident have carriage of the investigations and charges are expected to follow.

    MIL OSI News –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Economics: Phillips 66 Files Preliminary Proxy Statement for 2025 Annual Meeting

    Source: Phillips

    HOUSTON–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Phillips 66 (NYSE: PSX) today announced that it has filed its preliminary proxy materials with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in connection with its upcoming 2025 Annual Meeting of Shareholders.
    In today’s filing, the Phillips 66 Board of Directors:
    Announces the nomination of two new candidates bringing critical financial and operational capabilities to the Board:A. Nigel Hearne, a 35-year veteran of the energy industry with direct refining operations leadership, bringing deep downstream and integration expertise; and Howard I. Ungerleider, a highly strategic former President and Chief Financial Officer with extensive chemicals experience.
    Nominates John E. Lowe and Robert “Bob” W. Pease as directors:Lowe, a strategic leader with more than 40 years of leadership in midstream, refining and chemicals businesses; and Pease, a director identified in partnership with Elliott Investment Management (“Elliott”), whose expertise in refining operations strengthens the Board’s oversight of efficiency improvements and strategic execution.
    Announces it again intends to seek shareholder approval of a management proposal to approve the declassification of the Boardat the 2025 Annual Meeting, a proposal that the Company has previously put forth five times over the past decade.
    Reiterates unanimous support for the Company’s strategyto drive compelling, consistent returns for shareholders through operational excellence and effective allocation of capital across a leading integrated downstream business with a differentiated portfolio in highly attractive markets.
    Unanimously recommends that shareholders use the WHITE proxy card or the WHITE voting instruction form to vote FOR only the four nominees recommended by the Board, and AGAINST Elliott’s proposal to approve, on an advisory basis, that the Board adopt a policy to implement the required annual resignation of all directors, and as the Board recommends on all other proposals.
    Glenn F. Tilton, the Board’s lead independent director, said, “As a board, we regularly evaluate all ideas that may maximize shareholder value and have a proven history of acting decisively on value enhancing opportunities when it is in the best interests of our shareholders. Our priority is ensuring we have the right mix of skills so that we are best positioned to oversee the Company’s strategy and to deliver consistent and long-term value for our shareholders. The Board encourages new perspectives, welcomes debate and regularly engages with shareholders to solicit their feedback.”
    Tilton continued, “After careful consideration of Elliott’s nominees and several conversations with Elliott’s representatives over multiple years, we have determined that the dissident nominees do not possess skills or experiences not represented on the Board already or that would directly drive further shareholder value creation. Further, Elliott’s inconsistent approach and evolving demands would introduce undue risk by prioritizing uncertain short-term gains over a disciplined, long-term strategy. The Board reiterates its commitment to rigorously evaluating the portfolio and strategic alternatives to maximize long-term shareholder value while avoiding decisions driven by short-term market fluctuations and speculative valuations.”
    Phillips 66 Nominates Proven Leaders Who Strengthen Highly Engaged Board
    Over the past four years, Phillips 66 has welcomed five new independent directors to the Board, including two in 2024. Today, Phillips 66 is nominating four director candidates, including two new nominees:
    A. Nigel Hearne: With more than 35 years of experience in the energy industry, including extensive international upstream and downstream operating experience, he is a proven leader who will provide extremely valuable insights in overseeing Phillips 66’s execution of its strategic priorities. Hearne is currently the Chief Operating Officer of Harbour Energy and was recently Executive Vice President of Oil, Products & Gas at Chevron Corporation where he oversaw the entire value chain and was responsible for maximizing value from their global integrated model. He began his career in downstream operations, overseeing refineries in the United States and globally.
    Howard I. Ungerleider: An experienced public company board member, Ungerleider is a highly strategic former President and Chief Financial Officer with deep insight into the chemicals business. He served in leadership roles at Dow for more than 30 years and managed the financial complexities of the historic merge-and-spin of DowDuPont, an $86 billion holding company comprised of The Dow Chemical Company and DuPont, from September 2017 to April 2019. His financial expertise and broader leadership through strategic transformations will be a meaningful addition to the Board and its oversight of the Company’s strategy.
    John E. Lowe: As a respected strategic leader in the energy industry, he brings extensive expertise from an over 40-year career with leadership positions across midstream, refining, upstream and chemicals businesses. Through his various roles as an executive, strategic advisor and board member for upstream, midstream and downstream energy companies, he provides valuable insights into strategic, operational and regulatory considerations for Phillips 66’s strategic transformation and overall strategy.
    Robert W. Pease:Through his 38-year career in the energy industry, he has held numerous leadership roles, particularly in downstream businesses. He brings deep refinery operations experience to the Board, which bolsters the Board’s ability to oversee the Company’s focus on optimizing the cost structure and operational efficiency of its refining assets, along with valuable perspectives on shifting market demand and through-cycle positioning which are important for the Company to set its long-term strategy.
    “The addition of Nigel and Howard will add fresh insights from proven global leaders who not only have direct experience in our industry – they notably bring unique perspectives from their careers that are highly relevant to our position in the industry and our long-term strategy,” said Tilton. “Together, Nigel, Howard, Bob and John represent a unique set of skills and experiences. Nigel and Howard’s skills will complement those of our existing directors and can challenge our strategy and represent what is best for our shareholders,” Tilton added.
    Tilton concluded, “Our transformative strategy is in its early stages, and we are confident we have the right chief executive officer, leadership team and strategic plan in place to continue delivering sustainable value creation, as noted last year by one of our largest shareholders, Elliott Management. The Board takes a highly engaged approach to overseeing the Company’s strategy that involves thoughtfully reviewing operations and challenging management to further maximize long-term shareholder value.”
    Phillips 66’s Board of Directors is Committed to Declassification
    At the 2025 Annual Meeting, Phillips 66 is seeking shareholder approval of a proposal to approve the declassification of the Board by amending the Company’s certificate of incorporation and by-laws, as it has done five times before over the past decade. The Board continues to believe it is in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders to properly declassify the Board. Elliott is seeking shareholder approval of a request for the Board to adopt a policy to implement a required annual resignation of all directors. Elliott’s proposal is merely a distraction and contravenes several elements of the Company’s organizational documents, in violation of well-established principles of Delaware corporate law.
    The Board strongly urges shareholders who wish to properly declassify the Board in accordance with the Company’s governing documents to vote AGAINST Elliott’s proposal and in support of management’s proposal.
    Elliott’s Proxy Fight
    As stated in the March 5 public letter to shareholders, Phillips 66 has sought to engage with Elliott since 2023 to hear its ideas and work constructively toward a shared goal of long-term value creation.
    This constructive dialogue led to the addition of Bob Pease to the Board with Elliott stating: “We (Elliott) have worked collaboratively with Phillips 66 on the Board’s appointment of Bob, who will bring extensive experience in refining and the energy industry more broadly.”
    However, attempts to reach agreement on adding another mutually agreed director have been met with challenges.
    Following a period of silence, Elliott issued a series of public attacks on the Board and management team and, for the first time in its discussions with Phillips 66, proposed the idea of a separation. Phillips 66 sought to re-engage Elliott in constructive dialogue to find a path forward that would benefit all shareholders.
    At the latest meeting, Elliott representatives indicated there were no immediate next steps and opted not to present their nominees for interviews at that time, despite the Board’s willingness to engage. The Board and leadership team of Phillips 66 stand ready to engage constructively when Elliott is ready.
    In the coming weeks, Phillips 66 will provide more information about its highly qualified board candidates, its strong management team and its proven strategy to create long-term shareholder value. The Company will also provide details regarding how Elliott’s nominees and its proposed changes at Phillips 66 present significant risks to shareholder value.
    Keeping Our Shareholders Informed
    Phillips 66’s definitive proxy materials will soon be mailed out to shareholders and will include a WHITE proxy card or a WHITE voting instruction form with voting instructions. Your vote for all four Phillips 66 nominees on the WHITE proxy card or WHITE voting instruction form will be critical. Shareholders and other stakeholders can stay informed about the 2025 Annual Meeting and related updates by visiting: Phillips66Delivers.com.
    Phillips 66 strongly urges shareholders to simply discard and NOT vote using any Gold proxy card or Gold voting instruction form that may be sent by Elliott.
    About Phillips 66
    Phillips 66 (NYSE: PSX) is a leading integrated downstream energy provider that manufactures, transports and markets products that drive the global economy. The company’s portfolio includes Midstream, Chemicals, Refining, Marketing and Specialties, and Renewable Fuels businesses. Headquartered in Houston, Phillips 66 has employees around the globe who are committed to safely and reliably providing energy and improving lives while pursuing a lower-carbon future. For more information, visit phillips66.com or follow @Phillips66Co on LinkedIn.
    Forward-Looking Statements
    This document contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws relating to Phillips 66’s operations, strategy and performance. Words such as “anticipated,” “committed,” “estimated,” “expected,” “planned,” “scheduled,” “targeted,” “believe,” “continue,” “intend,” “will,” “would,” “objective,” “goal,” “project,” “efforts,” “strategies” and similar expressions that convey the prospective nature of events or outcomes generally indicate forward-looking statements. However, the absence of these words does not mean that a statement is not forward-looking. Forward-looking statements included in this news release are based on management’s expectations, estimates and projections as of the date they are made. These statements are not guarantees of future events or performance, and you should not unduly rely on them as they involve certain risks, uncertainties and assumptions that are difficult to predict. Therefore, actual outcomes and results may differ materially from what is expressed or forecast in such forward-looking statements. Factors that could cause actual results or events to differ materially from those described in the forward-looking statements include: changes in governmental policies or laws that relate to our operations, including regulations that seek to limit or restrict refining, marketing and midstream operations or regulate profits, pricing, or taxation of our products or feedstocks, or other regulations that restrict feedstock imports or product exports; our ability to timely obtain or maintain permits necessary for projects; fluctuations in NGL, crude oil, refined petroleum, renewable fuels and natural gas prices, and refining, marketing and petrochemical margins; the effects of any widespread public health crisis and its negative impact on commercial activity and demand for refined petroleum or renewable fuels products; changes to worldwide government policies relating to renewable fuels and greenhouse gas emissions that adversely affect programs including the renewable fuel standards program, low carbon fuel standards and tax credits for renewable fuels; potential liability from pending or future litigation; liability for remedial actions, including removal and reclamation obligations under existing or future environmental regulations; unexpected changes in costs for constructing, modifying or operating our facilities; our ability to successfully complete, or any material delay in the completion of, any asset disposition, acquisition, shutdown or conversion that we have announced or may pursue, including receipt of any necessary regulatory approvals or permits related thereto; unexpected difficulties in manufacturing, refining or transporting our products; the level and success of drilling and production volumes around our midstream assets; risks and uncertainties with respect to the actions of actual or potential competitive suppliers and transporters of refined petroleum products, renewable fuels or specialty products; lack of, or disruptions in, adequate and reliable transportation for our products; failure to complete construction of capital projects on time or within budget; our ability to comply with governmental regulations or make capital expenditures to maintain compliance with laws; limited access to capital or significantly higher cost of capital related to illiquidity or uncertainty in the domestic or international financial markets, which may also impact our ability to repurchase shares and declare and pay dividends; potential disruption of our operations due to accidents, weather events, including as a result of climate change, acts of terrorism or cyberattacks; general domestic and international economic and political developments, including armed hostilities (such as the Russia-Ukraine war), expropriation of assets, and other diplomatic developments; international monetary conditions and exchange controls; changes in estimates or projections used to assess fair value of intangible assets, goodwill and property and equipment and/or strategic decisions with respect to our asset portfolio that cause impairment charges; investments required, or reduced demand for products, as a result of environmental rules and regulations; changes in tax, environmental and other laws and regulations (including alternative energy mandates); political and societal concerns about climate change that could result in changes to our business or increase expenditures, including litigation-related expenses; the operation, financing and distribution decisions of equity affiliates we do not control; and other economic, business, competitive and/or regulatory factors affecting Phillips 66’s businesses generally as set forth in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Phillips 66 is under no obligation (and expressly disclaims any such obligation) to update or alter its forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.
    Additional Information
    On March 26, 2025, Phillips 66 filed a preliminary proxy statement on Schedule 14A (the “Proxy Statement”) and accompanying WHITE proxy card with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) in connection with its 2025 Annual Meeting of Shareholders (the “2025 Annual Meeting”) and its solicitation of proxies for Phillips 66’s director nominees and for other matters to be voted on. The Proxy Statement is in preliminary form and Phillips 66 intends to file and mail to shareholders of record entitled to vote at the 2025 Annual Meeting a definitive proxy statement and other documents, including a WHITE proxy card. Phillips 66 may also file other relevant documents with the SEC regarding its solicitation of proxies for the 2025 Annual Meeting. This communication is not a substitute for any proxy statement or other document that Phillips 66 has filed or may file with the SEC in connection with any solicitation by Phillips 66. PHILLIPS 66 SHAREHOLDERS ARE STRONGLY ENCOURAGED TO READ THE PROXY STATEMENT (AND ANY AMENDMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTS THERETO) AND ACCOMPANYING WHITE PROXY CARD AND ANY OTHER RELEVANT SOLICITATION MATERIALS FILED WITH THE SEC AS THEY CONTAIN IMPORTANT INFORMATION. Shareholders may obtain copies of the Proxy Statement, any amendments or supplements to the Proxy Statement and other documents (including the WHITE proxy card) filed by Phillips 66 with the SEC without charge from the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov. Copies of the documents filed by Phillips 66 with the SEC also may be obtained free of charge at Phillips 66’s investor relations website at https://investor.phillips66.com or upon written request sent to Phillips 66, 2331 CityWest Boulevard, Houston, TX 77042, Attention: Investor Relations.
    Certain Information Regarding Participants
    Phillips 66, its directors, its director nominees and certain of its executive officers and employees may be deemed to be participants in connection with the solicitation of proxies from Phillips 66 shareholders in connection with the matters to be considered at the 2025 Annual Meeting. Information regarding the names of such persons and their respective interests in Phillips 66, by securities holdings or otherwise, is available in the Proxy Statement, which was filed with the SEC on March 26, 2025, and will be included in Phillips 66’s definitive proxy statement, once available, including in the sections captioned “Beneficial Ownership of Phillips 66 Securities” and “Appendix C: Supplemental Information Regarding Participants in the Solicitation.” To the extent that Phillips 66’s directors and executive officers who may be deemed to be participants in the solicitation have acquired or disposed of securities holdings since the applicable “as of” date disclosed in the Proxy Statement, such transactions have been or will be reflected on Statements of Changes in Ownership of Securities on Form 4 or Initial Statements of Beneficial Ownership of Securities on Form 3 filed with the SEC. These documents are or will be available free of charge at the SEC’s website at www.sec.gov.

    Source: Phillips 66

    MIL OSI Economics –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-Evening Report: Peter Dutton promises $6 billion 12-month halving of petrol and diesel excise

    Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ) – By Michelle Grattan, Professorial Fellow, University of Canberra

    Opposition leader Peter Dutton will promise in his Thursday budget reply that a Coalition government would immediately halve the fuel excise on petrol and diesel.

    The cut, which would take the excise from 50.8 cents a litre to 25.4 cents, would be for a year, at a cost of A$6 billion.

    The opposition says the measure would mean a household with one vehicle filling up once a week would save about $14 weekly, on average. This would amount to about $700 to $750 over the year, based on a 55 litre tank.

    A two-car household would save about $28 a week on average – nearly $1500 over the year.

    Legislation for the excise cut would be introduced on the first parliamentary sitting day after the election so it could come into effect “as quickly as possible”.

    Dutton contrasted the immediate relief with the longer time frame before people received the tax cuts announced in the budget.

    Under the tax changes, taxpayers will receive a tax cut of up to $268 from July 1 next year and up to $536 every year from July 1 2027.

    The $17.1 billion income tax package was being rushed through the Senate on Wednesday night, as the parliament readies to rise for the election, that could be called as early as Friday for May 3.

    The government wanted to pass the legislation immediately to put the Coalition, which opposed the bill and voted against it in parliament, on the spot.

    Also, having the tax cuts in law gives greater certainty to them, as Labor promotes them in the coming campaign.

    Dutton said of his proposed excise cut: “If elected, we will deliver this cost of living relief immediately – whereas people have to wait 15 months for Labor’s 70 cent a day tax tweak.”

    “This cost of living relief will make a real difference to families and small businesses – everyone from tradies, to mums and dads, to older Australians, and to transport delivery workers,” he said.

    “The commute to work, taking the kids to school or sport, the family drive, or the trip to the shops will all cost less under the Coalition. Our plan will save many hundreds of dollars for families across Australia.

    “Lowering costs to small businesses, means lower costs for goods and services at the checkout.”

    The Morrison government introduced a six-month cut to fuel excise in 2022. The Albanese government declined to extend it when it expired.

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

    – ref. Peter Dutton promises $6 billion 12-month halving of petrol and diesel excise – https://theconversation.com/peter-dutton-promises-6-billion-12-month-halving-of-petrol-and-diesel-excise-250896

    MIL OSI Analysis – EveningReport.nz –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Rouge Bouillon closure update21 March 2025 The installation of the steel strapping is progressing well and is expected to be completed in the coming days. Once in place, this will allow for ongoing monitoring of any settling or movement in… Read more

    Source: Channel Islands – Jersey

    21 March 2025

    The installation of the steel strapping is progressing well and is expected to be completed in the coming days. Once in place, this will allow for ongoing monitoring of any settling or movement in the structure. 

    Following this, geological surveys will be conducted to assess the voids beneath the site. Work remains on schedule, and further updates will be provided as progress continues.

    We have now collated all relevant information including a upcoming schedule of works here: https://www.gov.je/Travel/Roads/RoadClosures/Pages/RougeBouillon.aspx​ 

    The situation is highly complex with several adjacent walls and buildings that are severely cracked and have been subject to significant movement following a burst watermain. The property and external walls were rendered unsafe with voids created under the structures. Multiple parties are involved, including Infrastructure and Environment, Jersey Water, structural engineers, building surveyors, loss adjustors, and insurance companies. 

    The team of professionals, working on behalf of the property owners and their insurance companies, has devised a plan to stabilise the property and then demolish the external walls. 

    • Step 1: a Contractor working on behalf of the owner of 28 Clarendon Road will install steel strapping around the building 
    • Step 2: the structural engineers, assisted by geotechnical engineers will investigate soil conditions under the foundations 
    • Step 3: the external structures and boundary walls will be demolished 
    • Step 4: re-open Rouge Bouillon once it has been determined that it is safe to do so.

    The project remains under constant review to ensure the best and safest outcome. 

    Routes and safety assurance 

    Rouge Bouillon continues to remain closed between Clarendon Road and Palmyra Road as investigations continue into the stability of an adjacent building wall, affected by a burst water main. 

    We have considered other options to manage the traffic around the closure, however the decision to retain the current traffic arrangement is based on the following factors: 

    • Reversing Clarendon Road poses additional safety risks for residents and pedestrians. 
    • Allowing right-turn access onto Clarendon Road from Val Plaisant could cause severe traffic congestion, particularly near the Gyratory. 
    • Reversing Midvale Road, while potentially useful, would necessitate signal junction changes, creating confusion, complications, and further safety concerns. 

    We advise the traveling public to continue to avoid the area and use alternative routes to access town where possible. 

    Public impact 

    We understand that the closure has significant impacts on daily travel and local businesses. The road will only reopen once the buildings are stabilised and all risks of structural collapse have been mitigated. 

    Next steps 

    A further update on the situation will be provided in seven days.​

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Stay Safe on Shared Paths

    Source: Scotland – City of Dundee

    26/03/25

    With weather improving over spring, people using shared paths in Dundee are being urged to show consideration for others as more walkers, wheelers and cyclists take to the network. 

    The reminder is being issued by a senior councillor, who is encouraging people to get out and make the most of Dundee’s shared paths, which include the 26-mile Green Circular. 

    Councillor Siobhan Tolland, depute convener of Fair Work, Economic Growth and Infrastructure, said: “Dundee has many shared paths that are a great way of travelling round the city and I hope as many people as possible get out and enjoy them during the coming months.  

    “I’d like to take this opportunity to remind them to show consideration to other users of these paths. 

    “This network is a great asset to help improve health and wellbeing and I would like it to remain a safe environment for everyone.” 

    Top tips for shared paths include: 

    • When it’s dark, or in dull conditions, make sure you are visible to others, cyclists should use lights at night. 

    • Be particularly careful at junctions, bends, entrances onto the path, or any other ‘blind spots’ where people could appear in front of you without warning. 

    • Please be aware, especially of more vulnerable users such as older people, people with small children, people in wheelchairs, or the hearing or visually impaired.   

    • When riding a bike, ring a bell well in advance if approaching people from behind, but remember, this might not always be enough to alert people that you’re coming. 

    More details on Dundee’s shared paths can be found on the City Council’s website here  

    Leader tours new Drumgeith Community Campus and Greenfield Academy

    Leader tours new Drumgeith Community Campus and Greenfield Academy

    Dundee City Council leader Councillor Mark Flynn visited the site of the new Drumgeith Community Campus and Greenfield Academy on Wednesday March 19 to see progress on the £100 million…

    19/03/25

    Dundee’s traditional Christmas offering announced

    Dundee’s traditional Christmas offering announced

    Dundee City Council has announced its plans for the city’s 2025 festive period including the return of a Christmas tree to City Square, a Christmas lights switch-on event and the continuation of…

    17/03/25

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Heathrow expansion – the impact on London’s surface transport

    Source: Mayor of London

    In 2017, Transport for London (TfL) estimated that £10-15bn would be needed to improve surface access – all the ways in which passengers, communities, staff and goods travel to and from the airport – to enable a third runway at Heathrow Airport.1

    Tomorrow, the London Assembly Transport Committee will ask guests from TfL, Heathrow Airport, Network Rail and the Heathrow Area Transport Forum about the implications of the expansion of Heathrow on surface access at the airport and the impact on London’s wider public transport network.

    The Committee will also ask guests from Heathrow about last week’s closure of the airport.

    The guests are:

    • Sophie Chapman, Surface Access Director, Heathrow Airport
    • Tim Leach, Head of Surface Access Strategy and Sponsorship, Heathrow Airport
    • Christina Calderato, Director of Transport Strategy and Policy, Transport for London
    • Marcus Jones, Route Director, Western, Network Rail
    • Anthony Smith, Chair, Heathrow Area Transport Forum

    The meeting will take place on Thursday 27 March from 10am, in the Chamber at City Hall, Kamal Chunchie Way, E16 1ZE.

    Media and members of the public are invited to attend.

    The meeting can also be viewed LIVE or later via webcast or YouTube.

    Follow us @LondonAssembly.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom –

    March 27, 2025
  • MIL-OSI Russia: The Academic Council of the State University of Management discussed the development strategy and the future of education

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: State University of Management – Official website of the State –

    On March 25, 2025, the next meeting of the Academic Council of the State University of Management was held.

    Traditionally, we started with the congratulatory part. Rector Vladimir Stroyev presented letters of gratitude from the Ministry of Science and Higher Education for their contribution to the development of practice-oriented education, the development of the federation within the framework of the “Service Learning” program to Vice-Rector Dmitry Bryukhanov and Associate Professor of the Department of Management in International Business and Tourism Industry Svetlana Grishaeva.

    Vladimir Vitalyevich also congratulated the birthday boys of the month and thanked Elena Shtyreva, an employee of the Institute of Distance Education of the State University of Management, for 55 years of continuous work at the State University of Management.

    “I also want to join in the congratulations and say “thank you” on behalf of all the institute’s employees for their daily work and contribution to the development of the institute. I know where she gets this character from, her grandfather was the deputy commander of Vasily Chapaev’s division,” Sergei Lenshin, director of the Fine Arts Department of the State University of Management, congratulated Elena Arkadyevna.

    After the completion of the formal part, those gathered moved on to considering the issues on the agenda.

    Deputy Director of the Department of Academic Policy and Implementation of Educational Programs Olga Zhuravleva presented a summary report on the self-assessment of the main areas of the university’s activities for 2024.

    “For the first time, we worked on the report together with the Center for Prospective Development, which allowed us to better present the overall picture. The indicators have mostly increased and are impressive. The University is successfully developing in most indicators. However, there are also growth points and challenges of modern society that we need to work with more actively,” Olga Zhuravleva noted.

    Director of the Center for Prospective Development Tatyana Gordeeva spoke about the results of the implementation of the State University of Management Development Program for 2024.

    “2024 has become a fundamental year in the formation of the organizational foundations of the development program. At the same time, today we are already working on its implementation in the context of the emerging new system of higher education. What it will be like is still unknown, but we must keep this in mind. In addition, there are risks of reducing off-budget admission to humanitarian programs, which are key for the State University of Management today. Therefore, today it is important to focus on the effective implementation of the development tasks that we have defined for ourselves in order to form the necessary reserve for participation in new national projects and the implementation of our ambitious goals,” Tatyana Gordeeva emphasized.

    Vladimir Stroev noted the importance of not only taking into account indicators in areas, but also making proposals for their improvement, which he expects from every employee.

    “The issue of the development program is not simple, it is connected with many indicators that are used in different systems and different issues. And all our reports must be treated responsibly, not only noting positive results, but also expressing criticism in case of their failure. These data are a reason to think about what we are doing now and what will happen to us tomorrow. It would be good not just to fulfill the indicators, but also to exceed them, or be close to this,” concluded Vladimir Vitalyevich.

    Director of the Institute of Economics and Finance Galina Sorokina reported on the results of the institute’s work for 2024.

    “The institute has shown growth in almost all areas, so it is especially pleasant to make a report. The number of not only admitted students has grown, but also those who transferred from other universities. The number of foreign students has also grown, with Vietnamese students predominating. The number of educational programs implemented by the institute is also growing. A program on behavioral economics is being developed, which will be carried out jointly with the Central Bank and Rosfinmonitoring,” Galina Petrovna noted.

    Vice-Rector Pavel Pavlovsky informed those gathered about the implementation of the Youth Policy Strategy at the State University of Management.

    “The State University of Management is undoubtedly one of the leading universities in the implementation of youth policy. We became the first university in Moscow for educational work, and in Russia we took 3rd place among universities with a population of 5 to 10 thousand people. In 2024, 47 federal projects were held on the basis of the State University of Management. This year, we initiated the All-Russian student competition “Family History. Immortal Memory”, expanded the geography of the All-Russian project “Course for Business and Entrepreneurship” that we are implementing, which will be held not only in the International Children’s Center “Artek” and the All-Russian Children’s Center “Ocean”, but also in the All-Russian Children’s Centers “Smena” and “Orlyonok”. And, of course, the All-Russian KVN School, “University Shifts” and other important events await us,” Pavel Vladimirovich shared.

    Vice-Rector Dmitry Bryukhanov proposed creating a Preparatory Department for Foreign Citizens, which was unanimously supported by the council members.

    At the end of the meeting, Vladimir Stroyev called on those gathered to prepare not only for the 2025 admissions campaign, but also to think about admissions in 2026 and make their proposals.

    “This year, the admission campaign is still under the old system, but next year a new model will be adopted, and we must be ready. It is time to prepare proposals for our areas in a given situation, including in the event of a stressful situation. We must have specific solutions for each issue,” the rector of the State University of Management concluded.

    In addition, the meeting discussed the nomination of GUU employees to participate in the All-Russian competition “Golden Names of Higher Education”, approval of new DPO programs, tuition fees and other work issues.

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 03/26/2025

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

    MIL OSI Russia News –

    March 27, 2025
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