Category: Transport

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Pay and display machines removed for cashless parking

    Source: City of York

    Published Monday, 7 October 2024

    In the coming weeks a number of parking pay and display machines will be removed, as the council moves to cashless parking.

    In February it was agreed at a decision session that the majority of the council’s car parking would go cashless, as the council looked to save money by removing the costs of maintaining machines and also avoiding the risk of thefts.

    This followed a cashless parking consultation held with residents in the summer of 2023, which proposed removing all cash payment machines in council car parks. However, after feedback from the consultation it was agreed that cash payments would still be accepted in 2 council car parks, Bootham Row and Castle Car Park.

    Councillor Kate Ravilious, Executive Member for Transport said:

    Ahead of the changes being made as we move to cashless on-street parking we wanted to update residents.

    “While 90% of payments are made by card, we are aware that some still prefer to pay cash so want to support them through this change. After listening to feedback we are keeping machines for people to pay by cash in at Bootham Row and Castle Car Park.”

    Currently out of over 1.5 million transactions in the last year 10% of the parking income was from cash payments. On street parking accounts for 6% of parking income in the city and there would have been a need to upgrade over 50 parking machines at significant cost.

    In the coming weeks on-street car parking machines will be removed. Information stickers will be added to machines to give residents early warning.

    Blue badge holders can continue to park free as per usual.

    See information on how to pay for car parking by phone.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Polytechnic University chess players held a large-scale tournament

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The Botvinnik Chess Club of SPbPU organized an open international interuniversity online chess tournament INTER SEP-24 as part of the Interuniversity Team Battles series. More than 1,000 people took part in the event.

    The chess players included representatives from Russia, Turkey, Bangladesh, Argentina, Kenya, Australia, Switzerland, Fiji, Brazil, India, Ghana, South Africa, Great Britain, Kazakhstan, Liberia and Mexico.

    The organization and conduct of the tournament was carried out by Polytech students Ruslan Barseghyan, Makari Yanchev, Alexey Arkhipovsky, Alexander Khvoshchev, Alena Makovkina, Alexey Aktyufeev, Daniil Agalakov, Lev Bystritsky, Artem Mkrtchyan, Elizaveta Khazagaeva, Anna Sukhova, Anastasia Kotova, Daniil Podreshetnikov, Bogdan Sivov, Angelina Velichko, Anastasia Bulyuk, Denis Zhdanov and Anastasia Kondratyeva.

    As a result, the AITU team from Astana took first place. The representatives of the Baikal State University from Irkutsk came in second. The third place was awarded to the TUSUR team from Tomsk.

    Once again, the largest inter-university tournament brought together representatives from 16 countries. We intend to develop and expand this event further to make it part of the international university culture, – shared the head of the SPbPU chess club Pavel Martynov.

    The final table of the international interuniversity chess tournament INTER SEP-24 can be seen atlink.

    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 accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    https://vvv.spbstu.ru/media/nevs/sport/chess-players-Polytechnic-held-a-large-scale-tournament/

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Early years education too important to be left to chance

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Ofsted has today published the final part in its series of Best start in life research reviews relating to early years education.

    Today’s report focuses on what progress looks like for pre-school aged children in the 4 specific areas of learning – literacy, mathematics, understanding the world, and expressive arts and design.

    The research is clear: early education is too important to be left to chance. A high-quality early years curriculum is particularly important as not all children get the same start in life – for example, due to differences in the level of help they receive at home.

    Today’s report highlights how the 4 specific areas of learning give breadth and richness to the early years curriculum, and show how early learning is connected.

    A strong foundation in literacy and mathematics gives children lifelong benefits and is crucial to their future success. Early literacy development helps with children’s language and vocabulary and can support their emotional understanding. Equally, effective early mathematical learning and encouraging positive attitudes to numbers and maths are crucial to children’s later achievement. Expressive arts provide children with opportunities to learn new skills and be creative. Understanding the world is a broad area and, for babies and young children, learning needs to be connected so they can build on their pre-existing knowledge to learn new ideas in the familiar contexts around them.

    To deliver a high-quality early years curriculum, practitioners need to understand how children develop and learn, so they can plan the next steps in their learning. Teaching in the specific areas should also offer children opportunities to develop their executive function skills, which are one of the best predictors of a child’s later success.

    Today’s report draws together all the findings from the research series and suggests the key indicators of an effective early years education include:

    • interactions between children and adults that are high-quality, including both caring interactions and those promoting children’s thinking. Finding out what children know and can do is more useful than standing back and observing
    • carefully considering what we teach our youngest children so that adults can make the best use of available time and ensure all children learn important knowledge, concepts and ideas
    • helping children to learn new things by making links with things that they already know
    • making sure that what children learn is sequenced appropriately for each area of learning. For example, in mathematics children need to build understanding of concepts in a clear hierarchy, but in other areas a different approach to sequencing might be better
    • developing a child’s executive function, such as a child’s ability to hold information in their working memory and work with that information, is not left to chance. These skills are crucial and do not just develop of their own accord
    • ensuring practitioners avoid making tasks too complicated, so that children’s working memory isn’t overwhelmed
    • setting out activities that children might experience is not enough. Practitioners ensure that learning is not left to chance and that all children have the support and guidance they need

    Sir Martyn Oliver, His Majesty’s Chief Inspector, said:

    A high-quality early education benefits all children, particularly the most vulnerable, and is far too important to be left to chance. Learning in the early years is fundamental to providing children with the tools they need to thrive throughout their education, and beyond. That is all the more important for children from disadvantaged backgrounds. If we get early education right for our most vulnerable children, we’ll get it right for all children.

    Early years practitioners deserve our gratitude for their hard work in making sure that every child gets off to the best start in life. I hope that this research series helps them to consider what an excellent early years curriculum for all children might look like.

    Today’s report builds on the findings of part 1 and part 2. The series of early years reviews aims to help practitioners raise the quality of early years education.

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    Published 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Trump Tax: private jet levy could raise £250k every time former President visits Scotland

    Source: Scottish Greens

    The super wealthy are doing terrible damage to our planet.

    A private jet tax could raise £250,000 every time former US President Donald Trump visits Scotland, says Scottish Greens finance spokesperson, Ross Greer.

    The levy would be based on the application of a new ‘super rate’ of Air Departure Tax for private jet passengers. This would be set at 10 times the current top rate of the tax, proportionate to the massively increased level of pollution for private air travel versus regular commercial flights. 

    The distance between Scotland and Trump’s Mar A Lago home in Florida puts it in Band B for Air Passenger Duty, currently set at £581 per passenger at the ‘Higher’ rate. A new Super Rate which reflects the huge damage private jets do to the climate could be set at £5,800. With Trump’s Boeing 757 capable of carrying 43 passengers, a flight to Scotland at this rate would result in a £249,400 fee at the point of departure back to the US.

    All parties agreed to devolve Air Passenger Duty during the Smith Commission ten years ago and an Act of the Scottish Parliament was passed in 2017 to replace it with a Scottish Air Departure Tax. However, this has not yet commenced due to the UK Government’s refusal to allow the exemption for lifeline island flights to continue. Were this to be resolved, the Scottish Government would immediately have the power to implement a super-tax on private jets.

    Ross Greer MSP said: “Most people are trying to play our part in tackling the climate crisis. Our individual efforts are important, but they are totally undermined by the super-rich flying across the world in private jets which are ten times more polluting than regular flights and fifty times worse than trains. It’s time these elites were taxed in line with the massive damage their lifestyle is doing to the planet.

    “Whether it’s Trump jetting between his golf courses, CEOs visiting their yachts or Rishi Sunak flying between parts of the UK with perfectly good rail lines, there’s no justification for it when we can all see the effects of climate breakdown as they devastate communities across the planet.

    “A billionaire uses 820 times as much CO2 as the average person in the UK. They do more damage to the planet before lunch than you do in a whole year. 

    “A private jet tax would raise money for our public services but its real aim would be to keep the super-rich and their destructive toys on the ground. It would of course have the added bonus of keeping the notoriously tight and cash-strapped Donald J Trump out of Scotland. That’s a gift you couldn’t even begin to put a price tag on.”

    NOTES

    Below table is current Air Passenger Duty as set UK-wide, with a new theoretical Super rate which would be applied to private aircraft above a certain size/weight. This Super rate is just ten times the Higher rate, roughly equal to the increased level of emissions per passenger relative to those on regular commercial flights.

    The distance between Orlando (closest major airport to Mar A Lago) and Edinburgh is just under 5,000 miles, so would be band B at £5,800. Trump’s 757 has a capacity of 43 people, so 43 x £5,800 = £249,400.

    Destination

    Reduced Rate

    Standard

    Higher

    New ‘Super’ Rate

    Domestic

    £7

    £14

    £78

    £780

    Band A
    (0 – 2,000 miles)

    £13

    £26

    £78

    £1000

    Band B 

    (2,001 – 5,500 miles)

    £88

    £194

    £581

    £5,800

    Band C

    (5,501 miles and above)

    £92

    £202

    £607

    £6,000

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Economics: By Investing in Technical Training, a Brighter Future Beckons for the Youth of Bhutan

    Source: Asia Development Bank

    Photo Essay | 08 October 2024

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    The Asian Development Bank is ramping up investment in technical and vocational education and training in Bhutan, which is helping to train thousands of students in critical skills that can be applied toward a range of potential careers.

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    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI USA: FACT SHEET: Biden-⁠ Harris Administration Announces Over 250 Organizations Made Voluntary Commitments to White  House Challenge to Save Lives from  Overdose

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    Today, the Biden-Harris Administration is announcing that over 250 organizations, businesses, and stakeholders across the country have made voluntary commitments to the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose.
    The Challenge, launched earlier this year, is a nationwide call-to-action to stakeholders across all sectors to increase training on, and access to, life-saving opioid overdose reversal medications like naloxone. The voluntary commitments highlighted today build on progress made under President Biden and Vice President Harris’s Unity Agenda, which calls on all Americans, in red states, blue states¸ and everywhere in between, to come together and help address the nation’s overdose epidemic.
    Under President Biden and Vice President Harris’s leadership, the Biden-Harris Administration has taken historic action and made unprecedented investments to reduce overdose deaths. The Administration removed decades-long barriers to treatment for substance use disorder and expanded access to life-saving overdose reversal medications like naloxone.  The Administration also acted to make naloxone available over-the-counter at groceries and pharmacies for the first time in history. Today, the nation is now seeing the largest decrease in overdose deaths on record.
    The White House received commitments to the Challenge from private and public entities, spanning entertainment and hospitality, professional sports leagues, health care providers, trade associations, schools and universities, technology companies, transportation partners, faith groups, private businesses, and more. A number of organizations and businesses made new voluntary commitments as part of the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose, including:
    Amazon is equipping its North American operations facilities with naloxone and bolstering its emergency response procedures with comprehensive training for employees on how to recognize signs of an opioid overdose and properly administer naloxone. Amazon is rolling out its naloxone program in two phases, starting with its most densely populated fulfillment centers. By early 2025, the program will expand to all of Amazon’s operations sites in the U.S., covering over 500,000 employees at hundreds of sites nationwide.
    American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) commits to train its members and staff on proper use of opioid overdose reversal medications. They also commit to including opioid overdose medications in all first aid kits.
    The Association of Flight Attendants-CWA (AFA) is working with the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to implement naloxone on flights, including trainings. They previously worked with the FAA to require that Emergency Medical Kits (EMK) carried by passenger airlines include naloxone.
    Atlanta Public Schools (APS) is implementing a district-wide training available to all school staff to recognize and reverse overdose. Currently, 136 APS health and security personnel have completed naloxone training. APS stocks naloxone in every elementary, middle, and high school in the district, serving nearly 50,000 students and 8,000 employees, and has opioid educational posters and brochures to increase school community awareness.
    Butler University formed the Butler Overdose Action Team, comprised of faculty, staff, and student leaders, in response to the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose. The team is leading campus-wide initiatives to increase awareness, training, and access to lifesaving opioid overdose reversal medication, and collaborating with local health organizations in Indianapolis to promote education on opioid use disorder on campus. Butler also recently placed naloxone in all 58 Emergency Kits across campus, and plans are underway for comprehensive naloxone training for students and employees.
    Charleston County School District (CCSD) commits to working with their community and local substance use agencies to provide educational programs on and promote the use of opioid overdose reversal medications (OORM). CCSD’s substance use program commits to educate students, staff, and parents/caregivers about the dangers of illicit fentanyl and how OORM can save lives. In addition, CCSD works closely with district nursing staff on the use and availability of OORM in CCSD’s 83 schools that serve approximately 49,000 students.
    The Dallas Area Rapid Transit Police Department commits to train and equip all of its Police Officers with naloxone. The Department supports a regional transit agency in the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex, covering six counties and thirteen cities.
    Deloitte LLP will equip U.S.-based Deloitte Offices with naloxone by December 2024. Naloxone will be placed in Automated External Defibrillator (AED) cabinets at its offices across the U.S. Further, Deloitte will train select office personnel to recognize and help treat overdose.
    Keystone Contractors Association (KCA) is recommending to its members that every construction jobsite and contractor’s office have naloxone available on-site. This builds upon KCA’s work in prior years in launching the Pennsylvania Construction Opioid Awareness Week to get resources and training to construction employers to provide to their workers.
    Laborers International Union of North America (LIUNA) commits to reach its 500,000+ members, their families, and LIUNA affiliates with education on the importance of naloxone on jobsites, training on how to use the medication, and information on where and how to get it. This work is in addition to developing and promoting comprehensive safety and health information on opioid use.
    The National Hockey League (NHL) commits to working with its clubs and staff to make life-saving medication readily available across NHL offices and in arenas. NHL is helping clubs make naloxone available at home games with their first aid units, and ensuring on-site personnel are trained to administer it on game nights. NHL is also advising clubs to include naloxone in their travel medical kits, and encouraging its availability in the visiting team’s emergency bags.
    San Diego Metropolitan Transit System (SDMTS) now trains every newly hired Code Compliance Inspector (CCI) from the Transit Security and Passenger Safety Department in the recognition of opioid overdose and issues naloxone as required equipment for staff. In 2024, CCIs administered naloxone nearly 200 times, and the SDMTS Bus Division Road Supervisors also started carrying naloxone. SDMTS started training CCIs to carry and administer naloxone in July 2021 in response to the overdose crisis.
    Commitments from these entities build upon steps taken in recent years by other organizations that joined the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose to address the overdose epidemic. Examples of these actions from organizations include:
    American Heart Association and Opioid Response Network are partnering on the EmPOWERED to End Opioid Misuse and Stimulant Use Disorder Initiative that aims to address opioid and stimulant usage within Black and Hispanic communities. They have partnered with Black and Hispanic churches to implement community trainings and disseminate educational tools to facilitate open and honest conversations with a wide range of people on the stigmatization of people experiencing opioid and substance use disorders.
    International Union of Painters & Allied Trades (IUPAT) District Council 35 prioritizes support for and awareness of mental health and substance use, and provides overdose education and training on naloxone to its members and apprentices. IUPAT also distributes naloxone to its members, apprentices, and jobsites. IUPAT is part of a broader effort by the Massachusetts Building Trades Recovery Council, which has distributed more than 11,000 doses of naloxone to 14 building trades unions across Massachusetts for distribution to their membership. The Recovery Council receives naloxone from Massachusetts’ Bureau of Substance Abuse Services’ Community Naloxone Program.
    The Jacksonville Transportation Authority (JTA) in Florida has developed overdose rescue training for operations, safety, and security staff, and implemented a ‘bus marshal’ program, where naloxone-equipped security officers ride strategically-targeted routes. This led to saving the life of a bus passenger who was experiencing overdose. JTA also launched ‘Safety on the Move’, delivering free overdose prevention and rescue training and naloxone kits to at-risk communities in partnership with Drug Free Duval, Community Coalition Alliance, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Foundation, and North Florida High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA) Overdose Response Strategy.
    The North Carolina Council of Churches (NCCC) hosts a Partners in Health and Wholeness initiative that works to bridge the issues of faith, health, and justice. This includes the Overdose Response program that offers opioid workshops to faith communities that seek to learn more about the opioid crisis and how they can help with response, and incorporates naloxone distribution upon request. They also received grant funding to provide local churches with resources for opioid-related initiatives for their members. 
    The Restaurant Association Metropolitan Washington (RAMW) has more than 1,400 businesses in its membership, including restaurants, food and hospitality vendors, and allied businesses that work within the food industry in DC, Northern Virginia, and Suburban Maryland. RAMW began partnering with the DC Department of Behavioral Health (DBH) to provide overdose education and naloxone distribution to restaurants in DC, including large trainings for business improvement districts. Restaurants can order a kit to receive by mail from RAMW’s website.
    The San Francisco Entertainment Commission is partnering with the San Francisco Department of Public Health to raise awareness about the presence of illicit fentanyl at and around nightlife spaces, and increase the entertainment industry’s access to life-saving naloxone. To date, they have led in-person trainings for staff at 18 nightlife businesses in San Francisco, distributed 300+ doses of naloxone at outreach events, and reached approximately 900 nightlife attendees through on-stage overdose prevention trainings before performances and other events.
    This Must Be the Place is a nonprofit providing free naloxone to attendees at music venues and festivals across the country. They committed to passing out over 60,000 free kits of naloxone at places like Lollapalooza, Bonnaroo, Austin City Limits, and Dreamville. Seventy percent of the population they reach are receiving naloxone for the first time.
    United Airlines equips each of its enhanced medical kits on every aircraft and station across the network with opioid overdose reversal medications. All of United’s 28,000+ flight attendants are annually trained in the proper use of these life-saving medications. Over the past five years, United has purchased nearly 1,200 units annually, ensuring greater safety for both passengers and crew, including flight attendants and pilots.
    The University of Rhode Island (URI), through its Cooperative Extension program, established the Community First Responder Program (CFRP). CFRP provides more than 50,000 kits annually. CFRP offers in-person and online educational trainings for the public at schools and town halls, and to healthcare providers, first responders, police, and more. They also distribute naloxone and safer-use kits at events in partnership with CVS Health and the U.S. Postal Service. CFRP has expanded services to rural regions of five other New England states through a grant from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). CFRP is expanding its regional rural overdose education via collaborations with New Hampshire Cooperative Extension, Husson University School of Pharmacy (Maine), University of Maine Cooperative Extension, Western New England University College of Pharmacy (Massachusetts), and University of Vermont Cooperative Extension. As naloxone is often inaccessible to New England’s rural regions, CFRP offers to mail no-cost naloxone to participants completing its online interactive module, “Become a Community First Responder.”
    Additional voluntary commitments can be found here.
    In support of President Biden and Vice President Harris’ whole-of-government approach to address the overdose epidemic, federal agencies are working to help expand access to life-saving opioid overdose reversal medications like naloxone and save even more lives. These efforts also align with updated Guidelines for Safety Station Programs in Federal Facilitiesreleased in December 2023:
    The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) has authorized first responders in its Office of Safety, Security and Personnel and throughout the U.S. Forest Service who are equipped and trained in the administration of opioid overdose reversal medications (OORM).  Additionally, USDA’s Center for Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships has provided OORM trainings to over 40 community partners across 15 states as part of its Rural and Farming Communities Mental Health and Suicide Prevention work. USDA remains committed to continuing and expanding the reach of these trainings.
    The Department of Commerce‘s Office of Export Enforcement (OEE) is training Special Agents in the use of opioid overdose reversal medications (OORM) in October 2024, allowing OEE Special Agents to safely and effectively deploy them. OEE will have OORM accessible during all preplanned enforcement operations by January 2025. 
    The Department of Defense (DoD) is committed to opioid safety and prevention of overdose. To strengthen DoD’s emergency response protocols, naloxone is available across installations in the Continental United States and training programs have been expanded, ensuring first responders are equipped and trained. The DoD remains committed to the safety and prevention of overdose by continuing its efforts to provide naloxone access to DoD first responders and investigators and to provide associated trainings beyond DoD first responders.
    The U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) is increasing training on and access to naloxone. The Indian Health Service (IHS) now mandates annual overdose response training for all IHS employees, contractors, students, and volunteers. Further, before 2025, naloxone training and a guide on procuring naloxone (i.e., using state standing orders, city and county public health departments, etc.) will be available to all U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps officers, and naloxone will be available in safety stations at all HHS regional offices. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), in partnership with the Program Support Center (PSC) and the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Health (OASH), will equip all AED stations in its headquarters with naloxone, and SAMHSA hosted an annual naloxone training for all staff as part of its International Overdose Awareness Day recognition. Additionally, naloxone training will be added to the HHS Learning Management System available to all HHS personnel, including volunteer Federal Civilian Responders.
    The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) issued, and recently updated, a policy regarding the Administration of Naloxone by Non-Healthcare Providers. This policy directs DHS agencies and offices to identify their workforce populations at higher risk of exposure and develop a program to equip them with both naloxone and the training to use it.  The DHS Office of Health Security (OHS) developed virtual and in-person training modules that DHS agencies and offices can use to train their non-healthcare providers or as the basis for developing their own workforce-specific training. DHS continues to work to operationalize formal programs that equip non-healthcare providers with Component-procured naloxone.
    The Department of the Interior (DOI) has issued guidance on the training, carrying, and use of naloxone by DOI employees who may come into contact with persons suspected of opioid overdose during their normal course of duties. The guidance allows critical first responders – including emergency medical responders and emergency medical technicians (EMR/EMT), firefighter EMTs, and law enforcement officers – to have access to opioid overdose reversal medications at various sites nationwide, including national parks and tribal lands. As DOI components continue to conduct risk assessments to identify high-risk areas and appropriate personnel to be trained, the Department is poised to implement vital resources efficiently to preserve life and protect the public.
    The Department of Justice (DOJ) has enacted policies so employees most likely to encounter overdose victims have access to opioid overdose reversal medications (OORM) and the training to safely and effectively deploy them. Pursuant to these policies, its law enforcement agencies – Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF), Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and U.S. Marshals Service – will have OORM accessible during all preplanned enforcement operations; all Federal Bureau of Prisons staff at all sites will have access to OORM 24 hours a day; and all DOJ public-facing facilities and law enforcement facilities will have safety stations equipped with OORM.
    The United States Postal Service (USPS) has trained 59,000 employees in 1,318 facilities in U.S. counties facing high numbers of overdose deaths in response to the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose. Also, USPS has procured and distributed naloxone to first aid kits in these facilities. As the USPS continues it communication activities on overdose prevention, it expects to reach over 500,000 employees, many of whom have public-facing roles as part of the Postal Service’s ubiquitous footprint across the United States. 
    The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is working to make training available to all employees by December 2024 and will develop and issue a policy statement to support naloxone implementation by March 2025. VA also pledges to ensure opioid overdose reversal medications are available in all high-risk Veterans Health Administration health care areas, including at VA Medical Centers and outpatient clinics, and in all Vet Centers by the end of 2025.
    Read more on the White House Challenge to Save Lives from Overdose HERE.
    Read more on the Biden-Harris Administration actions to address the overdose epidemic HERE.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: FACT SHEET: Biden-⁠ Harris Administration Holds Workforce Hub Convening in Milwaukee, Announces Commitments to Expand Pathways into Good-Paying  Jobs

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    Today, President Biden announced new actions from his Investing in America agenda to connect Milwaukee, Wisconsin residents to good-paying jobs, including replacing lead pipes and upgrading infrastructure through the Milwaukee Workforce Hub. The city’s Hub is one of nine Investing in America Workforce Hubs launched by the Biden-Harris Administration to ensure all Americans —including women, people of color, veterans, and other that have been historically left behind–have access to job opportunities, and the training needed to fill them. This announcement comes during President Biden’s visit to Milwaukee, where he announced EPA’s final rule to replace lead pipes within a decade and announced $2.6 billion in new funding to deliver clean drinking water nationwide. Thanks to funding from President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, infrastructure projects totaling nearly $100 million are in the works across the City of Milwaukee. As part of these investments, the city has begun replacing 100 percent of its lead service lines, reducing the timeline for replacement from 60 years to 10 years in alignment with the President’s goal. The Biden-Harris Administration will create thousands of jobs for Milwaukee residents through these investments, and will continue to collaborate with local organizations, ensuring the city is training the skilled workers needed to accomplish these projects. The City of Milwaukee and the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District are leading the charge in creating workforce opportunities for the community. Today, collaborators in the Milwaukee Workforce Hub are announcing commitments that will expand pathways into these good-paying jobs to meet the President’s goal. Scaling Up and Expanding Apprenticeships Registered apprenticeships are the gold-standard model for training a new generation of workers in the skilled trades and provide pathways to high-quality jobs for women and other historically underrepresented groups. Since taking office, the Biden-Harris Administration has invested more than $730 million to expand Registered Apprenticeships and pre-apprenticeships nationwide, leading to the hiring of more than 1 million apprentices. In Milwaukee, local organizations are taking steps to use more apprentices on public projects and prioritize graduates of local pre-apprenticeship programs which serve underrepresented populations. These steps build on the city’s existing program, which puts residents on a path to a journey-level position in a skilled trade.    In total, these actions will create opportunities for hundreds of new apprentices and help to grow certified pre-apprenticeship programs serving underrepresented populations, including high school students from Milwaukee Public Schools. These opportunities include:
    The City of Milwaukee’s Department of Public Works and Milwaukee Water Works will run a pilot from 2025 to 2027 and require that 10 percent of all labor hours within each craft go to apprentices—half of whom must come from certified pre-apprenticeship programs that serve residents of Milwaukee who are currently underrepresented in apprenticeships. The new requirement would apply to multiple major road construction bids totaling $102 million, including a $36 million Reconnecting Communities project to reconnect communities divided by a road that prioritizes vehicle traffic over bikers and pedestrians, and a $24.3 million RAISE project to make complete streets improvements along one and a half miles of Villard Ave, including raised bike lanes, signal improvements, and curb extensions. The pilot will apply to all contracts replacing at least 300 lead service lines, creating 175 apprentice jobs and covering an estimated $82 million of lead service line replacement funding from President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.
    Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District (MMSD) will also change their procurement policies to require apprenticeships for all crafts working on all their projects, helping to bring new workers into specialized crafts like pipefitting and operating engineers. For 2025, this policy would apply to construction bids totaling approximately $90 million for the reclamation facilities, the conveyance system, and flood management projects. This policy is estimated to create at least 80 apprentice jobs, 40 percent of whom will be required to come from certified pre-apprentice programs serving traditionally-underrepresented residents of Milwaukee.  
    The Wisconsin Department of Transportation (WisDOT) continues its efforts to develop a local workforce to build state highways. Currently, WisDOT has implemented a Federal Highway Administration pilot on a $65 million freeway project which sets incentives for local residency workforce and apprentice requirements as part of federally funded highway projects. The department will consider the use of the special provisions in future projects to grow this effort in the Milwaukee area.
    Milwaukee area unions and postsecondary providers have committed to increase their apprenticeship classes as demand for apprentices on public contracts increases—projecting to increase classes by at least 200 apprentices. Specific union level increases include 50 new apprentices from the Laborers’ International Union of North America, 70 from the International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Iron Workers, 75 from the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, and 20 from International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers.
    The City of Milwaukee’s Environmental Collaboration Office will also implement a Community Benefits Agreement as it builds a new public Electric Vehicle (EV) charging network in the city through a nearly $15 million federal grant from US Department of Transportation. This Community Benefits Agreement will require electrician apprentices on each EV charging installation and include local hire requirements consistent with the City of Milwaukee’s Resident Preference Program.  At least 40 percent of the chargers will be put in historically disadvantaged communities.
    Expanding Pipelines into Apprenticeship
    These expanded registered apprenticeship slots will create new opportunities for hundreds of workers in the Milwaukee area. The Milwaukee Workforce Hub will work to ensure every resident has access to these opportunities, by investing in pre-apprenticeship programs that offer disadvantaged communities a chance to develop the skills and work experience needed to succeed in these apprenticeships. As a result of the Milwaukee Workforce Hub, dedicated funding for pre-apprenticeships in the area will grow by at least $650,000.
    The Wisconsin Regional Training Partnership/Building Industry Group & Skilled Trades Employment Program (WRTP | BIG STEP) currently serves 1,000 individuals every year and has been a leader in the Milwaukee construction sector for decades. In the coming months and years, WRTP | BIG STEP will lead the workforce hub’s construction sector coordination and job training, convening industry partners to develop workforce programs that provide Milwaukee residents access to good-paying and union job in the skilled trades. New investments include:
    MMSD will invest $350,000 in WRTP | BIG STEP for certified pre-apprenticeship programs, including transportation assistance, stipends while participants are in training, and on-going placement and retention for first-year apprentices.
    Employ Milwaukee and philanthropic organizations will invest up to $400,000 in additional funding for WRTP | BIG STEP, including capacity building to increase participation in apprenticeship-readiness initiatives. Employ Milwaukee, the workforce board for Milwaukee, will use formula funds from the U.S. Department of Labor to support innovative customized training cohorts in to meet the needs of the local construction industry with a goal of training 60-80 workers.
    Unions in the Milwaukee region will expand their investment in WRTP | BIG STEP. Unions have been investing about $625,000 per year in this pre-apprenticeship program, which trained over 1,000 people in 2023. Over the next two years, regional trades are striving to increase their investments in WRTP | BIG STEP to at least 3 cents per hour of member work on regional mega projects, including a $3.3 billion data center being built by Microsoft in Southeast Wisconsin. Unions will also partner with Milwaukee Public Schools to prepare students for pre-apprenticeship programs.
    Providing Supportive Services
    The Milwaukee Workforce Hub will also support residents as they begin working in these growing fields, by helping residents with supportive services, including career navigation services and stipends. These investments will help ensure that workers have the resources and skills they need for continued success in the industry.
    The Wisconsin Department of Transportation will invest $507,000 in workforce development through the Highway Construction Skills Training (HCST) program. WRTP | BIG STEP receives $143,800 in funding from WisDOT to run HCST. This year, WisDOT used grant funding from US DOT to lead a pilot to expand stipends and supportive services for job training participants in HCST. Lessons learned from the pilot, will be used to look at where stipends and higher supportive services help increase graduates in the program. 
    MMSD is partnering with Employ Milwaukee and Milwaukee Community Services Corps to provide career navigation services and paid work experience for 64 participants in water sector careers with $1 million from the U.S. Department of Labor. The funding also supports the development of water industry career pathways and competency maps in partnership with the Council for Adult & Experiential Learning.
    Additional Federal Support for Workforce Development
    In addition to commitments from partners, the Biden-Harris Administration is making millions in direct investments in Milwaukee to support job training and upskilling to meet the need for these historic investments.
    EPA’s Great Lakes Restoration Initiative will incorporate key workforce development and labor best practices into the estimated $320 million in Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and other funding to clean up the Milwaukee Estuary Area of Concern. EPA will, for the first time, incorporate Project Labor Agreements into contract task orders with an estimated $275 million in Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding. This initiative will support local and regional jobs cleaning up contaminated sediments in the Milwaukee Estuary Area of Concern. In addition, EPA is collaborating with local organizations to support local workforce development as part of the estimated $45 million in activities to restore important habitats across Milwaukee.
    The City of Milwaukee Water Works is partnering with Employ Milwaukee to upskill at least 60 city of Milwaukee workers in occupations to support the replacement of lead service lines. Employ Milwaukee is using $500,000 from the U.S. Department of Labor Community Project Funding to fund this partnership.
    Employ Milwaukee also received a $5 million Building Pathways to Infrastructure Grant from the U.S. Department of Labor that will prepare more than 480 unemployed and underemployed individuals for high-demand infrastructure jobs, including advanced manufacturing, information technology, and professional, scientific, and technical service occupations that support the growing sectors of renewable energy, transportation, and broadband infrastructure. Over $900,000 from this grant is going to the Milwaukee Area Technical College to assist underrepresented populations in accessing academic and non-academic support to enter civil engineering and drafting occupations that will support transportation and water investments from the Biden-Harris Administration. Other partners in the grant include Waukesha Area Technical College, Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development Bureau of Apprenticeship Standards, WOW Workforce Board, MKE Tech Hub, City of Milwaukee, and a variety of employers.
    The City of Milwaukee is investing more than $25 million in American Rescue Plan (ARP) funding to remediate lead paint. To help meet that demand, the City provided $3 million for Employ Milwaukee’s Healthy Homes Construction Careers Program, which is designed to connect trained workers with lead abatement certifications to contractors who are paid by the City of Milwaukee Health Department to remediate high lead risk homes. The training is free to the student, including the cost of training, certification, exam fees, stipends, incentives, and wages during work experience. To date, 344 workers had been enrolled in training so far.
    The Wisconsin Biohealth Tech Hub received nearly $50 million through President Biden’s CHIPS and Science Act to establish the region as a leader in personalized medicine. Biden-Harris Administration funding for the Wisconsin Tech Hub will create inclusive talent pipelines that can help develop and deploy cutting edge medical technologies; addressing workforce challenges that often face new industries.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: FACT SHEET: Biden-⁠ Harris Administration Issues Final Rule to Replace Lead Pipes Within a Decade, Announces New Funding to Deliver Clean Drinking  Water

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    Since President Biden Took Office, Over 367,000 Lead Pipes Have Been Replaced Nationwide, Benefitting 918,000 People
    President Biden and Vice President Harris are fighting to ensure a future where every community has access to clean, safe water. Since Day One, the Biden-Harris Administration has worked to ensure that every American can turn on their tap and drink clean water without fear of lead and other toxic chemicals. As part of this historic commitment to clean water and environmental justice, President Biden committed to replace every lead pipe in the country within 10 years, issuing a comprehensive Lead Pipe and Paint Action Plan to achieve that goal.
    Today, to deliver on this promise, President Biden is traveling to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to announce that the Environmental Protection Agency is issuing a final rule that will require drinking water systems nationwide to replace lead service lines within 10 years. EPA is also investing an additional $2.6 billion for drinking water upgrades and lead pipe replacements, funded by President Biden’s landmark Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.  This announcement comes as part of the President’s commitment to spend his remaining months in office “sprinting to the finish” and delivering on his historic Investing in America agenda, which is improving the lives of Americans and planting the seeds for a better, more prosperous future for decades to come.
    In its first year, the Biden-Harris Administration announced that it would develop this new rule, known as the Lead and Copper Rule Improvements, to establish the first-ever national requirement to replace all lead service lines. Since then, President Biden secured a historic $15 billion in dedicated funding for lead pipe replacement, and hundreds of thousands of Americans have already had their lead pipes replaced. Because of the President’s actions today, millions more will benefit from lead-free infrastructure in the years to come.
    Lead poisoning can cause serious health effects, especially in children. It can cause irreversible damage to cognitive development, damage the kidneys, slow learning, and cause cardiovascular disease. Lead exposure can also impact pregnancies, increasing the risk of low birthweights or even miscarriage. No level of lead exposure is safe. Yet, due to decades of inequitable infrastructure development and underinvestment, lead poisoning disproportionately affects low-income communities and communities of color.
    Today’s announcement will help protect Americans in communities across the country from these harms – the EPA estimates that every year, this final rule will prevent up to 900,000 infants from being born with low birthweight, stop up to 200,000 IQ points lost in children, and reduce up to 1,500 cases of premature death from heart disease.
    To build on these commitments, today, the Department of Housing and Urban Development is investing over $416 million in new grants, prioritizing lead hazard reduction to protect children, alongside efforts to improve home health, energy efficiency, and community safety. HUD will provide funding to address lead-based paints in homes, develop training and partnerships to identify and control lead-based paint hazards, coordinate home inspections and more.
    Replacing Lead Pipes in Milwaukee
    Lead pipe replacement is actively underway in Milwaukee through a $30 million investment provided by President Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. Bipartisan Infrastructure Law funding has accelerated Milwaukee’s lead replacement timeline from 60 years down to 10 years. Milwaukee is replacing lead pipes using union labor and prioritizing replacements in disadvantaged communities with the most need. The city is now a leader in the region, partnering with cities like Detroit in the Great Lakes Lead Pipes Partnership to accelerate lead pipe replacement across the Midwest.
    Progress Replacing Lead Pipes Across America
    Beyond Milwaukee, the Biden-Harris Administration is taking action to accelerate lead pipe replacement nationwide. President Biden secured a historic $15 billion in dedicated funding through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law for lead pipe replacement, and an additional $11.7 billion that can be used for both drinking water projects and lead pipe replacement. Nearly half of this funding is required to flow to disadvantaged communities, including in neighborhoods and communities that shoulder most of the burden of lead poisoning. In addition to providing clean drinking water for millions, this effort is also creating good-paying jobs, many of them union jobs, in replacing lead pipes and delivering clean water to households. This effort also advances the President’s Justice40 Initiative, which sets the goal that 40% of the overall benefits of certain federal investments flow to disadvantaged communities that are marginalized by underinvestment and overburdened by pollution.
    These actions from the Administration have already put cities across the country on track to meet the President’s goal of replacing every lead pipe within a decade:
    Detroit, Michigan, has received $90 million from this Administration for lead pipe replacement, which has allowed the city to accelerate from replacing 700 lead pipes per year to replacing over 8,000 this year. Detroit is now on track to replace all 80,000 lead pipes within 10 years.
    Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, has received $98 million from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and American Rescue Plan to replace lead pipes, and is on track to replace every lead pipe by 2026. The city is already over halfway done with this work.
    St. Paul, Minnesota, received $16 million from the American Rescue Plan to enable the city’s Lead-Free St. Paul program to target the replacement of all lead pipes by 2032.
    Denver, Colorado has accelerated its efforts through $76 million from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, allowing the city to be on track to replace all lead pipes within a decade.
    Akron, Ohio is now on track to replace all lead service lines by 2027 thanks to $9 million in funding through the American Rescue Plan.
    And some communities have already finished replacing lead pipes. Following a lead-in-water crisis, Benton Harbor, Michigan, successfully replaced all its lead pipes within just two years, fueled by $18 million in funding from the President’s American Rescue Plan. And Edgerton, WI has replaced 100% of its known lead pipes after receiving funding from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.
    Delivering Clean Water
    The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law includes more than $50 billion to help ensure every community has access to clean water – the largest investment in clean water in American history. Combined with new protections against toxic chemicals and over 42 million acres of lands and waters protected under President Biden, the Biden-Harris Administration has embarked on the most ambitious conservation and clean water agenda in the nation’s history, making historic progress to secure clean water for all. Highlights of this ambitious agenda include:
    Combatting toxic “forever chemicals” in drinking water and wastewater. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law invests $10 billion to address harmful PFAS pollution in drinking water and wastewater. The EPA has also finalized the first-ever national standard to address these “forever chemicals” in drinking water, which will protect 100 million Americans from PFAS exposure, safeguarding public health and advancing environmental justice.
    Protecting freshwater at the source. Our rivers, lakes, streams, and wetlands are the sources of clean drinking water that flows into our homes and economic drivers for many communities. Through the America the Beautiful Freshwater Challenge, the Administration has launched a nationwide initiative to protect, restore, and reconnect 8 million acres of wetlands and 100,000 miles of our nation’s rivers and streams by 2030. Over 200 states, Tribes, local governments, and businesses have joined the effort to meet these goals.
    Investing in clean water for Tribes. The Biden-Harris Administration has announced historic Tribal water infrastructure investments totaling over $5 billion through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. This funding will help bring clean water to Tribal Nations, where half of Tribal households lack access to basic clean drinking water or adequate sanitation. The Administration has launched 900 Tribal clean water infrastructure projects to date through these investments.
    Investing in Wisconsin
    Today’s announcement builds on a record of investment in the state of Wisconsin over the course of the President’s term in office. In addition to the President delivering on lead pipe replacement, the President’s Investing in America agenda has deployed $7.2 billion in public sector clean energy, manufacturing, and infrastructure investments, which have catalyzed an additional $8 billion from the private sector.
    These investments include:
    $1.7 billion in funding to provide affordable, reliable high-speed internet to everyone in Wisconsin, with 72,000 homes and small businesses already connected.
    $4.1 billion for transportation – to rebuild our roads and bridges, expand our transit and rail, modernize our ports and airports, and more. This includes $1 billion in funding that the Biden-Harris Administration announced earlier this year to replace the Blatnik Bridge, an important route for people and freight in the Twin Ports area.
    1.3 million seniors and Medicare beneficiaries who can receive free vaccines, $35 insulin, and, starting in January, a $2,000 cap on out-of-pocket costs.
    $3.3 billion from Microsoft to bring a new data center that will create over 4,000 jobs to Racine, Wisconsin on the site of a proposed investment from Foxconn in the prior Administration that never materialized.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: White  House Press Call by Deputy Chief of Staff Natalie Quillian, EPA Administrator Michael Regan, and a Senior Administration Official Previewing the President Trip to  Wisconsin

    US Senate News:

    Source: The White House
    Via Teleconference
    11:34 A.M. EDT
    MR. FERNÁNDEZ HERNÁNDEZ:  Hi.  Good morning, everyone.
    Thank you for joining today’s press call to preview President Biden’s trip to Wisconsin and the Biden-Harris administration’s efforts to ensure every community has access to clean, safe drinking water.
    Today’s call will begin with on-the-record remarks from White House Deputy Chief of Staff Natalie Quillian and EPA Administrator Michael Regan.  After their remarks, we will have a question-and-answer period, which will be on background and attributable to “senior administration officials.”
    As a reminder, the contents of this call and the written materials you received over email are embargoed until tomorrow, October 8th at 5:00 a.m. Eastern.
    With that, I will turn it over to Natalie.  
    MS. QUILLIAN:  Great.  Thank you.  And thank you all for joining us today. 
    I’d like to begin with the big picture.  So, since day one, the president and the vice president have been clear that all Americans, no matter where they come from, should have access to their most basic needs, including being able to turn on the tap and drink clean drinking water without fear.
    We know that there is no safe level of lead exposure.  Lead service lines pose a severe health risk, especially in our children, damaging the brain and kidneys.
    That’s why the president committed to replace every lead pipe in the country within a decade.
    But he didn’t stop there.  He secured over $50 billion to deliver clean water through his Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, including $15 billion in dedicated funding for lead pipe replacement.
    Since then, Americans have had their lead pli- — pipes replaced, especially in disadvantaged communities, many of which are communities of color that shoulder most of the burden of lead poisoning.
    And tomorrow, the president is furthering his commitments to provide clean, lead-free water nationwide. 
    He’ll be traveling to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, to announce EPA’s final rule that will require water systems nationwide to replace lead service lines within 10 years.  He will also announce an additional $2.6 billion from his Bipartisan Infrastructure Law for drinking water upgrades and lead pipe replacements.
    This funding not only provides clean drinking water, but this effort is also creating good-paying jobs, many of them union jobs, in replacing lead pipes and delivering clean water.
    This investment will accelerate lead pipe replacement, helping to deliver clean water to families, kids, and communities across the nation.
    And in Wisconsin, we’re already seeing the results.  Wisconsin has an estimated 340,000 lead pipes, the 10th most lead pipes of any state.  And because of the president’s Bipartisan Infrastructure funding, Milwaukee’s lead pipe replacement timeline has accelerated from 60 years just down to 10 years.
    And Milwaukee is now actively replacing lead pipes, using union labor, prioritizing replacements in disadvantaged communities with the most need.
    And this announcement comes as part of the president’s commitment to spend his remaining months in office sprinting to the finish and delivering on his historic Investing in America agenda, which is improving the lives of Americans and planting the seeds for a better, more prosperous future for decades to come.
    And now I’d like to turn it over to an amazing leader who is helping make this all possible, Administrator Regan. 
    Administrator.
    ADMINISTRATOR REGAN:  Well, good morning, everyone.  And thank you all for joining this call.
    (Inaudible) in implementing President Biden and Vice President Harris’s Investing in America agenda.  Your partnership is helping EPA (inaudible). 
    Since the earliest days of this administration, and even before, President Biden had a vision to build a 100 percent (inaudible).
    (Inaudible) understands the urgency of getting the lead out of communities, because he and Vice President Harris know that ensuring everyone has access to clean water is a moral imperative.
    We know that over 9 million legacy lead pipes continue to deliver water to homes across the country.  But the science has been clear for decades: There is no safe level of lead in our drinking water. 
    In children, lead can severely harm mental and physical development, slow down learning, and irreversibly damage the brain.  In adults, lead can cause (inaudible) and even cancer.
    But thanks to President Biden and Vice President Harris, we are moving farther and faster than ever before to address this critical issue.
    PARTICIPANT:  Do we have an audio issue, Angelo?
    MR. FERNÁNDEZ HERNÁNDEZ:  Yep.  Can we try your connection one more time?
    PARTICIPANT:  Hold on one second.  We’re troubleshooting.  Sorry, everybody.  Hold on one second.
    We — anything — is this better, Angelo?  This is Nick with Administrator Regan.
    MR. FERNÁNDEZ HERNÁNDEZ:  Yep, that is better.
    PARTICIPANT:  Okay.  Should we start from the top or is there a certain point we should pick up at?
    MR. FERNÁNDEZ HERNÁNDEZ:  Let’s start at the top.  Thank you.
    PARTICIPANT:  Okay.  Thank you.
    ADMINISTRATOR REGAN:  Well, good morning, everyone.  And thank you all for joining today’s call. 
    And I’d like to start by thanking the president’s deputy chief of staff, Natalie Quillian.  Natalie, I’m so grateful for your leadership in implementing President Biden and Vice President Harris’s Investing in America agenda.  Your partnership is helping EPA to make a lasting, tangible difference in communities all across the country. 
    Since the earliest days of this administration and even before, President Biden had a vision to build a 100 percent lead-free future.
    The president understands the urgency of getting the lead out of communities because he and Vice President Harris know that ensuring everyone has access to clean water is a moral imperative.
    We know that over 9 million legacy lead pipes continue to deliver water to homes across our country.  But the science has been clear for decades: There is no safe level of lead in our drinking water.  In children, lead can severely harm mental and physical development, slow down learning, and irreversibly damage the brain.  In adults, lead can cause increased blood pressure, heart disease, decreased kidney function, and cancer.
    But thanks to President Biden and Vice President Harris, we are moving farther and faster than ever before to address this critical issue, and EPA is at the center of the solution. 
    I am very proud to announce that today, EPA has taken another historic step forward to ensure safe, clean drinking water for every child and every person in our nation.  Today, my agency is issuing a final rule requiring drinking water systems across the country to identify and replace lead pipes within 10 years.  The rule also requires increased rigorous drinking water testing and a lower threshold for communities to act on and protect people from lead in drinking water. 
    And these actions will help protect millions across this country.  In fact, our new rule will protect up to 900,000 infants from having low birth weight, reduce up to 1,500 cases of premature death from heart disease, prevent up to 200,000 IQ points lost in children, and help close the water equity gap every single year.  But these benefits not only protect public health, they can also reduce health care costs, improve school performance, and boost economic productivity. 
    In addition to finalizing this historic rule today, EPA is also announcing $2.6 billion in new funding under the president’s Bipartisan Infrastructure Law to help cities and states fund infrastructure upgrades to accelerate the removal of lead pipes. 
    Folks, there has never been more federal funding available to remove lead pipes.  And let me just add that investing in our water infrastructure is not only an investment in public health, it’s an investment in local economies.  For every $1 billion invested in water infrastructure, we create approximately 15,500 jobs. 
    President Biden is the president who is finally putting an end to this generational public health crisis, and, folks, delivering a lead-free America is President Biden’s legacy.
    This is a matter of public health, a matter of environmental justice, a matter of basic human rights, and it is finally being met with the urgency it demands.  President Biden has kept his promises, and he is fighting every single day for a cleaner, safer, and healthy America. 
    I’m truly grateful to everyone who helped us reach this moment, particularly those in EPA’s Office of Water, who worked tirelessly to finalize this rule. 
    With today’s announcement, we have more than enough reason to be optimistic about what’s possible for the future of our country and the future of our planet. 
    Now, with that, I’m happy to take a few questions.  Thank you.
    MR. FERNÁNDEZ HERNÁNDEZ:  Thank you, Administrator, and thank you, Natalie.  With that, we will move to the question-and-answer portion of the call.  As a reminder, this will be on background and attributable to “senior administration officials” as they identify themselves.  Comments from Natalie and the administrator will be attributable to them specifically.
    As some of you have done, please use the “raise hand” function on Zoom, and we will take a few of your questions.
    Okay.  As you’re called upon, please identify yourself and your outlet.  We will start with Aamer. You should be unmuted now.
    Q    Hi.  Thank — thank all three of you for doing this.  Two questions.  One, can you just give us a little bit of a preview of, in Wisconsin, where the president will be visiting and sort of how he will be highlighting this announcement?
    And then, secondly, is there any disappointment in the president — considering the significance of this announcement — that Senator Baldwin won’t be taking part?  Thanks.
    MS. QUILLIAN:  I can — this is Natalie.  I can answer that.  I don’t think we have any specifics yet on exactly — to share where he will be visiting, but as soon as we do, we’ll make sure you have those.  And I think it’s fair to say he will highlight the historic investments that we have made so far, including an additional $2.6 billion that he’ll be — he will be announcing tomorrow, as well as highlighting the stories of Americans whose lead pipes in Wisconsin are being replaced or have been replaced and the impact that’s had on their families and their children. 
    And then we’re — you know, Senator Baldwin is a — an amazing partner of this administration and leading the charge in the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.  So, we are just pleased to have such a great partner like her in Wisconsin.
    MR. FERNÁNDEZ HERNÁNDEZ:  Thank you, Natalie. 
    We will go to Rachel next.  You should be unmuted now. 
    Q    Great.  Thank you, guys, for doing this and for taking my question.  I recall in the proposed rule, there had been some concerns raised about exemptions that could leave some places with lead pipes for significantly longer.  I recall Chicago being one of them — having lead pipes possibly for 40 or 50 years, even with these — this rule.  Is this still the case in the final rule?  And could you also send us a copy of the final rule on embargo?
    ADMINISTRATOR REGAN:  Well, Rachel, thank you for that question.  And let me just say that the final rule is significantly more stringent than the proposal was.  Some of those numbers that you raised just here and now, those numbers have been slashed significantly.  So, what I would like to say is we are very sure that 99 percent of these cities will meet the deadline, and we’re still taking a look at those that fit in that 1 percent category. 
    But let me be very clear:  Those that may fit in that 1 percent category, we will aggressively pursue a timeline that stays in line with the president’s vision. 
    Q    Could you give us some idea of, you know — you said those numbers have been slashed.  Can you give us an example and how much it’s been slashed by? 
    SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Well, I’ll just say — and then I’ll turn it over to — to [senior administration official], who is the expert in our water office.  But, you know, the stringency — the off-ramp, if you will — is a significantly much higher hurdle to obtain, first and foremost.  We have really whittled down the flexibility in this rule. 
    And, you know, secondly, this rule is a significant, significant step forward.  But we can’t forget — forget the resources from the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and other programs in the water office that will help these cities achieve the president’s vision. 
    [Senior administration official], I don’t know if you want to add anything to that. 
    SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Thank you, [senior administration official].  I would just add only that, as you know, Rachel, the numbers associated with number of lead service lines that exist in places like Chicago at this point are estimates.  And as we get more information about what number of lead service lines exist, then, through the inventories that will be created — the first one is due October 16th, for example — we’ll be in a better position to determine whether communities actually need more time.  And we’ll go through a process for that.
    I will add to that that in communities like Chicago, we’re not only looking at and tracking where — how many lead service lines or whether they need extension, but we’re working extensively to ensure that they receive financing to tackle some of those lead service line issues. 
    For example, recently, we announced a $336 million loan to the city of Chicago for replacing lead service lines.  And I know that Chicago is working with other cities in the Midwest and the Great Lakes regions to share best practices to accelerate the removal of lead service lines. 
    MR. FERNÁNDEZ HERNÁNDEZ:  Thank you.  We will go to Annie next.  You should be unmuted now.
    Q    Hi.  Annie Snider from Politico.  I have two questions.  First of all, I hope you can speak to the vice president’s involvement in this.  If I recall correctly, her office briefed the proposed rule, and my understanding is that she played an important role in the regulatory use of this. 
    And then, second of all, this rule is coming out well within the Congressional Review Act window.  Are you concerned at all about this rule getting targeted if Republicans take control of Congress and the White House next year?
    SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Well, let me just say that the vice president, as you have stated, has been a significant partner to EPA as we have traveled the country and really highlighted the president’s vision, which is a 100 percent lead-free future, as well as helping the public understand the implications of lead exposure. 
    And so, the vice president has been very, very involved.  We have had a number of good, solid policy discussions.  And that engagement with the vice president, under the president’s leadership, has led to a very, very strong rule, as well as a very strong strategy for how we deploy these resources in the cities and towns that need it the most. 
    So, we’re very, very proud of our partnership with the vice president. 
    MR. FERNÁNDEZ HERNÁNDEZ:  Okay.  We will go to Emma next.  You should be unmuted now.  (Inaudible.)
    Q    Hi.  This is Emma Gardner for Inside EPA at Inside Washington Publishers.  Thank you so much for doing this.  I just have a couple of questions. 
    One, I’d be interested if you could give us a specific action level threshold in terms of parts per billion in the new rule.  And, secondly, I would love to know how the new rule approaches lead service lines that run underneath private land and if there are any incentives for landowners to replace them — the — those pipes themselves.
    SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Emma, I’ll take a stab at answering your two-part question.  The first question was, if I heard you correctly: What — what’s the action level in the new Lead and Copper Rule improvements?  It’s 10 parts per billion.  That’s the action level, which, as you know, previously was 15 parts per billion. 
    Just one thing to note: In terms of private side, our rule requires that for full li- — full lead service line replacement where systems have access to the full lead service line.  And we know that there are a variety of rules and laws out there that may influence whether or not a community have — has access to that or requires permission for a local entity to — to enter into private property.
    In the event that there’s private property that needs to be entered into and permission needs to be granted, the rule requires that systems ask the member of the — the owner of the property four different times about — for permission to replace that lead service line in two wholly different ways.  So, we’re trying to ensure that water systems around the country, where they do have lead service lines that are in private property, have a persistent way to get in touch with the landowner to get permission to replace them.
    MR. FERNÁNDEZ HERNÁNDEZ:  Thank you.  We will go to Jacob next.  You should be unmuted now. 
    Q    Hey, folks.  Thanks so much for doing this.  I also have a two-part question.  Firstly, just trying to follow up on a question from a previous reporter that I don’t think was totally answered, but could you just speak a little bit to the degree to which you’re concerned about, you know, efforts to overturn this rule through CRA efforts in Congress in, you know, a future Republican-led Congress? 
    And, secondly, can you speak to what conversations you had with stakeholders, particularly water service providers, and — and thinking about possible legal challenges that this rule might face, especially as the Supreme Court has, you know, limited the ability of the government to — to issue these sorts of regulations moving forward.  Thanks.  
    ADMINISTRATOR REGAN:  Well, thank you, Jacob, for that question.  I’ll take the first part, and [senior administration official] can follow. 
    Listen, this rule is grounded in science and within the four corners of our statutory authority.  And we have measured a number of times.  We’ve measured twice and we’re cutting once here.  We believe that it’s on solid legal footing, supported by the science. 
    And listen, the outcomes are undeniable.  If you look at protecting up to 900,000 infants from being born with low birth weight or the reducing of 1,500 cases of premature death from heart disease, the cost benefits are at a 13-to-1 ratio. 
    This is an opportunity to reduce lead exposure to millions of families all across the country, and we believe we’ve done it in a very strategic way, a legally sound way, supported by the science.  And the health benefits of this rule are undeniable.
    SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Mr. Administrator, the second part of the question was regarding conversations with stakeholders.  And I would just say that we had repeated conversations with stakeholders throughout this process. 
    We also received over 200,000 comments on the proposed rule.  The vast majority of them were supportive of the rule.  We met with stakeholders throughout this process.  We visited the cities where lead service lines are currently being replaced.
    And we know that, as the administrator mentioned at the beginning, that this rule is built on actions that have already been taken and already underway both in states and communities across this country.  There are four states that already have requirements to replace lead service lines in 10 years — from Illinois to Michigan to Rhode Island to New Jersey.  There are communities throughout this country that, before this rule was in — put in place, where they’ve already been engaged in removing lead service lines — from Milwaukee to Detroit to Cincinnati to Pittsburgh. 
    All across the country, communities are supportive and engaged in this effort today.
    MS. QUILLIAN:  Angelo, can I just — this is Natalie.  Can I just jump in on the first question, too, to add to what Administrator Regan said?
    Look, I think that we believe and hope that ending the poisoning of our kids from lead water should and could be a bipartisan priority.  And, indeed, we’ve seen many Republicans vote for the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law that made this possible. 
    Now Wiscon- — Wisconsin’s other senator, Ron Johnson, did not vote for it, but we do think that this should be a bipartisan priority.  And I hope that all of our — our members of Congress would vote for keeping our water clean rather than continuing to have lead in the water.
    MR. FERNÁNDEZ HERNÁNDEZ:  Thank you, Natalie.  We will have time for two more questions. 
    Let’s go to Michael.  You should be unmuted now.
    Q    Hey.  Thank you for this.  Appreciate the time, as always.  Just two kind of follow-up questions to some of the other questions that have been asked here.  Can you confirm that the 10 percent action level is not intended to be an individual homes action level? 
    And then, secondly, how does the final rule deal with if — if a — if a water system exceeds the 90 percent of — you know, tests above 10 parts per billion, are — is that water system required to provide free filters to its citizens?
    SENIOR ADMINISTRATION OFFICIAL:  Mr. Administrator, let me take a stab at answering that question. 
    Thank you, Mr. Hawthorne, for your question. 
    I can confirm that the 10 percent action level is throughout the system, as you indicated.  It’s not just on an individual home.  But any individual who has an action level exceedance — it’s the 90th percentile, as you know, Mr.  Hawthorne.  But any individual household that has an exceedance of the action level will be required to be communicated with, get their test results, and be able to take action immediately. 
    In addition to that, if the action level is exceeded on a repeated basis — four times in a five-year period, for example — then the community will be required to make filters available to all of the residents in the community, not merely the residents where the action level was repeated — reported.
    MR. FERNÁNDEZ HERNÁNDEZ:  Thank you. 
    And our final question will come from Miranda.  You should be unmuted now.
    Q    Hi.  Thanks for taking our questions. 
    What are you hearing from water providers about progress they’ve made on their inventories?  And any — you know, do — do you expect them to, you know, meet the — the October 16th deadline?  Or could there — could there be some — are you hearing about any challenges so far on that front?  Thank you. 
    ADMINISTRATOR REGAN:  Well, thank you for the question, Miranda.  And we fully believe, as [senior administration official] has indicated, that these systems are, in many cases, moving forward already. 
    I think it’s important for us to note that we know through conversations that these systems can step up and they can meet the challenge.  We have designed a very durable, strong rule that is grounded in the science, grounded in the law.  And we expect these water systems to step up and meet this rule, because under no circumstances do we want our children exposed to lead poison in their drinking water. 
    And as Natalie indicated, this is a bipartisan effort here.  There have been folks on both sides of the aisle for a number of years who have been calling for the removal of lead service lines, which are the largest source of lead exposure in this country. 
    And so, we fully believe that everyone can step up in a very cost-effective way and comply with this rule, and that is our expectation. 
    MR. FERNÁNDEZ HERNÁNDEZ:  Thank you, Administrator.  And that’s all the time that we have today.
    As a reminder, the contents of this call and the materials you received over email are embargoed until 5:00 a.m. Eastern tomorrow. 
    If you have any questions, please feel free to follow up with us, and thank you again for joining you.
    12:00 P.M. EDT

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI: Vice Admiral (Ret.) TJ White Joins Synergy ECP Board of Advisors

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    COLUMBIA, Md., Oct. 08, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) —  Synergy ECP, a leading provider of mission critical, highly technical solutions for the Defense and Intelligence Communities, is excited to announce the appointment of Vice Admiral (Ret.) TJ White to its Board of Advisors. Synergy ECP is a portfolio company of Falfurrias Management Partners.

    Vice Admiral TJ White brings decades of experience and leadership to Synergy ECP, having served with distinction in the United States Navy for 33 years. His extensive background in cyber operations includes command of U.S. Fleet Cyber Command/U.S. 10th Fleet and the Cyber National Mission Force. Additionally, Vice Admiral White filled key leadership roles within the cyber and intelligence communities as Deputy Director, Tailored Access Operations, NSA and Director for Intelligence, J2, U.S. IndoPacific Command, among many other relevant experiences.

    “We are thrilled to welcome Vice Admiral White to our Board of Advisors,” said Bruce Howard, CEO of Synergy ECP. “His expertise aligns perfectly with our mission to deliver impactful solutions in capability areas such as cyber operations, critical infrastructure security, and signals intelligence. We look forward to his contributions, insight, and deep understanding of what our national security customers need given his experience leading numerous joint military formations and combined Intelligence Community organizations.”

    “I am honored to join the Board of Advisors at Synergy ECP,” said Vice Admiral White. “As cyber threats continue to evolve in complexity and scale, it is imperative to have businesses like Synergy ECP committed to solving the toughest technical challenges within the cybersecurity domain. Synergy ECP’s highly skilled workforce and deep intimacy across the cyber landscape made joining the Advisory Board a clear choice to continue to support the nation’s cybersecurity and intelligence efforts.”

    About Synergy ECP
    Founded in 2007 and headquartered in Columbia, Maryland, Synergy ECP is a leading provider of cybersecurity, software and systems engineering and IT services to the U.S. intelligence and defense communities. The company leverages its expertise in data transport solutions, software and systems engineering, and other solutions to deliver critical and innovative capabilities to high-level decision makers that enhance our nation’s security. For more information, visit http://www.synergyecp.com.

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: Terecircuits Unveils New Bonding Material for Next-Generation Advanced Packaging

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., Oct. 08, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Terecircuits Corporation, a venture-backed startup in advanced materials for the semiconductor industry, today introduced Terefilm®, a patented material designed for temporary bonding and debonding applications in advanced packaging.

    According to Boston Consulting Group1, “The next generation of industry-leading organizations will be those that realize value creation is migrating towards companies that can design and integrate complex, system-level chip solutions using concepts like advanced packaging.” As components become smaller and more complex, the need for advanced temporary bonding materials, like Terefilm®, becomes paramount to enable emerging applications, including thin wafer handling and the transfer of fragile components.

    Terefilm® meets these requirements, offering unparalleled advantages including rapid release, precise patterning, and clean decomposition without solvents. The material can be used in processing up to 230ºC, giving customers a wide process window for bond-debond with clean decomposition.

    “Our focus with Terefilm® is squarely on innovating a novel material that will enable faster and more accurate semiconductor advanced packaging and related manufacturing processes,” said Wayne Rickard, CEO of Terecircuits. “Its benefits for bonding and debonding in semiconductor advanced packaging are compelling, offering ultra-clean, ultra-fast and residue-free release that eliminates traditional cleaning requirements and accelerates production. At the same time, its ability to enable selective material removal at nanoscale positions it for use in such diverse applications as enabling the parallel transfer of micro-LEDs and a photoresist for direct-write lithography. This flexibility makes Terefilm® a valuable solution for the challenges faced in advanced packaging today as well as emerging ones across a wide range of electronics manufacturing requirements.”

    The properties of Terefilm® make it highly effective for several critical applications:

    • Clean Decomposition: Unlike conventional materials, Terefilm® undergoes a remarkably clean decomposition process when activated, leaving no residue. This ensures ultra-clean surfaces, which are essential for successful hybrid bonding and other high-precision applications.
    • Rapid Release: Traditional heat and UV-sensitive films can take several minutes to release. Terefilm®, however, releases in microseconds. This near-instantaneous decomposition significantly enhances manufacturing efficiency.
    • Precise Patterning: Similar to lithographic photoresists, the material can be patterned to enable selection of specific regions. This allows for the targeted release of individual chips or subsets of chips, replacing the traditional pick-and-place process. This capability enables the parallel transfer of multiple components, dramatically increasing production speed and precision.

    To learn more about Terefilm® and its wide range of applications, please visit https://terecircuits.com/products/. To get more product information, contact Michele Fromel at mfromel@terecircuits.com.

    About Terecircuits Corporation
    Terecircuits Corporation is a venture-backed startup offering a truly groundbreaking core technology that will enable products requiring micron-scale circuit fabrication and assembly to be built faster and with greater accuracy than is achievable with today’s best practices. “Instrumenting the world” as envisioned by Industry 4.0 and IoT will require fundamental changes to advanced manufacturing to handle the sheer scale of production at reasonable costs, and Terecircuits meets these challenges with new and inventive materials and processes. Terecircuits democratizes advanced electronics manufacturing for displays, wearables, smart vehicles, virtual reality and medical devices through processes requiring less energy and capital equipment. For more information, visit http://www.terecircuits.com.

    MEDIA CONTACT:
    Kiterocket
    Stephanie Quinn, +1 480 316 8370, squinn@kiterocket.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/4516ec23-fa55-432a-9574-e2e9bb4698ee


    1 https://www.bcg.com/publications/2024/advanced-packaging-is-reshaping-the-chip-industry

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI: NowCM and White & Case established for Haniel the world’s first fully digital, end-to-end automated commercial paper programme

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    Luxembourg/Frankfurt/Duisburg, 8 October 2024 –

    NowCM, global technology leader in digital and automated bond issuance, and leading international law firm White & Case have teamed up to provide breakthrough technology and legal advice to the dated and manual commercial paper (CP) market by creating the NextGenCP for corporates and other CP issuers. Family-owned investment holding Franz Haniel & Cie. GmbH (Haniel) has led the way together with NowCM and White & Case in implementing this programme.

    As a long-term, purpose-driven investor, Haniel aims to create value for generations. Led by Dr. Axel Gros, treasurer of Haniel, and Birgit Sommer, head of CP at Haniel, creating the NextGenCP reinforces Haniel’s commitment to digital transformation, marking a significant step in modernizing the CP market.

    The new set-up includes several wide-reaching innovations in technology and law:

    • Fast set-up: NowCM has automated the setup of the NextGenCP based on White & Case’s state-of-the-art legal work. This innovation significantly reduces costs and allows for the establishment of NextGenCP in a matter of days, rather than the traditional months-long process.
    • High-volume facility: NextGenCP offers issuers the ability to conduct transactions with no volume limitations, for example Haniel aiming to reach three transactions per week. This supports high-frequency issuance, even several issuances in parallel, providing a streamlined and efficient process for managing large-scale CP programmes.
    • Arranger-less set-up: The NextGenCP setup requires no arranger bank, addressing a problem in market structure where banks are often reluctant to engage in lengthy, burdensome processes with low or no fees. Instead, NowCM Luxembourg, as a regulated entity, acts as the arranger with support from White & Case, enabling deployment without the need for an arranger bank. This allows issuers and banks to focus on their core businesses while simplifying the process.
    • Multi-dealer capability: Even though no arranger bank is needed, the NextGenCP operates in a traditional intermediated manner with dealer banks. It allows dealer banks to participate either in specific transactions or at the programme level, providing flexibility while maintaining the benefits of traditional market structures.
    • Fully automated: The NextGenCP is fully automated in its operation, allowing dealer banks to simply email their trade confirmation to NowCM. All subsequent steps, including life cycle events such as settlement and repayment, are executed without human intervention, streamlining the entire process for maximum efficiency.
    • Touchless: In the issuance process, there is no need for drafting or sending any documents. Everything is handled seamlessly through NowCM’s cloud-based platform. If the issuer wants, an additional approval step before the issuance can be implemented, adding flexibility without complicating the process.
    • Entirely digital: The CP, like all securities on NowCM’s platform, is represented by a full digital twin in a machine-readable and structured format. This digital twin contains all relevant information about the CP, its lifecycle, and other metadata, which were previously only available in unstructured formats such as PDFs and Word documents.
    • Golden source: NowCM’s structured data and document repository serves as the golden source for all data related to the CP, enabling seamless integration with other stakeholders and IT infrastructure. This ensures error-free data transmission and supports digital issuance, including under the German Electronic Securities Act, further enhancing efficiency and compliance in the issuance process.
    • AI-enabled: The process developed by NowCM incorporates the latest in AI technology, enabling fully automated, real-time handling of data.
    • STEP compliant and ECB eligible: Like traditional CP, NextGenCP is STEP compliant and, consequently, ECB eligible making it suitable for collateral. By using NextGenCP issuers not only future proof their CP issuance but also ensure that all data required under the new ECB “Single Collateral Management Rulebook for Europe” (SCoRE) is readily available in machine-readable form.
    • CP primary marketplace: NowCM operates the world’s first and only fully regulated primary marketplace. The Paris-based multilateral trading facility (MTF), comparable to a German exchange Freiverkehr or the EuroMTF in Luxembourg, offers the possibility to digitalise the only remaining manual step in the value chain. Instead of negotiating trades via phone or chat, issuers and dealers can directly negotiate and transact on the NowCM MTF simplifying the issuance of CP to the push of a button.
    • Optional – use of regulated issuance vehicle: For issuers looking to avoid all the hassle of managing the entire value chain of CP issuance, NowCM offers the use of its fully regulated issuance vehicle in Luxembourg, where NowCM takes over the entire issuance process.

    Haniel is the first issuer making use of NextGenCP and has already transacted several tens of millions in various transactions since the recent go-live using NowCM’s issuance vehicleunder the name “Haniel enkelfaehig”.

    Dr. Axel Gros, treasurer of Haniel, states: “We are very pleased with the implementation of this state-of-the-art CP programme. Leveraging NowCM’s advanced technology and White & Case outstanding legal expertise, NextGenCP offers a process flow beyond straight-through process (STP), ensuring seamless execution from issuance to settlement to repayment, thereby helping us to efficiently manage our liquidity needs”.

    Karsten Woeckener, Head of Germany of White & Case and its DCM practice group leader, adds: “As a global law-firm that is supporting the latest technology we were delighted to support this project and to help unlock the German CP market. We certainly hope that the combination of our legal expertise, Haniel invaluable insights and NowCM’s technology to create NextGenCP will attract many followers and usher a new age of funding in the money markets”.

    NowCM’s founder and CEO, Robert Koller, says: “We are delighted to have brought NextGenCP to life with our exceptional partners at White & Case and the incredible support and innovation leadership of Haniel and, not to forget, the many dealer banks involved. The simplicity of using NextGenCP is based on more than a decade of research and development, a data model of thousands of variables and business rules, a highly secure cloud platform and above all the interaction with our clients who contributed countless hours and ideas. We will see further announcements soon on bringing the funding business into the 21st century.”

    Thanks to the successful collaboration between Haniel, White & Case, and NowCM, the implementation of NextGenCP sets a new benchmark for digital innovation in the industry. As the first of its kind, the touchless NextGenCP is poised to revolutionize the issuance and management of commercial paper and money markets, paving the way for more advanced and efficient funding processes and liquidity management. NextGenCP is also available for CP issuers with an existing programme that want to convert their issuance into a fully digital experience.

    About Franz Haniel & Cie. GmbH

    Franz Haniel & Cie. GmbH is 100 percent family-owned and has been based in Duisburg since the company was founded in 1756. It manages a portfolio of independent companies with the goal to create value for generations as a leading purpose-driven investor.

    To this end, we align our portfolio strictly “enkelfähig,” that means: along clear performance and sustainability criteria. Currently, the Haniel portfolio comprises ten investments: BauWatch, BekaertDeslee, CWS Cleanrooms, CWS Fire Safety, CWS Hygiene, CWS Workwear, Emma – The Sleep Company, KMK kinderzimmer, ROVEMA and TAKKT. In addition, Haniel manages a financial stake in CECONOMY and minority stakes in high-growth start-ups.

    In 2023, the Haniel Group employed nearly 22,000 people and generated sales of EUR 4.4 billion.

    About White & Case

    White & Case is one of the leading international law firms and is present in the world’s key economic centres at 44 locations in 30 countries. In Germany, around 250 lawyers, tax advisors and notaries work in Berlin, Düsseldorf, Frankfurt am Main and Hamburg (http://www.whitecase.com).

    About NowCM

    NowCM is the leading market infrastructure and issuance provider within the primary debt capital markets. It offers an unparalleled, highly secure, cloud-native data platform for creating, negotiating, and managing debt, along with an end-to-end digital workflow platform. These tools enable all participants in the primary bond and CP markets to collaborate in real-time, fostering an open and cooperative environment. NowCM facilitate access to primary markets for inaugural and infrequent issuers through its Treasury-as-a-Service (TaaS) facility. This entity is regulated by the CSSF in Luxembourg and operates as a “funding subsidiary” using standardised yet flexible documentation and fully automated digital workflows. NowCM’s 360-degree suite of services is completed by a multi-lateral trading facility (MTF) that NowCM owns and operates. It stands as the world’s first and only regulated primary marketplace, subject to the supervision of the ACPR and AMF in France.

    Connect with:

    Franz Haniel & Cie. GmbH:
    Website: http://www.haniel.de   
    LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/franz-haniel-&-cie–gmbh     

    White & Case:
    Website: http://www.whitecase.com  
    LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/white-&-case  

    Media Contact:
    Nils Repke
    Senior Manager, Communications – Germany
    Phone: +49 69 29994-1310
    Email: nils.repke@whitecase.com
                                       
    NowCM:
    Website: http://www.nowcm.eu
    LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/company/nowcm    
    X (former Twitter): http://www.twitter.com/NowCM_EU    

    Media Contact:
    Kristina Kuzmina,
    Chief Communications and Marketing Officer
    Phone: +351 93247 8202 (PT)
    or +44 7490 373030 (UK)
    Email: kk@nowcm.eu    

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Polytechnic University donated books to libraries of Donetsk People’s Republic

    MILES AXLE Translation. Region: Russian Federation –

    Source: Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University – Peter the Great St Petersburg Polytechnic University –

    The Polytechnic University donated literature on socially significant topics, including specialized publications on construction, architecture and transport, to replenish and form new library collections in the city of Yenakiyevo in the Donetsk People’s Republic.

    The interaction of the Polytechnic University with new regions is not limited to the exchange of experience and the implementation of joint educational programs. An important aspect of cooperation has become the transfer of educational and scientific resources.

    Today, library collections in new territories are experiencing a significant shortage of high-quality specialized literature in Russian, noted Lyudmila Pankova, Vice-Rector for Educational Activities at SPbPU.

    Polytechnic University collected more than 150 textbooks and teaching aids. The authors of many publications are teachers of our university. Representatives of the Institute of Mechanical Engineering, Materials and Transport, the Institute of Physics and Mathematics, the Civil Engineering Institute, as well as the Information and Library Complex of SPbPU took an active part in collecting books.

    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 accurate to what the source is stating and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    https://vvv.spbstu.ru/media/nevs/student_life/polytechnic-donated-books-to-the-libraries-of-the-Donetsk-people’s-republic/

    EDITOR’S NOTE: This article is a translation. Apologies should the grammar and or sentence structure not be perfect.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: SFST’s opening remarks at press conference on Hong Kong FinTech Week 2024 (English only)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    SFST’s opening remarks at press conference on Hong Kong FinTech Week 2024 (English only)
    SFST’s opening remarks at press conference on Hong Kong FinTech Week 2024 (English only)
    ****************************************************************************************

         Following are the opening remarks by the Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury, Mr Christopher Hui, at the press conference on Hong Kong FinTech Week 2024 today (October 8):  Alpha (Director-General of Investment Promotion at Invest Hong Kong, Ms Alpha Lau), distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen,       Good afternoon and thank you for joining us today. It gives me great pleasure to unveil the official details of this year’s much-anticipated Hong Kong FinTech Week, carrying the theme “Illuminating New Pathways in Fintech”.       This year marks the ninth edition of our flagship event, standing at the vanguard of the global fintech revolution. I have had the good fortune to witness the remarkable growth and evolution of our Hong Kong FinTech Week over the years. The conference this year further encapsulates the global paradigm shift, with emerging technologies driving the spirit of change.      I have made it a tradition to announce a new policy statement and new initiatives during the FinTech Week, sharing with our global audience the Government’s vision and mission in taking forward market development together with the industry. In 2022 we announced the groundbreaking Policy Statement on Development of Virtual Assets in Hong Kong, and last year we shared the plan to develop a new integrated fund platform for our market. This year is no exception, and we are set to announce a policy statement for responsible use of artificial intelligence (AI) in our financial services sector. This will be another important announcement from us elaborating our policy stance on this topic of global importance and interest.       Hong Kong FinTech Week welcomes top technology leaders, policymakers, and investors from around the world for insightful discussions on the fintech landscape. We are set to showcase the individuals, rising stars, and innovations propelling advancements in efficiency, scalability, and sustainability worldwide. During the event, we will explore how entrepreneurs and corporations are leveraging frontier technologies like AI, tokenisation, and Web3 to craft innovative business models and capitalise on Asia’s economic ascension.       Hong Kong always shows resilience and strength during challenging times. Our city has recently been ranked third in the latest Global Financial Centres Index around the globe and first in the Asia Pacific Region. In terms of fintech, Hong Kong rose five places to ninth, putting it among the top 10 fintech hubs globally. This reflects the concerted efforts of the Government, financial regulators, and industry players to promote fintech development in Hong Kong. Over the past few months, we have introduced various initiatives to further cultivate a vibrant ecosystem for fintech innovation, including expanding the cross-boundary e-CNY pilot in Hong Kong, launching the new Generative AI Sandbox, as well as commencing phase 2 of the e-HKD Pilot Programme, just to name a few.       With its strategic location and robust financial infrastructure, Hong Kong emerges as a “super connector” and “super value-adder” for fintech. Hong Kong is primed to lead this transformative journey to uncover the pathways to opportunities. Notably, we’ve witnessed strong interest from the Mainland’s big tech companies showcasing their latest innovations, underscoring how Chinese technology is shaping global finance’s future through cross-border collaborations and cutting-edge technology integration.       The Mainland aside, Southeast Asia’s rising stars will be present to showcase their tailored solutions for the region’s unique markets, sharing success stories of fintech solutions crafted to meet the region’s distinctive market needs. These vibrant discussions will highlight Southeast Asia’s growing influence in the global fintech arena. The Middle East will also bring a wealth of strategic insights to the table, fostering innovation collaborations between Hong Kong and the region.       Hong Kong FinTech Week 2024 promises to be a melting pot of ideas, innovations, and collaborations for global communities. Attendees will have the opportunity to explore how frontiers like AI, tokenisation, blockchain, and green tech are tackling real-world challenges nowadays.       Another standout feature of the week is the Greater Bay Area day visit, an exclusive tour inviting international financial leaders, investors, and tech founders to explore the innovation ecosystems across Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Hong Kong. This excursion will facilitate collaboration, knowledge sharing, exploration of investment prospects, and meaningful dialogues, fostering a day of productive networking.       Through various initiatives aimed at attracting and retaining strategic companies and talent, we are ready for positive results from the FinTech Week. The event this year will pave the way for connected, efficient, and sustainable global economic growth from fintech offerings. I therefore extend a very warm welcome to all of you to join us. Thank you.  

     
    Ends/Tuesday, October 8, 2024Issued at HKT 16:35

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Policing protests in London

    Source: Mayor of London

    Policing protests and large-scale events in the capital is putting increased strain on the Metropolitan Police Service, with the Met describing the increased protests since October 2023 as the “greatest period of sustained pressure since the Olympics in 2012”.1

    This coincides with budgetary pressures in the Met, and reduced staffing and officer numbers.2 Officers from local neighbourhood teams are often redeployed to deal with protest and public order activity at short notice, impacting on local services.

    Tomorrow, the London Assembly Police and Crime Committee will hold the first meeting of its investigation into public order policing in London.

    The meeting will explore the challenges the Met is facing with policing large events and protests, as well as the recent Notting Hill Carnival, where police made 334 arrests.3

    The Committee will also look into the impact of new legislation and whether the right balance is being struck between preventing excessive disruption and the right to protest.

    Guests include:

    Panel 1: 10:00am – 11:30am

    • Matt Parr, former Inspector, HMICFRS 
    • Lord Walney, Government Independent Adviser on Political Violence and Disruption
    • Kirsty Brimelow KC, Barrister, Doughty Street Chambers 

    Panel 2: 11:35am – 1:00pm

    • Jodie Beck, Policy and Campaigns Officer, Liberty
    • Professor Geoff Pearson, Professor of Law at the University of Manchester and Academic Director of the N8 Policing Research Partnership
    • Tom Southerden, Programme Director, Law & Human Rights, Amnesty International
    • David Spencer, Head of Crime and Justice, Policy Exchange

    The meeting will take place on Wednesday 9 October 2024 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

  • MIL-OSI Submissions: Energy Tech – 1MW community-owned battery could generate up to $250K/ year revenues in Australia

    Source: GridBeyond

    Energy battery storage are critical for the decarbonisation of the electricity grid and the transition from a centralised generation model to a decentralised one, allowing the integration of more renewables in the energy system. In the Australian Energy Markets, community-owned batteries offer a sustainable and cost-effective solution that not only benefits the community but also the environment.

    According to The Australian Energy Market Operator (AEMO) if consumer batteries are efficiently coordinated, AEMO estimates that they could help reduce costs for all consumers by offsetting the need for an additional $4.1B in grid-scale investments. But in addition a 1MW community owned battery enrolled in an FCAS (Frequency Control Ancillary Services)  programme could generate $250K/year revenues for its community owners, according to the latest GridBeyond White Paper: Community Battery 101 – Australia. Community-scale storage could also achieve significant net value through stacking multiple services, earning the operators a valuable income stream and realising attractive payback and return on investment opportunities.

    Against rising electricity costs, community batteries provide a solution by empowering communities to take control of their energy. Community batteries can reduce energy costs, by storing excess energy when it’s cheap and using it during peak hours. They can make community less reliant on traditional energy providers and they are also more sustainable as they maximise the use of renewable energy sources like solar and wind and can provide a reliable source of energy even during grid outages.

    But for community batteries to be commercially viable, an intelligent energy storage management system (ESMS) platform must be interoperable between a grid operator’s system, grid edge control layer, and energy market interfaces. The ESMS must be able to co-optimise across value streams to deliver benefits across the entire energy stakeholder ecosystem.

    “It’s exciting to see the Australian Government supporting the rolling out community batteries to lower power bills and boost electricity reliability. Community batteries are a great opportunity for everyone as everyone can benefit from those. Energy storage batteries can help the government to reach its decarbonisation goal, they generate savings and can help communities to even benefiting financially through an intelligent energy storage management system” said Scott Berrie, Asset Development Director at GridBeyond.

    About GridBeyond 

    GridBeyond began commercially trading in 2010 and is home to the world’s first hybrid battery and demand network. Now a global player in the energy transition, GridBeyond provides a powerful combination of technological excellence, consultative approach and unrivalled expertise that enables its partners and clients have future-proof access to energy services, while supporting the wider electricity grid integrate more volatile renewables and make the leap to a greener future. All without impacting operations.

    GridBeyond delivers energy services, new revenues, enhanced savings, strengthened operations and sustainability to over 900 I&C sites worldwide, including some of the planet’s best-loved brands.

    MIL OSI – Submitted News

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Holding careless builders accountable

    Source: New Zealand Government

    The Government is looking at strengthening requirements for building professionals, including penalties, to ensure Kiwis have confidence in their biggest asset, Building and Construction Minister Chris Penk says

    “The Government is taking decisive action to make building easier and more affordable. If we want to tackle our chronic undersupply of houses that is slowing the economy down and locking families out of home ownership, we must do things differently. 

    “Reforming the way we consent homes and removing barriers to overseas building products will strip out delays and drive down costs so we can get more homes built at a more affordable price. However, for this to succeed we must ensure that we have qualified tradespeople doing the work, standing by it and being accountable if things go wrong. 

    “The trade-off for reducing oversight for low-risk work like granny flats is that we have adequate safeguards in place to hold careless or incompetent individuals to account. 

    “The current registration and licensing regimes are not working as well as they could and while the vast majority of tradespeople are competent, highly skilled professionals, a small minority are holding the sector back.  

    “Building consent authorities have told me that the penalties in the Building Act for tradespeople who knowingly cut corners are not enough to deter that behaviour and are not proportionate to the cost of remediating defected work for the consumer who is left out of pocket. 

    “This lack of robust requirements also has an enormous flow on effect which means councils are more likely to be overly risk-averse out of fear that their ratepayers will be liable for paying the bill as the last man standing. 

    “For Kiwis to have confidence in building work we need to ensure the oversight of building professionals is fit for purpose and fair. That’s why the Government is looking at strengthening registration and licensing regimes with a focus on: 

    • Lifting the competence and accountability requirements for building professionals
    • Improving consumer protection measures in the Building Act to provide the right support for consumers
    • Ensuring regulators have the right powers to hold people to account with a focus on licensing, complaints, and disciplinary processes
    • Introducing new penalties to deter bad behaviour. The Government is currently consulting on creating a new offence in the Building Act for deliberately hiding non-compliant building work in the context of remote inspections. 

    “These changes will be critical in supporting the Government’s agenda to make it easier and more affordable to build, and is particularly important when we place more trust in qualified individuals and reduce oversight from third parties as we have done through our NZ First-National commitment to allow granny flats and other small structures up to 60sqm to be built without a building consent.  

    “Lifting the competence of building professionals will also help support the ACT-National commitment to explore allowing builders to opt out of a building consent if they have insurance as this is one of the enablers for insurance companies to have confidence in taking on building work. 

    “This is all part of the Government’s plan to rebuild the economy and go for housing growth so Kiwis can get ahead.”

    Notes to editors 

    • As part of the consultation on increasing the use of remote inspections the Government is consulting on creating a new offence to deter deceptive behaviour during a remote inspection with a penalty of $50,000 for individuals and $150,000 for businesses.
    • This work to strengthen requirements for building professionals complements work currently underway by the Government to combat phoenixing which is a particular problem in the Building Industry. 

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Foreign Secretary’s statement on the Chagos Islands, 7 October 2024

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments 3

    Foreign Secretary David Lammy gave a statement on the conclusion of negotiations on the exercise of sovereignty over the British Indian Ocean Territory.

    With permission, Mr Speaker, I will make a statement on the conclusion of negotiations on the exercise of sovereignty over the British Indian Ocean Territory. 

    On Thursday 3 October, my Right Honourable Friend the Prime Minister and Mauritian Prime Minister Jugnauth made a historic announcement. After 2 years of negotiations, and decades of disagreement, the UK and Mauritius have reached a political agreement on the future of the British Indian Ocean Territory.

    Mr Speaker, the treaty is neither signed nor ratified. But I wanted to update the House on the conclusion of formal negotiations at the earliest opportunity.

    Members will appreciate the context. Since its creation, the Territory and the joint UK-US military base on Diego Garcia has had a contested existence. In recent years, the threat has risen significantly.

    Coming into office, the status quo was clearly not sustainable. A binding judgement against the UK seemed inevitable. It was just a matter of time before our only choices would have been abandoning the base altogether. Or breaking international law.

    If you oppose the deal, which of these alternatives do you prefer? Doing this deal – on our terms – was the sole way to maintain the full and effective operations of the base into the future.

    Mr Speaker, this must be why, in November 2022, the then Foreign Secretary, the Right Honourable Member for Braintree, initiated sovereignty negotiations. It’s also why my immediate predecessor, Lord Cameron of Chipping Norton, ultimately continued with those talks.

    Under the previous government there were 11 rounds of negotiations, the last one held just weeks before the General Election was called.

    So, in July, this government inherited unfinished business. Where a threat was real, and inaction was not a strategy. Inaction posed several acute risks to the UK.

    First, it threatened the UK-US base. From countering malign Iranian activity in the Middle East to ensuring a free and open Indo-Pacific, it is critical for our national security. Without surety of tenure, no base can operate effectively – nor truly deter our enemies. Critical investment decisions were already being delayed.

    Second, it impacted on our relationship with the US, who neither wanted nor welcomed the legal uncertainty, and strongly encouraged us to strike a deal. I am a trans-Atlanticist. We had to protect this important relationship.

    And third, it undermined our international standing. We are showing that what we mean is what we say on international law and desire for partnerships with the Global South. This strengthens our arguments when it comes to issues like Ukraine or the South China Sea.

    Mr Speaker, further legal wrangling served nobody’s interests but our adversaries’. In a more volatile world, a deal benefited us all, the UK, US and Mauritius. This government therefore made striking the best possible deal a priority.

    We appointed Jonathan Powell. As the Prime Minister’s Special Envoy for these negotiations, he has worked closely with a brilliant team of civil servants and lawyers. Their goal was a way forward which serves UK national interests, respects the interests of our partners, and upholds the international rule of law.

    This agreement fulfils these objectives. It is strongly supported by partners, with President Biden going so far as to “applaud” our achievement within minutes of the announcement! Secretary Blinken and Secretary Austin have also backed this “successful outcome” which “reaffirms [our] special defence relationship”.

    And the agreement has been welcomed by the Indian government and commended by the UN Secretary-General.

    In return for agreeing to Mauritian sovereignty over the entire islands, including Diego Garcia, the UK-US base has an uncontested long-term future. Base operations will remain under full UK control well into the next century.

    Mauritius will authorise us to exercise their sovereign rights and authorities in respect of Diego Garcia. This is initially for 99 years, but the UK has the right to extend this.

    And we have full Mauritian backing for robust security arrangements including preventing foreign armed forces from accessing or establishing themselves on the outer islands.

    The base’s long-term future is therefore more secure under this agreement than without it. If this were not the case, I doubt the White House, State Department or Pentagon would have praised the deal so effusively.

    This agreement will be underpinned by a financial settlement that is acceptable to both sides. Members will be aware the government does not normally reveal payments for our military bases overseas. And so it would be inappropriate to publicise further details of these arrangements at this stage.

    Mr Speaker, the agreement also recognises the rights and wrongs of the past. The whole House would agree that the manner in which Chagossians were forcibly removed in the 1960s was deeply wrong and regrettable. Mauritius is now free to implement a resettlement programme to islands other than Diego Garcia.

    The UK and Mauritius have also committed to support Chagossians’ welfare, establishing a new Trust Fund capitalised by the UK and providing additional government support to Chagossians in the UK. And the UK will maintain the pathway for Chagossians to obtain British Citizenship.

    Furthermore, Mauritius and the UK will now establish a new programme of visits to the archipelago for Chagossians. 

    This agreement also ushers in a new era in our relations with Mauritius. A Commonwealth nation and Africa’s leading democracy. We have agreed to intensify cooperation on our shared priorities, including security, growth and the environment. 

    The agreement ensures continued protection of these islands’ unique environment, home to over 200 species of coral and over 800 species of fish.

    Finally Mr Speaker, I want to reassure the House, and all members of the UK family worldwide, that this agreement does not signal any change in policy to Britain’s other Overseas Territories.

    British sovereignty of the Falkland Islands, Gibraltar and the Sovereign Base Areas is not up for negotiation. The situations are not comparable.

    This, Mr Speaker, has been acknowledged across our Overseas Territories. Fabian Picardo, Chief Minister of Gibraltar, vocally supported this agreement, stating that there is “no possible read across” to Gibraltar on the issue of sovereignty.

    Similarly, the Governor of the Falklands has confirmed that the historic contexts of the Chagos Archipelago and Falklands are “very different”. The government remains firmly committed to modern partnerships with our Overseas Territories based on mutual consent.

    After Mauritian elections, the government will move towards treaty signature. And it is then our intention to pursue ratification in 2025, by submitting the Treaty and a Bill to this House for scrutiny.

    This is a historic moment, a victory for diplomacy. We have saved the base. We have secured Britain’s national interests for the long-term.

    I commend this statement to the House.

    Updates to this page

    Published 7 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Don’t forget to check this Breast Cancer Awareness Month

    Source: City of Wolverhampton

    Statistics show that around 1 in 7 women in the UK will be diagnosed with breast cancer at some point in their lives, making it the most common cancer in the UK. It leads to around 11,500 deaths each year – but the NHS breast screening programme is helping to reduce breast cancer mortality by around 20% in women who are regularly screened.

    Anyone registered with a GP as female will be invited for NHS breast screening every 3 years between the ages of 50 and 71. Those over 71 can request screening. If you have not been invited for breast screening by the time you are 53 but think you should have been, please contact the Dudley, Wolverhampton and South West Staffordshire Breast Screening Service – for more details, visit NHS Breast Screening Programme.

    As well as screening, the NHS recommends that people check their breasts once a month. This will help with what is normal for your body therefore it will be easier to detect any changes that may need further examination from a health professional.

    Key symptoms that you should be looking or feeling for include a lump or swelling in your breast, chest or armpit, any changes to the skin of your breast, a change in size or shape, nipple discharge if you’re not pregnant or breastfeeding, a change in the shape or look of how your nipple usually looks, including a rash on it, or sores or ulcers on your chest.

    Some of these symptoms are very common and can be caused by other conditions, but if you do notice anything unusual, make an appointment with your GP as soon as possible.

    For help, visit Check your breasts. You can also sign up to a monthly text reminder to check with Breast Cancer UK.

    John Denley, Wolverhampton’s Director of Public Health, said: “Cancer screening and routinely checking your breasts for any changes is essential for early detection, which is critical in improving treatment outcomes and survival rates.

    “Early stage cancers are often more treatable and have a better prognosis than those detected at a later stage, and almost all women diagnosed with breast cancer at the earliest possible stage in England survive their disease for at least 5 years after diagnosis.

    “Screening can also identify precancerous conditions that can be treated before they develop into cancer, further reducing the risk of cancer development. By catching cancer early, screening programmes can reduce the overall burden of cancer, decrease healthcare costs, and improve the quality of life for patients.”

    For more information about breast cancer in women please visit Breast cancer in women.

    Though rare, men can also get breast cancer – for more information, please visit Breast cancer in men.  

    For more information, resources and support, visit Cancer Research UK

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Embassy of Sweden back in Beirut, Lebanon

    Source: Government of Sweden

    Embassy of Sweden back in Beirut, Lebanon – Government.se

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    Press release from Ministry for Foreign Affairs

    Published

    The Government decided on 2 October to resume embassy operations in Beirut, Lebanon. The Embassy is now in place.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Liverpool City Region and Homes England invest £51 million in Birkenhead regeneration project

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Homes England and Liverpool City Region Combined Authority funding comes as the two organisations sign Strategic Place Partnership agreement

    Peter Denton, Chief Executive of Homes England and Steve Rotheram, Mayor of the Liverpool City Region

    Plans to kick-start the regeneration of a former gasworks in Birkenhead has moved a step closer thanks to funding approval from Homes England and the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority.

    Hind Street Urban Garden Village, a major transformation project on the Wirral, will see derelict land around Hind Street turned into a new community of over 1,500 homes, a new park, improved transport links, commercial space and leisure facilities.

    The government’s housing and regeneration agency has today agreed a £29 million investment in the project, following a £22 million commitment from the Combined Authority. This investment will fund vital infrastructure works needed to unlock the site and deliver the first 633 homes.

    The funding approval for Hind Street follows hot on the heels of the establishment of a Strategic Place Partnership (SPP) between Homes England and Liverpool City Region Combined Authority.

    The SPP model is one of the ways Homes England is advancing locally led housing growth and regeneration. Designed to support regions with the most ambitious proposals for housing growth, the SPP is a long-term commitment, centred around a shared plan for bringing those proposals forward.

    Steve Rotheram, Mayor of the Liverpool City Region, said:

    This is really exciting news which marks a significant milestone in our mission to regenerate Birkenhead and the wider Wirral. Through our Strategic Place Partnership with Homes England, we’re accelerating transformational projects like Hind Street, turning derelict land into vibrant, sustainable communities that our region deserves.

    With over 1,500 new homes being built, alongside improved transport links and green spaces, this project will serve as a blueprint for the type of regeneration we want to see across the Liverpool City Region—regeneration that not only delivers homes but creates jobs, boosts local businesses, and builds stronger communities.

    It’s a prime example of how, by working together, we can unlock opportunities and remove the barriers holding our region back. By delivering key infrastructure and attracting investment, we’re ensuring that local people benefit directly from the improvements, making this a place where everyone has the chance to thrive.

    Peter Denton, Chief Executive of Homes England, said:

    The Strategic Place Partnership model gives us a framework to support local leaders who have a strong vision for housing and regeneration in their area. The Liverpool City Region is undoubtedly an area with huge potential for growth and is somewhere the government has already shown commitment to.

    The funding approved today for Hind Street Urban Village is further evidence of our support for the region and aligns with our mission to work together with the mayor and his team, to develop a pipeline of housing and regeneration development and help the Combined Authority unlock the region’s full potential.

    Building on the collaborative work evidenced with the Hind Street funding, as well as ongoing collaboration with Liverpool City Council at Festival Gardens, the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the parties will enhance and expand efforts to improve strategic placemaking through increasing the pace, scale and quality of housing delivery in the Liverpool City Region.

    The funding agreed today will be used to unlock the Hind Street site and remove complex barriers to its development, including moving Birkenhead’s gas supply to a new, improved location. The former Rock Ferry to Bidston Dock railway line will also be brought back to life as Dock Branch Park. The line, thought to be one of the oldest stretches of track in the world, has been closed since the early 1990s but will be given back to the community and transformed into a ‘linear’ park, providing walking and cycling routes and connecting people to local transport links. 

    The project is being delivered by Wirral Council in partnership with developers Ion, who have been commissioned to undertake Development Management services including the design of the scheme, the remediation and infrastructure works required and the submission of the planning application. Subject to planning approval, it is expected to start on site in 2025 and complete in 2027.

    Councillor Paul Stuart, Leader of Wirral Council said:

    This additional funding from Homes England, along with support from the Combined Authority, will really help to accelerate our plans to change this part of Birkenhead for the benefit of local communities.

    I’m pleased our ambitious ideas to transform this key area have this backing, enabling us to get started bringing along new homes, public spaces and better-connected living for our residents.

    Our regeneration strategy looks beyond changes to the built environment to see that in the long term, when regeneration is people-focussed, it reduces inequalities, creates employment opportunities and improves the health and wellbeing of those individuals and families who are making their homes and lives in our borough.

    Updates to this page

    Published 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: New restrictions to limit impact of Ips typographus tree pest

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government Non-Ministerial Departments

    Spruce tree planting prohibited in parts of East Anglia and South East England

    Planting of spruce trees in parts of East Anglia and South East England is to be restricted as part of additional new measures announced by the Forestry Commission today (Tuesday 8 October) following further findings this season of Ips typographus, also known as the eight-toothed spruce bark beetle.

    A new spruce tree planting restriction is coming into force in the restricted area, known as the Demarcated Area (DMA). Landowners, businesses and land managers are urged to comply with new requirements and stay vigilant to protect against Ips typographus. Planting spruce trees for ornamental and scientific purposes, growing on nursery sites for trade, or the planting of Christmas trees, will be permitted in specific circumstances detailed in the notice. Christmas tree growers in the affected area can continue to grow an unlimited number of spruce trees up to three metres in height above the root collar before authorisation is required.

    The new restrictions come after further findings this year, including the first UK finding of Ips typographus on Sitka spruce in July, and are part of the continued action being taken to limit the spread of the beetle and protect our nation’s trees, forestry and timber industries.

    Ips typographus is a serious pest of spruce trees in Europe and was first identified in the UK in 2018. These incursions are occurring in England as the beetle is blown over from the continent. The pest prefers stressed or dying trees but, under the right conditions, it can attack healthy trees.

    The new requirements come into force on 29 October across the existing DMA in the South East of England and East Anglia prohibiting the planting of spruce trees (Picea A.Dietr). Areas affected include parts of Lincolnshire, Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Norfolk, Suffolk, Hampshire, Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, Hertfordshire, Surrey, Greater London, Sussex, Kent and Essex.

    Forestry Commission Head of Plant Health Forestry Andrea Deol said:

    Ips typographus can have a serious impact on spruce trees, and so restricting spruce planting in some areas of East and South East England ahead of the tree-planting season will help with our ongoing eradication efforts.

    All landowners, managers and timber processors are encouraged to remain vigilant and report any sightings of the pest via our Tree Alert Portal.

    Defra Chief Plant Health Officer Professor Nicola Spence said:

    Pest and pathogens present a great risk for our biosecurity and, in particular, Ips typographus has the potential to cause significant damage to Great Britain’s forestry and timber industries.

    These new restrictions are part of continued action to limit the spread of the beetle and protect our nation’s trees and forest industries. All landowners and land managers should check the health of spruce trees on their land and take swift action to deal with any susceptible material.

    Existing restrictions remain in place to limit the spread of the pest through timber movement, by requiring pre-notification and authorisation by the Forestry Commission of any felling and movement of susceptible material within the DMA.

    It is important for landowners to continue to check the health of spruce trees on their land, identifying stressed, fallen, and snapped trees, and taking action to remove them and any surrounding susceptible material. Replacement with non-susceptible tree species is also encouraged to limit the possibility of populations of Ips typographus establishing and to prevent spread to other areas.

    Under the notice, exemptions are available for lower risk scenarios, such as trees grown at nurseries, for ornamental or scientific purposes and for the purpose of trade in large Christmas trees.

    Any sightings should be reported to the Forestry Commission via the TreeAlert online portal. Read the full guidance on the new requirements.

    Additional information:

    A video is available explaining the threat of Ips typographus on spruce trees in the UK, with advice on how woodland owners can help reduce the risk from this pest:

    Watch the video.

    Updates to this page

    Published 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Big Boost for Derby Jobs Fair returns!

    Source: City of Derby

    Severn Trent and Derby City Council are proud to announce that Severn Trent’s Big Boost for Derby Jobs Fair is returning! The event will take place on Wednesday 23 October 2024, at Pride Park Stadium from 10am to 2pm and is completely free. The jobs fair is designed to help local people in Derby who are looking to upskill or change careers by providing direct access to a variety of employment opportunities and career development resources.

    Attendees will benefit from on-site CV writing workshops, interview preparation sessions, and career counselling, ensuring they leave equipped with the skills and confidence needed to help secure employment. The event will feature over 20 employers, showcasing roles across sectors like health care, customer service, engineering, and utilities. Some of the employers attending include:

    • Derbyshire Police
    • Balfour Beatty
    • Deventio Housing Trust
    • NHS
    • Everyone Active
    • And many more yet to be announced!

    Severn Trent is introducing innovative tools such as virtual reality interview practice, allowing job seekers to simulate real-life interview experiences. The event will also offer crucial information on cost-of-living support, helping attendees to manage financial challenges while job hunting.

    Councillor Paul Hezelgrave, Deputy Leader of Derby City Council and Cabinet Member for Children, Young People and Skills, said:

    Derby has always been a city of potential, and now more than ever, we want to empower our residents to make bold changes in their careers by enhancing their skills in making a positive impact in job applications and interviews to bolster self-confidence and an ability to “sell themselves” to employers. The Big Boost for Derby Jobs Fair is a fantastic opportunity for people to connect with employers and explore opportunities that can help them build a better- paid future for themselves and their families.

    This event is completely free to attend so that we can ensure that everyone has access to the tools they need to thrive in their careers.”

    Severn Trent said:

    We see you, Derby. We hear you. We want tomorrow to be better than today, for you and the people around you. Whether you are looking to get into work for the first time or would just like a change, Derby is full of new opportunities, new skills, new chances. So, let’s bring everyone together to boost Derby’s potential.”

    Those interested in attending can register for free on the Eventbrite page.

    If you cannot make the event but still want support with developing your skills or finding a new job, contact the Employment and Skills Hub. As part of the Derby Promise, Derby City Council has launched the Employment and Skills Hub to help you gain the confidence, support and skills to move into employment. The Hub is based at the Council House and is open from 10am to 5pm Monday to Friday.

    You can learn more about the Employment and Skill Hub by visiting their webpage or get in touch with the team by emailing employmentandskills@derby.gov.uk. You can also subscribe to the Derby Jobs Weekly newsletter.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Prison Governors Association Speech

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Lord Timpson, Minister for Prisons, Probation and Reducing Reoffending, sets out why prison governors are at the forefront of efforts to drive down reoffending.

    Please note the political content has been removed from this transcript.

    Thank you for that introduction, Graham, and for the invitation to speak – it’s great to be here.

    Thanks to everyone involved for putting this event together.

    Let me start by saying just how grateful I am for the PGA’s work.

    You speak up for change, where change is needed…

    You push Government, where it needs to be pushed…

    And you do it not just for those you represent, but in the interests of public safety too.

    Your voice is valued, and we thank you for it… even when you say things we don’t necessarily want to hear.

    I know it’s your first annual conference since becoming PGA President, Tom – congratulations again on your appointment.

    Let me also congratulate your new Vice-Chairs, Mark, and Carl, on their appointments too.

    I’ve known Tom for a while now – we once even shadowed each other a few years ago, when he was Governor at HMP Wakefield, and I headed up the Timpson Group.

    I took Tom to visit some of our shops – one branch was in Uttoxeter Tesco, as I recall – while I found out what it’s like to lead one of our toughest prisons. 

    I know who has it harder…!

    And now I’m wearing a new hat, I did ask Tom if he fancied another job swap – but for some reason he wasn’t up for it.

    I can’t think why…

    I realise that the CEO of a business and prison governor are very different roles – but there are similarities, too.

    Both manage complex organisations. Both need a strategic brain, excellent management skills, the ability to communicate, inspire and motivate.

    But the main difference is this: most people know what a CEO does, what their job entails.

    You, on the other hand, are largely hidden from view. Even when prisons are plastered all over our TV screens, as they are right now.

    The average person would have little idea about your day-to-day – what it really means to lead a prison in 2024, as Tom has set out so starkly just now.

    Working every hour, under extraordinary pressure, to run safe and secure regimes.

    Dealing with self-harm, deaths and the scourge of drugs on a daily basis.

    Supporting your teams and trying to nurture them in an environment more stressful than most could imagine.

    Every challenge amplified, because our prisons are full to bursting.

    These are the realities you face every day.

    Now, prisons have always fascinated me – since I was a young boy, and my Mum, Alex, would take the babies she’d fostered into HMP Styal, so their mothers could see them.

    I’d sit outside in the car and wonder what was going on inside…

    What had these women done that was so terrible, that they couldn’t be with their babies?

    It was the start of a life-long interest.

    And as you may know, around 10 percent of people who work for Timpson are ex-offenders.

    It all started by chance 22 years ago, when, as a new CEO, I visited a local prison and met Matt – who got into a fight after his A-levels, and instead of going to university, went to jail.

    Matt showed me around the wing, and I immediately liked him. He was bright, enthusiastic, and I thought he was just the sort of person we wanted in the business.

    So I told him – “when you get out, I’ll give you a job.”

    And the rest is history.

    Matt went on to be one of our most successful branch managers – in a branch just a stone’s throw from the prison he served time in.

    He’s still there today. And while he hasn’t gone far physically, he’s travelled lightyears in terms of what he’s achieved…

    Because he had the will to turn his life around, and that extra support to get into work.

    I knew there must be more great people like Matt in our prisons, and from then on, we decided to proactively recruit ex-offenders.

    Later, working with you, we set up prison training academies…

    Then to create Employment Advisory Boards, building those vital links between prisons and local employers.

    And, in 2016, I was honoured to become Chair of the Prison Reform Trust.

    So I’ve been behind the scenes.

    And in that time, one constant has been your outstanding leadership, in the most challenging circumstances.

    It has been a privilege to get to know you, and to see the incredible work you do.

    Thank you.

    You have our deepest respect, and our gratitude.

    Over the years there has been much debate about what prison is primarily for – be it punishment, public protection or deterrence.

    Of course, it’s all of these things.  

    It’s right that dangerous people are taken off our streets – and that people who destroy lives and wreck our communities face the consequences.

    But if we cut to the core of it, prison should also be about reducing offending. That’s the only way we are genuinely going to protect the public.

    I say ‘should’, here, because it’s something we haven’t always been very good at in this country. I know you’d agree.

    Serious criminals should see the inside of a jail cell – and the most dangerous should stay there.

    But what happens next to the many offenders who will someday be let out really matters.

    For the vast majority of offenders, being locked up is a fork in the road.

    One way on that road can lead them to turn their lives around…

    The other will take them straight back to prison.

    Too often, it’s the latter. And I’ve no doubt how deeply frustrating it must be for you to see the same faces at your gates again and again.

    The numbers are clear – 80 percent of offending in this country is reoffending. That is too high by any measure.

    But I know just how determined you are to turn that around.  

    We all know what the answers are. I know that you know what needs to be done. My job is to help you realise those ambitions.

    Having worked in the family business since I was 14, I hope I’ve learnt a few things about leadership and responsibility along the way. There are plenty of philosophies out there.

    I found that a strong culture and high standards – rooted in trust, and kindness – was what worked for us.

    And I firmly believe that strong leaders – you – are the single most important element in a good prison.

    You set the culture…

    You set those high standards for your teams to follow, and for the prisoners you rehabilitate.

    And I can’t stress enough how important high standards are in our prisons.  

    Put it this way – I’ve never known a great organisation to have poor standards.

    That starts with the basics – a clean, tidy, environment, where prisoners and staff respect the rules.

    When I was a CEO, I’d check the Timpson head office car park for weeds and litter…

    Small things, I know. But they really matter…

    Those first impressions for people arriving really matter…

    And as leaders, it’s our job to lead by example.

    And in over 20 years of being involved with prisons, I can’t think of a time when your job has been tougher.

    For too long, you’ve been doing your best in very challenging circumstances.

    People don’t turn up to work to get beaten up, they turn up to inspire people, and to and turn lives around.

    Yet our crammed prisons are breeding violence – which threatens everyone’s safety, staff and prisoners alike…

    Staff shortages – and a lack of experienced staff – stretch your ability to run the kind of regimes you want to run.

    While so many of your prisons are dilapidated, in desperate need of repair…

    I’m grateful to Charlie Taylor – who is up next – for HMIP’s unflinching focus on these issues.

    And I know it hasn’t been easy, trying to rehabilitate offenders in a system teetering on the edge of disaster.

    A system that, when we came into government, had been run at 99 percent capacity for months.

    I should emphasise – none of this is your doing – in fact, the PGA has been sounding the alarm loud and clear.

    That’s why we had to take the tough decision to bring in changes to automatic release to ease the pressure on our prisons.

    It was, quite literally, a rescue effort.

    If we hadn’t acted, the justice system would have ground to a halt:

    Courts would have been unable to hold trials and police unable to make arrests.

    We would have faced the total breakdown of law and order.

    We only have to look at the recent disorder on our streets to see how close to catastrophe we came…

    Because we could deliver justice swiftly, we brought the violence to an end.

    But, in the process, we came dangerously close to running out of prison space entirely.

    We had no choice but to introduce emergency measures in the first few days of this new Government.

    It was only thanks to the heroic efforts of prison and probation staff, that we pulled through.

    We didn’t want to do this. But we were left with no choice…

    To attempt to delay any further, would have allowed our justice system to collapse.

    We could never have allowed that:

    This Government will always put the safety of the public – first.

    Throughout all of this you have been under immense pressure.

    Offender management units, in particular, have borne the brunt of several emergency measures…

    While more broadly the estate has coped with higher numbers of late arrivals and redirections.

    It’s in times like these that strong leadership matters most. We couldn’t have managed this crisis without you.

    And while there is still work to be done ahead of the next releases later this month, I want to thank you, again, for everything you’ve done to get us to this point.

    So, our changes have bought us some time. Time for the system to catch its breath.

    But these challenges haven’t just disappeared, and the crisis isn’t over.

    If things don’t change, we’ll end up in the same position all over again… Sooner than we care to mention.

    I want us to get a point where you can run your prisons how you want to run them…

    That is why the Justice Secretary has been clear that getting prisons built is a priority for her.

    That is why we will take control of the planning process, and deem prison development of national importance.

    And we also need decent regimes, that help offenders turn their backs on crime for good.

    I know there is brilliant, innovative work going on, and I want to encourage more of it.

    But innovating is difficult – impossible, even – when you’re so full that you can’t let prisoners out of their cells.

    That’s why it is essential we resolve this capacity crisis…

    So we can support and empower you to go even further to reduce reoffending.

    And, if we create the right conditions for you to do your jobs as you’d want to do them – I hope to see more of you staying in post for longer, too.

    Stability at the top is crucial.

    Because our prisons are on a journey, and there’s a long road ahead.

    Culture change doesn’t happen overnight.

    In my experience, it can take anywhere from three to five years to really move an organisation on.

    Much of our success will be down to you, our prison leaders.

    So I want to see more of you staying on that road for longer – and I want you to tell me how we can support you to do that.

    Great prisons need great leaders. But second, they need hardworking dedicated staff, like the officers in your teams.

    Fundamentally, prisons are a people business – like any company.

    As a CEO, I found that the happier people are in their jobs, the better they work. If they feel valued, trusted and cared for, they are going to perform well for you.

    And in your teams, people are working under such intense pressure day in, day out.

    The relationships – between you, and your staff… and your staff and your prisoners – go right to the core of safe, decent prisons.

    If we invest in officer training – in their well-being, and development – we empower them to do much more than simply maintain order.

    We empower them to become agents of change – to help people turn their lives around.

    I’ve met plenty of men and women who say that a prison officer transformed their life.

    Officers who took the time to mentor them – who really got to know the people on their wing.

    Who knew if their mum wasn’t well, or when their kids were starting school.

    But to be a prison officer requires a unique set of skills – quite unlike any other job.

    That ‘jailcraft’ equips officers for the challenges they will face every day. It takes time, and continual learning.

    Before joining the Government, I had the privilege of leading a review of prison officer training – speaking to hundreds of officers across the estate.

    It’s clear we have some decent foundations – but we can do so much more.

    I want to see more in-depth training that fully prepares officers for the realities of the role, right from the start.

    Greater consistency – with a strong curriculum and clear standards…

    More local ownership of training…

    Clear channels of accountability…

    And a culture of ongoing learning throughout an officer’s career…

    One that rightly builds pride in this absolutely critical role.

    I want to push forward with these changes, and I’ll say more about this as soon as I can.

    The third element of a good prison is, of course, purposeful activity.

    Prison education and training has a huge influence on the path offenders choose to take.

    It’s crucial that we get this right if we are to release better citizens, not better criminals.

    Yet I’ve seen people leave prison not even knowing how to use a computer.

    When we spend so much of our lives – and jobs – online, how are they supposed to get on in the modern world?

    That’s just one example. There are many others.

    But the point is clear: when you don’t have the right skills to get a job, slipping back into old habits is all too easy.

    And the lure of easy cash might feel like the only way to put money in your pocket.

    So, it might not come as a surprise that I’m passionate about prison education and training.

    Training that opens doors – that gives prisoners pride – and real skills that today’s employers want.

    I’m clear that prison is a punishment. But that’s no reason to stop the one in four working-age people in the UK who have criminal records from getting jobs.

    We know that prison leavers are less likely to reoffend if they have a job within a year of release.

    So, getting them into work doesn’t just cut crime, it boosts our economy too.

    That’s a win-win we can’t ignore.

    But for many, the process of applying for jobs can be daunting.

    That’s why I’m pleased to see a new partnership – between the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development Trust and the New Futures Network.

    It will embed HR professionals in EABs…

    Ensure that prison leavers can access HR advice to support them into work…

    Provide mentoring for Prison Employment Leads…

    And help us to create even closer links between prisons and local employers.

    And, I can testify, former prisoners make great colleagues.

    In my experience, they work hard, they turn up on time, and they are trustworthy – because they are so hungry to prove themselves.

    The amount they can achieve – starting from rock bottom – is nothing short of extraordinary.

    It’s no exaggeration to say that some of the most accomplished people I know were once in prison.

    They want to grasp that second chance with both hands.

    Together – let’s make sure they get it.

    Our fourth route to reducing reoffending is by tackling the scourge of drugs in our prisons.

    As you know so well, drugs undermine rehabilitation, fuel violence, debt, and are a sure path back into crime.

    Nearly half of prisoners have a history of drug misuse.

    Many will have addictions when they turn up at your gates, but too many who were clean on the outside are drawn into drugs on the inside.

    That flies in the face of what we want our prisons to achieve.

    The answer is clear.

    First, we need to stop drugs getting into prison. We can hardly expect prisoners to kick the habit if our jails are a sweetshop for drugs.

    We know what you are up against. Not least the growing use of drones to smuggle drugs – and the phones that power the illicit market – over your walls…

    And the increasing threat of synthetic opioids…

    We have to adapt rapidly if we are to protect our staff and prisoners.

    Second, we need prisons to drive demand for drugs down, not up.

    Purposeful activity is so important here. If prisoners have meaningful ways to spend their time, they’re less likely to turn to drugs through boredom, or distress.

    Staff training is crucial too. Your teams have to understand drugs, and addiction, so they can make sure prisoners get the right support, and are helped to recover.

    Third, prisoners with an addiction need treatment.

    There is good evidence to show this reduces reoffending – but we also need to make sure they stay in treatment after release. That groundwork starts in prison.

    And fourth – where it’s safe and appropriate – we should be driving more people with a drug problem away from prison and into treatment.

    That could include greater use of drug and alcohol treatment requirements attached to community sentences, for example.

    There are no easy solutions, but I want to work with you to create a system where people leave custody prepared to lead productive, drug-free lives.

    I know there is innovative work going on out there – and I want to explore how we can replicate that work elsewhere.

    As I come to a close, let me say again – this is the beginning of a new journey for our prisons.

    This Government will rebuild and reform the system.

    We’ll accelerate the prison building programme, to make sure we have the cells we need.

    We’ll soon publish our ten-year capacity strategy, setting out how we will acquire new land for prisons, and reform the planning process.

    And, as you’re aware, we will carry out a review of sentencing – with a focus on how it both protects the public and reduces reoffending.

    We’ll soon be in a position to share the terms of reference of that independent review and announce its chair – and I know the PGA will play its full part once it is underway.

    As I’ve said, change takes time. It also takes stamina. The last Government hardly led by example – 14 Prison Ministers in as many years isn’t a record to be proud of.

    So I can assure you – it’s very much my intention to stay the course.

    I want you to judge me on my actions. When I’m back here next year, and the year after that, let’s see where we’ve got to.

    I’m fortunate to have started this job with a good working knowledge of prisons, but it’s been humbling to visit some of you recently, and be reminded of the complex and challenging work you do every day.

    Thanks to everyone who has taken the time to talk to me so far –

    Aled at Holme House…

    Pete at Five Wells…

    Amy at Downview…

    Andy at Wandsworth…

    Emily at High Down…

    Dan at Preston…

    And many, many more…

    I should say that getting out into the estate is another of my top priorities…

    So you can tell me straight – what’s really going on in the system, what you’re up against, and how, together, we can make it better.

    I hear the last Minister to go to Isle of Wight prison was Anne Widdecombe. So, Dougie, you’ve been forewarned. I’ll be coming down!

    Let me finish by saying thank you, again…

    To you, to your teams, and every single person who keeps the system running – the teachers, nurses, psychologists, and non-operational staff.

    As leaders, your role goes far beyond managing institutions.

    You are protecting communities…

    You are shaping lives…

    And ultimately, you are strengthening our society.

    Thank you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Security: New Navy Medicine command to enhance expeditionary medical training, readiness

    Source: United States Navy (Medical)

    Navy Medicine celebrated a pivotal moment in its expeditionary mission with the official establishment of a new command and renamed Naval Expeditionary Medical Training Institute (NEMTI) to the Naval Expeditionary Medicine Warfighter Development Center (NEMWDC) during a ceremony at Camp Pendleton, Calif., Oct. 4.

    The command establishment signified a strategic shift in Navy Medicine’s approach to combat trauma readiness and operational medical support.

    “This transformation represents more than a change in name; it marks the continued evolution of Navy Medicine’s mission to support the warfighter, strengthen our operational capabilities, and provide unmatched medical expertise both in garrison and in forward-deployed locations,” said Rear Adm. Guido Valdes, Naval Medical Forces Pacific (NMFP) commander.

    The ceremony also marked NEMWDC’s organizational realignment from Navy Medicine Operational Training Command (NMOTC) to NMFP as an echelon 4 command, gaining more resources, capacity, and a broader and more dynamic role in bolstering Navy Medicine’s ability to support the warfighters.

    NEMWDC will serve as a center of excellence for unit level training for medical capabilities, enhancing combat trauma skills and certifying expeditionary medical platforms for future operations. This new command aligns with Navy Medicine’s “North Star,” ensuring that by 2027, the force will deliver trained and certified medical units capable of supporting the Fleet, Fleet Marine Force, and Joint Forces in any environment.

    “The impact of this change will resonate across Navy Medicine and serve to amplify our role in ensuring that medical forces are ready and fully equipped to support any mission, anytime, anywhere,” Valdes said.

    Capt. Kevin Bailey, the first commanding officer of NEMWDC, reflected on the journey that led to the establishment of the new command, noting that the foundation laid by NEMTI will guide NEMWDC’s efforts as it prepares expeditionary medical teams for future fight.

    “NEMWDC is truly a unique gem in Navy Medicine,” Bailey said. “This command is at the focal point for unit-level training leading to basic phase certification of Expeditionary Medicine (EXMED).”

    Capt. Bailey also shared his vision for integrating innovative technologies like health informatics and virtual reality into the training pipeline, ensuring that NEMWDC remains at the forefront of medical readiness.

    As NEMWDC evolves, it will focus on training medical personnel to deliver seamless care from Role 1 to Role 3 medical units, ensuring lifesaving support from the frontlines to more advanced medical facilities. This strategic realignment is expected to amplify Navy Medicine’s role in supporting warfighters in the most challenging environments.

    For Cmdr. Damian Storz, who transitioned from officer in charge of NEMTI to NEMWDC’s executive officer, the day marked the culmination of years of hard work and collaboration.

    “Our team’s dedication and our collaboration with leadership were key to overcoming challenges and setting the stage for this transition,” Storz said, noting that NEMWDC is well positioned to ensure medical units are ready for deployment.

    The ceremony also honored the long history of NEMTI, which has been at the forefront of expeditionary medical training since its establishment.

    “NEMTI’s impact has reached far and wide, ensuring operational success, whether it’s preparing medical teams for the frontlines or equipping them with the skills to operate in humanitarian or disaster scenarios,” Valdes said.

    The event concluded with a message of gratitude to the NEMWDC staff for their tireless dedication.

    “To the Sailors of the newly designated Naval Expeditionary Medicine Warfighter Development Center, I look forward to serving you as your commanding officer,” Bailey said.

    Naval Medical Forces Pacific (NMFP) provides oversight for 11 Navy Medicine Readiness and Training Commands (NMRTC), on the West Coast and Pacific Rim that train, man, and equip medical forces, primarily in military treatment facilities. Globally, NMFP oversees eight research laboratories that deliver research expertise in support of warfighter health and readiness. Additionally, NMFP manages the Naval Expeditionary Medicine Warfighter Development Center (NEMWDC), which plays a critical role in preparing medical teams for expeditionary and operational environments.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Sustainability by the book for Green Libraries Week

    Source: City of Leeds

    Libraries in Leeds are displaying books celebrating nature and climate action this week in a bid to inspire a new chapter in the city’s sustainability story.

    As part of Green Libraries Week, titles offering everything from top gardening tips, environmentally friendly recipes and information about the climate emergency will be among the Green Reads on show at libraries and community hubs across the city.

    Stats compiled by Leeds Libraries show the city’s library users have saved more than 2,550,000kg from their carbon footprints over the past year by borrowing rather than buying books- the equivalent of 1,300 flights from Leeds to New York.

    Now the service wants to offer visitors even more practical tips, guidance and facts about how everyone can do their bit to help the planet.

    The new Green Reads displays are part of a series of activities and events taking place throughout the week highlighting how libraries and their visitors can play their part.

    A collection of historic images showcasing the beauty of the city’s parks through the years will also showcase the importance of local green spaces during series of digital drop-in sessions and online on the Leodis website.

    The remarkable images include a photo from 1907 showing mill owner Jonathan Peate gifting land to the people of Yeadon for use as a local park.

    Also part of the gallery is an undated photo showing spectators watching a display of Maypole dancing at the annual Children’s Day at Roundhay Park. The event took place every year from 1920 until the 1960s, and a Queen was crowned each year.

    Also included is an engraving of Temple Newsam from the 1700s, created by Kip and Knyff Dutch draughtsmen, engravers and painters who specialised in engraved views of English country houses. This was one of many featured in their “Britannia Illustrata” published in around 1708.

    Other events being held during Green Libraries Week will include a code club, where visitors will be coding solutions to clean up oceans and reduce recyclable waste going to landfill.

    Green speakers at library social clubs, Story and Rhyme sessions celebrating wildlife, and eco-themed activity at kids clubs will also take place at a number of libraries across the city.

    Councillor Mary Harland, Leeds City Council’s executive member for communities, customer service and community safety, said: “Leeds has made a commitment to work towards being a carbon neutral city by 2030, and in order to achieve that ambition, we need everyone to work together across our communities.

    “Libraries are the perfect place for people to get the information they need to play their part and to pick up some simple, practical advice about what they can do at home to make a difference.

    “By taking part in Green Libraries Week, we’re highlighting some of the many ways people can get involved in a fun, accessible and friendly place.”

    More information on Green Libraries Week in Leeds including events at local libraries and community hubs can be found at: Green Libraries Week | Leeds Library

    ENDS

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Press Release – States of Alderney response to alternative air transport model proposition – 08.10.24 Tuesday 08 October 2024

    Source: Channel Islands – States of Alderney

    Press Release

    Date:  8th October 2024

    States of Alderney response to alternative air transport model proposition

    The States of Alderney has welcomed alternative ideas for air transport presented by three local people to States Members and now made public but emphasises that much work would be required before it can be considered as a viable option.

    The proposal seen by the States is authored by the Alderney Air Transport Group which consists of local men Roger Dadd, Rod Paris and Malcolm Matthews, who have experience of air transport operations.

    A States spokesman said: “We welcome ideas from the public and thank the group for its concept which we will review with interest as we develop the strategy for solving our connectivity issues. In the meantime, no doubt the group will continue to develop their ideas into a feasible and deliverable proposition that could be taken to the market. 

    “A successful air transport model will only emerge once we have clarity on the runway’s dimensions. Until then, such ideas are theory rather than a sound business plan.”

    The alternative proposition recommends buying up to four nine-passenger, single-pilot Tecnams and operating an inter-island service with no Alderney-Southampton route.

    A report commissioned by the States Trading Supervisory Board examining the options for Alderney’s runway is expected to be brought to the States of Alderney by the end of the year.

    Ends

    States of Alderney media enquiries:Alistair.Forrest2@gov.gg

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UK sanctions Russian troops deploying chemical weapons on the battlefield

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Russian troops involved in the abhorrent use of inhumane chemical weapons on the battlefield in Ukraine have been targeted by new UK sanctions.

    • Russia’s Radiological Chemical and Biological Defence (CBR) troops and their commander have been sanctioned for the deployment of barbaric chemical weapons in Ukraine. 
    • UK calls out Russia’s flagrant violation of the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) and urges Russia to immediately cease all such activity.  
    • Action continues the Foreign Secretary’s personal mission to target the full spectrum of the Kremlin’s malign activity through our arsenal of sanctions.

    Russian forces have openly admitted to using hazardous chemical weapons on the battlefield, with widespread use of riot control agents and multiple reports of the use of the toxic choking agent chloropicrin – first deployed on the battlefields of WW1.  

    Russia’s flagrant disregard for the Chemical Weapons Convention is a serious violation of international law. Agents of Putin’s mafia state were also responsible for deploying the deadly nerve agent Novichok on the streets of Salisbury in 2018, and against opposition leader Alexei Navalny in 2020.  

    Among those sanctioned today are the Radiological, Chemical and Biological Defence Troops of the Russian Armed Forces and its leader Igor Kirillov, responsible for helping deploy these barbaric weapons. Kirillov has also been a significant mouthpiece for Kremlin disinformation, spreading lies to mask Russia’s shameful and dangerous behaviour.

    Foreign Secretary, David Lammy said: 

    The UK will not sit idly by whilst Putin and his mafia state ride roughshod over international law, including the Chemical Weapons Convention. I have made it my personal mission to challenge this malign activity, and I will not back down. 

    Russia’s cruel and inhumane tactics on the battlefield are abhorrent and I will use the full arsenal of powers at my disposal to combat Russia’s malign activity. 

    Let me be clear; Putin and those who carry out his will have nowhere left to hide. We will continue to use sanctions to directly target and counter the Kremlin’s attempts to sow fear, division and disorder.

    Defence Secretary, John Healey said:

    Our message to Putin and his regime is clear: you cannot break international law without facing the consequences.

    We will not allow such blatant violations of the Chemical Weapons Convention and rules-based international order to go unpunished.

    The UK is cracking down on those responsible for these horrific chemical attacks in Ukraine. Our support for Ukraine is ironclad and will continue for as long as it takes.

    Also sanctioned today are two Russian Ministry of Defence laboratories for providing support for the development and deployment of these inhumane weapons for use on the frontlines. 

    The UK is steadfast in supporting Ukraine’s fight for freedom, liberty and victory in the face of these barbaric attacks. We have provided Ukraine with vital equipment and training to protect its people against chemical weapons.  

    The UK has also committed to delivering £3 billion of military aid to Ukraine every year for as long as they need. The UK’s military, financial, diplomatic and political support for Ukraine is iron-clad. We cannot and will not let aggressors like Putin succeed.

    Background

    Today’s action comes as the UK delivers a statement to the Organisation’s Executive Council laying out the UK’s commitment to the Chemical Weapons Convention and the OPCW in the face of those who act to undermine it. The full speech can be found here. 

    Those sanctioned today are: 

    • The Radiological Chemical and Biological Defence Troops of the Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation. 
    • Igor Kirillov, Head of the Radiological Chemical and Biological Defence Troops of the Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation. 
    • The Russian Ministry of Defence 27th Scientific Centre. 
    • The Russian Ministry of Defence 33rd Central Scientific Research and Testing Institute. 

    These targets have been designated under the UK’s Chemical Weapons (Sanctions) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019. The individual will be subject to an asset freeze and travel ban, and entities subject to an asset freeze. The asset freeze will apply to all persons within the territory and territorial sea of the UK and to all UK persons, wherever they are in the world. It also prevents funds or economic resources being provided to or for the benefit of the designated person. An individual subject to a travel ban must be refused leave to enter or to remain in the United Kingdom.

    Media enquiries

    Email newsdesk@fcdo.gov.uk

    Telephone 020 7008 3100

    Contact the FCDO Communication Team via email (monitored 24 hours a day) in the first instance, and we will respond as soon as possible.

    Updates to this page

    Published 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: CMA appoints 3 Senior Legal Directors

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Lourenço Ventura and Emma Cochrane will join the CMA’s existing team and Richard Romney will take up his current Senior Legal Director role on a permanent basis.

    iStock

    Richard, Emma and Lourenço will be responsible for leading legal teams across the CMA’s portfolio of work – Richard for mergers, markets and regulatory appeals, Emma for consumer enforcement and Lourenço for competition enforcement, alongside the current Senior Legal Directors.   

    Following a highly successful interim promotion, Richard will take up the permanent position with immediate effect. Prior to joining the CMA’s Legal Service on temporary promotion in January 2023, Richard was a Director within the Mergers team, responsible for overseeing a range of high-profile merger cases. Richard originally joined the CMA in 2019 as a Senior Associate from Freshfields. 

    Emma will join the CMA from Linklaters, where she is a Counsel in the Antitrust & Foreign Investment Group. Emma has over ten years’ experience as a competition lawyer, including advising on cartel investigations, mergers and acquisitions, market investigations, abuse of a dominant position and other commercial agreements. Prior to Linklaters, Emma spent four years at Simmons and Simmons in the EU, Competition & Regulatory group. 

    Lourenço is returning to the CMA after spending the last two years working at the European Commission in Brussels. Previously, Lourenço spent ten years in various roles at the Office of Fair Trading – the CMA’s predecessor – and the CMA, most recently in the role of Legal Director. Before this, Lourenço spent 3 years at the Lisbon office of law firm Garrigues working on competition and EU law, commercial agreements, pharmaceutical and regulatory, and misdemeanour procedures. 

    Emma is joining the CMA in November and Lourenço will take up his post at the start of 2025. 

    Welcoming the appointments, Chris Prevett, General Counsel at the CMA said:  

    Sound, strategic legal risk management, and reaching robust legal decisions, underpins every aspect of the CMA’s work on behalf of UK consumers and businesses. With the CMA’s responsibilities set to grow following the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act, I am really pleased to be making three appointments at this senior level.  

    Each of these senior appointments brings substantial expertise, and will add further strength and depth to the senior leadership team and high calibre lawyers and policy professionals comprising the CMA’s Legal Service. 

    This is a well-deserved promotion for Richard, reflecting his contribution to the CMA’s Legal Service, and I look forward to working with Emma and welcoming back Lourenço.

    Notes to Editors 

    1. For media enquiries, contact the CMA press office on 020 3738 6460 or press@cma.gov.uk

    Updates to this page

    Published 8 October 2024

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: Beam Global EV ARC™ Systems Continue to Provide Essential Power during Hurricane Helene

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN DIEGO, Oct. 08, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Beam Global (Nasdaq: BEEM), a leading provider of innovative and sustainable infrastructure solutions for the electrification of transportation and energy security, today announced its EV ARC™ systems in the south eastern United States continued to operate during Hurricane Helene. For example, EV ARC™ systems at the Bay Pines Florida Veterans Affairs Health Care in Big Bend, an area located in the direct path of Hurricane Helene, remained operational, sending data and continuing to provide a vital source of emergency power throughout the storm even while submerged in eight feet of storm surge.

    Hurricane Helene made a historic landfall in Big Bend, Florida as one of the most powerful storms to hit the state. The Category 4 hurricane brought up to eight-foot storm surges and 140 mph winds, leaving nearly one million Florida residents without power.

    Designed to endure extreme weather conditions, Beam Global EV ARC™ charging infrastructure is independently rated to withstand winds of up to 165 mph and can operate effectively in up to 9.5 feet of flooding. These systems come equipped with an optional Emergency Power Panel, which offers 120v and 240v outlets for use by first responders and authorized personnel when utility power is not available. EV ARC™ systems are designated by the federal General Services Administration (GSA) as disaster preparedness response and recovery products due to energy security and resiliency capabilities during grid outages and natural or man-made disasters.

    “Hurricane Helene tested our EV ARC product like never before, and it did not disappoint,” said Beam Global CEO Desmond Wheatley. “Even when the systems were buffeted by hurricane winds and submerged in eight feet of water with waves crashing over them, these vital infrastructure products continued to operate. Our customers were able to log in remotely and verify that the systems remained online throughout the storm, providing essential power. Beam Global’s products are becoming more and more relevant as global electricity demand increases and the job of providing it the traditional way becomes more challenging because of natural disasters and capacity constraints.”

    Beam Global EV ARC™ products have faced extreme storm conditions before. During last year’s Hurricane Idalia, EV ARC™ systems in Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas continued to provide vital EV charging and emergency power in areas suffering from prolonged grid outages. Beam Global’s government and commercial customers were able to continue to charge their EVs and access the emergency power panels to provide services to the broader community. It can often take days or weeks for utility power to be restored to affected areas. Beam Global’s products provide vital electrical energy during those periods whether they were there and survived the disaster or are delivered and rapidly deployed as a recovery asset post-event.

    The frequency and severity of climate disasters in the U.S. continues to significantly increase, with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reporting a rise in billion-dollar weather and climate disasters from an average of 5.8 events per year in the 1980s to over 22 events annually in recent years. This trend underscores the urgent need for resilient, off-grid infrastructure solutions like EV ARC™ systems that can withstand extreme conditions and support communities during crises.

    To learn more about Beam Global products visit BeamForAll.com.

    About Beam Global
    Beam Global is a clean technology innovator which develops and manufactures sustainable infrastructure products and technologies. We operate at the nexus of clean energy and transportation with a focus on sustainable energy infrastructure, rapidly deployed and scalable EV charging solutions, safe energy storage and vital energy security. With operations in the U.S. and Europe, Beam Global develops, patents, designs, engineers and manufactures unique and advanced clean technology solutions that power transportation, provide secure sources of electricity, save time and money and protect the environment. Headquartered in San Diego with facilities in Chicago, Belgrade and Kraljevo, Beam Global has a deep patent portfolio and is listed on Nasdaq under the symbol BEEM. For more information visit BeamForAll.com, LinkedIn, YouTube and X (formerly Twitter).

    Forward-Looking Statements
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    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/93e37add-1e8d-406e-b310-aef9878be529

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