Category: Transport

  • MIL-OSI USA: June 03, 2025 Lawmakers Call for an Increase in Federal Funding toFully Support Urban Search & Rescue Efforts Washington, D.C. – A bipartisan coalition of lawmakers is calling for more robust federal support to help ensure that when a disaster strikes, members of the National Urban Search & Rescue Response System (US&R) can respond. These heroic task forces… Read More

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Representative Kevin Mullin California (15th District)

    Washington, D.C. – A bipartisan coalition of lawmakers is calling for more robust federal support to help ensure that when a disaster strikes, members of the National Urban Search & Rescue Response System (US&R) can respond. These heroic task forces deploy to communities across America that need additional help during dangerous crises like wildfires, hurricanes and building collapses, but their work has been underfunded for years.

    For the second year in a row, a coalition of lawmakers led by Representatives Kevin Mullin (CA-15), Young Kim (CA-40), and Jill Tokuda (HI-02) – and which has grown to over 40 members of Congress from across the country – are urging Congress to include a modest, but desperately-needed, $16 million increase for a total of $56 million in funding for US&R.

    America’s US&R Response System includes 28 task forces strategically located across 19 states, and are composed of highly-trained emergency personnel from local fire departments. They are expected to respond to devastating national disasters well beyond their border without commensurate funding from the Federal government to maintain their operations.

    US&R task force members respond to the 911 terrorist attacks in 2001.

    US&R has helped communities receive immediate, life-saving assistance during catastrophic events such as the Maui and Los Angeles wildfires, Hurricanes Milton and Katrina, the September 11 terrorist attacks, the Oklahoma City bombing, the Northridge Earthquake, and many other extreme crises. These task forces play a vital role in national disaster response efforts and the lawmakers are seeking full funding for the task forces in the Fiscal Year 2026 budget to properly support this heroic work. Last year, the House passed an Appropriations bill with the requested level of funding, but Congress ultimately did not pass full-year spending bills. They are repeating the effort this year.

    “Ensuring our US&R task forces are fully funded means ensuring communities across America can depend on them when disaster strikes,” said Rep. Kevin Mullin. “I’m proud that California Task Force 3 is based out of Menlo Park Fire in my congressional district. The time and effort that is put into hosting and maintaining a task force for deployment at a moment’s notice is no small task. These teams represent the gold standard in emergency response and provide lifesaving services to those who are experiencing an unfathomable emergency. Their readiness comes at a cost, and providing adequate federal funding will help us stay prepared and save lives.”

    “Urban Search and Rescue teams from across the country are often among the first to help communities and families during times of great loss. Nearly two years after the devastating Maui wildfires, I can still vividly recall US&R teams entering the burn zone while the ground was still hot enough to melt shoes,” said Rep. Jill Tokuda. “I will always be grateful for the comfort and closure they provided, which is why I’m so proud to have joined my colleagues Representatives Kevin Mullin and Young Kim in advocating for increased funding for the US&R system in this year’s appropriations bills. We never know when disaster will strike, but when it does, all Americans deserve to know that US&R will come to their aid.”

    “First responders need the proper resources to keep our communities safe during a major disaster, including deadly wildfires and flood events,” said Rep. Young Kim. “The National Urban Search and Rescue (US&R) Response System consists of 28 vital task forces made up of federal, state, and local emergency personnel who are on call for rapid deployment to provide emergency medical care and search collapsed buildings. I support our US&R task forces’ lifesaving work and appreciate Orange County Fire Authority Chief Fennessy’s leadership as Western Representative for 9 US&R task forces. I will do my part to protect this program that saves lives.”

    US&R task force members during Hurricane Katrina.

    US&R Leaders Speak Out for Federal Support

    “When disaster strikes, our US&R assets are the backbone of the response effort,” said Joseph R. Downey, Chief of Rescue Operations with Fire Department of the City of New York (NY-TF1), and US&R Task Force Representative-National. “With our extensive training and experience, we form a reliable and adaptable force that operates at the heart of every federal disaster response. New York City, with the largest Fire and Police Departments in the country, received much needed assistance from US&R task forces in response to the 9-11 attacks on the WTC and Hurricane Sandy. Our task forces have consistently gone above and beyond to support the mission, but the lack of funding is hindering our ability to respond effectively. With increased labor and equipment costs, along with the expansion of our mission scope and more frequent deployments, we need your help now more than ever.”

    “FEMA Urban Search and Rescue teams, sponsored by local government fire agencies like Menlo Park Fire Protection, provide vital, highly trained surge resources to communities that have been struck by catastrophic disasters,” said Mark Lorenzen, Fire Chief, Menlo Park Fire Protection District (CA-TF3). “They are critical in both life saving measures as well as helping move jurisdictions forward to recovery. The teams are struggling financially to cover increasing costs while federal funding lags well behind inflation. I am thankful for the bipartisan efforts of our legislators, including Rep. Kevin Mullin who helped lead this effort to bridge the funding gap to ensure our sustainability.”

    “Over the past eight months alone, California Task Force 5 (CA-TF5) activated on a wide range of incidents — from Hurricanes Helene and Milton on the east coast to the Palisades and Eaton Fires in Los Angeles — and on each deployment, the investments made in the program were returned beyond measure in the form of lives saved, families rescued, and communities protected,” said Brian Fennessy, Fire Chief of the Orange County Fire Authority (CA-TF5). “As the home of one of only 28 such task forces in the nation, we are grateful for the elected officials, including our own Rep. Young Kim, who not only recognize the program’s importance, but also work to secure increased funding to expand its life-saving services.”

    “Ohio Task Force 1 (OH-TF1) has been deployed by FEMA nearly 40-times in the past 25 years,” said Evan W. Schumann, OFE, Program Manager (OH-TF1).  “Our canine handlers and dogs have been deployed to such events as the State of Washington landslide in 2014, the Kentucky Flooding in 2022, and the Hawaii Wildland Fire. To remain ready to respond to any disaster, OH-TF1 spent 11,696 hrs. of training in 2023 and over 2,647 hrs. of service time (doing work without compensation). The associated personnel costs of OH-TF1’s 2023 activities were almost all uncompensated by federal funding and born on the backs of OH-TF1’s Participating Agencies or team members.  I am grateful to Reps. Mullin, Kim and Tokuda for leading the charge to increase funding for the Urban Search & Rescue program that will provide us greater support.”

    Read the full letter here.

    This letter was signed by Reps. Gabe Amo (RI-01), Becca Balint (VT-At Large), Wesley Bell (MO-1), Ami Bera (CA-6), Brendan Boyle (PA-2), André Carson (In-7), Emanuel Cleaver (MO-5), Jasmine Crockett (TX-30), Gabe Evans (CO-8), Brian Fitzpatrick (PA-1), Mike Flood (NE-1), Jared Golden (ME-2), Daniel Goldman (NY-10), Maggie Goodlander (KY-3), Julie Johnson (TX-32), William Keating (MA-9), Timothy Kennedy (NY-26), Jennifer Kiggans (VA-2), Young Kim (CA-40), John Larson (CT-1), Stephen Lynch (MA-8), Seth Magaziner (RI-2), Nicole Malliotakis (NY-11), Doris Matsui (CA-7), Dave Min (CA-47), Seth Moulton (MA-6), Kevin Mullin (CA-15), Jimmy Panetta (CA-19), Chris Pappas (NH-1), Scott Peters (CA-50), Brittany Pettersen (C0-7), Ayanna Pressley (MA-7), Maria Salazar (FL-27), Mary Gay Scanlon (PA-5), Greg Stanton (AZ-4), Suhas Subramanyam (VA-10), Jill Tokuda (HI-2), Lori Trahan (MA-3), Derek Tran (CA-45), Frederica Wilson (FL-24).

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Baldwin Demands Trump Administration Reverse Course on Milwaukee Job Corps Closure

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Wisconsin Tammy Baldwin

    WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), Ranking Member of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education, demanded the Trump Administration reverse course on the decision to shutter Job Corps training sites across the country, including in Milwaukee, that help young Americans get high-quality career training, are a path to good-paying jobs, and support businesses’ and labor unions’ workforce needs. Last week, the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) announced it will begin shutting down contractor operated Job Corps centers nationwide, including in Milwaukee, where 237 students are currently enrolled and will be abruptly cut off from services, including classes, trainings, housing, and more.

    “Milwaukee Job Corps has critical relationships with employers and service providers to ensure students enter the workforce ready to succeed, including by partnering with labor unions to provide pathways to apprenticeships,” wrote Senator Baldwin in a letter to DOL Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer. “Employers in the Milwaukee area value Job Corps graduates as strong, reliable contributors in the workplace, and losing that connection will add to the challenge of filling open jobs.”

    The Milwaukee Job Corps site has served the community since 2010, and currently has 237 students. The Center assists students ages 16 through 24 in completing their education, obtaining career technical skills, and gaining employment, while also providing essential and transitional support services like housing. Since its opening, the Milwaukee Job Corps Center has awarded 1,354 high school diplomas, and 2,515 career technical completions, which indicate complete training requirements, certificates, and credentials for a trade.

    “Canceling the contract means these students will be interrupted and potentially dislocated in the middle of attaining certifications and reaching their goals,” Senator Baldwin continued. “Robbing these Wisconsinites of their path to self-sufficiency is neither efficient nor will it deliver the desired meaningful results for the students.”

    The full letter is available here and below.

    Dear Secretary Chavez-DeRemer:

    I write to urge you to reconsider your misguided decision to pause operations at Job Corps centers across the country, including in Milwaukee. I ask that you immediately reverse this decision, reinstate the contract, and ensure that the Job Corps Center in Milwaukee can return to providing quality services to its students and a talent pipeline for area employers.

    The Milwaukee Job Corps site has served the community since 2010, and currently has 237 students. The Center assists students ages 16 through 24 in completing their education, obtaining career technical skills and gaining employment, while also providing essential and transitional support services like housing. Milwaukee Job Corps has critical relationships with employers and service providers to ensure students enter the workforce ready to succeed, including by partnering with labor unions to provide pathways to apprenticeships. Employers in the Milwaukee area value Job Corps graduates as strong, reliable contributors in the workplace, and losing that connection will add to the challenge of filling open jobs.

    The sudden pause in Job Corps contracts, which serves as a functional cancellation of our investment in job training, will upend the lives of students currently participating in the program and disrupt a vital link in the workforce system in place in Milwaukee. Through Job Corps, students earn drivers’ licenses, attain GEDs, go on to join the military, go to college, and more. Canceling the contract means these students will be interrupted and potentially dislocated in the middle of attaining certifications and reaching their goals. Robbing these Wisconsinites of their path to self-sufficiency is neither efficient nor will it deliver the desired meaningful results for the students.

    I urge you to reconsider this course of action and reinstate the contract for the Jobs Corps Center in Milwaukee. Thank you for your prompt consideration of this important matter.

    Sincerely, 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Larsen Releases Statement on the Closing of the Job Corps Program

    Source: United States House of Representatives – Congressman Rick Larsen (2nd Congressional District Washington)

    Larsen Releases Statement on the Closing of the Job Corps Program

    Skagit County, W.A., June 3, 2025

    Today, Representative Rick Larsen released the following statement on the closing of the Job Corps program: 

    “As a part of the Trump administration’s efforts to give a tax break to the richest Americans and wealthiest corporations, Secretary of Labor Lori Chavez-DeRemer has closed the Job Corps program.  

    “This terrible decision directly harms Northwest Washington. In its 40 year history, Cascade Job Corps has helped more than 10,000 low-income young people complete college credits and professional certifications. Today, the program serves 250 young people and employs 119 staff members. It also supports administrative capacity and career training services at the Everett WorkSource Center.  

    “When Cascade Job Corps shuts down at the end of the month, many of those 250 young people will lose access to housing and health care, and all of them will lose access to the education they were pursuing. All staff members will lose their jobs as well.  

    “In the past week, my office has received 90 messages from Cascade Job Corps students, alumni, and staff, and other community leaders who see the vital services the program provides. I hear you, and I share your anger.  

    “One year ago, my former House of Representatives colleague Lori Chavez-DeRemer signed onto a letter supporting funding for the Job Corps program. Today, as the Secretary of Labor, she has closed the program. 

    “I urge Secretary Chavez-DeRemer to meet with me and other members who represent communities who are hurting because of this decision. I support the Job Corps program, and I agree with the letter the Secretary signed onto last year: ‘Your support will allow Job Corps to continue its track record of providing effective career and technical education to many of the most vulnerable young Americans in our communities.’” 

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    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Australia: State of the Climate 2024: Increased fire weather, marine heatwaves and sea levels

    Source: Australia Safe Travel Advisories

    31/10/2024

    The State of the Climate Report 2024 has found Australia’s weather and climate has continued to change, with an increase in extreme heat events, longer fire seasons, more intense heavy rainfall, and sea level rise.

    The report, prepared every two years, was released today by Australia’s national science agency, CSIRO, and the Bureau of Meteorology.

    It draws on the latest national and international climate research, monitoring, and projection information to describe changes and long-term trends in Australia’s climate.

    Scientists found the oceans around Australia are continuing to warm, with increases in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere leading to more acidic oceans, particularly south of Australia.

    CSIRO Research Manager Dr Jaci Brown said warming of the ocean has contributed to longer and more frequent marine heatwaves, with the highest average sea surface temperature on record occurring in 2022.

    “Increases in temperature have contributed to significant impacts on marine habitats, species and ecosystem health, such as the most recent mass coral bleaching event on the Great Barrier Reef this year,” Dr Brown said.

    “Rising sea levels around Australia are increasing the risk of inundation and damage to coastal infrastructure and communities.

    “Global mean sea level is increasing, having risen by around 22 centimetres since 1900. Half of this rise has occurred since 1970.

    “The rates of sea level rise vary across the Australian region, with the largest increases in the north and south-east of the Australian continent.”

    The amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere continues to increase, contributing to climate change, with 2023 the warmest year on record globally.

    Dr Karl Braganza, Climate Services Manager at the Bureau of Meteorology, said Australia is continuing to warm, with eight of the nine warmest years on record occurring since 2013.

    “This warming has led to an increase in extreme fire weather, and longer fire seasons across large parts of the country,” Dr Braganza said.

    The report describes the shift toward drier conditions between April to October across the southwest and southeast, and reduced rainfall in southwest Australia now seems to be a permanent feature of the climate.

    “The lower rainfall in the cooler months is leading to lower average streamflow in those regions, which can impact soil moisture and water storage levels and increase the risk of drought. Droughts this century have been significantly hotter than those in the past,” Dr Braganza said.

    “However, when heavy rainfall events occur, they are becoming more intense, with an increase of around 10 per cent or more in some regions.

    “The largest increases are in the north of the country, with 7 of the 10 wettest wet seasons since 1998 occurring in northern Australia.”

    Although Australian emissions have declined since 2005, Australia is projected to see continued warming over the coming decades, with more extremely hot days and fewer extremely cool days.

    The rate of emissions decline will need to accelerate from now to meet Australia’s 2030 emissions targets.

    State of the Climate 2024 is the eighth report in a series published every two years by CSIRO and the Bureau of Meteorology. The findings highlight the importance of ongoing monitoring and help to inform and manage climate risk.

    The 2024 report can be found on the CSIRO and Bureau of Meteorology websites.

    ENDS

    MIL OSI News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Future Engineers Shine at NASA’s 2025 Lunabotics Robotics Competition

    Source: NASA

    And the winner is… the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. The Utah Student Robotics Club won the grand prize Artemis Award on May 22 for NASA’s 2025 Lunabotics Challenge held at The Astronauts Memorial Foundation’s Center for Space Education at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida. 

    [embedded content]

    “Win was our motto for the whole year,” said Brycen Chaney, University of Utah, president of student robotics. “We had a mission objective to take our team and competition a step further, but win was right up front of our minds.”
    Lunabotics is an annual challenge where students design and build an autonomous and remote-controlled robot to navigate the lunar surface in support of the Artemis campaign. The students from the University of Utah used their robot to excavate simulated regolith, the loose, fragmented material on the Moon’s surface, as well as built a berm. The students, who competed against 37 other teams, won grand prize for the first time during the Lunabotics Challenge.
    “During the 16th annual Lunabotics University Challenge the teams continued to raise the bar on excavating, transporting, and depositing lunar regolith simulant with clever remotely controlled robots,” said Robert Mueller, senior technologist at NASA Kennedy for Advanced Products Development in the agency’s Exploration Research and Technology Programs Directorate, and lead judge and co-founder of the original Lunabotics robotic mining challenge. “New designs were revealed, and each team had a unique design and operations approach.”

    Other teams were recognized for their achievements: The University of Illinois Chicago placed first for the Robotic Construction Award. “It’s a total team effort that made this work,” said Elijah Wilkinson, senior and team captain at the University of Illinois Chicago. “Our team has worked long and hard on this. We have people who designed the robot, people who programmed the robot, people who wrote papers, people who wired the robot; teamwork is really what made it happen.”
    The University of Utah won second and the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa came in third place, respectively. The award recognizes the teams that score the highest points during the berm-building operations in the Artemis Arena. Teams are evaluated based on their robot’s ability to construct berms using excavated regolith simulant, demonstrating effective lunar surface construction techniques.
    To view the robots in action from the Robot Construction Award winners, please click on the following links: University of Illinois Chicago, University of Utah, University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa.

    Students from Purdue University in Lafayette, Indiana received the Caterpillar Autonomy Award for their work. The University of Alabama placed second, followed by the University of Akron in Ohio. This award honors teams that successfully complete competition activities autonomously. It emphasizes the development and implementation of autonomous control systems in lunar robotics, reflecting real-world applications in remote and automated operations.
    An Artemis I flag flown during the Nov. 16, 2022, mission was presented to the University of Illinois Chicago, as well as the University of Virginia in Charlottesville as part of the Innovation Award. The recognition is given to teams for their original ideas, creating efficiency, effective results, and solving a problem.
    Dr. Eric Meloche from the College of DuPage in Glen Ellyn, Illinois, and Jennifer Erickson, professor from the Colorado School of Mines in Golden each received an Artemis Educator Award, a recognition for educators, faculty, or mentors for their time and effort inspiring students.
    The University of Utah received the Effective Use of Communications Power Award and the University of Virginia the agency’s Center for Lunar and Asteroid Surface Science Award.

    Students from the Colorado School of Mines placed first receiving a Systems Engineering Award. University of Virginia in Charlottesville and the College of DuPage in Glen Ellyn, Illinois, came in second and third places.

    Kurt Leucht
    Commentator, Lunabotics Competition and Software Development team lead

    Below is a list of other awards given to students:

    Systems Engineering Paper Award Nova Award: Liberty University in Lynchburg, Virginia; University of Virginia; College of DuPage
    Best Use of Systems Engineering Tools: The University of Utah
    Best Use of Reviews as Control Gates: The University of Alabama
    Systems Engineering Paper Award Leaps and Bounds Award: The University of Miami in Florida
    Best presentation award by a first year team: University of Buffalo in New York
    Presentations and demonstrations awards: University of Utah, Colorado School of Mines, University of Miami

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Interview with Dave Des Marais

    Source: NASA

    Let’s start with your childhood, where you’re from, your family at the time, if you have siblings, your early years, and when it was that you became interested in what has developed into your career as an astrophysicist or research scientist?

    I was born in Richmond, Virginia in 1948, the youngest of four siblings – two brothers, a sister and myself. My father was a civil engineer for DuPont chemical company and designed HVAC systems for plants built in the late 30’s and early 40’s for the war effort. Our family moved around frequently back then, so my siblings and I were born in different states. When our father transferred to  DuPont headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, we moved to nearby Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, about 30 miles southwest of Philadelphia. During my childhood, my participation in outdoor activities with the Boy Scouts and my motivation by excellent high school chemistry and physics teachers stimulated my interest in the natural sciences.

    I attended Purdue University in Indiana in part because Purdue had an excellent chemistry curriculum and because my second older brother, whom I had always admired, received his chemical engineering degree there. As an undergraduate, I was particularly fascinated by the periodic table of the elements and analytical chemistry. Experiences outside the classroom were also important.  I noticed that another student in my dormitory had a little miner’s carbide headlamp on his desk. He explored caves as a member of the Purdue Outing Club and invited me to join. When we took caving and climbing trips in southern Indiana, I developed a fascination with geology, particularly about how caves form and about rocks generally. This kindled my interest in geochemistry, which ultimately guided my choices of graduate school and career. Three factors led to my decision in 1970 to attend Indiana University. One was IU’s strong geology and geochemistry programs. I also wanted to remain as near as possible to Shirley, my future spouse. The third reason was to continue exploring caves!

    While at IU I indeed continued cave exploration. I joined the Cave Research Foundation (CRF), which maps caves and supports research in the national parks, particularly in Mammoth Cave, Kentucky, which is the longest cave in the world, with 250 miles of mapped passageways. My involvement with CRF deepened my interest in other aspects of geology and geochemistry.

    My NASA connection began when Dr. John Hayes became my graduate advisor in geochemistry. Hayes’ graduate dissertation had addressed organic compounds in meteorites. He was also involved with the Viking mission as a member of Klaus Bieman’s MIT research group, which created the mass spectrometer for the Mars Viking mission. I took Hayes’ class on mass spectrometry, and fortunately he liked my term paper! Soon after, I chose to do my dissertation with him on lunar sample analyses, focusing on carbon and other elements relevant to life. I first presented my work in 1972 at the third Lunar Science Conference, where I met Sherwood Chang, then chief of the Ames Exobiology branch. Sherwood was also investigating carbon and other elements in lunar samples. Sherwood, John, and others inspired me to continue in the space sciences.

    That’s an Interesting path because many of our researchers had a postdoc with somebody or attended a conference and met someone through that network and found their way to Ames that way.

    I then did a postdoctoral fellowship at UCLA with Dr. Isaac (Ian) Kaplan, whose biogeochemistry group also had analzed lunar samples. I continued developing methods for carbon isotopic analyses of very small samples. The carbon-13 to carbon-12 abundance ratios of molecules can offer clues about how they are formed. Isotopic measurements also help to identify contamination in meteorites and other extraterrestrial samples. Sherwood Chang wanted to create an isotope geochemistry laboratory in the Ames Exobiology Branch, and that led to my being hired at Ames in 1976.

    You mentioned contamination of the meteorites. Was it geo-contamination or contamination from elsewhere that concerned you?

    The basic analytical goal is to decipher the entire history of an extraterrestrial sample, starting with understanding the contents of an object when it was formed, which in most cases was billions of years ago. When an object was still in space, other events happened that altered its composition. But our major concern has been about what happens after a meteorite arrives here. Life has become so pervasive that its chemical ‘fingerprints’ are on virtually everything. It’s difficult to avoid these substances anywhere in the shallow Earth’s crust. Also, Earth is an inhospitable place for meteorites because its surface environments are relatively hot and moist compared to conditions in space. So our environment can alter the meteorites and add organic contamination.

    What has been your most interesting work here at Ames?

    I have had a near-unique opportunity to explore the biogeochemistry of carbon across a wide range of processes and environments that sustain our biosphere. I investigated the isotope geochemistry of carbon and nitrogen in lunar samples, meteorites, and oceanic basalts. Our molecular isotopic measurements of hydrocarbons in carbonaceous chondrites confirmed their extraterrestrial origins and provided clues about their synthesis. My measurements of mid-oceanic basalts and hydrocarbon gases in geothermal systems chracterized components from the mantle and from sedimentary organic carbon.

    I participated in the Precambrian Paleobiology Research Group at U.C.L.A., led by Dr. J. W. Schopf. For example, we documented carbon isotopic evidence for the long-term evolution and oxygenation of Earth’s early environment. Later, I coordinated a long-term project to study the biogeochemistry of marine benthic microbial communities as modern analogs of Earth’s oldest known (>3 billion yr.-old) ecosystems. We characterized their enormous microbial diversity, their highly efficient harvesting of sunlight, their cycling of life-sustaining elements, and mechanisms for their fossilization in sedimentary rocks. These experiences, among others, informed me as I chaired the development of NASA’s Astrobiology Roadmaps in 2003 and 2008, and as I served as PI of Ames’ NASA Astrobiology Institute team from 1998 to 2014. These roles also informed my participation in NASA’s Mars Exploration Rover and Curiosity rover missions.

    Now that you’ve described what your pursuit is, what your discipline or research interests are, how would you justify that to people who are not scientists as to why taxpayers should be funding this particular research for NASA?

    NASA’s research programs are uniquely positioned to explore and compare multiple planets, including Earth. All life depends critically upon interactions between organisms and the geological processes and climate of their host planet. My career has addressed these interactions in multiple ways. Studies such as these are important for understanding the future of life on Earth, and they also guide our search for evidence of life elsewhere and for planning human missions to other bodies in our solar system.

    A more specific answer to your question is that the public has been interested in any life on Mars. Searching for evidence of past or present life there requires environmental surveys and analyses to identify the most promising locations. NASA’s Viking mission illustrated why most of the Martian surface is really not suitable to look for evidence of life. At least 70% of the surface of Mars is clearly unsuitable, but the remaining more promising 30% is still a lot of territory. The surface area of Mars is equal to that of all the continents on Earth.  Much of my research has related to an assessment of habitability, namely, assessing the resources that an environment must provide to sustain life. Where are the best places to look? Our rovers have now visited places that we are convinced could have supported life some three or more billion years ago. The next questions are:  did any fossils survive and can we actually bring the right samples back to Earth to confirm any findings? 

    Also, could a human mission sustain itself there? Again, we must look for resources that might support life today. Geochemical analyses are a key aspect of that search. If we have any future interest in Mars related to astrobiology or to human missions, we need to assess the past habitability and the present life-sustaining resources of potential landing sites. The public generally supports these exploration goals.

    They do, that is true, and that’s really the answer to why NASA does what it does. It’s directed by Congress, and they are influenced by the public, by what the public wants. I’ve always thought, or at least for a long time, that robotic exploration is much more practical, but the country wants astronauts, that’s where the public support is.

    I agree totally!

    And so, we continue to do that, and they’ve done wonderful things. But the time will come when it’s not feasible to do astronautic things because we humans don’t live long enough given the distances involved.

    Certainly that’s applies for destinations beyond our solar system. And even if there is a human mission to Mars, astronauts are going to be in a station, with robots going out in all directions. So robots will be with us in many ways for the future.

    It’s a very fascinating career you’ve described and the work that has followed from it.

    Thanks! It’s certainly been very fulfilling personally.

    What advice might you give to a young person who sees what you’re doing, is intrigued by it, and would like to pursue it as a career, would like to become a researcher for NASA?

    The advice I would give a young person is just engage in multiple experiences. You don’t know what what will stimulate and motivate you until you try it. And once you find something in particular, like astrobiology, then apply to institutions, like universities or institutes that are involved. Go to a place where they’re doing stuff that’s related to astrobiology in some way. Secondly, see if you can get yourself in a lab and get some undergraduate research experience.

    As an example, what worked for my son? He’s not in astrobiology. He went to Berkeley as an undergraduate and wanted to be a physician. But then he had an opportunity to work in someone’s plant biology lab. By the time he was applying for graduate schools he was identifying professors with whom he might want to work.  Now, years later, he’s a professor in plant genetics at a major university. When I applied to graduate schools, my approach wasn’t nearly as rigorous as my son’s strategy! So, perhaps get an undergraduate experience in a lab and, in any case, get a sense of what’s interesting by giving yourself multiple experiences and not necessarily focusing too soon. That’s the most general advice.

    That is similar to what parents do with their children. They don’t know what their children are going to be interested in or would do well, so they expose them to music, to art, and to all kinds of things and with some of them there won’t be any connection, but at some point, they’ll be interested in something and want to pursue it. So, you’re right, get a broad exposure to a variety of things and something will resonate.

    Yes, the more experiences, the better chance you might hit something that really resonates for you.

    You’ve talked about your professional work and research interests but what do you do for fun?

    Well, along with a lot of the things I’ve already described, my interest in the outdoors has always been high. Our family has done a lot of hiking and travel.

    Do you still do caving or spelunking?

    I was still active after joining Ames in 1976. I got CRF involved at Sequoia-Kings Canyon National Park, and CRF is still working there. I’ve been fortunate to participate in this collaboration between CRF and the National Park Service at Mammoth Cave, Kentucky, Carlsbad Caverns, New Mexico, and Sequoia-Kings Canyon National Park, California. My active participation tapered off about the same time my involvement with Mars picked up in the 1990’s.

    Earlier, I mentioned a little miner’s carbide cap lamp in another student’s dormitory room that led me to the Outing Club, geology, and ultimately my career. So, over the years I’ve collected artifacts related to mining and interacted with folks who explore the history of mining and its economic importance. That has made me realize just how difficult were the lives of miners. What I hadn’t anticipated was how grateful I became that I am alive today and not 100+ years ago, or that I live in the US and not many other places today.

    I often feel that. There are a lot of places in the world where you can’t just go over to the wall and dial up the temperature you want. We are certainly blessed in that regard. So, the collecting has been kind of a hobby for you. Do you have any musical interest or talent, anything like that?

    I was pretty proficient at the piano until I got into high school. But I took up the saxophone and got into the high school band. Later, I joined the Purdue Marching Band and played at football games. That was a great experience but I didn’t continue beyond my college sophomore year. My daughter and son have continued on piano intermittently as an effective form of relaxation. This reminds me of Carl Pilcher (former NASA Senior Scientist for Astrobiology and Director of the NASA Astrobiology Institute) who was a really good pianist.

    I didn’t know that and that’s interesting to me because I knew Carl. This is one reason why we do these interviews, because there will be a number of people who will read this and they won’t have known that about Carl if they knew him, and that’s how these little things that we don’t know about people come out as we sit down and talk with each other. You’ve mentioned your wife, Shirley, and your son and your daughter.  Would you like to say anything else about your family? Or your pets, or things you like to do together or vacations, anything like that?

    Shirley and I have been married 54 years as of this interview. She was an elementary school teacher for more than 25 years. Her support was crucial while I was in graduate school. She became a full-time parent for our pre-school children but then returned to Redwood City schools for most of her teaching career. She then became deeply involved in the local chapter of the League of Women Voters, serving both as its chairman and in other leadership positions. Shirley is the keystone of our family and she has enabled my career achievements immeasurably.

    Our son is a is a molecular biologist. He went to Berkeley first aspiring to be a doctor probably because his high school biology teacher emphasized human physiology. At Berkeley he ventured from one interest to the next. He had not been inspired by plant biology in high school, probably because his teachers focused on rote memorization of facts. But later he gained research experience in a Berkeley plant lab and got really interested in them. He attended graduate school at Duke University and is now an assistant professor in plant genetics with the MIT civil engineering  department. Why, you ask, is a civil engineering department interested in plant genetics? MIT started a major climate change project and one key concern is how crops must adapt.  His specialty is plant water use efficiency, response to CO2 levels, and temperature, factors that would be affected by a changing climate.

    Our daughter also attended Berkeley. She studied international economics of developing countries. She is good at math and also interested in social issues, so that curriculum motivated her. But her ultimate career choice arose from the focus on developing countries and her experiences in South America when she spent a semester at a university in Chile, and then worked with nonprofit organizations in Brazil. She then got a master’s degree in public health at the University of North Carolina.  She’s still involved in public health in North Carolina, working with a foundation that advises county health departments about treatments for drug addiction. The government has provided funds for counties, especially rural counties. She leads a group that’s advising them on how to administer these funds effectively.

    That’s very commendable. You should be proud of her as well.

    Yeah, we certainly are.

    We also had cats from the early ‘70’s up until maybe 2010 or something like that. We eventually achieved ‘parental freedom’ when the kids moved away and the pets passed away.  But our our family’s legacy lives on: both our son and our daughter have multiple cats in their houses! (laughs)

    We had cats too, and enjoyed them. My wife used to have to go away for a week or so every month to tend her parents, who were getting elderly, because she wanted to keep them in their home. I used to think it was funny that people talked to their pets, but when she was away, I talked to the cat all the time! I really enjoyed having her around. She would curl up on my lap if I was watching TV. She was good company.

    Yeah, no kidding. Dogs especially are like little kids that never grow up!

    Yes!

    One of the questions we like to ask is who or what has inspired you along your life path?

    My high school chemistry teacher inspired me about chemistry. He was also an outdoorsman type. My older brother was involved in Boy Scouts, and that also nurtured my interest in Scouts and the outdoors.

    At the time I was enrolled at Purdue University, a geology department had recently started and three faculty occupied the basement of an engineering building. Dr. Levandowski advocated that geochemistry might actually be a good match for me. At Indiana University, John Hayes, my thesis advisor, was very accomplished, charismatic, and inspirational. He was recognized internationally and ultimately inducted into the National Academy of Sciences. And, of course, Sherwood Chang and Chuck Klein helped inspire and guide my early career at Ames.

    Do you read for pleasure and if so, what do you like to read? What genre do you enjoy?

    I do not read fiction for pleasure.  I frequently read popular science and technology articles, so I guess that’s my pleasure reading. It’s still science, but it’s science that extends well beyond my own work, and I find that interesting.

    Absolutely it is.  I don’t read enough for pleasure. I buy a lot of books that I intend to read, but I just never get around to them. My wife says, in jest I think, when I’m gone, she’s going to have a big bonfire and burn all of them because they take up a lot of space. I would like to live to be 200 and read all of them, but I know I won’t! (laughs)

    One of the things that we like to do is add pictures to these interviews, of things we talked about, or any images that you particularly like.  What picture might you have on the wall there in your office, or perhaps in your home?  You could add something later after thinking about it a bit.  I had a map of the world, a satellite image of the world at night, in my office for a time. You’ve probably seen it. I was fascinated by it because you could tell so much about the countries by the lighting, the different colors, where it was and where it wasn’t.

    I have a big map of the world that emphasizes geology and particularly shows a lot of details about the ocean floor, especially with the volcanoes and all the features there. And you’ve probably seen the exobiology mural? it was in building N-200.

    I think I know which one you’re talking about. It has sea life coming up from the ocean on one side across the land and up to the stars on the other side.

    That’s right. Linda Jahnke, Tom Scattergood, and I created that back in 1980’s.

    You did?
    Yeah. When the art department made copies, I got one for my office, and several others have copies also.

    Oh, that’s wonderful. If you have an image of that you could include it when you send me back your edited transcript, and we could put it in and attribute it to you, Linda, and Tom.

    OK. That mural touches on several research topics I’ve addressed during my career. So, it would be a good one to include.

    We also ask if there is a favorite quote that has been particularly meaningful to you. We can put that in, too.

     ‘Life is what happens while you are busy making other plans’ (John Lennon)

    ‘We make a living by what we get, but we make a life by what we give.’ (the attribution to Winston Churchill is controversial)

    Thank you for getting in touch with me and for sitting down for an hour to do this. I will get this into a format where you can edit it. And then we’ll make a post out of it. And I think you’ll be pleased. And if not, you’ll have only yourself to blame! (laughs)

    That’s very cagey of you! (laughs) But then again, you’ve done this for quite a while.Your approach is quite sophisticated, so I appreciate that. I also appreciate your effort because so often stuff like this just disappears from history.

    Well, thank you, Dave. I’ve appreciated the chat and thank you for your time. We’ll make something out of it.

    Thanks for your commitment and for pursuing me to do this. Take care.

    You’re welcome.
    ________________________________________________

    Interview conducted by Fred Van Wert on January 13, 2025

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: IAM Western Territory Marches for Veterans on Memorial Day

    Source: US GOIAM Union

    The IAM Western Territory, including General Vice President Robert “Bobby” Martinez, the IAM Veterans Services Department, IAM District W24, Local 1005, Local 203, Local 2006, Local 63, and Local W130 participated in a “ruck march” to support local veterans on Memorial Day.

    The march was organized by Do Good Multnomah, a Portland, Ore., veterans services group that provides vital support to veterans impacted by life’s struggles.

    See photos from the march here.

    “The funds we are raising here today help veterans here – in Portland,” said Frank Wilson, an IAM shop steward for Portland city government workers and vice chairman of the IAM Veterans Services Steering Committee. “I can go see it for myself and check on the veterans who may be in tough spots, and just need help today – not when a bunch of paperwork is all approved.”

    Wilson, a U.S. Navy veteran, has been a strong advocate for veterans issues in the Portland area. His work and training with the IAM Veterans Services team has allowed him to grow his reach and impact for all U.S. military veterans.

    Do Good Multnomah has run this Memorial Day ruck march for the past four years as an annual fundraiser. The IAM sponsored two teams with Wilson’s help, and he also spearheaded a team sponsorship from the City of Portland Veterans committee, which includes various workers and unions. Wilson was awarded a certificate for his efforts by the Northwest Oregon Labor Council before the event stepped off.

    “We are extremely proud of Frank and the entire group of members who came out to support our veterans,” said IAM Western Territory General Vice President Robert “Bobby” Martinez. “Veterans are a vital part of the fabric of the IAM Union. The sacrifices they’ve made help us live in a beautiful country like this, help preserve our liberties, and most of all – protect our right to form a union in the workplace.”

    Do Good Multnomah touches the lives of 70% of the houseless veterans in Portland. In addition to shelter, the organization runs weather response teams to seek out veterans during inclement weather, and the charity also works with the American Red Cross to give victims of house fires that are veterans immediate cash assistance.  

    The organization raised over $37,000 from this Memorial Day event, well over the initial goal of thirty-thousand dollars, but the non-profit organization could always accept more donations for their goal of opening a new veteran clean and sober shelter. Do Good Multnomah has provided over two hundred and twenty thousand meals in their facilities for veterans, and nearly four thousand self care and personal hygiene kits to veterans in need. 

    “It’s a worse issue than a lot of people really understand,” said Bryan Stymacks, Assistant Coordinator of IAM Veterans Services, who walked with General Vice President Martinez as a team on the six-mile ruck march for Portland’s veteran community. “They have a lot of unique struggles that can cause them to fall into tough times and it’s important to be there for them when they do.”

    Veterans are 2.5 to 3 times more likely to experience homelessness in the northwestern U.S. housing market based on data from the Veterans Administration, where it takes an hourly wage of over $35 an hour to afford a two bedroom apartment. Do Good Multnomah believes there are roughly 1,500 houseless veterans on any given night in Oregon. They are using grants and donations to try groundbreaking solutions for this population. One solution is the “low barrier” shelter, which simply cuts the barrier requirements for shelter for a veteran that may be employed, but recently evicted, with  a stop gap shelter until other housing becomes a solution.

    Wilson believes that his work to raise funds and check on progress of veteran services in his community is an extension to his duty to our country. The world could use a lot more people like Frank.

    The post IAM Western Territory Marches for Veterans on Memorial Day appeared first on IAM Union.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Restoring Giants from the Ground Up: A Story of Fire, Soil, and Sequoias

    Source: US Geological Survey

    In just the past few years, wildfires, exacerbated by heavy fuel loads, warming temperatures and exceptional drought have killed nearly 20% of the world’s mature sequoias. Fires like the Castle Fire in 2020 and the KNP Complex Fire in 2021 burned hotter and more intensely than anything these forests had evolved to survive. And in some areas, something even more unsettling is happening: the groves are not growing back.

    While these massive trees once relied on fire to open their cones and create space for seedlings, today’s megafires can potentially consume entire cone crops and leave behind soil that is too dry, too hot, and possibly too depleted of life to support new growth. Now, a team of scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the National Park Service, Stanford University, the University of Washington, in collaboration with other partners, is trying to figure out how to bring these forests back—starting from the ground up.

    Naturally regenerating giant sequoia seedlings are growing in an area of Giant Forest, a sequoia grove in Sequoia National Park, that burned at low intensity during the 2021 KNP Complex Fire.

    The Secret Life Beneath the Forest Floor

    At the heart of the project is a tiny but powerful community: soil microbes. These fungi and bacteria live on and around tree roots, forming partnerships that help plants absorb water and nutrients, fight off disease, and tolerate drought.

    “Without the right microbes, seedlings may struggle to establish,” says Dr. Courtney Creamer, a USGS scientist leading the research. “High-intensity fires may reduce the diversity or abundance of beneficial soil microbes, especially those that support plant growth. We want to know: can reintroducing those microbes help seedlings survive in tough, post-fire landscapes?”

    Ellie Fajer holding a giant sequoia seedling’s root mass (left) that has been carefully excavated to collect root tips for examining arbuscular mycorrhizal associations. At right, a seedling is placed in a pressure chamber designed to measure plant water potential.

    To find out, the team is growing hundreds of sequoia seedlings in different soil mixes—some from unburned forests, some from severely burned sites. Some soils are treated with beneficial fungi like arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), known to support root development and water uptake. The goal is to test whether microbial “boosts” can give seedlings a better shot at surviving after being planted back in the wild.

    Courtney Creamer (left), USGS project lead, prepares control seedlings by planting in sterile peat cone-tainers—with or without microbial or mycorrhizal inoculants. Jonathan Humphrey (right), nursery manager at the National Park Service’s Ash Mountain Headquarters in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, waters freshly planted cone-tainers as part of the experimental setup.

    Mapping the Landscape, One Slope at a Time

    But microbes are only part of the story. Where seedlings are planted may matter just as much as how they’re grown.

    The researchers are using high-resolution terrain maps to classify the landscape into “moisture zones” based on slope, sun exposure, and proximity to water. Some areas hold moisture better—key for young trees facing California’s dry summers. By planting seedlings across these different zones and monitoring their success, the team hopes to learn which parts of the burned forest are most likely to support planted seedling growth. Placing each seedling where the soil, microbes, and moisture conditions are most favorable may further improve survival after catastrophic fire.

    USGS scientist Lauren Holzman (pictured right) developed a clustering model (shown left) using these layers to group areas into “wet” and “dry” zones—information that helps guide where restoration plantings are most likely to succeed.

    Replanting the Future

    This isn’t just about saving trees—it’s about protecting ecosystems, cultural heritage, and climate resilience. Giant sequoias play a vital role in their environment, providing habitat, storing carbon, and inspiring awe in millions of visitors each year. 

    That’s why the project is deeply collaborative. The team is working with land managers, land stewards, and researchers in academic, government, and non-governmental organizations to ensure the work reflects shared values and benefits.

    The stakes are high. If natural regeneration fails, and replanting doesn’t succeed, some sequoia groves could disappear altogether. But if this research can pinpoint where and how to restore them, it could guide reforestation efforts across the Sierra—and possibly inform efforts in other fire-impacted ecosystems.  In a hotter, drier future, targeted restoration strategies like this may be increasingly important.

    From microbes to mountainsides, the team is working to ensure that the next generation of sequoias takes root—not just for today, but for centuries to come.

    The 2024 Redwood Mountain field team (right to left): Mark Waldrop, Ellie Fajer, Jack McFarland, Courtney Creamer, Lauren Holzman, Claire Willing, Aubrey Franks, Christy Brigham, and Arie Oosterom.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Dutch Harbor Remembrance Day

    Source: US State of Alaska Governor

    WHEREAS, on June 3, 1942, six months after the attack on Pearl Harbor, World War II arrived in Alaska when Dutch Harbor on Amaknak Island was bombed by Japanese aircraft – the first aerial attack by an enemy on the continental United States; and

    WHEREAS, the Japanese pilots expected little resistance; however, due to an intercepted message three weeks earlier, the installation was on high alert, and Navy and Marine personnel were prepared with anti-aircraft weapons; and

    WHEREAS, faced with resistance at the Dutch Harbor installation, Japanese forces shifted their focus to the Margaret Bay Naval Barracks, where the attack claimed the lives of 25 servicemen; and

    WHEREAS, following the initial attack on Dutch Harbor, the Japanese carried out a series of assaults on Dutch Harbor, Adak, Kiska, and Attu, resulting in the Aleut people being evacuated and held in internment camps in Southeast Alaska for three years, through which many did not survive; and

    WHEREAS, the brave soldiers of the United States Armed Forces and allied Canadian Forces valiantly fought the invading Japanese for over a year in order to retake the remaining Aleutian Islands. The battle for Attu ranks as one of the United States’ most costly American assaults in the Pacific during the war, with hundreds of servicemen making the ultimate sacrifice to liberate Alaska; and

    WHEREAS, this year marks the 83rd anniversary of the bombing of Dutch Harbor and we remember and honor all those who were affected by the attack, commemorating both the military personnel who served and died to defend our Nation and the Aleuts who died while imprisoned.

    NOW THEREFORE, I, Mike Dunleavy, GOVERNOR OF THE STATE OF ALASKA, do hereby proclaim June 3, 2025 as:

    Dutch Harbor Remembrance Day

    in Alaska and encourage Alaskans to join with the people of Dutch Harbor, Unalaska, and the Aleutian Islands to honor all who were lost in Alaska during World War II, and I order the Alaska State Flag to be flown at half-staff in remembrance of those who perished.

    Dated: June 3, 2025

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Leader of Drug Organization That Trafficked Narcotics Shaped Like Candy Sentenced to Nearly Two Decades in Prison

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    BOSTON – A Lynn man was sentenced on May 30, 2025 in federal court in Boston for leading a large-scale drug trafficking organization (DTO) on the North Shore of Massachusetts. In November 2023, millions of doses of fentanyl and methamphetamine laced pills and powder with street value estimated to be over $7 million, were seized from a stash location and clandestine laboratory used by organization.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Deforestation Regulation – E-002072/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-002072/2025
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Anja Arndt (ESN)

    • 1.What costs have been incurred as a result of the 50 plus online training sessions that have been attended, according to the Commission, by more than 50 000 people so far to help them prepare for the new Deforestation Regulation (EUDR)?
    • 2.What additional costs relating to future training sessions on the EUDR will be covered by the EU budget?
    • 3.Which NGOs (such as the International Trade Center (ITC) in Geneva) are working for the Commission to carry out the implementation of the EUDR by providing, for example, training and handbooks, and what financial support – listed by organisation and year – are these NGOs receiving from the Commission?

    Submitted: 22.5.2025

    Last updated: 3 June 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: The Netherlands: Leyden Labs lands €20 million EIB investment facilitated by HERA to advance pandemic preparedness activities

    Source: European Investment Bank

    • European Investment Bank and Leyden Labs sign €20 million financing to advance Leyden Labs’ pandemic preparedness activities, guaranteed by European Commission’s InvestEU initiative through its Health Emergency Preparedness and Response (HERA).
    • Funding is part of “HERA Invest,” a €110 million top-up to the European Union’s InvestEU initiative, meant to address pandemic readiness, biodefense and antimicrobial resistance.
    • Leyden Labs will use the funding to advance development of its novel non-vaccine approach, with nasal sprays containing broadly-protective antibodies to defend against seasonal and pandemic viral infections.

    The European Investment Bank (EIB) and Dutch clinical-stage biotechnology company Leyden Laboratories B.V. have signed a €20 million financing deal to advance development of the Company’s broadly-protective antibodies to defend against seasonal and pandemic viral infections. Leyden Labs’ lead program is a pan-influenza nasal spray currently in clinical development (PanFlu), which has the potential to provide first-in-class influenza protection and meaningfully reduce the burden of influenza infection, including in infection from Avian Flu (H5).

    The venture debt financing agreement is supported under the European Commission’s InvestEU programme and specifically falls under “HERA Invest.” This €110 million initiative from the European Health Union is meant to address biodefence, pandemic readiness and antimicrobial resistance in Europe, as a top-up to the European Union’s InvestEU initiative, funded by the EU4Health programme.

    “The COVID-19 pandemic taught us multiple lessons, including that we should strengthen the EU’s preparedness and autonomy in key areas like bio sciences.” stated EIB Vice President Robert de Groot. “With the support of the European Commission, the EIB backs highly innovative EU companies like Leyden Labs with venture debt, enabling them to grow and thrive in Europe. Technological innovations from companies like Leyden Labs are key for European competitiveness and the well-being of our society.” 

    Hadja Lahbib, Commissioner for Equality, Preparedness and Crisis Management, added: “Respiratory viruses are common and affect us all, especially the most medically vulnerable. Today’s agreement reaffirms our commitment to invest in innovation to strengthen preparedness and protection against respiratory viruses. HERA Invest is a prime example of Europe at the forefront of medical advancements in response to serious threats to health.”

    “We are thrilled with this endorsement of our approach and support from HERA and the European Investment Bank. This will accelerate our efforts to provide broad, universal protection against current and future viral outbreaks. We are grateful that HERA and the EIB understand the urgency and significance of investing in initiatives to ensure Europe is prepared for pandemic viruses. This concern is greater than ever given the increasing threat of an avian influenza outbreak,” said Koenraad Wiedhaup, co-founder and CEO of Leyden Labs. 

    Leyden Labs’ product candidates are nasal sprays that administer broadly protective antibodies directly to the respiratory mucosa. Leyden Lab’s solutions are designed to work at the earliest moment, before the virus even reaches systemic circulation. Systemically administered vaccines primarily generate systemic protection against viruses, however, this may be a limitation that contributes to suboptimal efficacy. Airborne viruses, including influenza, do not directly enter systemic circulation, but rather, they enter the body through the nose and mouth. The Company’s antibodies aim to protect against full viral families, so they keep working even when a virus mutates and evolves. This intranasal strategy also has the potential to benefit people with weakened immune systems because it does not rely on the person to be able to mount an immune response in order to be protective.

    The Company’s novel approach has the potential to transform the way the healthcare ecosystem thinks about viral prophylaxis, while also providing an innovative solution for use both in times of seasonal outbreaks as well as pandemic emergencies.

    HERA’s responsibility is to ensure that the EU and Member States are ready to act in the face of cross-border health threats. The €20 million proceeds of this financing will support further development of Leyden Labs’ novel, non-vaccine approach to fighting respiratory viruses to contribute to European pandemic preparedness efforts.

    Background information:

    Health Emergency Preparedness and Response (HERA). The European Commission’s Health Emergency Preparedness and Response Authority (HERA) supports projects that strengthen preparedness and response capacities in the field of health. HERA was established as a direct consequence of the lessons learned from the initial management of the COVID-19 pandemic, to ensure a solid Union response to serious-cross border health threats and secure ready availability and accessibility of medical countermeasures. HERA’s responsibility is to ensure that the EU and Member States are ready to act in the face of cross-border health threats, and its mandate covers both the strengthening of preparedness in advance of future emergencies and the implementation of a swift and efficient response once crisis hits.

    HERA Invest is a €110 million top-up to the InvestEU programme, funded by the EU4Health programme. It is implemented by the EIB and supports projects that focus on pathogens with pandemic potential, chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear threats, and antimicrobial resistance. Together with HERA, the EIB assesses whether an operation meets HERA Invest’s criteria.

    The InvestEU programme provides the European Union with crucial long-term funding by leveraging substantial private and public funds in support of a sustainable recovery. It also helps mobilise private investment for EU policy priorities, such as the European Green Deal and the digital transition. InvestEU brings together under one roof the multitude of EU financial instruments previously available to support investment in the European Union, making funding for investment projects in Europe simpler, more efficient and more flexible. The programme consists of three components: the InvestEU Fund, the InvestEU Advisory Hub and the InvestEU Portal. The InvestEU Fund is deployed through implementing partners who will invest in projects using the EU budget guarantee of €26.2 billion. The entire budget guarantee will back the investment projects of the implementing partners, increase their risk-bearing capacity and thus mobilise at least €372 billion in additional investment.

    The European Investment Bank (EIB) is the long-term lending institution of the European Union, owned by its Member States. The Netherlands owns a 5,2% share of the EIB. It makes long-term finance available for sound investment in order to contribute towards EU policy goals and national priorities. More than 90% of its activity is in Europe. Over the last ten years, the EIB has made available more than €27 billion in financing for Dutch projects in various sectors, including research & development, sustainable mobility, drinking water, healthcare and SMEs. In 2024 the EIB Group, which also includes the EIB’s subsidiary, the European Investment Fund (EIF), made available more than €3 billion for Dutch projects.

    Leyden Laboratories B.V. (Leyden Labs), founded in 2020, is a clinical-stage biotechnology company based in the Netherlands. Leyden Labs is working to free people from the threat of respiratory viruses, by leveraging its Mucosal Protection Platform to develop a portfolio of candidates aimed at providing protection against influenza, coronaviruses, and other respiratory viruses through a new class of broadly protective nasal sprays. Leyden Labs is supported by a strong syndicate of investors and ambassadors; VC investors include GV (formerly Google Ventures), Casdin Capital, F-Prime Capital, ClavystBio (a life sciences venture investor established by Temasek), Polaris Partners, Qiming Venture Partners, Invus, SoftBank Vision Fund 2, Byers Capital / Brook Byers and Bluebird Ventures.To learn more, visit www.leydenlabs.com.

    CR9114, Leyden Labs’ lead product candidate for the PanFlu program, is a human monoclonal antibody that protects against influenza in preclinical models. Leyden Labs holds an exclusive license from Janssen Pharmaceuticals Inc., one of the Janssen Pharmaceutical Companies of Johnson & Johnson, to develop and commercialize CR9114.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Need to incorporate specific measures to better support the health coverage of islands in the EU cohesion policy framework – E-001524/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    Health services and infrastructure are already a priority under Cohesion Policy enabling Member States to promote equal access to healthcare and strengthen health system’s resilience[1].

    Implemented through shared management, national authorities can tailor investments addressing territorial needs, as access to basic healthcare is vital to support the right to live where people reside.

    For Greece, some EUR 416 million[2] under the European Regional Development Fund, support health infrastructure and equipment at all levels of the National Health System across regions, including Primary Healthcare, eHealth and telemedicine[3].

    Complementary, some EUR 323 million[4] under the European Social Fund Plus, support measures targeting marginalised and isolated communities such as the creation of 127 Local Health Units[5] and Mobile Healthcare Units[6], promotion of citizen registration with a personal doctor, the development of integrated information technology systems, long-term and mental healthcare actions, especially in remote areas, and staff training to improve access and quality[7].

    To help islands and outermost regions address multi-faceted problems, the Commission will launch a consultation on an Islands Strategy as announced in the communication of 1 April 2025 ‘A modernised Cohesion policy: The mid-term review’[8].

    The Commission will keep working with Member States to mobilise reforms and investments based on community needs, encouraging them to address the specific challenges of their islands through Cohesion Policy support[9].

    Since deliberations on the post-2027 framework of Cohesion Policy are still ongoing, it is premature to comment on its content at this stage, as its final outcome will depend on the results of discussions with the co-legislators .

    • [1] In total, EUR 7.4 billion have been allocated by Member States across the EU from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and Interreg to support health-related investments under Cohesion Policy for 2021-2027. These include improvements in healthcare infrastructure, long-term care, and digitalisation, in line with national and regional smart specialisation strategies. Examples of ERDF support include investments in health infrastructure and equipment, that improve access to mainstream high-quality healthcare and long-term care (LTC) services across the EU. Cohesion policy also supports research and innovation linked to healthcare, digitalizations and e-health, based on Member States’ and regions’ smart specialisation strategies (S3).
    • [2] Public expenditure.
    • [3] Through 13 regional programmes.
    • [4] Public expenditure.
    • [5] Local Health Units (TOMYs) — Τοπικές Μονάδες Υγείας ( ΤΟΜΥ ).
    • [6] Mobile Healthcare Units (KOMYs) — Κινητές Μονάδες Υγείας ( ΚΟΜΥ ).
    • [7] European Social Fund Plus (ESF+) investments fall under the horizontal intervention field 160 and 16-
      Regulation (EU) 2021/1060 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 June 2021 laying down common provisions on the European Regional Development Fund, the European Social Fund Plus, the Cohesion Fund, the Just Transition Fund and the European Maritime Fisheries and Aquaculture Fund and financial rules for those and for the Asylum, Migration and Integration Fund, the Internal Security Fund and the Instrument for Financial Support for Border Management and Visa Policy ( OJ L 231, 30.6.2021, p. 159 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=OJ%3AL%3A2021%3A231%3ATOC)
      https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2021/1060/oj/eng.
    • [8] https://ec.europa.eu/regional_policy/information-sources/publications/communications/2025/a-modernised-cohesion-policy-the-mid-term-review_en.
    • [9] The Commission’s Communication on ‘The road to the next multiannual financial framework’ clearly sets out the need for a simpler, more focused and more impactful budget with a leaner budgetary architecture consolidating current spending programmes to overcome a currently fragmented funding landscape.
      6d47acb4-9206-4d0f-8f9b-3b10cad7b1ed_en.

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Possible imposition of increased tariffs by the US on European wines and other alcoholic drinks – E-001319/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    The Commission regrets the decisions of the United States (US) to impose tariffs on exports of EU goods, notably steel and aluminium, cars and car parts, and other products subject to a universal tariff of 10%, which hurt businesses and consumers. The universal tariffs regrettably also target EU exports of wine and spirits.

    The priority remains to avoid disruptions to EU-US trade and to seek negotiated solutions with the US. The Commission stated its readiness to negotiate a zero for zero tariff agreement on industrial products with the goal of achieving frictionless and mutually beneficial trade.

    In light of the decision by the US to delay by 90 days and partially suspend its universal tariffs, the EU has decided to put its countermeasures on hold for the same length of time.

    This gesture of goodwill will give time for negotiations to proceed. If, however, the talks are not satisfactory, the EU countermeasures will come into force on 14 July 2025. In addition, on 8 May 2025, the Commission launched a stakeholder consultation on further EU rebalancing measures[1] against the US, including possible rebalancing measures on imports of wine and spirits from the US.

    At the same time, the Commission continues to focus on diversifying its trade partnerships, engaging with other countries that share the commitment to a free and open exchange of goods, services, and ideas. The Commission is also stepping up its effort to lift barriers in the EU single market.

    • [1] https://policy.trade.ec.europa.eu/consultations/information-gathering-notice-under-regulation-eu-no-6542014-new-us-tariffs-imports-originating-or-eu_en.
    Last updated: 3 June 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Artificial Intelligence in health care in the EU – E-002076/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-002076/2025
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Gerald Hauser (PfE)

    With its ‘Artificial Intelligence in healthcare’ initiative, the Commission is actively encouraging the use of AI technologies in that sector[1]. The aim is to fundamentally transform health care in the EU. The Commission recommends the use of AI for, among other things, efficiently allocating health-care resources, solving key challenges in the health-care system, reducing costs, optimising administrative processes (e.g. appointment scheduling, electronic patient records), improving diagnoses and devising ‘personalised treatment plans’.

    In terms of content, the Commission is largely drawing on the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) guidelines, which called for ‘automated triage processes’ as early as 2023. In Austria, it is already the case that certain diagnostic decisions and treatment approvals are no longer made by doctors but by AI systems.

    • 1.What is the legal basis for the use of artificial intelligence in healthcare in the EU?
    • 2.Who is liable for mistakes (such as the rejection of suitable diagnostic procedures, late treatment appointments, treatment errors or resulting damage to health or death) caused by the use of AI?
    • 3.Does the Commission fundamentally support the idea that it should no longer be doctors but AI systems that decide who receives what medical treatment or appointment, when, where and how – or indeed whether they receive any treatment at all?

    Submitted: 22.5.2025

    • [1] https://health.ec.europa.eu/ehealth-digital-health-and-care/artificial-intelligence-healthcare_en
    Last updated: 3 June 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Closure of Bressana Bottarone bridge on Milan-Genoa strategic axis: need for urgent and coordinated plan at EU level – E-002085/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-002085/2025
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Gaetano Pedulla’ (The Left)

    The Bressana Bottarone bridge, a fundamental part of the infrastructure connecting Lombardy, Liguria and Piedmont, is a strategic element of the ‘Rhine Alps’ TEN-T network – a crucial corridor for the internal market guaranteed by the TFEU.

    The railway bridge is scheduled to fully close between 1 June and 28 September 2025, which will bring the Milan-Genoa line to a standstill. Meanwhile, the ex-SS35 SP road bridge will close for approximately one year from May 2025, potentially contrary to the road safety standards of Directive 2008/96/EC.

    There will likely be a lack of communication and adequate substitute services, risking the collapse of local public transport and thus hindering the objectives of the EU’s ‘Fit for 55’ package.

    In the light of this:

    • 1.What urgent measures can the Commission take/recommend to the Italian authorities and the regions involved to minimise the impact, ensure effective and safe alternative solutions – in line with EU objectives – for public transport and road safety, and ensure the free movement of people and goods, as provided for in the TFEU?
    • 2.Does it consider the management of this infrastructure to be in keeping with the TEN-T objectives of an efficient and seamless transport network? If not, what actions can it take to promote better planning and coordination at EU level for infrastructure interventions of this scale?

    Submitted: 23.5.2025

    Last updated: 3 June 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Gov. Kemp Announces Solicitor General, Superior Court, and State Court Appointments

    Source: US State of Georgia

    Atlanta, GA – Governor Brian P. Kemp today announced three appointments. Elizabeth W. Torres will serve as the Solicitor General of Worth County, filling the vacancy created by the appointment of the Honorable James “Jay” E. Crowe, Jr. as State Court Judge of Worth County; Chaundra Lewis will serve on the Superior Court of the Flint Judicial Circuit, filling the vacancy created by the resignation of the Honorable Brian J. Amero; and James Boles will serve on the State Court of Henry County, filling the vacancy created by the appointment of the Honorable Chaundra Lewis.

    Elizabeth W. Torres is currently a partner at Wilmot & Torres. She also currently serves as the solicitor for the City of Tifton and City of Lenox. Following her graduation from law school, she worked in Atlanta practicing commercial litigation for a year. She then decided to return to her hometown of Tifton, Georgia to continue her law career. In addition to her prosecutorial work, she practices a wide variety of civil litigation, including family law and matters pending in probate court.

    Torres attended the University of Georgia, where she earned her Bachelor of Arts in political science. She then attended the University of Georgia School of Law as the Richard B. Russell Distinguished Law Fellow. Torres and her husband have two children and reside in Tift County.

    Chaundra Lewis currently serves as a Henry County State Court Judge. In addition to handling her assigned caseload, Judge Lewis also presides over the Henry County DUI/Drug Court Program. Prior to joining the Henry County State Court bench,  Judge Lewis served as deputy chief assistant in the Henry County District Attorney’s Office. She also served as the deputy chief assistant solicitor general in both Fulton and Clayton Counties. Prior to her time as a prosecutor, Judge Lewis was a state court staff attorney, as well as a civil litigator and defense attorney in private practice.

    Judge Lewis is an avid community servant, serving as a board member of Gigi’s House and also volunteering with Miracle Mission International Outreach, Inc. Judge Lewis is a graduate of Leadership Clayton, Leadership Henry and Leadership Georgia. She is also an active member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc. and Jack and Jill of America, Inc. 

    Judge Lewis earned her Bachelor of Arts Degree in English from Spelman College.  She earned her Juris Doctor from the University of Memphis Cecil C. Humphries School of Law. Judge Lewis and her husband of 27 years, Kevin,  live in McDonough and are the proud parents of three daughters, Kennedy, Lauryn, and Chandler.

    James D. Boles, Jr. is a trial attorney and managing partner at Sexton & Moody, P.C. Before joining the firm, he worked in a similar capacity as a sole proprietor at the Law Office of James D. Boles, LLC.

    James attended Atlanta’s John Marshall Law School and graduated in 2016. He served on the board of the Public Interest Law Society, was justice of the Phi Alpha Delta Law Fraternity, and competed as a member of the Trial Competition Team. Prior to law school, James attended Kennesaw State University, where he graduated with a bachelor’s in political science.

    James and his wife, Leslie, live in Henry County, where he volunteers as a coach for the Stockbridge High School Mock Trial Team. 
     

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Markey Blasts Republican Efforts to Ban State AI Regulation for the Next Decade

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Massachusetts Ed Markey
    Says he will raise a point of order against any AI regulation moratorium in the Senate reconciliation bill
    Watch: Senator Markey’s remarks on Republicans’ effort to ban AI regulation for ten years
    Washington (June 3, 2025) – Senator Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), a member of the Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee, today delivered remarks on the Senate floor opposing a provision in the House-passed reconciliation bill that would prevent states from regulating artificial intelligence (AI) for the next 10 years. If the 10-year moratorium is included in the Senate reconciliation bill, Senator Markey stated that he would raise a point of order against the provision as a violation of the Senate’s Byrd Rule, which prohibits reconciliation bills from containing any provisions that do not affect the federal budget. Below is an excerpt from Senator Markey’s prepared remarks.
    “Make no mistake: we can have an AI revolution while also protecting the civil rights and liberties of everyday Americans. We can support innovation without supercharging the tracking and targeting of young people online. And we can promote competition, while safeguarding our environment. But with their blanket 10-year ban on state AI regulation, Republicans are choosing a sledgehammer over the scalpel. They are choosing Big Tech over kids, families, seniors, and disadvantaged communities across this country. We cannot allow that to happen,” said Senator Markey. “I am committed to fighting this 10-year ban with every tool at my disposal. And that starts by making it clear that this 10-year ban on state AI regulation is a policy change that has no impact on the federal budget. That means it cannot be included in a reconciliation bill. If Senate Republicans keep the House language in their reconciliation bill, I will raise a point of order against it. When my Republican colleagues are ready to have a serious conversation about AI regulation, my door is open. But this backdoor AI moratorium is not serious. It’s not responsible. And it’s not acceptable.”
    Senator Markey is the author of the Artificial Intelligence (AI) Civil Rights Act, the most comprehensive AI civil rights legislation introduced in Congress. The legislation would put strict guardrails on companies’ use of algorithms for consequential decisions, ensure algorithms are tested before and after deployment, help eliminate and prevent bias, and renew Americans’ faith in the accuracy and fairness of complex algorithms.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Military Times: Warren presses Hegseth about fluoridation’s impact on readiness

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Massachusetts – Elizabeth Warren
    May 23, 2025
    Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., has sent a letter pressing Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth for answers about how potentially ending fluoride use in drinking water, as recently championed by the Trump administration’s health care chief, could undermine military readiness.
    Warren’s Thursday letter comes as Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has said he plans to direct the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to stop recommending fluoride be added to drinking water in communities nationwide. Kennedy said he’s assembling a task force of health experts to study the issue and make new recommendations. Kennedy, who has called fluoride a “dangerous neurotoxin,” has blamed the fluoridation of drinking water on health issues, including arthritis, bone breaks and thyroid disease, according to The Associated Press.
    “These attacks on the use of fluoride for dental health present a serious readiness problem,” Warren wrote in her letter, adding that Sean O’Keefe, the administration’s nominee to be deputy under secretary of defense for personnel and readiness, has said “dental health issues are often the largest cause of non-deployability within a military unit.”
    The potential reversal of the CDC’s recommendations on fluoridated water “will exacerbate these readiness concerns,” Warren wrote.
    State and local governments have the authority to add fluoride to water sources, but the CDC’s recommendation to fluoridate water is widely followed.

    Read the full article here.
    By:  Karen JowersSource: Military Times
    Previous Article

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Video: Axiom Mission 4 Launches to the International Space Station

    Source: United States of America – Federal Government Departments (video statements)

    Axiom Mission 4, set to lift off at 8:22 a.m. EDT (1222 UTC) on Tuesday, June 10, is Axiom’s fourth private astronaut mission to the International Space Station. Ax-4 is launching from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center aboard SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft.

    During their two-week stay aboard the orbiting laboratory, the crew of Ax-4 will engage in science, outreach, and commercial activities.

    Peggy Whitson, former NASA astronaut and director of human spaceflight at Axiom Space, will command the mission, while ISRO (Indian Space Research Organisation) astronaut Shubhanshu Shukla will serve as pilot. The two mission specialists are ESA (European Space Agency) project astronaut Sławosz Uznański-Wiśniewski of Poland and Tibor Kapu of Hungary. This mission will send the first ISRO astronaut to the station as part of a joint effort between NASA and the Indian space agency. Ax-4 will also carry the first astronauts from Poland and Hungary to stay aboard the space station.

    Launch coverage is led by Axiom Space, with support from NASA and SpaceX; NASA’s primary mission responsibilities begin during Dragon’s approach to the International Space Station, the start of Ax-4 integrated operations. Learn more about NASA’s role in Ax-4 and how we’re working with our industry partners to open low Earth orbit to more people, more science, and more opportunities: https://go.nasa.gov/4mRkpGj

    Song: ‘Apache’ by Kevin Graham
    Content ID: WXGBDH0A08QGK9CG

    Song: ‘Majestic Skies’ by Strength To Last
    Content ID: VINOM8MWVMC8LB7X

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4TT_1e6rkM

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: New Seasonal Access Rangers start across Highland

    Source: Scotland – Highland Council

    Last weekend saw the first patrols of The Highland Council’s, new Seasonal Access Ranger team. The new rangers will seek to promote and advise on responsible access to the countryside through the Scottish Outdoor Access Code. The team is funded directly by The Highland Council.

    There are currently 16 Access Rangers on patrol with two more to join in mid-June focussing on the long-distance routes. Five of the rangers are very experienced, returning after previous seasons, and able to help guide new rangers into their role.

    Economy and Infrastructure Committee Chair, Cllr Ken Gowans said: The Council are pleased to be able to provide a seasonal rangers service this year and so far, the team have been welcomed by visitors and locals alike, with a friendly approach to encouraging responsible behaviour.

    “The Council recognise the importance of supporting communities to manage the increase in visitors across the area, particularly along the NC500, Skye, Lochaber, Wester Ross & Loch Ness. A key role for the rangers will be engaging with the public and raising awareness of the Outdoor Access Code and communicating to people that as individuals we all play an important role in ensuring that Highland’s beautiful outdoor spaces are protected for all to enjoy for future generations.”

    Rangers will also ensure awareness of the other legislation, such as parking and environmental health. They will monitor use and report incidents to the relevant Council teams or emergency services. The rangers will also carry out duties to keep tidy, maintain and manage Council owned sites, core paths and work with communities and land managers on other sites to protect habitats and encourage respect for the landscape. Where possible, the rangers will work with local volunteers to engage with visitors.

    This year, responsible camping will be a key priority, and in many locations, this will mean a ‘no fires’ message. There is a significant fire risk throughout the Highlands in the summer months and lighting campfires on peaty ground, woodland, grassland, or moors is dangerous and contrary to the Code. It is irresponsible to light fires close to buildings, historic monuments and within 30m of a public road. Even small fires cause significant damage to our natural environment from scorch marks to tree removal and the use of dead wood (housing insects) for fires. Much of this damage can take years to recover.

    People can contact the Ranger team, by email at accessrangers@highland.gov.uk or by phoning the Senior Ranger on 07909 051223.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI New Zealand: Supermarket trial of FRT: Inquiry results announced

    Source: Privacy Commissioner

    Privacy Commissioner Michael Webster has found that the live facial recognition technology model trialled by Foodstuffs North Island is compliant with the Privacy Act. 

    However, his Inquiry report released today, shows that any business considering or using FRT needs to make sure it sets things up right to stay within the law. 

    “While the use of FRT during the trial was effective at reducing harmful behaviour (especially reducing serious violent incidents) it has also shown that there are many things that need to be taken into account.

    “FRT systems have potential safety benefits, but they do raise significant privacy concerns, including the unnecessary or unfair collection of people’s information, misidentification, technical bias which can reinforce existing inequities and human bias, or the ability to be used for surveillance”.  

    “These issues become particularly critical when people need to access essential services such as supermarkets. FRT will only be acceptable if the use is necessary and the privacy risks are successfully managed”.

    The purpose of the Privacy Commissioner’s Inquiry into Foodstuffs North Island’s trial use of live FRT was to understand its privacy impacts, its compliance with the Privacy Act, and to evaluate if it was an effective tool in reducing serious retail crime compared with other less privacy intrusive options.

    The Inquiry found while the level of privacy intrusion was high because every visitor’s face is collected, the privacy safeguards used in the trial reduced it to an acceptable level. 

    “Foodstuffs North Island designed the privacy safeguards used in the trial with feedback from my Office. This has provided some useful lessons for other businesses which may be considering using FRT.” 

    The main privacy safeguards in place during the trial were:

    • Images that did not result in a positive match were deleted immediately, as recommended by OPC – this meant there was very little privacy impact on most people who entered the trial stores.
    • The system was set up to only identify people who had engaged in seriously harmful behaviour, particularly violent offending.
    • Staff were not permitted to add images of children or young people under 18, or people thought to be vulnerable, to the watchlist.
    • There was no sharing of watchlist information between stores.
    • During the trial, the operational threshold that triggered an FRT alert was raised from 90% to 92.5% likelihood of the images matching, reducing the chances that people would be misidentified while managing down the “computer says yes” risk.
    • Match alerts were verified by two trained staff, ensuring that human decision making was a key part of the process.
    • Access to the FRT system and information was restricted to trained authorised staff only.
    • Images collected were not permitted to be used for training data purposes.
    • Systems were reviewed and improved during the trial where misidentifications or errors occurred.

    “There is still some work to do to increase the safety and effectiveness of FRT software use in the New Zealand context, as FRT technology has been developed overseas and has not been trained on the New Zealand population. 

    “As a result, we can’t be completely confident it has fully addressed technical bias issues, including the potential negative impact on Māori and Pacific people. This means the technology must only be used with the right processes in place, including human checks that an alert is accurate before acting on it.”

    “Some improvements will also need to be made by FSNI before the use of FRT is made permanent or expanded to more stores. These focus on ensuring the documented processes and system settings are updated to match what happens in practice, including ongoing review of the use of FRT to make sure its use is justified as an effective tool for reducing serious harm offending. 

    “I also expect that Foodstuffs North Island will put in place monitoring and review to allow it to evaluate the impact of skin tone on identification accuracy and store response, and to provide confidence to the regulator and customers that key privacy safeguards remain in place. 

    “The trial findings will help other businesses to ask the right questions about whether FRT is necessary and appropriate for them and to understand what they would need to do to set FRT up and run it in a privacy protective way.” 

    The report sets out my expectations for the use of FRT across nine key areas, says the Privacy Commissioner. 

    The FRT trial started on 8 February and ended on 7 September 2024 and ran in 25 supermarkets. During the trial, 225,972,004 faces were scanned (includes multiple scans of the same person), with 99.999% of these deleted within one minute, and there were 1742 alerts of which 1208 were confirmed matches. See our infographic of FRT by the numbers.

    OPC is currently developing a Biometric Processing Privacy Code, which applies to biometric information, including a photo of someone’s face used in a Facial Recognition System. The new Code is expected to be published in mid-2025. The Biometrics Code is designed to provide guardrails for the safe use of biometrics generally, including FRT, in New Zealand.

    MIL OSI New Zealand News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Interdepartmental working group on festival arrangements summarises visitor arrivals to Hong Kong during Tuen Ng Festival long weekend of Mainland

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

    Interdepartmental working group on festival arrangements summarises visitor arrivals to Hong Kong during Tuen Ng Festival long weekend of Mainland 
         Mr Chan said, “Following the Labour Day Golden Week, we once again successfully promoted the integration of culture and tourism during this year’s Tuen Ng Festival long weekend of the Mainland, enabling both visitors and the general public to experience Hong Kong’s unique festive atmosphere. On the Dragon Boat Festival day, the Dragon Boat Food Lane and festive photo spots at the Avenue of Stars organised by the Hong Kong Tourism Board attracted the public and visitors to taste local delicacies and take photos as mementos. In addition to dragon boat races held across various districts, Tai O held the unique Dragon Boat Water Parade, where sacred sampans carrying deity statues, towed by dragon boats along Tai O’s waterways, prayed for the well-being of the local community. The event attracted a large number of tourists and locals to experience Hong Kong’s authentic Dragon Boat Festival culture. During the long weekend, the opening ceremony and carnival of Hong Kong Intangible Cultural Heritage Month 2025 took place at the Hong Kong Cultural Centre Piazza in Tsim Sha Tsui. Many visitors took the opportunity to enjoy the performances and participate in booth activities, experiencing Hong Kong’s rich intangible cultural heritage up close. Furthermore, the popularity of the movie ‘Twilight of the Warriors: Walled In’ attracted numerous tourists to visit the Kowloon Walled City Park, taking photos and exploring the newly opened ‘Kowloon Walled City: A Cinematic Journey’ Movie Set Exhibition, which exemplifies the successful integration of Hong Kong’s film culture and tourism.”
     
    Visitor flow, situation of control points, and traffic and public transport arrangements
     
         During the Tuen Ng Festival long weekend of the Mainland, the Immigration Department recorded a total of around 460 000 inbound visitors to Hong Kong through various sea, land and air control points. Among them, Mainland visitors accounted for about 360 000, representing a year-on-year increase of about 10 per cent and around 80 per cent of the total arrivals; and the number of non-Mainland visitors was around 94 000, representing a year-on-year increase of about 14 per cent.
     
         The arrival of Mainland visitors peaked on May 31 with around 140 000 Mainland visitors arriving in Hong Kong. During the long weekend, the Express Rail Link West Kowloon Control Point received the highest number of Mainland visitors, followed by the Lok Ma Chau Spur Line Control Point.
     
         The Emergency Transport Co-ordination Centre of the Transport Department (TD) operated round the clock throughout the long weekend to holistically monitor the traffic conditions and public transport services of all districts, including boundary control points (BCPs), major stations and various tourist hotspots, across the territory. During the period, the TD directed local and cross-boundary public transport operators (PTOs) to enhance their carrying capacity, including increasing the frequency of bus and green minibus services connecting various land-based BCPs and strengthening cross-boundary coach services, to meet visitors’ demand. PTOs also deployed additional staff to maintain order and reserved sufficient vehicles and manpower to further enhance services when necessary.
     
         During the long weekend, the overall operation of the control points, traffic conditions and transport services were mostly smooth.
     
    Major tourist attractions
     
         Visitors went to different parts of Hong Kong during the Tuen Ng Festival long weekend of the Mainland, with high visitor flow observed at major tourist attractions, including the West Kowloon Cultural District, Ocean Park, Hong Kong Disneyland, the Peak Tram and Ngong Ping 360. Smooth and effective crowd management measures were implemented.
     
         Mr Chan expressed his gratitude to the relevant government departments, organisations and industries for their dedication and collaboration in making comprehensive preparations. By consolidating the experience gained from receiving visitors during the Labour Day Golden Week of the Mainland in early May, they provided visitors and the public with a high-quality experience during the Tuen Ng Festival long weekend of the Mainland.
    Issued at HKT 19:48

    NNNN

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Acting Secretary for Health chairs 20th meeting of Cancer Coordinating Committee (with photos)

    Source: Hong Kong Government special administrative region

         The Acting Secretary for Health, Dr Libby Lee, chaired the 20th meeting of the Cancer Coordinating Committee (CCC) today (June 3) to discuss the response strategies and measures against cancer with relevant government departments and organisations.

         Dr Lee said, “Cancer has been the top killer in Hong Kong for years, accounting for more than 40 deaths every day on average. According to the World Health Organization, 30 per cent to 50 per cent of cancer cases could be prevented by modifying or avoiding key risk factors and implementing evidence-based prevention strategies. Prevention as well as early detection and management of cancer patients are the most cost-effective long-term strategies in reducing the cancer burden.”

         During the meeting, the CCC examined the implementation of the Hong Kong Cancer Strategy (the Strategy). Promulgated in July 2019, the Strategy was Hong Kong’s first holistic plan on the work of cancer prevention and control, aiming to identify service gaps and formulate strategic priorities and directions to reduce the local disease burden of cancer.

         The CCC also examined the city-wide population-based cancer surveillance data for 2022, including figures on incidence, mortality, survival rates and cancer prevalence in the population for major cancers. A total of 35 373 newly diagnosed cancer cases were recorded in 2022, involving 17 239 males and 18 134 females. In other words, 97 new cancer cases were diagnosed every day on average. Among which, lung cancer (5 707 cases) remains the most common cancer in Hong Kong, while breast cancer (5 208 cases, including male breast cancer) has for the first time outnumbered colorectal cancer (5 190 cases), accounting for the second and third most common cancers, respectively.

         Dr Lee said, “Cancer mortality rates of both males and females have shown a declining trend over the past three decades, indicating Hong Kong’s healthcare system has yielded positive results in combating cancer. In addition, the stage-specific survival rates of various cancers show that the survival rate will be higher if a patient has the cancer detected at an early stage followed by early treatment. In Hong Kong, most patients with early-stage cancers have a five-year relative survival rate reaching 90 per cent or higher. The ratio of surviving for more than five years for those with certain early-stage cancers, such as female breast, prostate and thyroid cancers, is comparable to that of the general population.”

         The CCC also reviewed and discussed various work on cancer prevention and control, including surveillances, prevention and screening; diagnosis, treatment and survivorship care; and research (see Annex for details).

         Among which, the Department of Health (DH) has been promoting a healthy lifestyle as the primary strategy for cancer prevention to enhance public understanding of cancer prevention and screening. For prevention, primary prevention (i.e. reducing exposure to cancer risk factors) is the most important strategy for reducing the risk of developing cancer. The Government has long been adopting a multipronged approach, including publicity, education, promotion, legislation and regulation, to encourage citizens to adopt a healthy lifestyle, such as a healthy diet, regular physical activities and maintenance of a healthy body weight and waist circumference, as well as avoidance of smoking and alcohol, to reduce the risks of contracting non-communicable diseases including cancer.

         For screening, the DH has implemented the Cervical Screening Programme, the Colorectal Cancer Screening Programme and the Breast Cancer Screening Pilot Programme. Most of the cancer cases identified through various screening programmes are at earlier stages, leading to a more favourable prognosis. In view of this, the 2024 Policy Address announced that the Government will explore the use of artificial intelligence to assist lung cancer screening and implement hepatitis B screening to prevent liver cancer. Details of these works will be announced in due course.

         Established in 2001 and chaired by the Secretary for Health, the CCC comprises cancer experts and doctors from the public and private sectors, academics and public health professionals. The CCC makes recommendations on the formulation of strategies for cancer prevention and control, while steering the direction of work in relation to cancer prevention and screening, treatment, surveillance and research, etc. The Cancer Expert Working Group on Cancer Prevention and Screening under the CCC regularly reviews international and local evidence and makes recommendations on cancer prevention and screening applicable to the local setting. In addition, the Hong Kong Cancer Registry, the Hospital Authority and the Research and Data Analytics Office of the Health Bureau oversee cancer surveillance, treatment and research respectively.

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Written question – Court of Auditors’ reports and number of fraud cases – E-002006/2025

    Source: European Parliament

    Question for written answer  E-002006/2025/rev.1
    to the Commission
    Rule 144
    Auke Zijlstra (PfE), Ton Diepeveen (PfE)

    On 6 May 2025, the European Court of Auditors (ECA) published Review 02/2025 entitled ‘Performance-orientation, accountability and transparency – lessons to be learned from the weaknesses of the RRF’[1]. In it, the ECA makes a rather scathing assessment of the Recovery and Resilience Facility (RRF) and states that much is going wrong. The following is stated in the review: ‘By the end of 2023, the member states had not reported a single case of suspected fraud in their management declarations. However, the 2023 annual report of the European Public Prosecutor’s Office, indicated 206 active investigations related to RRF funds […].’ (p. 33). On 14 May 2025, in addition, ECA Special Report 09/2025[2] was presented to Parliament’s Committee on Budgetary Control. The ECA reported that the Commission had not conducted a detailed assessment and wanted to provide assurance for 2022 without carrying out audit work itself. According to the Director-General of Commission DG ECFIN, 64 ongoing cases had been reported by the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO).

    • 1.Does the Commission know the correct number of ongoing cases at the EPPO?
    • 2.In the Commission’s view, how is it possible that the figures vary to such an extent and that some Member States evidently do not report fraud?
    • 3.In view of the above, does the Commission agree that the RRF and the way it is being handled are a disaster?

    Submitted: 20.5.2025

    • [1] https://www.eca.europa.eu/ECAPublications/RV-2025-02/RV-2025-02_EN.pdf.
    • [2] https://www.eca.europa.eu/ECAPublications/SR-2025-09/SR-2025-09_EN.pdf.
    Last updated: 3 June 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Implementation and regulatory considerations for the European Disability and Parking Cards Directive – E-001342/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    The aim of the implementing act/s, provided for by Article 9 of Directive (EU) 2024/2841, is to ensure the digitalisation of the European Disability Card and the European Parking Card for persons with disabilities.

    The Commission intends to adopt one implementing act, likely during the first half of 2026. It can contain provisions to set the accessible digital versions of both cards, with the data fields set out in Annexes I and II respectively, and to ensure interoperability.

    It can also establish common technical specifications regarding the storage medium of the digital version of both cards for matters such as verifying the validity of both cards and their serial or file number, for controlling their authenticity, for preventing forgery and fraud, for the reading of those cards between Member States, and for their use in a digital identity wallet at EU level.

    As per Article 20 of Directive (EU) 2024/2841, a report on the directive’s application shall be submitted by 2031 and every four years thereafter, to the European Parliament, the Council, the Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions, with input from Member States and stakeholders.

    The Commission will support Member States in the transposition process and will monitor the timely and correct transposition of the directives.

    Last updated: 3 June 2025

    MIL OSI Europe News

  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Exemption of defence spending from EU fiscal rules – E-000034/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    EU integration was built on a shared aspiration for lasting peace in Europe. Given the deterioration of the security situation, the determination to maintain peace has prompted the Commission, together with the High Representative/Vice-President, to elaborate the White Paper for European Defence Readiness 2030[1], which aims to deter any temptation of military aggression and to ensure that Europeans are ready to withstand all threats, including the most extreme military contingencies.

    It means that Europeans shall take care of their own security, build their strategic autonomy and a fairer burden-sharing within the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, which remains the cornerstone of EU’s defence.

    The Commission supports Member States’ efforts to achieve defence readiness in a more cooperative and more cost-efficient manner with its policy, financial, and regulatory powers.

    The White Paper for European Defence Readiness 2030 sets out a vision according to which they should tap the full potential of EU collaboration to deliver peace through strength and unity.

    The ReArm Europe Plan provides ambitious and sound financial foundations to support Member States in sustaining this huge effort and in closing the accumulated capability gap. Finally, the Defence Omnibus will be proposed in June to simplify the regulatory environment of the defence sector.

    Member States are in the driving seat for defence matters and remain the sole decision-makers to identify, prioritise and realise their capability needs.

    The Commission supports them with its policies and instruments, promoting a more cooperative approach towards defence investment and industrial ramp up, to increase value for money, better interoperability and resilience in the EU’s achievements of defence readiness.

    • [1] https://defence-industry-space.ec.europa.eu/document/download/30b50d2c-49aa-4250-9ca6-27a0347cf009_en?filename=White%20Paper.pdf.

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  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Flight tickets – E-000781/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    Decades of liberalisation of the air services market[1] and regulation of air ticket distribution[2] have led to a mature distribution market.

    The Air Services Regulation provides for pricing freedom of air carriers and the Booking.com[3] case law has underlined the right of businesses to set differentiated prices across different channels.

    The widespread presence of flight offers in different channels is an indicator of competition. In this context, while some airlines may opt for particular intermediaries, other airlines may opt to disintermediate some of their tickets. This is a usual commercial practice seen in many competitive markets.

    Limiting airline freedom to deal with intermediaries of their choice and negotiate distribution contracts could disrupt the balance between airlines and intermediaries and may undermine competition between airlines.

    Consumer protection and passenger rights apply equally to all flight-only ticket sales, irrespective of the channel. There are also specific protections for package travel[4].

    In 2023, the Commission proposed that intermediaries, where they acquire a ticket on behalf of a passenger, shall provide the contact details of the passenger to the air carrier, so that the air carrier can comply with certain obligations it has under Union law, such as re-routing, information and provision of care[5].

    Furthermore, the Commission plans to adopt a proposal on Multimodal Digital Mobility Services (MDMS) in 2025, to achieve seamless multimodal passenger transport.

    The initiative aims to set out principles to facilitate cooperation between transport operators and intermediaries and to improve the availability of flight tickets in multimodal platforms.

    • [1] Regulation (EC) No 1008/2008 ( Air Services Regulation) on common rules for the operation of air services in the Community, OJ L 293, 31.10.2008, p. 3-20.
    • [2] Regulation (EC) No 80/2009 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 14 January 2009 on a Code of Conduct for computerised reservation systems, OJ L 35, 4.2.2009, p. 47-55.
    • [3] European Court of Justice, Case Booking.com and Booking.com (Deutschland), C-264/23 , paras. 61 and 62 ‘so far as concerns wide parity clauses, which prohibit partner hoteliers referenced on the reservation platform from offering, on their own sales channels or on sales channels operated by third parties, rooms at a lower price than that offered on that platform, they do not appear to be objectively necessary for the main operation of providing online hotel reservation services or proportionate to the objective pursued by it. After all, there is no intrinsic link between the continued existence of the main activity of the hotel reservation platform and the imposition of such clauses, which clearly produce appreciable restrictive effects’.
    • [4] Directive (EU) 2015/2302 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 25 November 2015 on package travel and linked travel arrangements, OJ L 326, 11.12.2015, p. 1-33.
    • [5] Please see COM(2023) 753 final, Art. 14a, and COM(2023) 752 final, Art. 5.
    Last updated: 3 June 2025

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  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – Is the 2040 intermediate climate target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 90 % legally and economically feasible? – E-001551/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    EU climate policies have been highly effective, with EU net territorial emissions meeting the 2020 target already in 2019 ahead of 2020 and being 37% below 1990 levels in 2023[1].

    Consumption-based emissions can be beyond the EU legislator’s jurisdiction. Still, this footprint as estimated by the Directorate-General for Statistics (ESTAT) declined by 14% between 2010 and 2022 while the gross domestic product (GDP) increased by 19%[2].

    The EU is implementing the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM)[3] to address carbon leakage and actively engages with partners to support them in creating effective policies to reduce their territorial emissions, including through effective carbon pricing mechanisms.

    The Impact Assessment[4] accompanying the communication on the 2040 target[5]. provides a comprehensive analysis of the impact of the recommended target in accordance with the Better Regulation requirements[6] and considers all the elements listed in the article 4(5) of the European Climate Law[7].

    As highlighted in the communication, investments in the energy system are estimated at about 3.2% of the GDP in 2031-2050, the majority of which would be needed in any case to modernise the EU’s energy system.

    In addition, it shows that decarbonisation of the economy will generate major co-benefits, including sharp cuts in fossil fuels imports, significantly improved economic resilience and strategic autonomy, and reduced healthcare costs and mortality due to air pollution. The cost of inaction and corresponding damages have also been assessed.

    The impact assessment also considered different global climate policy contexts depending on the evolution of climate policy by major relevant players.

    • [1] 2024 Climate Action Progress Report, COM(2024) 498 final.
    • [2] https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/databrowser/view/nama_10_gdp/default/table?lang=en&category=na10.nama10.nama_10_ma.
    • [3]  Regulation (EU) 2023/956.
    • [4] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A52024SC0063.
    • [5] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=COM%3A2024%3A63%3AFIN.
    • [6] https://commission.europa.eu/law/law-making-process/better-regulation_en.
    • [7] Regulation (EU) 2021/1119.
    Last updated: 3 June 2025

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  • MIL-OSI Europe: Answer to a written question – The Commission’s strategy in response to US trade policy – E-000587/2025(ASW)

    Source: European Parliament

    The Commission wants to preserve and expand the EU- United States (US) trade partnership for the benefit of the respective people and businesses.

    The Commission regrets US announcements on the possible imposition of tariffs on goods imported from the EU. As the EU and US economies are so closely intertwined, it should also be in the US’ interest to avoid tariff hikes.

    The Commission’s priority is to avoid disruptions to EU-US trade and to seek negotiated solutions. Therefore, the Commission decided to delay the imposition of EU countermeasures to allow for negotiations.

    At the same time, the Commission is ready to ensure that the EU will react firmly, swiftly and proportionately to any unjustified tariffs or trade measures if no mutually beneficial solution is otherwise attainable.

    The Commission recognises the challenges EU industries and agriculture face in terms of competitiveness. To address those, the recently presented Competitiveness Compass[1] and Clean Industrial Deal[2] provide a strategic framework to enhance industrial resilience while ensuring that decarbonisation drives growth.

    The aim is to lower energy prices with the measures proposed in the Affordable Energy Action Plan[3], to secure critical raw materials, increase access to capital markets, and to introduce regulatory simplification, which is being done through the Omnibus Simplification Package[4].

    The Commission remains committed to evaluating further measures to mitigate competitive imbalances while reinforcing Europe’s economic and industrial leadership.

    Conversely, the new Vision for Agriculture and Food[5] identifies a fairer global level playing field as a key element of the EU’s agri-food economic diplomacy while keeping in line with World Trade Organisation rules.

    • [1] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A52025DC0030.
    • [2] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=celex:52025DC0085.
    • [3] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=COM:2025:79:FIN.
    • [4] https://commission.europa.eu/publications/omnibus-i_en.
    • [5] https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX:52025DC0075.

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