Category: United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: HOLBA BID ballots, declaration of results | Westminster City Council

    Source: City of Westminster

    As part of our statutory duty, we were appointed to hold 6 BID ballots HOLBA. The following ballots were successful:

    • St Martin’s occupier renewal BID ballot
    • St Martin’s owner renewal BID ballot
    • Piccadilly and Jermyn Street property owner renewal BID ballot
    • Leicester Square and Piccadilly property owner renewal BID ballot

    The St Martin’s occupier renewal BID ballot was successful. 55 out of 60 votes with the majority of the business ratepayers in the proposed BID area who voted, voting in favour of the proposal, both by aggregate rateable value (93.3%) and numbers voting (91.7%). The St Martin’s Occupier BID will continue until 31 March 2030. The BID ballot opened on 11 February 2025 and closed on 11 March 2025.

    The St Martin’s owner renewal BID ballot was successful. 36 out of 37 votes with the majority of the business ratepayers in the proposed BID area who voted, voting in favour of the proposal, both by aggregate rateable value (96%) and numbers voting (97%). The St Martin’s Owner BID will continue until 31 March 2030. The BID ballot opened on 12 February 2025 and closed on 12 March 2025.

    The Piccadilly and Jermyn Street property owner renewal BID ballot was successful. 116 out of 119 votes with the majority of the business ratepayers in the proposed BID area who voted, voting in favour of the proposal, both by aggregate rateable value (94%) and numbers voting (97%). The Piccadilly and Jermyn Street Property Owner BID will continue until 31 March 2030. The BID ballot opened on 12 February 2025 and closed on 12 March 2025.

    The Leicester Square and Piccadilly property owner renewal BID ballot was successful. 115 out of 115 votes with the majority of the business ratepayers in the proposed BID area who voted, voting in favour of the proposal, both by aggregate rateable value (100%) and numbers voting (100%). Leicester Square and Piccadilly Property Owner BID will continue until 31 March 2030. The BID ballot opened on 12 February 2025 and closed on 12 March 2025.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: St James’ BID ballot results | Westminster City Council

    Source: City of Westminster

    As part of our statutory duty, we were appointed to hold a ballot for the proposed new St. James’s occupier and property owner Business Improvement Districts (BIDs).

    The results were announced for the two BID ballots on 13 March 2025.

    For the occupier ballot, 32 out of 61 votes were in favour (52%), but only 46.9% of those who voted, by aggregate rateable value were in favour, which resulted in an unsuccessful ballot. In order for a new BID to be established, the votes in favour of the BID proposal must form a majority, both in terms of aggregate rateable value, and numbers voting. 

    For the property owner ballot, 58 out of 77 votes were in favour with the majority of voters in the proposed BID area who voted, voting in favour of the proposal, both by aggregate rateable value (84%) and numbers voting (75%). 

    In order for a property owner BID to be established, an occupier BID must be established first in line with BID regulations.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Stoke-on-Trent celebrates Kinship Carers with launch of new Community Clusters initiative

    Source: City of Stoke-on-Trent

    Published: Thursday, 20th March 2025

    During Kinship Week (17 – 21 March), the city council is celebrating family members and friends who step up to care for children when their parents can’t.

    Kinship carers are family members or close friends who step in to care for children, often at short notice and with little time to prepare. Their selfless commitment helps ensure that children can remain within their family network and continue to thrive in familiar surroundings.

    As part of this year’s Kinship Week celebrations, the city council is launching Community Clusters – a new initiative aimed at strengthening support for kinship carers.

    Community Clusters will offer monthly support groups where carers can come together to share experiences, offer advice, and build meaningful connections with others in similar situations.

    Councillor Sarah Hill, cabinet member for children’s services at Stoke-on-Trent City Council, said: “Kinship carers play a vital role in providing children with a safe, loving, and stable home. During Kinship Week, we want to say a heartfelt thank you to all those who step up and make such a profound difference in children’s lives.

    “The launch of Community Clusters marks an important step in our ongoing commitment to supporting kinship carers. We understand the challenges they face, and these groups will create a space for carers to connect, feel supported, and share their journey with others.”

    The new support groups are part of the city council’s wider focus on early intervention and partnership working, ensuring that families receive the right support at the right time. By reducing isolation and building a network of mutual support, Community Clusters aim to empower kinship carers in their vital role.

    For more information about Community Clusters and support available for kinship carers, visit: https://fostering.stoke.gov.uk/

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Council delivers 12 new, high-quality social housing properties

    Source: St Albans City and District

    Publication date:

    A £4.3 million development of new social rent homes in St Albans is almost completed with tenants due to move in this spring.

    St Albans City and District Council has developed the 12 properties on a site called The Hedges, off Woollam Crescent, Batchwood.

    There are six family-sized, semi-detached houses, each with three bedrooms and a back garden, and an apartment building with six two-bedroom flats. The ground floor flats have wet rooms designed for people with mobility needs.

    The site previously had ten single-storey prefab units that were used for temporary accommodation and were no longer fit for purpose.

    All the new homes are being allocated to people on the Council’s housing register who are waiting for a permanent home of their own.

    Councillor Jacqui Taylor, Lead for Housing, enjoyed a tour of the site and said:

    I am delighted that we have delivered such a high-quality development of much-needed new homes.

    It is another demonstration of our priority commitment to provide more modern, quality social housing that will last long into the future. 

    These homes have been built to the highest standard and include many eco-friendly features that will keep emissions low. I am sure the new tenants will be very happy to move into this community.

    The design of the new homes and the building materials were chosen to blend in with existing Woollam Crescent properties.

    Each ground floor flat has its own outdoor space while there is also a communal garden for all tenants to enjoy. Resident and visitor parking as well as secure cycle storage has also been included on the site.

    In keeping with the Council’s commitment to tackling climate change and reducing harmful emissions, the properties were fitted with energy efficient features. These include solar panels and air source heat pumps to provide renewable energy.

    Infrastructure for electric vehicle charging has been incorporated, and the charging points can simply be installed as and when needed as electric vehicle usage increases.

    In addition, the landscaped gardens support ecology by providing new trees, bird and bat boxes, and hedgehog highways.

    Cllr Taylor added:

    I am proud that the decisions we took to build all our new Council homes without gas and with renewable energy systems instead are bearing fruit with each new development. This avoids the need for costly retro-fitting in the future.

    The King Off site in Sopwell is being built to the same standard and we have three more sites in the pipeline in the Sopwell and Cunningham areas. We are also currently reviewing all the little used garage sites across the District to bring forward others suitable for social housing.

    Photos: top, Cllr Taylor, centre, beside some of the three-bedroom houses at  The Hedges with Cllr Paul de Kort, right, the Council leader, and Matt Cleaver, left, the contracts manager for builders Parrott Construction; below, Cllr Taylor, centre, beside the apartment block with Cllr de Kort, left, and Matt Cleaver, right.

    Media contact: John McJannet, Principal Communications Officer, St Albans City and District Council: 01727- 819533; john.mcjannet@stalbans.gov.uk.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Spring programme announced for Sunday concerts in Scarva

    Source: Northern Ireland City of Armagh

    Music lovers make a date in your diary as the line up has been announced for the concert bands playing in beautiful Scarva village each Sunday from 6th April until 28th September.

    The magnificent Victorian bandstand on Scarva Green will play host to the finest bands from the borough and beyond from 3pm to 4pm each Sunday afternoon as part of the popular concert band series.

    What better way to spend a tranquil afternoon than relishing the relaxing music set amongst the award-winning floral displays and watching the world go by under a sunny Scarva sky.

    April concerts include Castlewellan Accordion Band (6th), Aughnaskeagh Silver Band (13th), and Ardarragh Accordion Band (27th). There will be no concert on Easter Sunday (20th).

    May concerts include Wellington Memorial Silver Band (4th), St. Marks Silver Band (11th), Geoghegan Memorial Pipe Band (18th) and Castlewellan Accordion Band (25th).

    As well as enjoying the marvellous music why not take in the stunning natural beauty of the surrounding area with a stroll or cycle along the Newry Canal Towpath and enjoy the abundance of plants and wildlife. Nearby Scarva Park with its children’s play area is always popular with families.

    Please note all concerts are subject to change. Further details of the season’s programme can be viewed at visitarmagh.com/scarva-bandstand-concerts.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Discover stories from ‘The Saff’ at Leicester Museum

    Source: City of Leicester

    A NEW exhibition at Leicester Museum & Art Gallery will tell the story of the city’s Saffron Lane in the words of the people who live and work in the area.

    Opening on Saturday (22 March), Popping to the Shops: Saffron Lane looks at the development of the Saffron Lane estate in the 1920s, the working men’s clubs that provided entertainment for the new community, and the enterprising locals who converted their front rooms into mini convenience stores and hair salons, before purpose-built shops arrived in the area.

    Oral histories, recorded with past tenants, capture residents’ first impressions of their new homes on the estate – which welcomed its first residents in 1925 and was the first large-scale housing development to be built in Leicester after the First World War.

    One tenant, who moved into her new home on ‘The Saff’ in the 1930s, likened it to ‘paradise’, having running water, a bath and a separate bedroom for the children. Visitors to the exhibition will be able to see how she may have decorated her brand new home, thanks to a display of early 20th century furniture and household items from the museum’s collection.

    Another resident, who moved to The Fairway in 1926, remembers the downside of moving onto a brand new estate, with churned-up mud surrounding the houses until the road was constructed, and the Midland Red bus stop a long walk away at the top of Saffron Lane.  

    There were very few local amenities on the estate when the first residents moved in, but oral histories featured in the exhibition recall the milkman who would come from Countesthorpe, the dairy that sold milk on Cyprus Road, the mobile greengrocer with an open-backed van, the baker with his basket of hot cross buns, and Tommy Newby’s, the grocer, where the boxes were piled high and the cat sat on the bacon slicer!

    Tommy Newby’s may be long gone, but the Saffron Lane businesses that serve the community today are at the heart of the new exhibition.

    These include a locksmith at number 575 that’s been trading in Leicester since 1717 and on Saffron Lane since 1990, an optician at number 441 where the mannequins in the attic provided a clue to the building’s previous incarnation as a haberdashery, and a copy shop at 196B that started life selling furniture, until demand for its photocopying and printing services changed the focus of the business completely.

    In total, eight current Saffron Lane businesses feature in the exhibition, with each of them generously giving up their time to be photographed by exhibition photographer Leila Houston and supporting the project by sharing their stories.

    Assistant city mayor Cllr Vi Dempster said: “This brilliant new exhibition shines a light on the people and businesses that help to give Saffron Lane its strong sense of identity and community.

    “It’s 100 years this year since the first residents moved onto the Saffron Lane estate, giving us the perfect opportunity to listen to their stories and look back at the estate’s history, while meeting some of the people who live and work in the area today.

    “I’m very grateful to everyone who has donated items to the exhibition and given their support to this project. Thanks to their generosity, our museum staff have been able to bring the story of ‘The Saff’ to life in an exhibition that I’m sure will be popular with visitors.”

    Popping to the Shops: Saffron Lane opens at Leicester Museum & Art Gallery on Saturday (22 March) and runs until 31 August. Admission is free.

    Much of the historical information in the exhibition has been drawn from ‘The Story of the Saff’, edited by local historian Cynthia Brown, published in 1998 and featuring the memories of the Saffron Past & Present Group.

    The new exhibition follows on from the success of Popping to the Shops: Narborough Road, which launched in January 2024 and is currently on display at Newarke Houses Museum until 27 April. 

    Both exhibitions are supported using public funding from Arts Council England

    Popping to the Shops: Saffron Lane is dedicated to the memory of Philip French, the museum’s former social history curator, who died in November 2024.

    Picture caption: Shops on Saffron Lane in 1980

    Note to editors:

    The eight Saffron Lane businesses that have given their support to the project and are featured in Popping to the Shops are:

    • Fix My Bike (FMB), 210 Saffron Lane
    • Bettinson Ltd Kitchen Design, 212 Saffron Lane
    • The Bread Basket, 581 Saffron Lane
    • Morgan’s Locksmith, 575 Saffron Lane
    • Saffron Eyecare, 441 Saffron Lane
    • Brush & Blade Barbers, 447 Saffron Lane
    • TFG Copyprint, 196B Saffron Lane
    • Millennium Fish Bar, 553 Saffron Lane

     

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Homes in the district to benefit from £8m energy efficiency boost

    Source: City of Canterbury

    The energy efficiency of hundreds of council homes will be dramatically boosted after Canterbury City Council was awarded £6.6m through the government’s Warm Homes: Social Housing Fund – the biggest payout in Kent.

    The money will add to the £11.25m the council has put aside in its Housing Revenue Account capital budget over the next three years.

    The money will be used to insulate homes and install high-performance windows and doors to keep in the heat and to replace or upgrade heating systems.

    The measures chosen in each property included in the project will be individually-tailored based on assessments which are already underway.

    Welcoming the cash from the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (DESNEZ), Cllr Pip Hazelton, Cabinet Member for Housing, said: “This huge investment in our council homes will add immeasurably to the quality of life for those people living there.

    “With much less energy wasted, their homes will be warmer and, importantly, their gas and electricity bills will fall meaning they have more money in their pockets.”

    Now the size of the grant has been confirmed by the government, officers are working on a detailed plan for delivering the work.

    On top of this money, the council was also awarded £1.5m as part of the government’s Warm Homes: Local Grant scheme.

    This pot of money is aimed at people on low incomes in privately owned or rented homes whose Energy Performance Certificate is between D and G.

    It could pay for insulation, solar panels or even air source heat pumps.

    Cabinet Member for Environment and Climate Change, Cllr Mel Dawkins, said: “More than £8m in government money dedicated to making people’s homes more energy efficient, less carbon hungry and cheaper to run has to be embraced.

    “It represents a significant step on our journey to creating a net zero district for everyone.

    “But this is where the hard work begins – our plans added to the money received now needs to turn into action on the ground.”

    Arrangements are currently being put in place to administer the Warm Homes: Local Grants scheme and the council will publicise the fact applications are open.

    Published: 20 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Kabaddi World Cup comes to Coventry for the first time

    Source: City of Coventry

    Coventry welcomed the world’s best kabaddi players and thousands of passionate fans as the sport’s biggest tournament was held in the UK for the first time.

    Coventry Building Society Arena in partnership with Coventry City Council hosted more than 1,000 fans and 150 athletes for a full-day of exciting and fast-paced action in the Kabaddi World Cup on Wednesday, March 19.

    The tournament is taking place across the West Midlands from March 17 to 23. It’s the first time the championships have been hosted outside Asia.

    It is the latest in a line of international sporting events to be held in the city and at its premier venue for live sport, Coventry Building Society Arena.

    Five group matches were played in Coventry, including three men’s matches, highlighted by host nation England’s clash against the USA.

    England’s men ran out comfortable winners against the US to make it three wins from three in Group A while India cruised past Hong Kong to leave themselves in a healthy position in Group B.

    The day also saw two women’s games held with England edging past Hong Kong in Group E and India thrashing Poland by 104 points to 15 in a one-sided Group D affair.

    The tournament was held in the Commonwealth Convention Centre at Coventry Building Society Arena, with the halls transformed into an elite arena for kabbadi.

    Across the day, the venue hosted a range of cultural and arts activities for young people to enjoy, including a dance workshop and t-shirt design session.

    A free schools festival took place at Coventry Building Society Arena the day before action got underway in the world cup, with the event including a tournament for teams from 14 Coventry schools, cultural activities and performances from local groups.

    The activity was supported by Sky Blues in the Community and United by 2022.

    Cllr Kamran Caan, Cabinet Member for Public Health and Sport at Coventry City Council, said: “It’s been fantastic to see the Kabaddi World Cup at Coventry Building Society Arena – it’s such a vibrant and exciting event that’s dominated the West Midlands over recent days.

    “Coventry is known for hosting major sporting events, and this is yet another example of how we continue to attract global competitions that showcase our city on the international stage.

    “Events like this not only provide fantastic entertainment and boost the local economy, but they give us the opportunity to engage with the community through sport by hosting workshops and tournaments with our partners in the city.”

    Paul Michael, Managing Director at Coventry Building Society Arena, said it was a great opportunity to welcome new audiences to the venue and to again provide the backdrop for elite international sport.

    “We were incredibly proud to be a host venue for the Kabaddi World Cup and it truly demonstrated how as a city we are able to engage local communities in events,” he said.

    “Hosting this event was about much more than just international sport, it was about celebrating diversity and bringing communities together. The community day and match day demonstrated this, with hundreds of young people coming out across the two days to enjoy the sport of kabaddi.

    “We opened up a number of spaces to accommodate the thousands of people joining us across the two days, with our Convention Centre hosting the action itself and areas on the upper levels of the venue transforming into spaces for community activities.

    “The Kabaddi World Cup highlighted yet again why Coventry is a great destination for international sport events, not only in hosting the sport itself but ensuring that it has a lasting legacy in the community.”

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: FBI Veteran Joseph Bonavolonta Joins Wrap with 27 Years of Experience, Former SAC of Boston Field Office

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    MIAMI, March 20, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Wrap Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: WRAP) (“Wrap” or, the “Company”) today announced the appointment of Joseph R. Bonavolonta as Domestic Head of Managed Services of the Company, bringing over 27 years of experience from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) to the Company’s management team.

    Mr. Bonavolonta, who culminated his distinguished FBI career as Special Agent in Charge (SAC) of the Boston Field Office, led one of the agency’s largest divisions, overseeing high-profile criminal and national security investigations. His leadership extended to managing Joint Terrorism Task Forces, Safe Streets Gang and Violent Crime Task Forces, and directing the New England Region’s Domestic Director of National Intelligence (DDNI) Program.

    In his new role, Mr. Bonavolonta is expected to assist the Company in driving growth while further deepening Wrap’s global law enforcement network. His extensive expertise in national security, compliance and risk management, combined with Wrap’s growing investigative technology partners, will enhance the Company’s mission to provide innovative, non-lethal solutions for public safety worldwide.

    Prior to joining Wrap, Mr. Bonavolonta served as Managing Partner at a global security firm, where he provided strategic security solutions for multinational corporations, critical institutions, and high-net-worth individuals. His deep knowledge of technologies used in risk and vulnerability assessments, insider threats, cybersecurity and physical security strategies makes him an invaluable asset to Wrap’s growing Managed Services Branch.

    “We are committed to bringing together elite-level talent and cutting-edge technology to solve the most pressing security challenges of today and the future,” said Bill McMurry, Chief Executive Officer of Managed Services at WRAP. “Joseph Bonavolonta’s unmatched expertise will be instrumental in strengthening our Managed Services Branch, reinforcing our role in supporting those who protect us and expanding our capabilities across both public and private sectors.”

    Mr. Bonavolonta’s distinguished FBI career also includes leadership roles such as:

    • Deputy Assistant Director of the Counterintelligence Division, overseeing domestic and international operations;
    • Head of the Boston Field Office’s Cyber and Counterintelligence Branch, tackling nation-state driven espionage and cybersecurity threats; and
    • Supervisor of the Complex Financial Crimes Program in the Newark Field Office.

    His investigative achievements include spearheading international organized crime initiatives in coordination with the Italian National Police, and the dismantling of major criminal networks, including the Bonanno La Cosa Nostra (LCN) Family. His work earned him numerous accolades, including the Attorney General’s Director’s Award for Superior Performance, the Law Enforcement Distinguished Community Service Award, and the National Intelligence Meritorious Unit Citation.

    His deep connections within the New England law enforcement community and across federal and international security networks will help solidify Wrap’s relationships globally, strengthening the Company’s impact in law enforcement, security and risk mitigation.

    Expanding Expertise with W1 Global and James DeStefano

    Mr. Bonavolonta’s addition is expected to further strengthen Wrap’s global security, technology and investigative expertise, complementing the experience brought in through Wrap’s recent W1 Global, LLC acquisition. He joins James DeStefano, a retired FBI executive and former head of the FBI New York Field Office’s Crisis Management Program, who has spent years conducting risk and vulnerability assessments for corporate clients.

    Their combined experience is expected to enhance Wrap’s ability to deliver comprehensive technology security solutions to law enforcement agencies, commercial clients and high-net-worth individuals worldwide.

    About Wrap Technologies, Inc.
    Wrap Technologies, Inc. (Nasdaq: WRAP) is a global leader in public safety solutions, bringing together cutting-edge technology with exceptional people to address the complex, modern day challenges facing public safety organizations.

    Wrap’s BolaWrap® solution is a safer way to gain compliance—without pain. This innovative, patented device deploys light, sound, and a Kevlar® tether to safely restrain individuals from a distance, giving officers critical time and space to manage non-compliant situations before resorting to higher-force options. The BolaWrap 150 does not shoot, strike, shock, or incapacitate—instead, it helps officers operate lower on the force continuum, reducing the risk of injury to both officers and subjects. Used by over 1,000 agencies across the U.S. and in 60 countries, BolaWrap® is backed by training certified by the International Association of Directors of Law Enforcement Standards and Training (IADLEST), reinforcing Wrap’s commitment to public safety through cutting-edge technology and expert training.

    Wrap Reality™ VR is an advanced, fully immersive training simulator designed to enhance decision-making under pressure. As a comprehensive public safety training platform, it provides first responders with realistic, interactive scenarios that reflect the evolving challenges of modern law enforcement. By offering a growing library of real-world situations, Wrap Reality™ equips officers with the skills and confidence to navigate high stakes encounters effectively, leading to safer outcomes for both responders and the communities they serve.

    Wrap’s Intrensic solution is an advanced body-worn camera and evidence management system built for efficiency, security, and transparency. Designed to meet the rigorous demands of modern law enforcement, Intrensic seamlessly captures, stores, and manages digital evidence, ensuring integrity and full chain-of-custody compliance. With automated workflows, secure cloud storage, and intuitive case management tools, it streamlines operations, reduces administrative burden, and enhances courtroom credibility.

    Trademark Information
    Wrap, the Wrap logo, BolaWrap®, Wrap Reality™ and Wrap Training Academy are trademarks of Wrap Technologies, Inc., some of which are registered in the U.S. and abroad. All other trade names used herein are either trademarks or registered trademarks of the respective holders.

    Cautionary Note on Forward-Looking Statements – Safe Harbor Statement
    This release contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the “safe harbor” provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Words such as “expect,” “anticipate,” “should”, “believe”, “target”, “project”, “goals”, “estimate”, “potential”, “predict”, “may”, “will”, “could”, “intend”, and variations of these terms or the negative of these terms and similar expressions are intended to identify these forward-looking statements. Moreover, forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, many of which involve factors or circumstances that are beyond the Company’s control. The Company’s actual results could differ materially from those stated or implied in forward-looking statements due to a number of factors, including but not limited to: the expected benefits of the acquisition of W1 Global, LLC, the Company’s ability to maintain compliance with the Nasdaq Capital Market’s listing standards; the Company’s ability to successfully implement training programs for the use of its products; the Company’s ability to manufacture and produce products for its customers; the Company’s ability to develop sales for its products; the market acceptance of existing and future products; the availability of funding to continue to finance operations; the complexity, expense and time associated with sales to law enforcement and government entities; the lengthy evaluation and sales cycle for the Company’s product solutions; product defects; litigation risks from alleged product-related injuries; risks of government regulations; the business impact of health crises or outbreaks of disease, such as epidemics or pandemics; the impact resulting from geopolitical conflicts and any resulting sanctions; the ability to obtain export licenses for counties outside of the United States; the ability to obtain patents and defend intellectual property against competitors; the impact of competitive products and solutions; and the Company’s ability to maintain and enhance its brand, as well as other risk factors mentioned in the Company’s most recent annual report on Form 10-K, subsequent quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, and other Securities and Exchange Commission filings. These forward-looking statements are made as of the date of this release and were based on current expectations, estimates, forecasts, and projections as well as the beliefs and assumptions of management. Except as required by law, the Company undertakes no duty or obligation to update any forward-looking statements contained in this release as a result of new information, future events or changes in its expectations.

    Investor Relations Contact:
    (800) 583-2652
    ir@wrap.com

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at
    https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/183801f3-4937-4aff-b91a-901b9599b322

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Environment Agency and Oxford City Council act on Government calls to unlock growth

    Source: City of Oxford

    The Environment Agency and Oxford City Council have acted on Government calls to unlock growth.

    • Partnership unlocks 18,000 new homes whilst ensuring high standards of environmental protection
    • A new solution to development follows Government calls to unlock growth
    • Environment Agency won’t seek a planning condition and Oxford City Council can now determine planning applications with benefit of increased confidence in, and oversight of, waste water treatment scheme

    A partnership between the Environment Agency and Oxford City Council has secured the infrastructure needed to allow the development of around 18,000 new homes in and around Oxford, delivering change in the area in line with the Government’s ambition to unlock growth.

    The move follows Government calls for growth-boosting measures and the delivery of homes and investment for local communities. It could form the blueprint to unlock a number of projects around the country where the right wastewater infrastructure is needed before development can go ahead.

    The EA had previously challenged planning applications for new housing over concerns about sewage treatment capacity which posed a risk to water quality if developments had gone ahead as planned.

    Following a rigorous process to find a solution to unlock the new homes, the EA, Oxford City Council and Thames Water have now agreed a scheme which can provide the capacity needed at the Sewage Treatment Works to allow for the occupation of development from 2027, in line with local plans.

    Technical experts at the EA have ensured that Thames Water has now presented a clear, fully costed and funded programme of work, providing the confidence and certainty that water quality will be protected and communities in the area will have the water services they need, while allowing projected growth to come forward.

    The EA will shortly be writing to Oxford City Council and other affected Local Planning Authorities with their revised advice.

    “After a rigorous process, we have secured the water services and environmental protections which communities in Oxford need to thrive in their new homes. Oxford City Council now have everything they need to decide if the development goes ahead.

    “The Environment Agency believes that protecting the environment and sustainable development can go hand in hand, now and into the future. This kind of powerful partnership working is exactly what’s needed to unlock homes and jobs whilst protecting nature.”

    Philip Duffy, Chief Executive at the Environment Agency

    “I am delighted that the joint working between Oxford City Council and the EA has got us to this point. This is a great example of collaborative working to help solve a major issue for the city and the surrounding area.

    “We look forward to receiving the EA’s letter, so we can determine our next steps as Local Planning Authority and work at pace to unlock the growth and new homes currently stalled across the city.”

    Councillor Susan Brown, Leader Oxford City Council

    “This Government is determined to go further and faster to kickstart economic growth through our Plan for Change and put more money in people’s pockets. This work to unlock housing and commercial development in Oxford is just the kind of action that will unleash the potential of the Oxford-Cambridge Growth Corridor and grow our economy.”

    Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves

    Notes to Editors

    • Ahead of a full upgrade in 2031, Thames Water will introduce an interim scheme in 2027 to provide wastewater capacity. The scheme has been reviewed and modelled by the Environment Agency, who will use their regulatory grip, working alongside Defra and Oxford City Council to ensure that Thames Water deliver against the agreed timeline.
    • Oxford City Council, as lead planning authority, will now make the final planning decision to determine if the proposed development goes ahead.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UK, France and Switzerland announce new anti-corruption alliance

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    UK, France and Switzerland announce new anti-corruption alliance

    UK, France and Switzerland announce new alliance to tackle bribery and corruption threat 

    The UK’s Serious Fraud Office, France’s Parquet National Financier (PNF) and the Office of the Attorney General of Switzerland (OAG) today affirmed their shared commitment to tackling international bribery and corruption at an event in London.   

    The agencies also founded a new taskforce to strengthen collaboration.  

    All three countries have wide-reaching anti-bribery legislation with jurisdiction to prosecute criminal conduct that occurs overseas, if there is a link to the prosecuting country.   

    The taskforce will strengthen existing ties between these countries and lead to greater joint working on cases, as well as sharing of insight and expertise.   

    The statement can be seen here.

    Nick Ephgrave, Director of the Serious Fraud Office, said:

    The commitment we have made today reaffirms our individual and collective commitment to tackling the pernicious threat of international bribery and corruption, wherever it occurs. 

    We will make use of every power and partnership available to confront this criminality. This taskforce is an important step forward in our approach.

    Jean-François Bohnert, Head of the Parquet National Financier, said:

    I am delighted that ten years of operational cooperation between the PNF, SFO and OAG are developing today into the setting up of a prosecutorial taskforce.

    This taskforce will definitely strengthen our current cooperation in order to fight more efficiently against bribery and corruption in individual cases.

    Stefan Blättler, Attorney General of the Swiss Confederation, said:

    Within the framework of this cooperation, we will be able to help ensure that fraud and crime can be better combated in the future.

    This task force is of great importance for Switzerland.

    Solicitor General Lucy Rigby KC MP said:

    I welcome the SFO’s commitment to working even more closely with their French and Swiss partners, including setting up this new taskforce to tackle international bribery and corruption.

    Through strong international partnerships, we will be able to robustly tackle cross-border economic crime and protect our future prosperity.

    Press Office

    Email news@sfo.gov.uk

    Out of hours press office contact number +44 (0)7557 009842

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: St Albans Museums Shortlisted for National Award Following Award Wins at Hertfordshire Association of Museums

    Source: St Albans City and District

    Publication date:

    St Albans Museums has been shortlisted for a prestigious national award following a number of award wins locally at Hertfordshire Association of Museums. 

    The Catching the Chain exhibition, which explores the history of criminal justice, and is on display at St Albans Museum + Gallery until 21 April, has been nominated for Temporary or Touring Exhibition of the Year at the 23rd annual Museum + Heritage Awards. 

    The awards celebrate the very best of museums, galleries, and cultural and heritage visitor attractions. The ceremony to reveal the winners will take place on the evening of Thursday 15 May 15 2025 at Hilton Park Lane, London. 

    Other shortlisted museums across the 18 categories include the British Museum, the Natural History Museum, and Horniman Museum and Gardens.

    More locally, the Museums Team have picked up awards for two Arts Council England funded projects at the Hertfordshire Association of Museums awards. The team won the Creative Health Award for their year-long Community in Residence programme with Hertfordshire M.E. / Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Support Group. 

    Learning and Engagement Officer Danielle Cavender-Handley and Archaeologist Tom Lucas each received a Heritage Hero award for their work on Digitising the Park, including the Tread the Past trail around Verulamium Park, Voicing Verulamium in the Hypocaust and the Roman Town House project with Passport to Leisure.

    Councillor Paul de Kort praised the museums team as part of the Leader’s Announcements in this week’s St Albans City and District Strategy and Resource Committee meeting. 

    Councillor Anthony Rowlands, Lead for Museums, echoed Cllr de Kort’s sentiments and said:

    It is wonderful to see the hard work of the museums team being recognised both regionally and nationally. From year-long community focussed programmes to exhibitions and projects which bring history to life, the variety and breadth of what our museums can offer is something to be proud of. We thank Arts Council England for their generous NPO funding which has made each of these projects a possibility.

    Photo above: Danielle Cavender-Handley, right, and Tom Lucas, left, receiving their awards.

    Notes to Editors

    About St Albans Museums

    • St Albans Museums is an award-winning local authority funded museum service which manages and operates two museums, a number of heritage sites and Ancient Scheduled Monuments and cares for the City’s nationally significant collections.
    • Amongst its portfolio, the museum service’s key sites include the city-centre venue St Albans Museum + Gallery and Verulamium Museum, a specialist Roman museum located in a much-loved local park.
    • The Museums operate as part of St Albans City and District Council (SADC) and receive core funding as part of the Community and Place delivery directorate.
    • In April 2023, the Museums Service was awarded just over £1m in funding from Arts Council England as part of its National Portfolio Organisation (NPO) programme. The NPO status has seen the Museums embark on an ambitious programme of events and activities which will be delivered between April 2023 and March 2026.
    • Follow @stalbansmuseums on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram for latest news and updates.
    • St Albans Museums’ collections comprise a wide range of artefacts relating to the development of St Albans over the centuries, from a market town to the modern City we see today.
    • For more information about what is on, visit www.stalbansmuseums.org.uk/whats-on where you can view full listings.
    • St Albans Museum + Gallery is free to visit and open to the public every day 10am – 4pm.
    • Verulamium Museum is a charged-for museum and is open to the public every day 10am-4pm

    About Hertfordshire Association of Museums

    The Hertfordshire Association of Museums is a dynamic and active network supporting all people who work for or volunteer in our museums with the aim of increasing awareness and raising professional standards. Each year, the association delivers a programme of training, network events and meetings plus an annual awards event.

    About Museums + Heritage Awards

    The global awards celebrate the very best in the world of museums, galleries, and cultural and heritage visitor attractions.

    Full shortlist and more information available here: https://awards.museumsandheritage.com

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Hertfordshire’s councils and OPCC submit joint response to Government on local government reform

    Source: St Albans City and District

    Publication date:

    All 11 councils in Hertfordshire and the Office of the Police and Crime Commissioner (OPCC) have agreed a joint interim response to the Government outlining a number of initial options for the reorganisation of local government structures in the county.

    Hertfordshire is what’s known as a two-tier area with the county council responsible for services such as libraries, highways and transport, adult social care and children’s services, and 10 district and borough councils providing services such as bin collections, street cleaning, environmental health, leisure and housing. The Police and Crime Commissioner is responsible for the oversight of policing across the county.

    As part of its plans to reshape local government, on 5 February the Government invited councils in all two-tier areas to submit an interim plan by 21 March for moving to a single tier of unitarity councils providing all services.

    Hertfordshire’s councils and the OPCC’s shared priorities are ensuring any changes benefit residents and businesses, excellent local government services are maintained, residents are kept safe, and strong democratic accountability is available to communities across the county.

    All 11 councils and the OPCC worked together to produce the interim submission which has been shared with elected members at each individual organisation and Hertfordshire’s MPs.

    The submission sets out a number of options for further consideration, ranging from one to four unitary councils providing all services. 

    It also includes early thinking on how each option could support devolution, improve services, deliver value for money and maintain strong links to communities. 

    While a joint submission has been agreed, councils have differing views on the options set out and no decisions are being made at this stage. 

    Councils and the OPCC will continue to collaborate over the coming months to collate and analyse further evidence for each option. 

    The Government will provide feedback on the interim submission which will also inform the development of final proposals to be submitted to the Government by 28 November 2025 for a decision by Ministers.

    The views of residents, businesses, local government partners, colleagues, and other stakeholders across the public and private sectors will be essential as proposals develop. All councils and the OPCC are committed to providing updates throughout the process.

    Councillor Paul de Kort, Leader of St Albans City and District Council, said: 

    There is still considerable work to be undertaken before a decision should be made on the best option for restructuring local government in Hertfordshire.

    We are keeping an open mind until we consult with our residents as well as important stakeholders such as local businesses, other public agencies, parish councils,  voluntary groups and charities. Their views must be heard and taken into account.

    There is also a need for much more guidance from the Government about many crucial aspects of the restructuring they are demanding.

    We need to gather all this information, discuss and analyse it, before we can throw our weight behind one particular option. 

    The last reorganisation has lasted more than 50 years and this current one may well do the same, so it is vital we get this right and do not rush any decision.

    Notes to Editors:

    Interim Submission: Local Government Reorganisation in Hertfordshire will appear here: https://www.stalbans.gov.uk/local-government-reorganisation

    The statutory invitation from the Government received on 5 February to submit proposals for the reorganisation of local government structures in the county.

    The English Devolution White Paper: English Devolution White Paper – GOV.UK

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Palestinian City chosen for City of Friendship

    Source: City of Preston

    Preston City Council Members have chosen the city of Hebron in Palestine to explore the possibilities of an informal friendship agreement between the two cities. 

    The city council announced last year that it was keen to strike up a friendship with a town or city in the Palestinian territories that had a shared interest with Preston.

    The alliance would form a friendship to promote lasting peace, understanding and solidarity across the miles.  

    Hebron is considered one of the oldest cities in the Middle East, located in the southern part of the Occupied West Bank, 30 kilometres (19 miles) south of Jerusalem.

    It has a population of more than 201,000 and is believed to have lots of commonalities with Preston including a multi-cultural and diverse population.  

    Hebron is a chief commercial and industrial centre in the region with its main trade in limestone from nearby quarries and with a local reputation for grapes, figs, ceramics, plastics and pottery.  

    The City of Derby signed an agreement as a Sister City Relationship between themselves and the City of Hebron (Al Khalil), Palestine in January 2014, in recognition of their friendly ties.

    Councillor Nweeda Khan, Cabinet Member for Communities and Social Justice at Preston City Council said:

    We are working with Derby City Council, which is formally twinned with Hebron to learning from them and their positive experience of a successful friendship agreement with this progressive Middle Eastern city. We are looking forward to progressing our friendship plans and are supported by the Friendship of Palestine organisation. 

    Mukhtar Master, Muslim Representative on the Preston Faith Covenant said:

    Hebron, also known as Al-Khalil, would be an excellent choice by Preston City Council.  

    The mosques of Preston made the formal approach to the council to establish a twinning or friendship arrangement with a Palestinian city. Hebron (Al-Khalil) is the resting place of the Prophet Abraham, hence it has immense significance, not only for Islam, but also for Christianity and Judaism.

    Councillor Matthew Brown, Leader of Preston City Council said;

    This is a friendship arrangement that could have mutual benefits for both cities, promoting peace and understanding throughout both ours and Hebron’s multi-cultural communities. I welcome the friendship between the two cities, as a symbol of solidarity between all faiths and communities, one that will foster communication, inclusion and tolerance.

    Preston City Council would consider friendship alliances with other towns and cities around the world on request from Preston-based communities, including Jewish Faith Covenant representatives and a similar friendship organisation to form a future friendship arrangement with a town or city in Israel.  

    Additional Information

    Preston City Council actively applies and prioritises the principles of Community Wealth Building wherever applicable and appropriate. Community Wealth Building is an approach which aims to ensure the economic system builds wealth and prosperity for everyone. 

    Image source – from the Welcome to Palestine website.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: PR Cruise Ships and Manche Iles Express 2025 Thursday 20 March 2025

    Source: Channel Islands – States of Alderney

    Press Release
    Date: 20th March 2025

    Alderney is getting ready to welcome 9 luxury cruise ship visits this summer.

    The Island’s special brand of welcoming hospitality will also be in full swing for several visits of the France-based ferry company Manche Iles Express.

    “This is a great opportunity to showcase Alderney’s famous warm welcome,” said Visit Alderney’s Caroline Gauvain. “Although the cruise ship guests are here for only a short time, we are confident they’ll enjoy our hospitality and our unique island and want to come back for a longer stay next time.”

    The scheduled cruise ship visits are:
    • Tuesday April 29 – Ocean Nova (morning)
    • Wednesday July 2 – MS Hamburg (morning)
    • Sunday July 13 – MS Hamburg (morning)
    • Wednesday August 6/Thursday 7 August – Hebridean Princess (overnight 8.30pm-1pm)
    • Saturday August 9/Sunday 10 August – Hebridean Princess (overnight 1pm-8am)
    • Sunday August 31 – Island Sky (all day)
    • Monday September 1/Tuesday 2 September – Hebridean Princess (overnight 5pm-1pm)
    • Sunday September 7 – Island Sky (all day)
    • Tuesday September 9 – MS Hamburg (afternoon)

    The full schedule is available at www.harbours.gg/cruiseships.

    Scheduled visits by Manche Iles Express from Dielette are:
    Sunday 4 / Friday 23 / Sunday 25 May
    Sunday 6 /Sunday 20 July
    Monday 4 / Monday 18 August
    Sunday 7 September

    They will also be running from Alderney to Diélette for the French Exchange on 7 June, with a return sailing on 8 June evening. Information: www.manche-iles.com/en

    End

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Leeds brown bin service resuming from next week

    Source: City of Leeds

    Fortnightly garden waste collection service restarts from Monday 24 March

    The latest sure sign that spring has arrived comes with the announcement that brown bin collections in Leeds will restart next week.

    Alongside visible signs of the change of season such as daffodils appearing in bloom at the roadside, the annual resumption of garden waste collections in the city after their winter hiatus will encourage all those in Leeds with green fingers to begin venturing out into their gardens once again.

    For all Leeds residents who receive a brown bin garden waste collection the fortnightly service will restart from Monday (24 March). All collection dates by property can be seen at www.leeds.gov.uk/mybinday while reminders can also be sent directly to smartphones by downloading the popular Leeds Bins app.

    Leeds City Council delivers the largest garden waste collection service by any council in the UK, annually collecting more than 31,000 tonnes of garden waste from 220,000 households across the city. All garden waste collected by the council is composted locally and used in farming, horticulture and local land restoration projects.

    As a reminder Leeds City Council, unlike other local authorities, does not charge households to receive a garden waste collections service. It is there to assist households in managing their garden waste and to reduce the amount of such waste that was historically going in the black bin, rather than accommodating all garden waste produced by all sizes of gardens.

    Larger amounts of garden waste produced by bigger gardens or any excess garden waste can be taken for free to any of the council’s eight household waste and recycling centres, which are all open all year round, seven days a week. Details for these can be seen at www.leeds.gov.uk/recycling.

    Those with gardens or greenspace are also encouraged to consider other environmentally beneficial ways to use or dispose of garden waste. These include leaving grass cuttings on lawns, reusing garden waste by composting or creating piles for insects, birds and other local wildlife, which will help both the eco-system and the garden itself.

    For those interested in starting to home compost to help the environment, hints, tips and specially-discounted composters are available via www.leeds.gov.uk/composting.

    Leeds City Council’s executive member for climate, energy, environment and green space, Councillor Mohammed Rafique said:

    “With signs of the weather now slowly warming up and visible evidence of new life and spring appearing in fields and green spaces around the city, we are pleased to be restarting the brown bin garden waste collections service again.

    “We are very proud of being able to continue to offer the largest garden waste collection service of any council in the UK at no charge, and would encourage everyone to do their bit by thinking about what they can do to help the environment in their own garden or green space or wider local community.”

    ENDS

    For media enquiries please contact:

    Leeds City Council communications and marketing,

    Email: communicationsteam@leeds.gov.uk

    Tel: 0113 378 6007

     

     

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: Upcoming Discussions on Public Health, Ecology Designed to Get People ‘Thinking Globally’

    Source: US State of Connecticut

    A series of virtual panel discussions this semester from the Office of Global Affairs and International Studies Association aims to prompt students, faculty, and the community to think bigger than themselves, even bigger than UConn, when considering issues that touch nearly every corner of the world.

    “Thinking Globally in 2025” is tackling such topics as public health and ecology in March and April, after having looked at media and misinformation in late February.

    “In some ways, I see this as curating the relevant expertise that’s out there to help people begin to make sense of an incredibly confusing and quite scary world,” says Jane Anna Gordon, a political science professor and series co-organizer. “We want people to come away with the sense that we need a big, broad, diverse community of people if we have any hope of understanding the globe.”

    Sarah W. Dorr, director of professional development at the International Studies Association (ISA) and a research scholar in Global Affairs, says she conceived of the series after noting that ISA members and UConn faculty have vast expertise in a variety of fields, but hadn’t come together for interdisciplinary discussions.

    After developing the idea for a speaker series that would draw from UConn’s faculty and ISA’s national and international network, Dorr approached Global Affairs and connected with Allison Casaly ’12 (CLAS), who serves as its global partnerships manager.

    Casaly says her office also was looking to begin a speaker series, as was Gordon, who had put together a fall-time faculty seminar around the theme of thinking globally. With combined efforts, the three planned for “Thinking Globally” to kick off this semester, featuring three topics they considered particularly impactful in the contemporary world.

    The first, “Our Digital World: Media and Misinformation,” featured UConn journalism assistant professor Amanda J. Crawford as moderator, and as panelists UConn journalism department head and professor Marie K. Shanahan and UConn communication assistant professor Jiyoun Suk, along with Dmitry Chernobrov from the University of Sheffield, England.

    About 80 people registered for the virtual discussion, Dorr says, about half from UConn. The event was open to anyone affiliated with the University or ISA, or from the wider community.

    “With all of the uncertainty going on in the country and in the world, it’s valuable to provide a forum where people can gather and learn about issues, while having the opportunity to ask questions of the experts that we bring in,” Casaly says.

    Dorr adds, “In addition to promoting interdisciplinary discussion, one of the main aims of the series is to get academic expertise down the pipeline and make it available to the wider public in this age of misinformation.”

    The second discussion, “Our World: Public Health,” will happen March 25, featuring Joy Elwell from the UConn schools of Nursing and Medicine as moderator, and as panelists Fumilayo Showers, an assistant professor of sociology and Africana Studies at UConn; Elsio A. Wunder, an assistant professor of pathobiology and veterinary science at UConn; and Stevan M. Weine from the University of Illinois.

    “Our Ecological World: Oceans & Waterways” will happen April 22, featuring Matthew McKenzie, a history professor at UConn; Carmel Christy K.J., a postdoctoral research associate at the Gladstein Family Human Rights Institute at UConn; James O’Donnell, a UConn professor and executive director of the Connecticut Institute for Resilience and Climate Adaptation; Eduardo Urios-Aparisi, an associate professor of Spanish studies and applied linguistics and discourse studies at UConn, along with Neil Oculi from the University Portland and Henry Carey from Georgia State University as moderators.

    While the three organizers say promoting and engaging people with the series is the primary goal, they hope to expand it in the fall and offer it as a for-credit class to UConn students, similar to the online, asynchronous popup course on antisemitism that’s been held since 2022.

    For this course, they expect to require students not just to learn but take that learning and think about what they can do with it through some sort of public project.

    “We want students to take away a holistic understanding of the issue,” Casaly says. “By having people from different disciplines talk about the same broad theme, we’re hoping people can appreciate the diversity of perspectives that exist and the value those different perspectives bring to understanding the issue.”

    Dorr also suggests there may be an opportunity to expand the series into a podcast or abbreviated video format, sort of a here’s-what-you-need-to-know-from-the-experts.

    Snapshots like this might be good teaching tools too, Gordon says.

    “I’m open to any ideas that people may have about how to further all this fantastic content,” Dorr adds.

    While they understand some topics might be more attractive draws for audiences, ideally, they hope to develop a core group that shows up regularly and can take what they learn each month back to their personal and professional contacts.

    “We’re in such a confusing time,” Gordon says. “On the one hand, we’re part of a globe – think about COVID, the transmission of information, election meddling. But at the same time, we’re in a period in which those who are ascending politically are trying to deglobalize or at least become much more exclusionary. That becomes very contradictory and makes people feel nihilistic and isolated. Being able to talk with other people about this, how to work through it, and what to do in response is really urgent.”

    Registration for the March 25 and April 22 events can be done online from the ISA website. The ISA is an interdisciplinary association with more than 7,000 members dedicated to international, transnational, and global affairs. While it’s work spans international borders, it is based at UConn.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Global: 5 years on, true counts of COVID-19 deaths remain elusive − and research is hobbled by lack of data

    Source: The Conversation – USA – By Dylan Thomas Doyle, Ph.D. Candidate in Information Science, University of Colorado Boulder

    National COVID-19 memorial wall for the five-year anniversary on March 11, 2025, in London, England. Andrew Aitchison/In Pictures via Getty Images

    In the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers struggled to grasp the rate of the virus’s spread and the number of related deaths. While hospitals tracked cases and deaths within their walls, the broader picture of mortality across communities remained frustratingly incomplete.

    Policymakers and researchers quickly discovered a troubling pattern: Many deaths linked to the virus were never officially counted. A study analyzing data from over 3,000 U.S. counties between March 2020 and August 2022 found nearly 163,000 excess deaths from natural causes that were missing from official mortality records.

    Excess deaths, meaning those that exceed the number expected based on historical trends, serve as a key indicator of underreported deaths during health crises. Many of these uncounted deaths were later tied to COVID-19 through reviews of medical records, death certificates and statistical modeling.

    In addition, lack of real-time tracking for medical interventions during those early days slowed vaccine development by delaying insights into which treatments worked and how people were responding to newly circulating variants.

    Five years since the beginning of COVID-19, new epidemics such as bird flu are emerging worldwide, and researchers are still finding it difficult to access the data about people’s deaths that they need to develop lifesaving interventions.

    How can the U.S. mortality data system improve? I’m a technology infrastructure researcher, and my team and I design policy and technical systems to reduce inefficiency in health care and government organizations. By analyzing the flow of mortality data in the U.S., we found several areas of the system that could use updating.

    Critical need for real-time data

    A death record includes key details beyond just the fact of death, such as the cause, contributing conditions, demographics, place of death and sometimes medical history. This information is crucial for researchers to be able to analyze trends, identify disparities and drive medical advances.

    Approximately 2.8 million death records are added to the U.S. mortality data system each year. But in 2022 – the most recent official count available – when the world was still in the throes of the pandemic, 3,279,857 deaths were recorded in the federal system. Still, this figure is widely considered to be a major undercount of true excess deaths from COVID-19.

    In addition, real-time tracking of COVID-19 mortality data was severely lacking. This process involves the continuous collection, analysis and reporting of deaths from hospitals, health agencies and government databases by integrating electronic health records, lab reports and public health surveillance systems. Ideally, it provides up-to-date insights for decision-making, but during the COVID-19 pandemic, these tracking systems lagged and failed to generate comprehensive data.

    Getting real-time COVID-19 data from hospitals and other agencies into the hands of researchers proved difficult.
    Gerald Herbert/AP Photo

    Without comprehensive data on prior COVID-19 infections, antibody responses and adverse events, researchers faced challenges designing clinical trials to predict how long immunity would last and optimize booster schedules.

    Such data is essential in vaccine development because it helps identify who is most at risk, which variants and treatments affect survival rates, and how vaccines should be designed and distributed. And as part of the broader U.S. vital records system, mortality data is essential for medical research, including evaluating public health programs, identifying health disparities and monitoring disease.

    At the heart of the problem is the inefficiency of government policy, particularly outdated public health reporting systems and slow data modernization efforts that hinder timely decision-making. These long-standing policies, such as reliance on paper-based death certificates and disjointed state-level reporting, have failed to keep pace with real-time data needs during crises such as COVID-19.

    These policy shortcomings lead to delays in reporting and lack of coordination between hospital organizations, state government vital records offices and federal government agencies in collecting, standardizing and sharing death records.

    History of US mortality data

    The U.S. mortality data system has been cobbled together through a disparate patchwork of state and local governments, federal agencies and public health organizations over the course of more than a century and a half. It has been shaped by advances in public health, medical record-keeping and technology. From its inception to the present day, the mortality data system has been plagued by inconsistencies, inefficiencies and tensions between medical professionals, state governments and the federal government.

    The first national efforts to track information about deaths began in the 1850s when the U.S. Census Bureau started collecting mortality data as part of the decennial census. However, these early efforts were inconsistent, as death registration was largely voluntary and varied widely across states.

    In the early 20th century, the establishment of the National Vital Statistics System brought greater standardization to mortality data. For example, the system required all U.S. states and territories to standardize their death certificate format. It also consolidated mortality data at the federal level, whereas mortality data was previously stored at the state level.

    However, state and federal reporting remained fragmented. For example, states had no unifom timeline for submitting mortality data, resulting in some states taking months or even years to finalize and release death records. Local or state-level paperwork processing practices also remained varied and at times contradictory.

    Death record processing varies by state.
    eric1513/iStock via Getty Images Plus

    To begin to close gaps in reporting timelines to aid medical researchers, in 1981 the National Center for Health Statistics – a division of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention – introduced the National Death Index. This is a centralized database of death records collected from state vital statistics offices, making it easier to access death data for health and medical research. The system was originally paper-based, with the aim of allowing researchers to track the deaths of study participants without navigating complex bureaucracies.

    As time has passed, the National Death Index and state databases have become increasingly digital. The rise of electronic death registration systems in recent decades has improved processing speed when it comes to researchers accessing mortality data from the National Death Index. However, while the index has solved some issues related to gaps between state and federal data, other issues, such as high fees and inconsistency in state reporting times, still plague it.

    Accessing the data that matters most

    With the Trump administration’s increasing removal of CDC public health datasets, it is unclear whether policy reform for mortality data will be addressed anytime soon.

    Experts fear that the removal of CDC datasets has now set precedent for the Trump administration to cross further lines in its attempts to influence the research and data published by the CDC. The longer-term impact of the current administration’s public health policy on mortality data and disease response are not yet clear.

    What is clear is that five years since COVID-19, the U.S. mortality tracking system remains unequipped to meet emerging public health crises. Without addressing these challenges, the U.S. may not be able to respond quickly enough to public health crises threatening American lives.

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

    ref. 5 years on, true counts of COVID-19 deaths remain elusive − and research is hobbled by lack of data – https://theconversation.com/5-years-on-true-counts-of-covid-19-deaths-remain-elusive-and-research-is-hobbled-by-lack-of-data-244799

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Green Party announces new CEO in “pivotal year for Green politics”

    Source: Green Party of England and Wales

    The Green Party of England and Wales has today announced the appointment of Harriet Lamb as the party’s new CEO. Harriet joins from the global environmental action NGO ‘WRAP’ where she currently serves as their CEO.  

    The announcement comes just weeks before “pivotal” local elections where the party hopes to build on its record-breaking number of councillors and maintain momentum after last year’s record-breaking result in the General Election.  

    From June, as CEO, Harriet will head up the party’s staff team and its day-to-day operations. 

    Welcoming Harriet to the role, Green Party Co-Leader, Adrian Ramsay MP, said,  

    “I am delighted to welcome Harriet to the Green Party. She brings a wealth of experience leading and scaling up organisations centred on bringing about environmental and social justice. She evidently has the experience and passion to play a central role in growing our party and our impact towards our core mission.   

    He continued, “The Green Party is on a roll. In the last few years we have quadrupled our number of councillors, entering administration on over 40 councils, and last year we saw a record General Election vote. With two party politics having broken down and people looking for alternatives, the Green Party’s positive vision for a fair, liveable future is needed more than ever. I look forward to working closely with Harriet in driving the party’s growth and impact to the next level.”  

    Commenting, Harriet Lamb said, 

    “I am super excited to be joining the Green Party and I am really looking forward to helping deliver the Party’s ambitious plans. I have spent my life working for charities driving social and environmental change – to end low pay, support refugees, nurturing peace in conflict-ridden countries, create the circular economy and most notably building the Fairtrade movement in the UK and globally – all values and issues dear to the Green Party and its agenda for positive change.” 

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Middle East: Foreign Secretary statement, 20 March 2025

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    Oral statement to Parliament

    Middle East: Foreign Secretary statement, 20 March 2025

    The Foreign Secretary, David Lammy, has provided an update to the House of Commons on the conflict in Gaza.

    With permission, Madam Deputy Speaker, I will make a statement about the conflict in Gaza.

    In January, I outlined to the House the deal agreed between Israel and Hamas. It was a moment of huge hope and relief.

    In the weeks that followed, hostages cruelly detained by Hamas were reunited with their families and aid blocked by Israel finally flooded into Gaza. A path out of this horrendous conflict appeared open.

    It is therefore a matter of deep regret to have to update the House today on a breakdown of that ceasefire and yet more bloodshed in Gaza.

    On the night of 18 March, Israel launched airstrikes across Gaza. A number of Hamas figures were reportedly killed.

    But it has been reported that over 400 Palestinians were killed in missile strikes and artillery barrages, the majority of them women and children.

    This appears to have been the deadliest single day for Palestinians since the war began. This is an appalling loss of life and we mourn the loss of every civilian.

    Yesterday morning, a UN compound in Gaza was hit. I can confirm to the House that a British National was amongst the wounded. Our priority is supporting them and their family at this time.

    Gaza has been the most dangerous place in the world to be an aid worker.

    I share the outrage of UN Secretary-General Guterres at this incident. The Government calls for a transparent investigation and for those responsible to be held to account.

    The UK is now working closely with partners such as France and Germany, to send a clear message.

    We strongly oppose Israel’s resumption of hostilities. We urgently want to see a return to a ceasefire. More bloodshed is in no-one’s interest. Hamas must release all the hostages and negotiations must resume.

    Madam Deputy Speaker, diplomacy is the only way to achieve security for both Israelis and Palestinians.

    The House will know that the ceasefire in Gaza had lasted for almost two months, the result of dogged efforts by Egypt, Qatar and the United States.

    The deal reached in January saw the nightmare of captivity end for 30 hostages and the bodies of 8 further victims of Hamas returned to their loved ones.

    We all remember the joy of seeing Emily Damari reunited with her mother and family, and the desperately-needed aid had begun to flow back into Gaza – food, medicines, fuel and tents.

    Children in Gaza had respite from relentless fear. The severely injured could cross the border again for treatment. Palestinians had begun to return to their homes and consider how to rebuild their lives.

    In the first days of the ceasefire, the UK moved swiftly to invest in the peace.

    We released £17m in additional emergency humanitarian funding for the promised surge in aid, bringing our total support this year for Palestinians across the region to £129m.

    We accelerated work on the pathway to reconstruction, supporting our Arab partners’ very welcome recent initiative.

    We worked at every level to support negotiations for a permanent ceasefire and the return of every single hostage and backed an extension to phase one of the current deal.

    But negotiations have been gridlocked for several weeks.

    Hamas has been resisting calls for the release of further hostages in return for a longer truce and Israeli forces did not begin to withdraw from the Philadelphi corridor as agreed.

    On 2 March, the Israeli government announced it was blocking all further aid deliveries until Hamas agreed to its terms.

    For weeks now, supplies of basic goods and electricity have been blocked, leaving over half a million civilians once again cut off from clean drinking water and sparking a 200% surge in the price of some basic foodstuffs – a boon to those criminals who use violence to control supplies.

    As I told the House on Monday, this is appalling and unacceptable.

    Ultimately, of course, these are matters for the courts, not governments, to determine but it’s difficult to see how denying humanitarian assistance to a civilian population can be compatible with international humanitarian law.

    Though it’s important to say I could have been a little clearer in the House on Monday, our position remains that Israel’s actions in Gaza are at clear risk of breaching international humanitarian law.

    The consequences of the ceasefire’s breakdown, Madam Deputy Speaker, are catastrophic.

    For the family and friends of the remaining 59 hostages, including Avinatan Or, the agony goes on.

    Hamas’ kidnapping of these people, their treatment of them in captivity, the cruel theatre of their release, depriving them of food and basic rights, these are acts of despicable cruelty.

    Hamas must release them all now.

    And Palestinian civilians, who have already endured so much, now must fear a rerun and a return to days of death, deprivation and destruction. 

    Civilians have once again been issued with evacuation orders by Israel.

    Only 4% of the UN Flash Appeal is funded – not even enough to get through to the end of this month.

    Health centres have had to close, even as the devastated Gazan health service has to treat another surge of those wounded in strikes.

    Madam Deputy Speaker, Hamas can have no role in Gaza’s future.

    A collapsed ceasefire will not bring the hostages home to their families.

    An endless conflict will not bring long term security to Israel. 

    And a deepening war will only set back the cause of regional normalisation and risk further instability – shortly after the Houthis resumed their unacceptable threats to shipping in the Red Sea.

    Madam Deputy Speaker, since the renewed outbreak of hostilities, I have spoken to Secretary Rubio, to EU High Representative Kallas, to UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Tom Fletcher. And I will shortly speak to my Israeli counterpart Gideon Sa’ar and Palestinian Prime Minister Mustafa.

    We and our partners need to persuade the parties that this conflict cannot be resolved by military means.

    We want Israel and Hamas to re-engage with negotiations.

    We continue to condemn Hamas, of course, for their actions on October 7th, their refusal to release the hostages, and their ongoing threat to Israel.

    But we are also resolute in calling on Israel to abide by international law and to lift the unacceptable restrictions on aid and demand the protection of civilians.

    Many months ago, only weeks into office, I concluded that there was a clear risk of Israel breaching international humanitarian law in Gaza.

    It was this risk that I first set out to this House in September which meant that the Government suspended relevant export licences for items for use by the IDF in military operations in Gaza.

    The actions of the last three weeks only reinforce that conclusion.

    Madam Deputy Speaker, in the days and weeks ahead, we will redouble our efforts to restore a ceasefire.

    But we will also continue to work with our partners on the security, governance and reconstruction arrangements. Those issues are not going away.

    There remains no military solution to this conflict. A two-state solution remains the only path to a just and lasting peace.

    At this dispatch box in January, I called the ceasefire deal a glimmer of light in the darkness. It feels like the darkness has returned.

    Former British hostage Emily Damari said the resumption of fighting left her heart “broken, crushed and disappointed”. I am sure she speaks for the whole House.

    But we must preserve hope. For the sake of the remaining hostages and their loved ones, for the people of Gaza, for the future of two peoples that have suffered so much for so long, we will keep striving for a return to the path of peace.

    I commend this statement to the House.

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UN Human Rights Council 58: UK Statement for the General Debate Under Agenda Item 4

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Speech

    UN Human Rights Council 58: UK Statement for the General Debate Under Agenda Item 4

    UK Statement for the General Debate Under Agenda Item 4. Delivered by the UK’s Permanent Representative to the WTO and UN, Simon Manley.

    Thank you, Mr Vice President,

    Just yesterday, we heard in this hall the Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine conclude, for the first time, that enforced disappearances committed by Russia amount to a crime against humanity. And that Russian authorities arbitrarily detain civilians, torture and execute prisoners of war and civilians, steal and indoctrinate Ukrainian children. There must be accountability and a just and lasting peace that ensures Ukraine’s sovereignty and security.

    China continues to persecute and arbitrarily detain Uyghurs, Tibetans, activists, lawyers and journalists like Sophia Huang. In Hong Kong, the sentencing of 45 activists and former politicians under the Beijing-imposed National Security Law, and the ongoing prosecution of Jimmy Lai, underline how rights continue to be eroded. Once again, we call for their release. 

    In Iran, women, girls and minorities face sustained repression. Freedom of expression is curtailed, journalists silenced. Executions have reached appalling levels. 

    Finally, we urge all parties to return to the Gaza ceasefire talks. All hostages must be released. Aid must restart. The recent civilian casualties are appalling. Our thoughts are also with the victims and families of those killed and injured in the UN compound yesterday. The Israeli and Palestinian people deserve a peaceful and secure future based on a two-state solution.

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: TRA initiates transition review into glass fibre from Egypt

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    News story

    TRA initiates transition review into glass fibre from Egypt

    The TRA has initiated a transition review of a countervailing measure on imports of Continuous Glass Fibre from Egypt.

    The TRA has initiated a transition review of a countervailing measure on imports of Continuous Glass Fibre from Egypt.

    The TRA will be reviewing the measure transitioned from the EU to determine whether it is still suitable for the UK’s needs. This measure is due to expire on 26 June 2025.

    Glass fibres are used in the creation of wind turbine blades and in such industries as transport (automotive, marine, aerospace), building and construction and electric/electronics, as well as the manufacturing of various consumer goods.

    Last year, the UK imported around 27 million kg of continuous glass fibre, with products from Egypt accounting for around 10% of that volume.

    Businesses that may be affected by this measure can register their interest through our public file by 2 April 2025. Interested parties that register after this date may not be able to participate fully in the review.

    Notes to editors

    • The Trade Remedies Authority is the UK body that investigates whether new trade remedy measures are needed to counter unfair import practices and unforeseen surges of imports.
    • Trade remedy investigations were carried out by the EU Commission on the UK’s behalf until the UK left the EU. A number of EU trade remedy measures of interest to UK producers were transitioned into UK law when the UK left the EU and the TRA has been reviewing these to assess whether they are suitable for UK needs.
    • The goods to be reviewed are described as:
      • chopped glass fibre strands, of a length of not more than 50mm, or
      • glass fibre rovings, excluding glass fibre rovings which are impregnated and coated and have a loss on ignition of more than 3% (as determined by the ISO Standard 1887).

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Manchester tech companies shut down for suspected monthly direct debit scam

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Press release

    Manchester tech companies shut down for suspected monthly direct debit scam

    Consumers appeared to be signed up for monthly payments without their consent

    • Concerns were raised that tech companies Affinity Technology Solutions Limited and RCSR Tech Limited were operating a direct debit scam 

    • Monthly payments of around £30 were made without customers’ knowledge or permission, complainants said 

    • Both companies have now been shut down in court following investigations by the Insolvency Service 

    Two connected tech companies which claimed to protect people online and enhance their social media image have been shut down following concerns they were running a direct debit scam.  

    Manchester-based companies Affinity Technology Solutions Limited and RCSR Tech Limited were both wound-up at the High Court in Manchester on Tuesday 18 March. 

    Affinity claimed to offer a service called IDSafeGuard which protected their customers’ online identity.  

    RCSR claimed to provide a service called ReportCurve which it said boosted a person’s online and social media footprint, making them more attractive to would-be employers and improving their eligibility for financial products. 

    However, individuals reported that they had monthly subscription fees of around £29.99 removed from their bank accounts for services they had never subscribed to. 

    The unwanted subscription services appeared to have been set up as part of an online loan application through an affiliated marketing company’s website. 

    Complaints were also made that the two companies would not cancel the unwanted subscriptions or offer refunds to customers. 

    David Usher, Chief Investigator at the Insolvency Service, said: 

    Numerous complaints were made that Affinity and RCSR were tricking consumers into monthly subscriptions for products they did not want or were entirely unaware of. 

    Indeed, from our investigations, it is not clear that either company provided any of the services to their unwitting customers. 

    Both Affinity and RSCR completely failed to co-operate with our investigations, leaving us with no option but to take this robust action to stop the companies from trading in the future and protect the public from further financial harm.

    Affinity and RCSR were incorporated within two days of each other in February 2020. Both were described on Companies House as providing business and domestic software development. 

    Insolvency Service investigations concluded that the companies were linked through the same controlling force who was not listed as the official director. The registered office for both companies was also the same address on Wilmslow Road in south Manchester. 

    Investigators contacted the official directors of both Affinity and RSCR as well as the individual believed to be in actual control of the companies. All of them failed to comply with the investigation. 

    Both companies also failed to file accounts at Companies House as they were required to do. 

    The Official Receiver has been appointed as liquidator of Affinity Technology Solutions Limited and RCSR Tech Limited. 

    All enquiries concerning the affairs of both companies should be made to the Official Receiver of the Public Interest Unit: 16th Floor, 1 Westfield Avenue, Stratford, London, E20 1HZ. Email: piu.or@insolvency.gov.uk

    Affinity is not linked to a number of companies with similar names. 

    Further information 

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: A new Greater Norwich Council gets official endorsement as one of Norfolk’s three unitary councils

    Source: City of Norwich

    Local residents will soon be invited to give their views on proposals being submitted to Government to create three new unitary councils to cover Norfolk.

    This proposal would see the current eight local councils across the county replaced with three larger ones – ensuring residents continue to get all their vital local services delivered locally by those who know their own communities better than anyone else.

    Two reports endorsing a three-unitary model – one being a Greater Norwich Council – were last night given formal backing by the city council’s decision making body, cabinet.

    As a result, the proposals for how local councils should be structured in Norwich and the wider county will be submitted to the Government tomorrow (Friday 21 March).

    Mike Stonard, leader of Norwich City Council, said: “Greater Norwich is unique within Norfolk. It is the economic and cultural capital of the region and it drives growth.

    “These are just two of the reasons why a Greater Norwich Council needs its own single unitary council – a place where people who live and work here, who understand the city, and who really know their local communities, can represent the best interests of their residents.

    “Over the past few months, we have worked closely with our district council colleagues to shape a vision that isn’t just about structures and governance. Instead, it is about how we deliver for the people and businesses of our city, and wider county, as well as how we secure Norwich’s place at the heart of regional and national growth.”

    This work led independent experts, Deloitte, to confirm that a three-unitary model for Norfolk is the strongest option – with a Greater Norwich Council being one of the three unitary councils for our county.

    Deloitte’s three-unitary option scored the best because it:

    • Is firmly rooted in an understanding of the places of Norfolk, in that it reflects and prioritises the three main historic urban centres (Norwich, Great Yarmouth and King’s Lynn) which act as the main civic and economic hubs for Norfolk
    • Will drive the delivery of improved outcomes for the people of Norfolk
    • Creates a singular focus for Norwich as the economic driving force and powerhouse of Norfolk
    • Creates more opportunity for delivering economic growth
    • Ensures areas will have appropriate place identities
    • Is based on local relationships between existing districts with a track record of successful collaboration and delivering highly effective, cost effective services
    • Provides a strong base for devolution alongside a Norfolk and Suffolk Strategic Authority
    • Better maintains effective local engagement due to the number of smaller authorities which can build on highly successful methods of community and stakeholder engagement employed by each of the districts.

    The city council will continue to develop the three-unitary model, including a Greater Norwich Council, for final submission to the Government on 26 September 2025. This will include a full business case and fully worked up boundaries.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Energy Security & Critical Infrastructure Protection Conference

    Source: United Kingdom – Government Statements

    World news story

    Energy Security & Critical Infrastructure Protection Conference

    Experts from Greece, Cyprus, Bulgaria and the UK met in Athens to discuss energy security and how to best protect critical national Infrastructure.

    Last month, British Embassy Athens, British Embassy Sofia and British High Commission Nicosia, in collaboration with the Office of the Greek National Security Advisor, organized a two-day conference (February 24-25, 2025) that focused on energy security and the protection of critical national infrastructure, held at the Security Studies Centre of the Ministry of Citizen Protection.

    Εxperts from ministries, other state authorities and the energy sector from Greece, Cyprus, Bulgaria and the UK exchanged views, as well as best practices, related to legal and operational challenges, criticality assessments, critical maritime and subsea infrastructure, resilience policy, incident response, interoperability models, defence strategies and international cooperation.  A cross-government UK delegation from the Cabinet Office, Department for Energy Security and Net Zero, Ministry of Defence and Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office shared lessons learned, both domestically and internationally.

    In her address, British Deputy Head of Mission Susan Geary referred to the constantly changing security environment and welcomed regional efforts to transform the Eastern Mediterranean into an energy hub that contributes to EU and NATO resilience by diversifying energy supply routes:

    Protecting Critical National Infrastructure is a complex endeavour that requires cross-government coordination. Both the public and private sectors have a role to play in assessing the criticality of infrastructure, identifying cross-sector dependencies, and developing best practices for managing vulnerabilities to common risks. Having the right structures, protocols and capabilities in place is vital.

    In his address, National Security Advisor Dr. Thanos Dokos noted, among other things:

    Dealing with hybrid threats and protecting our critical infrastructure have become tasks of rapidly increasing importance for our security. And resilience and preparedness are now part of the daily vocabulary of security professionals. As countries in the Eastern Mediterranean start preparing for the protection of underwater and other critical infrastructure, it is important to cooperate with other EU and NATO countries and learn from each other’s experience and expertise.

    Enhancing energy security, mitigating risks and preventing disruptions are key priorities for all involved. Delegates agreed to explore ways to further collaborate going forward.

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Widening access to university education

    Source: Scottish Government

    Rise in students from most deprived areas.

    Access to higher education at university for Scottish students from the most deprived areas has increased to a near record high, official figures have shown.

    The latest Higher Education Statistics Agency (HESA) figures for 2023-24 show that 16.7% of full-time first degree entrants to Scottish universities came from the nation’s 20% most deprived areas. This marks an increase from 16.3% the previous year.

    The figures also show an increase overall in the number of Scottish-based students at Scottish universities to 173,795, as well as a rise in full-time Scottish first degree entrants.

    However, non-EU international student numbers have seen a decline in 2023-24 following changes by the UK Government to the immigration system, such as ending the inclusion of family members on student visas.

    Minister for Higher and Further Education Graeme Dey said:

    “These figures show the significant progress of Scotland’s universities in making higher education not only more inclusive, but also attracting a rising number of Scots overall.

    “The number of Scots from the most deprived backgrounds entering university on full-time first degree courses is now up 37% since the establishment of the Commission on Widening Access by this Government.

    “This means many more people, no matter their background, have the opportunity to prosper in their lives.

    “We recognise the issues raised by the sector around a decline in international student numbers and damaging UK migration policies which is why we have proposed a ‘Scottish Graduate Visa’ which would allow us to retain international students after they graduate from Scottish institutions.”

    Background

    Higher Education Student Statistics: UK, 2023/24 | HESA

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Berge Mawson report published

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Berge Mawson report published

    Fatal accident on board a bulk carrier at Bunyu Island anchorage, Indonesia.

    Image courtesy of Komite Nasional Keselamatan Transportasi

    Today, we have published our accident investigation report into the deaths of three stevedores in a cargo hold access space on board Berge Mawson on 27 June 2022 at Bunyu Island anchorage, Indonesia.

    Chief Inspector of Marine Accidents, Andrew Moll OBE, said:

    Cargo operations on board bulk carriers require stevedores and other shore workers to carry out tasks on board, often working separately from the crew. In this accident, it is evident that the stevedores did not have sufficient understanding of the hazards posed by coal cargoes nor, more worryingly, had they received training about the dangers associated with entering enclosed spaces.

    Although Berge Mawson’s crew were well-trained in their emergency response to enclosed space accidents, their drill scenarios did not involve shore workers who could be on board at the time. In the crew’s rush to collect rescue equipment they left the entry point to an enclosed space containing a noxious atmosphere unguarded, and this oversight tragically led to the second and third stevedores dying in a well-intentioned but misguided attempt to rescue their colleague.

    Despite international and industry guidance on the training stevedores should receive before working on bulk carriers, InterManager data shows that, of the 257 enclosed space fatalities reported between 1999 and 2023, 67 (26%) were stevedores or shore workers. To help prevent further loss of life it is essential that bulk carrier and terminal operating procedures, practices and training equip shore workers to operate safely on board the vessels they attend.

    This investigation was carried out by the UK Marine Accident Investigation Branch (MAIB) on behalf of the Isle of Man Administration in accordance with the Memorandum of Understanding between the MAIB and the Red Ensign Group Category 1 registries of Isle of Man, Cayman Islands, Bermuda and Gibraltar.

    Media enquiries (telephone only)

    Media enquiries during office hours 01932 440015

    Media enquiries out of hours 0300 7777878

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Bluefin tuna fishery applications set to open

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    News story

    Bluefin tuna fishery applications set to open

    Fishers with commercial licences who want to apply for an authorisation to fish commercially for bluefin tuna in English waters in 2025 can start the process from 20 March 2025.

    Marine Management Organisation (MMO), in support of Defra, has published guidance to support fishers through the application process and explain how the fishery will operate this year.

    The UK has a quota allocation of 66 tonnes of bluefin tuna in 2025. From this, 45 tonnes will be used for the commercial fishery.

    MMO aim to issue licence authorisations for 15 commercial vessels with three tonnes of quota per vessel. The fishery will be open from 1 July to 31 December 2025. 

    In summary, to be eligible to apply you must:

    • Hold a commercial fishing licence and be registered in either England, Scotland, Wales, or Northern Ireland.
    • Apply for a vessel of 12 metres and under in overall length.
    • Agree to limit each fishing trip targeting bluefin tuna to no more than 24 hours.
    • Agree to use rod and reel fishing gears only. No chumming will be permitted. 
    • Agree to record all catches of bluefin tuna and submit an Electronic Bluefin Tuna Catch Document (eBCD) record for all landings.

    The application period will close on 21 April 2025. Incomplete applications or those submitted after the deadline will not be considered. For further information and to apply please visit https://www.gov.uk/guidance/bluefin-tuna-bft-commercial-fishery-within-uk-waters

    Information on the English catch and release recreational bluefin tuna fishery will be available in due course. Information when available will be published on https://www.gov.uk/guidance/bluefin-tuna-bft-fisheries-in-2025.

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UK Statement to the Eighth Review Meeting of the Joint Convention on the Safety of Spent Fuel Management and on the Safety of Radioactive Waste Management

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    World news story

    UK Statement to the Eighth Review Meeting of the Joint Convention on the Safety of Spent Fuel Management and on the Safety of Radioactive Waste Management

    Delivered at the International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, 19 March 2025

    President,

    The United Kingdom remains gravely concerned about the nuclear safety risks associated with Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine, including its continued control of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP), which is preventing the competent authorities of Ukraine from upholding their commitments and responsibilities as a Contracting Party to the Joint Convention on the Safety of Spent Fuel Management and on the Safety of Radioactive Waste Management.

    We reject the Russian Federation’s claims of ownership of ZNPP and its reporting of Ukrainian civil nuclear facilities in its national report and presentation to the Joint Convention Review Meeting. We endorse the consistent position of the International Atomic Energy Agency that the ZNPP is a Ukrainian power plant.

    Only Ukraine’s competent authorities are entitled to report on ZNPP. The Russian Federation’s inclusion of nuclear and radiation facilities that form part of the territory of Ukraine should be rejected outright by the 8th Review meeting and as President to the Review Meeting, we ask that you ensure this is achieved.

    We commend Ukraine for its continued commitment to participate in the 8th Review Meeting and meet the obligations of the Joint Convention for the safety of spent fuel and radioactive waste management in what are exceptionally difficult circumstances.

    Russia’s actions have demonstrated a blatant disregard for international nuclear safety and the objectives of the Joint Convention. Russia’s reckless activity in the vicinity of all of Ukraine’s nuclear facilities has created unacceptable risks. It is clear that Russia, in the context of the Joint Convention, is acting counter to the principles of Article 1 on maintaining levels of safety, effective defences against potential hazards and the prevention of accidents.

    We express our full support to the IAEA for its work with Ukraine to help decrease the risk of a nuclear accident and ensure the safety of nuclear material and facilities in Ukraine. We are grateful to IAEA personnel who continue to operate under the most challenging of circumstances.

    Updates to this page

    Published 20 March 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Supporting people with complex disabilities

    Source: Scottish Government

    Funding of £10 million to create more specially equipped toilets

    Around 150 additional community toilet facilities for people with complex disabilities and health conditions will be created across the country thanks to £10 million Scottish Government funding over the next two years.

    There are currently around 270 of the specially equipped facilities, known as Changing Places Toilets, in Scotland. This is an increase of 30% since 2019 when new legislation required these spaces to be included in large new buildings with public access.  

    Mental Wellbeing and Social Care Minister Maree Todd said:

    “Access to toilet facilities is a fundamental human right.  This £10 million investment in Changing Places Toilets will make a huge difference to thousands of disabled people and their families and carers as it will enable them to participate fully in society and access community resources – things which most of us take for granted.

    “The Fund will be open to all communities in Scotland and will prioritise areas which do not currently have adequate provision.

    “Support from local bodies has been, and will continue to be, central to driving this work forward, and we look forward to receiving applications from all over Scotland when the Fund opens in the summer.

    Jill Clark, a Glasgow-based Changing Places Toilets user said:

    “It is really important to have changing places toilets across Scotland because it lets people like myself lead a normal life without worrying about getting access to a toilet everywhere we go!”

    PAMIS (Promoting a more inclusive society) CEO Jenny Miller said:

    “PAMIS is delighted that this fund is progressing. It is vital that we ensure that those who need this life changing resource and those who are keen to develop inclusive venues and services are involved in shaping the fund. Your insights are key, and we know that for the community PAMIS supports, those with a profound learning and multiple disabilities, the fund will make a huge difference to their inclusion within communities across Scotland.” 

    Background

    Changing Places Toilets (CPT) offer a vital facility for disabled people and their families and carers whose needs cannot be met through standard accessible toilet provision.  This includes people with profound or multiple disabilities, people with muscular dystrophy, older people, veterans, people who require the use of a larger wheelchair and people who require a calm and quiet environment.

    CPTs have key features which distinguish them from standard accessible toilets. They:

    • offer adequate space (at least 12m2) for a disabled person when they are not in their wheelchair, as well as space for their wheelchair to turn, and one or two carers.
    • have an adult-sized, height-adjustable changing bench to allow people to lie down to have their personal care needs met.
    • have a ceiling hoist to lift people out of their wheelchair safely
    • have a centrally placed peninsular toilet which provides access for people who require support on both sides.

    To express views on or note interest in funding for the Changing Places Toilets Fund go to Changing Places Toilets Scotland Fund Survey

    The Scottish Government’s CPT Planning Guide provides information and guidance to those considering installing a CPT in both existing and new buildings. This guide was produced in collaboration with PAMIS (Promoting a more inclusive society) who are co-chairs and co-founders of the Changing Places Consortium and offer expert advice on CPTs in Scotland.

    MIL OSI United Kingdom