National Security Memorandum on Countering Biological Threats, Enhancing Pandemic Preparedness, and Achieving Global Health Security – The White House

NATIONAL SECURITY MEMORANDUM/NSM-15MEMORANDUM FOR THE VICE PRESIDENT THE SECRETARY OF STATE THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE THE ATTORNEY GENERAL THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR THE SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE THE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE THE SECRETARY OF LABOR THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES THE SECRETARY OF TRANSPORTATION THE SECRETARY OF ENERGY THE SECRETARY OF VETERANS AFFAIRS THE SECRETARY OF HOMELAND SECURITY THE ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT AND CHIEF OF STAFF THE ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY THE DIRECTOR OF THE OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET THE UNITED STATES TRADE REPRESENTATIVE THE REPRESENTATIVE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA TO THE UNITED NATIONS THE DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL INTELLIGENCE THE DIRECTOR OF THE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY THE ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT FOR NATIONAL SECURITY AFFAIRS THE COUNSEL TO THE PRESIDENT THE ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT FOR DOMESTIC POLICY THE ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT AND HOMELAND SECURITY ADVISOR THE DIRECTOR OF THE OFFICE OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY THE CHAIRMAN OF THE JOINT CHIEFS OF STAFF THE ADMINISTRATOR OF THE UNITED STATES AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT THE DIRECTOR OF THE FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATIONSUBJECT: Countering Biological Threats, Enhancing Pandemic Preparedness, and Achieving Global Health SecurityIt is a vital interest of the United States to prepare for, prevent, detect, respond to, and recover from biological threats at home and abroad. The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has highlighted that the United States and the world are vulnerable to biological threats, whether naturally occurring, accidental, or deliberate. COVID-19 has cost millions of lives and has resulted in trillions of dollars in economic loss and major setbacks in health and economic development globally. No sector of the United States economy or society is immune to the effects of a major biological incident. Moreover, few other national security threats are capable of producing catastrophic and potentially existential global consequences at the scale and speed of biological threats. Therefore, countering biological threats, advancing pandemic preparedness, and achieving global health security are top national and international security priorities for the United States. Nearly all executive departments and agencies (agencies) contribute to the biodefense mission of the United States Government. Moving forward, the United States must fundamentally transform its capabilities to protect our Nation from biological threats and advance pandemic preparedness and health security more broadly for the world. Section 1. Policy. It is the policy of the United States to preserve our health, economic, social, and national security by protecting the Nation from biological threats and promoting pandemic preparedness and global health security. The United States Government will undertake actions at home and with partners globally to reduce the risk of naturally occurring, accidental, and deliberate biological events with the potential to significantly impact humans, animals (domestic and wildlife), plants, and the environment, and to negatively affect health, the economy, society, and security. The foundational policies for the United States Governments role in biodefense include: the National Biodefense Strategy for Countering Biological Threats, Enhancing Pandemic Preparedness, and Achieving Global Health Security (Biodefense Strategy) and its associated Implementation Plan, American Pandemic Preparedness: Transforming Our Capabilities, and the U.S.Global Health Security Strategy. Agency activities in support of the Biodefense Strategy and its Implementation Plan shall be conducted consistent with the Biodefense Strategy. Activities undertaken to implement existing Executive Orders and Presidential Directives, including but not limited to those listed in Annex IV of the Biodefense Strategy, shall be conducted consistent with the Biodefense Strategy. Further, implementation of this memorandum shall ensure consistent integration with Presidential Directives regarding domestic response. Sec. 2. Coordination and Governance of United States Biodefense Efforts. The policy set forth in section 1 of this memorandum shall be implemented, to the extent permitted by law and available appropriations and subject to the internal programmatic and budgetary processes of relevant agencies, as follows: (a) The Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs (APNSA) shall serve as the lead for policy coordination and review, acting through the process described in National Security Memorandum 2 (NSM-2) of February 4, 2021 (Renewing the National Security Council System), to provide strategic input and facilitate policy integration for Federal biodefense efforts. (b) In accordance with Executive Order 13987 of January 20, 2021 (Organizing and Mobilizing the United States Government to Provide a Unified and Effective Response to Combat COVID-19 and to Provide United States Leadership on Global Health and Security), and National Security Memorandum 1 of January 21, 2021 (United States Global Leadership to Strengthen the International COVID-19 Response and to Advance Global Health Security and Biological Preparedness), the APNSA shall coordinate the Federal Governments efforts to prepare for, prevent, detect, respond to, and recover from biological threats and to advance global health security, international pandemic preparedness, and global health resilience. This subsection does not apply to Federal law enforcement activities, criminal investigations, or intelligence activities related to domestic incidents involving suspected terrorist threats, terrorist attacks, significant cyber incidents or other acts within the criminal jurisdiction of the United States. (c) The heads of agencies shall: (i) implement the Biodefense Strategy, as well as related strategies such as the U.S. Global Health Security Strategy, and include biodefense-related activities, including resourcing and achieving the goals of the Biodefense Strategy and the priorities, targets, and actions of its Implementation Plan, within their strategic planning and budgetary processes; (ii) in the event of the determination of a nationally or internationally significant biological incident, implement Federal response efforts in accordance with Homeland Security Presidential Directive 5 of February 28, 2003 (Management of Domestic Incidents), Presidential Policy Directive 8 of March 30, 2011 (National Preparedness), Presidential Policy Directive 44 of November 7, 2016 (Enhancing Domestic Incident Response), and Federal Government response and recovery frameworks and operational plans; (iii) coordinate their biodefense policies with other agencies that have responsibilities or capabilities pertaining to biodefense, as well as with appropriate non-Federal entities; (iv) share information and coordinate decision-making related to the biodefense enterprise; and (v) monitor, evaluate, and hold their respective agencies accountable for the implementation of section 3(a) of this memorandum. (d) Heads of agencies are not required to share information on counterproliferation activities, military plans or operations, intelligence activities, or specific law enforcement activities and criminal investigations. Sec. 3. Implementation. (a) At least once every 3 years, in alignment with the annual budget cycle, the APNSA and the Assistant to the President and Homeland Security Advisor (APHSA), in coordination with the heads of relevant agencies, shall review and update, as necessary, biodefense priorities under the Biodefense Strategys Implementation Plan. These updates shall be submitted to the President through the APNSA and, to the extent permitted by and consistent with applicable law and policy, released to the public. (b) Within 1 year of the date of this memorandum and annually thereafter, the APNSA or the APHSA, in coordination with the Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy and the Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy, shall chair a Principals Committee Senior Officials Exercise (SOE) on a biopreparedness health emergency in coordination with the heads of relevant agencies. The SOE shall include a detailed summary of conclusions, which shall inform the review listed in subsection(a) of this section. The heads of relevant agencies shall, on an annual basis, submit all related SOE After Action Reports to the APNSA and the APHSA to inform the review listed in subsection (a) of this section; the Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency to inform the National Exercise Program; and the heads of relevant agencies to inform biopreparedness. (c) Within 1 year of the date of this memorandum, and annually thereafter in alignment with the annual budget cycle: (i) the heads of relevant agencies shall include in their annual budget requests to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) information on those activities, programs, and projects that are planned, programmed, or have been executed that advance or are expected to advance the Biodefense Strategy and its Implementation Plan; ensure that these new and existing activities are prioritized in their annual budget requests; quantify resources allocated to biodefense within their annual budget requests; make a determination on whether their budget requests are sufficient to meet priorities established in the Biodefense Strategys Implementation Plan; and meet annually with National Security Council (NSC) staff to review their annual budget requests; (ii) as part of the annual budget process, the Director of OMB, in consultation with the APNSA, shall conduct an analysis of Federal biodefense and pandemic preparedness programs to assess whether resources are sufficient to meet the objectives of the Biodefense Strategys Implementation Plan; and (iii) the APNSA, through the process described in NSM-2 and in coordination with the Director of OMB, shall convene relevant agencies to ensure that interagency budgets for programs that contribute directly to the implementation of this memorandum and additional relevant resource requests are directed to meet the objectives of the Biodefense Strategys Implementation Plan. (d) To facilitate effective implementation of the Biodefense Strategy, within 90days of the date of this memorandum and at least quarterly thereafter, the NSC staff Directorate for Global Health Security and Biodefense shall convene lead agencies identified in the Biodefense Strategys Implementation Plan at the Assistant Secretary level. These agencies shall brief the NSC staff on progress towards key milestones and timelines, as well as on critical gaps and barriers to progress. The NSC staff Directorate for Global Health Security and Biodefense shall provide updates quarterly to the APNSA based off of these briefs, summarizing progress towards the implementation of the Biodefense Strategy by highlighting the extent to which the goals and objectives are being met, outlining major gaps and impediments to timely and effective implementation, and presenting options for overcoming these gaps. The APNSA shall provide to the President, on an annual basis, a memorandum summarizing these updates. (e) Within 180 days of the date of this memorandum and annually thereafter, or more frequently as warranted, the Director of National Intelligence, in coordination with the Secretaries of Defense and Homeland Security, the Attorney General, and the heads of relevant agencies, shall provide to the APNSA and the heads of relevant agencies a threat assessment on potential actors and threats, delivery systems, and methods that could be directed against or affect the national biodefense enterprise or that could negatively affect global health security, prioritizing high consequence or potentially catastrophic biological threats. These threat assessments shall be used to inform the review listed in subsection (a) of this section.

(f) Within 1 year of the date of this memorandum, the APNSA shall, in coordination with relevant agencies pursuant to Executive Order 13747 of November 4, 2016 (Advancing the Global Health Security Agenda to Achieve a World Safe and Secure from Infectious Disease Threats), recommend to the President updated goals and objectives for inclusion in the United States Government Global Health Security Strategy of 2019. These recommendations shall incorporate lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic and shall guide the Federal Government in protecting the United States at home and abroad from health security threats; describe the health security capacities needed in partner countries to prevent, detect, and respond to infectious disease threats, whether naturally occurring, accidental, or deliberate; and outline the United States international support for the global health security architecture. Sec. 4. General Provisions. (a) This memorandum rescinds and replaces National Security Presidential Memorandum 14 of September 18, 2018 (Support for National Biodefense). (b) Nothing in this memorandum shall be construed to impair or otherwise affect: (i) the authority granted by law to an executive department or agency, or the head thereof; or (ii) the functions of the Director of OMB relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals. (c) This memorandum shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and subject to the availability of appropriations. (d) This memorandum is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the UnitedStates, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.

JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.

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National Security Memorandum on Countering Biological Threats, Enhancing Pandemic Preparedness, and Achieving Global Health Security - The White House

Lessons Learned In Workforce Innovation: How Six States Are Planning to Advance Digital Skills for Equitable Economic Participation – National…

Governors are prioritizing digital skill development across the education and training continuum, from K-12 curriculum to upskilling and reskilling for workers and adult learners.

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The COVID-19 pandemic dramatically accelerated longstanding trends in the digital transformation of work and workplaces, revolutionizing online service delivery, remote work and workplace digitization across nearly every sector. Estimates suggest the pandemic advanced 10 years of planned technological change in the workplace in less than one year. Yet according to research by the National Skills Coalition, nearly one in three workers in the United States have few or no digital skills, and at least 38 percent of those workers are employed in jobs that require moderate or advanced computer usage. This skills gap creates talent and growth issues for businesses of all sizes from large companies looking to grow and invest in the United States, to small and mid-size companies that employ the greatest share of workers with low or no digital skills but require a more digitally-skilled workforce to remain competitive.

This rapid digitization of the economy has also exacerbated the digital divide defined here as the gap between individuals who have access to broadband, connected devices and digital skills and those who do not. This gap creates barriers to equitable economic participation for workers and their families and ultimately poses major risks to economic stability and resiliency at the household, community and state levels. Equipping workers and adult learners (especially those from historically underserved populations) with the digital skills required to succeed in high-quality jobs now and in the future, and access critical workforce services such as unemployment insurance systems and online job postings, is a growing imperative for state workforce systems. As a result, Governors are prioritizing digital skill development across the education and training continuum, from K-12 curriculum to upskilling and reskilling for workers and adult learners. At the federal level, investments in digital equity through the Infrastructure Investments and Jobs Act (IIJA) are providing unprecedented resources for states to advance digital skills and take full advantage of expanded broadband connectivity. Even with this investment, long-term and sustainable solutions to addressing digital skill gaps must go beyond the Acts provisions and programs.

To help states develop innovative, long-term plans to close digital skills gaps, meet employers talent needs and develop a workforce that is more resilient in the face of digital transformation, the National Governors Associations Workforce Innovation Network (NGA WIN) launched its second round of innovation grants to six states in November 2021. NGA WIN awarded Hawaii, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island $100,000 each and provided facilitation, guidance and support to state teams as they developed strategic plans to increase access to the digital skills needed to help all individuals in their states fully participate in training, education and work. States applied these resources to support personnel, project coordination and research (including assessing the states existing resources for digital upskilling), creating strategies and programs to support digital skill development, and drafting a comprehensive state action plan with policy recommendations to close digital skill gaps in alignment with their Governors workforce and economic development goals.

This publication provides lessons learned and case studies for Governors and state policymakers as they work to bridge the digital divide. It begins by highlighting the key activities that are part of the state strategic planning process, including analyzing the state digital skills landscape through data collection, asset mapping and stakeholder engagement. It then details how these planning activities inform the state action plans, including strategies and policies that address elements such as access and equity, partner alignment, data collection, training opportunities, digital navigation and resource allocation. The publication also features information on how states can align their state plans with plans developed for other federal programs such as the Digital Equity Act (DEA) and the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (BEAD) program, in-depth profiles of the six grantee states innovations, and a framework for creating state plans to advance digital skills.

Digital Equity: The condition in which individuals and communities have the information technology capacity that is needed for full participation in the society and economy of the United States. (Digital Equity Act)

Digital Literacy: The skills associated with using technology to enable users to find, evaluate, organize, create, and communicate information. (Digital Equity Act)

Digital Skills: A range of abilities to use digital devices, communication applications, and networks to access and manage information that enable people to create and share digital content, communicate and collaborate, and solve problems for effective and creative self-fulfillment in life, learning, work, and social activities at large. (UNESCO)

Digital Resilience: The awareness, skills, agility, and confidence to be empowered users of new technologies and adapt to changing digital skill demands. Digital resilience improves capacity to problem-solve and upskill, navigate digital transformations, and be active participants in society and the economy. (Digital US)

The state planning process to advance digital skills begins well before policy recommendations are considered and drafted. States may engage in a variety of activities to determine the baseline of the states digital literacy, assess needs for the workforce and employers, and gather information that will inform strategic planning and guide the development of state plans to close digital skill gaps.

The following activities were developed by NGA staff for WIN grantees to provide an initial structure for state plan development and can be utilized by other states in their own planning. These activities were designed to equip state teams with valuable information to develop a plan that is truly responsive to the needs of employers, workers, and service providers, and that ultimately bridges the digital divide to promote more equitable economic opportunity. These key activities in state planning processes include:

As with all state policy initiatives, it is critical to ground the planning process in a shared understanding of the existing landscape in this case, the landscape of digital skills and digital equity within the state. While more comprehensive assessments of financial and training assets as well as skill need and attainment data will be necessary as planning continues, states can use readily available tools coupled with a high-level ecosystem scan to gather key information from the outset. The State Digital Equity Scorecard, developed by Microsoft, the National Digital Inclusion Alliance (NDIA) and the National Skills Coalition (NSC), was utilized by all six NGA WIN grantees in their planning process and can be a valuable resource for states beginning their analysis. This tool provides every state with a numerical score based on six indicators (as seen in the image below) related to state efforts to address digital equity. The Scorecard is a first step that can highlight states existing capacity and competency on digital skills and digital equity. Additional research to establish a baseline including information on existing state or local plans, programs, or initiatives that may have digital skills and digital equity components is also important. There are likely state efforts already underway that can be leveraged to provide a broader understanding of that states overall status on digital skills and digital equity, such as state broadband plans or technology-related training programs.

Once states have a general understanding of the current ecosystem of digital skills, training programs, plans and initiatives, they can then develop definitions, goals and a shared vision. Developing shared language for concepts such as digital divide, digital equity, digital literacy and digital resiliency can ease communication between partners and ensure that these terms are rooted in the states unique conditions and aspirations. In addition to the definitions established in the Digital Equity Act, resources available to states for defining these key terms include those developed by NDIA and those explored in the Digital Resilience in the American Workforce (DRAW) initiative. Using the defined terms, states can then craft a vision for the future of digital skill attainment. Key elements of a state vision may include target populations, scope, level of skill attainment, timeframe, and more. See pages 17-22 for each NGA WIN grantees vision. Whether concurrently or following the development of a vision, states may identify shorter-term goals that, when achieved in concert with one another, lead the state toward realizing its broader vision. The definitions, goals and vision will serve as the framework for the remainder of the planning process, so stakeholders should be engaged to ensure these guideposts are reflective of their needs and goals.

Once states have completed an initial evaluation of existing capacity and developed a vision for digital skill advancement, the next step is to map digital skills assets more comprehensively using a tool such as the State Digital Skill Asset Inventory Tool, developed by NGA and NDIA, and conduct a resource gap analysis. This includes assessing the demand for digital skills, workforce supply of digital skills competencies, and currently available training and educational opportunities. States can consider mapping information such as training and education resources, state and local initiatives, anchor institutions like public schools or libraries, training providers, community champions such as non-profits, service providers, and other assets dedicated to closing digital skill gaps.

NGA WIN grantee Pennsylvania partnered with Thomas P. Miller and Associates (TPMA) to develop the Digital Literacy Programming Map (as seen below), which provides accessible information on digital literacy training opportunities. The map serves a dual purpose: helping the state identify training deserts to inform where investments might be made to increase training opportunities; and serving as a public-facing tool for individuals to identify training programs in their area, organizations to connect their clients to resources, and for employers who wish to utilize training providers to advance their employees digital skills. Each node includes the name and contact information of the training provider, location, skill level for that program, program cost, and other relevant details.

As states are surveying their digital skills landscape, they may encounter a lack of readily accessible data that directly identifies digital literacy levels for certain populations, the digital skills demands of employers, and the gap between the two. This presents a challenge in determining where and for whom investments in digital skills training are most necessary. NGA WINs Using Data To Advance Digital Skills: A State Playbook provides states with recommendations for compiling a variety of existing data sources to inform their state plan, including data on education, employment, the labor market, public benefits, workforce programs and broadband connectivity. Once states have inventoried existing data sources, they may then develop a plan to collect or develop data to fill outstanding information gaps. Importantly, an ideal data landscape will include publicly available and transparent information on programs and credentials that demonstrate positive outcomes in advancing digital skills. With a robust data landscape, states can communicate the impact of improved digital skill levels on workers wages, career pathways and job quality, as well as employers competitive advantage. Additionally, states can capitalize on new and existing initiatives and goals to both connect digital skill advancement to larger state initiatives, such as postsecondary attainment or rural development, as well as to inform metrics and performance on digital skill attainment. States may also use the information on data gaps and inefficiencies gathered through this process to identify priority areas for improvement that may require new investment, partnerships, or other solutions.

NGA WIN grantee Oklahoma utilized data to tell a compelling story about the impact of digital skills advancement on a workers wages. By matching an occupational digital skill scores matrix developed by the Brookings Institution with occupational wage data produced by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and long-term occupational projections funded by the U.S. Department of Labor, the Oklahoma team found almost three-quarters of current jobs in the state require at least a medium level of digital skills, and that each additional point in a digital score, on a scale of 0-100, is associated with an extra $781 in annual earnings.

The process of developing a state plan to close digital skills gaps requires thoughtful and consistent stakeholder engagement. Throughout each of the key activities identified above, stakeholders will provide varied and unique perspectives as well as qualitative and quantitative data. Governors and their planning team may consider engaging public sector stakeholders including state agencies of labor, commerce, education, justice, human services, libraries, veterans affairs, and others. There are also several stakeholders outside of state government to involve in this process.

Engaging workers and learners in the planning process will ensure plans, policies and programs are more effective at meeting user needs, especially when historically marginalized or underserved populations are intentionally engaged from the outset. These may include people experiencing poverty, justice-involved individuals, people with disabilities, English language learners, Native and Tribal populations, and more. It is also critical to engage non-government partners, who will be essential to carrying out the plan, including training providers, employers, industry associations, community-based organizations, K-12 districts and postsecondary educational institutions. Populations to be considered here are also identified as covered populations in the Digital Equity Act.

The Digital Equity Act also requires robust stakeholder engagement throughout the planning and execution stages of its programs, so establishing relationships and developing trust will be beneficial for both the DEA programs (as described further in pages 15-16) as well as the states broader strategic planning process to advance digital skills over both the short and long term. States will also benefit from establishing ongoing feedback loops with these stakeholders for regular engagement and data collection that ensures state efforts, policies and programs are achieving the desired impact and are responsive to evolving needs.Planning teams will also benefit from making the plan, data and programmatic information accessible to a wider stakeholder audience, including federal, state and local legislators, policymakers and the public, as this will increase broad awareness, transparency and buy-in as well as allow these partners to leverage the information collected through the state planning process.

NGA WIN grantee Rhode Island prioritized and executed a robust, iterative stakeholder engagement strategy throughout their planning process. Stakeholders included community leaders, residents, incarcerated individuals, digital skills training providers and participants, employers and philanthropic groups who provided their input through interviews, focus groups, surveys and other forums throughout the process of gathering information and drafting their state plan. As a result, the state plan that the Rhode Island team developed is both representative of current digital skills and literacy challenges and opportunities and will remain responsive as technology, skills and demands shift in the future.

The process map outlined above reflects broadly applicable best practices for state strategic planning developed through decades of NGA Center for Best Practices work to facilitate these processes across policy areas, citing most recently the process completed with NGA WIN state grantees as described in this report, as well as state strategic planning process maps developed in NGAs 2018-2020 Future Workforce Now initiative and in the NGA 2021 State Roadmap for Workforce Recovery.

Closing state digital skills gaps requires a blend of policies, programs and initiatives contained in a comprehensive plan that unites partners around a common vision and goals, informed by the key activities discussed previously. These plans serve to guide state efforts to advance digital skills but also exist as living documents to be updated as states needs and capacity evolves. Effective state plans acknowledge and provide for a continuum of digital upskilling throughout workers careers as technology and skills demands change. The following key elements offer a menu of policy areas to consider as states develop strategies and policy recommendations to advance digital skills. While all of these elements may be necessary for a long-term comprehensive plan, states should first consider which areas are most essential to address the unique needs of their state and meet their shared vision and goals.For a complete guide to developing a state plan to advance digital skills (including a policy recommendation template), please reference Appendix A: State Policy Plan Framework for Advancing Digital Skills.

The increasing digitization of the economy has exacerbated the opportunity gap between those who have access to resources to improve their digital literacy and skills and those who do not. The DEA provides a set of covered populations including individuals who are members of a racial or ethnic minority group, veterans, incarcerated individuals, individuals who reside in a rural area and more. States may consider how to embed principles of access and equity in their policy recommendations, especially for the DEA-specified covered populations, and develop strategies to increase equitable access to training and services.Resources such as NSCs Applying a Racial Equity Lens to Digital Literacy, JFFs Advancing Access and Digital Equity: Challenges and Solutions and the DRAW initiatives. Findings from a National Landscape Scan on Adult Digital Literacy Instruction can provide states with actionable steps to address questions of access and equity for target populations.

Strategies to improve access and equity regarding digital skills include:

NGA WIN grantee North Dakota sought to capture a full picture of the digital connectivity and literacy levels of underserved populations in the state throughout their data compilation, analysis and plan development process. To achieve a comprehensive assessment, the North Dakota team developed a series of maps highlighting counties with the highest concentration of veteran, rural and Tribal populations. By layering these new maps with the states broadband connectivity map, the North Dakota team identified the need for connectivity and digital upskilling programs in counties with large Tribal populations, which have historically lacked access to these resources. Leveraging these data sets allowed the North Dakota team to target this population and make a recommendation in their state plan to engage with Tribal partners to identify digital skill gaps and training opportunities.

Aligning partners around a shared vision and coordinating efforts across public and private entities is critical to implementing state strategies to advance digital skills. States may consider policy recommendations for partnership, systems improvement and infrastructure development that are necessary to build and maintain a digitally resilient workforce.

Examples of policy recommendations or strategies to foster alignment, partnership and sustained momentum include:

NGA WIN grantee Hawaiirecognized the imperative for coordinated leadership of the states work to advance digital skills and recommended designating a Digital Workforce Hui in their state plan to close digital skills gaps. Building on the successful model of the Hawaii Broadband Hui as a convener for collaboration on broadband solutions, the Digital Workforce Hui will include state agencies involved in digital skills education and training, and will be led by the Hawaii Broadband and Digital Equity Office in partnership with the Hawaii State Public Library (both of which were members of Hawaiis NGA WIN team). The Digital Workforce Hui will be responsible for implementing the states plan to close digital skills gaps and driving alignment with the states vision for digital skill advancement. This includes additional work such as: supporting community-based organizations to incorporate digital literacy into their goals and programs; developing pathways and tools for the progression from foundational literacy to digital literacy to occupational digital skills; creating a plan to digitally upskill and increase equity and access in the public sector workforce; and executing a digital skills communication campaign to excite and inspire residents to be a part of the digital workforce future.

A robust plan to collect and analyze digital skills data can provide states with valuable information to adapt and respond to the evolving needs of workers and employers. States can leverage new and existing data sources to ensure their strategies to advance digital skills are data-driven and to develop goals for digital skill attainment. While the initial data compilation and analysis efforts for planning will supply states with a baseline of information, it is important to develop strategies that promote ongoing data collection and analysis.This long-term, iterative process allows states to evaluate their progress toward identified goals for digital skill attainment and measure and improve outcomes for digital skills programming.

Examples of policy recommendations or strategies to facilitate data collection as well as performance assessment and improvement include:

Advancing digital skills often requires the expansion of existing training opportunities and/or the creation of new programs and services. Upon completion of a gap analysis of training availability, skills competencies and labor supply and demand, states may consider which successful models for advancing digital skills are best suited to be scaled, which existing, well-vetted digital skills curricula may be adopted, if it may be necessary to establish new programs or curricula, and opportunities to integrate digital skills into existing workforce training programs.

Examples of policy recommendations or strategies to create or expand digital skills training opportunities include:

Expanding digital navigation services can provide workers and families with critical information to access affordable internet, devices, and digital literacy and digital skills training. To help close the digital skills gap, states may consider policy recommendations and strategies to invest in digital navigation infrastructure that can serve as a key connector between individuals and the resources they need to increase their digital skills.

Examples of policy recommendations or strategies to support digital navigation services include:

Digital navigators are trusted guides who assist community members in internet adoption and the use of computing devices. Digital navigation services include ongoing assistance with affordable internet access, device acquisition, technical skills, and application support. (National Digital Inclusion Alliance)

NGA WIN grantee North Carolina prioritized digital navigation in their state plan to close digital skills gaps by including recommendations to establish both state-level leadership and on-the-ground digital navigation infrastructure. The team set three goals for digital navigation: leverage federal dollars to fund digital equity programs across the state (including digital navigation); empower community-based organizations to provide digital skills training and digital navigation services; and use existing state assets as working laboratories to train and connect workers with high-paying digital careers.

North Carolinas strategies to meet these goals include: using American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funds to launch a competitive grant program housed in the North Carolina Department of Information Technologys Office of Digital Equity and Literacy to fund digital navigation projects; establishing a state digital navigator position to develop and maintain a digital literacy resources website and coordinate with local digital navigators; and developing a network of working laboratories within a 45-60-mile radius of the most underserved or unserved areas to provide residents a safe location, safe connection and devices to utilize broadband for telehealth, online classes, training or remote work.

Many of the policy recommendations and strategies suggested above may require funding to support the implementation and sustainability of state efforts to advance digital skills. This may include leveraging federal funds available through legislation such as the Digital Equity Act (DEA) or the Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (BEAD), workforce funding streams such as the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) or the Strengthening Career and Technical Education for the 21st Century Act (Perkins V), or state-funded workforce development programs.

As states consider options for funding digital literacy and digital skill development, several principles may help inform the allocation of state resources now and in the future:

For example, Pennsylvania is currently in the third round of their Digital Literacy and Workforce Development Grants, which are funded by the WIOA Governors reserve fund. These awards to local workforce development boards, public libraries, non-profits and small businesses, particularly in areas of poverty or low digital literacy, support digital literacy classes emphasizing career development skills. Supported training is focused on digital fundamentals, digital job seeking, digital citizenship and digital information.

For more information on funding streams to support digital skill development, please reference Appendix B: Funding to Advance Digital Skills.

While Governors and state policymakers are planning to advance digital skills, the federal government has also recognized the need for robust and comprehensive investments in digital upskilling and digital equity. This has manifested in the Digital Equity Act (DEA) and Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program (BEAD) of the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA). DEA and BEAD provide a historic level of funding for planning and implementation of programs to provide equitable access to high-speed internet and the training necessary to fully access and utilize that connectivity. This offers a timely opportunity for states to advance digital skills that align with DEA and BEAD planning to amplify and sustain their combined impact. While state digital skills plans and programs may exceed the scope and five-year timeframe of DEA and BEAD, these programs include a mandate and funding to achieve common goals that support state visions for digital skill development, and these principles for alignment may be applied to any future federal investment in digital skills.

There will likely be overlap in the groups involved with DEA and BEAD planning, but it is critical that those working on planning for these two programs build awareness of one anothers work to ensure goals and activities are aligned to the extent possible and to take advantage of existing stakeholder networks and available data. To better coordinate planning efforts and avoid duplication, state teams developing and implementing state plans to advance digital skills should identify and connect with the agencies and teams leading their states work on DEA and BEAD planning. This alignment and information-sharing will ultimately lead to greater collective impact for all three plans.

Throughout the process of developing a state plan to close digital skills gaps, states will likely have engaged a wide range of stakeholders, from workers to employers to service providers. DEA and BEAD also require states to engage a diverse group of stakeholders in developing digital equity plans, which provides an opportunity for states to leverage their existing network of stakeholders and build on their previous engagement and data collection on digital skills needs and competencies. By including stakeholders who are involved in digital skills work, states can ensure digital literacy and digital skill advancement remain a priority as they work to address digital equity more broadly. It is critical to involve stakeholders in both the planning and implementation phases of these federal programs and look to them to identify challenges and successes in equitable access to digital skills training resources. Many of the service providers in the stakeholder network may also provide valuable information on lessons learned in overcoming barriers to access digital services to apply to other digital equity efforts. As discussed previously, states can also use the regular feedback loops they establish with stakeholders on digital skill advancement to ensure DEA and BEAD plans reflect evolving needs, and to regularly assess progress toward identified goals and metrics.

State plans to advance digital skills can include a broad vision with long-term strategies that look beyond federal programs, but they should also be aligned with the goals and metrics of time-limited programs like DEA and BEAD. The DEA Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) for the State Digital Equity Planning Grant Program requires states to identify barriers to digital equity as well as measurable objectives for documenting and promoting digital literacy access to services in their State Digital Equity Plan. The DEA also requires State Digital Equity Plans to assess how their objectives will impact and interact with the States (i) economic and workforce development goals, plans, and outcomes; (ii) educational outcomes; (iii) health outcomes; (iv) civic and social engagement; and (v) delivery of other essential services. Likewise, the BEAD NOFO for the Five-Year Action Plan requires states to identify needs, goals, and implementation strategies for digital equity and inclusion, which includes digital skills. To the extent possible, aligning goals and metrics for digital literacy and digital skill development across these three plans can increase coordination among partners implementing strategies to meet those goals. This alignment can also ensure sustainability of efforts to advance digital skills and literacy beyond the limited timeframe for the DEA and BEAD programs, which is essential for continued workforce competitiveness as digital skill needs are continuously and rapidly evolving.

(* Indicates state team lead)

State Team: Friends of the Library of Hawaii, Hawaii Broadband Hui, Hawaii Department of Business, Economic Development & Tourism, Hawaii Literacy, Hawaii State Public Library System*, Hawaii Workforce Development Council, Office of Governor David Ige

Vision: Hawaii is known as a place where people learn.

Digital equity has been a top priority for Hawaii and for Governor David Iges administration, leading the state to develop a broadband strategic plan and adopt a Digital Equity Declaration outlining a vision, goals and priorities to move Hawaii toward a more equitable digital future. The state also conducted the Hawaii Digital Literacy and Readiness Study which assessed the digital literacy and readiness of the states workforce across segments of the population including demographics, education, occupation, industry and geography. The Hawaii NGA WIN team sought to expand on this work by developing a comprehensive plan to achieve a 100% digitally literate workforce that has the skills to adapt to the continuously changing job market and economy.

To gather qualitative and quantitative data on the digital skills gap in their state and to engage communities on their needs and priorities for a plan to advance digital skills, the Hawaii team conducted a comprehensive stakeholder engagement process that included one-on-one interviews, focus groups, roundtables and surveys with employers, workers, community-based organization, labor leaders and industry specialists. These conversations surfaced a multifaceted definition for digital readiness in Hawaii as well a continuum for digital upskilling. These definitions helped to shape a plan to advance both individuals digital skills and the public systems capacity to support those individuals. Outreach to organizations providing digital literacy and digital skills training also led to the development of the iterative Hawaii Digital Skills Training Resources map.

The Hawaii teams five-year state plan to advance digital skills emphasizes five key strategies: designate a Digital Workforce Hui; invest to grow existing programs; track longitudinal and skills-specific metrics; designate the Hawaii State Public Library System as a hub for digital skills learning; and continue building the digital skills resources map. The Digital Workforce Hui will lead the implementation of the strategies and sub-strategies laid out in their state plan as well as coordinate among partners to ensure sustainability of their efforts to achieve their shared vision.

My vision for the state includes a broad shift to a diversified economy with a focus on digital access and equity so all in our community have the tools needed to thrive in todays digital world.

State Team: North Carolina Department of Information Technology*, North Carolina Business Committee for Education, North Carolina Community College System, NCWorks Commission, Office of Governor Roy Cooper, State Library of North Carolina

Vision: All North Carolinians will be empowered to participate in the digital economy fully and equitably by increasing access to and awareness of digital literacy education and skills training.

Like many states, the COVID-19 pandemic exposed digital inequities between North Carolinians, including access to affordable high-speed internet and the skills needed to take advantage of broadband connectivity. Governor Roy Cooper has made digital equity a priority for his administration, creating a plan to close the digital divide in North Carolina by 2025 and establishing the nations first Office of Digital Equity and Literacy (ODEL) to coordinate digital literacy efforts and digital skills training statewide. Building on this investment, the North Carolina NGA WIN team sought to develop strategies to provide access to digital skills resources and training through data-driven coordination among state, local and private partners.

To address their states unique barriers and prioritize activities for their state plan to close the digital skills gap, the North Carolina team identified three areas of focus early on in their work: system infrastructure and partner alignment; digital skills training on career pathways for in-demand occupations; and community and stakeholder engagement and awareness. Additionally, the North Carolina team prioritized two key deliverables from the outset: including developing a virtual hub for digital skills training and creating a Digital Navigator position in ODEL to lead work on the virtual hub and collaborate with communities across the state in digital equity planning. The team also deployed a statewide survey of employers to assess digital skills attainment and needs in the states workforce, providing valuable data to quantify the digital skills gap.

North Carolinas plan to close the digital skills gap contains policy recommendations and strategies that support alignment and partnership, data collection and performance improvement, and digital navigation and resource development. Key recommendations include: establishing a working group to coordinate digital literacy and digital skills programming across state agencies; partnering with community-based organizations to conduct focus groups and listening sessions with digitally-excluded populations; implementing data collection tools to capture a more robust picture of digital skills needs; determining targets for job readiness and job creation and aligning digital skills metrics with those targets; training and connecting residents with FAST TRACK, high-paying digital careers, and employment opportunities.

Without access to digital skill development opportunities, gaps in career, education and health care opportunities will only widen. Keeping North Carolina at the forefront of digital innovation and workforce development is critical to our states continued success.

State Team: North Dakota Department of Commerce*, North Dakota Department of Public Instruction, Office of Governor Doug Burgum, North Dakota Workforce Development Council

Vision: All North Dakotans will have equitable access to opportunities to develop digital skills to meet the needs of North Dakotas 21st Century workforce.

North Dakotas position as the top state in the country for providing high-speed fiber optic access, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development, provided the North Dakota NGA WIN team with a foundation to expand the states digital inclusion work to advance digital skills. To better understand the states connectivity landscape, the North Dakota team partnered with the Dakota Carrier Network, a collective of rural broadband service providers, to access a broadband connectivity map. After assessing statewide connectivity and connectivity for underserved populations, including veterans and Tribal communities, the team compiled additional data in partnership with Job Service North Dakota, the Department of Public Instruction and others. The team used the data they complied to assess additional factors such as internet speeds, digital skill gaps among adult learners and jobseekers and the potential return on investment for workers who increase their digital skills. This process surfaced two key findings: the in-demand jobs on the North Dakota Job Service website have higher average digital skills requirements than the average for all occupations and increasing a North Dakotans digital skills score by one point on a scale of 0-100 can increase annual income by an average of just under $660.

Using these insights, the North Dakota team prioritized upskilling the workforce to meet employer needs while also improving workers economic opportunity by advancing digital skills. In their state plan to close digital skills gaps, the North Dakota team recommended the appointment of a Digital Equity Director, who will be responsible for overseeing the states digital equity efforts, aligning partners and policy, data collection and program evaluation. The plan also included a recommendation to increase the number of people utilizing state services or programs who receive fundamental digital skills training. The plan identified several agencies including workforce system partners, human services agencies, state libraries and others that should include foundational digital skills training in their training or assistance programs.

North Dakotas economy is changing more rapidly than ever in part due to advancements in technology. A skilled workforce is vital to our success as a state. North Dakota leads the nation in providing high-speed connectivity for its residents, so we are well-positioned to pursue this opportunity to advance digital equity throughout the state.

State Team: Office of Governor J. Kevin Stitt, Oklahoma Department of Human Services, Oklahoma Employment Security Commission*, Oklahoma State Senate

Vision: Create economic opportunities that transform the rural workforce to meet the foundational and occupational digital skills demands of todays workforce.

The Oklahoma NGA WIN team recognized early on in their process that Oklahoma, like many other states, has a challenge in connecting residents, and specifically workers, with access to broadband and the skills they need to utilize the internet for all that it has to offer. In some regions of the state, particularly in rural counties, broadband access is not currently available, accessible or reliable enough to allow residents to fully participate in life and the economy. Additionally, the Oklahoma NGA WIN team recognized that there was also a distinct lack of digital skills in more rural areas of the state, where broadband may have recently become available and has not been widely adopted. As a result of this analysis, the Oklahoma team chose to focus their state plan to advance digital skills on rural Oklahomans and their communities.

The Oklahoma team leveraged their state Labor Market Information office to develop a narrative about the impact that connecting rural Oklahomans to remote working opportunities could have on the economic opportunity for those families as well as their communities. By analyzing publicly available labor market data, the team was able to demonstrate that each additional point added to a workers digital skills score, on a scale of 0-100, is associated with an extra $781 in annual earnings.In rural Oklahoma, the impact of becoming more digitally literate could directly impact the ability to afford living expenses.

As part of their state plan to advance digital skills, the Oklahoma team developed a pilot project to connect rural Oklahomans to high-quality jobs in the digital economy. The team is partnering with an Oklahoma employer to identify jobseekers who live in rural areas and are interested in remote work. They will then conduct digital skill assessments to connect those jobseekers either to immediate employment based on their skills, or to digital skills training to prepare them for future employment with the business partner. The team will specifically target rural Oklahomans who receive unemployment insurance benefits or who are long-term unemployed and will leverage existing reemployment services to connect these jobseekers to digital skills training. Lessons learned from the pilot project will help the Oklahoma team continue to develop wider-reaching digital upskilling opportunities, especially for rural jobseekers and other underserved populations.

Bridging the digital skills gap is critical to growing and maintaining a thriving workforce in Oklahoma. Im proud to support our states efforts to find innovative ways to bring digital training and quality jobs to as many Oklahomans as possible.

State Team: Office of Governor Tom Wolf*, Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development, Pennsylvania Department of Education, Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry, Pennsylvania Workforce Development Board*, Team Pennsylvania

Vision: Within the next five years, Pennsylvanians will have the abilities needed to fully, safely, and responsibly participate in a society reliant on digital technology and the Internet. Each Pennsylvanian will have the ability to useand the ability to continue to learn to usefrequently changing devices and software platforms, and to find, access, organize, evaluate, create, and communicate information competently and confidently enough to accomplish that individuals needs of living, learning, and working.

From the outset of their project, the Pennsylvania NGA WIN team strove to align their activities and priorities with those of the newly created Pennsylvania Broadband Development Authority. The collaboration and integration of these efforts grounded the teams work and promoted discussion about the best means of ensuring those who were already connected, and especially those who would be gaining access, would have the ability to digitally upskill. The Pennsylvania team carefully considered whether to target specific populations with their plan to advance digital skills and whether to focus on foundational or occupational digital skills. Through a comprehensive data collection and analysis and stakeholder engagement process, the Pennsylvania team determined that the needs of their residents and employers would be best served by a concerted effort on digital upskilling for foundational digital literacy for all Pennsylvanians.

The Pennsylvania team prioritized an assessment of the statewide digital skills landscape to better understand currently available training opportunities as well as the digital skills needs of employers. To gather this information, the team launched an employer survey that received over 350 responses and provided valuable insight including that slightly fewer than half of respondents agreed with the phrase, My employees digital skills needs are met. To better understand the Commonwealths digital skills training infrastructure, the Pennsylvania team contracted with TPMA to build a training asset map. This map, which will soon be made public, will allow policymakers and service providers to determine areas and populations that lack digital literacy and digital skills training resources and make investments in those communities. To support these efforts, the Pennsylvania team included a policy recommendation in their plan to identify and engage anchor institutions that serve as trusted entities within communities to provide foundational digital literacy skills training or connect people to training opportunities.

Broadband availability and devices have little meaning if people do not have the skills to use these tools to accomplish tasks in a digital world. Advancement of digital skills must be discussed in the context of broadband and device access for a holistic approach to address digital gaps.

State Team: Office of Governor Dan McKee, Office of Lieutenant Governor Sabina Matos, Providence Public Library, Rhode Island Commerce, Rhode Island Department of Education, Rhode Island Governors Workforce Board, Rhode Island Office of the Postsecondary Commissioner, Skills for Rhode Islands Future*

Vision: To support digital equity through access to high-speed internet, appropriate devices, and digital skill development that ensures an equitable Rhode Island economy.

The Rhode Island NGA WIN team, with a diverse cohort of members, sought to capitalize on the states focus to create an equitable and opportunity-rich economy by improving equity and access to digital skills. The vision adopted by the Rhode Island team includes goals for the state, the workforce and workplace, the digital skills service delivery ecosystem as well as individuals. This intersectional, crosscutting approach to addressing the digital skills gap resulted in a process that was rooted in stakeholder engagement and centered the Rhode Islanders who would be impacted by digital upskilling efforts.

Rhode Islands plan to close the digital skills gap was informed by a robust data compilation and analysis effort, which included stakeholder interviews, focus groups and surveys. To bolster the anecdotal and qualitative data, the Rhode Island team reviewed and considered adult basic education training program data, American Community Survey and other federally compiled data, recent state and local reports on broadband access and digital skills, as well as information from community-based service providers.

Following months of engagement and reflection, Rhode Islands state plan to advance digital skills contains policy recommendations and strategies that promote systems-level action to close the digital skills gap. Key recommendations from the plan include: encouraging the Broadband Advisory Council to integrate policy, planning, and funding for high-speed internet, device access, and skills training; developing a common framework for assessing and addressing the digital equity gap; building the capacity of the digital skills training ecosystem; and developing a statewide data repository that inventories, tracks, measures, and monitors progress toward achieving digital equity, among others.

During the pandemic, households had increased reliance on digital connectivity, and access to such became essential for employment, education and daily activities. It is our intent to tackle barriers to access for low-and moderate-income households assuring they have reliable and affordable high-speed internet at home for critical resources and information.

The National Governors Association Workforce Innovation Network (NGA WIN) is a nonpartisan learning and action collaborative for state leaders who have demonstrated strong commitments to developing a resilient workforce. The initiative is dedicated to building state capacity for near-term innovation and longer-term strategy development to prepare state workforces for a post-COVID-19 economy. NGA WIN was launched in January 2021 in partnership with its founding sponsor, the Cognizant Foundation. NGA WIN is an initiative of the Workforce Development and Economic Policy Program in the NGA Center for Best Practices (NGA Center).

The NGA Center thanks the Governors and state workforce system leaders who participated in the second cohort of NGA WIN. Without their leadership and commitment to sharing best practices, this publication and other NGA WIN resources would not be possible. The NGA Center would also like to thank the Cognizant Foundation, Intel, Microsoft, Walmart and Western Governors University for their sponsorship and partnership, as well as the NGA WIN Advisory Network for their partnership in supporting Governors and state policymakers and their thoughtful review of this publication. This publication was prepared by Sophia Yager and Jordan Morang, policy analysts at the NGA Center, with guidance and direction by Rachael Stephens, program director for workforce development and economic policy at the NGA Center. The authors thank their colleagues Katherine Ash, Jack Porter and Katie Nichols for their contributions to this publication and to the success of NGA WIN.

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Global Energy Metals Announces Results of Partner Funded Exploration at the Millennium Project Including Confirmation of High Cobalt and Copper Grades…

Vancouver, BC - Global Energy Metals Corporation TSXV:GEMC | OTCQB:GBLEF | FSE:5GE1 ('Global Energy Metals', the 'Company' and/or 'GEMC'), a company involved in investment exposure to the battery metals supply chain, is pleased to provide an exploration update from its Millennium copper-cobalt-gold (Cu-Co-Au) project ('Millennium' and/or the 'Project') located in Queensland, Australia. The exploration program is being fully funded by Metal Bank Ltd. ('MBK') as it earns up to an 80% interest in the project through staged exploration and milestone share equity payments. Global Energy Metals currently holds 100% of the Project through its wholly-owned subsidiary Element Minerals Australia Pty Ltd and has a 31,250,000 share equity position in MBK.

Highlights

Assay results continue to return high cobalt grades

First diamond drilling assays received including: 12m @ 0.62% Cu, 0.14% Co and 0.34g/t Au from 51m (MI22DD01)

Additional RC results received including: 3m @ 0.22% Co from 61m (MI22RC04)

12m @ 0.53% Cu and 0.14% Co from 39m (MI22RC08 - outside current resource)

Scope of the Central Resource area extended approximately 120m north of existing Resource

Electrical (IP/resistivity) geophysics survey completed

Resource upgrade work to commence upon receipt of final outstanding assay results

Mitchell Smith, CEO & Director of GEMC commented:

'The Metal Bank funded drill campaign has not only been successful in achieving the main objective of confirming the extent and continuity of high-grade cobalt and copper mineralisation at Millennium but has also extended the limits of mineralisation defined by the current JORC Mineral Resource model. We look forward to continued drilling success by our partner and the advancement of this important cobalt-copper project in Australia at a time when jurisdictionally safe supply of critical battery minerals is so highly regarded.'

Commenting on the results, Metal Bank's Chair, Ines Scotland said:

'Great results. Cobalt is recognised as a critical mineral for the production of renewable energy technologies and just this past week there was significant media coverage regarding the Quad Fund and their charter to invest in Cobalt and Copper companies. The additional near surface extensions in the Central Area are particularly encouraging, and we still waiting on the assay results of the deeper drilling.'

Following resource extension and infill drilling program completion in mid-September, assay results have now been received for the first of MBK's diamond drill (DD) holes (MI22DD01) and additional reverse circulation (RC) drilling (MI22RC04, MI22RC08-11) at the Southern and Central Resource Areas of the Millennium project.

Results include:

12m @ 0.62% Cu, 0.14% Co and 0.34g/t Au from 51m (MI22DD01)

3m @ 0.22% Co from 61m (MI22RC04)

12m @ 0.53% Cu and 0.14% Co from 39m (MI22RC08, outside current resource)

1m @ 2.19% Cu from 40m (MI22RC10, outside current resource)

These results form part of the Millennium resource update, infilling gaps, extending mineralisation and resource confidence, along with metallurgical sampling acquisition. Of particular note are the strong cobalt (Co) grades hosted in hydrothermal veins and crackle breccias. The cobalt grades reiterate Millennium as one of Australia's highest grade undeveloped battery metals projects, contained within granted mining licenses. (Figure 2).

Furthermore, results from holes MI22RC08 and MI22RC09 have extended the scope of the Central Area resource some 120m north of the existing JORC 2012 Inferred Resource of 5.9Mt @ 1.08%1 CuEq (Figure 2).

Results for a further four diamond drill (DD) holes and seven reverse circulation (RC) holes including the deep resource drilling and exploration and extension work in the Northern Area are awaited.

In addition, a small Induced Polarisation/resistivity electrical geophysical survey (as utilised to excellent effect at Carnaby Resources and Hammer Metals Cloncurry region projects) was also conducted. This survey aimed to better delineate key structural and geological features to aid drill targeting over untested parts of the project.

Millennium Project

The Millennium Copper and Cobalt Project near Cloncurry in NW QLD currently holds a JORC 2012- compliant Inferred Resource of 5.9Mt @ 1.08% CuEq (Cu-Co-Au-Ag) across 5 granted Mining Leases with significant potential for expansion. It is located 19km from the Rocklands copper-cobalt project with an established processing plant capable of treating Millennium-style ores once recommissioned.

MBK's 2021 drill results and other previous drilling, in conjunction with significant appreciation in copper and cobalt prices since maiden Resource reporting, provided support for an initial Exploration Target for the Project of 8 - 10Mt @ 1.0 - 1.1% CuEq.

MBK developed a three-phase work program for Millennium in 2022 seeking to confirm the Exploration Target for the Project, and future Resource expansion and development potential. The Exploration Target is based on extensions both along strike and at depth in both the Southern and Central Area copper-cobalt-gold Resources and in the Northern Area, where shallow copper intervals at broad spacing have been returned some 800-1000m north of the closest Resource.

Upon receipt and assessment of all results from the current 2022 drilling program, MBK will embark on a JORC 2012-compliant Resource update and Scoping Study utilising appropriate economic parameters aimed for completion late 2022.

It should be noted that the Exploration Target is conceptual in nature. There has been insufficient drilling at depth of the existing Resource and in the Northern Area of the project and insufficient information relating to the Reasonable Prospects of Eventual Economic Extraction (RPEEE) of the Millennium project to estimate a Mineral Resource over the Exploration Target area, and it is uncertain if further study will result in the estimation of a Mineral Resource over this area. It is acknowledged that the currently available data is insufficient spatially in terms of the density of drill holes, and in quality, in terms of MBK's final audit procedures for down hole data, data acquisition and processing, for the results of this analysis to be classified as a Mineral Resource in accordance with the JORC Code.

About Metal Bank

Metal Bank Limited is an ASX-listed minerals exploration company (ASX: MBK) holding a significant portfolio of advanced gold and copper exploration projects with substantial growth upside, including: the right to earn up to 80% of the Millennium Copper & Cobalt project which holds an inferred 2012 JORC resource of 5.9Mt @ 1.08% CuEq, across 5 granted Mining Leases with significant potential for expansion; a 75% interest in the advanced Livingstone Gold Project in WA which holds a JORC 2004 Inferred Resource of 49,900oz Au at the Homestead prospect, a JORC 2012 Inferred Resource of 30,500oz6 Au at Kingsley, and an Exploration Target6 of 290 - 400Kt at 1.8 - 2.0 g/t Au for 16,800 - 25,700oz Au at Kingsley; and the 8 Mile, Wild Irishman and Eidsvold Gold projects in South East Queensland where considerable work by MBK to date has drill-proven both high grade vein-style and bulk tonnage intrusion-related Au mineralisation.

Metal Bank's exploration programs at these projects are focussed on: short term resource growth - advancing existing projects to substantially increase JORC Resources; identifying additional mineralisation at each of its projects; and assessing development potential and including fast tracking projects through feasibility and development to production.

Metal Bank is also committed to a strategy of diversification and growth through identification of new exploration opportunities which complement its existing portfolio and pursuit of other opportunities to diversify the Company's assets through acquisition of advanced projects or cash- flow generating assets to assist with funding of the exploration portfolio.

Qualified Person

Mr. Paul Sarjeant, P. Geo., is the qualified person for this release as defined by National Instrument 43-101 - Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects.

Global Energy Metals Corporation

(TSXV:GEMC | OTCQB:GBLEF | FSE:5GE1)

Global Energy Metals Corp. offers investment exposure to the growing rechargeable battery and electric vehicle market by building a diversified global portfolio of exploration and growth-stage battery mineral assets.

Global Energy Metals recognizes that the proliferation and growth of the electrified economy in the coming decades is underpinned by the availability of battery metals, including cobalt, nickel, copper, lithium and other raw materials. To be part of the solution and respond to this electrification movement, Global Energy Metals has taken a 'consolidate, partner and invest' approach and in doing so have assembled and are advancing a portfolio of strategically significant investments in battery metal resources.

As demonstrated with the Company's current copper, nickel and cobalt projects in Canada, Australia, Norway and the United States, GEMC is investing-in, exploring and developing prospective, scaleable assets in established mining and processing jurisdictions in close proximity to end-use markets. Global Energy Metals is targeting projects with low logistics and processing risks, so that they can be fast tracked to enter the supply chain in this cycle. The Company is also collaborating with industry peers to strengthen its exposure to these critical commodities and the associated technologies required for a cleaner future.

Securing exposure to these critical minerals powering the eMobility revolution is a generational investment opportunity. Global Energy Metals believes Now is the Time to be part of this electrification movement.

Contact:

Global Energy Metals Corporation

#1501-128 West Pender Street

Vancouver, BC, V6B 1R8

Email: info@globalenergymetals.com

T: + 1 (604) 688-4219

Cautionary Statement on Forward-Looking Information:

Certain information in this release may constitute forward-looking statements under applicable securities laws and necessarily involve risks associated with regulatory approvals and timelines. Although Global Energy Metals believes the expectations expressed in such forward-looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions, such statements are not guarantees of future performance and actual results or developments may differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. Except as required by law, the Company undertakes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements in the event that management's beliefs, estimates or opinions, or other factors, should change.

GEMC's operations could be significantly adversely affected by the effects of a widespread global outbreak of a contagious disease, including the recent outbreak of illness caused by COVID-19. It is not possible to accurately predict the impact COVID-19 will have on operations and the ability of others to meet their obligations, including uncertainties relating to the ultimate geographic spread of the virus, the severity of the disease, the duration of the outbreak, and the length of travel and quarantine restrictions imposed by governments of affected countries. In addition, a significant outbreak of contagious diseases in the human population could result in a widespread health crisis that could adversely affect the economies and financial markets of many countries, resulting in an economic downturn that could further affect operations and the ability to finance its operations.

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Global Energy Metals Announces Results of Partner Funded Exploration at the Millennium Project Including Confirmation of High Cobalt and Copper Grades...

Families in Latin America and the Caribbean are still struggling to recover from the pandemic – World – ReliefWeb

UNICEF survey finds half of households with children in the region are putting less food on their plates.

PANAMA CITY, 17 October 2022 Three years on, many families in Latin America and the Caribbean are still struggling to bounce back from the pandemic, according to a regional survey conducted by UNICEF. During the pandemic, half of households with children in Latin America and the Eastern Caribbean reduced food portion sizes for adults, and one in ten reduced portion sizes for children.

Families are not only eating smaller portions but also skipping meals. In the survey, 15 per cent of households with children reported eating less than three meals per day, up from 8 per cent in 2019, before the pandemic.

The shock of the pandemic is far from over. Many parents are still struggling to recover the jobs they lost during the pandemic and cant afford to put enough food on their childrens plates. The most vulnerable families havent bounced back, putting childrens health and wellbeing at risk, said Youssouf Abdel-Jelil, UNICEF Regional Director a.i. for Latin America and the Caribbean.

According to the survey, just 60 per cent of adults in households with children are working, down from 67 per cent before the pandemic. For many the work is precarious: 37 per cent of households with children rely on informal income.

While the most vulnerable families needs persist, the survey found that just 24 per cent of households with children currently receive some form of government support, down from 43 per cent in 2020. Food, employment, and medical attention are the main demands of families.

Families in Latin America and the Caribbean have been hit several times, not just by the socioeconomic impact of COVID-19, but also by rising inflation due to the crisis in Ukraine. Without support, even more families will be pushed into poverty. Children must be at the heart of national social protection policies, to help them and their families recover and thrive, Abdel-Jelil added.

UNICEF calls on governments to continue investing in children and giving their families the support they need to reduce the lifelong effects of poverty.

Media contacts

Sendai ZeaCommunication Specialist (Emergencies)UNICEF Latin America and the CaribbeanTel: +507 6821 0843Email: sczea@unicef.org

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Coral reefs in the Caribbean continue to be under bleaching conditions | Loop Caribbean News – Loop News Caribbean

The Barbados-based Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology (CIMH) Tuesday said that the coral reef in the entire region continues to be under bleaching watch conditions and that warning conditions are becoming more prevalent.

In its latest edition of the Caribbean Coral Reef Watch, CIMH said the bleaching outlook for the Caribbean indicates that the Windward Islands Dominica, Grenada, St Lucia and St Vincent and the Grenadines as well as the Leeward Antilles including Antigua and Barbuda, St Kitts-Nevis, Montserrat, Anguilla and Trinidad and Tobago will be experiencing Alert Level 1 and 2 conditions fromOctober, extending into December.

It said waters around the Windward Islands are at Alert Level 1, which means that bleaching is expected. According to CIMH, Alert Level 2 means there is widespread bleaching and some mortality is expected.

In its four-month outlook, CIMH predicts that coral bleaching heat stress will be at bleaching levels from October to December

Heat stress conditions now predicted to be at Alert Level 1 and 2 throughout the Caribbean basin, October and November, the CIMH added.

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Beyond Boundaries: Seeing Art History from the Caribbean – iBerkshires.com

WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. On Thursday, Oct. 20, and Friday, Oct. 21, the Research and Academic Program at the Clark Art Institute hosts a Clark Conference, Beyond Boundaries: Seeing Art History from the Caribbean.

The conference begins at 9 am in the Clark's auditorium. The program is free and open to the public.

Included in a press release: Why has art historya discipline often defined by its relationship with shifting terrains of theoretical critique and analysisbeen slow to engage with Caribbean writers and thinkers, to take seriously their multidisciplinary, multi-theoretical, and multi-lingual voices? This conference asks what a deep engagement with the nuances of Caribbean intellectual thought could mean for art history.

Speakers include:

This program has been made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities: Democracy Demands Wisdom. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in these programs do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

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Why You Should Book Your Trip Now For This Caribbean Island – TravelAwaits

Thinking about a winter trip to the Bahamas? Now would be a good time to plan and book that vacation. Tourism in the Bahamas is currently booming, and further growth is predicted for 2023. According to the countrys Ministry of Tourism, air and sea arrivals to the Bahamas are up 515.6 percent this year compared to the same period in 2021. This boom comes as the country works hard to return to pre-pandemic levels.

Overall, the country is seeing a tourism boom two years after the pandemic began. Indeed, 2019 was a banner year for the Bahamas tourism industry, with the country attracting 7.2 million visitors, including nearly five million cruise passengers and two million stopover visitors.

Bahama tourism officials expect 2023 tourism will exceed 2019 levels. They plan to increase the number of stopover visitors who are drawn by new and renovated hotels, i.e., the expansion and relaunch at Sandals Royal Bahamian, the relaunch of Club Med in San Salvador, the new Ritz-Carlton Reserve in South Eleuthera, and the return of Grand Bahama Grand Lucayan.

The biggest growth area may come from Florida, the Bahamas largest and closest source market. Each year, the Bahamas welcomes approximately 500,000 stopover visitors from Florida. The goal is to double that number.

Why target Florida? There are 22 million Floridians, and Its a 30-minute flight to the Bahamas. The Bahamas is an easy destination, and the new and renovated hotels will make the trip even more attractive.

Who knew that the Bahamas has 16 full-fledged island destinations? The plan is to spread the growth of tourism across the archipelago. To accommodate the expected boom in tourism, the country is making big investments in infrastructure, including destinations like Exuma, which is seeing a new wave of development.

The Bahamian people are expected to be the stars of this burgeoning tourism. Officials will promote a vibrant future focused on the Bahamian people, culture, and heritage. The plan is to step up meaningful investments and sustainability, including the return of cultural events and festivals.

Want to learn more about what the Bahamas has to offer? Check out these articles:

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Why You Should Book Your Trip Now For This Caribbean Island - TravelAwaits

6 Destinations In The Caribbean With Overwater Bungalows – Travel Off Path

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Have you ever dreamed of staying in an overwater bungalow on the beach?

These are the most beautiful underwater bungalows in the Caribbean to escape to on your next vacation!

Staying in an overwater bungalow in the Maldives or Bora Bora is a bucket list item for many travelers. But you dont have to fly halfway across the world to experience an overwater bungalow.

These Caribbean overwater bungalows are much closer for American travelers, and many are more affordable too.

Some of the best overwater bungalows in the Caribbean are at Sandals Royal Caribbean in Montego Bay, Jamaica.

This all-inclusive resort offers a collection of South Pacific-style overwater bungalows where you can wake up and go for a swim in the crystal-clear turquoise waters around you before taking advantage of the many activities, amenities, and dining options included in your stay.

Check Prices At Sandals Royal Caribbean

The Bitter End Yacht Club in the British Virgin Islands has recently reopened after several years of closure due to Hurricane Irma, and they are welcoming back guests with the introduction of their all-new overwater bungalows.

This resort, which has long been popular with sailing and yacht enthusiasts in the Caribbean, is only accessible by boat, making it a secluded hideaway in one of the most beautiful parts of the world.

Another great choice for overwater bungalows in the Caribbean is Palafitos Overwater Bungalows, located in Tulum, Mexico. This resort is set on exclusive Maroma Beach, known for its white sand and crystal-clear water.

Guests can enjoy the stunning beauty of Mexicos Caribbean coast in this enclave of 30 luxury overwater bungalows. You can watch the sunrise and sunset from your bungalow, some of which include private plunge pools.

If youre looking for a romantic and secluded getaway, the overwater bungalows at Amanyara in Turks & Caicos will not disappoint.

Set against an 18,000-acre nature preserve on one of the islands most beautiful beaches, this luxury resort offers overwater bungalows that will become your own personal paradise.

Check Prices At Amanyara

Thatch Caye Resort in Belize offers some of the most affordable overwater bungalows in the Caribbean if you are looking to experience tropical luxury on a smaller budget, with rates starting at $699 USD per night for a couple.

This resort, which is located on a tiny island off the coast of Belize and only accessible by boat, is also all-inclusive. Youll be able to enjoy meals and activities like kayaking, paddleboarding, and snorkeling in your own secluded island getaway.

Check Prices At Thatch Caye Resort

Another one of the best overwater bugalows in the Caribbean is the collection at Royalton Antigua in Antigua & Barbuda.

This all-inclusive resort is known for being one of the most luxurious on the island, and their overwater bungalows are held to the same high standard. Each one includes a private plunge pool and additional exclusive amenities to make your trip as relaxing as possible.

Check Prices At Royalton Antigua

These are the best overwater bungalows in the Caribbean that are only a short flight away for American travelers.

While overwater bungalows are a luxury travel experience, some of these Caribbean overwater bungalows offer more affordable rates than those in the Maldives or Bora Bora.

Rates at these overwaters bungalows start at:

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This hurricane-hit Caribbean community has an innovative new way to keep the lights on – Environmental Defense Fund

Video by Leslie Von Pless

Caribbean islands contribute just a fraction of a percent of global climate pollution, yet they are among the hardest hit by climate impacts, including more intense hurricanes.

At the Victory Center, a special needs school in St. Johns, Antigua, Environmental Defense Fund and the Antigua and Barbuda Department of Environment are working together to see how an electric school bus can help the school stay up and running, even if a hurricane knocks out the power.

If schools are closed for an extended period of time, a lot of our students can really struggle, says Victory Center principal Kelly Hedges. Its important to get the power back on so they can return to normalcy as quickly as possible.

When equipped with two-way chargers, large electric vehicles like trucks and buses become mobile battery packs. They can plug directly into a building, such as a school, hospital or emergency shelter, and provide enough power to keep the lights on and run critical equipment.

In places that are vulnerable to power outages, bidirectional charging could be a lifeline for local communities.

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This hurricane-hit Caribbean community has an innovative new way to keep the lights on - Environmental Defense Fund

Latin America & The Caribbean Weekly Situation Update (10-16 October 2022) as of 17 October – Colombia – ReliefWeb

Attachments

REGIONAL: HURRICANE JULIA

KEY FIGURES

38 PEOPLE KILLED IN CENTRAL AMERICA

1.6M+ PEOPLE AFFECTED ACROSS CENTRAL AMERICA AND COLOMBIA

The death toll from Tropical Storm Julia has risen to at least 38 people in northern Central America. The devasting storm has affected more than 1.6 million people across Central America and Colombia. In affected countries, humanitarian coordination teams have been activated and continue to provide support to government-led response efforts. The humanitarian community remains concerned about the impacts on an already precarious livelihood and food security situation as well as housing and shelter needs and protection for displaced populations.

In Nicaragua, where Julia made landfall as a Category 1 hurricane, more than 800 homes have suffered varying degrees of damage while some 200,000 people were temporarily left without electricity and access to drinking water. Julias impacts have been devasting across large swaths of El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras, compounding the impacts of an already active rainy season. More than 24,600 people in these countries were forced to seek refuge in emergency shelters after Julias passage.

These three countries have multi-year Humanitarian Response Plans (HRP) that cover many of the areas affected by Julia. However, these HRPs remain significantly underfunded, making it difficult for response efforts to keep pace with mounting needs and creating greater risks for the accumulation of unmet needs that will leave affected populations even more exposed to future shocks.

In El Salvador, preliminary estimates from the World Food Programme (WFP) indicate that around 180,000 people already facing acute food insecurity (IPC Phase 3 or above) have been affected by heavy rains. More than 1.3 million people have been affected by Julia in Guatemala, adding to the over 5.7 million affected during the rainy season. In Honduras, more than 148,000 people have been affected by Julia, bringing the total population affected during the rainy season to more than 188,000 people.

Before battering Central America, Julia passed over northern South America, where La Nia-driven rains have wreaked havoc in recent weeks and months. In Colombia, more than 150,000 people were affected by floods and strong winds in the northern region of La Guajira, home to extremely vulnerable indigenous populations that face high levels of food insecurity and malnutrition.

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Latin America & The Caribbean Weekly Situation Update (10-16 October 2022) as of 17 October - Colombia - ReliefWeb

Spotted: Royal Caribbean teases Icon of the Seas reveal later this week – Royal Caribbean Blog

Could this finally be the week Royal Caribbean finally pulls back the curtain on its next new cruise ship?

Guests on at least one cruise ship got a tease that Royal Caribbean will provide more information about Icon of the Seas.

Betty Lou posted in an unofficial Icon of the Seas Facebook group a photo of the Monday edition of the Cruise Compass from Anthem of the Seas that indicates more information will be available in just a few days.

"Introducing Icon of the Seas in 3 days" is what the graphic says. Since this is the Monday edition of the Cruise Compass, that would indicate Thursday could be the day.

To be clear, the Cruise Compass makes no promises of anything. It simply teases some sort of information coming in three more days.

There is also a QR code, which brings users towww.royalcaribbean.com/icon.

Visiting the website, Royal Caribbean says, "On Thursday, October 20th, were unveiling our newest class of ship and the worlds greatest vacation Icon of the Seas".

From here, guests can sign up for an email update when more information is available.

If you look closely, you can also see what appears to be a rendering of the aft of Icon of the Seas in the background of the image.

It's also worth noting the web page's metadata contains the text, "Presenting the largest cruise ship to ever touch water, Icon of the Seas".

While we don't yet know by which metrics Icon will be the largest, Royal Caribbean has hinted Icon could be larger than the Oasis Class.

Royal Caribbean also posted a new video teaser with new looks at icon of the Seas renderings.

No matter what is announced later this week, it seems Royal Caribbean is going to share more information of some kind.

To say Royal Caribbean has been tight-lipped about Icon of the Seas would be an understatement.

With the ship set to debut likely little more than a year from now (late 2023 is the target date), Royal Caribbean has provided little details about the ship.

There's been no reveal of what the ship even looks like, let alone what features it will have. There's no official word where the ship will sail from, itineraries, or any other pertinent information.

Royal Caribbean has been keeping the entire project as secretive as possible up to now in order to maintain a competitive edge, as well as to likely drum up intrigue among cruise fans eager to know more.

Icon of the Seas is the first of its kind for Royal Caribbean and the first of a new class of ships. Royal Caribbean has not released a new ship class in over a decade; instead, the company has continued to expand its Oasis-class and Quantum-class ships, including Wonder of the Seas in 2022 and Odyssey of the Seas in 2021.

Icon of the Seas is set to debut in late 2023.

There's about 3,000 people working on the ship every day. At its current pace, Icon of the Seas will be 80% complete in December from a construction perspective.

Icon of the Seas will become the cruise lines first LNG powered ship in its fleet.

LNG powered cruise ships feature dual engines that utilize liquified natural gas to propel the ship. This makes the ships more efficient and environmentally friendly.

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Spotted: Royal Caribbean teases Icon of the Seas reveal later this week - Royal Caribbean Blog

Juan Carlos Salazar: Latin America and the Caribbean have particularly favourable conditions for the production of SAF – Aviacionline

During the Open Meeting of the 2022 edition of the ALTA AGM & Airline Leaders Forum held in Buenos Aires, the Secretary General of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), Juan Carlos Salazar, spoke about the challenges facing the industry as it moves out of the pandemic.

The first point made by the executive was related to the tension created between the need for continued growth and long-term sustainability. Specifically, from the point of view of sustainable and environmentally friendly tourism, Salazar pointed out that this requires tourists who can arrive at their destination on zero-emission flights. This poses challenges for those who design and manufacture aircraft and for those in charge of managing company fleets. Fleet management will have a huge impact on the chances of reaching the zero emissions target by 2050, the Secretary added.

FlyZero: Green hydrogen is key to zero-emission aviation future

He also stressed the importance of global cooperation and collaboration to achieve the goal. We need to harmonise the regulatory framework globally. I believe that the way to achieve emission reductions is through our CORSIA programme. The Organisation has a central role to play here, and it must work with all private actors. ICAOs CORSIA programme is the first global measure that represents a cooperative approach, moving away from isolated initiatives that may be taken by national or regional regulators. In other words, it offers a harmonised way to reduce emissions while minimising market distortions and respecting the unique circumstances of ICAO member states.

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In addition, Salazar indicated that the Assembly (ICAOs sovereign and most important body) stressed the importance of using SAFs to achieve carbon neutrality. On this point, he stressed that Latin America and the Caribbean have particularly favourable conditions for the production of SAF. We can become world leaders. This is why I encourage everyone to join our SAF programme.

Another issue he addressed was the resilience of air transport during the pandemic. Salazar said that ICAO decisions were a very important factor in how governments handled the pandemic. For example, the use of digital technologies to minimise contact, the implementation of digital health passports and our master health list -which allows for the validation of vaccination credentials and health passports- provided security at the most critical moments of the pandemic. Given the ever-present possibility of another event similar to 2020, he said the organisation must formulate a new strategy for the future. We must establish a comprehensive framework for crisis management.

On another point, he noted that the Global Aviation Security Plan (GASeP), which aims to improve the effectiveness of global aviation security, is being implemented. The plan aims to bring the international community together to analyse the ever-evolving threats and risks facing the civil aviation community.

Finally, Salazar said that all member states recognise that aviation is a powerful motor of economic activity. They also recognise that air transport services should be liberalised. On the industrys role during the pandemic, he added that it showed us the strategic factor that aviation matters in helping to overcome crises such as COVID-19.

To this end, he also appealed to innovation and the opportunities it creates: During the innovation forum we noted that, not surprisingly, the world at large expects aviation, due to its nature and function, to evolve and adapt better and faster than other industries. Expectations are high and the new normal demands a transformed industry and a more effective ICAO. I will seek to make it a solutions provider, said Salazar, closing his presentation.

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Juan Carlos Salazar: Latin America and the Caribbean have particularly favourable conditions for the production of SAF - Aviacionline

UNGA showcases the benefits of collaboration Caribbean Life – Caribbean Life

The United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) came to a close last month with the unexpected but highly encouraging move by the Danish government to put forward $13 million USD towards loss and damage. With global communities still reeling from the impacts of Hurricane Ian, causing 137 deaths (to date) and estimated over 50 billion USD in damage in the US, after hitting Jamaica, Cayman and Cuba and Hurricane Fiona hitting Bermuda, Dominican Republic, Turks and Caicos, Guadeloupe, Puerto Rico and Canada and deadly floods in Pakistan, a resolution on loss and damage has been at the top of the agenda for at-risk communities. Denmarks contribution is meant to kickstart, or further ignite after Scotlands initiation at COP26, a constructive conversation towards finding an equitable solution. COP27 must advance not just the discussion but further action. Yet this was not the only development at UNGA civil society descended en masse to New York to find opportunities to collaborate on resilience-building projects, and even before Denmarks announcement, there was optimism that the world adjacent to the right track for climate action.

The Caribbean on the World Stage

New York Climate Week, which coincided with UNGA, saw multiple side-events and discussions held that furthered conversations on public-private partnerships towards climate finance and sustainable development. Stakeholders from around the world were present and keen to find opportunities to collaborate. Knowledge-sharing events turned into pathways to unlock grants and financing for projects in the Caribbean, and allowed for constructive conversations with representatives from the private and public sectors. A key consideration that was often brought up throughout climate week and UNGA, was the need to complement the innovation we are seeing especially in the global South as well as the North with more sources of catalytic funding.

Bahamas Prime Minister, Philip Davis had some very pragmatic recommendations, including Let those who pledge write the cheque as we are heading into COP27 where there are often many announcements the details matter. Michael Bloomberg at his event announced the need for and their plan to implement greater tracking mechanisms so that amidst the announcements we are also seeing the action being realized. What we know is that there is momentum and the capacity to take action. Barbados Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley highlighted how international financial structures can and have in the past been altered to respond to crises. The same changes should be made now, she argued, to support vulnerable communities on the frontlines of climate change in future-proofing their infrastructure and institutions. With the power of the pen, we can change the capital that is available to multilateral development banks that will remove the barriers that currently exist for us to fight poverty, she expressed, With those commitments, we can make a difference in todays world.

Unlocking private finance has been a rallying call for us at the CCSA as we continue to match investors with local projects across the Caribbean, and hearing the discussions carried out at the sidelines UNGA have left us with a sense of hope heading into COP27. At UNGA, the Caribbean was firmly on the world stage. From speeches made by the leaders of Barbados, Antigua & Barbuda, Jamaica, Guyana and St. Lucia all advocating for stronger international cooperation at a financial and governance level, to discussions held between civil society and policymakers on advancing loss and damage, the Caribbean communitys interests were well represented.

Building on UNGA

We are now in a critical moment between UNGA and COP27 where there must continue to be discussions, negotiations and progress made on key issues. UNGA has provided multiple avenues for new solutions especially on loss and damage. The opportunities created at UNGA can be further developed through regional meetings such as the 2nd Hydrogen Congress for Latin America & the Caribbean (H2LAC) or the Barbados Chamber of Commerce & Industrys Renewable Energy Expo. Likewise, we need to take the time to build bridges with other communities in similar situations, as Prime Minister Mia Mottley expressed recently, The ability for leaders and experts of island nations to come together on the basis of our shared experiences during this climate crisis, is a moment that is of great importance not just to us who live in island nations, but indeed to the entire world.

This is where the power of UNGA lies in its ability to bring world leaders, civil society, and the private sector together in order to further the conversations that spark action necessary to build a better world. Climate action requires global effort and commitment, as well as local innovation the only way to meld these together is by collaborating, sharing knowledge, and having hard discussions in order to confront the challenges ahead. Building on UNGA means building on loss and damage for communities in the Caribbean and elsewhere with the support of countries like Denmark, or finding new opportunities for resilience-building and climate financing with the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The solutions for a better world are available through collaboration, following UNGA and into COP27, these pathways form and develop, eventually leading to the outcomes we seek.

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UNGA showcases the benefits of collaboration Caribbean Life - Caribbean Life

A Lovely New Caribbean Hotel in the Heart of Rhum Country – Caribbean Journal

There is sugarcane growing right next door, waving in the French Caribbean breeze.

And there was sugarcane along the highway on the way here.

And theres sugarcane in my glass.

This is rhum country, the the island of Basse-Terre in Guadeloupe, a land of lush rainforests, towering volcanoes and some of the best rum on earth.

Its unique microclimate has produced a terroir in which sugarcane thrives, where Guadeloupes Rhum Agricole, the unique French Caribbean rum that distills fermented sugar cane juice instead of molasses, is liquid gold.

While both Martinique and Guadeloupe produce Rhum Agricole, Martiniques rums have found more success beyond their shores; the outstanding rums of Guadeloupe, at least outside of France, remain largely a cask of mystery.

And here at the Habitation Saint Charles, next to a field of cane, is the islands coolest new hotel.

There are just nine rooms here, along with three villas, a mix of rooms, bungalows and villas, with some of the bungalows and all of the villas boasting their own private plunge pools.

Inside, the rooms are well-appointed and sleek, some with Smeg appliances and others with both indoor and outdoor showers.

Mine, for example, had a beautiful stone-walled plunge pool with a waterfall, a welcome soundtrack in the afternoon, swapping places at night for the rhythmic song of Guadeloupes tree frogs.

Theres a lovely main pool that, instead of a fence or glass wall, is built into the shape of a rock garden; a delightful bar with a nice selection of rums from around the Caribbean; and a three-meals-a-day eatery featuring modern Creole cuisine.

No, its not on the beach, and there isnt a view; the story here is the tranquility and the privacy; youre here in the fields and the meadows of Basse-Terre, in an endlessly serene environ that marries an airy, relaxing setting with a prime location for exploring Basse-Terres collection of rum distilleries.

And hotel, which opened at the beginning of this year, is instantly one of the best hotels in all of Guadeloupe.

And if youre looking for the family heritage of Reimonenq, the rugged artistry of Montebello or the aged wonders of Karukera, every one of them is just a 15 or 20 minute drive.

And thats just the beginning of exploring the rum wonders of Basse-Terrego further and you can explore the legendary Bologne or the innovations of the brand-new Papa Rouyo.

Even better, the superb beaches of Deshaies (yes, thats the town from Death in Paradise) and the northwestern coast are less than an hour away, with equally spectacular stretches of sand on the journey there.

And after a day of exploring, or an afternoon at the beach, you come back to the Habitation, find your hanging chair or descend into your pool, perhaps enjoying the treasures youve acquired in the day.

And you listen to the tree frogs and you raise your glass to the quiet of a country evening.

Rhum country, that is.

For more, visit the Habitation Saint Charles.

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A Lovely New Caribbean Hotel in the Heart of Rhum Country - Caribbean Journal

Why Norwegian Cruise Line And Royal Caribbean Group Shares Are Rising During Tuesday’s Session – Norwegia – Benzinga

Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings Ltd NCLH andRoyal Caribbean Cruises Ltd RCLshares are trading higher by 6.68% to $14.06 and 5.52% to $47.60, respectively, during Tuesday's sessionamid strength in cruise stocks. Cruise stocks are also higher in sympathy withCarnival Corp CCLafter the company earlier announced a private offering of $1.25 billion aggregate principal amount of Senior Priority Notes due 2028.

What Happened?

In connection with the offering of the Senior Priority Notes, Carnival and its subsidiaries will contribute 12 unencumbered vessels to the Issuer, with each of these vessels continuing to be operated under one of the company's, Carnival plc's or one of their subsidiaries' brands.

Carnival expects to use the net proceeds of the offering to make principal payments on debt and for general corporate purposes.

Carnival may also use all or a portion of the net proceeds to temporarily repay amounts outstanding under the company's revolver.

See Also:Why Bitcoin- And Ethereum-Related Stock Silvergate Capital Is Getting Hammered

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Why Norwegian Cruise Line And Royal Caribbean Group Shares Are Rising During Tuesday's Session - Norwegia - Benzinga

Impressive Revenue Expectations from Agriculture Production in the Caribbean – South Florida Caribbean News

TRINIDAD & TOBAGO The Caribbean Investment Forum, to be held November 8-11 at the Hyatt Regency in Trinidad and Tobago, is an opportunity for investors to explore the extraordinary opportunities in the Caribbean region. One speaker at the Forum, Ralph Birkhoff, Senior Partner & Principal, Alquimi Renewables, LLC, knows first hand that this region is ripe for investment in sustainable development, particularly climate-resilient protected agriculture and integrated renewable energy systems based on his experiences.

After having lived in the region for over a decade, and being from Canada, Birkhoff said. I realized that many of these fresh produce categories have to be imported as there is not the agricultural infrastructure here to service the local demand with the types of fresh, healthy, delicious produce were accustomed to in more developed markets.

Birkhoff, living and working then as an investor and consultant in the region, realized that many of the types of imported produce sold across the island supermarkets simply could not be grown by traditional means in the region. This gap in the market prompted Birkhoff and his partners at AlquimiRenewables to focus on developing a climate smart greenhouse prototype; one that was adaptable to the unique context of Caribbean islands and resistant to the deadly Category 5 hurricanes that frequent the region, as well as being energy and water efficient. Alquimis greenhouses are designed for sub-tropical zones using various integrated hydroponic systems that can grow these types of produce locally, reducing the need for imports.

Collaborating with local, regional and international investment interests, Alquimi supports the successful implementation and expansion of Greenhouse Farm Projects under their two brands. Island Growers Caribbean (IGC) and BerryCove Organic Farms, Trinidad & Tobagos first commercially scaled climate-smart hydroponic greenhouse farm.

Alquimi and their investor partners are adding to food security in Trinidad & Tobago, Antigua & Barbuda, and Barbados, with plans to expand in 2023 to Guyana,Saint Lucia, Jamaica, and the Bahamas, and many other islands across the region in the coming years.

Because of the constant risk of annual tropical storms that would destroy a standard greenhouse, Birkhoff said. We needed to develop an innovative system that would meet the specific threats of the region. In addition, provide investors with risk mitigation to ensure that our investments wouldnt be affected once operational. Because of the many inherent climate risks in our region, current farms and greenhouse systems dont qualify for insurance to protect their assets. We changed that dynamic and were the first greenhouse farms to be commercially insured in the region.

Alquimi, like many entrepreneurial companies building solutions for the Caribbean shared that indeed the toughest part of the development process of this new greenhouse technology, was getting investors to understand that this is uncharted territory in this region, and that every step and approval we require is a unique one. For instance we were the first applicant ever to receive permission to import live berry plant stock from Europe into Trinidad.

Being transparent with investors is important, he said. Everything were doing is quite new to the region. Were introducing new technologies and engineering solutions at every turn because of the regions unique weather and climate conditions. While these same technologies can be expanded to areas that are less prone to threatening tropical storms, they still need to be engineered for the most extreme local environments. We never know when a Category 5 storm is going to take aim at our facilities only that some day they will.

Alquimi has also recently established Advanced Hydroponic Systems in Trinidad, which designs, engineers and fabricates customized commercial hydroponic systems for sale and export. We see a tremendous opportunity for growth in this unique manufacturing sector to support the expanding regional and international CEA sector.

Ralph Birkhoff will join dozens of other speakers and hundreds of attendees at the Caribbean Investment Forum. The forum is scheduled for November 8-11 at the Hyatt Regency in Trinidad and Tobago. The forum will provide potential investors with information and direct access to leaders throughout the region. Especially those who are creating the innovative solutions the region needs. Plus for those that savvy investors can benefit from financially.

The revenue expectations from expanded agricultural production for this region are impressive, Birkhoff said. Providing this region with additional food security and helping to develop renewable energy solutions the region needs for the next century, are not only key to the regions development, but are outstanding opportunities for investors to realize a solid return while making a lasting difference for the people.

Entrepreneurs and investors interested in attending the Caribbean Investment Forum can learn more and register at http://www.caribbeaninvestmentforum.com.

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Impressive Revenue Expectations from Agriculture Production in the Caribbean - South Florida Caribbean News

New Online Form Streamlines Entry Into This Popular Caribbean Island – TravelAwaits

Have you ever forgotten to complete an immigration form before flying to a new country? If you have, especially during the pandemic, you know how it feels to be barred from boarding your flight until the paperwork is done. When your fellow travelers are in the same boat, flights are delayed and connections are missed. Worry no more, however, when you are heading to Jamaica!

Jamaica, a major Caribbean tourist destination, will soon adopt a Digital Travel Declaration (DTD) solution allowing travelers to submit all entry documentation through one easy online platform. The DTD, developed by SITA, will support Jamaicas Passport, Immigration, and Citizenship Agency (PICA) in clearing passengers for travel pre-departure. The key phrase here is pre-departure. That means a smooth entry procedure with no surprises because the DTD form is filled out online prior to departure youll know youve qualified for entry!

Additional improvements include the implementation of SITAs automated security kiosks in both Montego Bay and Kingston airports. Its all part of Jamaicas push to refine its border processes with the help of new technologies.

Currently, Americans can visit Jamaica with no requirement other than a valid passport. The DTD system is not yet in operation; its part of the countrys new technology plan. At this point, its unknown whether the DTD constitutes a Travel Authorization Form modeling the European Travel Information and Authorization System (ETIAS), or the U.S.s own Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA).

Visitor numbers plunged by more than half in 2021 due to COVID. However, tourism in Jamaica is well on its way to a full recovery, as passenger volumes surge across the globe.

With COVID gone, so are the health forms. As a result of the international trend to cut down on paperwork, many countries that required health forms prior to 2020 abandoned the form for good. Other destinations like Jamaica, where forms were not routinely required, are bringing some forms in to improve border security.

The country currently has no health-related entry requirements in place. Earlier this year, Jamaica reversed a pandemic-era decision, ceasing its demand for vaccination or pre-departure tests of incoming tourists. But, should it be necessary to reinstate this requirement, the DTD will easily accommodate the change.

Its worth noting that Jamaica does require Americans to have sufficient means of subsistence while vacationing, as well as a return or outbound ticket. Proof of these is required for entry into the country.

The Jamaican government has not said that the DTD form is an entry fee or e-Visa; it is only a validation process to check identities and confirm travel purposes. PICA will be able to easily adapt and reconfigure the DTD if/when entry requirements shift. It doesnt seem that the country will tighten rules anytime soon, but tourists should check Jamaicas tourism site for any developments.

For more information on traveling to Jamaica, check out these articles:

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New Online Form Streamlines Entry Into This Popular Caribbean Island - TravelAwaits

‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ Star Reveals He Was Almost Paralyzed By Near-Fatal Fall – Disney Dining

Disney has created a number of memorable live-action films Mary Poppins, The Parent Trap, Hocus Pocus, Cruella,and more. However, one of the most successful live-action franchises was actually based on one of Disneys most popular attractions, Pirates of the Caribbean.

Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearlwas released in 2003 and starred Johnny Depp as Captain Jack Sparrow, Kiera Knightly as Elizabeth Swann, and actor Orlando Bloom as Will Turner. Subsequently, four more Pirates of the Caribbean movies were released Dead Mans Chest, At Worlds End, On Stranger Tides,andDead Men Tell No Tales.

While Johnny Depp was in all 5 of the films, Orlando Bloom was in the first three, then returned forDead Men Tell No Tales.Before starring as Will Turner, Bloom had not done a ton of feature work, but was well-known for playing the role of Legolas in The Lord of the Rings.

Now, in a new project with UNICEF United Nations International Childrens Emergency Fund Bloom is revealing that his acting career almost never happened. The actor revealed that, when he was 19, he was climbing up to a roof terrace when the drainpipe he was climbing broke, and he ended up falling three stories, breaking his back.

According to Bloom, doctors believed that, while his spine was intact, they believed he may never walk again.

I was very fortunate to survive the fall because my spinal cord was still just intact.

When I was in the hospital, I was told for the first four days that I may never walk again. That was really the beginning of what was a long and painful journey for me into recognizing and understanding some of the patterns that had been in my life that had led me to having numerous accidents. And the culmination was breaking my back, which was a near-death experience.

You can hear Bloom tell his story below in a story shared on Instagram by UNICEF.

Thankfully, Bloom defied doctors expectations and walked out of the hospital albeit on crutches just 12 days later. However, he then struggled with mental health issues as he worked to get better from his near-death experience, as well as learn how to make better choices in life.

In recognition of World Mental Health Day, Bloom and UNICEF are teaming up to help bring mental health struggles more into the conversation and make it something families are more comfortable talking about, as well as seeking help when necessary.

You can read more about Blooms partnership with UNICEF, as well as donate to UNICEF by clicking here.

You can watch Bloom in all fivePirates of the Caribbeanfilms on Disney+.

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'Pirates of the Caribbean' Star Reveals He Was Almost Paralyzed By Near-Fatal Fall - Disney Dining

The Ongoing Fight Against Femicides and Violence Against Women in the Caribbean – Rolling Stone

When Bad Bunny dropped his critically acclaimed album Un Verano Sin Ti, fans flocked to the dream-pop track Andrea, which features the Puerto Rican indie duo Buscabulla. Immediately, many listeners thought of Andrea Ruiz Costas, a Puerto Rican woman who was murdered by her partner in 2021. Though Bad Bunny later said that the song isnt directly about Ruiz, Andrea has become an anthem that speaks to the rampant gender violence and growing femicide rates plaguing his home.

It is perhaps the most poignant moment on the album, one that brings up the deep-rooted history of violence against Puerto Rican women, which includes a forced sterilization program the U.S. ran in the 1950s and coincides with the recent overturning of Roe v. Wade, likely to impact access to safe and legal abortion in the U.S. territory. In 2021, Puerto Ricos governor declared a state-of-emergency on the island after growing violence against women, something many grassroots organizations and on-the-groud groups are working to address.

Puerto Rican women, and women in Latin America overall, will continue to suffer behind white patriarchal ideology, says domestic violence lawyer and professor at Universidad de Puerto Rico Recinto de Ro Piedras, Mariana Iriarte. She suggests a history of toxic masculinity behind media and culture is a major reason why there continues to be violent behavior toward women in the Caribbean and Latin America.

Although better data on gender-based violence is needed now more than ever, we know the COVID pandemic heightened femicides and attempted femicides, especially in Latin America, where many countries have been grappling with a deep-seated history of unequal gender dynamics. According to emerging evidence from the World Bank Group, Latin America saw increases in gender-based violence that can be linked to stricter social distancing measures: In Colombia, there was a boost in domestic violence calls by 91 percent, while in Brazil, the probability of femicides more than doubled during intense periods of isolation. Databases like the Gender Equality Observatory for Latin America and the Caribbean aim to annually consolidate and update statistics on womens violent and gender-based deaths, based on the reported incidents provided by governments, which leaves room for egregious and incomplete documentation.

The Caribbean continues to have some of the highest rates of violence as well. The Dominican Republic had the second-highest rate of femicides reported in 2020, according to the United Nations. Just one motoconcho ride away from the Dominican Republic, the Haitian feminist organization Ngs Mawon hosted a campaign against femicides earlier this year, utilizing street art by local artists like V!cky Onlien. They simultaneously raised awareness about Haitis environmental issues, which they see as a direct correlation with how society treats Haitian women. The organization Alas Tensas Gender Observatory (OGAT) in Cuba, as well as the #YoSiTeCreo platform in Cuba, verified 18 femicides on the island this year alone, leading groups such as Red Femenina de Cuba to urge the Cuban government declare a state of emergency for gender violence.

Despite todays widened visibility and social criticism, femicide continues to rise throughout the Caribbean, with women from Black and poorer regions being disportionately affected, Iriarte explains. She helps victims of domestic violence in Puerto Rico obtain protection orders and works intimately with groups such as Taller Salud, a community-based feminist organization dedicated to improving acess to health care, to reducing violence, and encourage economic growth through education and activism for women. An essential part of the work needed is to examine issues of gender-based violence in an intersectional way that addresses the specific challenges and oppression Black and trans women face.

We have to look at this from an intersectional lens; a white cishetero woman is not in the same position as a Black lesbian woman, she says. These intersectionalities are fundamental; we cannot talk about femicide without talking about the femicide rates involving trans women, let alone Black trans women.

One constant obstacle is a lacking support infrastructure and a police system that often works against the interests of Black women in particular. Weve customarily made the association of safety with law enforcement, and the reality is when you look at the stats, the police do not serve us, Iriarte says. They do not serve our most vulnerable. For Black and trans women in particular, police are quite frankly not an option. She continues, If you are a Black or trans woman in Puerto Rico and you seek help from the cops, you yourself risk going to jail, being physically assaulted, or worse, assassinated under their watch.

She urges the redistribution of wealth in the abolition of police. Weve adopted political strategies from the Black feminist political movements of the United States. Police abolition isnt just a matter of deconstructing police, but of redistributing the funds and resources robbed of the communities theyve sworn to protect and serve Thats money taken away from the communities that need it most.

What is happening is alarming and more so in a scenario of economic and political crisis. We ask for help and support from all projects, organizations, and conscious and sensitive citizens, in seeking solutions to this problem, reads an excerpt from a statement of emergency that Cubas Alas Tensas earlier this year, expressing a similar distrust of police from their neighboring activists in Puerto Rico. The PNR [Polica Nacional Revolucionaria] does not do its job, use social networks and make it viral. If you have information about events of this type, write to us, and we will carefully investigate the sources. We need a citizen alliance for the end of feminicides.

In the Dominican Republic, feminist organizations have also been tackling similar issues. The lack of protections women and girls face in the country has also played out in music and popular culture: On April 22, ahead of Bad Bunnys summer soundtrack, dembow rapper Rochy RD was arrested in Santo Domingo for allegedly sexually assaulting a minor and participating in child sex trafficking. According to a lawsuit filed against him and the artist La Demente 1212, the couple recruited and paid low-income girls between the ages of 16 and younger to engage in sexual activities with the rapper. While the recording artist awaited trial inside La Victoria prison, followers and colleagues across social media protested his innocence while blaming victims under the guise of respectability politics.

Aquelarre RD is one such collective that has been raising awareness of what women and girls are up against since 2019. They formed in response to not just the lack of state protection around Black and queer women in the Dominican Republic, but a lack of solidarity and recognition among other so-called feminist movements on the island.

We realized that the Dominican feminist movement, apart from the fact that it is largely concentrated in the capital of Santo Domingo, is not interested in connecting with all bases of feminism, which is to say that this is a movement made up of women who are privileged and from middle-to-upper class society, says Aquelarre RD founder, Esther Giron. They are not interested in connecting with the many different issues that uniquely impact Black women living in barrios, in populous provinces, in campos, where many are fighting over basic needs, like healthcare, access to healthy food, employment, and education.

Currently, Aquelarre RD consists of 13 members from throughout the Monseor Nouel province in the central city of Bonao. They have dedicated their efforts to creating spaces focused on safety and education for Black and LGBTQ women from neglected environments while championing womens rights and legal protection through popular education (or education in the language of the people), community workshops, and political activism and protest.

In the case of Rochy RD, the violation of various articles of the Dominican Penal Code, including the Code for the Protection of Children and Adolescents were cited, yet local activists understood why justice would likely not be served. There is no social framework for those laws to ever actually be put into action, Dominican cultural critic and educator Zahira Kelly said in a recent interview. The police do not care; theyre the first ones to blame the victim. The laws in this case become useless, because not only does the state not care to enforce those laws, the social norms here say that they should not be enforced either.

In September of last year, many young feminist leaders from various national groups met in Loma de Blanco, Bonao, Dominican Republic to reflect, share, and reimagine the challenges of the womens and feminist movement of the Dominican Republic, hoping to update the nations sex, gender and racial discourse while outlining the deeply fragmented and obscured history of violence against Black and brown bodies.

As a result of that gathering, the National Pre-Encounter of Young Women (PNMJ) issued a political declaration to the state, with a thorough account of demands that include the construction of an anti-racist, plural and popular feminist movement that connects with the demands of Black women of the popular sectors and peripheries, and criticzes the feminism that prevails in the Dominican Republic, which has lost its social base and responds to Eurocentric currents of thought and universalizes the category of women, ignoring the oppressions that go beyond the essentialism of the sex-gender category; such as class and race.

While the fight for womens right frequently focuses on access to abortion, Giron notes that countries in the Carribbean need muli-prong solutions that capture the nuances of the struggles for gender equality. It seems like the Dominican feminist movement stops at abortion, which is super important, but that is simply one struggle, Giron says. We cannot speak about the right to bodily autonomy if we are not considering what that looks like for our most vulnerable women and girls.

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The Ongoing Fight Against Femicides and Violence Against Women in the Caribbean - Rolling Stone

St Vincent will host the 11th Caribbean Beekeeping Congress – St Vincent Times

The 11th Caribbean Beekeeping Congress will be held in St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) from Sunday, 30 October to Wednesday, 2 November 2022, according to an announcement made earlier this year. This years subject is Building the Resilience of the Beekeeping Industry Following a Natural Disaster.

Not only will this event provide Beekeepers with the opportunity to gain exposure, but it will also assist in sensitizing the wider communities on the importance of bees to our food security. This congress will also promote opportunities for new alternative livelihoods, particularly for young persons.

Monday, October 17th 2022, saw the official launch of the 11th Caribbean Beekeeping Congress at SPAZIO Headquarters Conference Room in Frenches. Present at the launch were Cornelius Richards, Coordinator for the Caribbean Beekeeping Congress, Allan Williams, Beekeeping Extension Officer and Shafika Andrews, Head of the Secretariat for the Caribbean Beekeeping Congress.

Coordinator for the 11th Caribbean Beekeeping Congress, Cornelius Richards indicated that the focus of this years congress will be on the natural factors that are contributing to the decline of the bee population. The 2021 La Soufriere Volcano eruption severely impacted the beekeeping industry in SVG, however, since then the bee population is recovering smoothly which is largely impart due to the hard work of the Apiculturist of SVG, he informed. Mr Richards concluded by inviting regional and international partners to SVG to share information on resiliency development in the beekeeping industry following a natural disaster.

Beekeeping Extension Officer, Allan Williams disclosed that the event would be a dynamic experience with several activities centered on the dissemination of information about the industry. He also stated that there would be a mass tree planting activity as part of the endeavour to replenish the tree population following the volcanic eruption as it plays a major role in bee development. Mr Williams extended an invitation to all current and aspiring beekeepers to register as it can assist in building their capacity in bee development.

Head of the Secretariat for the 11th Caribbean Beekeeping Congress, Shafika Andrews encouraged persons to make the investment as the knowledge acquired would be worth it in the end. Do not hesitate to learn about bees and the importance of honey. She stressed. Persons can register online at https://cbc.acboonline.com/ or at the main office, located at SPAZIOs Headquarters in Frenches. They can be contacted via telephone number, (784) 434 4031 or via email, [emailprotected]

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St Vincent will host the 11th Caribbean Beekeeping Congress - St Vincent Times