Staten Island Museum celebrates its 140th Anniversary with 140 Objects online exhibition – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND N.Y. -- This Friday, the Staten Island Museum is celebrating its 140th anniversary of its founding on November 12, 1881 by a group of young naturalists who came together with the idea to preserve the natural history of Staten Island.

To celebrate this day, the Museum has multiple initiatives, including a 140 Object virtual exhibition. The exhibition includes historical maps, periodical cicada specimen, sculptures, modern art, and historical artifacts chosen by the Staten Island Museums collections staff. It is also the first installment of the museums new online collections database.

Hylan Plaza, Peter Van Dyck (American, 1978) (Courtesy/ Staten Island Museum)Staten Island Museum

We are grateful to the founders for acting on their love for Staten Island and their instincts to preserve specimens. Now, 140 years later, the current museum staff and Board of Trustees are building upon that legacy and pursuing what it means to be a 21st century museum and New York Citys only remaining cultural institution with collections that span natural science, history, and art, said Janice Monger, Staten Island Museum President and CEO. We welcome the public to visit us in person for a stunning site-specific artist installation Jennifer Angus: Magicicada or peruse a new online exhibition 140 Objects to experience the collections from home.

Jennifer Angus, Magicicada at the Staten Island museum (Courtesy/ Staten Island Museum)

Staten Island Museum is home to one of the worlds largest collection of cicadas, the Magicicada exhibit. Magicicada refers to a genus of cicada that was designated in 1925 by Staten Island Museum co-founder and cicada expert William T. Davis. The exhibit is now featuring an installation from artist, Jennifer Angus. The installation is filled with patterns created with preserved insects. Angus installation is currently on view until May 2022.

Arch-Hommage VII, Helen Levin (Courtesy/ Staten Island Museum)Staten Island Museum

Another anniversary initiative the museum is holding is part of its longstanding art show tradition of the past 70 years. The open call is for an exhibition called Yes, And which is aimed to open in June of 2022. The theme suggests the abundance of experience on and perception of Staten Islands art and artists. Applications are being accepted through December 31, 2021.

-Morris Moving Company, Gift of the Morris Family, Collection (Courtesy/ Staten Island Museum)Staten Island Museum

Staten Island Museum is also partnering with the Richard B. Dickenson Chapter of the Afro-American Historical and Genealogical Society (SIAAHGS) and Frederick Douglass Memorial Park, for over the next two years they will be working on the Access, Collaboration, and Equity in Genealogy (ACEGen) initiative to digitize burial records dating back to the cemeterys founding in the 1930s. ACEGen will begin with a special focus on African American records, and the museums collection will be accessible to the public online with historical documents that are under-represented in the public record.

Staten Island Museum timeline from 1881-2007 (Courtesy/ Staten Island Museum)

Staten Island Museum timeline from 1881-2007 (Courtesy/ Staten Island Museum)

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Staten Island Museum celebrates its 140th Anniversary with 140 Objects online exhibition - SILive.com

BREAKING: Entire Area of The Wizarding World of Harry Potter – Hogsmeade Temporarily Closed at Universal’s Islands of Adventure – wdwnt.com

The Wizarding World of Harry Potter Hogsmeade is closed this morning at Universals Islands of Adventure. The land and all three of its rides (Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey, Hagrids Magical Creatures Motorbike Adventure, and Flight of the Hippogriff) have yet to open today.

A sign at the entrance to Islands of Adventure informs guests that Hagrids Magical Creatures Motorbike Adventure will be open later today.

Some Team Members from Hogsmeade are out in the Lost Continent, advising guests of the closure and directing traffic.

Team Members out front are advising guests to visit Universal Studios Florida for The Wizarding World of Harry Potter Diagon Alley. No official reason for the closure has been given, but some Team Members are reporting they are being sent home due to a power outage.

Guests were able to board the Hogwarts Express at Hogsmeade Station for a one-way trip to Universal Studios Florida. However, the train has now ceased operations from either station.

Power outages are not uncommon, but the early release of scheduled Team Members may indicate that this will not be resolved quickly.

This is a developing story, so stay tuned for further updates.

For more Universal Studios news from around the world, follow Universal Parks News Today on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.

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BREAKING: Entire Area of The Wizarding World of Harry Potter - Hogsmeade Temporarily Closed at Universal's Islands of Adventure - wdwnt.com

Private islands for sale in Queensland going cheap, but lifestyle has its challenges – ABC News

Eager buyers trying to get a foot on the property ladder could snap up a tropical island for the price of a one-bedroom apartment in Sydney, a real estate agent says.

Private islands are no longer just a privilege for billionaires like Richard Branson as buyers look beyond the mainland to get more bang for their buck.

"There is a greater interest," Richard Vanhoff, a real estate agent specialising in islands, said.

"With the pricing of southern states, they are paying big money for houses and they still don't get the waterfront.

"When you are buying an island, you get all the waterfront."

Around Australia, private Islands have been snapped up in the past 12 months for as little as $320,000.

Queenslander Craig Becky was searching for an investment property last year when he found an offer too good to pass up.

"I actually saw it on a morning TV show and it was touted as the cheapest island in Australia," he said.

"I thought, 'Oh it's in my price range.'

"I just never had in my mind I would buy an island one day, but when it came up, I thought, 'I just have to have it.'

"Life is short."

Mr Becky is now the proud owner of Worthington Island, off the coast of Gladstone, which he bought for "well under" the asking price of $385,000.

The 27-hectare island has an off-the grid beach shack and a private airstrip.

"It's not what everybody thinks of palm trees and white sand," Mr Becky said.

"it's more mangroves and crabbing and fishing. It's like a big bush block with a shack on it.

"It's really relaxing have a fish, have a nap, go for a walk around.

"It's beautiful, I love it."

But the lifestyle does not come without challenges Mr Becky doesn't get much in return for his rates, with no-one to pick up the weekly rubbish and access to the island is at the mercy of the tides.

But for this island owner, the benefits far outweigh the inconveniences.

"Everything is on island time," he said.

"The thing I love is that there are no neighbours."

The sale of islands is consistent with buying patterns since the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the Real Estate Institute of Queensland (REIQ).

"What we are seeing is that many people are wanting to buy regional properties because of the lifestyle," REIQ chief executive Antonia Mercorella said.

But she said it was difficult to gauge whetherthe obsession with space would remain when things got backto normal.

"Before you invest, I think you really need to think about the practicalities of it," Ms Mercorella said.

"In some cases the island can be quite remote and difficult and expensive to get to.

"It's not something you would buy for the purpose of flipping you would want to be buying it with the view to perhaps holding onto it for the longer term."

Judging by available listings, an island lifestyle can be achieved for any price.

Poole Island in the Whitsundays has a million dollar price tag, while Temple Island off the coast of Mackay is on the market for $1.7m.

Or, if you've got a spare $15m, perhaps Marble Island off the central Queensland coast is more to your liking.

Mr Vanhoff said the lengthy lockdowns in southern states over the past two years had made the freedom of island living hugely appealing.

"People are sitting back in those areas that are in restrictions thinking about life and thinking about their future," he said.

"I guess islands come to mind they go, 'Oh, wouldn't we like to do that, that would be great, we wouldn't have to put up with this.'

"I get the odd call when there is a big lotto being presented.

"They'll ring me and get all the information out of me and get all excitedbecause their clairvoyant told them they would win and then they don't win.

"But it's all good fun."

Ms Mercorella said while private islands were being marketed more regularly, their sale remained unusual.

"It's probably a fantasy that many of us have," she said.

"But I think for the majority of us, practicality and reality probably sets in and prevents us from making the choice."

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Private islands for sale in Queensland going cheap, but lifestyle has its challenges - ABC News

Young Grand Island man defies the odds with incredible comeback – WIVB.com – News 4

A young man from Grand Island is defying the odds.

A year and a half ago, it was unknown if Ben Richard would ever walk again.

And now, hes not only walking, but hes an inspiration for other Western New Yorkers battling spinal cord injuries.

These days, 19-year-old Ben Richard is walking, and even dancing with a lively spirit.

Hes independent.

He gets by with the help of his family, friends, therapists at ECMC and his 9 iron, which he uses as a cane.

Its actually really nice. Its got the rubber grip so it doesnt move anywhere, explained Ben.

We first introduced you to Ben last year.

His WWII Veteran grandfather graduated high school with him, wheeling him across the stage.

Separated by decades and vast life experiences, it was a day that almost never happened.

On May 9, 2020, a car crash changed his life.

The first probably week and a half to two weeks, I dont really remember much. I remember a little bit of the ICU, said Ben.

Ben was a passenger in a car that skidded on ice, ejecting him.

Most serious of his injuries, Ben fractured his scull, broke his shoulder and dislocated his back at the L3,L4 vertebrae, pinching his spinal cord and paralyzing him below the knee.

He explains the sensation as pain that shoots through the roof.

Feelings very strange below the knee. I pretty much have all the pain that comes with stubbing a toe but its like so much worse, said Ben.

But it doesnt stop him and it never has.

Today, Ben is paving his own path.

In his early days of recovery, Ben was told by doctors, they werent sure if hed ever walk.

To shove it in their faces, I got contraction when I tried to point my toes down in my calf. Im hopeful, said Ben.

Bens physical therapist Julie Buono is helping Ben gain strength.

His progress is huge. When he started, he was in a wheelchair, he wasnt standing. He cold transfer from the wheelchair to a mat and we had to do a lot of stretching, explained Buono.

He comes to outpatient physical therapy at ECMC twice a week, and he works hard.

Were trying to work on his balance so he can get rid of the cane eventually, said Buono.

Ben is thankful to be here.

He was 18 at the time of his injury, which is the youngest you can be to participate in this program.

He says its the best therapy for his type of injury.

I got really really lucky to I mean lucky is a funny word but like I was blessed enough to come here, said Ben.

While Ben works to recover, hes also here for the camaraderie.

Hes everyones biggest cheerleader in the gym and its cool to see. Hes the first one willing to talk to someone, to encourage them, to tell his story if he needs to. So, he really is a positive influence on anyone he meets, said Occupational Therapist, Rachael Ponichtera.

Despite only being 19, Ben is now a peer counselor for people with similar injuries.

Through all of this, hes gained something really important: perspective.

You take a lot of things for granted before and now its just like especially being in like groups of seeing everyone on the MRU and seeing people down here, its like Im glad I have my arm. It could be gone. It couldve flew off. You know? Or, Im just glad Im this far. I see some people come in and Im like you know, I was there, explained Ben.

Two weeks ago, Ben participated in the USA Wheelchair Football League and he made an incredible play, catching a pass.

Ben says no matter where life takes him, hell always find success.

A story of motivation for people, no matter how high the odds are stacked against you.

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Young Grand Island man defies the odds with incredible comeback - WIVB.com - News 4

2022 Budget Address – Government of the Virgin Islands

2022 BUDGET ADDRESS

DELIVERED BY

PREMIER AND MINISTER OF FINANCE

HONOURABLE ANDREW. A. FAHIE

UNDER THE THEME:

Strategically positioning New Industries with Sustainability and Innovation: Continuing to improve the standard of living with focus on Education, Small Business, Healthcare and Technology

Thursday, 11th November, 2021

Thank you Mr. Speaker.

It is important that I begin this Budget Address from the words of Abba, our Father as found in Luke 12:8, And I tell you, everyone who acknowledges me before men, the Son of Man also will acknowledge before the angels of God.

I thank God for His continued strength as we turn this Budget Address over in to His hands.

I say Good Day and GODs Blessings to all Honourable Members of this Honourable House and all the people of these beautiful Virgin Islands wherever they may be, as we continue to move forward in this New Regular, living and working with COVID-19.

Together we continue to confront all the challenges and embracing opportunities that this unpredictable pandemic has thrown, and continues to throw our way.

I am pleased and proud, as a Virgin Islander, to stand today to present this fourth National Budget in under three years, and to do so with sufficient time in hand for all the necessary processes to be completed so that everything will be in place for the start of the new financial year in January 2022. Simply put; since taking office, all our Budgets have passed on time as mandated by the Constitution.

Introduction

Mr Speaker, it is important for us as a young country to bear in mind the symbolism of what it is for a people to develop, present, approve and implement their own Budget; especially when they are able to generate the funds and to balance their Budget for themselves year after year after year. It is something to be proud of, to be inspired by and to be encouraged.

For this empowerment, we thank our foreparents. Let us join in paying tribute to our foreparents who started and maintained the course, on the journey to ensuring that the Virgin Islands people are empowered to pursue their aspirations of being fully in control of their destiny.

It was the late Theodolph Faulkner of Anegada and other great Virgin Islands leaders who made the bold and unequivocal declaration on 24 November, 1949: [And I Quote]

We are imbued with a desire to decide our local affairs our own selves. We have outgrown that undesirable stage where one official, or an official clique, makes decisions for us.

We are seeking the privilege of deciding how our monies are spent and what shall be our Presidential laws and policies. [End of Quote]

That was the impetus for the return of legislative function to the shores of the Virgin Islands, paving the way for Virgin Islands people to enjoy full participation in the democratic election of their representatives and for the making of laws to govern themselves legislation such as the Appropriations Act.

As we continue to honour the struggles and strides of those who led before us, we recall the Late and Great former Chief Minister Dr. the Honourable Willard Wheatley, the first Virgin Islander to officially hold the post of Minister of Finance, on 1 June, 1977.

Dr. Wheatleys exceptional public management saw the Government of the Virgin Islands independently closing a budget deficit in 1978 and ending the year with a budget surplus of $1.3 million. Through this, in one of the most significant milestones in the political and economic journey of our nation-building, the Virgin Islands graduated out of Grant-In-Aid, and have maintain this course through the decades.

Virgin Islanders liberated themselves from external financial dependence on the United Kingdom. And as I said, we graduated from Grant-In-Aid, and have maintain this course through the decades for all Chief Ministers, for all Premiers.

And at this time, I would like to take a moment. Because it is two years now today since Honourable RT ONeal died. And I would like us to stand and take a moment of silence, Mr Speaker, in honour of his memory.

Thank You. May his soul rest in eternal peace.

Virgin Islanders liberated themselves from external financial dependence on the United Kingdom; clearly demonstrating the ability of our people to manage our own economic affairs from each Chief Minister to each Premier, hold each other accountable, and uphold their dignity. Virgin Islanders are not defined by anyone or any circumstance. We are innovative, capable and resilient. We just have to continue to believe in ourselves and stay laser-focused on our true Virgin Islands Vision.

The year 2021 has been another unprecedented year for the Virgin Islands. While your Government wished we could focus exclusively on delivering our Manifesto pledges - remedying decades old problems with our aging infrastructure and furthering the development of the Virgin Islands for the benefit of our people - this unfortunately could not entirely be the case.

For the second consecutive year, like most - if not all - other countries, we remained in battle with the worst pandemic to hit the world in over 100 years. The COVID-19 pandemic, in recent months, is presenting new threats in the forms of aggressive variant strains, as it continues to supress economic activity generally in every part of the world, and more specifically in the areas of tourism and travel, upon which our economy is heavily reliant. This is subduing revenues for the public and private sectors, and creating hardship for many of our people whose jobs and income streams are adversely affected, not just locally, but globally.

In 2021 we saw a major spike in COVID-19 cases on our shores and grief that was unprecedented in our era in the loss of 37 additional lives. We ask God to continue to comfort families and loved ones, as we also remember our loved ones who passed due to different causes. Many of them were friends. Many of them were family. Thankfully, according to recent data, the number of positive cases now stands at 15, all of which were detected by our effective travel screening protocols. We wish those persons a full and speedy recovery.

In January 2021, the United Kingdom Government declared it an appropriate time to institute a Commission of Inquiry (COI) on Governance in the Virgin Islands, under the Commissions of Inquiry Act 1880.

The Inquiry, which is still in progress, placed significant demands on the resources of our Public Service as documents dating back more than a decade had to be sourced, officers had to prepare affidavits and statements, and senior public officials including Ministers, Permanent Secretaries, heads of departments and others had to attend the COI to give evidence.

The Inquiry took up significant time and attention, but Mr Speaker, your Government fully and faithfully participated in the proceedings, with the hope that a transparent COI would lead to a just and beneficial outcome for the people of the Virgin Islands.

These challenges have come as we continue to recover from the 2017 August Floods and two devastating Category 5 hurricanes Irma and Maria, that created a paradigm shift for our economy. We continue our recovery efforts with our limited resources.

But, as I will explain later in this Budget Address, your Government and its agencies and departments, still managed to accomplished a lot of work for the development of the Virgin Islands, amid the challenges and distractions.

This is an appropriate time to commend our public officers across all ministries, agencies and departments. And I must commend all f our public officers for the hard work they have done through these last few years during the hurricanes, during COVID-19 and even during the COI. I want to say that they mean a lot to me as Premier, because even during the COVID-19 lockdown, I personally took the time to call each and every public officer in terms of Permanent Secretaries and Department Heads and Senior Officers, and even some other officers everyone, to see how they were doing and to see how they were coping with COVID-19. Because larger than the public service, we are one people and we do have a life, and we do have to make sure as leaders that we care.

So, I commend our public officers and all those who have powered through with commitment to keep our Virgin Islands moving forward during these difficult times. Our successes are the results of collective effort and dedication.

The Acting Financial Secretary, Mr Jeremiah Frett, the officers in the Ministry of Finance, and the Permanent Secretaries who provided the Ministry with the relevant programmes of works and project details, have done an exceptional job in preparing the 2022 National Budget, which I present now under the theme of,

Strategically positioning New Industries with Sustainability and Innovation: Continuing to improve the standard of living with focus on Education, Small Business, Healthcare and Technology.

Mr Speaker, what follows in this Budget Address is just a summary and a snapshot of some of the work that has been done and some of the targets that we are setting for the year ahead. More comprehensive details can be found in the Medium-Term Framework Plan 2022-2024 and the Draft Estimates of the 2022 Budget, which I encourage all our citizens to read once it is published.

Knowledge is power, and these documents will provide persons with the knowledge and information they need to more actively participate in the opportunities in our economy.

The Global Economy

Mr Speaker, context is important. Therefore, we must situate the Virgin Islands economy within the global landscape. That is the only way we can have a proper appreciation for what has happened in 2021 and what the projections will be for 2022.

The advent of COVID-19 vaccines early in 2021 brought optimism for the resurgence of economies after a stagnant 2020.

In June 2021, the World Bank, in its Global Economic Prospects Report, forecasted that the global economy was set to expand 5.6 percent in 2021 - the strongest post-recession pace in 80 years underpinned by steady but highly unequal vaccine access. The July 2021 global growth projection from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for 2021 was for 6.0 percent over 2020.

Perspective is, however, important. This recovery was, however, projected to be unevenly concentrated in a few major economies, with most emerging market and developing economies lagging behind. While about 90 percent of advanced economies were expected to regain their pre-pandemic per capita income levels by 2022, only about one-third of emerging market and developing economies were expected to do so.

Further, the World Bank noted, in low-income countries, the effects of the pandemic are reversing earlier gains in poverty reduction and compounding food insecurity and other long-standing challenges.

According to the World Bank, by 2022, the global output would remain about 2 percent below pre-pandemic projections, and per capita income losses incurred in 2020 would not be fully undone in about two-thirds of emerging markets and developing economies.

Simply put, COVID has messed up the entire worlds economy.

The IMF, however, in its October 2021 World Economic Outlook Report has downgraded the 2021 growth projection by 0.1 percent.

The world will have to wait until June 2022 to hear what the World Bank has to say.

Mr. Speaker, no-one has a playbook for this unpredictable and unprecedented COVID-19.

I caution that persons should not get carried away by the overall figures, because while the projections are very encouraging for the wealthier economies, the situation is very much the opposite in the less developed economies.

Vaccine access, vaccine hesitancy, the emergence of new variants of the virus, and disruptions to major supply chains, are among the main contributors to the reduced projection. Pandemic-related disruptions to contact-intensive sectors have also caused the labour market recovery to significantly lag the output recovery in most countries.

The IMF is maintaining its projection for 4.9 percent global growth in 2022.

Mr Speaker by April 2020, international tourist arrivals globally had dropped by 98 percentage points from pre-pandemic levels, according to data from the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO). The recovery has been very sluggish.

A joint report by the UNWTO and the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) in June 2021 estimates a total loss of more than $4 trillion to the global Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for the years 2020 and 2021 due to COVID-19s direct impact on tourism and its ripple effect on other sectors. Some 53 percent of this loss will be experienced by developing countries.

The Virgin Islands is clearly not unique in our experience, Mr Speaker.

According to the UNWTO/UNCTAD report, experts do not expect a return to pre-COVID arrival levels until 2023 or later. The main barriers are travel restrictions, slow containment of the virus, low traveller confidence and a poor economic environment.

Additionally, the profile of travellers has changed. Retirees, who tend to spend more per trip, are more likely to stay at home. Younger travellers, who seem more willing to travel tend to stay longer but spend less than older travellers. This means that tourism-dependent developing countries must diversify their industries.

While we will strive to be optimistic, we have to also be realistic.

We must measure our expectations while global tourism recovers. We must take heed. We must adjust our thinking and our strategy.

We must pivot to our strengths, improve on our weaknesses, be cognisant of threats and position ourselves to take advantage of opportunities when they arise - and to even create our own opportunities through innovation.

We must push forward, adapt, evolve and we must continue to diversify our economy.

Financial Performance Review

But notwithstanding this glum projection from the global tourism community, I am pleased to say that the Virgin Islands tourism industry did show some encouraging signs for recovery, particularly in the recent months. And for this we must say to GOD be all the glory.

We have much to be thankful for and much to look forward to in 2022 as a preferred destination and jurisdiction.

Despite the unavoidable restrictions on travel such as reduced airline and ferry capacities which apply not only to the Virgin Islands, the demand for the Virgin Islands sun, sand, sea and overall experience has remained high.

Up to the end of October just below 38,000 persons entered the Virgin Islands via the air and sea ports, with the vast majority being visitors.

With a more aggressive advocacy for mass vaccinations, the reduction of the BVI Gateway fee and easing of the quarantine periods for fully vaccinated travellers, it is expected that the gradual increase in arrival numbers will continue through the rest of 2021 to reach a projected 46,000 overnighters and day-trippers.

Based on the cruise schedules published by the BVI Ports Authority (BVIPA), it was projected that a total of around 66,000 cruise passengers would visit our shores by the end of 2021.

And in case you are wondering, I want to thank all of those who work at the Cyril B. Romney Tortola Pier Park, the BVI Ports Authority and especially all of us who went to Seatrade and were able to help this to happen with Gods help.

Critical to this progress was the Virgin Islands profile as a relatively safe destination for travel during the pandemic.

We were clear that our strategy for the reopening of the borders and businesses, was a managed one with vigilance to keep everyone safe.

Notwithstanding the protocols for operations, our people generally kept in line with what was required. Our visitors adapted and adjusted to our New Regular, so that activity could continue to expand.

Mr Speaker, there were those at this time who said that the BVI will never be back. There were those who were saying at this time that other places were eating our lunch. But Iam here to say today that because of the measures that we have put in place, we not only now have our lunch back; we have the entire store to get breakfast, lunch and dinner.

For 2021:

We are on our way back.

When the pandemic struck in March 2020, your Government took some decisive measures, which we said although they were tough -- were aimed at protecting the lives and livelihood of our people and the economy from catastrophic damage.

The level of economic activity that can be seen taking place is proof that we have been able to achieve this so far, and our economy remains stable and resilient after all it has been through in recent years.

The stimulation of the economy through various measures assisted in reducing some financial burden on our systems, while creating opportunity for business ideas, innovative operations, and boosting activities where possible.

For 2021:

The projected improvement in economic activity in 2021 came as no surprise following the stimulation of the economy from the roll-out of a $40 million grant from the BVI Social Security Board (BVISSB) in the third quarter of 2020.

Do keep in mind that $10 million from the BVISSB grant was placed into an unemployment relief fund and managed by BVISSB. Also, $7.5 million from the grant was paid to the National Health Insurance (NHI), where from the inception previous Governments had been delinquent in making payments.

Along with the economic stimulus package, your Government also injected resources into the economy by advancing the roll-out of a number of public sector capital projects.

The combination of these two measures the grant and the capital projects resulted in a vitamin boost for economic activity across many sectors leading to a 2.2 percent upward revision of the projection for the overall growth in 2021 over 2020, compared to the 7.5 percent contraction that was first forecasted.

Mr Speaker, your Government is fully aware of the need to continue exercising a reasonable level of caution. Because we continue to get back stronger and stronger daily, but we are not there yet. But thank GOD we are not where we were.

Hence, while this improvement is encouraging, we are cognisant that it is not enough to outweigh the effects of the pandemic on our GDP. We will get there, but it will take diligence, persistence and vigilance.

With respect to Financial Services, Mr Speaker, despite the continued declining annual trend in the market share of the industry in 2020, which was accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic, there was a rebound of the financial services industry in mid-2020, which continued into the first half of 2021, with incorporation figures that were similar to pre-pandemic levels. New incorporations grew by 68.5 percent and 24.1 percent by the end of the second quarter of 2021 compared to the same period in 2020 and 2019, respectively.

Incorporations up to August, numbered 23,182, growing 65.5 percent when compared with the same period in 2020. Similar growth patterns were recorded in revenue from fees up to August 2021 with a growth of 3.7 percent compared to the similar period in 2020.

Revenue from Financial Services surpassed the initial 2021 estimate of $184.4 million and is projected to close at $196.4 million more than $7 million in excess of the 2020 figure of $189.75 million. This is of course due to the sterling efforts of our innovative and driven team at the Financial Services Commission and our other industry stakeholders.

While the projection is that new incorporations will remain steady or be slightly improved at best, we must be on guard that the overall declining trends witnessed over the last 10 years, in both incorporations and transactional activity can continue.

In the construction sector, Town and Country Planning Department data shows that construction imports grew by a substantial 98.8 percent in the first half of 2021 - to $51.98 million, compared to the first half of 2020. Inflationary pressures do continue to be felt across goods following the demand and supply stresses affecting the general movement of prices impacted by the pandemic. And may I add, this is not just in the BVI, but this is happening throughout the entire world.

While the pandemic impacts linger, in 2021 some sectors continue to operate with certain constraints. On the other hand, other sectors such as mining and quarrying, construction, and transportation and storage are showing signs of increasing economic activity that is largely driven by ongoing public and private sector capital projects.

The revised budget estimates show total Government revenue in 2021 was $332.1 million; just $190,000 less than the initial projection.

Total Revised Recurrent Expenditure for fiscal year 2021 totalled $341.7 million; $11.3 million above the initial estimates. This included $17.88 million in Coronavirus Prevention Expense, which together with other expenditure, was essential in keeping our people safe while protecting the economy during the on-going pandemic.

It is anticipated that by the end of 2021 the Government of Virgin Islands will expend $4 million towards the long overdue increments for work year 2017 and the balance will be expended in 2022. Our public officers deserve their increments, and even during these challenging times, this Government is making provisions to ensure that it is paid and paid in this 2022 Budget. And even before the end of the year, some of the public officers will receive their increment. We are almost there. We are getting there.

Total Government Debt stands at $140.98 million as at 15 October, 2021, of which $94.3 million is foreign debt and $46.6 million is local debt.

The numbers once again show prudent, responsible fiscal management. The situation could easily have turned much worse had your Government not taken the tough and well calculated decisions to mitigate the spread of COVID-19, and to stimulate the economy in the areas targeted.

Mr Speaker, as the captain of the financial ship, I can honestly say that there were many sleepless nights to keep this country running. But with GODs help, we continued to run between the raindrops and dont get wet.

Record and Forecast

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2022 Budget Address - Government of the Virgin Islands

Island Nursing Home Task Force meets with town officials – The Ellsworth American

DEER ISLE The Island Nursing Home is officially empty of residents that is. There are still a couple of employees working to handle paperwork and other issues.

That was some of the news from two members of the Island Nursing Home Task Force: Chairman Dr. Sam Harrington and Vice Chairwoman Rep. Genevieve McDonald (D-Stonington).

The nursing home, which closed due to a lack of staff, moved its last resident Oct. 22.

On Nov. 4, Harrington and McDonald updated members of the Deer Isle Select Board, who had questions.

So, what are they doing up there? Select Board member Joe Brown asked.

We dont know, McDonald quipped. There is a social worker whos keeping in touch with residents and another staffer, Lori Morey, is in the building handling medical records and other paperwork. I dont know how long that will go on.

Select Board members asked whether the homes executive director, Matthew Trombley, had left. He has.

INH has temporarily frozen its license, which expires in October 2022. McDonald said there is a process to extend the license.

Deer Isle Town Manager Jim Fisher said, Before they hire a new executive director, they need to decide if theyre going to reopen as a nursing home.

An executive directors license is essentially what runs the nursing home, McDonald said. It needs to be someone dedicated to the island.

Harrington said Heidi Gillen might serve as the interim executive director.

Shes been there a long time, Harrington said. Shes done every job. She was designated to be the successor for Matthew when the board realized Matthew wasnt going to be there forever.

One complaint that many community members have expressed is what they see as late notice about the nursing homes closure. The nursing home announced the October closure in late August.

To that end, McDonald and state Sen. Louie Luchini (D-Hancock County) are co-sponsoring a bill that will require more transparency around nursing homes closures.

I agree there should have been a lot more transparency, McDonald said. I wish they had reached out sooner. I wish that previous to it getting that dire, they had reached out to the community.

Transparency was nothing up there, said Select Board Chairman Ron Eaton. Ticks me off.

A shortage of housing on the island was one of the issues cited in the staffing shortage.

It would be ideal to have local staff, but if theres nowhere for them to live thats what we run into, McDonald said. So, one of the things we have to look at, we may have to look at foreign nursing.

INH has looked into hiring nurses from the Philippines.

I dont have any doubt that will be the way to do it, said Brown, whose family has run a plumbing and heating business on the island for over 70 years. Maybe downsizing the operation so you dont have to have as many staff to run it. If Im running my business, Im going to start out a little smaller.

Fisher said housing is very important, but the median age is 55 in Deer Isle.

Thats not an easy age to recruit someone to do a job like that, he said.

Its a difficult job, Brown added.

Harrington said its difficult for employees to work if they dont know if theyll be asked to work a double shift.

Thats an untenable situation to be in if you have family, he said.

Its a very fragile industry, the physician said. If youre short one staff member, you cant shrink your business, you have to move a patient.

Meanwhile, INH is looking for volunteers, about 160 in total, to adopt a resident, according to the nursing homes social media page.

Dede Ragot, INHs social services director, said the goal of the program is to recruit a group of volunteers who are interested in reaching out and maintaining contact with the Island Nursing Home residents who were recently displaced and transitioned to other facilities.

The aim of this program is to support former residents with their transition, maintain a connection with their island community, and to convey they are missed and have not been forgotten, Ragot said.

Being a volunteer would mean committing to contacting a resident each month, whether through sending a card, calling or visiting.

We will match volunteers and residents with similar interests through an about me profile or a specific resident can be requested, said Ragot. INH is hoping to find two to three volunteers (roughly 160 volunteers) for each of our former residents.

Groups wishing to contribute cards, letters, drawings, small gifts, stamps, etc. are also welcome and would be greatly appreciated. For more information, contact Ragot at 460-2941 or [emailprotected]

Meanwhile, the task force is hosting an online community meeting on Monday, Nov. 15, at 5:45 p.m.

McDonald said the purpose of the meeting is to provide an update and to solicit feedback from the community. The link to attend can be found on the calendar on the town of Deer Isles website.

Excerpt from:

Island Nursing Home Task Force meets with town officials - The Ellsworth American

Aucklanders can visit the Hauraki Gulf conservation islands again – Stuff.co.nz

Aucklanders who have been cooped up during lockdown over the last few months will be able to enjoy some of the incredible nature on their doorsteps once again from Friday.

Ferries will restart to the Hauraki Gulf conservation islands of Rangitoto and Tiritiri Matangi on Friday and Rotoroa Island on Saturday as restrictions are loosened under step 2 of alert level 3.

The islands have been off limits to recreational visitors for the last three months, with only essential travel allowed as Auckland continued to deal with the pandemic.

Fullers360 CEO, Mike Horne, says its great to once again welcome day-trippers onboard.

Fullers360

Rangitoto Island features must-do Auckland walks.

READ MORE:* Lonely Planet names Auckland the best city in the world to travel to in 2022* The best Auckland day hikes to do in the new alert level 3 * Te Huia train service on track for central Auckland stop on weekdays

The DOC protected islands are teeming with native wildlife for Aucklanders to spot on their next day trip. Were proud of the role we have in providing essential services for Aucklanders, and now being able to reopen island destinations for safe recreational travel, said Horne.

Andrew Poole, Chair at Rotoroa Island Trust, agreed: "With stunning coastal walks, sandy swimming beaches, fascinating island history and native wildlife, Rotoroa Island is a place to truly feel restored.

Sailings will be operating with reduced capacity to enable physical distancing onboard, and passengers must still follow all government guidelines for travelling on public transport including wearing a face covering onboard and inside ferry terminals, and scanning in using the Covid Tracer app.

Why go? Rangitoto Island features must-do Auckland walks.

Visitors can spend a few hours ambling around most of the volcanic island's base or take a trip up to the 260-metre-high crater summit to soak in the Hauraki Gulf's panorama.

Fullers360

Tiritiri Matangi is a 75-minute ferry ride from downtown Auckland.

Why go? Tiritiri Matangi is a bird watcher's paradise.

The 220-hectare Department of Conservation-run island is being repopulated with native birds and vegetation including t, fantail, silvereye and grey warblers.

AUCKLAND ZOO

One of the residents on Rotorua Island.

Why go? Get up close and surrounded by nature.

Listen out for teke, takah, pteke, whitehead and saddleback calls. Keep an eye out for kiwi. First released in 2014, more than 25 kiwi now enjoy the predator-free haven.

More information at fullers.co.nz.

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Aucklanders can visit the Hauraki Gulf conservation islands again - Stuff.co.nz

Malta: The island welcoming digital nomads – BBC News

Visitors to Malta may also benefit from the tourism-boosting Free Independent Traveller (FIT) scheme, which allows participating hotels to give guests who stay three days or more up to 200 (100 from the government and a matching subsidy from the hotel) in incentives (which can include a room discount or on-site perks). Book quickly though, as the special deals may end when funds for the programme run out.

Travel with no trace

Malta has been making some of the largest strides in environmental sustainability in recent years, ranking 10th in Earth.org's Global Sustainability Index. In 2021, the country launched its action plan toward a circular economy one which ensures that producers remain responsible for where their products end up, encouraging reuse, recycling and overall reduction of resources.

To encourage this, the Malta Ministry for Tourism launched its Green Mobility programme for hotels in 2019, which awards hotels for encouraging sustainable modes of transport like bicycling, electric vehicles and shuttle services for its employees and guests to get to and from the hotel and urban centres. Current award winners include the five-star AX The Palace, its four-star sister hotel AX Victoria, and The Waterfront Hotel, conveniently located in Sliema near the ferry to capital city Valletta.

Eating sustainably and serving local ingredients from local farmers and fishermen has been on the rise here as well. Le Bistro, located in the Radisson Blu Resort near the sandy beach of Golden Bay, works closely with local suppliers to serve Spanish- and Italian-influenced dishes.

For those looking to eat more plant-based fare, Malta resident James Cutajar, who runs the travel blog The Travel Deck, recommends The Grassy Hopper, Malta's first vegan restaurant, which recently rebranded under the name Foam and Fork. "They offer some amazing burgers, wraps and salads," he said.

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Malta: The island welcoming digital nomads - BBC News

Atlanta named one of the best travel destinations in the world for 2022 – FOX 5 Atlanta

(Image by William Thompson from Pixabay)

ATLANTA - When it comes to cities, Atlanta has a lot to offer, and now a global travel organization has named the city one of the best places to travel to in the world.

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Lonely Planet, a travel guidebook company that has been recommending places to go for decades, included the Peach State's capital in its Best in Travel list for 2022. It's the only U.S. city on the list.

The list is created annually with nominations from Lonely Planet's staff, writers, bloggers, partners, and more. A panel of experts then narrows down the selections to just 10 countries, regions, and cities.

For 2022, Lonely Planet said Atlanta ranked No. 4 in its Top 10 Cities list, coming just behind Auckland, New Zealand, Taipei, Taiwan, and Freiburg, Germany.

"Charismatic and lush, Atlanta is a feverish, easy-on-the-eyes cavalcade of culture, cuisine, and Southern hospitality," Lonely Planet writes in its description of the city.

In part, the group says it chose Atlanta for its lush greenspaces, numerous walking and biking paths, its diverse community appeal, connection to history and civil rights, and its thriving arts and music scenes.

"We are thrilled with Atlantas recognition as a world-class city for travelers to visit and explore our history and culture," said Andrew Wilson, executive vice president and chief marketing officer of Atlanta Convention & Visitors Bureau. "Visitors will learn why Atlanta makes headlines as a dynamic city that continues to evolve and inspire travel for everyone."

Three places Lonely Planet suggests visitors definitely check out is the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historic Site, High Museum of Art, and the city's expansive breweries.

You can read the full list of Best in Travel here.

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Atlanta named one of the best travel destinations in the world for 2022 - FOX 5 Atlanta

Hilton Doha honoured by World Travel Awards – Breaking Travel News

Hilton Doha has been crowned Qatars Leading City Hotel by the global ceremony platform, World Travel Awards.

The international awards brand is recognised as the ultimate hallmark of industry excellence, each year rewarding and celebrating global brands from all sectors of the travel and tourism industry.

Hilton Doha triumphed among the pool of five-star hotels nominated for the same category by providing a unique lifestyle for well-travelled guests.

The property offers a diverse and exciting experience, including a variety of food and beverage outlets, relaxing pool amenities and an unapparelled beach experience.

The hotel truly captures the essence of a perfect escape from the everyday hustle and bustle in a form of a resort, located at the heart of the business district of Doha.

We pride ourselves, here at Hilton Doha, in providing unforgettable experiences for every guest we welcome, and gifting new memories to create, for when they return.

Our hotel will always be here, as the resort of the busy life of Doha needs, said Elias Moukarzel, general manager Hilton Doha Hotel.

More Information

Find out more about Hilton Doha on the official website.

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Hilton Doha honoured by World Travel Awards - Breaking Travel News

An emotional journey: Families reunite in U.S. with tears, balloons as COVID travel ban ends – Reuters

NEW YORK/LONDON/TIJUANA, Nov 8 (Reuters) - Paul Campbell had waited nearly two years to reunite with his German fiance at Boston's Logan airport on Monday, the day the United States eased travel restrictions imposed on much of the world since the COVID-19 pandemic began.

"I'm just ecstatic that she's here, I'm happy," said Campbell, 63, a retired firefighter from Vermont who greeted her with a heart-shaped balloon. "Our relationship is still thriving even though we've been apart for two years."

At John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, a child held a sign reading, "Do I look bigger?" as he waited for the first British Airways flight from London's Heathrow. "730 days missed u! Aunty Jill + Uncle Mark," his sign said.

The travel ban, imposed since early 2020, barred access to non-U.S. citizens travelling from 33 countries - including China, India and much of Europe - and had also restricted overland entry from Mexico and Canada.

While travel continued for residents of other countries and visitors falling under exceptions, the ban eliminated the sources of more than half the visitors to the United States in 2019, according to trade group U.S. Travel, primarily tourists and other non-essential travellers to the United States.

"Today America is open for business. That is our message to the world," U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told Reuters in an interview at Chicago's O'Hare airport.

For many arriving on packed flights from Europe or lining up at border crossings in Canada and Mexico, Monday's was an emotional journey that ended in the arms of joyful relatives clutching flowers, balloons and homemade signs.

Months of pent-up demand triggered a major spike in bookings on Monday, with travellers only required to show official proof of vaccination and a recent, negative viral test. Travel bookings for the holiday season in the United States continue to rise rapidly, according to airlines and industry data.

No major issues at airports were flagged in an early morning call among airlines and U.S. government officials although authorities have warned about possible long queues and delays.

Earlier, long-term rivals British Airways and Virgin Atlantic carried out simultaneous take-offs from Heathrow's parallel runways, a stunt aimed at highlighting the importance of transatlantic business to the UK's aviation sector.

"It's a major day of celebration," Weiss said, adding that planes were "filling up nicely," in what he called a significant tipping point for an industry brought to its knees by the pandemic.

LAND BORDER CROSSINGS

U.S. land borders also reopened to non-essential travel on Monday.

People wait for their relatives after the arrival of the British Airways flight at JFK International Airport in New York, U.S., November 8, 2021. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

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Canadian travellers, particularly retirees headed to U.S. sun spots, flocked to the U.S. land border to drive across for the first time in 20 months, although testing requirements could dampen short-stay travel.

Janet Simoni, who lives in London, Ontario crossed the U.S.-Canada border just after midnight and drove to the house near Detroit where her husband lives.

"This whole half of my life has been missing for almost two years," said Simoni.

In Mexico's Ciudad Juarez, across from the Texan city of El Paso, a line of about 20 people formed early. They crossed and embraced family on the other side of the border, a Reuters witness said.

"We thought they were going to tell us again that they had decided not to open it," said Lorena Hernandez, stroking her grown-up daughter's hair and smiling broadly after they were reunited in El Paso. "I said, if they don't reopen, Im going to take a plane."

Hundreds of migrants have arrived at Mexican border cities such as Tijuana in recent days, hoping the reset will make it easier to cross and seek U.S. asylum, despite warnings from advocates that the re-opening is for people who have papers.

'SO SURREAL'

Aysha Mathew struggled to hold back tears after her mother and sister arrived at New York's JFK airport on Monday, fresh off the first British Airways flight from London's Heathrow.

Mathew was holding her toddler, Adam, and pushing a stroller with her infant, Aaron, whom her mother and sister were meeting for the first time.

"It's so surreal to finally be here and see them meet in person," Mathew said. "I'm really, really happy."

U.S. allies had heavily lobbied the Biden administration to lift the rules.

While cheering the resumption of the two-way transatlantic traffic, airline officials stressed that tourism and family trips alone will not be enough forcarriers whose profits depend on filling the most expensive seats. L1N2RZ0LF

According to U.S. Travel, declines in international visitation since the start of the pandemic resulted in nearly $300 billion in lost export income and a loss of more than one million U.S. jobs.

Reporting David Shepardson in Chicago, Julia Harte in New York, Tara Oakes, Stuart McDill, Sarah Young in London, Antony Paone in Paris, Jose Luis Gonzalez in Ciudad Juarez, Amran Abocar and Anna Mehler Paperny in Toronto, Brian Snyder in Boston; Writing by Ingrid Melander and Maria Caspani; Editing by Gareth Jones, Nick Macfie, Philippa Fletcher and Cynthia Osterman

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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An emotional journey: Families reunite in U.S. with tears, balloons as COVID travel ban ends - Reuters

International travel will get easier, but restrictions will remain – The Economist

Nov 8th 2021

by Simon Wright: Industry editor, The Economist

THE START of the pandemic was characterised by empty supermarket shelves, as global supply chains creaked under the strain of panic buying and the disruption caused by covid-19. The system soon adjusted. But one shortage that has not been alleviated is that of international travellers. Planes are still often half-full at best and many of the worlds airports remain sparsely populated. International arrivals fell by nearly 75% in 2020, according to the UNs World Travel Organisation, with 1bn fewer people taking trips abroad. The figures for 2021 are not expected to be much better. But the prospects for 2022 look less gloomy.

More people will rediscover the pleasures of jumping on a plane to go on a spontaneous city break, attend a long-planned family wedding or take the holiday of a lifetime. And while executives will continue to spend a lot of time sitting bolt upright in video calls, more will also recline in business-class seats. In the decades before the pandemic, international travel grew rapidly, with the number of visitors to foreign countries tripling between 1990 and 2019. Budget airlines, growing prosperity and more leisure time underpinned this growth. These forces will eventually reassert themselves.

Early in the pandemic, most forecasters reckoned that international travel would not recover to the levels of 2019 before 2023 at the earliest, and more likely in 2024. That still seems a reasonable bet. Restrictions on international jaunts are still tight and are lifting only slowly. Even now only three countriesColombia, Costa Rica and Mexicoimpose no restrictions on visitors, while 88 countries are still closed completely and many more have draconian policies in place. But as vaccination rates climb and infections fall, rules will be relaxed and routes will reopen. Much of the worlds population was barred from entering the United States until its rules changed in November.

Cross-border travel will not recover to pre-covid levels until 2023 at the earliest, and more likely 2024

The recovery will be uneven. Domestic travel in large countries has already bounced backAmerica is getting closer to pre-covid levels and China has surpassed them already. Regional travel is picking up. IATA, an airline-industry body, reckons Europe could be back to nearly four-fifths of pre-pandemic levels in 2022. But Asias recovery has been slow and may continue to lag the rest of the world. Long-haul travel will remain at low levels until vaccinations are more widespread and the plethora of rules and regulations become easier to navigate.

Leisure bookings surge whenever countries lift restrictions on foreign travel, and unless a new, more dangerous mutation of covid-19 emerges, that huge pent-up demand will help fill planes again on short-haul routes. Businesses, however, plan to spend less on travel. Surveys suggest that budgets are typically being cut by 20-40%. The gloomiest prognosticators reckon half of all business travel could be gone for good. Many meetings and conferences will remain virtual, or at least take place in hybrid form with far fewer people attending in person.

Even if a more virulent mutation of the virus emerges, potentially putting everything into reverse again, one type of globetrotter will fly above the lingering dark cloudsthe rich. Soaring demand for seats on private jets is likely to continue as the wealthy sidestep many of the barriers facing the masses. The first eight months of 2021 saw 2.9m flights by business jets, 70% more than in 2020 and a tad higher than in 2019, while commercial flights still languish around 40% below pre-pandemic levels, according to WingX, a private-aviation data firm.

If that is not exclusive enough, a new covid-free destination took off in 2021 and is expected to welcome many more visitors in the coming years. If you have several hundred thousand dollars to spare, you can book a ticket for a flight to outer space.

Simon Wright: Industry editor, The Economist

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition of The World Ahead 2022 under the headline Fasten your seat belts

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International travel will get easier, but restrictions will remain - The Economist

Global travel insurance market could be worth $35 billion by 2027 – ITIJ

The global travel insurance market is expected to be worth US$35 billion by the year 2027, with a forecast rise in value of around eight per cent in the US market alone, according to a research study by Global Market Insights Inc.

Demand for travel insurance is forecast to be driven primarily by growing demand in the tourist industry for high-risk sports activities and adventure tourism. Participants in such activities are expected to be more likely to take out travel insurance to safeguard themselves against potential mishaps.

Global Market Insight also credits the rise in more customisable policies as a key driving factor in the markets projected growth, with interest and awareness in such policies being fuelled in part by the popularity of travel blogs and social media influencers.

This includes:

Other factors which Global Market Insights note will contribute to the growth of the regions tourist industry include:

The projected growth also reflects the expanding tourism sector in places such as North America, which remains buoyant despite the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

According to a report by the World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC) in October, the regions tourist industry represented approximately $2.2 trillion, but later fell to $1.25 trillion in 2020 as international travel ground to a halt.

Despite this, the WTTC says that the sector is on track to recoup more than a third of that loss this year, with a projected value of $1.7 trillion for 2021 a recovery which the WTTC credits to the successful rollout of Covid vaccines in the US and Canada, coupled with relaxed travel restrictions on the continent.

This is expected to continue next year, with a potential year-on-year rise of 26.4 per cent projected for 2022 which will bring the regions tourist industry back to pre-pandemic levels at a value of $2.2 trillion.

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Global travel insurance market could be worth $35 billion by 2027 - ITIJ

Reading your way around the world with a difference – Sydney Morning Herald

Armchair travellers have always loved books that take them to new destinations. In lockdown, with closed borders, they were a consolation: there was no other way to travel except in your head. But now we are beginning a very cautious opening up to the world, travel books can whet our appetite for new experiences far from home.

By travel books, I mean more than travel guides, useful as these are. If youre looking for something comprehensive, you cant go past Lonely Planets The Travel Book, which showcases the best of 230 nations every United Nations-approved country in the world.

Geoff Dyers novel Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi is sexy, horrifying and hilarious.Credit:

If youre nervous about going overseas and would prefer to travel within Australia, youll appreciate your journey more with some understanding of the oldest culture in the world. Marcia Langtons Welcome to Country is a guide book with a difference: it explores Indigenous languages and customs, history, native title, art and dance, storytelling and cultural awareness and etiquette for visitors.

But sometimes the most enjoyable way to choose or prepare for a possible trip is to read about what writers got up to in those places, allowing for fictional licence. My best preparation for the unlikely combination of Venice and Varanasi, for example, was Geoff Dyers sexy, horrifying and hilarious novel Jeff in Venice, Death in Varanasi. Just dont do what his narrator did, or youll end up deranged and starving.

We love intrepid narrators, even when few of us would be daring enough to follow in their footsteps or in the case of Ken Haley, wheelchair tracks. This crazy-brave Australian wont let a little disability cramp his style as he travels around the world and records his adventures. His latest book, The One that Got Away, sees him rolling around the Caribbean in the time of COVID, encountering the odd robbery, health problem, hurricane and unexpectedly active volcano. Haley is sharply observant, funny and gutsy.

Intrepid heroes are all the go in The Independents list of best travel books that explore more than just a destination, with recommendations for Jon Krakauers Into Thin Air, about disaster on Mount Everest; two African journeys, Levison Woods Walking the Nile and Waypoints: A Journey on Foot by Robert Martineau; and for women travellers, Mia Kankimakis The Women I Think About at Night.

Marcia Langtons Welcome to Country is a guide book with a difference.Credit:Arsineh Houspian

The Independent also recommends Bill Brysons classic 2000 book Down Under: Travels in a Sunburned Country. Its a hugely entertaining read that is also a little annoying for Australians, because Bryson made such a brief visit and sometimes seems content to trot out the clichs, though he always puts his own humorous stamp on them.

Travel can be an invitation to wild and improbable travellers tales, which feature in Antoni Jachs Travelling Companions, a novel based very loosely on his solo explorations in Europe in the 1990s and the travellers he met along the way. The realistic problems of travel delays, strikes, terrible weather sit alongside philosophical confessions and brilliantly surreal contemporary fairytales with enticing titles, such as The Tale of the Corporate Raider, the Glamorous Stockbroker & the Talking Parrot.

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Reading your way around the world with a difference - Sydney Morning Herald

Maryville College freshmen travel ‘Around the World in 50 Minutes’ – Maryville Daily Times

More than 250 Maryville College freshmen tested their abilities to navigate international travel Monday, Nov. 8, by speaking foreign languages, calculating currency exchanges and packing for the trip.

The challenges were among nine stations laid out on the campus grounds for "Around the World in 50 Minutes," an event sponsored by the college's Center for Global Engagement and Global+ initiative.

The immediate prize for students was water bottles, but the college also hopes the event piqued their interest in travel, showed them how to navigate potential obstacles to studying abroad and exposed them to different cultures.

Resuming travel

The global pandemic shut down study-abroad plans for about 200 MC Scots in the summer of 2020, and one student was forced to return early from studying in Milan when COVID-19 cases closed Italian schools and colleges in March of that year.

Kirsten Sheppard, the college's director of global engagement, said rebuilding the education abroad program will take time. "Heath and safety of our students is our first priority," she said.

Currently the college is monitoring countries where five students are scheduled to study next semester and plans to make a decision 75 days before their departures.

Maryville College also hopes to make decisions by the end of this semester about two travel programs with about 15 students each, a spring break trip to Switzerland and a May term trip to Amsterdam.

Global citizens

While it has been nearly two years since Maryville College sent students abroad, in the meantime it launched a Global+ Program that increases intercultural competencies throughout the curriculum.

The college explains on its website, "This generation of students lives in an interconnected, diverse, and rapidly changing world. Global (intercultural) competency is one of the main tools we, as educators, can give students to thrive in this new environment."

It defines global competence as "the capacity to understand and appreciate local and global issues, diverse perspectives and world views and interact appropriately and effectively with people from different cultures and identities.

During COVID-19, Sheppard said, the college "integrated virtual study and internships abroad, and we have developed several Global+ courses that embed global perspectives, guest speakers and projects."

The college also is developing a Global+Certificate program it hopes to take to the faculty and board this spring.

This program aims for students to be able to think globally, communicate across languages and build relationships with people from other cultures.

Packed for success

During Monday's event, facilitators included tidbits of information, such as the ability to receive scholarships for study abroad and the fact students can study in English in dozens of other countries.

Teams of students worked together on challenges such as packing a suitcase in 90 seconds. While several knew to roll clothes for packing, they also learned to place their passport for easy retrieval and take reminders of accommodations that don't include them.

They had to use chopsticks to move marshmallows or build an "Eiffel Tower" more than a meter high using aluminum foil.

One of the language challenges had students translate a key text from one of five languages taught on campus, although they could use an app too. The translation: "Excuse me. Would you please help me?"

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Maryville College freshmen travel 'Around the World in 50 Minutes' - Maryville Daily Times

As the Biden Administration Lifts Travel Bans on Visitors to the U.S., Museums Hope It Will Boost Lagging Attendance – artnet News

This week, the Biden administration lifted restrictions on its pandemic travel ban, allowing vaccinated visitors from Canada, China, Mexico, and other countries to enter the U.S. for the first time in 18 months. For major American museums, where international visitors have historically accounted for major portions of yearly attendance figures, the news was surely welcomed.

Visitor numbers dropped roughly 70 percent at the Art Institute of Chicago, for example, from roughly 1.5 million to 420,000 in the 2020 fiscal year, according to a museum spokesperson. In previous years, international guests accounted for 25 to 30 percent of ticket buyers, representing about $5 million in admission revenue.

We are optimistic about the return of international travelers, but know that return will be gradual, the representative said, noting that, for the time being, the institution is continuing to focus primarily on local audiences.

The Smithsonian, which doesnt charge admission and thus cant track where visitors come from, saw similar decreases in its overall numbers during the same period of time, according to its public engagement data. Attendance numbers dipped 67 percent across the Smithsonians various museums, from roughly 23.3 million to 7.6 million in the 2019 fiscal year.

The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Courtesy of the museum.

Meanwhile the New York Times reported this week that, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where international travelers account for about a third of attendance, daily visitor numbers have been cut in half since the start of the pandemic. And the effects have been even greater when it comes to admission profits, since the museum has a pay-what-you-want policy in place for New Yorkers.

However, not every institution can expect a bump in foot traffic with the amending of travel restrictions.At the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, a southern institution less frequented by foreigners than those on the coasts (90 percent of the museums annual visitors are local), the change to the travel ban will likely have no noticeable impact, a representative said.

In the last fiscal year, 455,000 visitors came to the museum, down from nearly a million during the previous cycle. But the museum has rebounded like few others have: At this time, attendance is back above pre-pandemic levels, the museum spokesperson said.

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As the Biden Administration Lifts Travel Bans on Visitors to the U.S., Museums Hope It Will Boost Lagging Attendance - artnet News

Train travel can be as quick, cheap and easy to book as flights. Here’s how to get onboard. – Euronews

Just a few changes to our flying habits would be enough to partly reverse global warming caused by the aviation industry. According to a new study, if we were to reduce air traffic by just 2.5 per cent each year, warming will consistently level off over the coming decades.

However, with the current growth rate of aviation, the industry will be responsible for around nearly 0.1C of heating by 2050. This is a huge amount for one industry to be responsible for.

Report author, Milan Klwer, from the University of Oxford and colleagues from Manchester Metropolitan University calculated that to date, aircraft are responsible for 0.04C of global heating. This is about 4 per cent of the 1.2C temperature increase humans have caused since the Industrial Revolution.

If aviation continues to grow at about 3 per cent a year then it will have caused 0.09C of heating by 2050.

Mr Klwer warns that as world leaders and delegates at COP26 haggle over targets to limit global warming to 1.5C, aviation is unlikely to be included in them, given the lack of low-carbon alternatives to long-haul flights

Sustainable aviation fuels, and hydrogen or electric planes, are being developed, although the climate scientist believes that none of these technologies are currently available at the necessary scale. He says that at the current rate, the world will have warmed by 2C within three decades.

On Monday British Airways' first flight to the newly-reopened US departed for New York. It was fuelled by a 35 per cent blend of sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) provided by BP and made from used cooking oil.

According to BA, it's the first commercial transatlantic flight ever to be operated with such a significant level of the fuel blended with traditional jet fuel. The flight was also carried out by the airline's most fuel-efficient long-haul aircraft, the A350, making its overall CO2 emissions more than 50 per cent less than its now-retired 747 aircraft, the company said.

"Aviation has so far been quite slow to make the step change in technology that they need to make, which is to move to hydrogen and renewable energy," said Harold Goodwin, Responsible Tourism Director at the Institute of Place Management, Managing Director of the Responsible Tourism Partnership and adviser to the World Travel Market on its Responsible Tourism programme.

"We will see short or very short-haul electric flights soon. Airbus is also making great progress on hydrogen". However, according to Mr Goodwin the developer of the famous Rolls Royce engine recently told him, "if the engineers were just given the money to get on with the job, they would have hydrogen-powered aviation in the near future."

Resolving to fly less can also contribute considerably to reducing the number of unnecessary flights, says Mr Kloewer and Mr Goodwin agrees: "People need to think about holidaying closer to home and see what's available in their own country."

Individual travellers should also try to take direct flight, and just take hand luggage rather than checking in bags to reduce the aircraft's weight.

"Fly with the budget carriers in the more modern planes then carbon emissions will go down. Any traveller can now look up the most carbon-efficient flights on Google."

"I've had a look at some of those and the majority of them, the most carbon-efficient, are also the cheapest".

On current trends, Mr Goodwin believes that by 2050 the aviation industry will be subject to serious regulation.

The risks to the aviation industry and for travel and tourism, in general, are extremely serious; "For countries like the Gambia or the Caribbean islands, which are highly dependent on tourism, losing the opportunity to travel by air is a real existential threat for them".

Mr Goodwin suggests that we only fly once a year and make it a longer trip, rather than lots of short trips.

"Look at the way the Japanese travel. They come to Europe, they do several different European countries and they stay for a while. It's that kind of approach.

The group of travellers that concerns Mr Goodwin the most are those on zero-hours contracts or short term contracts, who are "very prone to travelling short notice on short hall on European city breaks. They generally fly because they have no paid holidays". A three week holiday for them is "not an option."

"I think we need to think about how the travel and tourism industry works to try and encourage a proper holiday structure for people so they can travel for longer."

In his study, Mr Klwer suggests that politicians should shift subsidies from flying to more sustainable modes of transport, such as train journeys.

"Travelling by train is not such an issue in Europe," says Mr Goodwin, "but it's a big issue in the UK because we just don't have the rapid transit available".

"In China and Japan, where the bullet trains are operating, it's really quick. There are a lot of people not using flights anymore, including tour operators. Those changes will make a really big difference".

"If you look at Intrepid, they are doing all the transfers within the itinerary for their travellers. But without flying.

One travel company that's stepping up is No Fly Travel Club. As the name implies, they organise trips that don't involve any flights.

Itineraries mostly use high-speed rail thereby helping customers to shrink their carbon footprint by 70 per cent. Weekend breaks include exploring Mediterranean Marseille, a night-train adventure to Vienna and wine tasting in the Loire Valley.

Founder Catherine Livesley said that when people want to take a city break, pre-pandemic, "just hopping on a plane becomes the default option" because train travel can be confusing to organise and people aren't aware of all the great places you can reach by train.

In designing their trips the company looked at how straightforward the journey would be: "Not necessarily how long, but how many connections and with most places there is only one change".

"Also the cities or locations have a lot of small businesses that are sustainable and you can make your own decisions while you're there, such as eating organic food or buying local produce".

No Fly Travel Club have recently launched flight-free city breaks, departing from London.

These can often be as quick as flying to your destination. "For example, the train to Marseille takes roughly seven hours and by the time you've got to the airport and flown there, the time works out more or less the same, and the price doesn't work out that different, either," says Catherine.

Prices for the trip start from 450 per person and go up to 800-900 per person. "Some are slightly more high-end, but there's a range of prices because we really wanted it to be accessible. There's no point having a sustainable city break that only millionaires can afford".

Firstly, there needs to be more awareness of the options available to us, says Catherine. "In the UK we're so fortunate to be plugged into this network of European rail. You can reach so many destinations in less than a day's travel and I honestly don't think people know that".

A lot of people want to see rail travel become "more accessible, cheaper" she added.

"Unfortunately, [UK Chancellor of the Exchequer] Rishi Sunak's decided to provide more subsidies for domestic flights. But it would be possible to make rail travel cheaper if governments decided to move in that direction".

Part of what No Fly Travel Club does is campaigning on these issues and raising awareness at the government level of what can be done to help people choose lower carbon types of transport.

"We work with flight free UK and other campaign groups, but at the moment it's about generating awareness of this problem".

"We need to give people these choices and not just default to the airlines being the voice of authority on aviation".

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Train travel can be as quick, cheap and easy to book as flights. Here's how to get onboard. - Euronews

Seeing the World Through a Grain of Rice – The New York Times

Before there was bread or pasta, much less meat or fish, there was rice. Growing up in Hawaii, Texas and Maryland, I ate rice three times a day: with fish for breakfast; with Spam and nori for lunch; with hamburger or more fish or tofu for dinner. In my childhood, Thanksgiving turkey was served not with mashed potatoes but rice; steak not with frites but rice; scrambled eggs not with toast but rice. (It wasnt until I went to college on the East Coast that I finally experienced classic American dishes accompanied by their traditional starches.) And it was always the same kind: white, short-grain Japanese rice, polished and glossy, pleasantly clumpy and quick to yield between the teeth, clinging to the chopstick, sticking to the spoon. In adulthood, when rice became a kind of decadence, sacrificed in adherence to a supposedly healthier, definitely less satisfying low-carb diet, the mere scent of it made me wistful how much easier life seemed before rice became so complicated.

- Tracing Mexicos history through its ambivalent relationship to rice, a staple inextricable from colonialism.

- When scorched on the bottom of the pot by a skilled cook, rice transforms from bland supporting actor to rich, complex protagonist.

- Mansaf, a Bedouin dish of lamb and rice, is both a national symbol in Jordan and a talisman of home for suburban Detroits Arab American diaspora.

- Senegal, which consumes more rice per capita, most of it imported, than almost any other African nation, is attempting to resuscitate homegrown varieties.

Over the past few years, however, Ive returned to rice, eating it as I once did (if not as often as I once did), with everything from meatloaf to poached salmon. And why not? Much of the rest of the world never abandoned it. After wheat, rice is our most, and most widely consumed, grain and, although it has origins in both Asia and Africa, its today difficult to find a culture that hasnt made it its own, often in recipes that have become synonymous with a regional or national cuisine: risotto in Italy, horchata in Mexico, rice and beans in the Dominican Republic. The fact that, as Aatish Taseer learns on his trip to Oaxaca, rice remains in some places a 500-year-old interloper, its introduction the result of conquest and colonization, fails to diminish our species gift for culinary interpretation and resourcefulness.

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Seeing the World Through a Grain of Rice - The New York Times

Frdric Bastiat Quotes (Author of The Law)

Life Is a Gift from God.We hold from God the gift which includes all others. This gift is life -- physical, intellectual, and moral life.

But life cannot maintain itself alone. The Creator of life has entrusted us with the responsibility of preserving, developing, and perfecting it. In order that we may accomplish this, He has provided us with a collection of marvelous faculties. And He has put us in the midst of a variety of natural resources. By the application of our faculties to these natural resources we convert them into products, and use them. This process is necessary in order that life may run its appointed course.

Life, faculties, production--in other words, individuality, liberty, property -- this is man. And in spite of the cunning of artful political leaders, these three gifts from God precede all human legislation, and are superior to it.

Life, liberty, and property do not exist because men have made laws. On the contrary, it was the fact that life, liberty, and property existed beforehand that caused men to make laws in the first place. Frederic Bastiat, The Law

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Frdric Bastiat Quotes (Author of The Law)

Communism Quotes (1054 quotes) – Goodreads

The bourgeoisie, wherever it has got the upper hand, has put an end to all feudal, patriarchal, idyllic relations. It has pitilessly torn asunder the motley feudal ties that bound man to his 'natural superiors,' and has left remaining no other nexus between man and man than naked self-interest, callous 'cash payment.' It has drowned the most heavenly ecstasies of religious fervor, of chivalrous enthusiasm, of philistine sentimentalism, in the icy water of egotistical calculation. It has resolved personal worth into exchange value, and in place of the numberless indefeasible chartered freedoms, has set up that single, unconscionable freedomFree Trade. In one word, for exploitation, veiled by religious and political illusions, it has substituted naked, shameless, direct, brutal exploitation.

The bourgeoisie has stripped of its halo every occupation hitherto honored and looked up to with reverent awe. It has converted the physician, the lawyer, the priest, the poet, the man of science, into its paid wage laborers.

The bourgeoisie has torn away from the family its sentimental veil, and has reduced the family relation to a mere money relation. Karl Marx, The Communist Manifesto

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Communism Quotes (1054 quotes) - Goodreads