The Catholic Church in Spain is losing the euthanasia debate. Can it re-enter the conversation if it becomes legal? – America Magazine

Jaume Vives wanted to be direct about the reality of euthanasia, but he had to settle for Euthanasia? #Hijacked debate. The residents association of the apartment building told him his initial message for a 500-square meter banner he got permission to hang from the building was too explicit.

Were legislating euthanasia, but when we wanted to talk about it, to show what it is, we were told it was too aggressive, he said.

Mr. Vives, a member of the Association of Catholic Activists and leader of Vividores (The Living), a campaign to fight the legalization of euthanasia in Spain, was also denied space on public transportation by the private company that manages bus advertising.

Hijacked debate may be the best description of how euthanasia will become legal in Spain.

A bill to legalize euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide for adults facing incurable illness, irreversible disability and even mental illness as a subjective right is expected to pass Spains Senate by the end of March, the final hurdle before it becomes law. The lower chamber of the Spanish Parliament approved the law on Dec. 17, rushed through in a special session of the Congress of Deputies without expert testimony and over the objections of both the countrys bioethics committee and its doctors association.

Spain is not the only country in Europe that has taken significant steps toward the decriminalization or legalization of euthanasia. Portugals Congress approved a euthanasia bill in February 2020, and its Senate voted it into law at the end of January.

Ireland has also taken steps to legalizing euthanasia, and courts in Germany, Italy and Austria recently handed down decisions that could that open the way for its legalization. Last October, New Zealand became the first country to legalize euthanasia through referendum. Physician-assisted suicide is also legal in Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Canada, Colombia, the Australian state of Victoria and eight U.S. states.

In response to the growing legal acceptance of euthanasia, the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith reiterated church teaching in September in the letter Samaritanus Bonus. Spanish bishops published their own letter on the issue last December, Sowers of Hope, in which they reminded Catholics that there is no one that cant be cared for even if they are incurable. The bishops called for a day of prayer and fasting on the eve of the laws vote and have encouraged the faithful to include explicit instructions in their advanced directives that they do not wish to be euthanized.

The recent rash of pro-euthanasia legislation and court decisions suggest that euthanistic notions of a dignified death have gained acceptance in politics, courts and among the general public in Europe. But most physicians and bioethicists still oppose euthanasia, according to Lopold Vanbellingen, a researcher at the European Institute of Bioethics.

Bioethicists and political observers say public opinion in Spain has been groomed over the course of decades to consider euthanasia a medical treatment for pain. They add that an ideology of personal autonomy converging with the sensibilities of a consumerist culture have changed expectations of the role of doctors in attending to suffering.

Asking the right questionsThe Spanish law was approved with very little social debate beforehand, said Montserrat Esquerda of the Borgia Institute of Bioethics in Barcelona. There have been various cases exploited in the media that have [helped promote acceptance of euthnasia] and some public opinion polls in which there wasnt clarification and verification of what the person understood as euthanasia.

Those polls find consistentsupport for euthanasia from Spaniards, but according to experts, the circumstances detailed in many survey questions better describepalliative care, not euthanasia.

Theres a very clear confusion in terms, and many people equate euthanasia with a death without pain, Ms. Esquerda explained.

Euthanasia broke into the public consciousness in Spain in the 1990s, when Ramn Sampedro, a quadriplegic, began a series of lawsuits seeking assistance to end his life, reaching up as far as the European Commission on Human Rights. He lost in every court.

In 1998, his family and friends helped him carry out a plan to end his life with cyanide so that no one could be convicted of assisting in his suicide. His story was turned into the Oscar-winning 2004 movie The Sea Inside.

Since then, almost a dozen attempts to decriminalize euthanasia have come through the Spanish parliament without becoming law.During the 2019 national elelctions, the Socialist presidential candidate, Pedro Snchez, pledged to make euthanasia legal should he be elected.

That campaign followed on the heels of the highly publicized death of Mara Jos Carrasco. Ms. Carrasco, 61, had suffered from multiple sclerosis for 30 years. Her husband, ngel Hernndez, filmed her asking him to help her end her life several days in a row and then gave her a drink laced with a lethal dose of medication.

Mr. Snchez and his party won the November 2019 elections. After he consolidated his government with the support of far-left parties, the euthanasia bill went before the parliament again in January 2020.

The Spanish Medical Organization had come out against legalizing euthanasia in May 2018, stating that it contradicted the Hippocratic oath. The Spanish Society for Palliative Care also announced its opposition.

In a unanimous decision, the Bioethics Committee of Spain, an independent consultative body attached to the Ministry of Health, advised against the law in March 2020. There exist solid health, ethical, legal, economic, and social reasons to reject the transformation of euthanasia into a personal right and a public service, the committee concluded.

But that credentialed opposition to euthanasia was ignored. In parliament, supporters of the bill blocked expert testimony.

Customer service providers or professionals of the healing arts?The Bioethics Committee of Spains 74-page opinion addressed how recent changes in the expectations of patients are affecting medicine. The committee noted that there has been an evolution in the clinical relationship that has put the patient at the epicenter of health care.

But, it continued, It is essential to emphasize that even if the patient is the center of the clinical relationship, the doctor is responsible for indications and contraindications and is co-responsible in making decisions.

Is medicine still theart of curingand, if not possible,of healing, or has medicine become a commercialservice like everything else, at everyones disposal,according to his or her wishes? Mr. Vanbellingen asked.

The committee found neither a medical indication for euthanasia to alleviate suffering nor a legal and ethical justification for deriving a right to physician-assisted suicide from an individual desire to die.We do not think that such compassion ethically or legally legitimizes a request that, not finding support in true autonomy either, can be attended to within the present context of palliative care, social support and health care, it stated.

Mr. Verbellingen pointed out that although euthanasia laws intend to limit the context of the practice, the criteria established in the laws are too subjective, leading to death on demand.

Palliative care versus euthanasiaSpain also highlights the difficulty of countering enthusiasm for euthanasia with the benefits of palliative care alone. In the 2019 Atlas of Palliative Care in Europe, published by the European Association of Palliative Care, Spain ranked 31st of 51 countries in capacity for palliative care, landing alongside Georgia and Moldavia. It estimated that 80,000 people a year die in Spain without receiving the palliative care they need.

According to Ms. Esquerda, there is a parallel capacity gap in care for people who are disabled or who are suffering long-lasting degenerative illnesses. Both doctors and politicians know that Spains public health care system lags in care for the very infirm.

Four proposals to strengthen palliative care have come before the parliament, according to Mr. Vives, but none became law. Politically, palliative care isnt attractive, he said, especially compared to the splash of granting citizens the apparent autonomy to free themselves from suffering.

Samaritanus Bonus also reminds Catholics that at the individual level, palliative care alone is not enough to overcome the desire to end suffering through death.

Palliative care cannot provide a fundamental answer to suffering or eradicate it from peoples lives.To claim otherwise is to generate a false hope, and cause even greater despair in the midst of suffering, it states. Terminal illness causes a profound suffering in the sick person, who seeks a level of care beyond the purely technical.

To assuage their suffering, they need the wine of hope that comes through faith in God and to experience a solidarity and a love that takes on the suffering, offering a sense of life that extends beyond death, and someone who remains at the bedside of the sick to bear witness to their unique and unrepeatable value, the document teaches.

Ms. Carrascos story suggests both the gaps of medical support in Spain and the necessity of human and spiritual accompaniment of the terminally ill and disabled. She had been on a waiting list to enter a residential care facility since 2007 to offer a respite to her husband, who had been her sole caretaker and was in his late fifties. In 2018, her husband, then 68, suffered a herniated disk from lifting Ms. Carrasco.

She was granted a temporary placement in a facility, but that was delayed in a snaggle of bureaucracy. Her husbands surgery had to be postponed because there was no one else to care for Ms. Carrasco. In September 2018, her health declined further and she could barely eat or talk.

She was offered both a feeding tube and palliative care, including partial sedation, but refused all additional treatment, reportedly stating, I dont want to sleep, I want to die. Her husband had said he recorded his wifes death to show their suffering and abandonment.

The desire for a good death and lifeBesides influencing public policy, the Vividores campaign seeks to reach the people who are suffering and looking for meaning in their lives, Mr. Vives said. He believes that most people do not want to answer suffering with death.

The campaigns website includes a series of interviews with people living with joy despite disabilities and degenerative diseases. Those interviews have generated the most positive response to the anti-euthanasia campaign.

We have the example of many people who have written us and called [to tell us] that they saw the interviews, that listening to the interviews [changed] their understanding of life and their problems, Pablo Velasco, another organizer, said. Even if the law passes, the campaign was not a failure.

Vividores organizers say they are going to keep the campaign going as the law proceeds through the Senate, and if it passes, they plan to continue with a deeper educational and public opinion campaign over the next five years to try to overturn it.

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The Catholic Church in Spain is losing the euthanasia debate. Can it re-enter the conversation if it becomes legal? - America Magazine

Amendments to Canada’s euthanasia law threaten traditional ‘standard of care’ – BioEdge

Amendments to Canadas euthanasia law threaten traditional standard of care

The Canadian Parliament is debating a major expansion of the countrys 2016 euthanasia act. Critics say that the amendments will make Canadas law the most permissive in the world.

Bill C-7 intends to give access to Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD) to people whose natural death is not reasonably foreseeable. It establishes more relaxed eligibility rules for those who are near death, including a form of advance directives, and more stringent rules for those who are not.

Writing in Policy Options, Trudo Lemmens, Mary Shariff and Leonie Herx contend that C-7 endorses an ablist prejudice that life with a disability has less dignity or is less worth living. It transforms MAiD from a procedure to facilitate dying into a terminal therapy for lifes suffering.

The particular effect they zero in on is that the Bill abrogates a doctors traditional standard of care, which obliges physicians to apply their skills and intricate knowledge to a patients particular clinical circumstances. Instead patient choice becomes the criterion for deciding whether or not he or she is eligible for MAiD.

That physicians need to obtain informed consent from the patient before engaging in MAiD is obviously key. But they must also generally act according to the standard of care which is based on evidence-informed standards, shared among professionals and in line with their acquired clinical expertise.

The fact that a patient ultimately consents to a treatment proposed by a physician does not dislodge this a priori standard. It is part of medical practice that physicians can present only those medical treatment options that are reasonably and objectively indicated based on the standard of care.

They use the example of a hip replacement to illustrate the problem. Before surgery, which is risky and painful, a doctor will advise a patient to modify his lifestyle or to use pain medication. He doesnt reach for a scalpel immediately.

But C-7 effectively allows a patient to self-diagnose his enduring and intolerable suffering and to prescribe the remedy, death. This is obviously a very tricky problem for patients with mental disorders.

This is a stunning reversal of the central role of the medical and legal concept of the standard of care. It lifts informed consent up to the status of the sole arbiter of what constitutes proper medical practice. This development is also internationally unprecedented. Even the three most permissive MAiD regimes in the world -- Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, the only ones that currently permit physician-provided ending of life outside the end-of-life context -- treat MAiD rightly as the last resort, available when no other options are seen to remain.

The authors caustically observe that Canadian doctors have surrendered their professional integrity.

By supporting Bill C-7, medical organizations are handing over to patients the determination of professional standards. They are thereby also abandoning their commitment to patients to provide the best evidence-informed care, based on the concept of informed consent that we also know is rarely if ever fully realized in practice.

Parliamentary critics are also alarmed at the haste with which the law is changing. Colleagues, how did we get to this point, where we are debating an overhaul of our entire regime a few short years after its enactment and before we have even undertaken a parliamentary review? asked Opposition Senate leader Don Plett this week. As has been said before, we are here because of a lower court decision made by one judge, in one province and because the government chose not to defend its own legislation.

Michael Cook is editor of BioEdge

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Amendments to Canada's euthanasia law threaten traditional 'standard of care' - BioEdge

Court to decide on euthanasia and right to die in South Africa – BusinessTech

An atheist advocate and doctor have added their voices to a crucial legal challenge to determine whether or not euthanasia should be legalised in South Africa.

The last time the issue was raised in court in South Africa was in 2015 when lawyer Robert Stransham-Ford, who was dying, launched an urgent application in the Pretoria High Court for an order that a doctor be legally entitled to give him a lethal dose to end his life.

It was an individual application, not done in the public interest. Judge Hans Fabricius ruled in his favour, but unbeknown to the judge, Stansham-Ford died, naturally, two hours before the judgment.

The case went to the Supreme Court of Appeal, the State respondents fearing a precedent.

In essence, the SCA ruled that this was not the right matter to develop the common law and that Judge Fabriciuss ruling was moot and had no effect since Stansham-Ford had died already.

Now medical doctor Suzanne Walter, a palliative care specialist, and her patient Diethelm Harck, who have both been diagnosed with terminal diseases, are hoping to persuade Johannesburg High Court Judge Raylene Keightly to develop the law to allow both physician-assisted suicide (PAS) (where the doctor prescribes and the patient self-administers) and physician assisted euthanasia (PAE) (where the doctor administers any medicine to end life).

The matter is set down for hearing on 22 February, and is expected to start with the evidence of Walter, who was diagnosed in February 2017 with Multiple Myeloma, and Harck, who was diagnosed in 2013 with Motor Neuron Disease.

In pleadings they both say they are suffering torturing symptoms. While it is not unlawful for them to commit suicide, they fear when the time is right, they will not be capable of swallowing pills or self-administering medication.

If a willing doctor were to help them, he or she would face criminal charges and would also face being struck off the roll by the Health Professionals Council of South Africa (HPCSA) for unprofessional conduct.

The two say that the law as it stands, and the attitude of the HPCSA, impinge on their right to dignity and right to live a life and choose the way they want to die.

They want Parliament to enact legislation to give effect to their rights to self-determination. In the meantime, they say, the court should rule that any mentally competent terminally ill person may approach the high court for an order allowing them to undergo either PAS or PAE.

Joining their cause as friends of the court are Advocate Bruce Leech and Dr Paul Rowe, both atheists.

In an affidavit filed with the court, Leech says public policy is rooted in the Christian ethic inherited via South Africas colonialist legal systems first of Roman-Dutch Law and then of English Law. So too is the HPCSAs rule against PAS and PAE.

Christian values are imposed directly and indirectly on people who do not necessarily share those values. I do not share these beliefs and neither does Dr Rowe.

And once it is shown that this is the case, the retention of this policy is plainly a limitation imposed on the right under the Constitution to freely exercise ones religious choice and freely believe or think what one chooses.

The decriminalisation of PAS and PAE does not in any way infringe on the rights of those who do not believe in PAS and PAE, based on their own religious and moral convictions.

The HPCSA and the State respondents, the Ministers of Health, Justice, and the National Director of Public Prosecutions are all opposing the application.

The HPCSA says doctors should be willing to obey its code of conduct which protects the public and is in the best interests of patients. It says the ban on euthanasia and assisted suicide does not offend the Constitution, and if it does, it is justified because it is necessary to protect the right to life and protect and preserve trust in the doctor-patient relationship.

Medicine and medical treatment ameliorates the pain and suffering of those who have or are in the terminal phase of a serious disease. Such treatments are available (to Walter and Harck) and are progressively being made available to all persons in South Africa.

The state respondents have essentially denied all the allegations made and say Walters and Harck are not entitled to the legal relief they seek.

Civic organisation Cause of Justice, also a friend of the court, is also opposing the application. The organisation says doctors must not be allowed to kill a person because no matter the loss of quality of life, each human life has inherent worth.

To depart from the principle will result in a cultural shift and a slippery slope towards acceptance of death as a solution to human pain and suffering. We must guard against this at all costs.

The Centre for Applied Legal Studies (CALS) has been given permission by Judge Keightly to present evidence.

It supports the right to die with dignity.

Attorney Sheena Swemmer said the case raises important constitutional issues about the rights to human dignity, life, health and bodily autonomy.

The Centre will present evidence from experts in Canada, the Netherlands and Oregon, in the USA, where assisted dying is legal.

These specialists are well-placed to outline the policies and checks and balances and provide first hand experience in implementing them.

They are also able to speak more generally to the evolution of medical ethics and the nature of terminal illnesses and end of life care generally, she said.

After the evidence of Walters and Harck, the matter is expected to be adjourned until later this year.

Read: Push to raise the drinking age in South Africa: report

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Court to decide on euthanasia and right to die in South Africa - BusinessTech

WATCH: ALS Activist Bjorn Formosa Believes Euthanasia Should Be There For Those Who Need It – Lovin Malta

Maltas leading ALS activist Bjorn Formosa believes euthanasia should be made available for certain cases.

Im a terminal patient. Im not in favour of euthanasia personally, Im in favour of life and Im ready to live until Im 100, Formosa clarified when asked his position on L-Erbga Fost Il-imga.

However, the activist said, his organisation encounters patients with the most unforgiving diseases, people often hidden away from the publics knowledge.

ALS and Huntingtons disease are some of the worse diseases out there, Formosa continued.

There are also extremes, like locked-in syndrome, when a patient is completely paralysed they cant even blink but are conscious of whats happening. Imagine spending day after day without being able to move. Its not my place to tell such a desperate person that they need to live.

If I lost my faculty of speech and ability to move my eyes, how would I do the work Im doing? We need to understand each individuals case and their sense of life, the ALS activist added.

Active euthanasia and assisted suicide are illegal in Malta, but the debate has reached national discourse.

Prime Minister Robert Abela has called for a serious discussion on the issue after Deputy Leader Daniel Micallef made a public appeal for a debate after his father battled a serious illness before dying. On a European level, MEP Cyrus Engerer had told this newsroom that he was in favour of having the choice in Malta.

Lovin Malta also interviewed Maltese assisted-dying campaigner Sam Debattista who was diagnosed with Huntingtons Disease at the age of 17.

However, it seems Maltas MPs are still cold to the idea of introducing legislation on euthanasia.

Read Lovin Maltas analysis on the state of euthanasia debate on Malta and around the world here.

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WATCH: ALS Activist Bjorn Formosa Believes Euthanasia Should Be There For Those Who Need It - Lovin Malta

Assisted suicide a ‘failure to care for the terminally-ill’ bishops warn in Oireachtas submission – The Irish Catholic

Assisted suicide reflects a failure of compassion on the part of society the Catholic bishops have warned in their submission to the Oireachtas committee reviewing legislation that, if passed, would legalise euthanasia.

Good palliative care not assisted suicide offers terminally-ill people the best possibility of achievinga dignified and peaceful end of life, the Church leaders said in their submission.

They insist that assisted suicide is a failure to respond to the challenge of caring for terminally-ill patients as they approach the end of their lives.

The bishops also pointed to the fact that the legislation as drafted would coerce the consciences of objecting healthcare providers in order to facilitate something they know to be gravely immoral and utterly incompatible with their vocation to heal.

This burdening of conscience is unnecessary, disproportionate and seriously unjust, the submission added.

In the context of the Covid-19 pandemic, the bishops say they have been deeply moved by the level of generosity and tenderness that has been shown by so many healthcare professionals and the sacrifices that have been made by so many to protect those who are most at risk.

Alongside that positive manifestation of genuine compassion, we note, however, that some of the written protocols which relate to the difficult and essential task of prioritising critical care resources, are shot through with language which is essentially utilitarian in its assessment of the value of human life.

Whatever our prognosis and however limited our capacity, our value as persons is rooted in who we are rather than in our life-expectancy or our ability to reach certain standards of physical or mental performanceWe contend that, the committee would best serve humanity and the common good of society by recommending to the Oireachtas that this Bill should not be passed.

The submission which can be read in fullhere concludes by also recommending that the Oireachtas should consider whether there is adequate provision for palliative care and, if so, whether there is sufficient energy invested in making its availability known and its purpose understood.

Meanwhile,more than 2,700 healthcare professionals have signed an open letter stating that they are gravely concerned about the attempt to introduce assisted suicide.

Opponents of the bill, including the majority of geriatricians, argue that it stigmatises the elderly, sick and disabled.

The letter came as submissions close for the second stage of theDying with Dignity Billintroduced by People Before Profit TD Gino Kenny.

One of the open letters signatories, geriatrician and consultant physician Dr Kevin McCarroll, toldThe Irish Catholicthat the bill results from a prejudice against the elderly and those living with a disability.

There is an endemic prejudice about older people and unfortunately that leads into euthanasia becoming an option, he said.

Dr McCarrollargued that a lack of understanding of palliative care and a simplistic understanding of dignity are at the heart of the bill.

Ultimately, there is a lack of understanding of what can be done in modern medicine in order to palliate patients, he said.

The real aim should be living with dignity and optimising their care. Some of these people talk about pressure on resources there shouldnt be pressure on resources, there should be good quality care, Dr McCarroll insisted.

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Assisted suicide a 'failure to care for the terminally-ill' bishops warn in Oireachtas submission - The Irish Catholic

Steve Braunias: Why The Bachelorette has me thinking about euthanasia – New Zealand Herald

Bachelorette Lexie Brown, before the reality kicked in. Photo / TVNZ

OPINION:

No. No, it hasn't got any better, not by a hair, not even by a Planck length (the smallest possible size for anything in the universe, equivalent to around a millionth of a billionth of a billionth of a billionth of a cm across), but a good and indeed very gratifying development of the latest series of The Bachelorette is that it hasn't got any worse.

Episode three on Monday night had a lightness of being, as though it had thrown in the towel. It didn't pretend it had much life left in it. It didn't rage against the dying of the light. It was as though the show had signed up for last year's referendum result: euthanasia.

Or maybe it bucked the result of that other referendum and was stoned.

Either way, it made for very mellow viewing. Hottie Lexie, the show's trophy bride waiting at the altar for her favoured drongo, went to the zoo with one of the drongos. I cannot remember his name. It may have been Jack, Jock, Spock or Sprongo.

They looked at some giraffes. The giraffes were very tall. There were trees in the background. The day was overcast. A zookeeper said a few words. Lexie and Jack/Jock giggled, dragged their feet, yawned.

There was something woozy about their date. At one point I thought the giraffes were going to say a few words, too, but it was possible to detect a harsh reality at the margins. That is: Spock/Sprongo doesn't stand a chance.

Their date was in the friend zone. It got nowhere near the erotic zone. It wasn't physical, it wasn't chemical, it just didn't look right. And actually, this crucial absence is beginning to look evident in a number of Lexie's eligible drongos.

There's that guy who got plastered in a previous episode on a glass and a half of red. He doesn't look right next to Lexie; she looks like she wants to run away, politely. There's that American guy who comes across as aggressive, surly, competitive, and those vibes don't make him look right next to chilled-out Lexie; she looks like she wants to run for the hills, fast.

And then there's that guy with an apartment in Paris. "I don't know if I'm cool enough for him?", said Lexie, her rising inflection soaring to the height of a giraffe. He's not that cool. He wore a pair of dungarees. But he doesn't look right next to her, either. She looks like she wants to run, and reflect on why it is that cool is often synonymous with deeply boring.

7 Feb, 2021 03:45 AMQuick Read

But the guy with his hair in a bun looks right next to her. He was the one who said to her the second they met, "Hello, gorgeous". She chose him as her very first date. The whole series could easily have wrapped up then and there. Jock/Spock, Plastered Guy, American Psycho, Cool Boring Guy and most of the others just don't measure up to Bun Guy.

The Bachelorette could be heading for a quick exit euthanasia, swiftly.

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Steve Braunias: Why The Bachelorette has me thinking about euthanasia - New Zealand Herald

Barbara Kay: Wider access to assisted dying in Canada will be catastrophic for the disabled – National Post

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A bill to expand access to medical assistance in dying (MAiD) comes to a Senate vote no later than Feb 17. That leaves a bare working week for the House to consider what may be a number of Senate-approved amendments before a court-imposed deadline for final passage on Feb 26.

Bill C-7 is the Trudeau governments response to the 2019 Quebec Superior Court Truchon ruling named for Jean Truchon, one of its two disabled, but not dying, plaintiffs which struck down the current euthanasia laws natural death is reasonably foreseeable criterion as too narrow. It asserted the right to MAiD for any Canadian suffering what he or she considers irremediable mental or physical suffering. The government did not appeal the judgment, an indication of its willingness in fact eagerness to meet and, as evidenced in Bill C-7, go beyond Truchons request.

For example, C-7 eliminates the 10-day reflection period, and reduces the need for two witnesses to one (who may be part of the caretaking process). C-7 would therefore open the door to MAiD on demand for people struggling with chronic physical or mental disability a total of about six million Canadians, according to government stats.

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This feature is viewed as particularly catastrophic by many disabled Canadians, as well it should be. The obvious message to the disabled is that our society puts a higher value on dying with dignity than living with dignity, even with greatly diminished independence. Those disabled who require a great deal of costly care will be reminded far more overtly than they already are and we know they are that MAiD is available to them. As well, those who have just become disabled through calamitous injury will be encouraged to consider MAiD when they are most psychologically vulnerable to the temptation.

Nobody is more sensitive to this inevitable consequence than David Shannon, who became quadriplegic following a spinal cord injury in a rugby scrum at age 18. Despite multiple surgeries and close brushes with death, he leads what he considers a full life. An Order of Ontario and Order of Canada recipient, Shannon obtained a law degree, and has acted as a Human Rights Commissioner. Shannon writes, Ive loved and been loved. My proudest accomplishment is that I lived. He asks, Why is there not the promotion to pursue ones autonomy?

In a December speech to the House of Commons on C-7 Conservative MP Tamara Jansen said the disabled have to know that there is a viable alternative to death.

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Thats the moral dilemma in a nutshell. Without a viable alternative, one cannot say euthanasia is a freely made choice. In reality, disabled people often choose MAiD because the only other options are not viable.

Roger Foleys case, for example, continues to haunt me two years after I first wrote about him. Foley suffers from a neurodegenerative disease, cerebellar ataxia, that renders him unable to function independently. In his London hospital he has suffered food poisoning and substandard care serious enough to cause suicidal ideation. Foley has recorded being reminded that MAiD is an option. His only other choice is a forced discharge and dependence on contracted agencies that proved unreliable in the past. Foley wants a third option: assisted life with self-directed funding, which would cost 10-15 per cent of the daily $1,845 his London hospital charges him.

Why cant he have that? It would allow him to live in the community with dignity, safety and continuity of care instead of in the soulless sterility of a hospital. Foleys spirit and determination are indomitable, but one can see how easily others in his situation might request MAiD and, thanks to C-7, get it on the same day.

In 2016, Quebecer Archie Rolland, who suffered from advanced ALS and required specialized care chose MAiD when he was transferred against his will, for cost-saving reasons, to a facility with inadequately trained staff whose incompetence made his life a living hell. In the end, Rolland said, Its not the ALS thats killing me; its my fight for better care, for decent care.

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Dr. Catherine Frazee gave heartbreaking testimony to the Senate hearings, citing Rollands case and that of Sean Tagert, also a prisoner of ALS. Tagert considered his quality of life good. He had shared custody of his adolescent son, while an elaborate technological system gave his days purpose. Denied the two additional daily hours of home care he required, Tagert was transferred to an institution far from his son, without the sophisticated technology that added critical value to his existence. So no viable alternative for Tagert. Is it any wonder he then chose MAiD?

A 2017 Journal of Ethics in Mental Health study of those who signed up for assisted suicide in Oregon concluded that pain and suffering were amongst the least cited reasons for choosing assisted death. Most significant were loss of autonomy, loss of self-control, feelings of being a burden, and, paramountly, fear of being alone. As anti-euthanasia physician Paul Saba writes in his eloquent new book, Made to Live, The euthanasia and assisted suicide mindset has been marketed by attacking peoples failing courage and preying on their fear that they will end their lives as a worthless human burden or worse, alone. Further, It is irresponsible to promote the myth that euthanasia and assisted suicide are never the result of severe external pressures, and that they are pure rational choices freely arrived at by citizens of a civilized and caring country.

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Quebec Justice Christine Baudouin approved the right to MAiD (which he got) of the cerebral-palsy afflicted Jean Truchon, because He can no longer live on his own He says he has been dead since 2012. Why couldnt he live on his own? He couldnt afford to. In an August 2017 email to Jonathan Marchand, who suffers from muscular dystrophy and is trapped in my long-term care facility, but has long fought for the right of the disabled, including Jean Truchon, to live with adequate assistance at home, Truchon confided (my translation), I want to thank you for your interest in my cause. In response to your question concerning home care, I think that actually if there were services of 70 hours and more, I would have preferred to stay at home and possibly I would not have had the same wish to die.

Two more care hours daily might have saved Sean Tagerts and Jean Truchons lives. We should not be offering wider access to euthanasia until every Canadian that needs it has a truly viable option: access to excellent palliative care (only accessible to 30 per cent of us) or optimal life assistance for the disabled. But C-7 will, shamefully, make Canada one of the most MAiD-friendly countries in the world.

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Barbara Kay: Wider access to assisted dying in Canada will be catastrophic for the disabled - National Post

Portugal: Parliament Gives the Green Light to Assisted Suicide – FSSPX.News

Taking advantage of the re-election of President Marcelo Rebelo for a second term as head of state, the Portuguese Parliament has just voted for the decriminalization of euthanasia in the country. A decision that comes as the health system is at the end of its rope due to the virulence of the COVID-19 epidemic, which has resulted in a record number of deaths since the start of 2021.

Do not speak of euthanasia but simply of a medically assisted anticipation of death, a soft way of designating the thing, voted on January 29, 2021 in a country at the head of which a fervent Catholic, in the person of Marcelo Rebelo, has just been re-elected.

The final version of the text, made public on January 26, and voted on three days later, provides that only national citizens legally residing in national territory, having made a free and informed decision, may have recourse to euthanasia. But in fact, it is much more a question of assisted suicide than euthanasia.

As the European Institute of Bioethics (IEB) notes, the new law does not require suffering to be caused by injury or disease, but only that it be concurrent with them. Likewise, it does not matter whether the patients suffering is able to be alleviated or not: suffering which is intolerable but which could be alleviated can thus pave the way for euthanasia.

Everything is based, in short, on a subjective assessment of the patient which must be validated by the medical profession: the door opens to all abuses, since the text even provides that psychological suffering is one of the causes of assisted suicide.

But thats not all: the existence of a terminal illness is not required for the law to apply, euthanasia being allowed for people with permanent injuries of extreme severity. Thus, a severely disabled person, physically or mentally, is eligible for euthanasia.

The law still provides for possible sanctions for health centers that fail to apply the new euthanasia provisions, even though conscientious objection is still recognized for health workers. This could pose formidable problems for Catholic clinics and hospitals.

After its adoption, the law will be sent to the Head of State, who will be responsible for promulgating it, and Portugal will then become the fourth country of the European Union (EU) to provide a legal framework for the physical elimination of the most vulnerable, after Belgium, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands.

President Robelo does, however, have the option of vetoing the text, or sending it to the Constitutional Court for prior review. But the head of states veto could be overturned by a second MP vote.

The Portuguese Episcopal Conference (CEP) expressed sadness and indignation at the adoption of this law which violates the principle of the inviolability of human life enshrined in our fundamental law.

The CEP has appealed to protect life, especially when it is the most fragile, with all the means and in particular with access to palliative care, which the majority of the Portuguese population does not yet have.

As the IEB specifies, 70% of Portuguese patients likely to benefit from palliative care do not have access to it due to a lack of sufficiently trained staff. As it is well known that access to appropriate care provides relief to patients, who then no longer wish to be euthanized.

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Portugal: Parliament Gives the Green Light to Assisted Suicide - FSSPX.News

Right to die: Doctor & patient head to court over euthanasia – All4Women

ABOUT THE AUTHORGroundUp

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(By Tania Broughton)

The last time the issue was raised in court in South Africa was in 2015 when lawyer Robert Stransham-Ford, who was dying, launched an urgent application in the Pretoria High Court for an order that a doctor be legally entitled to give him a lethal dose to end his life.

It was an individual application, not done in the public interest. Judge Hans Fabricius ruled in his favour, but unbeknown to the judge, Stansham-Ford died, naturally, two hours before the judgment.

The case went to the Supreme Court of Appeal, the State respondents fearing a precedent.

In essence, the SCA ruled that this was not the right matter to develop the common law and that Judge Fabriciuss ruling was moot and had no effect since Stansham-Ford had died already.

Now medical doctor Suzanne Walter, a palliative care specialist, and her patient Diethelm Harck, who have both been diagnosed with terminal diseases, are hoping to persuade Johannesburg High Court Judge Raylene Keightly to develop the law to allow both physician assisted suicide (PAS) (where the doctor prescribes and the patient self-administers) and physician assisted euthanasia (PAE) (where the doctor administers any medicine to end life).

The matter is set down for hearing on 22 February, and is expected to start with the evidence of Walter, who was diagnosed in February 2017 with Multiple Myeloma, and Harck, who was diagnosed in 2013 with Motor Neuron Disease.

In pleadings they both say they are suffering torturing symptoms. While it is not unlawful for them to commit suicide, they fear when the time is right, they will not be capable of swallowing pills or self-administering medication.

If a willing doctor were to help them, he or she would face criminal charges and would also face being struck off the roll by the Health Professionals Council of South Africa (HPCSA) for unprofessional conduct.

The two say that the law as it stands, and the attitude of the HPCSA, impinge on their right to dignity and right to live a life and choose the way they want to die.

They want Parliament to enact legislation to give effect to their rights to self-determination. In the meantime, they say, the court should rule that any mentally competent terminally ill person may approach the high court for an order allowing them to undergo either PAS or PAE.

In an affidavit filed with the court, Leech says public policy is rooted in the Christian ethic inherited via South Africas colonialist legal systems first of Roman-Dutch Law and then of English Law. So too is the HPCSAs rule against PAS and PAE.

Christian values are imposed directly and indirectly on people who do not necessarily share those values. I do not share these beliefs and neither does Dr Rowe.

And once it is shown that this is the case, the retention of this policy is plainly a limitation imposed on the right under the Constitution to freely exercise ones religious choice and freely believe or think what one chooses.

The decriminalisation of PAS and PAE does not in any way infringe on the rights of those who do not believe in PAS and PAE, based on their own religious and moral convictions.

The HPCSA and the State respondents, the Ministers of Health, Justice, and the National Director of Public Prosecutions are all opposing the application.

The HPCSA says doctors should be willing to obey its code of conduct which protects the public and is in the best interests of patients. It says the ban on euthanasia and assisted suicide does not offend the Constitution, and if it does, it is justified because it is necessary to protect the right to life and protect and preserve trust in the doctor-patient relationship.

Medicine and medical treatment ameliorates the pain and suffering of those who have or are in the terminal phase of a serious disease. Such treatments are available (to Walter and Harck) and are progressively being made available to all persons in South Africa.

Civic organisation Cause of Justice, also a friend of the court, is also opposing the application. The organisation says doctors must not be allowed to kill a person because no matter the loss of quality of life, each human life has inherent worth.

To depart from the principle will result in a cultural shift and a slippery slope towards acceptance of death as a solution to human pain and suffering. We must guard against this at all costs.

The Centre for Applied Legal Studies (CALS) has been given permission by Judge Keightly to present evidence.

It supports the right to die with dignity.

Attorney Sheena Swemmer said the case raises important constitutional issues about the rights to human dignity, life, health and bodily autonomy. The Centre will present evidence from experts in Canada, the Netherlands and Oregon, in the USA, where assisted dying is legal.

These specialists are well-placed to outline the policies and checks and balances and provide first hand experience in implementing them. They are also able to speak more generally to the evolution of medical ethics and the nature of terminal illnesses and end of life care generally, she said.

After the evidence of Walters and Harck, the matter is expected to be adjourned until later this year.

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Right to die: Doctor & patient head to court over euthanasia - All4Women

Could the fate of society depend on how we think about bodies? – Angelus News

Abortion. In vitro and other forms of assisted reproduction. Euthanasia. End-of-life decisions. They are among the most sensitive social issues of our age, and public policies in these areas generate heated moral argument and debate. So why cant our society agree about them?

According to O. Carter Snead, Notre Dame University law and politics professor and director of the de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture, the reason is that we have lost any shared understanding of the meaning of human life.

O. Carter Snead (Courtesy image)

We have indeed forgotten who we are and what we owe to one another. We desperately need to remember, he has written.

Sneads new book, What It Means to be Human: The Case for the Body in Public Bioethics (Harvard, $39.95), was recently named one of The Wall Street Journals Top 10 books of 2020.

In it, Snead takes a deep look at the way our society looks at the human person and human life what he terms expressive individualism. This philosophy, he argues, reduces human persons to the sum of their feelings and desires, forgetting that we are living bodies with deep personal histories, and that we belong to one another in families and communities.

In an interview with Angelus, Snead explains how this way of thinking leads to policies that diminish the most vulnerable and encourage divisions in society. He also calls for a new anthropology and better laws that would lead to greater compassion for the weak and greater respect for the sanctity and dignity of human life.

Why write this book and why now?

Ive been involved in public bioethics for almost 20 years, including time as general counsel for President George W. Bushs Council on Bioethics. Ive always been struck by how frequently the law fails to protect the weakest and most vulnerable among us in the context of public bioethics.

Public bioethics began in scandals. Think of the Tuskegee scandal in which American researchers systematically deceived and exploited poor African American sharecroppers who were suffering from syphilis in Macon County, Alabama. Or of the research involving the intentional injection of Hepatitis into intellectually disabled children, chronicled by Henry Beecher in the New England Journal of Medicine. Or of the scandals involving research on newly born, just aborted, and imminently dying children in Scandinavia by American researchers.

So I started asking why it was that the law failed in this way, and what I came to was the view that our laws are rooted in a false and impoverished vision of what it means to be human and to flourish as a human being.

Laws dealing with abortion, assisted reproduction, end-of-life decision-making, euthanasia, and assisted suicide have a flattened, false vision of the person that excludes those who are not capable of high-level cognition, who cannot articulate their inner selves, and who cannot chart their own lifes course.

Its an anthropological vision that Robert Bellah, Charles Taylor, and others have referred to as expressive individualism, in which a person is conceived of as a singular, atomized individual unit abstracted from any social context such as connections to family, community, or country.

Expressive individuals are thought to flourish by their self-discovery of interior truths. They must chart their path accordingly and everything else relationships, the body, and nature are instruments to be harnessed in pursuit of that goal.

Excluded from that vision are the elderly, the disabled, the poor, the marginalized, and children including unborn and newborn.

A doctor draws blood from one of the Tuskegee test subjects in 1932. In his book, Snead argues that laws are failing the modern society's most vulnerable the same way they failed African Americans deceived during the Tuskegee Syphilis Study. (Wikimedia Commons)

In U.S. abortion jurisprudence the moral status of the developing human person is entirely determined by each individual pregnant woman. What are the dangers of building laws about the human person based on such a subjective approach?

In Roe v. Wade, Justice Harry Blackmun framed the question of abortion on the anthropology of expressive individualism, even though he didnt acknowledge it. He described the context of abortion as a clash of strangers, in which the child in the womb was considered to be an invasive burden, a parasite, something subhuman and sub-personal.

Blackmun declined to take a position on the moral status of the unborn human being. But he did say the state may not recognize that child as a person, not just under the Constitution but under the domestic laws of the state. The state may not adopt, as he said, one vision of personhood or one definition of personhood.

So the unborn childs moral status is an entirely subjective matter, to be determined by the woman carrying the child. It is a declaration that that child is sub-personal, has no rights under the Constitution, and may not have rights under state or federal law insofar as that conflicts with the interests and desires of the woman.

But a mother and her unborn child are not strangers. They are related to each other, both biologically and in a deeper relational way. If you were to understand the crisis of abortion through that lens, the conclusion is very different.

If we were to reframe abortion law as a unique crisis involving a mother and her child, we the community and the government would be summoned to their aid. By atomizing the mother and the child, Blackmun sets up an adversarial relationship of strife that can only be resolved through violence. Thats precisely what he gave us: the right to abortion.

You also explore the lack of laws that regulate artificial reproductive technologies (ART) and argue that this area of bioethics is also neglectful of the body and relationships. What would a coherent legal approach to ART look like?

People can do almost whatever they want in the quest to create a biologically related child. I argue that laws should treat these practices in light of the parent-child relationship that they involve.

The relationship between parent and child has certain implications and creates unchosen obligations on the part of the parent to care for the child, a right which that child does not need to earn.

When we begin the process of conceiving a child and initiating a pregnancy and birth through ART, were not just talking about an individual that is undertaking a project. Were talking about a person that wants to be a parent and who is a parent once they begin to participate in this process.

The best interest of that child is to be welcomed and unconditionally loved and cared for throughout his/her life. That means the law has to offer inducements, protections, deterrents, and other behavior-shaping devices to make sure that people act as they should vis-a-vis the well-being and the best interests of a child.

The way we practice IVF right now involves sex selection, multiple gestations, and all kinds of techniques that can modify the childs body. It involves gestational surrogacy and the buying and selling of eggs or batches of living embryos. Thats not an endeavor thats about being a parent and rightly taking care of children.

We have legal frameworks and policies that are designed to protect the well-being of children in American family law. And we have mechanisms to help support and shape the behavior of parents to ensure their childrens well-being.

Thats precisely the kind of norm that we should draw upon when thinking not only about ART, but about abortion, too: We should think about abortion as the proposed use of lethal force on behalf of a mother on an innocent child.

(Shutterstock)

Many states are passing laws that allow people the freedom to choose the time, place, and manner of ones death. How can we make the case for protecting life from conception until natural death?

Expressive individualism doesnt take seriously what it means to be an embodied being that were fragile corruptible bodies in time, that were mutually dependent upon one another, and that were subject to natural limits, including disease, age, and death.

Because were embodied beings, we have to have certain kinds of support systems in our lives. We need what the philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre calls networks of uncalculated giving and graceful receiving made up of people who are willing to make the good of others their own without seeking anything in return for it. The most obvious example of a network of uncalculated giving and graceful receiving is the family.

We all depend on these networks for survival, from our time as newborns, when we get sick, and as were nearing the end of our life. But we also depend on them to learn to care for others without expecting anything in return.

The law goes wrong when it fails to acknowledge this, especially when it comes to end-of-life decision-making. In places like California, which has legalized assisted suicide and promotes aggressive termination of life-sustaining measures for quality of life reasons, the law assumes that the highest good of the person whos sick is to assert his/her unencumbered will.

And so proponents say, Lets give them the freedom to kill themselves, to author the last chapter of their book in a way that coheres with their life story.

But anybody whos familiar with the clinical context in which these issues arise knows thats not reality. A person whos having suicidal ideation is almost always a person whos suffering from depression or from intractable suffering. And thats not a zone where autonomy is operating at its height thats a zone where a person needs help.

If you come to their aid and treat someones depression or pain the right way, studies show that a lot of suicidal ideation goes away.

Now, are there people, probably rich, maybe white or privileged, who can make the decision to end their lives in a full and free way? Maybe there are, but you dont make law and public policy for the richest or most privileged people. You make law and public policy to protect the weakest and most vulnerable.

In California, there are just too many of those people the elderly, the disabled, members of marginalized groups, minorities, and others who already dont have enough protection from inequalities and the health care system that we have.

These laws create a path of least resistance toward assisted suicide, especially for the marginalized. This is why the disability rights community largely opposes assisted suicide, and why Bishop Charles Blake and the Pentecostal African American community in California rose up against it.

When it comes to persuasion, its important for arguments to be sound, to be grounded in evidence and good reasoning. But even more than that, I always come back to Mother Teresa: you cant really persuade someone without loving them first, and not in a cynical or strategic way.

People who disagree with us wont hear us and we wont listen to them if we dont take that approach. Hopefully that will touch their hearts in a way that they will be open to listen.

But even if not, you still have to love them, not only because its the right thing to do, but because its the only way were going to actually have a conversation in which we hear one another and think about what is being said.

Originally posted here:

Could the fate of society depend on how we think about bodies? - Angelus News

First Nations leaders say Bill C7 goes against their beliefs and values – Grandin Media – Grandin Media

Indigenous leaders from across Canada say they have grave concerns about efforts to expand the availability of assisted suicide, warning it will have a lasting impact on our vulnerable populations.

In a letter entitled Indigenous Peoples Should Not Be Compelled to Provide or Facilitate Medical Assistance in Dying, 15 First Nations representatives and Indigenous health-care workers and leaders asked the government to recognize the value of Aboriginal healing practices and Canadians right not to be compelled to provide or facilitate in the provision of MAiD (medical assistance in dying).

The letter, addressed to senators, federal and provincial politicians, and health-care regulators, calls on the federal government to respect First Nations relationships with their communities and their right to determine how health services are delivered.

Signatories to the letter include Siksika Health Services CEO Tyler White, former Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick Graydon Nicholas, retired senator Nick Sibbeston of the Northwest Territories, Indigenous health and suicide prevention advisers, and elders.

Bill C-7 goes against many of our cultural values, belief systems, and sacred teachings, said the leaders. The view that MAiD is a dignified end for the terminally ill or those living with disabilities should not be forced on our peoples.

The leaders say the consultation process has been inadequate and has not taken into account the existing health disparities and social inequalities we face compared to non-Indigenous people.

The letter states Indigenous people are vulnerable to discrimination and coercion in the health-care system and, along with all Canadians, deserve protection from unsolicited counsel regarding MAiD.

Given our history with the negative consequences of colonialism and the involuntary imposition of cultural values and ideas, we believe that people should not be compelled to provide or facilitate in the provision of MAiD.

The Indigenous leaders and advocates (supported by the Physicians Alliance Against Euthanasia) are among many groups voicing opposition to Bill C-7, which would eliminate the need for a persons death to be reasonability foreseeable to qualify for euthanasia. The legislation would also eliminate or ease other safeguards such as lowering the number of witnesses needed when someone consents to assisted suicide.

The House of Commons passed Bill C-7 by a two-to-one margin Dec. 10. It is now being debated in the Senate, which is expected to vote on it by Feb. 17.

On Tuesday senators voted to amend Bill C-7 to give the federal government 18 months to expand access to assisted suicide to people suffering solely from mental illnesses. More amendments are expected as debate continues.

The Senates legal and constitutional affairs committee heard from 81 witnesses during five days of hearings. It also received 86 written briefs from health-care professionals, faith groups, and organizations including the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, Canadian Physicians for Life, Cardus, Christian Legal Fellowship, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, and the Canadian Society of Palliative Care. (All written briefs are available on the Senate website).

Canadas bishops have said the many perspectives shared at the Senate hearings reveal there is no consensus in Canada on expanding assisted suicide despite the governments claim to the contrary in order to justify the passing of Bill C-7.

As the Senate moves toward its final verdict on Bill C-7, some critics think the federal government should not change the existing law, which took effect in 2016, until a full and promised parliamentary review of the legislation is undertaken first.

Colleagues, how did we get to this point, where we are debating an overhaul of our entire regime a few short years after its enactment and before we have even undertaken a parliamentary review? asked Conservative Don Plett, the Opposition leader in the Senate.

We are here because of a lower court decision made by one judge, in one province, and because the government chose not to defend its own legislation.

Pro-life groups are urging Canadians to share their concerns with senators on the legal and constitutional affairs committee.

-With files from Canadian Catholic News

Continued here:

First Nations leaders say Bill C7 goes against their beliefs and values - Grandin Media - Grandin Media

NKSC Organization of The Year – Carolina Tails Magazine

THE HUMANE SOCIETY OF GREENWOOD has been named the 2020 Organization of the Year by the statewide No Kill South Carolina (NKSC) initiative. This award is given to the organization that has excelled in implementing and/or maintaining NKSC lifesaving and humane strategies during the year. NKSC is a program of Charleston Animal Society, funded by the Petco Foundation.

Carolina Tails recently spoke to The Humane Society of Greenwoods Executive Director Connie Mawyer.

CT: Congratulations on your award! How does it feel?Connie: It feels extremely exciting. I have seen a change in the staffs fatigue level. When we have an influx of dogs or cats, we now formulate a plan on how to navigate. I no longer go home in tears, dreading some days. I enjoy coming to work, and the staff are motivated, and they want to learn more in this field. Most of all, I know that we are giving our all and we are not euthanizing animals at such a high rate.

CT: In 2016 the Humane Society of Greenwood had a Save Rate* of 50% and in 2020 you have achieved a remarkable 90%. How did you do it?

Connie: In 2018, we moved into a new building and started developing new life- saving strategies we learned from NKSC. By creating protocols, standards and implementing managed Intake we have streamlined in a sense, a balance for the number of animals we can take in and the number of staff to ensure the capacity of care. We have also increased our live release rate by reaching out to the community to help financially when an injured animal comes in the doors. Working together, we can save them with proper medical treatment and the community has been very generous in donating the funds to get the appropriate medical services we cannot afford.

* Save Rate = (Live Intake minus Euthanasia, Died, Lost in Care Outcomes) divided by Live Intake.

CT: What kind of challenges did you face and what do you attribute this achievement to?

Connie: We received push back and heard from frustrated community members. But as we have moved forward, we are educating the community about our lifesaving strategies and we are able to show them that it works through the numbers. One example is with our community cats. Our policy had been to take any and every cat into the shelter that was brought to us. Sadly, the feral cats and community outside cats were not likely to become adoptable and were more likely to be euthanized. By helping the community understand that the cats in the community are not indoor cats and do not thrive in the shelter setting, we have developed a community cat program and when we have the resources and funds, we have volunteers who TNR, Trap, Neuter, and Release these cats. We have also developed a foster program with community volunteers and we also have a great network of rescue organizations we work with all over the country to help us when we reach capacity.

CT: What message do you have to other shelter leaders who want to save more lives?Connie: It takes the entire team to make this work. The formula for the capacity of care, using managed intake and collaborating with the community as well as the other facilities. Here in Greenwood, we have also developed a working relationship with Animal Control. Working together we can tackle tough issues like neglect, strays and hoarding issues.

CT: What would you say to people who want to save animal lives in their own communities?Connie: Microchip and Spay and Neuter. I cannot say that enough. The issues that plague communities are the unwanted litters of both dogs and cats.

If you see a cat, please do not think you are helping that cat by bringing them to a shelter. Do not touch the cat. They will usually return home when they are done wandering, otherwise it is a cat that lives outside. Feral and community cats do not thrive in the shelter setting.

CT: What the future holds for the animals in Greenwood County?Connie: Working in partnership with the community to help bring the overpopulation down by being able to offer low-cost spay and neuter. We have a clinic at the Humane Society and we are working hard to get it operational. That will give the community a better opportunity to get their pets spayed and neutered. We are a resource and want to assist the residents of Greenwood by offering services and alternatives when we cannot take an animal in.

Originally posted here:

NKSC Organization of The Year - Carolina Tails Magazine

Irish Bishops urge parliament to reject Dying with Dignity bill – Vatican News

The Bishops of Ireland are calling on political leaders to reject the so-called Dying with Dignity Bill 2020.

By Lisa Zengarini

The Irish Bishops have expressed their opposition to a new bill that provides for people with progressive terminal illness to decide the timing of their own death and seek assistance to end their lives under controlled and monitored circumstances. The so-called "Dying with Dignity Bill 2020" was introduced in the Oireachtas ireann (Irish Parliament) last year and is presently under scrutiny.

A long and detailed Submission presented this week to the Oireachtas Committee on Justice, the Council for Life and the Consultative Group on Bioethics of the Irish Catholic Bishops Conference (ICBC), points out that, although it does not use the term suicide the Bill is essentially about making provision for a person who wishes to end his or her life, to make a formal declaration to that effect and to seek medical assistance in doing so. The Bills proposals therefore run radically counter to the common good, the promotion of which is a particular responsibility of the State, the Council for Life and the Consultative Group on Bioethics state, warning that it would not only encourage the acceptance of assisted suicide, but significantly weaken the protections against the non-consensual killing of particularly vulnerable classes of persons.

Pointing out that that the Submission is rooted in the Churchs conviction that we have a moral responsibility to care for our neighbour according to the Gospel image of the Good Samaritan and it draws on the insights of Letter Samaritanus bonus, on the care of persons in the critical and terminal phases of life, the Irish Bishops note that within existing law and medical practice, good palliative care, by upholding absolute respect for human life and, at the same time, acknowledging human mortality, offers terminally ill people the best possibility of achieving the dignified and peaceful end of life, mentioned in the Bill. In this respect, the Submission further emphasizes that the proposed legislation fails to require care givers to provide adequate palliative care for the terminally ill person.

Bishops also object to the assumption underlying assisted suicide that there is such a thing as a life which is no longer worth living: This false assumption, they say, inevitably erodes the very basis of legal respect and protection, on a basis of equality, for every human life, regardless of age, disability, competence, or illness. According to the Irish Bishops, assisted suicide reflects a failure of compassion on the part of society that same compassion which is often presented to justify it.

Regarding the question of patient autonomy, by which a person has the right to be treated and cared for in a manner which reflects his or her own personal values, hopes and desires, the Submission reiterates that this autonomy is not absolute because as members of society our decisions can have serious implications for others.

It also warns that assisted suicide would place the terminally ill, the disabled, and other vulnerable patients under emotional and social pressure to end their own lives in order to spare others the burden of caring for them. Moreover, the Irish Bishops point out that the the logic of assisted suicide propels the widening of the practice towards extremely vulnerable groups and towards non-consensual killing, as confirmed by international data on Countries like Belgium, The Netherlands and Switzerland where assisted suicide/euthanasia were originally introduced on limited grounds.

Another issue raised by the Submission is conscientious objection. According to the Bishops, the provision of the Bill fails to acknowledge the right to freedom of conscience for healthcare professionals who judge any significant cooperation with suicide to be morally wrong, thus coercing the consciences of objecting healthcare providers in order to facilitate something they know to be gravely immoral and utterly incompatible with their vocation to heal.

In the light of all these considerations and of Pope Francis's words against the current socio-cultural context which is gradually eroding the awareness of what makes human life precious, the Irish bishops conclude recommending to the Oireachtas that the Bill should not be passed.

Original post:

Irish Bishops urge parliament to reject Dying with Dignity bill - Vatican News

Colorado Springs Utilities announces Kelker Substation expansion | News | southeastexpress.org – Southeast Express

Colorado Springs Utilities is moving forward with plans to retire the coal-fired Martin Drake Power Plant and replace it with six individual gas-powered GE turbines.

Eric Gray, CEO of GE Gas Power, said the units are expected to arrive by the end of the year. As part of the transition, CSU will also expand the Kelker Substation, located along South Academy Boulevard, between Hancock Expressway and Astrozon Boulevard.

Latrina Ollie and Sharise George of Be the Change 719 organized a cleanup near the Kelker Substation.

The expansion will utilize the empty lot in between the existing Kelker Substation and the McDonald's at Astrozon Boulevard. The lot has been a frequent site for community cleanup efforts in the last year, and is regularly filled with litter and debris.

Kelker is our substation that has many lines coming and going out of that station, said Aram Benyamin, the CEO of CSU during a press conference Feb. 10. When we built the station we built it to a certain configuration. We have to expand that capacity. We have many assets well add to it: a new line, a high voltage position that well add, a transformer, and we will build in redundancy into the system, adding breakers into the substation. It is a critical station we want to make sure it has state of the art technology and capacity to maneuver the flow of power as we expand the city. Kelker is a critical substation and we want to invest capital and design it properly so we dont have any constriction issues there.

Construction is expected to begin in September 2021, with the expansion complete by December 2025. Starting Feb. 10, the U.S. Department of Agricultures Wildlife Services will begin a prairie dog mitigation program, setting live trap to capture prairie dogs for euthanasia. After euthanasia, the prairie dogs will be donated to a wildlife rehabilitation center for food for injured wildlife.

Prairie Dog Area

After the trapping period, expected to last through Feb. 24, CSU will treat the remaining burrows with aluminum phosphide and seal them. CSU has said there is no risk of secondary poisoning of raptors or other predators, nor will the public be at risk. A temporary 3.5 foot fence will be in place during the trapping period.

The transition away from a coal-powered plant will help CSU meet its goal of an 80 percent reduction in emissions by 2030. Benyamin says the transition will also lead to savings for CSU rate-payers.

That savings allows us to do projects that we would otherwise use ratepayers to do, he said. Were seeing a reduction in our operating costs by switching to gas.

Continued here:

Colorado Springs Utilities announces Kelker Substation expansion | News | southeastexpress.org - Southeast Express

Sale of Ascension sewer systems heads to voters; here’s what included in final deal – The Advocate

Ascension Parish voters will be asked April 24 to decide whether the way to settle parish government's decades-long struggle to improve sewage treatment is to let someone else handle it.

Through the years, parish leaders have floated various plans to build a regional system financed with government loans and grants or with a private partner. But the cost, a fledging customer base, and the potential necessity for high user fees, new taxes or both have led those ideas to founder time and again.

A new group of parish officials who fought as councilmen and president-elect in late 2019 to block a proposed sewer partnership with Bernhard Capital Partners Management have wrangled with the investment group and among themselves for the past 13 months.

They concluded it's better to exit the sewer business and sell off the parish assets. Under the deal voters will consider, Ascension would sell its package plants, force mains, trunk lines, land and other assets to a local sewer company owned by Bernhard Capital Partners for $9.26 million.

The company, National Water Infrastructure, would ink a 20-year, non-exclusive franchise agreement with the parish and pay an annual franchise fee that will escalate as new customers are added but start at $500,000, parish officials said.

In exchange, the company, which is the successor to and partly owned by longtime local sewer provider Ascension Wastewater Treatment, will spend $200 million on a new regional treatment plant. The new plant would consolidate now-scattered neighborhood sewage treatment systems and reroute the treated wastewater to the Mississippi River.

Parish officials said they will save $3 million per year in general tax revenue spent to subsidize the cost of the small, disconnected parish systems.

In pitching other council members to put the plan on the ballot earlier this week, Council Chairwoman Teri Casso recounted the parish's history with sewer negotiations and how they have led to this point.

"The rest of the story begins tonight, and it will make a difference for our children, and for their children and for our businesses. It will make a tremendous difference for our parish government. It will take off our plate a very expensive effort to accomplish what we have not been able to since 1990," the three-term councilwoman from Dutchtown said.

The initial joining of the parish and National Water systems would total 19,000 customers in unincorporated eastern Ascension. The plan doesn't affect Gonzales or Sorrento municipal customers or people with individual, private systems.

The regional system would fulfill a long-sought goal of parish leaders and state environmental regulators by pulling treated sewage effluent out of overburdened local waterways and ditches and sending it to the Mississippi.

Parish officials said they plan in-person open houses and perhaps virtual ones in the coming weeks to explain the deal. Thursday's vote suggests the entire council and Parish President Clint Cointment are behind the deal.

The state Public Service Commission would also have to approve the deal and any potential rate increases.

"It's fair, it's equitable and governed by the Public Service Commission," said Tom Pertuit, CEO of National Water, "who has a history of putting the ratepayer first, and they will be extremely cognizant of all issues related to the ratepayer, I know that."

Pertuit said ratepayers would see "extremely minimal" rate increases for at least the first two years but acknowledged some increases were likely with the significant capital outlay expected.

NWI residential customers currently pay $45 per month; parish customers pay $42.50 per month. Pertuit added that no one with a private, individual treatment system would be required to hook into National Water's network.

The united parish stance is a turnabout. Eight months ago, amid negotiations with Bernhard, Cointment had pitched a plan to have the parish go it alone and leverage Ascension's existing assets into a regional system.

After the vote Thursday, Cointment, who had months ago warmed to a sale, voiced his support for the deal and halting future use of general parish revenues on a sewer system that had already cost $42 million in subsidies over the past 10 years.

Though the parish system may be poised for customer growth it has accumulated the rights to a swath of new customers recently Ascension is only projected to have2,700 by the end of 2021 and faces significant upfront costs to meet environmental requirements.

"My administration fully supports this sale of the parishs sewer system because along with all of the financial benefits, this is our best chance to improve the environment and remove 3 million gallons of sewer effluent per day from our polluted waterways and ditches," Cointment said in a statement.

In addition to future annual savings, the sale will also allow the parish to redirect $13.5 million now set aside for sewer costs, the Cointment administration says.

NWI also has agreed to pay for $1 million in needed repairs to the parish-run sewage treatment plant at Oak Grove Primary School that serves the school and customers along a parish trunk line under La. 42 in Prairieville.

Councilman Corey Orgeron, who is the utilities chairman but was not part of private negotiations that have dominated the last months of the deal's refinement, was an early proponent of an agreement that would have eventually sold off the parish assets.

That earlier deal was closer to a lease with an option to buy for Bernhard and offered at least a $15 million payment to the parish for its assets nearly $6 million more than what the parish would now receive.

A subsequent appraisal found the replacement cost of the parish's sewer assets totaled nearly $28 million, but physical depreciation, obsolescence and other hits reduced value by nearly two-thirds. The final price of $9.26 million is an average of two valuation methods, the appraisals say.

Orgeron said this agreement remains the right path for the parish and the public: "This is the best deal we've gotten in decades, and it's the best deal we're going to get anytime in the near future."

Under the agreement, NWI has committed to finish a first regional plant within five years. NWI would build another 4 million gallons in treatment capacity, which also would discharge in the Mississippi, after an additional 15,000 customers are added to its system. The parish government would bear no cost for the plant, though ratepayers would have to finance it.

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Sale of Ascension sewer systems heads to voters; here's what included in final deal - The Advocate

Christian community went on after Jesus’ ascension – Leawood – Church of the Resurrection

Over the past month (and if Im really honest, the past few months) I have grown distant in my walk with God. Between work, seminary, and family I have let the busyness of life envelope me and have focused on the many tasks I must get done. In the few moments that time has allowed Ive let myself relax, but never intentionally committed any time to God. This isnt to say that I havent prayed or talked with God, because I have (and I have continued to pray every night with my kids). Ive even prayed most mornings that God would fill me and use me that day. But I havent always completely meant it; I havent delved into the Scriptures beyond what was needed for school; I havent sat in silence to listen to the Holy Spirit speak; I havent allowed myself to fully feel the presence of God.

So I decided to do something about that. This week I began working through Richard Fosters book Celebration of Discipline. My plan is to read a chapter of that book each week, then focus on that particular discipline that week. Along with that my goal is also to focus on a single chapter of the Bible each week, reading it every day (something suggested by Rev. Scott Chrostek in the recent Wednesday Night series Resolutions).

On Monday I began that process. The focused discipline of this week is meditation, a perfect start to encountering the presence of God. As I prepared to begin, sitting in my office and flipping my Bible to Romans 12, my daughter walked in. She took notice of my posture and said, Daddy, are you praying? I kindly said, Yes, and she smiled at me, turned, and skipped away. I read through that chapter twice, highlighting what stood out to me.

The moment I set the Bible down to begin in meditation my daughter walked in again. I smiled and asked her what she needed. Her answer instantly melted my heart: I wanted to pray with you, Daddy. So she sat there, next to me, as I held her and we prayed together for several minutes. When I said Amen she got up and skipped back out.

Heres what I realized in this wonderfully beautiful moment. For the last few months God has been inviting me into his presence--because he never stops inviting us. I have just been reluctant to say yes. And when on this day I came, ready and fully willing to accept Gods invitation, the Holy Spirit came to me, entering my room through my young daughter's small frame. And there he sat with me as we prayed together, my daughter in my arms, and I in his arms. This, to me, was a beautiful image of the relationship God invites us to. In this time of loneliness, God has always invited us in and will always be with us.

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Christian community went on after Jesus' ascension - Leawood - Church of the Resurrection

Godfall Primal Update Adds Ascension Levels, Banes and More – GamingBolt

Primal items introduced, along with Volatile Dreamstones and a new vendor.

While Counterplay Games Godfall launched to quite a mixed reaction, the developer has continued supporting it. Update 2.4.44 aka the Primal update adds new content for endgame players while revamping several activities like Tower of Trials. Ascension Levels have been added, allowing players to gain new powers and bonuses after hitting the level cap.

The titular Primal items are also live and provide a massive buff to the items primary trait as a new loot modifier. As for Tower of Trials, both the normal and Ascended versions have new objectives, surprise events and improved rewards while also serving as the source for Primal items. There are also Banes which players can equip, conferring debuffs but also providing a loot bonus.

If that werent enough, Dreamstones have been changed to have better loot targeting with new Volatile Dreamstones providing improved rewards. For more details, check out the patch notes here. Counterplay has also confirmed that Godfalls paid expansion, included with Ascended and Deluxe Editions, will release in Q2 2021. Stay tuned for more details on that in the coming months.

Key Features

For both new and veteran players, the Primal Update brings big changes to Godfall to test your mettle. Here is a quick summary of key features coming with this patch:

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Godfall Primal Update Adds Ascension Levels, Banes and More - GamingBolt

17 vie to be Ascension registrar of voters, including Painter and state election officials – The Advocate

GONZALES Murphy Painter, a former top law enforcement official in Louisiana who is suing Ascension Parish's president and others over alleged dirty tricks during his 2019 campaign for parish president, is one of 17 people seeking to be that parish's next registrar of voters.

Longtime Ascension Registrar Robert Poche' retired last month after nearly 40 years in a job that plays an important, non-partisan role in ensuring the integrity of the elections and offers a virtual lifetime appointment with lucrative pay.

Others seeking the job include Joanne Capace Reed, a former state director of voter registration who is chief deputy for East Baton Rouge Parish Registrar of Voters Steve Raborn; Shanie Bourg, elections operations administrator for the Louisiana Secretary of State's Office and former election operations manager; and Elizabeth Williams, a former Ascension chief deputy registrar of voters who left the office in 2009 after more than 35 years, their resumes say.

Painter has named Parish President Clint Cointment in his lawsuit, but it is the Parish Council, not the president, who makes the next appointment for registrar.

Cointment and other defendants in the suit have denied any role in an alleged conspiracy to damage Painter's election chances in 2019. Painter wasn't immediately available for comment Sunday.

Late last week, the Parish Council agreed on an interview and a ranking and voting process.

They decided to give each candidate 15 minutes to give an opening statement and answer three questions in an initial round of interviews that will be held in public before the entire council. Three finalists will given an additional five minutes to speak, then the council will pick its appointee.

Teri Casso, the council chairwoman, said the council has yet to decide when those interviews will happen but said she believes the interviews and voting will likely happen over two or three days. Due to scheduling conflicts, those interviews probably won't happen until next month, though the dates were still to be determined.

Casso said the application process has drawn "severalvery eligible candidates."

While registrar's offices don't have a role in the direct vote count that is left to parish clerks of court they register the people who do vote and ensure what parish and precinct they live in and, thus, in what elections they are eligible to cast ballots.

Registrar's offices also distribute and receive mail-in ballots and, in Ascension, offer some of the locations for in-person, early voting. The registrar of voters is also one of five members of the parish Board of Election Supervisors, which oversees election preparations, counts mail-in votes and certifies elections in Ascension. The registrar must be a registered voter in the parish.

In Ascension, the registrar's office has seven budgeted positions. In that parish and elsewhere, it can be a low-key job unless election-time passions bring the office's responsibilities to forefront.

In August, for example, voter registration records for two candidates for Donaldsonville City Council played an important role in election challenges ahead of fall elections. In court hearings, Poche', the now retired registrar, testified about the candidates' registrations and voting records. One candidate was allowed to stay in the race and another was not, in part, based on their registrations and voting history.

Perhaps more notably, the registrar's office in East Baton Rouge was tasked with verifying whether the supporters of the St. George incorporation movement had obtained enough signatures from registered voters to put their measure on the ballot.

The office determined movement came up 71 signatures short in 2015, but had surpassed the threshold in 2019. Voters later approved forming the new city. Reed was working for Raborn's office during the second count.

The opening has also drawn applicants with less direct experience in elections but with management or legal careers. They include Barbara Duhe, a retired city of Gonzales manager; Paul Gibson, a retired human resources and student support services director for St. Charles Parish schools; Isaac Jackson, a retired general counsel for the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources; and Leroy Laiche, a Prairieville lawyer and former justice of the peace in Ascension who was forced from the office in 2016 for judicial misconduct.

In an interview Sunday, Casso avoided discussing any candidate by name. In public discussions, other council members have done the same. But some top officials in Ascension have already made their views known.

Clerk of Court Bridget Hanna, who is the parish's elections chief and would work closely with a future registrar, said she has told anyone who has asked her, including some other applicants who have called her, that she is recommending Bourg.

Hanna, who has worked in the clerk's office for more 37 years and as clerk for six, said she has worked with Bourg for many years. She called her the most qualified of all the applicants, saying she wrote Secretary of State materials that parish clerks and registrars use for elections.

"I know the integrity that she has. I know that she can walk into that office on day one, take over that office, and bring it where it needs to be," Hanna said.

Reed, the deputy registrar in East Baton Rouge, has amassed her own recommendations. Her application includes those from nearly a dozen other parish registrars, including Raborn, and from Bill Blair, the state Legislature's director of demographic services and an important figure in redistricting.

Others who have applied for the job are Paphine Bajoie, a Baton Rouge 1st City Court clerk; Laura Baragona, a retired Ascension schools paraprofessional; Melody Christy, administrative assistant to Louisiana 1st Circuit Appeals Judge Guy Holdridge and a former Ascension deputy clerk of court; and Michael Heath, a facilities manager for River Parishes Community College and longtime local elections commissioner, resumes say.

Additional candidates are Monica Jackson, an assistant chief tax collector in the Ascension sheriff's office; Debra Larks, a postal supervisor and former business owner; Brady Moran, an IT analyst; Charla LeMaire Moran, an accountant and Ascension school office system specialist; and Rhonda Washington-Dunbar, a retired Ascension schools librarian who briefly was office manager for local Judge Alvin Turner Jr., resumes say.

This story was changed 2:45 p.m. Monday, Feb. 8, 2021, to correct the current and prior jobs of Shanie Bourg, an applicant for the Ascension registrar of voters.

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17 vie to be Ascension registrar of voters, including Painter and state election officials - The Advocate

Angela Hill’s Ascension To UFC’s Center Stage – The Official Website of the Ultimate Fighting Championship

And it's funny because I always get that question, 'Why do you think that there aren't more Black women in the UFC? There's Black women dominating in all other sports, but why don't you think that they're rarely seen in MMA?' Hill continues. And I know it's not me, but I feel like if I were more successful, then maybe you would see more faces there. So I've just been trying to be that role model that I would want to look up to as a young athlete, as well, and use that pressure, use that weight as a way to get out of bed in the morning when I don't feel like training or a way to push past some mental block that I'm having with a certain move. I know I can do this; I just have to focus more and use it. Because the pressure's never gonna go away. I'm never gonna stop caring about Black people, so I want to be a positive influence and be someone that people can look up to.

She already is. And while she would have liked some of those close decisions to have gone in her direction, her work as an ambassador of the sport in and out of the Octagon isnt determined by a win-loss record. And as hard as it can sometimes be to feel that way after a tough defeat, Hill has received plenty of messages that let her know shes made an impact and is opening the doors she wants to.

A Timeline of African American and Black UFC Athlete Accomplishments

I get most people saying that to me online, Hill said. They'll go, 'You got my daughter into MMA,' or 'You got my wife into MMA. She hated it before, then she watched a couple of your fights, and she's like, 'Oh my God!'' It's funny, I think a lot of times when people are represented in most things, then you forget what it feels like not to be represented. So that's why you have a lot of people who love hip-hop flocking to Eminem because they're like, 'Oh, this guy looks like me.' And imagine if that was every other thing in the world, where it was dominated by people who don't look like you.

"So it's really funny when you see a TV show and the main character is a Black woman, you're like, 'Oh s**t, I'm gonna watch that,' because you feel like you can put yourself in that character even easier than when you're watching something where there are no Black people. It's pretty cool to inspire people like that and open that door for them, like, 'Hey, you can be an athlete,' 'Hey, you can be an MMA fighter,' or you can do something you might have thought wouldn't be welcoming to you because you don't see people who look like you doing it.

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Angela Hill's Ascension To UFC's Center Stage - The Official Website of the Ultimate Fighting Championship

Ascension Providence Hospital will allow overnight visitors starting on Monday – FOX10 News

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Instruction

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Ascension Providence Hospital will allow overnight visitors starting on Monday - FOX10 News