A phased reopening – Thegardenisland.com

LIHUE Governor David Ige said Thursday he plans to allow indoor gatherings of up to 50 people and outdoor gatherings of up to 100 people on Kauai, and that the whole state could reopen to trans-Pacific travel as early as late July.

The details for Kauais next steps are outlined in Mayor Derek Kawakamis Emergency Rule 13, which was submitted to the governors office for approval early this week.

As of deadline on Thursday, Kawakamis office hadnt yet received approval on the proposed Rule 13.

If approved, gatherings would still be subject to all other existing state guidelines, including physical distancing from those not in the same household. More details, including a starting date for allowing these gatherings, will be announced after governor approval.

Ige mentioned the emergency rule in Thursdays 2020 Virtual Governors Luncheon, an annual event thats usually held at a Kauai resort and is hosted by the Kauai Chamber of Commerce. Pandemic-related emergency rules forced the 2020 meeting to an online platform.

In the meeting, Ige also touched on goals for reopening trans-Pacific travel, virus testing and contact tracing capabilities, the budget crisis with officials looking at an estimated $2.3 billion shortfall in the state budget.

Were going to have to look at hiring freezes furloughs program cutbacks because we dont have the revenues to maintain this size of government moving forward, Ige said Thursday. Discussions on those next steps are currently happening at the state level.

Then he said he was planning to approve Kawakamis Emergency Rule 13 later in the day, explaining I know that it is an important part of getting our economy going and being able to see a new normal of activity for our business and organizations throughout the state.

Ige said the whole state is taking phased steps toward reopening, pointing out Kauai has been trendsetting for the rest of the state since the early days of the pandemic.

You on Kauai led the way, far ahead of other counties, Ige said, highlighting the trailblazing steps Kawakamis Office has taken, like being at the forefront of reopening the beaches, bars and other businesses.

Trans-Pacific travel

With temperature checks set up at airports, a new form required for travel and the reopening of interisland travel without quarantine on June 16, Ige said the next step for Hawaii is creating an environment that allows us to bring out-of-state travelers back in a safe way.

Current strategy to do that involves targeting communities with a low prevalence of the virus specifically opening up first to places like Japan and Korea, requiring travelers to get tested for COVID-19 before they board the plane to Hawaii, and working with the hospitality industry to monitor traveler health after they land.

The process isnt instantaneous; airlines need 2-4 weeks to gear up and add flights and hotel properties need 4-6 weeks to prep for visitors.

We are working hard to have that happen as quickly as we can, Ige said, setting a realistic goal of reopening to trans-Pacific travel sometime from late July through mid-August.

Ige said he and his team know that relying on a single pre-test for COVID-19 before welcoming travelers to Hawaii is not a zero risk game, because they could get infected after taking the test, but the probability of infection is decreased dramatically upon pretesting for the virus.

Placing public health officers in resorts and other visitor lodging to monitor travelers after they arrive helps mitigate that risk, officials said.

Ige said the state is also looking at ways to support the Young Brothers shipping company, which has asked for a 34% increase in shipping rates and a reduction in partial-load shipments; re-evaluating capitol improvement projects state wide and is considering how to strengthen internet connectivity across all of the islands.

Jessica Else, editor-in-chief, can be reached at 245-0457 or jelse@thegardenisland.com.

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A phased reopening - Thegardenisland.com

Big Island Road Closures, June 20 to June 26 – Big Island Now

Lane closure schedules may change at any time without further notice. All projects are weather permitting.

MAMALAHOA HIGHWAY (ROUTE 11)

HILO

Closure of single lane at a time on Mamalahoa Highway (Route 11) in both directions between mile markers 6 and 6.5, Liilii Street and Shipman Road, in the vicinity of Hilo on Monday, June 22, through Friday, June 26, from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., for construction of a new traffic signal.

KAU

Closure of single lane at a time on Mamalahoa Highway (Route 11) in both directions between mile markers 28 and 32, on Monday, June 22, through Friday, June 26, from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m., for paving work. Traffic flow in both directions will be maintained through alternating traffic control (contraflow).

KAU

Closure of single lane at a time on Mamalahoa Highway (Route 11) in both directions between mile markers 60 and 66, on Saturday, June 20, through Friday, June 26, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., for landscape maintenance. Traffic flow in both

HAWAII BELT ROAD (ROUTE 19)

HAMAKUA

Closure of single lane at a time on Hawaii Belt Road (Route 19) in both directions between mile markers 23 and 27, Kapehu Road and Jardine Road, on Saturday, June 20, through Friday, June 26, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., for landscape maintenance. Traffic flow in both directions will be maintained through alternating traffic control (contraflow).

HAMAKUA

Closure of single lane at a time on Hawaii Belt Road (Route 19) in both directions between mile markers 36 and 38, between Paauilo Makai Road and Kaunanano Road, on Monday, June 22, through Friday, June 26, from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m., for guardrail installation. Traffic flow in both directions will be maintained through alternating traffic control (contraflow).

HAMAKUA

Closure of single lane at a time on Hawaii Belt Road (Route 19) in both directions between mile markers 36 and 39, on Saturday, June 20, through Friday, June 26, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., for landscape maintenance. Traffic flow in both directions will be maintained through alternating traffic control (contraflow).

KAWAIHAE ROAD (ROUTE 19)

SOUTH KOHALA

Closure of single lane at a time on Kawaihae Road (Route 19) in both directions between mile markers 62 and 67, on Saturday, June 20, through Friday, June 26, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., for landscape maintenance. Traffic flow in both directions will be maintained through alternating traffic control (contraflow).

QUEEN KAAHUMANU HIGHWAY (ROUTE 19)

KONA

Closure of single lane at a time on Queen Kaahumanu Highway (Route 19) in both directions between mile markers 92 and 96, on Saturday, June 20, through Friday, June 26, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., for storm drain inspection and cleaning. Traffic flow in both directions will be maintained through alternating traffic control (contraflow).

KEAAU-PAHOA ROAD (ROUTE 130)

PUNA (24-HOUR WORK)

Lane shift on Keaau-Pahoa Road (Route 130) in both directions between Ilima Street and Ainaloa Boulevard, on Saturday, June 20, through Friday, June 26, over a 24-hour period, for construction of the Ainaloa Roundabout.

PUNA

Single lane closure on Keaau-Pahoa Road (Route 130) in both directions between mile markers 0 and 4, on Saturday, June 20, through Friday, June 26, from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., for landscape maintenance.

DANIEL K. INOUYE HIGHWAY (ROUTE 200)

HAMAKUA

Lane closure on Daniel K. Inouye Highway (Route 200) in both directions between mile markers 29 and 35, on Saturday, June 20, through Friday, June 26, from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m., for landscape maintenance. Traffic flow in both directions will be maintained through alternating traffic control (contraflow)..

AKONI PULE HIGHWAY (ROUTE 270)

NORTH KOHALA

Closure of single lane at a time on Akoni Pule Highway (Route 270) in both directions between Akana Place and Makapala Road, on Monday, June 22, through Friday, June 26, from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m., for waterline installation. Traffic flow in both directions will be maintained through alternating traffic control (contraflow).

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Big Island Road Closures, June 20 to June 26 - Big Island Now

Boch provides a boost for Island charities – Martha’s Vineyard Times

On Saturday, a charitable wash-ashore gifted three individual $10,000 checks to Island organizations: Saint Elizabeths Parish, the Marthas Vineyard Public Schools system, and the Island Food Pantry.

Edgartown seasonal resident Ernie Boch Jr. and old friend Ryan Ruley of Oak Bluffs joined forces to support Island organizations that have been hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic. Boch has been a resident of Marthas Vineyard since 1966, and has had a long-term relationship with Island fundraising. He knew there was a need to support, and reached out to Ruley to help devise a plan to maximize his efforts. During my conversation with Boch, he mentioned that while teaming up, Ruley told him where the funds could make the greatest positive impact for the Island.

Although Ernie Boch Jr. could not be in attendance, his son Alex Boch was introduced to his fathers philanthropic tendencies as he was accompanied by Ruley then a candidate and now a newly minted selectman in Oak Bluffs as they put on their masks and began their philanthropic Island tour, and personally handed out the $10,000 checks from Subaru New England.

The first stop was St. Elizabeths Church in Edgartown, where the duo handed Father Michael Nagle the first $10,000 check. Nagle is pastor of Good Shepherd Parish, which includes St. Elizabeth and St. Augustine. The church has been handing out groceries every other week during the pandemic, under the direction of Joe Capobianco.

This will allow us to continue to give out food and support Island families and individuals. Since the pandemic, there is a greater demand for food as people are getting laid off. There are a lot of moving pieces when feeding individuals, and this will be a fantastic help, Nagle said after receiving the donation.

The next stop on the Island philanthropy tour was the Marthas Vineyard Regional High School, where Boch and Ruley met up with Assistant Superintendent Richie Smith and cafeteria staff.

This will be going toward supporting and feeding a bunch of kids. As of right now, we are supporting about 600 to 700 kids a week, Smith said. Even when school is no longer in session, there are still kids. Our main focus right now is to support the students and work with the community to support feeding the kids.

The last stop on the tour was the Island Food Pantry in Vineyard Haven, where the duo handed the last $10,000 check to the executive director of the Island Food Pantry, Kayte Morris.

We feed about 250 to 350 families a week; this will go directly to food, transportation, and operation costs. Because of the pandemic, we are feeding more people than ever, and running at a crazy pace. We are a privately funded, small operation that is reliant upon donations, Morris said. Before the pandemic we had 80 consistent volunteers. Since the pandemic, all but four of them had to leave due to personal or financial reasons. Because of that, I have had to completely retrain an entirely new group of volunteers. We are fortunate to have had a wonderful response by the community, as many members have been able to fill in the gaps. Now that the state is opening again, the volunteers are going back to work, which is fantastic, but we are hoping that more people will volunteer in the future.

To contact Morris about volunteering at the Island Food Pantry, you can reach her at info@islandfoodpantry.org.

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Boch provides a boost for Island charities - Martha's Vineyard Times

Town of Grand Island partners with local agencies to address questions related to solar energy – Niagara Frontier Publications

Sat, Jun 20th 2020 07:00 am

The Town of Grand Island has partnered with two local agencies to provide a virtual, live presentation with a question and answer session about solar parks and community solar.

Golden Age Center Director Jennifer Menter, Councilwoman Jennifer Baney, Councilman Thomas Digati, University at Buffalo Regional Institute clean energy coordinator Jason Kulaszewski, and PUSH Buffalo Program Assistant Lou DeJesus have been collaborating to bring a seminar to Grand Island residents. This seminar stemmed from inquiries from residents about solar parks and the desire of residents to know more about community solar plans.

As public officials, we get a lot of inquiries, and I frequently hear from residents wanting to know more about their options to buy into existing community solar, said Baney. I reached out to some experts in the field that we have worked with before, so that our residents can feel educated and informed about solar projects that are happening in their community. There will be a focus on consumer protection and how to determine if a company is reputable, which was a very important component to me.

I look forward to joining forces with PUSH Buffalo and the Town of Grand Island and learning more about solar energy with the senior population, said Menter. Learning how solar energy works, how to be more energy efficient, how to reduce energy consumption, and how to share this information through this virtual platform is an exciting and interactive way to learn about this popular energy source. I look forward to this presentation and this partnership.

UBRI is happy to support efforts on Grand Island to educate residents about the benefits of solar energy, said Kulaszewski. The town has been a local leader in solar development, and this event will continue to build on the success of previous educational campaigns like 2018s Solarize Grand Island that helped Grand Island become a designated clean energy community.

The seminar will take place at 2 p.m. on June 30. Residents can join the interactive session by logging into the Solar Energy Zoom Meeting at the following direct link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89856153493?pwd=T08xdlpiVWpCQzM0NjJHQm1sZVZpdz09. The Meeting ID is 898 5615 3493 and the Passcode is 025688. Residents can also call in to listen to the meeting and ask follow-up questions at the following phone number: 1-646-558-8656 and entering the Meeting ID.

The meeting will be livestreamed and available for later viewing at the Town of Grand Island YouTube page. Questions can be directed to Baney at 716-622-9006.

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Town of Grand Island partners with local agencies to address questions related to solar energy - Niagara Frontier Publications

The island with a key to our future – BBC News

From the sea, volcanic Ascension Island looks as if its smouldering. Big mid-Atlantic swell rolling up from the Southern Ocean explodes onto the rugged cinder and sand shoreline, leaving sea spray hanging in the air like steam. Inland, its all black lava and red rubble, a forbidding landscape that once earned the island the tourist-repelling descriptor of hell with the fire put out.

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The mist that collects around the islands highest peak completes the smoky illusion. Rising above a cataclysmic backdrop of dormant craters, pyroclastic deposits and lava domes, 859m-high Green Mountain is a leafy oddity on the charred island: its flourishing cloud forest is testament to both the ingenuity of humans and the resilience of nature.

Planted on a desolate hilltop less than 160 years ago, the forest that began on a whim has started attracting the notice of scientists around the world. Upending traditional ideas of conservation, Green Mountain offers the hopeful idea that man-made ecosystems can improve our environment. As the climate crisis ravages landscapes and leads to catastrophic damage such as the recent bush fires in Australia the thriving jungle on Ascension bolsters the argument that maybe we can regenerate a forest using concepts from this remote and often forgotten place.

Ascension Island erupted from the Atlantic Ocean about a million years ago. Located midway between Angola and Brazil, the island got its name when it was rediscovered by Afonso de Albuquerque on Ascension Day 1503 (it was first spotted by Joo da Nova in 1501). For a long time it was only occupied by nesting seabirds and green turtles that make the 3,000-mile journey from Brazil to breed. Its first human inhabitants came in 1815, when the British Royal Navy set up camp to keep watch on Napoleon, who was imprisoned 700 nautical miles south-east on Saint Helena.

What you see on Green Mountain is something traditional researchers wouldnt have looked twice at

Ascension went on to become a useful stopping point for ships. But during his visit in 1836, Charles Darwin pointed out the islands most obvious flaw: its treeless, naked hideousness made it a tough place to live. Inspired by his friend Darwins theories about turning the arid landscape into a garden, botanist Joseph Hooker came up with a plan: by planting seedlings from around the world, trees could catch the mist and increase rainfall over the scorched island, making it livable.

The plan was a success. In 1860, John Bell, the island's horticulturalist, supervised the planting of some 27,000 trees and shrubs, which resulted in the development of enough soil to grow crops.

It was the opportunity to visit Darwins quirky and little-known forest, along with the mid-ocean promise of fresh raspberries and bananas, that drew my family to Ascension; an island that now has a population of around 900 people made up of American and British military and their civilian contractors.

Leaving our sailboat anchored in Clarence Bay, we drove our rental car out of Georgetown, along Nasa Road and through a blindingly bright lunarscape past the nightclub, the golf course, lava flows and volcanic craters and around the feral donkeys that were foraging in a desert of mesquite and prickly pear.

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Eventually we started up Green Mountain. Here the harsh sunlight was softened by mist and then blotted out by patchy rain. Then the road took us into a casuarina and acacia forest that could have come straight out of Australia. From there we drove into a dense jungle of bananas, ginger, juniper, raspberries, coffee, ferns and figs.

After parking, we set off on a hike. Encountering the occasional feral sheep, we walked along a cool, misty trail. Overgrown with Cape yews and Norfolk pines, descendants of some of the seedlings Hooker advised the British Admiralty to transport to Ascension from botanical gardens around the world, the forest felt deceptively ancient.

According to traditional ecological principles, this hotchpotch of endemic grasses and ferns combined with more than 300 non-indigenous species should never have evolved into a thriving ecosystem. Complex forests are thought to take millions of years of careful self-selection to develop. But the man-made ecosystem on Green Mountain, where introduced species and island plants seem to have evolved together, doesnt fit that paradigm. Its neither garden, nor wilderness.

What you see on Green Mountain is something traditional researchers wouldnt have looked twice at, Dave Wilkinson, ecology professor at the University of Lincoln, UK, told me over the phone, Because its completely dominated by non-native species, it would have been of no interest.

He added: Ecologists have traditionally focused on the natural bits, not the things that arent supposed to be there. Those things were considered bad.

Until recently, conservation meant getting rid of invasive species and allowing a landscape to return to the way it was before people got involved. On isolated and treeless Gough Island, 2,000 nautical miles further south, the English house mouse offers a classic example of what goes wrong when humans mess with the environment. In his book The New Wild, Why Invasive Species Will Be Nature's Salvation, author Fred Pearce describes how house mice got to the island from passing ships and then, over decades of windswept isolation, the mice mutated and turned carnivorous. They now consume a ton of seabirds a day, threatening the local population.

A chance visit to Ascension Island in 2004 got Wilkinson thinking about this natural versus invasive perspective. Most who see the forest say, Well this is very odd, and then go study the turtles or seabirds, he said. But Wilkinson couldnt move on. Green Mountain is a very dramatic example of something quite common: in a lot of the world, non-native species are a functioning part of the ecosystem.

Its a tropical forest on a site that didnt use to have a tropical forest

Wilkinson took the idea further in his controversial 2004 essay for the Journal of Biogeography, The Parable of Green Mountain, challenging the theory that introduced species dont belong and putting forward the argument that man-made ecosystems, like Green Mountain, could play a critical role in our future.

Over the next few years this idea gained traction, and in 2006 the term novel ecosystem was developed by renowned ecologist Richard Hobbs to describe places like Green Mountain that were irreversibly changed by human intervention and may not need to be fixed.

Anna Bckstrm, senior ecologist at the ICON Science Research Group, RMIT University in Australia, says that proponents of a novel-ecosystem approach have a pragmatic view of conservation. The concept offers more flexibility, she explained. Given the realities of climate change, human impact and the small amount of funds usually available for conservation, she says that by accepting the changes humans have made, ecological restoration is more manageable. The landscape doesnt have to revert to what it was, she said. We just want diversity and balance.

This idea, that the service an ecosystem provides such as flood control, carbon sequestration or pollination is more important than a forests pristine condition is becoming embraced more widely. As ecosystems are thrown into chaos through the fires, storms and disease brought on by the climate crisis, its becoming more about resilience than anything.

If a group of plants survive, and some of them are non-indigenous, we dont want to rip them out, Bckstrm said. Diversity in the ecosystem is more important than a plants origin.

Going even further, Wilkinson says that the novel-ecosystem approach allows ecologists to account for some of the forces that might shape the ecosystems of the future. Twenty years ago conservation managers would never consider planting a non-native species, but now we know the value of having a mixture of trees on the site so if a tree pathogen, fire or storm comes through you dont lose absolutely everything, he said. With a novel-ecosystem approach, conservationists have the freedom to rebuild a now-dry flood plane with drought-resistant species or replant a fire-ravaged landscape with plants that thrive in a hotter region.

What this means is the experiment of Green Mountain, where plants were thrown together from different places and then somehow thrived, can perhaps be replicated. It tells us that controversial ideas like Chinas, to plant billions of trees to hold back the desert; or Australias push for people to plant non-indigenous fire retardant plants and trees are worth looking at closely. Darwin and Hookers novel idea tells us when it comes to survival, sometimes its okay to experiment and create something new.

Green Mountain is a very dramatic example of something quite common

The thing that struck me the most when I stood on the misty summit of Green Mountain, looking over the arid lowlands out to the sea, was the awareness that in traditional ecology there should never have been a Green Mountain. Even Hooker came to regret the forest and the damage it did to Ascensions native ecosystem, with the introduced plants eventually outcompeting the sparse growth that was there.

But luckily, there was never that much interest in digging up Green Mountain. And then time went on and longtime Ascension Island conservation officer Stedson Stroud discovered that the once thought-to-be-extinct Ascension Island parsley fern hadnt actually been wiped out by the new plants, and that some of the islands other native plants actually grew better because of the introduced species.

Wilkinson says that in the past five to 10 years, a shift in thinking meant conservationists began to see the accident of Green Mountain as something optimistic, Its a tropical forest on a site that didnt use to have a tropical forest. Were used to seeing the opposite; tropical forests are cleared and then theyre gone.

Wilkinson says while you probably cant build a Green Mountain after every fire, or whenever pests or pathogens destroy a forest, Darwin and Hooker did leave us a few clues for building a more resilient world. We live in a time of accelerating climate change, when disease moves more quickly than evolution. Just look at how Covid-19 sped around the world, he said. Green Mountain shows that you can bring ecosystems back or potentially put them into places where they werent before on a timescale of less than a century.

They wont be as diverse as a tropical forest thats been there for millennia. But theyll exist.

The World of Tomorrow is a BBC Travel series that visits ingenious communities around the world that are adapting to environmental change or who are finding new ways to live sustainably.

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The island with a key to our future - BBC News

UFC fills out first four cards for Fight Island debut in July – ESPN

UFC's schedule for its four events on Fight Island next month is just about full.

UFC president Dana White on Thursday revealed the company's main card lineups, as well as the majority of prelims, for events scheduled on July 11, July 15, July 18 and July 25. The events will be held at UFC's Fight Island, which is located on Yas Island in Abu Dhabi.

A UFC 251 pay-per-view event, headlined by three title fights, will kick things off July 11. The card will feature welterweight champion Kamaru Usman defending his title against Gilbert Burns. Other top bouts on the card are a featherweight title rematch between champion Alexander Volkanovski and Max Holloway and a vacant bantamweight title fight between Petr Yan and Jose Aldo.

UFC Fight Night on July 15 will be headlined by featherweights Calvin Kattar and Dan Ige, and former lightweight champion Frankie Edgar will make his bantamweight debut against Pedro Munhoz.

On July 18, a flyweight title rematch between Deiveson Figueiredo and Joseph Benavidez will serve as the main event. Figueiredo knocked out Benavidez earlier this year but missed weight for the bout and was ineligible to win the championship.

The flurry of UFC events on Yas Island will culminate July 25 with a middleweight main event between former champion Robert Whittaker and Darren Till. That main card also will feature a light heavyweight fight between Brazilian legends Mauricio "Shogun" Rua and Antonio Rogerio Nogueira, as well as the return of formerly retired Swede Alexander Gustafsson against Fabricio Werdum.

The concept of Fight Island includes a hotel, arena and training Octagon on the beach as well as a 10-mile "safe zone" to secure the location from outside visitors. Only UFC athletes, their respective camps and staff will be permitted in the area.

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UFC fills out first four cards for Fight Island debut in July - ESPN

Interisland travelers tell all – Thegardenisland.com

LIHUE Tuesday was the first day for residents to travel interisland without being quarantined, and at Lihue Airport three women from Oahu took the opportunity to fly over to Kauai and pick up new, furry family members.

We came to pick up our puppies that have been waiting for us, said Oahu resident June Rae, cuddling one of the three-week-old red toy poodles alongside traveling companions Mani Woo and Christina Martinovic.

The trio has been waiting to pick up the puppies until quarantine was lifted. They said the dogs were about $2,000 each, bought through Kauai-based John Burgess, owner of Hawaiian Xotix Toy Poodles and Yorkies.

Rae said the three were planning to fly back to Oahu on a return trip later in the day, and said the interisland process was fairly smooth to navigate. The main challenge they faced was keeping their masks on.

Rae said they downloaded the newly-required inter-island travel forms ahead of time, which helped streamline the pre-boarding process. Planning ahead, they said, was the key to smooth travel.

When you first arrive the National Guard will go ahead and take your temperature, and we go through a line. Then you go to the person who is going to collect those forms, and they just review it to make sure its signed, said Maritnovic.

Rae said she even brought onto the flight a small spray bottle of hand sanitizer and they didnt say anything to me.

Martinovic, Woo and Rae said they noticed the flight from Oahu to Kauai was pretty full.

I didnt feel like there was much social distancing on the plane, Martinovic said.

Rae added: Yeah, there were people next to you if you were seated on the two-seater side.

Martinovic said Hawaiian Airlines staff was very welcoming and happy to see customers.

Sheleah Watson also arrived on Kauai on an Oahu flight on Tuesday morning, traveling with her kids. Watson works at Barking Sands on the Westside of Kauai, and was traveling for work. She said her flight was fairly empty, with chairs in between passengers.

When traveling with kids, (that) helps, she said, expressing her gratitude for the resumption of interisland flights. Im glad they are opening it between the islands. I think it makes sense. Im here for work. I work at the end of Barking Sands.

Watson said the process was easier than she thought it would be, especially if passengers plan ahead, fill forms out before arriving at the airport and follow the rules.

Hawaiian Airliness Senior Specialist for External Communications Marissa Villegas said Hawaiian Airlines is excited to greet residents once again.

We are thrilled to be able to reconnect kamaaina with their family and friends and give them the opportunity to take a much-needed staycation on a Neighbor Island, said Villegas. Given Hawaiis success in managing the spread of COVID-19, we believe that neighbor island travel will help stimulate economic activity across the state and serve as a critical indicator in the phased reopening of Hawaii.

According to Hawaiian Airlines, they want their guests to feel confident traveling to, from and between the islands, and they want Hawaii residents on every island to feel comfortable accepting travelers.

Villegas said that, During this time, we have adopted numerous measures throughout our operations to protect the health of our employees and guests and give travelers peace of mind, including frequent cleaning and disinfecting of our airport spaces and aircraft, electrostatic spraying of cabins, check-in, boarding, seating and deplaning procedures to increase personal space, encouraging travelers to check-in via our mobile app, and requiring employees and guests to wear a face covering (except for young children and those unable to do so due to a medical condition).

Weve also capped our main cabin load factors at 70%, and blocked all middle seats to ensure our guests and crew-members have more personal space, said Villegas.

I recommend you review our Keeping You Safe webpage to learn how we have adjusted our operations so the community may continue to enjoy safe and reliable transportation: hawaiianairlines.com/KeepingYouSafe, said Villegas.

Villegas said Hawaiian Airlines is encouraged by brisk booking activity since the state announced it would remove the interisland quarantine effective Tuesday.

As of today, we have increased frequencies on all of our neighbor island routes, ranging from seven to up to 11 daily round trips per market, based on demand, and will continue to adjust as needed, said Villegas.

To download the newly-required interisland travel form, visit: health.hawaii.gov/travel.

Stephanie Shinno, features and community reporter, can be reached at 245-0424 or sshinno@thegardenisland.com.

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Interisland travelers tell all - Thegardenisland.com

Love Island’s Malin Andersson posts poignant tribute to Sophie Gradon two years after suicide – Mirror Online

Love Island's Malin Andersson has posted a poignant tribute to her tragic co-star to Sophie Gradon two years after her suicide.

Sophie was just 32 when she took her own life back in 2018.

Two years on from the tragedy, her TV co-star Malin, 27, led tributes by sharing a picture of the pair together on the ITV dating show.

In a picture shared on Instagram, Malin and Sophie are seen in the Love Island villa alongside co-stars including Olivia Buckland, Kady McDermott and Zara Holland.

She wrote alongside the snap: "Always right beside me. Then, now. Forever. I know youre dancing with my girls. Love you Soph."

The remark about her "girls" was a heartbreaking reference to Malin's late mum, who died in 2017 after a battle with cancer, and her daughter Consy, who passed away in 2019.

Kady commented on the post by leaving a series of love heart emojis.

The islanders all starred in the 2016 series alongside Sophie, who died two years after her appearance in the show.

She took her own life in June 2018 after battling a series of personal problems.

Her death was followed by another tragedy when Love Island 2017 star Mike Thalassitis also took his own life in March 2019.

The tragedy prompted ITV review their policies regarding Love Island an implement new policies to safeguard contestants' mental health.

The show was rocked again in February this year when host Caroline Flack also died by suicide, prompting the show to be briefly taken off air.

Love Island's winter series finished but the summer show and the next season planned for January have since been scrapped due to the coronavirus outbreak.

It's now expected back on TV in summer 2020.

* Samaritans (116 123) operates a 24-hour service available every day of the year. If you prefer to write down how youre feeling, or if youre worried about being overheard on the phone, you can email Samaritans at jo@samaritans.org

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Love Island's Malin Andersson posts poignant tribute to Sophie Gradon two years after suicide - Mirror Online

Large mass of grasses creates floating island in Muskegon – WNEM Saginaw

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Large mass of grasses creates floating island in Muskegon - WNEM Saginaw

MTM On The Road: A Tour Around Mackinac Island – 9 & 10 News – 9&10 News

Mackinac Island is continuing to open up and eager to have visitors back.

Some new things you might notice when visiting this summer include a huge pavilion that looks over the water at Mission Point Resort.They are opening back up June 25 and hope to have the pavilion done by then.

Another new addition to the Island is the Great Turtle Distillery.They have a loaded menu from food to drinks.

Another great spot to grab a bite to eat is at Marys Bistro.They are now offering a contactless menu and their same beautiful view of the water.

When visiting, if youre looking for a more private place to stay, youll want to check in at Small Point.

Its a bed and breakfast on the Island that is taking all the necessary precautions to keep their guests safe.

Of course, before you leave Mackinac Island, youll want to take a souvenir with you.Urvanas has some of the most unique gifts youll find on the Island.

They have all handcrafted things from jewelry to knives.

For more options when it comes to souvenirs, you can head over to the Loon Feather and Balsam Shop.They have everything from Mackinac Island sweatshirts to jewelry.

To get a look at everything the Island has to offer, youll want to hop on a Mackinac Island Carriage Tour to take you around.

Plus The Grand Hotel opens Sunday.

Our On The Road Crew, Gabriella and Stephanie, give us a look at all these spots!

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MTM On The Road: A Tour Around Mackinac Island - 9 & 10 News - 9&10 News

Town Council considering ordinance to require mask wearing on island – Block Island Times

Island residents and businesses concerned about the number of island visitors not wearing masks in public, especially in Old Harbor District where passengers get off of the ferry and congregate in town, addressed those issues with the Town Council at its Wednesday meeting this week. As a response, the council is now considering an island-wide requirement for people to wear facemasks in public while on the island.

Several of us met with the Department of Health officials, and they were concerned about the situation on Block Island, said Second Warden Andr Boudreau.

Boudreau went on to say new regulations will be coming out shortly from the state, and the state can only do so much given our [location]. We cant rely on the state to come out here and enforce our rules. We need to have a partnership with them, and our leadership needs to take part in that.

Lacoste announced the state is doing some inspections around the state, including Block Island, to ensure businesses are in compliance with the Department of Health regulations that have been issued.

Lacoste made a motion to have town attorney Kathy Merolla draft an amendment to the town emergency ordinance requiring masks to be worn in public. Merolla will come back with a draft amendment at Wednesdays, June 24 council meeting.

Council members also gave Councilor Sven Risom the okay to move forward with his effort to meet ferry passengers at Old Harbor and provide them information and masks.

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Town Council considering ordinance to require mask wearing on island - Block Island Times

UFC 251 — Which fighter faces the most pressure on Fight Island? – ESPN

UFC president Dana White began touting a welterweight title bout between champion Kamaru Usman and Jorge Masvidal as far back as January, when a heated exchange between the fighters during Super Bowl week lit a marketing fuse that was expected to detonate a blockbuster main event on July 11.

But a lot has happened since the heat for that fight started to build, including the world changing due to the coronavirus pandemic. The International Fight Week card on July 11 has turned into the first card on Fight Island, also known as Yas Island in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates.

And while Usman will indeed be defending his belt, it won't be against Masvidal, who has been waging a passionate battle against the UFC on social media for fighter pay after his negotiations for the Usman bout fell apart. Instead, Gilbert Burns has stepped into the challenger's role for UFC 251.

Saturday's UFC Fight Night main event features sizzling heavyweights Curtis Blaydes and Alexander Volkov, who have each won seven of their past eight fights. In the co-main event, featherweights Josh Emmett (15-2) and Shane Burgos (13-1) are set to square off.

UFC Fight Night: Blaydes vs. Volkov Saturday, Las Vegas Prelims: ESPN/ESPN+, 5 p.m. ET Main card: ESPN/ESPN+, 8 p.m. ET

Subscribe to ESPN+ to get exclusive live UFC events, weigh-ins and more; Ariel and the Bad Guy; Dana White's Contender Series; and more exclusive MMA content.

So what now for Masvidal, the UFC's 2019 fighter of the year who hasn't fought since beating Nate Diaz for the mythical BMF title on Nov. 2?

And how does UFC 251 look without him? There will be two title bouts other than the main event, including Alexander Volkanovski defending the featherweight championship against Max Holloway, and Petr Yan facing Jose Aldo for the vacant bantamweight belt.

ESPN's expert panel of Ariel Helwani, Phil Murphy, Brett Okamoto and Jeff Wagenheim addresses Masvidal's situation, the reality of Fight Island, the UFC 251 title fights and more.

Helwani: I don't mean to be a downer, but it's a real bummer. Usman vs. Masvidal was the fight to make, plain and simple. It was the fight to make the moment Usman walked out of UFC 245 as the reigning, defending welterweight champion in December. Then they had their Super Bowl run-in, and it got even more interesting. And, you'll recall, Dana White told the media during Super Bowl week that this fight was going to happen in July. And now it's not. Of course, a lot has happened since then, but still. This card would be so much more intriguing if that were the main event. And I hope this doesn't come across like I am disrespecting Gilbert Burns. I'm really not. I have a ton of respect for the fighter he has become and for what Burns has done this year. But there are a bunch of people he could fight next. The Masvidal story is more pressing. This was the culmination of 18 years in the game -- from the backyards of Miami to the desert of Abu Dhabi, sprinkled with some real bad blood. I'm sure Usman vs. Burns will be fun and entertaining, but I'm not over Masvidal's removal from this card just yet. I wish they could have come to terms on a deal that made sense for all and we got the fight we were promised months ago.

Murphy: Masvidal has been the no-brainer booking for Usman since their verbal sparring session at Super Bowl Radio Row. The confrontation made UFC public relations seethe and its marketing team salivate. Usman-Masvidal was the biggest draw at 170 pounds by a country mile, which is saying something in a division that deep.

That's not a knock against Burns, either; he is undeniably deserving of his shot at the belt. Given the recency of his dominant win over former champ Tyron Woodley, Burns could easily have been labeled the No. 1 contender and challenged the Usman-Masvidal winner late this year.

The effect on Masvidal's future can still be minimized. Should he land opposite the Usman-Burns winner as next in line or atop the marquee against Conor McGregor, luring the Irishman out of an abrupt third retirement, the UFC 251 miss can be redeemed. I think this ultimately ends well for Masvidal.

Okamoto: It's a bummer. No other way to say it. Masvidal and Usman had heat. It's the title fight we thought we were getting all year. I love Masvidal's story. He has been hiding in plain sight his entire career, and then he caught fire in 2019. I want to see the end of that story. The Darren Till knockout, Ben Askren highlight, BMF title ... does it all lead to a UFC championship? Feels like the story isn't finished. Holdouts are a part of professional sports. Masvidal is not the first pro athlete to hold out for a better contract, nor will he be the last. I hope we see him fight for a title, but I don't know what his future holds. The UFC just showed it was willing to move on from him once. And after this fight between Usman and Burns, guys such as Colby Covington and Leon Edwards will be waiting to take the next shot. I'm apprehensive about Masvidal's future, to be honest. I hope they're able to work it out.

Wagenheim: I'd be upset about the absence of Masvidal if the UFC were shoving him aside and feeding us another bogus championship fight. (We're already getting one of those with Yan vs. two-losses-in-a-row, 0-1-at-bantamweight Aldo.) But Burns is a legit 170-pound challenger, as Edwards would have been if he had accepted the title shot. So the show goes on. As for Masvidal, his is a cautionary tale, one that has been told before and will continue to be reprised until fighters learn to act in their self-interest. I'm not even talking about them organizing. We've seen those efforts run out of steam again and again, so maybe a fighter association is simply not to be. But why do athletes let their managers negotiate long-term contracts without every nuance covered in writing?

1:06

Before he takes on Max Holloway for the featherweight title, take a look at some of the best fights from Alexander Volkanovski's career. Order UFC 245 here on ESPN+ https://plus.espn.com/ufc/ppv.

Helwani: Volkanovski vs. Holloway 2. Historically, when an ex-champion gets an immediate rematch after losing his or her belt, it doesn't bode well for the former titlist. Will the same thing happen to Holloway? Also, a second straight loss to Volkanovski would put Holloway in purgatory at 145, not that long after it seemed like he would be reigning supreme at featherweight for years. How does Holloway respond to that loss? Will he make adjustments, especially when it comes to checking those leg kicks? How will Volkanovski respond after hand surgery? And will he feel the pressure that comes with being the hunted and not the hunter for the first time? All those questions and more will be answered. Intriguing fight.

Murphy: The main event between Usman and Burns is my favorite of the three, almost by process of elimination.

Aldo is no better than the fourth-most deserving bantamweight for a shot at the vacated belt. Part of me feels like we're watching a Grand Prix semifinal, with Aljamain Sterling waiting for the winner in the championship. In the co-main event, nothing from Volkanovski piecing up Holloway for 25 minutes six months ago suggests 25 more minutes will finish any differently.

In Usman vs. Burns, though, you have former Blackzilians training partners with world-class grappling in different disciplines who share two of the longer active UFC winning streaks. The matchup is replete with a backstory that's a refreshing change from "these two don't like each other." It's top-tier MMA with scores of options in how the fight will unfold, many of which would keep fans on a knife's edge.

Okamoto: The main event. If I could only watch one of the three, it's Usman vs. Burns. Just the tear Burns has been on; and teammate vs. teammate is always an interesting storyline to me. I definitely want to see if Holloway can get back on track. If he loses to Volkanovski, he'll be 1-3 in his past four fights. That would have seemed inconceivable at the start of 2019. And, of course, I want to see who claims the vacant bantamweight championship. That's one of the most intriguing divisions in the sport right now. But that said, the welterweight main event is still the most interesting to me.

Wagenheim: I'm most looking forward to Volkanovski vs. Holloway 2. How will each man look? Prior to their meeting in December, Holloway was a dominant featherweight champion. But Volkanovski controlled nearly every second of their 25 minutes in the cage together. Was that the result of a great game plan by the City Kickboxing coaches? Or is the Aussie simply the better man? Was Holloway depleted by the beating he had taken from lightweight Dustin Poirier eight months earlier in an attempt to add a second title belt? If so, will Max be himself this time? Volkanovski feels "disrespected" by those who question his title-winning performance and says he'll knock out Holloway this time. That's even more reason to be excited for this rematch.

Helwani: I don't want to be the guy who says I told you so, but ... I told you so. I never believed "Fight Island" was going to look like everyone thought it would. But I'll tell you what, this has been some of the UFC's best promotional work in years. I can't tell you how many times I've been asked about Fight Island since the pandemic hit us here. It has truly captured the imagination of the world. So, kudos to them. I guess a lot of people never watched BodogFight back in the day. It actually held fights on a beach. It was cool and all, but nothing to get all crazy about. Anyhow, I bet some people will even tune in on July 11 because of the Fight Island name alone. The question is, will they be disappointed when they do so?

In the end, the real victory here is that the UFC figured out a way to hold events internationally so all the fighters outside of America can fight and get paid. I'm certain none of them cares if the fights are happening on a beach or not, anyway. This just opens up the matchup possibilities exponentially, and we see that with the July 11 card.

2 Related

Murphy: Is anybody not a little disappointed Fight Island is only a marketing tool? UFC president Dana White told TMZ, "I have a private island that I've secured," and he told Brett Okamoto, "We really are putting an Octagon on the beach." The picture those interviews painted is far more "Street Fighter" than the site that hosts four cards over 14 days next month.

Technically, Yas Island is hardly more of an island than the United Kingdom. In fairness, "Fight Archipelago" looks far less sexy on T-shirts. ("Fight Isthmus" has potential.)

Billed as a rogue expedition into the combat sports unknown, this is actually a third trip to a city that has hosted UFC pay-per-views as recently as September. The sealed-off, 10-mile "safety zone" is the one attribute with a Fight Island feel -- until you learn the safety zone also has a water park, Ferrari World and an Ikea.

Okamoto: I'm as guilty of over-fantasizing about Fight Island as anyone. I even wrote a (super awesome) song about it while I was stuck at home in March. A Caribbean island somewhere, with palm trees and waves crashing next to the Octagon? I pictured all of that. So, now it's in Abu Dhabi, where the UFC just was in September. So, am I a little let down? A tad. But also ... I don't care. I just want to see the sport pick up and operate at pre-COVID-19 levels, and that's what Fight Island accomplishes. It's an opportunity for international athletes who might have had trouble getting into the United States. The spirit of Fight Island will live through Yas Island, even if it's not exactly what we imagined.

Wagenheim: I'm a bit let down, honestly. Dana White sold us on Fight Island with scant details, but what we are getting is far less exotic than what a lot of us imagined -- and even less so than what the UFC's own T-shirt designers envisioned. Logistically, this is going to mean arduous travel for around 100 fighters and their teams. On the other hand, any concerns about sufficient medical care being available on some remote outpost are alleviated by the fights being on an island that's part of Abu Dhabi, a city of 1.4 million people with several hospitals. And location aside, it's good to see fighters from outside the United States having an opportunity to get back in the game.

Helwani: I'll offer two: Holloway and Paige VanZant. The former because if he loses a second straight fight to Volkanovski, he will be in featherweight purgatory, meaning as long as Volkanovski is champion, Holloway won't sniff a title shot. It's just really hard to justify giving a title shot to someone who is 0-2 versus the champ. Just ask Chad Mendes, Urijah Faber or Joseph Benavidez. And then you can say, well, he can just move up to 155 if he loses; but when Holloway fought Poirier at lightweight last year, Holloway looked really small, so I'm not sure that is the answer for him. And PVZ because this is the final fight on her UFC contract. Most expect her to leave and join her husband, Austin Vanderford, in Bellator, but you always want to enter free agency coming off a win. What if she scores an incredible win? Maybe the UFC offers her a big contract -- or at the very least, her price tag goes up for Bellator and others. If VanZant loses, she has way less leverage.

Murphy: Back-to-back wins over undisputed featherweight king Aldo moved Holloway into the conversation for best pound-for-pound fighter on the planet. A decisive loss to Poirier for the interim lightweight belt was forgiven, as Holloway was visibly smaller and trying to join the ranks of champ champs. A decisive loss to someone in his own division, though, has put Holloway's career at a crossroads. Volkanovski picked apart Holloway at UFC 245. Despite two 48-47 scorecards, there was no doubt fans would hear Bruce Buffer say, "And new," when the horn sounded after the fifth round.

Either Holloway solves a puzzle he had little success handling in December or his career takes another step along the trajectory of that of Aldo and countless other greats who string together losses without warning. With no shortage of depth at 145, two losses against the champion would mean a long road to title consideration for Holloway.

Okamoto: Volkanovski. That might sound strange, considering Holloway is the one who lost his title in December and has lost two of his past three contests. But Holloway is popular, and he will still be popular after UFC 251, win or lose. If Holloway loses, I imagine he'll move up to 155 pounds, where there are plenty of big fights for him. Volkanovski is also popular, but not to the extent of Holloway. I don't think Volkanovski would get an immediate rematch if he were to lose. Volkanovski probably would fall back in line a bit, and right now, that's a tough line at 145 pounds. Volkanovski is going to face plenty of the top talent in that division. The question is, is he going to face them as a champion making a title defense? Or will he face them as a contender, trying to get back to the title? I'm sure he'd rather do it as a champion, as the money will be much better in that scenario. Volkanovski has the most to lose at UFC 251, there's no doubt in my mind.

Wagenheim: There's pressure to go around, really. Looking at the eight fighters in the three title bouts and the rematch of former champions, I think the least pressure is on Burns (his fast rise has him kind of playing with house money) and Aldo (his legacy is set, and a bantamweight fight isn't going to tear that down). Among the other six fighters, I'd say it comes down to Volkanovski and Holloway for the most pressure. A second loss by Holloway could push him permanently out of the title picture (same goes for Jessica Andrade and Rose Namajunas). But I'll go with Volkanovski. He looked spectacular in winning the belt in December. If Holloway turns the tables on him in a big way, Volkanovski could be remembered as a mere blip on the featherweight radar. Another dominant performance, on the other hand, would cement the Aussie's place.

0:28

Chan Sung Jung lands a vicious punch to the head of Renato Moicano in the first round. For more UFC action, sign up here for ESPN+ http://plus.espn.com/ufc.

Helwani: I want to be realistic with this choice, otherwise I'd go with something like Conor McGregor vs. Nate Diaz 3 or Jon Jones vs. Francis Ngannou. Obviously, they aren't doing those fights in July because the pay-per-view main card is already set, and there's no way they are giving those away for free. Israel Adesanya vs. Paulo Costa is another perfect international fight, but again, it's not happening in July (though it was discussed). So, while it sounds like they are close to making this fight happen later this summer, I am going to ask to expedite the rumored but not yet officially announced Brian Ortega vs. Chan Sung Jung grudge match. Jung must defend Jay Park's honor once and for all! Jokes aside, it's been almost two years since we've seen Ortega fight, and his last fight was for the title against Holloway. I'm curious to see how Ortega looks these days, and I think Jung deserves a title shot if he wins. Plus, the backstory is just too much fun.

Murphy: Mackenzie Dern's grappling legend was built all over the world; she owns a stack of IBJJF (International Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Federation) gold medals from Mundials and other elite jiu-jitsu tournaments. Abu Dhabi, though, is the site of maybe her greatest upset, a win over nine-time world champion Gabi Garcia in the Absolute division at WPJJC (World Professional Jiu-Jitsu Cup). Given the region's love for jiu-jitsu -- and Dern's legacy in the sport -- it would be great to have her represented somewhere on the four Fight Island shows.

Dern absorbed only seven significant strikes in her first-round kneebar win over Hannah Cifers last month. Dern told Daniel Cormier in the postfight interview she wants a short layoff, returning to the Octagon at some point this summer. I don't know if I have a specific matchup in mind. Any unranked strawweight grappler against whom Dern can show she is ready to climb that steep divisional ladder makes sense, including Randa Markos or a Montana De La Rosa rematch, among others.

Okamoto: We did a panel a little while back about building your fantasy Fight Island main card. And I had a featherweight fight between Zabit Magomedsharipov and Yair Rodriguez on mine. I don't think that fight is going to be anytime next month, but I'll still use it as my answer. I want to see that fight. Book it. Fight Island, Las Vegas, anywhere. I need to see it.

Wagenheim: I have no reason to believe that either Khabib Nurmagomedov vs. Justin Gaethje or Israel Adesanya vs. Paulo Costa is in peril, but I'll cite those must-see fights anyway because they are the only two championship matchups I see on the horizon that cannot be replaced. Neither has a Burns-type Plan B. For UFC title belts to mean something, matchmakers must book those fights and not stray from them.

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UFC 251 -- Which fighter faces the most pressure on Fight Island? - ESPN

Think twice before booking off-island travel, says Jersey Consumer Council – ITV News

Jersey's Consumer Council is urging people to be cautious when booking travel off-island whilst advice is uncertain.

Both Easyjet and British Airways have re-opened their booking systems from early July. The government has also indicated that some commercial travel could resume in a matter of weeks, when the island hopes to move into Level 1 of its exit strategy.

Carl Walker, Chairman of Jersey Consumer Council, told ITV News people should avoid booking unless they could afford to risk the money spent.

Yes, it's very tempting but we are still in uncharted territory, we still don't know if those flights are going to go. There's still a huge question mark over whether even if restrictions are lifted, are the flights looking to obtain a certain number of seats sold before that flight will go, and if not they may cancel or move it again.

I'd advise unless it's essential, just hold fire at least a little bit longer and wait to see what happens. Flights are going to be available, airlines will be opening new routes, or re-opening routes, throughout the next six months, 12 months as we go forward. There are still going to be options there, but unless you can afford to live without that money you are going to put down now, don't do it, hang on a little bit longer.

Carl Walker, Chairman of Jersey Consumer Council

The Consumer Council have had many queries from people who have already paid deposits on holidays due to take place in August, where they are now being asked to pay the remainder.

Because the travel exclusions don't extend beyond June and July at the moment, they can't automatically get a refund. What some holiday companies are offering are credit notes or vouchers to move that holiday, which is certainly an option, but if islanders are really intent on taking the holiday, book it on a credit card.

If they haven't got a credit card, ask a family member or friend to book it for them, and they can then transfer that money across. It's really important because it gives you that extra protection should the holiday be cancelled and avoid you having to try to go through that voucher process.

Carl Walker, Chairman of Jersey Consumer Council

Condor has announced they will not resume sailings until 2 July at the earliest.

Earlier this week, Manche Iles Express, which connects the Channel Islands to Normandy, suggested holidays to France could soon be on the horizon.

In a press release they stated that although the Channel Islands did not form part of the Schengen zone (to which travel restrictions with France have already been eased), they took hope from President Macron's assurance that travel outside of Europe would become possible to places 'where the pandemic is under control'.

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Think twice before booking off-island travel, says Jersey Consumer Council - ITV News

The Long Con: Erik Bergman and the importance of charity – CalvinAyre.com

Erik Bergman has already proven himself as a success in founding Catena Media, but since then hes proven to be so much more, going on to charitable ventures and founding Great.com as well. As we all start to discover the things that matter most to us during these troubling times, our Becky Liggero Fontana spoke with Bergman to see how he thinks we can make a better world, on this weeks episode of The Long Con.

Bergman is a relentlessly positive man, and that comes from a conscious decision to smile more. Liggero Fontana asked why that is. Well first and foremost, I believe that smiling communicates that you are happy, and what that means is that if Im happy you are safe, because Im not going to attack you if Im smiling, he said. So I believe that being smiling communicates that the people around you are safe, and I believe thats something that sets an energy between people. I think that safety is one of the feelings that we prioritize the least in our society and in our companies and stuff like that, we dont think about it, but when we feel safe we can be ourselves, and where well be ourselves we can be genuinely happy. I believe that if we feel safe thats when the inner child within us comes in, thats what we can play and just enjoy the moment.

Catena Media has been such a success in the gambling world, and its almost shocking that Bergman would have left it. I mean the very short story of Catena Media is that it started out of pure joy and pure happiness. Me and Ian, and my other co-founder, we just did this as a hobby project, and then suddenly it took off. We hired a lot of people, I had no idea what we were doing we had investors, we had lawyers, we had an IPO, and a lot of the passion I originally felt was replaced by demands and sacrifices and late nights and stress, and all of these things. And I just lost all the joy, and at some point, reached immense financial success.

After leaving Catena, Bergman went on to help fund school project in Africa, and that gave him a whole new perspective on life, as he discovered just how rough some people have it. He told a story about a school he helped funded, which had to have the unique rule that the children shot not be beaten. In the other school buildings, the kids got beaten up, and the kids had to be afraid, but here the kids got to be safe, as we touched upon, and they got to be happy, he said. And for me that was the first time I realized that, whoa, this is something that you can do with money, this is something that can change things, that really brings meaning.

That new perspective lead to what has become Great.com, and rather than focus on short term moves to build profit, he hopes for something much greater. Well, in very short, Great will be a casino affiliate, very similar to Catena and all the others out there, but with a big, big difference that this will be a lifelong project, he said. Im doing this for the next 50 years and for me its not important to make results this year, its important that we make the biggest possible bang for the buck over the next decades.

To build a truly great organization that can help support these projects, Bergman is exploring the ways he can have a happier, more committed workforce. I believe that the single most important thing when it comes to reaching results is consistency over time, and being persistent chasing your results, he said. And this is very, very easy if youre having fun, and its very, very hard if youre not having fun. And I believe that most organizations, they strive towards not having fun and pushing themselves to the results, because thats usually the quickest way of getting there, while were prioritizing having fun and creative freedom and whatever it is otherwise that is important in life, because we believe thats how youll get the better results in the long run and the happiest team.

Bergman hopes that by leading by example, and making charity a top priority, he can help shift the corporate culture permanently. If I could accomplish one thing in my life, that would be to make charity cool, he said. And what I mean by that is that people spend $10,000 on a Rolex watch, to show their Rolex watch and be genuinely proud of their Rolex watch, but theyre not giving $10,000 to charity and talk about how they did that.

Watch the full video to see Bergmans thought on other important charitable causes, how he hopes to let employees set their own salaries one day, and the lessons he expects the world to take from the Covid-19 pandemic. And dont forget to subscribe to the CalvinAyre.com YouTube channel so you dont miss any of the great interviews and videos we have coming.

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The Long Con: Erik Bergman and the importance of charity - CalvinAyre.com

LAS VEGAS RE-LAUNCH OF THE STRIP, an important discussion at Sports Betting & Casino Summit North America 2020 – European Gaming Industry News

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The top industry companies have all confirmed their interest to join the Sports Betting & Casino Summit North America (Virtual Conference), which will open its virtual doors between 23-24 June

The virtual seats are limited, so hurry and register now to secure your seat(s)! REGISTER HERE

Lasvegassun.com has released an interesting editorial which is titled Sights and sounds of Vegas give us hope for a full recovery, and we can directly tie this piece with one of the most interesting land-based industry related panel discussions at Sports Betting & Casino Summit North America (Virtual Conference).

After the Bellagio fountains are now back to life with a playing of Simple Gifts to honor the Las Vegas front-liners who have protected the city during the pandemic, MGM Resorts International made another spot-on choice for the follow-up song. This is of course an anthem of the fabulous city, Viva Las Vegas.

Las Vegas is already booming and WADE VANDERVORT, of Lasvegassun.com wrote it so beautifully as we would not change anything:

it was a godsend to see waters dancing, lights twinkling and guests coming through the doors in the resort corridor and downtown. After 78 days of eerie quiet, Las Vegas took its first steps to recovery.

Its a moment of hope and a reminder that our community has rebounded from crisis and tragedy before.

Besides the Bellagio fountains, the gondolas are also gliding along the faux canals at The Venetian.

Up and down Las Vegas Boulevard, from Wynn Las Vegas at the north end to New York-New York and MGM Grand on the south end, gamblers are sliding bills into slot machines and wagering chips at blackjack and roulette tables.

Life is slowly returning to normal in Sin City.

As mentioned above, at Sports Betting & Casino Summit North America (Virtual Conference) we will discuss the subject, and the LAS VEGAS RE-LAUNCH OF THE STRIP panel discussion has some very important guests who are joining us on the 23rd of June to share their insights.

The panel discussion is joined by Jay Kornegay (Vice President Race & Sports Operations Westgate LV Resort & Casino), Seth Schorr (CEO of Fifth Street Gaming and Chairman of Downtown Grand Hotel & Casino) and Matthew Holt (President at U.S. Integrity), and will be moderated by Benjie Cherniak (Managing Director of SG Digitals Don Best Sports group).

Do not miss this unique opportunity to attend a virtual conference that gathers all North American gaming industry experts for 2 days of discussions and networking. Register your seat now!

Jay Kornegay Vice President Race & Sports Operations Westgate LV Resort & Casino

Jay Kornegay is Vice President of the LVH Las Vegas Hotel & Casino SuperBook. He has more than 26 years experience in the race and sports book industry. Jay graduated from Colorado State University in 1987 with a bachelors degree in Restaurant Business Management. Always intrigued by gaming, Jay moved to Nevada later that year to start his path in that field.

Starting in Lake Tahoe and soon afterwards moving to Las Vegas, Jay has worked at four major sports books. He opened the Imperial Palace sports book in 1989, which soon turned into one of the more popular sports books in the state of Nevada.

In 2004, Jay took the reins of the LVH SuperBook. As the worlds largest race and sports book with over 30,000 square feet, the SuperBook is one of the top sports books in Nevada. Over the years, the SuperBook has won numerous awards and often represents the Las Vegas market with national media outlets. It is known for its aggressive nature and being a player-friendly book by offering fair odds to guests. The LVH SuperBook is also known for offering Nevadas largest wagering menu by posting many 2nd/3rd tier sports, as well as having an international flavor. In addition, the SuperBook hosts the SuperContest, which is recognized as the most prestigious pro football handicapping contest. For the fourth consecutive year, the SuperContest set a record for number of entries and marked the most entries ever this past football season at 1034.

Jay resides in Las Vegas with wife Pam, daughter Cara and son Nicholas. He is also well known for shooting a 36 on the front nine and a 59 on the back nine.

Seth Schorr CEO of Fifth Street Gaming and Chairman of Downtown Grand Hotel & Casino

Seth Schorr is CEO of Fifth Street Gaming and Chairman of Downtown Grand Hotel & Casino. The urban casino resort is the embodiments of Schorrs vision to create a downtown Las Vegas hospitality experience delivering a superior guest experience and a genuine sense of community.

Since beginning his career in gaming and hospitality in 1991, Schorr served as an integral member of the Wynn Resorts team, developing the international marketing department in Macau, the interactive gaming division, and The Wynn Collection of Fine Art. Earlier in his career, Schorr also worked in numerous capacities at Mirage Resorts including positions at Bellagio Hotel & Casino, The Mirage Hotel & Casino, and Treasure Island Hotel & Casino.

Schorr and his partner, Jeffrey Fine, co-founded Fifth Street Gaming which owns and operates five casinos. The principals of Fifth Street Gaming also control, through its affiliate, the LEV Restaurant Group, a food and beverage operation that owns and manages more than 50 restaurants in the Las Vegas area and Southern California including The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf, Jamba Juice, Lobster ME, JaBurritos, Daily Kitchen, Evel Pie, and Golden Tiki.

In early 2015, Schorr was introduced to the world of eSports and lead the effort of developing the first fully integrated eSports program in a casino resort at The Downtown Grand. The Downtown Grands eSports program has included weekly eSports contests, team residencies and sponsorships, a weekly broadcast and professional tournaments. Schorr sits on the board of GameCo and advised on the development and launch of the worlds first video game slot machine. In 2017 Schorr launched Commercial Streaming Solutions which developed a patent-pending media platform, KonekTV, that provides streaming content, including Esports and sports betting content, to retail venues. Schorr is a founder of the Nevada Esports Alliance and continues to be a leader in the convergence of Esports and sports gambling. Schorr is the co-founder of The Strategy Organization: a Modern Gaming and Hospitality consulting firm.

Schorr is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, is a member of YPO and sits on numerous boards including those for The Las Vegas Natural History Museum, Nevada Restaurant Association, Jewish Federation of Las Vegas, the Advisory Board of The Smith Center for Performing Arts, One Night for One Drop and was appointed by Governor Sandoval to serve on Nevada State Board of Museums & History. He is also an executive board member and Chairman of the Communications Committee of the Downtown Las Vegas alliance. Schorr is an avid cyclist, amateur photographer and has two little angels Dax (10) and Mia (9). Most importantly, Schorr recently married Dr. Emily Schorr.

Matthew Holt President at U.S. Integrity

Originally from New Hampshire, Mr. Holt originally honorably served in the United States Air Force. Once completing his term in the Air Force Mr. Holt attended Morehead State University, obtaining a sports marketing degree before taking up residence in Las Vegas, Nevada. Mr. Holt founded U.S. Integrity, LLC. based out of Las Vegas, Nevada. U.S. Integrity is the gold standard of game integrity and fraud prevention services in the United States. Mr. Holt and his team at US Integrity have built innovative, technology based solutions that allow for easy accessible data and analytics for fraud prevention and game integrity monitoring.

Benjie Cherniak Managing Director of SG Digitals Don Best Sports group

Benjie Cherniak is the Managing Director of SG Digitals Don Best Sports group, a leading provider of sports information products and services relevant to the North American sports betting industry. Benjie oversees the companys sports information platform, automated data distribution, live pricing, and ancillary consulting services.

Following the acquisition of Don Best by Scientific Games, Benjie has accelerated the growth of OpenBet, the companys sports betting platform, by integrating Don Bests world-class pricing services into the technology. Don Bests trading and pricing expertise have seamlessly become an integral part of SG Digitals core offering.

Prior to joining Scientific Games, Benjie spearheaded Don Bests international growth via tailored solutions to tier-one sportsbook operators in the United States, Europe, Asia, Latin America and beyond. Under Benjies supervision, Don Best introduced (a) a proprietary pricing product for North American based sports that rapidly established itself as the industry standard; and (b) a data integrity offering to assist North American based sport leagues in identifying potential fraudulent betting patterns.

With 15 years of industry experience, Benjie is a leading voice in the emerging US sports betting industry from both an operational and legislative perspective.

Related

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LAS VEGAS RE-LAUNCH OF THE STRIP, an important discussion at Sports Betting & Casino Summit North America 2020 - European Gaming Industry News

Future of the Forests : As the Nantahala and Pisgah national forests face a historic turning point, the planners are impassioned and the stakes are…

A hiker marvels at Douglas Falls in the Big Ivy section of Pisgah National Forest.

On any warm summer day in the heart of Pisgah National Forest, dozens of swimmers of all ages are usually lined up and ready to plummet on their rear ends down a 50-foot natural granite water slide into a pool of eye-poppingly cold water. The slick rock, on the Davidson River near Brevard, is steep enough for a thrill but not sheer enough to be recklessand an impressive signifier of natures ability to not only devise complex ecological systems but also provide world-class recreation.

This water park is free from the usual trappings of a tourist draw. No piped-in music. No sticky snacks, trinkets, or adult beverages for sale. Still, the nature-built slide requires serious resources: lifeguards, trash collectors, and parking attendants, just for starters. In fact, the Sliding Rock Recreation Area is among the most-popular destinations in one of the most-visited national forest systems in the United States.

Venture beyond the roadside attractions and youll find huge swaths of wild terrain and towering hardwoods, rare wildflowers, sparkling streams, and fish and wildlife in Western North Carolinas two national foreststhe Pisgah and the Nantahalawhich together encompass over one million acres and span 18 mountain counties.

Driving through the area, hiking a trail, casting for trout, or sliding down a creek on your fanny, youd have little indication that these forests are nearing the completion of an unprecedented planning processone that will have decades of impacts. In February 2020, nearly 40 years after legislation stipulated that the public be engaged in national forest planning and almost a decade after the launch of this planning process, the USDA Forest Service unveiled the Proposed Nantahala and Pisgah National Forests Land Management Plan to steward these precious resources.

Is the plan a voluminous bureaucratic opus destined to be read only by an exclusive circle of specialists and authorities? Perhaps. But the hundreds of pages of analysis and public opinion were devised not only by scientists and government experts, but by an unprecedented outpouring of public interest from the very people that live near and use the forests.

In fact, the future stewardship of the Pisgah and Nantahala national forests will not rest solely on the shoulders of a century-old federal government agency; it will be aided by a network of organizations made up of horseback riders, hunters, climbers, and wilderness lovers, to name a few. Their missions vary, but all of their values are deeply tied to the public forests of Western North Carolina.

This planning revision process has set the stage for a meaningful private and public partnership of groups and people who are deeply invested in providing manpower and resources to get more accomplished in our national forests, says Lang Hornthal of EcoForesters, a nonprofit forestry organization based in Asheville.

And it couldnt come at a more crucial time. In the early part of the 20th century, the resurrection of Western North Carolina forests, long plundered by timber companies, was heralded by some as an enormous environmental victory. Today, however, the struggle to protect the land from industrial-scale logging is over. Instead, attention is focused on how to manage public forests for a wide range of uses, including sustainable timber harvesting, recreation, conservation, and wildlife habitat, among many others.

Yet given the historical, ecological, and economic importance of the two forests, deciding exactly how to manage their future is no simple task. Whether you harvest wild plants or timber for a living, hike trails, hunt for turkey, or enjoy wildflowers or mountain views, you have a stake in how the national forests are managed, and you should pay attention to this process.

Gifford Pinchot (inset) was an early advocate of practicing scientific forestry in WNC and around the nation; in 1905, he became the first chief of the new United States Forest Service. Right, a Forest Service bridge above Sunburst Falls in Pisgah National Forest. Bottom left, Forest Service surveyors scope out a road project in the mid 1960s. Pisgah, established in 1916, was one of the first national forests in the eastern US.

Pinchots vision

In 1892, Gifford Pinchot arrived at the train depot in Asheville to oversee the wooded domain of George Vanderbilts vast estate, stretching from his castle-in-the-works to the conical apex of Mount Pisgah 20 miles uplandmuch of it damaged, heavily grazed by free-range cattle, and burned by wildfire. The high-minded, Yale-educated forester believed that scientific forestry could not only produce timber for a rapidly industrializing nation, but that forests could be managed for future generations, too.

Pinchot didnt stay in Asheville long. But, in the following decade, he would again oversee portions of North Carolinas timberland, including forests once owned by Vanderbilt and sold to the government, only this time as the nations first chief public forester. Among President Theodore Roosevelts most-trusted advisers, Pinchot led a crusade to protect against what the two considered the plundering of the nations vast natural resource. The forests of the US, Roosevelt asserted, should be set apart forever for the use and benefit of our people as a whole.

Those words formed a prelude to the formation of a federal forest agency. Organized in 1905 and led by Pinchot, the US Forest Service was created to manage 21 million acres of forests in the West. Soon, the agency looked east, where forests were in dismal shape due, in part, to industrial-scale timber harvests and a blight that erased the American Chestnut from the landscape.

Today, the region and its land managers face an entirely novel set of challenges that were unimaginable to Pinchot and Roosevelt, from global warming to escalating recreational demands.

A big opportunity

Wherever you are in Western North Carolina, public lands are always in the backdrop, forests are always in view, says Jill Gottesman of the The Wilderness Society. Were the next generation of people stewarding the land, and this is one of our biggest opportunities to guide the management of our backyard.

In 2013 Gottesman helped form the Nantahala-Pisgah Forest Partnership, which included an array of recreational, economic, government, and conservation organizations eager to discuss a range of forest issues in preparation for the start of the plan-revision process that began in November 2012. (Each national forest is required to have a management plan renewed every two decades; a single plan for WNCs two forests was approved in 1994.)

The NPFPs objective has been to provide guidance in creating the best forest plan possible and to restore the two forests ecological health and economic sustainability. It is one of several collaborative entities that have formed or been active during the planning process, including the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Council, the Pisgah-Nantahala Stakeholders Forum, and I Heart Pisgah.

But bringing people together with conflicting interests is never easy. Hornthal acknowledges that managing conflict among special interests is ever present in forest planning, but says that disagreements and alignments of various users and interests is far more nuanced than youd expect. For example: you probably wouldnt suspect that those wishing to extract timber for profit and those that desire the protection of old-growth forests actually agree on something, but they do.

In fact, despite the presence of discord, there is at least one crucial zone where multiple groups with conflicting interests meet: the ecological restoration of the forests. That is, using science and techniques to direct the recovery of an ecosystem that has been degraded or damaged by creating conditions that plants and animals require to thrive. In some cases, restoration may involve leaving a forest completely alone; in others, it entails prescribed fire or timber clearings to replace spontaneous natural disturbances once caused by wildfire.

Theres a lot of interest in making parts of the forest younger and making parts of the forest grow older for many different reasons and values, says Kevin Colburn, a member of the NPFPs leadership team and stewardship director of American Whitewater. One of the nuances we found is that ecological restoration as a concept meshes with pretty much everyones values whether you shop at REI, Cabelas, or both.

Tradition and transition

Of course, there are a few groups that were here long before Pinchot and his lofty ideals about how to manage forests. Tommy Cabe represents one of them: the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians. We may be tucked in this corner of Western North Carolina, but we are still here. Weve survived, says the EBCIs forest resource specialist and partner of the NPFP. Theres an opportunity for us to engage and to demonstrate our philosophy on landscape management.

A chief example is how to harvest and sustain ramp populations, a wild onion that Native Americans have harvested for thousands of years. Its just one of many nontimber forest products, from ginseng to galax, that Native Americans and others gather for food, medicine, and crafts, or for spiritual or commercial reasons. Over the last several years, the bold-tasting green has become wildly popular among foodies, and its rising economic worth has increased pressure on harvesting.

Of course, other rural communities throughout the mountains rely on the national forests and its precious bounty to sustain their economies, too. Take Graham County and its seat, Robbinsville, nestled in the states far southwestern corner. The county has struggled to find an economic foothold since its worst setback in decades, when Stanley Furniture shuttered its plant and shed over 300 jobs in 2014, a devastating hit for a town of around 600 residents.

Sophia Paulos, the countys economic director, says that lumber production helps to maintain the cultural tradition of working with the forest to earn a living. While other rural western counties have attempted to influence the forest plan revision, most have operated at the fringes of the planning process. Paulos however, jumped on the opportunity and joined the NPFP. I immediately saw the forest plan as crucial to Graham County, says Paulos. Whether its tourism or timber, our economy is dependent on the forest. Its a part of us. So I felt like it was very important for us to be at the table.

While county leaders hope to revive the timber economy, the future of the countys nearly 9,000 residents remains heavily linked to the resources within Nantahala National Forest, with or without lumber production. Increasingly, tourism and recreation may drive it.

However, recreational demands are pressing down hard on points in many parts of the forest, whether its crowded mountain bike trails near Asheville and Brevard, campgrounds, popular streams, or other heavily used recreational assets. The crux, says Hornthal, who serves as the chair of the NPFP leadership team, is how to add and manage more infrastructure when the agency is having a tough time maintaining what they have now due to shrinking federal budgets and staffing.

One approach, for instance, is a management strategy promoted in the plan by the Forest Service that divides the region into 12 geographic units that highlight specific uses and focused management practices as they relate to the three themes of the plan revision: restoration and resiliency, providing clean and abundant water, and connecting people to the land.

Another approach in the draft forest plan is to identify special interest areas, a designation that recognizes places with significant public interest. Among the proposed areas is acreage in Buncombe County near the Blue Ridge Parkway that includes the Big Ivy watershed and the peaks of the Craggy Mountains. The group I Heart Pisgah wants the Forest Service to take it a step further and is proposing the area be protected as the Craggy Mountain Wilderness and National Scenic Area, encompassing 16,000 acres. Additions to the National US Wilderness Preservation System and national scenic area designations offer a higher level of land protection, requiring a recommendation from the Forest Service and approval by Congress and the president.

Having a national scenic area 15 miles from Asheville would be an exciting development for the entire region and protect the values people have for this area, asserts Will Harlan, an organizer of I Heart Pisgah. The area has a great mountain biking trail network, hundreds of acres of old growth, clean water, rare species, and is arguably one of the most valued viewsheds in the nation. Their proposal, says Harlan, is based on the public comments of hundreds of people who wish to see the area protected forever.

While the final plan will not be unveiled until 2021, the draft includes four potential alternatives to manage the forests. By law, the draft requires a 90-day public comment period featuring public meetings that were postponed by the COVID-19 pandemic. Forest Service planning officer Michelle Aldridge says the alternatives were designed based on shared values we heard from our partners and the public to offer win-win solutions and minimize polarization. Collaborators specifically asked the Forest Service to design alternatives that would unite interests, building upon shared values, rather than send folks back to their corners to advocate for single interests.

Among the innovative structures of the plan is the adoption of tiered objectives. The strategy initially targets modest goals for each forest plan objective, such as the number of miles of trail improvements, and only stretches to more ambitious objectives once the needs of other stakeholders, such as timber-harvesting interests, are met. The hope is to incentivize forest users to collaborate rather than fight, and nurture future partnerships.

Hornthal points out that the focus of the collaborative work during the planning process has been, in large part, to reduce conflict. Ultimately, however, he and others have a desire to rise above the fray and focus energy on resolution of some of the forests most pressing challenges, such as battling exotic plants and pests, repairing a backlog of damaged trails and roads, nurturing local economies, restoring delicate habitats, and adapting to a changing climate.

By the time the plan is finalized in 2021, its creation will have spanned a decade. While a bureaucratic document 10 years in the making may seem excessive, on an ecological timeline, its faintly perceptible.

In fact, how we steward the land now will matter for a long time to come, says Cabe of the EBCI, whose ancestors championed a sweeping view of nature. Were taught not to decimate the landscape, otherwise it will affect our bloodline for seven generations. Thats a long time, but thats how we regard the land. Thats how weve always regarded it.

Drafting an effective plan that encourages harmony is more crucial than ever, says Hornthal, in order to sustain the transformation of the mountain forests from an ecological apocalypse to an indisputable environmental triumph.

Our forests have been neglected, and now is the time to do something, he says. Were all in this together.

(Clockwise from left) Dry Falls in Macon County, one of Nantahala National Forests renowned scenic spots; Mountain biking and fly fishing are but two of the outdoor pursuits that help draw hundreds of thousands of visitors to the national forests each year. Top, biking in Pisgah; above, fishing near Pisgahs Davidson River Campground

Whats Next?

The forest planning process is winding down but far from over. The release of the proposed plan was accompanied by a draft environmental impact statement, which evaluates the impact of each proposed management alternative and presents the possible trade-offs of what might come with them.

A 90-day public comment period followed the release of the draft EIS. That process commenced in February, but was delayed by the pandemic and has been extended to June 29. In addition, several public meetings were cancelled, but the Forest Service has created a virtual open house online to share vital information (find it at bit.ly/WNCforests).

Moving forward, the Forest Service will respond to public comments in the fall of 2020, and present an updated plan and final EIS in the spring of 2021. Following a five-month objection period, the agency will review any unresolved objections, and it estimates the release of a finalized plan in late 2021.

Editors note: This feature was sourced in part from the writers extensive reporting for Carolina Public Press, an Asheville-basednonprofit news service.

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Future of the Forests : As the Nantahala and Pisgah national forests face a historic turning point, the planners are impassioned and the stakes are...

Indonesia 2020: Total Hospital & Medical Installed Base Mapping with COVID-19 Updates – Less Than 5% of the Total Beds in the Country Equipped to…

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The "HospeTrack Hospital Intelligence for Indonesia" report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.

The Indonesia Total Hospital & Medical Installed Base Mapping report was updated in 2020 and includes over 2,764 hospitals from the country with their health infrastructure detailed out.

With Less than 5% of the Total Beds in the Country Equipped to Provide Intensive Care Services, Indonesia's Developmental Policies may Aid Medical Equipment Manufacturers

Indonesia has been striving to contain the dual impact caused by COVID-19 on public health as well as its economy. Amidst rapidly weakening of Rupiah against US dollar, the country has been among the worst-hit in South-East Asia. In addition to its existing challenges around providing equitable access to healthcare, hospitals in few provinces are expected to be inundated with critical COVID-19 cases. Provinces such as DKI Jakarta, West Java, East Java, Banten, Central Java and South Sulawesi have been bearing the brunt of the highest number of COVID-19 cases.

However, these six provinces have only about 4,500 ICU beds - representing about 53% of the total ICU beds in the country. The number of ventilators in Indonesia are considered to be insufficient and their distribution remains disparate. However, despite the challenges in logistics and supply chain caused due to COVID-19 crisis, Indonesia has been looking to procure additional ventilators and boost local production of portable ventilators to fulfil the increasing demand.

As of 2019, about 2,764 hospitals were functioning in Indonesia. Around 70 of them were equipped to provide tertiary care services. Indonesia is expected to focus on improving tertiary care services, to bridge this gap in the immediate term while improving distribution of healthcare services. With the Universal Health Coverage Policy now committing to serve 80% of the population, load distribution will be a factor that will need continuous attention. For the aforementioned reasons, the country's bold $400BN total infrastructure development plan for 2020-2024 is expected to focus on healthcare as one of the key areas of investment.

According to the HospeTrack Hospital Intelligence for Indonesia, the largest opportunity in the immediate term is likely to be around infrastructure build-up necessary for expanding tertiary care services. This may include growth in anaesthesia machines, ventilators, operating rooms, CT and MRI scanners. As of 2019, penetration of advanced imaging modalities like MRI and CT was less than 30-40% in the 70 tertiary care hospitals. The data in the report also shows that there are approximately 150 Cath Labs, 750 CT scanners and a much lower installed base of MRI scanners between the country's 2,764 hospitals. Both the public sector hospitals and the private health sector could potentially focus on bolstering the above-installed base in the next 3-4 years.

In terms of intensive care services, there are close to 8,000 total ICU beds in the country - estimated to be lower than 5% of the total inpatient beds - another area that could witness improved efforts and investments, especially from the public sector. Procurement in terms of patient monitoring systems, ventilators and hospital information technologies to improve intensive care services is expected to be a key investment area for the country in the next five years.

The dataset provides account-level directional detail on total beds, ICU beds, ORs, ventilators, incubators, etc., along with Anaesthesia Machines, C-Arms, Cath Labs, PET, Nuclear, SPECT, CT, MRI scanners, Ultrasound and X-Ray machines, making it the only source of hospital-level intelligence for medical equipment installed base in Indonesia. This dataset is a valuable tool for any organization that is in the process of optimizing sales targets, estimating market potential or building an account management plan in Indonesia.

The report is a craftily designed dataset that provides a graphical summary of the health infrastructure in the country apart from an account-level view of resources, directional information on medical device installed base, hospital demographic and care services. The report commits itself as a tool to understand, visualize, and identify opportunity pockets at the hospital-level for medical devices manufacturers, and digital healthcare companies.

Contents

1. Visualize and Map the Total Installed Base of the Country by Hospital

2. Generate Targeted Leads Based on Current Care Area Focus of a Hospital

3. Visualize the Current Health Resource Status of a Hospital

4. Comprehend Medical Services Potential Using Bed and Operating Rooms Data

5. Understand and Identify Types of Hospitals

6. Create Opportunity Heat Maps

7. Estimate Medical Device Penetration and Potential in the Country

Companies Mentioned

For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/48vqbk

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Indonesia 2020: Total Hospital & Medical Installed Base Mapping with COVID-19 Updates - Less Than 5% of the Total Beds in the Country Equipped to...

Groundswell Startups Partners with StarterStudio to Bring Idea & Build Stage Startup Programming to Brevard – SpaceCoastDaily.com

Groundswell was founded in 2016 and is home to a diverse network of high-tech foundersGroundswell Startups, a nonprofit high-tech incubator and coworking space in Melbourne, Florida announced a partnership with Orlando-based StarterStudio to bring Idea & Build Stage Startup Programming to Brevard County. (Groundswell Startups image)

BREVARD COUNTY MELBOURNE, FLORIDA Groundswell Startups, a nonprofit high-tech incubator and coworking space in Melbourne, Florida announced a partnership with Orlando-based StarterStudio to bring Idea & Build Stage Startup Programming to Brevard County.

Groundswell, founded in 2016, is home to a diverse network of high-tech founders, creatives, and innovators who work together in a collaborative environment to scale their companies.

The heart of Groundswells mission is to connect founders with their vetted mentor and subject-matter expert network to assist companies in getting ready for funding, and then using their network to help open the door to those opportunities.

Over the past four years, Groundswell has assisted over 20 companies gain access to funding with over 25 million collectively raised in venture capital funds.

The partnership will allow Groundswell Startups to utilize StarterStudios well-respected and results driven programming and facilitators to provide additional support to startups in Brevard County.

We are all about coordinated collaboration at Groundswell, said Jarin Eisenberg, COO of Groundswell Startups.

StarterStudio is a regional partner who is leading the way with their virtual programming. Instead of duplicating an established resource, we look to this partnership as an opportunity to bring high-quality programming to Brevard County and to expand our ecosystem which will benefit all of the companies we serve.

To start, the two organizations will partner on bringing Idea & Build Stage acceleration programming to the area. The Idea Stage program is a 10-week evening series with classes once a week.

It is focused on helping entrepreneurial-minded individuals validate their tech business idea, collect feedback from potential customers, develop a sustainable revenue model, and learn how to effectively communicate about their business.

The Build Stage accelerator program is a 12-week, part-time offering for very early companies that have a minimum viable product and need the fundamentals of go-to-market strategy, selling, customer relationships, finding and managing technical resources, basics of business law, financial models, and ultimately, information on all types of funding sources to speed them toward a sustainable tech or tech-enabled business.

We are so excited to extend our accelerator programs to the heart of the Space Coasts tech economy, said Lilian Myers, executive director at StarterStudio.

We have collaborated with Groundswell on putting later-stage companies in front of investors for some time. What we know from having over 120 startups come through our various programs in the greater Orlando market, is that there is often a big education gap between having an idea and then knowing how to get it validated, built, and into the hands of actual paying customers.

Filling that gap quickly means more entrepreneurs have a better shot at contributing to local economic vibrance and were so pleased to be joining Groundswell to make that happen in Brevard.

Since COVID-19, we have experienced an increased demand for services and support. People want to take their destiny into their own hands, and we want to do everything we can to support them.

The program has received support from TSS Solutions, Rossway Swan, Flavin and Nooney, and Lowndes, each stepping up to provide partial scholarship opportunities for participants.

We are excited for this partnership, and for the impact, it will make on the companies we serve. Applications are open now and the first class of cohorts is expected to start July 27.

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Groundswell Startups Partners with StarterStudio to Bring Idea & Build Stage Startup Programming to Brevard - SpaceCoastDaily.com

Vatican document on integral ecology: Safeguarding Creation is everyone’s responsibility – Vatican News

Several Vatican Dicasteries team up to release a document entitled Journeying for the care of the common home, which offers a guide to all Christians on how to maintain a healthy relationship with Creation.

By Isabella Piro

The Vatican released a document on Thursday that offers a guide to Catholics, and all Christians, regarding our relationship with Gods Creation.

Entitled Journeying for the care of the common home, the document coincides with the fifth anniversary of Pope Francis encyclical Laudato s, which was signed on 24 May 2015 and published on 18 June of that same year.

The document was drafted by the Holy See Interdicastery Table on Integral Ecology, created in 2015 to evaluate ways to best promote and implement integral ecology.

Institutions linked to the Holy See, along with several Bishops Conferences, and Catholic organizations, make up the committee.

The text was written prior to the Covid-19 pandemic, but it highlights the main message of Laudato s: Everything is connected; each particular crisis forms part of a single, complex socio-environmental crisis that requires a true ecological conversion.

The first part of the document opens with a reminder of the need for ecological conversion.

This involves a change in mentality leading us to care for life and Creation, dialogue with others, and an awareness of the deep connection between the worlds problems.

Initiatives such as the Season of Creation, it says, should be enhanced, along with monastic traditions that teach contemplation, prayer, work, and service. These initiatives can help educate people about the link between personal, social, and environmental balance.

The document then reaffirms the centrality of life and the human person, because nature cannot be defended without the defence of every human life. From this fact derives the need to develop the concept of sin against human life among younger generations, which can help contrast the throwaway culture with a caring culture.

The text also places strong emphasis on the family as a protagonist of integral ecology. When grounded in the basic principles of communion and fruitfulness, the family can become a privileged place for education where one learns to respect human beings and Creation. States, therefore, are urged to promote smart policies for family development.

At the same time, schools are invited to acquire a new centrality, in other words, to become a place to develop the capacity for discernment, critical thinking, and responsible action. The document offers two suggestions in this regard: (1) to facilitate links between the home, the school, and the parish; and (2) to launch training projects for ecological citizenship, which should promote among young people a new model of relationships that goes beyond individualism in favor of solidarity, responsibility, and care.

Universities are invited to centre their curricula on a backbone of integral ecology. Through their three-fold mission of teaching, research, and service to society, universities need to encourage students to engage in professions that facilitate positive environmental change. The document suggests specifically that students should study the theology of Creation, which consists in the relationship of the human being with the world, while remaining conscious of the fact that caring for Creation requires ongoing education and a true educational pact between all institutions involved in education.

The document also reaffirms that the commitment to caring for our common home is an integral part of Christian life, and not a secondary option. Further, care for our common home is an excellent area to build ecumenical and interreligious dialogue and collaboration. The wisdom found in various religions, it says, can encourage a contemplative and sober lifestyle that leads to overcoming the deterioration of the Planet.

The first part of the document concludes with a chapter dedicated to communication and its profound analogy with the care of our common home. Both, in fact, are based on communion, relationship, and connection.

In the context of an ecology of the media, the media are urged to highlight the links between human destiny and the natural environment, while empowering citizens, and combating fake news.

The second part of the document opens with the subject of food, referring to Pope Francis words: whenever food is thrown out it is as if it were stolen from the table of the poor (LS, 50). Food waste, therefore, is condemned as an act of injustice.

The document calls for the promotion of diversified and sustainable agriculture, defence of small producers and natural resources, and the urgent need for healthy food education, both in quantity and in quality. There is also a strong call to combat phenomena such as land grabbing and major agro-industrial projects that pollute the environment, as well as an appeal to protect biodiversity.

Echoes of this appeal can also be found in the chapter devoted to water, access to which is an essential human right. Here, too, there is a call to avoid waste and to go beyond the utilitarian criteria that lead to the privatization of this natural good.

Along the same lines is an invitation to reduce pollution, to de-carbonize the energy and economic sectors, and to invest in clean and renewable energy, making it accessible to all.

The seas and oceans also cut to the heart of integral ecology. They are the blue lungs of the planet, and require governance focused on the common good of the entire human family and founded on the principle of subsidiarity.

The document also stresses the urgent need to promote a circular economy that does not aim at over-exploitation of productive resources, but at their long-term maintenance, so that they can be reused. We must overcome the concept of rejected waste, it says, because everything has value. This, however, will only be possible through positive interaction between technological innovation, investment in sustainable infrastructure, and growth in resource productivity.

The private sector is called upon to operate transparently in the supply chain. The document goes on to call for the reform of fossil fuel subsidies and the taxation of CO2 emissions.

In the field of labour, the document expresses hopes for the promotion of sustainable socio-economic development, so that poverty might be eradicated and the marginalized might find paths toward socio-professional advancement. It also calls for decent work, fair wages, efforts to combat child labour, and an inclusive economy which promotes the value of the family and motherhood, along with the prevention and eradication of new forms of slavery, such as human trafficking.

The document says the world of finance needs to play its part, by aiming for the primacy of the common good and working to put an end to poverty. The Covid-19 pandemic, reads the document, shows how elements of the system are being questioned, when it reduces welfare, allows speculation even in misfortune, and oppresses the poorest people.

The document urges government to close tax havens, sanction financial institutions involved in illegal operations, and bridge the gap between those who have access to credit and those who do not. It exhorts everyone to promote a style of management of the Churchs goods that is inspired by transparency, coherence, and courage, based on a perspective of integral sustainability.

Within civil institutions, the document stresses the primacy of civil society, which politics, governments, and administrations must serve. It calls for the globalization of substantive, social, and participatory democracy, and a long-term vision based on justice, morality, and the fight against corruption.

The document says an important aspect is the promotion of access to justice for all, including the poor, the marginalized, the excluded. It also encourages governments to rethink prudently the prison system, in order to promote the rehabilitation of prisoners, especially young people serving time for their first conviction.

The text then dwells on healthcare systems, calling it a question of equity and social justice. It reaffirms the importance of the right to care. As ecological networks are degraded, it reads, social networks are also broken down. In both cases, it is the poorest who suffer the consequences. The document offers concrete suggestions, including an examination of the dangers associated with the rapid spread of viral and bacterial epidemics, and the promotion of palliative care.

Finally, the interdicasterial document examines the issue of climate change, saying it has a profound environmental, ethical, economic, political, and social relevance which impacts the poor above all. Therefore, we first need a new model of development that links the fight against climate change to the fight against poverty, in tune with the Social Doctrine of the Church.

Recalling that no one acts alone, the document calls for a commitment to low carbon sustainable development to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Proposals made in this area include the reforestation of areas such as the Amazon rainforest, along with support for the international process aimed at defining the category of climate refugee to ensure them necessary legal and humanitarian protections.

The last chapter of the text is dedicated to the commitment of Vatican City State.

There are four operational areas in which the implications of Laudato s are applied are: (1) environmental protection (e.g. sorted waste collection already established in all Vatican offices); (2) protection of water resources (e.g. closed circuits for fountain water); (3) care for green areas (e.g. progressive reduction of harmful phytosanitary products); (4) reduced consumption of energy resources (e.g. in 2008, a photovoltaic system was installed on the roof of the Nervi Hall, and new energy-saving lighting systems were installed in the Sistine Chapel, St. Peters Square, and the Vatican Basilica, reducing costs by 60, 70, and 80 percent, respectively).

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Vatican document on integral ecology: Safeguarding Creation is everyone's responsibility - Vatican News

A year of good and affordable kai in Papatoetoe – OurAuckland

At the heart of Papatoetoes town centre is The Food Hub. The bustling, community-driven kitchen, cafe and meeting place is a place where locals can enjoy homegrown and indigenous food options, that are both healthy and sustainably sourced.

The Food Hub has reached some key milestones over the past months and the evolution of this initiative has been staggering, from its inception to the fully licensed caf and commercial kitchen onsite today.

As part of its urban regeneration strategy for the area, the team at Panuku saw potential in an under-utilised netball club in Papatoetoe which neighbours the central New World Papatoetoe supermarket.

Panuku managed the site management and provided resource consent before handing over management of The Food Hub to The Southern Initiative and Healthy Families in September 2018.

Connie Clarkson, Panukus Head of Commercial Place Operations, says:

Panuku played a vital role in connecting The Food Hubs key people, like the New World supermarket and the Washer Family.

"Max Washer owns the iconic White Lady food truck, which recently retired after 45 years of being based in the CBD. The White Lady now proudly resides at the Food Hub for new cooking and catering initiatives. These strong relationships had to be forged otherwise the project would never have been able to go ahead.

The vision for The Food Hub was to explore whats possible when you bring the resources of local government, traditional knowledge, local food production and healthy principles together.

Some of the major successes have been:

The long-term goal is for The Food Hub to replicated in other urban centres. As Julio Bin from The Southern Initiative says:

The Food Hub helps alleviate food insecurity and influences behaviours by making a healthier and sustainable local food system.

"The concept has evolved to become a community-led enterprise focused on providing good and affordable food to the local community, while upcycling surplus food into meals and juices.

"The Food Hub is now, post COVID-19, an example of an alternative model to enhance community food resilience and support a sustainable and local food economy.

Excerpt from:

A year of good and affordable kai in Papatoetoe - OurAuckland