Some Progress on Curbing Speeding L.A. Drivers, Much Reform Still Needed – Streetsblog St. Louis

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For years, safety advocates have criticized state speed limit law that makes California and Los Angeles streets increasingly more deadly. Lately, local and state efforts are seeing some momentum in the long campaign to reduce speeding.

Streetsblog readers may already know that driver speed is one of the biggest factors in how car crashes kill and injure people. The faster the speed, the more deadly the crash impact for pedestrians, for cyclists, and for people in cars including the speeding driver themself.

SBLA readers are probably also aware of the arcane 85th percentile state law that basically rewards drivers for speeding. The L.A. Times called the law absurd. If enough scofflaw drivers speed on a given street, then the city is forced to raise the speed limit there.

The same California law mandates that, for police to use standard speed enforcement (commonly called radar speed guns though generally using lidar in Los Angeles), cities must go through a cumbersome process of doing speed surveys every five to seven years. If cities allow speed surveys to go stale, then police generally cannot enforce speed limits.

For the past few years, the city of Los Angeles has been working to curb speeding within the limitations of the current absurd system.

In 2016, 75 percent of L.A. streets had expired speed surveys, which caused LAPD speeding tickets to drop off dramatically. Per LAPD testimony, the department issued 99,000 speeding tickets in 2010. In 2015, that number had dropped to 16,000. In 2017, LADOT stepped up work to complete speed surveys and to modify (mostly increase) speed limits so LAPD could issue speeding tickets. At that time LADOT brought the total number of enforceable streets from 19 percent in early 2016 to 53 percent in late 2017, emphasizing the Vision Zero High Injury Network (HIN.)

Last week, in an email to Streetsblog, LADOT spokesperson Colin Sweeney confirmed that all L.A. streets now have enforceable speed limits:

LADOT has updated all expired speed zone surveys. There are now a total 1,262 miles of radar-enforceable streets which includes 100 percent of the HIN. There are thousands of miles of additional collector and residential streets which do not have a posted speed limit. In these cases, limits are still enforceable by the prima facie rule as determined by Article 22352 in the CA Vehicle Code. Going forward, LADOT is proactively renewing speed zone surveys across the city over a five-year cycle to both level out the workload and prevent surveys expiring in the future.

Streetsblog made an inquiry to LAPD to see how enforcement is currently working. SBLA are still waiting to hear the number of speeding tickets issued citywide in recent years; this story will be updated when that data is available.

Streetsblog spoke with LAPD Captain Andy Neiman, Commanding Officer, Valley Traffic Division. Neiman reports that, in the San Fernando Valley, LAPD speeding enforcement has increased a great deal in recent years; he estimated anecdotally that he has seen speeding tickets up roughly 150 percent compared to 2017. He did state that nonetheless, speeding remains a serious issue on the long straight wide major thoroughfares all over the Valley.

Fortunately speed limit reform efforts are not limited to the local level. Recent developments indicate needed reforms are moving forward at the state level.

As a result of legislation by State Assemblymember Laura Friedman, the state formed a Zero Fatalities Task Force. It initially appeared that speed limit reforms might be subject to death by committee. Last week the task force delivered its recommendations report, and they do call for major speed limit law improvements. The report cites many problems with the current 85th percentile rule, including speed creep, in which speed limits go up over time as limits are raised, people drive faster, and then limits are raised again.

Find lots of detail on the reports statewide implications at Streetsblog California and southern California implications at LAist.From LAist:

It [current California speed limit law] would be like increasing a persons daily recommended calories because their neighbors overeat, [LADOT General Manager Seleta] Reynolds said in a statement to LAist. Cities like Los Angeles need the flexibility to set speed limits that fit. We were grateful for the opportunity to participate in this groundbreaking work and look forward to championing these recommendations that, if implemented, will save lives.

L.A. City Councilman Mike Bonin said he was grateful for the report, which properly diagnosed the problem, but hoped it had included stronger recommendations moving forward. Bonin has long been critical of the 85th percentile rule, calling it absurd and one of the stupidest pieces of legislation hes dealt with.

Not only is it a stupid law, its also a dangerous law because we know that the faster people are going, the more likely someone who gets hit by a car is going to die, he said. It actually has deadly consequences.

Bonin, who chairs the councils transportation committee, said hed like to see a speed limit system based on street type that also accounts for vulnerability and risk to all road users, rather than the current method that relies solely on how drivers behave.

This week, Friedman introduced A.B. 2121 which would make small steps toward reforming state speed limit law. A.B. 2121 would:

It is not the death of the 85th percentile rule, but given Friedmans tenacious success at wringing important results out of mundane task forces, it could be a few important steps toward much needed speed limit reform.

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Some Progress on Curbing Speeding L.A. Drivers, Much Reform Still Needed - Streetsblog St. Louis

Vail Health CEO gives a progress report on his first year on the job – Vail Daily News

VAIL When he first arrived on the job early lsat year, Vail Health CEO Will Cook wore a tie to work and had a very long to-do list. The tie is gone now, and there are some important items on the list crossed off, or at least well begun.

Cook recently sat down with the Vail Daily to talk about the past year and the months to come.

That first year is everything I thought it would be, Cook said, particularly regarding being able to see quick results from new and continuing initiatives.

Cooks most recent experience was working in large hospital systems. In those big-city settings, You couldnt mobilize the community as easily.

In the Vail Valley, mobilizing people and resources can happen fairly quickly.

Vail Health in April of 2019 announced it would pledge $60 million over the next decade to bolster the valleys behavioral health resources.

While the idea for increasing services had been percolating before Cook took the job, he said hed made that focus on behavioral health a priority when talking to Mike Shannon, the former chairman of the Vail Health and Vail Health Services board of directors.

Cook recalled that he told Shannon I need the support of the board, both financially and politically, Cook said.

That request came early on in his tenure.

It was by far the most wonderful experience Ive had in a boardroom, Cook said.

Today, Vail Health has added 30 behavioral health specialists out of a goal of 50.

Cook credited Eagle Valley Behavioral Health Director Chris Lindley for the progress on the initiatives. Lindley is a galvanizer, Cook said, adding that Lindley was instrumental in putting together the core working group.

Even with progress over the past several months, Cook said theres still a lot of work to do. But, he added, the support is in place.

Another big initiative was the acquisition last year of Colorado Mountain Medical. That acquisition of the physicians group will help create a more proactive system, Cook said.

Getting people to see doctors on a regular basis means patients can sometimes get early help and referral to specialists on potentially disastrous health problems.

All of that costs money, Cook said. But if you dont (have early care) and have a heart attack, a $10,000 issue becomes a $100,000 issue.

Vail Health entering that part of the care spectrum requires a big provider network. Cook said Vail Health could build its own network and compete with Colorado Mountain Medical, or Vail Health could merge with the established provider.

That expansion also allowed Vail Health to negotiate reimbursement rates with Anthem, the only insurance company for valley residents with private insurance.

The insurance landscape is shifting, and may change even more as the fight over a public option insurance option heats up in the state legislature.

Co-sponsored last session by Rep. Dylan Roberts, D-Avon, and Sen. Kerry Donovan, D-Vail, the public option bill directed state insurance regulators to draft a proposal for a state option insurance plan. The proposal was vetted in stakeholder meetings around the state before beingpresented to the legislature earlier this month.Roberts is now working on a bill based on some version of that plan, which has been opposed by many hospitals in the state.

Cook said he needs to learn more about the bill before offering support or opposition.

I need to see more of the details, Cook said. Im open to solutions that enhance (care).

Providing care to more people is important, not just for residents, but for the local hospital.

Cook said people leaving the valley for care tend to go either to Front Range-based providers or Valley View Hospital in Glenwood Springs.

Cook said theres a widely-held perception that Vail Healths services and procedures are more expensive. But, he said, a recent Rand Corporation study showed Vail Health is less expensive, on average, than either Valley View or St. Anthonys Summit County.

Part of getting people to stop seeking care elsewhere is a matter of education, Cook said. Thats particularly true in the western part of the valley, he added.

We have to rebuild trust, in the western valley, Cook said.

Part of building trust is working to be a more transparent organization. Vail Health is a private, nonprofit operation. Board meetings dont have to be open to the public.

Cook said hes working to open up one or two meetings a year. But, he added, that wont happen for a while.

Transparency also includes being more open about Vail Healths finances.

Some transparency is coming in the form of a federal mandate to post prices for procedures and services. Cook said he intends for Vail Health to go beyond whats required by law.

But, he added, Vail Health which is a complex organization that includes both nonprofit and for-profit arms needs to be better about its financial reporting.

That includes billing, which Cook acknowledged is broken.

That takes time, he said. We have to untangle how its been done, and totally rebuild it.

As Cook is becoming better known in the community, he fields plenty of questions when hes out and about. Most of those questions are about costs.

Most of those questions are from people who want to understand what Vail Health is doing to make care more affordable.

The answers are complicated, and could be some time in coming, he said.

Vail Daily Business Editor Scott Miller can be reached at smiller@vaildaily.com or 970-748-2930.

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Vail Health CEO gives a progress report on his first year on the job - Vail Daily News

Where’s The Progress? Little Movement On Proposed Nassau Hub In 15 Years – Long Island Weekly News

Example of light rail in Taipei (Photo by Subscriptshoe9 via Wikimedia / CC BY-SA 4.0)

This year is the 15th anniversary of the ongoing proposed Nassau Hub planning effort and study. Under several grants worth $10 million, most of these funds from the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) have been spent on this study with no significant progress to date.

Since 2005, Nassau County has conducted a series of ongoing planning and environmental efforts to support a number of potential transportation improvements, such as bus rapid transit, light rail or other options for the Nassau Hub. The cost for design, construction and implementation could be several hundred million dollars, depending on the transportation mode and route(s) selected. Some estimate a $450 million total cost.

The success of the LIRR $2.6 billion main line third track and $11.8 billion East Side access to Grand Central Terminal projects are also dependent upon the NICE bus being able to expand feeder service to LIRR stations. How will NICE bus be able to accommodate future expansion for accommodation of new LIRR riders with additional service?

One potential source of funding is the Federal Transit Administration discretionary competitive New Starts program. This project is not included in the latest FTA March 2019 New Starts Report for the federal fiscal year 2020. There is no indication that Nassau County has even initiated a dialogue with the FTA for admission into this program. Dont be surprised when the next FTA New Starts Report for the federal fiscal year 2021 does not include this project. The report is due for submission to Congress by March.

After 15 years of planning, the project not being admitted into the federal New Starts process is disappointing. This first step in obtaining permission to enter the project development phase of the FTA New Starts Program is just the start of a long multiyear process.

The initial approval to enter the project development phase is only the first step, and the project still faces myriad hurdles. Completion of this work includes the FTA issuing an environmental finding, along with reaching agreements with the project sponsor, in this case Nassau County, concerning proposed project budget, scope and milestones.

This is followed by the project being given permission by the FTA to advance to the next stage, known as final engineering. Progression of final design and engineering from 30 to 100 percent averages several more years. This could include review and approval by various village, town, county, state and federal permitting or regulatory agencies along with financial, user, operations and maintenance groups. How long would the Nassau County Interim Financial Review Board take before providing approval?

Based on the lack of progress to date, Nassau County may be unable to obtain federal funding for the Nassau Hub Bus Rapid Transit project until 2024. Who knows how many years it would take before anyone can board the first vehicle in passenger service?

Larry Penner is a transportation historian and advocate who previously worked 31 years for the United States Department of Transportation Federal Transit Administration Region 2 New York office.

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Where's The Progress? Little Movement On Proposed Nassau Hub In 15 Years - Long Island Weekly News

Treasury yields climb on reports of progress toward virus treatment – MarketWatch

Treasury yields rose on Wednesday amid reports that researchers had made progress in coming up with cures and treatments for the rapidly spreading coronavirus. The rise was extended after an estimate of private-sector jobs growth.

The 10-year Treasury note yield TMUBMUSD10Y, +0.00% rose 4.6 basis points to 1.649%, its highest since Jan. 24, while the two-year note rate TMUBMUSD02Y, +0.00% was up 2.6 basis points to 1.441%. The 30-year bond yield TMUBMUSD30Y, +0.00% climbed 5.1 basis points to 2.132%.

Some of the coronavirus fears abated amid efforts by scientists to develop drugs to counter the virus. Researchers at Zhejiang University said they found an effective drug to treat coronavirus patients, according to a Chinese newspaper. A British team of scientists have also claimed that they shortened a part of the development time for a vaccine.

Still, the World Health Organization has said that there are no known effective therapeutics against the virus, in response to the media reports.

The number of coronavirus cases have continued to march higher. Chinas National Health Commission reported more than 24,000 confirmed cases and 490 deaths within the country.

Traders faced a rush of economic data in the morning. Automatic Data Processing said the U.S. economy added 291,000 private-sector jobs in January. The December trade deficit fell 1.7% in 2019, its first annual decline in six years, reflecting the impact of U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods.

The Institute for Supply Management reported its January nonmanufacturing index rose to a six-month high of 55.5%, from 54.9% last month. Any number above 50% reflects an expansion in economic activity.

As for the Federal Reserve, Gov. Lael Brainard will speak later, at 4:10 p.m. Eastern. San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said in an interview with CNBC she did not expect the impact of the coronavirus on the U.S. economy to be material.

Traders of fed fund futures had started to price in increased odds of a rate cut this year following the pathogens outbreak, but improving manufacturing data has weighed on the case for further monetary easing.

The Treasury Department announced it would bring back the 20-year bond this year, but details on the timing and size of the auctions wont be forthcoming until May.

Tremendous selling hit [Treasury] prices early this morning on China reports of promising early results from a treatment for coronavirus. Headlines that it was a vaccine sparked the stampede as a vaccine would imply quarantines could ease faster than expected, wrote Jim Vogel, an interest-rate strategist at FHN Financial.

Broadly, the American economy and the developed economies of the world dont need China as a demand driver, as much as they use it as a supply driver. That makes a Chinese slowdown from the coronavirus a bit more easier to deal with, especially if it lasts for only a couple of months, said Tom Graff, head of fixed-income at Brown Advisory, in an interview with MarketWatch.

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PHOTO: Animatronic’s Hand Falls Off Mid-Show at Carousel of Progress in the Magic Kingdom – wdwnt.com

This post may contain affiliate links; please read the disclosure for more information.

According to user ColtsMcgee on Reddit, Johns hand fell off today during a performance of Walt Disneys Carousel of Progress. Based on the image, it appears his right hand fell off during the first scene, or the 1900s section of the show.

This isnt the first incident for the Carousel of Progress in recent memory, because, in December, a guest climbed onto the stage during the same scene and touched some of the props. While all damages from that incident were repaired, many readers have messaged us since then to report on numerous issues with the attraction. For example, scenes have been running without background music, leading the audio-animatronics to sing eerily acapella.

Walt Disneys Carousel of Progress has been long slated for a refurbishment, and we reported back in August that the attraction will have a large scale refurbishment after Walt Disney Worlds 50th anniversary.

Stay tuned to WDWNT for updates on this story and many more.

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PHOTO: Animatronic's Hand Falls Off Mid-Show at Carousel of Progress in the Magic Kingdom - wdwnt.com

Mookie Betts, David Price trade: Boston Red Sox making progress on reworking deal but talks with Twins, Dod – MassLive.com

The blockbuster trade sending Mookie Betts and David Price to the Dodgers is still more likely to happen than not but some involved are suggesting its not a certainty, according to reports from MLB.coms Mark Feinsand and MLB Networks Jon Heyman. According to Feinsand, the Red Sox, Dodgers and Twins are making progress on a revised deal after Boston was not satisfied with the medical records of pitcher Brusdar Graterol.

Talk between the Twins and Red Sox are going slowly, according to The Athletics Ken Rosenthal, who reports that the Dodgers may acquire a prospect from another club to help bridge the gap.

Boston, Los Angeles and Minnesota agreed to a three-way deal that would send Betts and Price to the Dodgers, outfielder Alex Verdugo and Graterol to the Red Sox and righty Kenta Maeda to the Twins on Tuesday night, but the deal still hasnt been formalized more than 48 hours later. The reason, as Rosenthal reported Wednesday, was Bostons assessment of the 21-year-old Graterol, who they now project to be more of a reliever than a starter.

The Red Sox are looking for more compensation as a result of Graterols medicals, either in the form of an additional player or further financial help. Its unclear if that would come from the Twins, who are sending them Graterol, or the Dodgers, who are sending Verdugo and paying about half of the $96 million remaining on Prices contract through 2022.

With pitchers and catchers due to report to spring training next week, the pressure is on for the clubs to finalize the much-publicized deal. The Dodgers have even more at stake than the other clubs, as they have another pending deal (sending outfielder Joc Pederson and pitcher Ross Stripling to the Angels for infielder Luis Rengifo) that is reportedly dependent on the finalization of the three-teamer.

At this point, it appears the teams are motivated to work out their differences to ensure a deal gets done. With all of the moving parts, it appears theres at least a remote chance that the blockbuster falls apart.

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Mookie Betts, David Price trade: Boston Red Sox making progress on reworking deal but talks with Twins, Dod - MassLive.com

Portion of Alii Drive reduced to one lane 24 hours a day as sinkhole repairs progress – KHON2

Posted: Feb 7, 2020 / 04:04 PM HST / Updated: Feb 7, 2020 / 04:04 PM HST

(DPW)

HONOLULU (KHON2) Repairs are in progress to Alii Drive, which fronts Coconut Grove Marketplace.

This was due to a sinkhole that developed in late December 2019.

According to the Department of Public Works, the repairs initially would reduce traffic to one lane of alternating travel between Hualalai and Walua Roads from 7 a.m. to sunset, Monday through Friday.

However, due to construction conditions encountered during the repairs, starting Tuesday, February 11, 2020, the road will be reduced to one lane of alternating travel 24 hours a day for the duration of the project.

Its possible that Alii Drive may be completely closed within the work zone if the road becomes unstable during excavation work. Road crews may also work on Saturdays to ensure the repairs are completed as expeditiously as possible.

Repairs to the sinkhole include repairing road damage caused by erosion, as well as stabilizing the area surrounding the sinkhole to prevent future erosion. The makai shoulder of the road, which has been closed to pedestrians since the sinkhole appeared in late December, will remain closed while repairs are performed.

Motorists are advised to be aware of traffic delays and to drive with caution in the work zone. Signs will be posted on Alii Drive advising motorists of the roadwork and traffic signals will be installed on Alii Drive at either end of Coconut Grove Marketplace to facilitate traffic flow.

For questions or concerns, call the Engineering Division at 961-8423.

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Portion of Alii Drive reduced to one lane 24 hours a day as sinkhole repairs progress - KHON2

Progress and stumbles one year into Trump’s plan to end HIV | TheHill – The Hill

A year ago, President TrumpDonald John TrumpFive takeaways: Fear of Trump hangs over Democratic debate Klobuchar raises million since start of debate Buttigieg, Sanders aim to build momentum from New Hampshire debate MORE announced a groundbreaking initiative to end HIV transmission in the United States by 2030. This forward-thinking and ambitious goal is achievable because of several significant developments such as President Obamas National HIV/AIDS Strategy (the first for the U.S., released in 2010 and updated in 2015), which identified a limited number of evidence-based actions to make the most significant impact on the domestic HIV epidemic; unprecedented scientific advances in HIV prevention and treatment; and community-based leadership in reducing HIV transmission in key localities nationwide.

Although fighting HIV is a truly bipartisan issue with champions on both sides of the aisle, President Trump recently claimed at a New Jersey rally that Obama"chose not to" end AIDS. I worked in the Obama White House and helped write and implement President Obamas National HIV/AIDS Strategy.

President Trumps rhetoric is not helpful. His comments overshadow real steps that his administration has made to combat the domestic epidemic in terms of funding and scaling up effective HIV prevention interventions.

More importantly, the Presidents statement highlights a blind spot: the biggest threat to achieving the goal of ending HIV is none other than the administration itself.

Various policies of the Trump Administration undermine this goal by targeting communities at the highest risk for HIV. For instance, cuts to Title X-funded providersaffect the availabilityof basic health care, reproductive, and HIV services for low-income women.

Thepublic chargerule discourages non-citizens from seeking government assistance (including health services) at a time when HIV rates are increasing among a segment of the Latino population. And anti-immigrant rhetoric and crackdowns only exacerbate HIV transmission when fearful undocumented immigrantsdelayseeking health care.

The administration has actively sought topermitdiscrimination against transgender populations in health care settings, supportsworkplacebias against LGBT people (note: many Americans are insured through their jobs), and wants to allow health care workers to object to providing care to LGBT individuals morally.

The administration alsofiredgay and HIV-positive U.S. Air Force airmen because of their HIV status, only to be rebuffed by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals that said the administrationspolicyis at odds with current science. None of these actions help to engender trust with communities at risk for HIV.

Access to health care remains fundamental to eliminating HIV. Following the implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), a large proportion of people living with HIV in the U.S.gainedaccess to comprehensive health insurance.

Medicaid expansion has enabled more people with HIV to obtain coverage. People living with HIV who are insured are less likely to transmit the virus, which explains why HIV diagnoses in Louisianafellto the lowest level in a decade two years after the state expanded Medicaid.

Yet, unlike President Obama, the percentage ofuninsuredAmericans has increased under President Trump. Although President Trumpclaimsthat he has saved Americans with pre-existing conditions from being denied health care, ampleevidencesuggests otherwise.

The administration downplays the impact of these policies on the Presidents goal of ending HIV transmission, but these issues demonstrablyunderminethe realization of the Presidents HIV initiative. Even the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently published astudyshowing that states with greater overall levels of health care coverage and LGBT anti-discrimination laws had lower mortality rates among adults living with HIV (aged 34-54).

Bold goals matter, but ending an epidemic remains hard work,we need things like:

1. A long-term commitment that will require an increase in investments in subsequent years

2. Public-private partnerships to help fill gaps in access to services and medicines

3. Supplementing sparse health services and health personnel in rural settings

4. Expeditious and affordable access to new HIV prevention and treatment innovations as they become available

5. A concerted effort to find an effective vaccine and ultimately a cure for HIV

6. Recognition that funding for HIV research hasbenefitedand led to scientific advances for other chronic health conditions.

I want President Trumps initiative to succeed and am encouraged by those people in the administration who are working in good faith to realize its goal. But it remains to be seen whether the administration and its policies will stop undermining their worthy objective.

Greg Millett is Director of Public Policy at amfAR, The Foundation for AIDS Research, a former scientist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and an architect of President Obamas National HIV/AIDS Strategy.

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Progress and stumbles one year into Trump's plan to end HIV | TheHill - The Hill

$13 Minimum Wage Initiative Continues Progress Toward Ohio Ballot – Cleveland Scene

COLUMBUS, Ohio An effort to increase the minimum wage for Ohio workers is a step closer to the November ballot.

On Wednesday, the Ohio Ballot Board certified the language for the proposed amendment brought forth by Ohioans for Raising the Wage.

James Hayes, the coalition's spokesman, says the measure mirrors the 2006 initiative that indexed wage increases to inflation.

"We would be voting to raise wages to $13 by 2025," he states. "That rate would be connected to inflation so wages would continue to rise with the cost of living year after year as it has been thus far, but we would just have a higher floor to begin with."

The current minimum wage is $8.70 an hour. The coalition needs to collect about 450,000 certified signatures by July 1 to put the measure before voters in November.

While there is no formal opposition to the measure at this time, some concerns have been raised about the impact on businesses as well as the need for the measure given the 2006 amendment.

However, Hayes argues that the current minimum wage leaves even full-time workers without enough money to cover basic necessities.

"For the last 14 years the legislature has not been responding to the needs of working people as wages have stagnated," he states. "The communities that the organizations that are a part of our effort represent have been hurting for too long and we know that we can't wait for help from Columbus. "

Currently, an Ohioan working full time for minimum wage is paid just over $18,000. And according to research from Policy Matters Ohio, that would leave a full-time worker with a family of three approximately $3,000 below the poverty line.

This story was produced in association with Media in the Public Interest and funded in part by The George Gund Foundation.

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$13 Minimum Wage Initiative Continues Progress Toward Ohio Ballot - Cleveland Scene

I Love You More Than Coffee – Progress Index

Contributed Report

FridayFeb7,2020at12:03AM

PETERSBURG Melissa Face will read selections from her new book, I Love You More Than Coffee: Essays on Parenthood and sign copies on Friday, Feb. 14 from 4-7 at the Historic Farmers Bank Museum, 19 Bollingbrook St.

In the collection she writes about the emotions parents experience: anticipation, joy, fear, guilt, and worry. New and seasoned parents will find common ground in Faces heartfelt, humorous, and authentic stories of her life with two young children.

Face, who lives with her family in Prince George, has written for numerous local and national publications, including Richmond Family Magazine, Boomer, Guideposts, Country Woman, Farm and Ranch Living, and twenty-one volumes of Chicken Soup for the Soul. She is a member of James River Writers and Hampton Roads Writers.

She has a Bachelor Arts degree in psychology from Coastal Carolina University and a Master of Arts in human resources development from Webster University. She also holds teaching certifications in English, special education, and gifted education.

She has had a varied career, including as a newspaper reporter, addictions counselor, and master control operator at a television station, and currently teaches world literature at the Appomattox Regional Governors School for the Arts and Technology.

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I Love You More Than Coffee - Progress Index

Muschamp updates Hill’s rehab, progress by Doty and other QBs – 247Sports.com

South Carolina Gamecocks coach Will Muschamp discussed the teams quarterbacks during the National Signing Day press conference on Wednesday.

Two new players were added to the position last month: 4-star Luke Doty and Colorado State graduate transfer Collin Hill.

Luke Doty has been outstanding, Muschamp said, as he updated the progress on some of the teams midyear enrollees.

Hill, who suffered a torn ACL during his final season with the Rams, continues to recover from the injury, which will keep him sidelined during spring practice. Day 1 of spring ball is scheduled for Feb. 26.

Collin is still rehabbing the knee and they think he is ahead of where he should be, as far as his strength is concerned, as far as his quad is concerned, Muschamp said. Thats the biggest thing, is strength levels, and they think hes ahead of where hes supposed to be. Hes working extremely hard to rehab the knee.

Muschamp added, I dont think Collin is going to take any snaps during the spring, based on what Ive been told. Ive been told he will not be fully cleared until June, possibly May Im trying to get my months (properly counted). He wont take any snaps this spring.

When asked about the quarterbacks picking up the system thats being installed by first-year offensive coordinator Mike Bobo, Muschamp referred to four players.

I think, as much as anything, theres going to be some new terminology, Muschamp said. Collins familiar with (it) and Ryan (Hilinski) and Luke and Jay (Urich) are not, at this point, but they will be. Those guys are working extra on their own every single day to come up here and learn, so when we do start with the coaches, theyve got a pretty good grasp of what were trying to do.

Weve got an outstanding group, as far as work ethic is concerned and intelligence is concerned and maturity is concerned. Those guys will be ready to go. Certainly, having Collins experience, can do nothing but help.

But Mikes also got a lot of experience in coaching young quarterbacks, so he can understand what a guy can handle, what he cant handle and what we feel like we can do on the field and what we cant do. I think that his experience will certainly help us with that.

Hill began last season as Colorado States starter, before he was injured in the third game. He finished his final season there with 840 yards and eight touchdowns. He completed 69 of 102 throws and had two interceptions.

Hilinski is South Carolinas returning starter. As a freshman in 2019, he completed 236 of 406 passes for 2,357 yards with 11 touchdowns and five interceptions.

Doty, a 4-star recruit, was trying to lead Myrtle Beach (S.C.) High School to a second-straight 4A state title before his senior season ended prematurely with a thumb injury.

Urich played some at quarterback last season for the Gamecocks, but he also saw time at wide receiver.

Redshirt sophomore Dakereon Joyner also split time between the positions. Joyner, however, was not mentioned by Muschamp on Wednesday, during his comments about the quarterbacks.

The belief is that Joyner will be among the returning skill players for Bobo to utilize during his first season with the South Carolina Gamecocks.

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Muschamp updates Hill's rehab, progress by Doty and other QBs - 247Sports.com

Scallops: ‘Lack of progress’ in Cardigan Bay fishing rules – BBC News

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Fishermen and conservationists have said they are frustrated by lack of progress after a decision to allow more scallop fishing in a spot off the Welsh coast.

In 2016, the Welsh Government said a more flexible area around Cardigan Bay would be introduced.

It said Brexit had slowed work, but expected to make "significant progress" this year.

Environmentalists said any increase had to be done with minimal impact.

But fishermen said an opportunity to make a decent living was being missed.

Father and son Robbie and John Gorman own a scallop trawler called the Joanna, moored in Aberystwyth harbour.

Lobster fishing is their main work but scallops provide much-needed income during the winter.

Current rules allow them to dredge for scallops only in one small area in Cardigan Bay for a limited period.

But they insist a larger area could be fished without damaging the marine habitat.

"It's nonsensical. It doesn't harm the environment - it's something that can be cropped sensibly," said Robbie Gorman.

"When you're fishing somewhere and picking up a relatively small catch of scallops and there's a closed area the other side of a line where they're knee-deep - it's a stupid waste and they're only going to die of old age and just lie there rotting."

Overfishing in the early 2000s led to a decision by the Welsh Government to close the scallop fishery, but 10 years ago a small area was re-opened.

Mick Green, a senior policy advisor with Whale and Dolphin Conservation, said the group was "not happy" about the 2016 decision, but had accepted it.

However, he added: "But we think there are other methods - for example Yorkshire Wildlife Trust have teamed up with people farming scallops in crates, so you don't have to scrape the sea bed, you just pick up the crates.

"If the Welsh Government had spent two years looking at things like that, we might have got somewhere by now, but at the moment we're all up in the air."

He said the group would work with fishermen to ensure it was "as least damaging as possible, so that they make their livelihood and we still have our wildlife".

Environment Minister Lesley Griffiths said: "I remain fully committed to introducing flexible management for fisheries in Wales, including our scallop fishery, to ensure sustainable management of this natural resource.

"While the demands of leaving the European Union have slowed this work, I fully expect to make significant progress on flexible management for Welsh fisheries in 2020."

The Welsh Government said there were 39 vessels permitted to fish for scallops with dredgers in Welsh waters and before any fishery measures are implemented, it must satisfy the rigorous environmental assessment process to demonstrate there was no adverse impact on the protected features of this marine site.

But those representing the Welsh fishing industry said a vital opportunity was being missed.

Jerry Percy, director of the New Under Ten Fishermen's Association, representing crews using boats smaller than 10ft, pointed to research conducted by marine scientists at Bangor University which contributed to the Welsh Government's consultation.

"The science says we can fish there sustainably without having an undue impact," he said.

"It is a special area of conservation and you have to fish in those areas without having a significant adverse impact on the integrity of the site.

"It's not for me as a fisherman to say there should be fishing there, the science says we can do that without adversely harming the dolphins or anything else there."

Read more here:

Scallops: 'Lack of progress' in Cardigan Bay fishing rules - BBC News

Flyers injury updates: Carter Hart continues to make progress; Shayne Gostisbehere to miss another game but wi – The Philadelphia Inquirer

Vigneault said he believes Claude Giroux, goal-less in his last 11 games, was pressing and trying too hard. .... Jonathan Bernier (2.92 GAA, .907 save percentage) is expected to get the call for Detroit, which dropped a 6-1 decision to the Flyers on Nov. 29. The Flyers pulled away from a 2-1 lead by getting three goals (Sean Couturier, Kevin Hayes, Oskar Lindblom) in a 69-second span that started late in the second period. Jake Voracek had three assists in that win against Red Wings goalie Cal Pickard. ... James van Riemsdyk and his wife, Lauren, are expecting their first child, a girl, in May. Van Riemsdyk said it will be his parents first grandchild. Ive never seen my dad so excited besides hockey and boating, he said with a smile. ... Nolan Patrick (migraine disorder) did not make the trip.

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Flyers injury updates: Carter Hart continues to make progress; Shayne Gostisbehere to miss another game but wi - The Philadelphia Inquirer

World War 3 | WW3 | WWIII | Endtime Ministries | Irvin …

By Irvin Baxter

The question is not, Is there going to be a World War III? It is in your Bible. There is not a one tenth of one percent chance that it is not going to happen. Another world war is coming, and it will be the biggest world war ever. According to the Bible, one out of three people on the earth will die in this war of all wars! The prophecy is found in Revelation chapter nine, verse 15: And the four angels were loosed, which were prepared for an hour, and a day, and a month, and a year, for to slay the third part of men.

The third part of men would be over two billion people! Other translations read one-third of the human race, one-third of all the people on earth, one-third of humanity. They all say the same thing. A war is just ahead that will wipe out over two billion human beings!

Prior to the 20th Century, there had never been a war with one million fatalities. Then came World War I in 1914, with 8.2 million dead. They called it The Great War. With the founding of the League of Nations, we had hoped that this type of carnage would never happen again. Twenty years later, 52 million people died in World War II. As if something had come unhinged in the human soul, we cried out, How can we ever stop this? With the founding of the United Nations we had hoped that the solution to world peace was at hand. I have the dreadful assignment of telling you, it is not fixed. There is another war coming. There will neither be 8 million dead nor 52 million dead. This war that is coming will kill 2.2 billion, forty times World War II. It will be the worst war ever.

I cant tell you exactly when this is going to happen, but the Bible tells us where World War III will originate. The Sixth Trumpet prophecy is found in Revelation 9:14-15:

Saying to the sixth angel which had the trumpet, Loose the four angels which are bound in the great river Euphrates.And the four angels were loosed, which were prepared for an hour, and a day, and a month, and a year, for to slay the third part of men.

These angels were bound in the Euphrates River, which flows through Turkey, Syria, and Iraq, and empties into the Persian Gulf. War has been raging up and down the Euphrates River since 2003 when the U.S. invaded Iraq. When they are loosed, these evil angels will carry out their assignment to kill one-third of mankind.

Out of the chaos and destruction, a strong leader will rise to promise peace and security. The Antichrist will step onto the world scene at just the right moment. He will provide firm direction but he will also demand absolute obedience.

There are four prophetic developments occurring right now that demonstrate how close we are to the Euphrates River War, otherwise known as World War III.

In Genesis 15:18, God entered into a covenant with Abraham, affirming that the Promised Land would be given to his descendants. The Antichrist, according to Daniel 9: 27 will confirm this covenant with many for seven years. A peace agreement which confirms the covenant will establish Israels right to exist in the Holy Land and will mark the beginning of the final seven years to Armageddon. U. S. Secretary of State John Kerry has set the goal of April 29, 2014 to reach just such a peace agreement between Palestinians and Israelis. A viable two-state solution is the only way this conflict can end, he said, and there is not much time to achieve it, and there is no other alternative.

Halfway through the final seven years, the Antichrist will order the stopping of animal sacrifices on the Temple Mount, which will have been resumed by then. He will then stand in the temple claiming to be God.

II Thessalonians 2:3-4 and Revelation 11:1-2 describe a temple standing on the Temple Mount three and one-half years before Armageddon. Israel has been subsidizing nonprofit organizations that advocate the building of the Third Temple atop Jerusalems holiest site. The Temple Institute is dedicated to the vision of the Temples rebuilding, and has already recreated several items to be used when services are resumed on the Temple Mount.

Revelation 13:16-17 describes the control system which will be implemented during the reign of the Antichrist. During the Great Tribulation, every person on earth will be coerced into pledging allegiance to the Antichrist. Those who do so will be given a unique identification mark or number permitting them to participate in the world economy. Those who refuse will be denied the privilege of buying and selling.

The REAL ID Act mandates that Americans produce federally approved identification upon demand. Although it has repeatedly postponed implementation penalties, the Department of Homeland Security has announced a gradual rollout for enforcing the law, beginning in April, 2014. The Affordable Care Act, often referred to as Obamacare, implements a national ID system disguised within a data hub, and a unique patient identifier to verify eligibility. Concurrently making its way through Congress, as part of an immigration reform bill, is E-Verify, a mandated universal biometric ID required for federal approval for employment.

Middle East unrest continues to boil in Libya, Iraq, Egypt and Jordan. Syria is on the brink of expanding to a full-scale war that could involve the major world powers. Analysts believe Syria may soon become a flashpoint that would divide the region along a battle lines drawn between Shia and Sunni Muslims. Iran is one of Americas and Israels foremost enemies and the Islamic Republic has become one of the most serious threats to stability in the Middle East. As Iran is rapidly achieving nuclear capability, the region will become far more dangerous as the number of countries engaged in nuclear activities grows. The Deputy Commander of Irans Revolutionary Guard has threatened that Tehran is able to destroy every spot in Israel. Germany views Iran as a potential threat not just to Israel, but also to European countries.

WWIII Entrance Ramp for the Antichrist details how this war is going to come out of the Euphrates River area, resulting in the killing of one-third of the human race. It is going to happen and it will affect us, our families, our nation, our world, everything. And it looks like it is coming sooner, rather than later.

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World War 3 panic: How Russia lost control of nuclear weapon in shocking test blunder – Express.co.uk

The 9M730 Burevestnik is a Russian experimental nuclear-powered and nuclear-armed cruise missile, which has been dubbed a game-changer for its revolutionary design.The missile is claimed to have virtually unlimited range and was one of six new strategic weapons unveiled by President Vladimir Putin on March 1, 2018, The claims are enough to send a warning to any other nation planning to go into conflict with the Kremlin, but it appears the weapon is quite unreliable.

According to US intelligence, only one of 12 tests have been successful, and the Russian military actually has no idea where one of them went, Dark5s documentary: The Race to Find Russias Lost Nuke revealed.

The series said in 2018: In November of 2017, Russian defence forces launched a high-tech, nuclear-armed missile from a small base called Pankovo on Yuzhny Island, an uninhabited strip of land which has been used in nuclear weapons testing since the Fifties.

The launch was an early-phase test of the extremely powerful Burevestnik missile.

The Burevestnik programme is an attempt by the Kremlin to develop a weapon that is both nuclear-armed and nuclear-powered, meaning it is driven by a sustained nuclear reaction that could potentially allow it to travel unlimited distances and stay in flight for a nearly unlimited amount of time.

During the test launch, however, the missile only travelled for a brief two-minutes before it lost directional control and was sent screaming out of the sky into the remote waters somewhere off the northern coast of Russia.

The series went on to reveal how Russia attempted to find their lost nuke.

It added: After the missile splashed down, the Russian government lost track of its location, and search teams were unable to recover it intact or locate any possible debris.

Given its short flight time, the radius that the missile could have travelled before crashing is limited.

READ MORE: WW3 warning: 3AM White House call that saved US from total annihilation exposed

Yuzhny Island is the southern island of the Novaya Zemlya archipelago that splits the Barents Sea to the west from the Kara Sea to the east.

Given that the launch angle of the missile was decidedly in the northwest direction, away from civilisation, it seems most likely that the downed Burevestnik, a top-secret and potentially game-changing weapon, is still hiding somewhere in the sprawling Barents Sea.

With this information now leaked into the public sphere, its a safe bet that the Russians arent the only ones hunting for it.

In 2018 a Russian naval flotilla set off from Severomorsk.

Theeight ship task forcewas allegedly on a safety of navigation exercise, but the presence of the crane ship KIL-143 raised suspicions that the vessel's real purpose was to recover the lostBurevestnik.

In August last year, a mysterious nuclear blast in the Barents Sea killed seven people.

The US suspected the two events were connected, but Russia has refuted the claims and no evidence has been put forward thus far.

Vyacheslav Solovyov, the scientific director of theRussian Federal Nuclear Centre, said in an interview with a local newspaper that the institute had been studying small-scale sources of energy with the use of fissile materials."

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World War 3 panic: How Russia lost control of nuclear weapon in shocking test blunder - Express.co.uk

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WW3 warning: 3AM White House call that saved US from total annihilation exposed – Express.co.uk

The incident came at the height of the Cold War, as the US and Soviet Union jostled to become the ultimate global superpower.On November 9, 1979, acomputer errorat the North American Aerospace Defence Command (NORAD) headquarters caused an alarm and full preparation for alarge-scale nuclear attackfrom the USSR. It led tonational security adviserZbigniew Brzezinskibeing awoken at 3AM to the news that 2,200 ballistic missiles were on their way.

It was a false alarm, but Brzezinski was not to know that and any form of retaliation would have been enough to start a real nuclear war thanks to Mutually Assured Destruction.

Lance Geiger, a history researcher and the man behind The History Guy on YouTube revealed the sobering details on his channel.

He said in 2018:In the early morning of November 9, 1979, in the worlds most advanced bunker, using the brand-new and robust early warning system, the unthinkable happened.

Decades of strategy around massive retaliation, Mutually Assured Destruction collapsed as the screens at the NORAD command centre showed indisputable that Americas worst nightmare had occurred.

The Soviet Union had launched an all-out nuclear attack on the US

Lance Geiger

The Soviet Union had launched an all-out nuclear attack on the US, designed to destroy our command functions and our nuclear weapons.

This was no drill, the Pentagons National Military Command Centre and the Alternate National Military Command Centre all showed the same thing the Soviets had launched more than 200 submarine-launched ballistic missiles.

Following procedure, the launch control centres for Americas 550 Minuteman 3 and 450 Minuteman 2 missiles were given a preliminary warning to prepare for a counter-attack.

Mr Geiger, 55, went on to detail the chain of events that followed.

He added: The crews of the SAC-ready alert bombers were moved to their aircraft emerging from their mole holes to man their B-52 bombers and started their engines.

READ MORE:World War 3: PM's demand to 'monitor' French nukesafter'EU deal'backfired exposed

The entire Continental Air Defence interceptor force, fighter aircrafts tasked to defend the US, was put on alert and at least 10 F-106 Delta Dart fighter interceptors were launched to protect US airspace.

Finally, the Presidents Doomsday Plane, the national emergency airborne command post, was launched without the President or Secretary of Defence on board.

US national security advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski was woken at 3AM by a call from his military assistant Major General William Odom, who informed him that 250Soviet ballistic missiles were headed to the US.

Brzezinski knew that the Presidents decision time to order a retaliation was just three to seven minutes and they were still waiting for satellite confirmation.

A moment later, Odom called again to tell him that the Soviets had now launched 2,200 missilesan all-out nuclear attack.

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But, Brzezinski somehow kept a cool head and though before ordering a retaliation.

That bought enough time for a third phone call.

Mr Geiger said: As Brzezinski prepared to call the President, he made a silent decision of his own, he chose not to wake his wife.

If the world was going to end in half an hour, he would let her go quietly.

Moments later, Odom called for a third time, data from the early-warning satellites were seeing nothing, it was a false alarm.

Later it was determined that software simulating a nuclear attack, intended to test the new system, had inexplicably been transferred into the regular warning display.

As all command centres were linked, they were all showing the same thing.

Unfortunately, the mistake was not the last of its kind, as a computer glitch at NORAD caused three more false alarms a year later.

By May 1981, Soviet fears had reached an all-time high as General SecretaryLeonid Brezhnev andKGB chairmanYuri Andropovbluntly announced that theUSwas preparing a secret nuclear attack on theUSSR.

Andropov revealed the KGB would beginOperation RYaN (Nuclear Missile Attack) the largest, most comprehensive intelligence operation in Soviet history.

Consequently, mass paranoia set in among Soviet leaders regarding the US plans, asmemoriesofNazi Germany's surprise invasion of the USSRstill haunted them.

These fears were not helped by the actionsand rhetoricofnewly-electedUS President Ronald Reagan.

He announced a new medium-range nuclear missile to be introduced into Europe Pershing II which could reach the Soviet Union from West Germany in six minutes.

On March 8, 1983, Reagan brandished the Soviet Union an evil empireduring a press conference, sparkingfury in the Kremlin, who became obsessed Reagan was attempting to smear the communist ideology.

The timing of NATOs yearly Able Archer exercise could not have come at a worse time for the USSR.

In November, Able Archer 83, an exercise to simulate nuclear war, was carried out by NATO forces.

While it was simply a communications test, paranoid Soviet agents believed this was exactly how the US would mask a real attack.

The operation introduced several new elements not seen in previous years, including anewunique format of coded communication,radio silences, and the participation ofheads of government.

It also simulated a move through all alert phases, from DEFCON 5 to DEFCON 1, which KGB agents wrongly assumed to be a real move into the highest nuclear threat.

TheSoviet politburo believed theironly chance of surviving a NATO strike was to preempt it, and so readied its nuclear arsenal.

Days later, on November 11,1983,Soviet fears were completely ended upon learning the Able Archer exercise had finished thanks to double agent Oleg Gordievsky.

Many historians including Thomas Blanton, Director of theNational Security Archive, andTom Nichols, a professor at theNaval War College, have since argued that Able Archer 83 was one of the times when the world has come closest tonuclear warsince theCuban Missile Crisisin 1962.

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WW3 warning: 3AM White House call that saved US from total annihilation exposed - Express.co.uk

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US military hinted at using HAARP weather machine in WW3 in 12-year-old report – Daily Star

Conspiracy theorists have long speculated that the defunct HAARP project is secretly being used in warfare, but a 12-year-old document and a speech from the 1990s suggest the US military have at least considered the idea.

The High-frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) is a cutting edge transmitter facility used to study the properties and behaviour of the ionosphere, located in Alaska.

Its military-funded construction was completed in 2007, but just seven years later the programme was shut down and ownership of HAARP and its capabilities were transferred to the University of Alaska.

For years conspiracy theorists have speculated that the US government is using HAARP to control the weather, an allegation that's been repeatedly denied by officials and scientists.

The recent flare-up in tensions between the US and Iran reignited interest in the theory, with some speculating that should full-scale war break out HAARP would be used by American troops to defeat Iran.

A spate of earthquakes near Iran's Bushehr nuclear power plant only fuelled the theories.

In 2017 the Iranian Deputy Interior Minister for Security and Law Enforcement, Mohammad Hossein Zolfaqari, was forced to issue a public statement denying a connection between the region's repeated earthquakes and HAARP.

American magazine National Review reports that in a speech in 1997, the US Secretary of Defence William Cohen made an oblique reference to military technology that could cause earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.

"...some scientists in their laboratories trying to devise certain types of pathogens that would be ethnic specific so that they could just eliminate certain ethnic groups and races; and others are designing some sort of engineering, some sort of insects that can destroy specific crops," he said.

"Others are engaging even in an eco-type of terrorism whereby they can alter the climate, set off earthquakes, volcanoes remotely through the use of electromagnetic waves."

National Review speculates he may have been referring to a HAARP prototype, but casts doubt on whether members of the Trump administration could quiet about possessing earthquake weapons.

A 12-year-old document also contains evidence that the US military planned to invest in "weather modification" technology in the interest of national security.

Air Force 2025, a 3,300-page report featuring contributions from technologists, futurists, science fiction writers, scientists, historians, active military officers and retired Air Force generals, was published in 2008.

It predicts the most pressing dangers facing the US in the decades to come, and devises potential defence strategies to combat them.

One such proposal was the creation of a "Spacebased High-Energy Laser System" - a hugely powerful chemical laser with the ability to hit targets on the ground, in the air and in space.

"At lower power settings, it could disable enemy optics, perform passive sensing missions, actively illuminate a target with a laser, or even modify the weather," an article analysing the report reads. "Between fifteen and twenty such satellites could provide global coverage."

In an excerpt from the report itself published by Global Research, experts seem convinced that militarised weather manipulation is not a far-fetched fantasy but only a matter of time.

"Weather modification will become a part of domestic and international security and could be done unilaterally," it reads.

"It could have offensive and defensive applications and even be used for deterrence purposes. The ability to generate precipitation, fog, and storms on earth or to modify space weather, and the production of artificial weather all are a part of an integrated set of technologies which can provide substantial increase in US, or degraded capability in an adversary, to achieve global awareness, reach, and power."

It's unlikely that Iran's earthquakes were caused by HAARP or that the programme will be used in future attacks, but there's ample evidence its potential capabilities once formed a key part of the US defence strategy.

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US military hinted at using HAARP weather machine in WW3 in 12-year-old report - Daily Star

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Picking the Right Automation Tool for the Job – No Jitter

The Web provides a lot of information on networking and IT automation, and many tools are presented as the right solution to fix your IT problem. There is a growing stable of open source tools as well as a variety of commercial products. But youll soon find that selecting the right tool depends on the task. Some tools can handle multiple tasks, but more frequently, each tool will do one thing well.

So, lets look at some of the tools and possibilities.

Configuration Management

Configuration management is often the first task that comes to mind when we talk about network automation, a very difficult task to solve for many vendors. In some products, the commands take effect immediately, while other products allow for a commit and roll-back phase. A mistyped IP address or the wrong interface name in a configuration update could result in the device being cut-off from the management system. Sometimes, commands are added to a configuration, while other commands replace existing commands. There are also different interfaces for managing configurations: command-line interface, network management protocols, or APIs.

Intent-based configuration and model-based systems are an attempt to use abstractions that apply across a variety of devices and interfaces. These methods are frequently combined with source-of-truth databases that define the desired state of the network. The network configurations are then derived from the SoT database, and a configuration management system makes sure that the configurations reflect the desired state.

OS Management

A related task is managing network device operating systems. Many networks have grown over time, and network devices are frequently installed with the operating system that was delivered. We commonly find networks where different operating system versions are running on multiple devices of the same model. This creates an environment in which commands can be different, and bugs are different, leading to unexpected behavior. OS management may be incorporated into a configuration management tool, or it may be a separate tool.

Validation and Troubleshooting

How do you know that a network is functioning as desired? A mistyped IP address could prevent a critical routing neighbor relationship from forming. Mistakes in firewall rules might prevent access to an important server, or more importantly, allow unauthorized access to critical servers without you being aware of it. Such errors arent obvious from a superficial review of the configuration.

Networking organizations at the forefront of automation are creating continuous integration/continuous deployment (CI/CD) environments in which changes and tests are used with non-production test networks (virtual and/or physical) to validate changes and automatically push them to the network if there are no test failures. This process is like the CI/CD process used by modern software development teams for application development.

Network troubleshooting requires similar functions, and automation is a great approach for quickly gathering a lot of data, which can help pinpoint failures. A library of validation and troubleshooting tests can make it easy to identify problems. Even better, use an event analysis system to automatically trigger automation tasks that gather troubleshooting data.

UC MACD

Moves, adds, changes, deletions (MACD) is a big deal for network subsystems like UC, where phone numbers, voicemail boxes, and voice/video endpoints need to be consistently maintained. These automation systems are critical when moving from one voice system to another, allowing for translation of the UC system configuration between vendors. The sheer volume of daily changes drives the need for automation.

Summary

Network automation is becoming mainstream. The nice thing is that the network team doesnt have to become programmers to adopt it. However, it does help to start to learn general software development methodologies, so you can take advantage of the many valuable tools that require some level of programming expertise to install and run.

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Picking the Right Automation Tool for the Job - No Jitter

Have robots grounded the flying geese? Automation and offshoring in the manufacturing sector – Brookings Institution

Adidas announced in late 2019 that its Speedfactoriesin Ansbach in Germany and Atlanta in the U.S.which use computerized knitting, robotic cutting, and 3D printing to produce athletic footwear will close next year. Having been heralded as evidence of how robots will lead to wide-scale reshoring of manufacturing to Europe and the U.S., does this reversal mean that these worries were all overblown? Tellingly, the other headline in the announcement was that these automated production lines will instead be moved to China and Vietnam where 90 percent of Adidas suppliers are currently located. This is not an isolated example. China has installed more industrial robots than any other country and is rapidly automating to address declining wage competitiveness. This is important given that China produces a quarter of all manufacturing globally, and the production of labor-intensive goods and tasks has typically shifted to countries with lower labor costs in a pattern that then reproduces itself among countries in the lower tiers.

Akamatsus flying geese paradigm describes this shifting international division of labor based on dynamic comparative advantage. American, European, and Japanese firms moved a lot of their production to developing Asia and Latin America, first helping countries like Malaysia and Chile, then others like China and Mexico, and then others like Vietnam and Bangladesh. Lower-wage countries in Asia and Africa are hoping to be next in line. Will robotization slow down the offshoring of production to lower-cost locations and ground the flying geese? In a new paper, we move beyond anecdotes to analyze the impact of robotization in high-income countries on greenfield FDI flows from high-income countries (HICs) to low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Unlike trade flows and other investments, which can be sticky and slow to change in response to other factors, greenfield FDI data represent announcements and are therefore forward-looking.

The intensity of robot use varies widely across manufacturing industries and high-income countries. In 2015, the number of robots per 1,000 employees was the highest in the Republic of Korea, Germany, Sweden, the United States, and Denmark. Among these, the intensity of robot use increased discernibly between 2004 and 2015 in Korea and the United States but remained largely unchanged in several European countries. Robotization remains more limited in China (Figure 1). Among industries, robotization is most pronounced and has advanced most rapidly between 2004 and 2015 in electronics, automotive products, rubber and plastics, and metal products. In contrast, the intensity of robot use in textiles, apparel, and leather products remains the most limited (Figure 2).

Exploiting these differences in how the intensity of robot use has increased across countries and industries between 2004 and 2015, and accounting for any other changes at the country-sector and country-year level, we find a 10 percent increase in the number of robots per 1,000 employees in HICs is associated with a 5.5 percent increase in the growth of FDI from HICs to LMICs. The results are robust. The positive impact of robotization in HICs on FDI growth from HICs to LMICs is (a) not driven by any single industry, (b) accounts for the stock of related ICT capital and the market size of destination countries, and importantly (c) is robust to the inclusion and exclusion, respectively, of China as a source and destination country. This positive relationship is consistent with the income effect of automation outweighing the substitution effect. On the one hand, robotization makes it economically profitable to reshore some labor-intensive tasks to advanced economies. On the other hand, it leads to an expansion in the scale of production, which results in greater offshoring to low- and middle-income countries.

However, the relationship between robotization in HICs and FDI from HICs to LMICs is not a linear one. While the linear effect remains positive, continued robotization past a threshold level of robots per 1,000 workers has a negative impact on this FDI growth. This reflects initial signs that scale economies in the use of robots may concentrate production in fewer places. However, only 3 percent of the sample exceeds the threshold level beyond which further automation results in negative FDI growth and is consistent with reshoring. For another 25 percent of the sample, the impact of robotization on FDI growth is positive, but at a rate that is declining. So, although these are early warning signs, automation in HICs has still resulted in growing FDI from HICs to LMICs for more than two-thirds of the sample under consideration.

Robots have therefore not grounded the flying geese, at least not yet. However, for the geese to fly unabated, lower-cost locations will likely need to walk the extra mile to remain attractive investment destinations. This means relying less on low wages only to be globally competitive but doing more to meet demanding ecosystem requirements in terms of infrastructure, logistics and other backbone services, regulatory requirements, and so on. Robotization has not yet changed the larger development agenda.

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Have robots grounded the flying geese? Automation and offshoring in the manufacturing sector - Brookings Institution

How to get started with automation: A Red Hat exec offers advice – TechRepublic

Red Hat VP Nick Hopman shares the company's secrets on helping organizations to automate.

Automation of business workflows and processes with a businessman in background touching a button

NicoElNino, Getty Images/iStockphoto

As enterprises digitize in an effort to keep pace with their customers, more leaders seek the holy grail of automation. Automation can help speed time to market and breed greater efficiency. Most companies, however, aren't naturally inclined to automate their processes, even though 71% say they're at least kicking the tires on automation.

Red Hat's Nick Hopman, Vice President of Global Professional Services Practices, Solutions, and Offerings, sat down with me to talk through how organizations can best implement automation rather than just aspire to it.

SEE: An IT pro's guide to robotic process automation (free PDF) (TechRepublic)

According to Hopman, Red Hat has settled on four key principles to help companies get started with automation:

Stand up an Automation Community of Practice: Establishing strong community leaders and a regular cadence of activities and incentivizing participation through rewards and recognition.

Create a common GIT-based repository for all automation code:Allowing different teams to use the same code for their diverse purposes allows teams to get off the ground faster.

Infrastructure as Code (IaC):Gets your teams and engineers to treat every single piece of infrastructure as something that can be configured via code, while removing human error from the process.

Treat automation as a product instead of a project: Allows your team to iteratively build the automation and release it faster.

While great, it's less clear how organizations can effectively embrace these. For example, while almost certainly useful to treat infrastructure as code, that doesn't come naturally to most. According to Hopman, you don't need "most" to get started: "Individuals and teams have been automating processes far longer than enterprises have. The challenge lies in applying the culture of automation that might exist on a smaller level across an organization."

SEE:Machine automation policy guidelines(TechRepublic Premium)

To get moving, organizations need to find ways to help those pockets of automation spread. Start by laying the groundwork of why it matters, Hopman said:

There's a strong business case to be made for automation--improving security, increasing predictability, and efficiency of repetitive tasks. If you're doing a task 10, 100, 1000 times, then automating it will free you up to do other projects, making the organization more efficient and allowing individuals to work on other projects that might take more creativity and innovation.

Once that vision is laid out, generating "widespread awareness" of the destination, the next step involves "breaking down the barriers between various groups," thereby allowing those small pockets of automation culture to spread. When I asked about the best people to involve in a community of practice, Hopman was quick to suggest that you don't want only the early adopters:

A mixture of people from the organization is best. You will need some true believer/early adopter types--the community has to start somewhere and these are the folks that can help recruit and self-mobilize. You need some experts to share what they know, what they have learned--their content is bait for others to join and further their knowledge. The CoP scales and includes more and more from the organization from there.

And, importantly, it really is about culture, not technology. As Hopman pointed out, "It's not an on prem problem. Legacy infrastructure and mainframes don't inhibit you from driving automation forward." Sure, automation may fit best within more modern development practices, but this shouldn't be the excuse that holds automation back. Culture is the real key to embracing automation.

Disclosure: I work for AWS, but nothing herein directly or indirectly relates to my work.

We deliver the top business tech news stories about the companies, the people, and the products revolutionizing the planet. Delivered Daily

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How to get started with automation: A Red Hat exec offers advice - TechRepublic