Gene Therapy Is Now Available, but Who Will Pay for It? – Scientific American

By Ben Hirschler

LONDON (Reuters) - The science of gene therapy is finally delivering on its potential, and drugmakers are now hoping to produce commercially viable medicines after tiny sales for the first two such treatments in Europe.

Thanks to advances in delivering genes to targeted cells, more treatments based on fixing faulty DNA in patients are coming soon, including the first ones in the United States.

Yet the lack of sales for the two drugs already launched to treat ultra-rare diseases in Europe highlights the hurdles ahead for drugmakers in marketing new, extremely expensive products for genetic diseases.

After decades of frustrations, firms believe there are now major opportunities for gene therapy in treating inherited conditions such as haemophilia. They argue that therapies offering one-off cures for intractable diseases will save health providers large sums in the long term over conventional treatments which each patient may need for years.

In the past five years, European regulators have approved two gene therapies - the first of their kind in the world, outside China - but only three patients have so far been treated commercially.

UniQure's Glybera, for a very rare blood disorder, is now being taken off the market given lack of demand.

The future of GlaxoSmithKline's Strimvelis for ADA-SCID - or "bubble boy" disease, where sufferers are highly vulnerable to infections - is uncertain after the company decided to review and possibly sell its rare diseases unit.

Glybera, costing around $1 million per patient, has been used just once since approval in 2012. Strimvelis, at about $700,000, has seen two sales since its approval in May 2016, with two more patients due to be treated later this year.

"It's disappointing that so few patients have received gene therapy in Europe," said KPMG chief medical adviser Hilary Thomas. "It shows the business challenges and the problems faced by publicly-funded healthcare systems in dealing with a very expensive one-off treatment."

These first two therapies are for exceptionally rare conditions - GSK estimates there are only 15 new cases of ADA-SCID in Europe each year - but both drugs are expected to pave the way for bigger products.

The idea of using engineered viruses to deliver healthy genes has fuelled experiments since the 1990s. Progress was derailed by a patient death and cancer cases, but now scientists have learnt how to make viral delivery safer and more efficient.

Spark Therapeutics hopes to win U.S. approval in January 2018 for a gene therapy to cure a rare inherited form of blindness, while Novartis could get a U.S. go-ahead as early as next month for its gene-modified cell therapy against leukaemia - a variation on standard gene therapy.

At the same time, academic research is advancing by leaps and bounds, with last week's successful use of CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing to correct a defect in a human embryo pointing to more innovative therapies down the line.

Spark Chief Executive Jeffrey Marrazzo thinks there are specific reasons why Europe's first gene therapies have sold poorly, reflecting complex reimbursement systems, Glybera's patchy clinical trials record and the fact Strimvelis is given at only one clinic in Italy.

He expects Spark will do better. It plans to have treatment centers in each country to address a type of blindness affecting about 6,000 people around the world.

Marrazzo admits, however, there are many questions about how his firm should be rewarded for the $400 million it has spent developing the drug, given that healthcare systems are geared to paying for drugs monthly rather than facing a huge upfront bill.

A one-time cure, even at $1 million, could still save money over the long term by reducing the need for expensive care, in much the same way that a kidney transplant can save hundreds of thousands of dollars in dialysis costs.

But gene therapy companies - which also include Bluebird Bio, BioMarin, Sangamo and GenSight - may need new business models.

One option would be a pay-for-performance system, where governments or insurers would make payments to companies that could be halted if the drug stopped working.

"In an area like haemophilia I think that approach is going to make a ton of sense, since the budget impact there starts to get more significant," Marrazzo said.

Haemophilia, a hereditary condition affecting more than 100,000 people in markets where specialty drugmakers typically operate, promises to be the first really big commercial opportunity. It offers to free patients from regular infusions of blood-clotting factors that can cost up to $400,000 a year.

Significantly, despite its move away from ultra-rare diseases, GSK is still looking to use its gene therapy platform to develop treatments for more common diseases, including cancer and beta-thalassaemia, another inherited blood disorder.

Rivals such as Pfizer and Sanofi are also investing, and overall financing for gene and gene-modified cell therapies reached $1 billion in the first quarter of 2017, according to the Alliance of Regenerative Medicine.

Shire CEO Flemming Ornskov - who has a large conventional haemophilia business and is also chasing Biomarin and Spark in hunting a cure for the bleeding disorder - sees both the opportunities and the difficulties of gene therapy.

"Is it something that I think will take market share mid- to long-term if the data continues to be encouraging? Yes. But I think everybody will have to figure out a business model."

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Gene Therapy Is Now Available, but Who Will Pay for It? - Scientific American

Pfizer to invest $100M in Sanford gene therapy operation, add jobs … – WRAL Tech Wire

Updated Aug. 8, 2017 at 7:02 a.m.

Published: 2017-08-07 16:07:00 Updated: 2017-08-08 07:02:05

Sanford, N.C. Pharmaceutical giant Pfizer Inc. plans to invest $100 million in its Sanford operations as part of a push into gene therapy, officials said Monday.

The effort builds on a technology developed at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and will create 40 jobs in Sanford.

"Pfizer is proud to further expand our presence in North Carolina, particularly as we build our leadership in gene therapy," Lynn Bottone, site leader at Pfizer Sanford, said in a statement. "We look forward to the next phase of this expansion as we build a clinical and commercial manufacturing facility."

Preliminary work on the expansion and initial hiring have already begun. The 230-acre campus employs about 450 people, reports the N.C. Biotechnology Center.

Gene therapy is a potentially transformational technology for patients that involves highly specialized, one-time treatments to address the root cause of diseases caused by genetic mutation. The technology involves introducing genetic material into the body to deliver a correct copy of a gene to a patients cells to compensate for a defective or missing gene.

Last year, Pfizer acquired Bamboo Therapeutics Inc., a privately held biotechnology company in Chapel Hill focused on developing gene therapies for the potential treatment of patients with certain rare diseases related to neuromuscular conditions and those affecting the central nervous system. Pfizer also committed $4 million to support postdoctoral fellowships in North Carolina universities for training in gene therapy research.

"We are excited that Carolinas research will improve lives and create jobs for North Carolinians," UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Carol Folt said in a statement. "This is a perfect example of how placing innovation at the center of our university creates new opportunities. We are proud to be a part of the technologies, expertise and infrastructure that went into Bamboo Therapeutics and helped make this manufacturing expansion in Sanford possible. Gene therapy is a strength at Carolina, and we look forward to continue to help advance this industry."

Pfizer is also expanding a drug-manufacturing facility in Rocky Mount that it acquired from Hospira in 2015. The $190 million project will add 65,000 square feet of sterile injectable facilities but will not create any new jobs. The plant employs about 300 people.

Gov. Roy Cooper visited Pfizers Sanford facility last week to take a tour and meet with the companys senior leaders.

"North Carolina is one of the few places in the country with the biotech resources to take an idea all the way from the lab to the manufacturing line," Cooper said in a statement. "Pfizers investment in Lee County is a prime example of how North Carolinas world-class universities and cutting-edge industries work together to move our state forward."

Pfizer qualified for a performance-based grant of $250,000 from the One North Carolina Fund, which provides state assistance matched by local governments to help attract economic investment and create jobs. Companies receive no money upfront and must meet job and investment targets to obtain payment.

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Pfizer to invest $100M in Sanford gene therapy operation, add jobs ... - WRAL Tech Wire

BioMarin Pharmaceutical launches gene therapy drug plant in Novato – North Bay Business Journal

NORTH BAY BUSINESS JOURNAL

August 7, 2017, 1:53PM

08/07/2017

BioMarin Pharmaceutical on Monday dedicated its new Novato manufacturing facility which is expected to be key in its continuing clinical trials on a drug the company believes will potentially genetically repair the cause of hemophilia A.

Before a crowd of 300 to 400 people, the company, which manufactures drugs mostly for rare diseases, called its new production location the largest gene-therapy-manufacturing facility in the world. The project was completed 11 months ahead of schedule, employing 300 people in 200,000 construction hours, according to Robert Baffi, the firms executive vice president, Technical Operations.

Jean-Jacques Bienaim, chairman and CEO of BioMarin, said the drug to be produced at the location, BMN 270 gene therapy for hemophilia A, has the potential to change what future doctors learn about hemophilia.

Because of a genetic flaw, the blood of those who have hemophilia does not clot. The mutation takes places in a single gene that provides instructions to make a protein called Factor VIII, which is essential for blood to clot normally.

According to the company, the drug thus far in investigational clinical trials has shown the ability to genetically correct the problem and allow patients to manufacture and maintain a constant level of Factor VIII. Production of the drug to be used in those continuing trials will begin as soon as possible in Novato.

Among those affected by the hemophilia is the son of Christine Orr a speaker at todays event. Genetic roulette resulted in an older son being born without the problem.

But soon after her younger son was born, it became apparent he had little or no clotting factor. Every other day, home infusions of clotting factor have helped curb the problem, but she said her son experienced the stigma of parents being afraid to invite him to birthday parties or play dates over what might happen if he were to be hurt.

She said a one-shot treatment to potentially genetically treat and cure the disease gives her hope that yes, a cure is on my horizon, and he can choose his path in life and not have hemophilia choose it for him.

On Aug. 2, BioMarin Pharmaceutical reported it reaped $317 million in second-quarter revenue, up 6 percent from the same quarter in 2016.

It operated a loss of $37 million for the second quarter, but far less than the $419 million loss in the same quarter last year. The last quarters losses amounted to 21 cents per diluted share.

BioMarin, which has six main drugs on the market, had two huge contributors to second-quarter revenue: Kuvan, with $102 million, and Vimizim, with $103 million.

Kuvan, sapropterin dihydrochloride, treats a genetic disorder called phenylketonuria. BioMarin bought global rights to Kuvan in 2015 from Merck for 340 million euros, about $405 million. PKU is rare, and causes amino acid phenylalanine to build up in the body. The buildup of the amino acid can cause grave health problems.

Vimizim treats patients with mucopolysaccharidosis type IV-A, also called Morquio A syndrome, which is a metabolic disorder that inhibits the bodys ability to process certain mucopolysaccharides. It is usually inherited.

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BioMarin Pharmaceutical launches gene therapy drug plant in Novato - North Bay Business Journal

Unpublished US Government Report: Human-Caused Climate Change Is Real – Futurism

In BriefAs part of the quadrennial National Climate Assessment, a teamof scientists from 13 federal institutions have drafted a specialreport on climate change in the U.S. A leaked draft of this reportvery clearly asserts that human-made climate change is real,leaving some scientists concerned that the Trump administrationwill try to suppress it. Setting the Record Straight

As part of a congressional mandate, the Global Change Research Programis required to produce a National Climate Assessment every four years. A draft for this years report has already been submitted to the Trump administrationfor approval before it can be made public. In the meantime, a draft copy of one section,Climate Science Special Report (CSSR), has been obtained and published by The New York Times.

Prepared by scientists from 13 federal agencies, the CSSR concludes that human-made climate change is real and that its effects are being felt by Americans right now. According to the report, average temperatures in the U.S. have risen dramatically since the 1980s, andthe past few decades have been the warmestof the last 1,500 years.

Evidence for a changing climate abounds, from the top of the atmosphere to the depths of the oceans, the CSSR reads. Its extremely likely that more than half of the global average temperature increase since 1951 is linked to human influence. Many lines of evidence demonstrate that human activities, especially emissions of greenhouse (heat-trapping) gases, are primarily responsible for recent observed climate change.

The scientists also validate concerns over rising sea levels, which arealready affecting some places in the U.S. The report also notes an unmistakable link between climate change and extreme weather conditions. However, this field of attribution science is complex.

The researchers found relatively strong evidence that man-made factors played a role in such extreme weather events as the 2003 European heat wave and the 2013 record heat in Australia. Other events, like the Texas heat wave in 2011, were more complicated, withLa Nia playing a significant role.

While the CSSR doesnt includeany policy recommendations, it does predict some potential implications of climate change in the U.S.

Depending on future carbon emission levels, average annual temperatures in the U.S. couldincrease by 2.8 to 4.8 degrees Celsius (5.0 to 8.6 degrees Fahrenheit) before the end of the century.

Indeed, to remain below the global mean temperature increase limitof 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), worldwide emissions need to be significantly reduced.

Thankfully, the Paris Climate Agreement aims to cap theglobal temperature increase at 1.5 degrees Celsius. Despite the U.S. officially withdrawing from the agreement, a coalition of states as well as organizations within the private sector remain dedicated toreaching this goal and maybe even surpassing it. Renewable energy is becoming an increasingly cheaper alternative to fossil fuels, as well as a viable source of employment for a great number of Americans.

The CSSRs authors, however, have one other concern. One scientist who wished to remain anonymous toldThe New York Timesthat theyre worried the Trump administration might try to alter or suppress the report.

U.S. President Donald Trump has calledclimate change a hoax, and the head of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Scott Pruitt,doesnt think carbon dioxide plays a huge factor in climate change. The EPA is one of the 13 agencies tasked withapproving the report by August 18. Meanwhile, The Guardianreports that U.S. Department of Agriculture staff have been told to avoid using the term climate change in their work.

Its a fraught situation, Michael Oppenheimer, a professor of geoscience and international affairs at Princeton University who was not involved in the CSSR, told The New York Times. This is the first case in which an analysis of climate change of this scope has come up in the Trump administration, and scientists will be watching very carefully to see how they handle it.

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Unpublished US Government Report: Human-Caused Climate Change Is Real - Futurism

Bitcoin is Now Worth Nearly Three Times the Price of Gold – Futurism

In Brief After a weekend of significant gains, Bitcoin has continued that trend by being worth nearly three times the price of gold.

Gold is often seen as an investment safe-haven due to the long term stability of the commodity. It is also often used as a standard by which to compare cryptocurrency, especially Bitcoin. Many of the leading cryptocurrencys major milestones have been viewed in terms of their comparison to gold.

The latest numbers are truly staggering. The price of Bitcoin reached a high today of over $3,400 (at the time of writing it stands at a similarly impressive $3,390.66), while the price of an ounce of gold is $1,260.40. This leaves Bitcoin at nearly triple the price of gold, renewing speculations about the ability of Bitcoin to become a substitute for gold.

This is great news considering the tumultuous recent history of Bitcoin that resulted in amuch-dreaded splitting pointfor the currency. Still, Bitcoin has never been stronger in spite of (or perhaps thanks to) the upheaval.

Bitcoin also enjoyed some significant gains this weekend, crossing $3,200 for the first time in history.

Bitcoin, and cryptocurrencies in general, are enjoying an uptick in public visibility, which is undoubtedlyfortifying the impressive gains being made. It will be interesting to see how meteoric the rise of Bitcoin will continue to be.

Disclosure: Several members of the Futurism team, including the editors of this piece, are personal investors in a number of cryptocurrency markets. Their personal investment perspectives have no impact on editorial content.

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Bitcoin is Now Worth Nearly Three Times the Price of Gold - Futurism

The Head of the Freedom Caucus Faces His Constituents | The New … – The New Yorker

On Monday, in Flat Rock, North Carolina, a forested town thirty miles south of Asheville, a half dozen police cars lined the curb outside Blue Ridge Community Colleges Bo Thomas Auditorium. Congressman Mark Meadows, who represents the states Eleventh District, was holding his first in-person town hall of the year. A onetime aspiring meteorologist who operated a sandwich shop with his wife before going into real estate, Meadows won his seat in 2012, after the Eleventh was redrawn with most of liberal Asheville cut out. In 2015, he helped found the Freedom Caucus, which he now heads, and which has helped make him a central figure and chief influencer in Washington. The caucus opposed the White Houses early efforts on health-care reform, leading Trump to promise that he would come after Meadows big time . Still, Meadows reportedly texts daily with Steve Bannon, lunches weekly with Paul Ryan, and has become so beloved by Breitbart News that the conservative site has called for him to become House Speaker.

But how do his constituents feel? In Flat Rock, the auditorium was filled to its four-hundred-and-fifty-person capacity an hour before the town hall was scheduled to begin. Outside, in a spitting rain, a dozen protesters in a roped-off area held signs: SINGLE PAYER UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE: JUST DO IT; WHEN INJUSTICE BECOMES LAW, RESISTANCE BECOMES DUTY; REFINE AND REPAIR, NOT REPEAL AND DELAY. Also, IT IS NO COINCIDENCE THAT A LARGE GATHERING OF BABOONS IS CALLED CONGRESS! An elderly man in a shirt that read Trump won, resistance is futile walked up to the group. A middle-aged protester asked the man why America couldnt have single-payer health care when thirty other countries have it. The Trump supporter replied, Im sorry, I dont believe in government health care. Everything the government touches turns to crap.

After going through an airport-style security check, I sat down in one of the last rows of the auditorium, next to a retired history teacher named Evelyn Brush, who described herself as a lone voice in the Republican wilderness where she lives. Its a very unenlightened state, she said, shaking her head but smiling. Brush offered me a hard candy. They cant relate to other peoples sufferingI think thats what it is, she added. Brush is a member of the Henderson County Democratic Party, and she recognized many of the faces in the auditorium as ours. She also belongs to a multi-faith discussion groupBrush is Christianthat meets weekly at a synagogue in Hendersonville and had put together a list of demands for Meadows, which she showed me. Among the demands: Leave transgender people in the military, Fund public education, Dont restrict vetted immigrants, Vote for the country, not Trump, and Remember the poor.

Brush attended one of Meadowss town halls last year, and, though she disagrees with him on most issues, she was impressed. He acted like a gentleman, she said. He even answered her questionshe asked him to explain, for those who were unclear, the difference between an immigrant and a refugeea fairly unusual outcome for dissenting town-hall attendees . Brush said that Meadows had tried to present some facts to people that were totally without facts and only had passionate opinions. He straightened them out in a very professional manner. She added, These were the people who voted for him, mostly, and he risked alienating them.

Sitting in front of Brush, and next to a former head of the Henderson County Republican Party, was Ed Joran, who is retired from the trash business, he said. He wore a Meadows shirt and a pin reading Deplorables for Trump. He said that he agreed with everything that Meadows has said and done in Congress. Hes tough but personable. I think he could be a candidate for President in maybe 2020, definitely 2024, Joran told me. He added, I think hes at 78 r.p.m. He might be able to do more. But look what he did in his second term in Congresshe got rid of Boehner! And this Republican majority cant even pass a health bill!

Just then, the Henderson County sheriff, Charles McDonald, took the stage to introduce Meadows. After reaffirming the importance of the First Amendment, he urged the crowd to allow for a smooth evening and gently spelled out the consequences of doing otherwise: immediate and unceremonious removal. These words elicited groans, and a few dozen people raised signs that had been given out at the door that said Agree on one side and Disagree on the other.

The Disagree side got more use here and throughout the evening. In the course of nearly two hours, Meadows, suited and relaxed, answered twenty-seven pre-submitted questions, most of which were pointed and challenging. Roughly half concerned health care, including the very first: What health- insurance plan do you have now? Meadows explained that, like other members of Congress, he has Obamacare. It costs him and his wife roughly a thousand dollars each month in premiums, with a deductible of seventy-five hundred dollars, he said, seemingly in pursuit of sympathy. His answers were measured and often thoughtful. Still, the liberal-leaning crowdalmost entirely white, riled-up, and of retirement age or thereaboutsfrequently expressed their displeasure with what he had to say.

When Meadows described a health-care proposal that he said Lindsey Graham was working onblock-granting Medicaid and Obamacare subsidiesthe crowd loudly booed. Someone shouted, 1.3 million people will lose coverage! Joran turned to me. People here are behaving just like their kids at Berkeley, he said with disgust.

Meadows said that he prefers free-market solutions to health care. (When a constituent doubted his claim, later on, that every five-per-cent reduction in regulations creates one million jobs, Meadows was uncharacteristically curt: Google the study, he said.) Some have suggested, and lets have a real discussion about, Medicare for all, he said. After some cheers, he continued, The price tag is just unbelievably high. So, to pay for it, he said, It has to be a tax

On the rich! someone yelled.

You can take the top one per cent and tax them fully, and it still wont pay for Medicare, Meadows coolly continued. If you disagree, heres what I would ask you: send me the information.

Another shout: I have!

We had 29,992 e-mails or letters in the first seven months of this year, Meadows said, claiming that each one had been read. So I can tell you, if youve got a way to pay for Medicare for all, that will tackle one of the problems. Send me the facts and figures.

Another voice rang out: Canada!

Meadows said that Congress would continue to try to reform health care but, he conceded, If we dont have a bill in September, I think its probably not going to happen.

Later, someone asked if Meadows would support a law requiring Presidential candidates to release their tax returns. No, he replied. Thats not required by the Constitution. But, he added, Im all for disclosure and oversight. The question clearly referred to President Trumps refusal to release his own returns, but Trump was not mentioned by name. His name only came up once or twice the entire evening.

On one occasion, Meadows was actually able to unite the room in applause. Im one of the few members of Congress that believes in term limits, he said, in response to a constituents question, and Ive actually co-sponsored legislation to suggest that we need to have them. After the cheering subsided, he said, Look, I got you guys to agree on something!

As it happens, I spent a day with Meadows once, about twenty years ago, in Highlands, North Carolina, in the southern Appalachians. The congressmans company, Meadows Mountain Realty, catered to Atlanta couples, like my parents, who were looking for second homes; he eventually sold us on a piece of land outside town with valley views and plenty of terrain for me and my brother to explore. It didnt have an obvious water source, so Meadows recommended a guy who sent a man to search for well sites with a forked stick. It seemed odd, but the man did find water. And, while Meadows didnt do the dowsing himself, Ive always associated him with divining rods.

On Monday, the final question concerned Trumps promised border wall. How much would it cost? Meadows tried to glide past the details, before saying that it would be two billion this year, probably, and twelve to twenty billion to eventually complete the construction. He defended the importance of securing our border, but he did undercut one of the Presidents most memorable promises: Mexico, I dont think, is paying for it, he said.

Brush appreciated this answer. Hes honest, she whispered.

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The Head of the Freedom Caucus Faces His Constituents | The New ... - The New Yorker

Locarno Film Review: ‘Freedom’ – Variety

At some time or another, idly or with intent, most of us have surely wondered about disappearing. What if I rode this bus until the end of the line and then just kept walking? What if I grabbed my passport and drove to the airport? What if I went out for cigarettes and never came home? The seductive romance that clings to the idea is in part down to the multiplicity of these what-ifs, but German director Jan Speckenbachs intriguing, sincere, if somewhat overreaching sophomore feature Freedom starts with the dice already rolled. Nora (Johanna Wokalek) wanders past Breugels Tower of Babel painting in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, while in Berlin, unaware of her whereabouts, her lawyer husband Philip (a sympathetic Hans-Jochen Wagner), teenage daughter Lena (Rubina Labusch) and younger son Jonas (Georg Arms) go about their lives carefully skirting the Nora-shaped hole in the family.

Speckenbachs most inspired decision here is to split his film more or less equally between Nora and Philip, as she becomes an increasingly vague abstraction of her former self, through changing haircuts, different cities and various assumed identities, while he seems to become more sharply defined in response to the challenges of this new, unsought status quo. The films unusual chronology, which starts off with the deed already done, only to spin back for a final act that takes place in Berlin the night of Noras sudden departure, is also a clever choice one made braver still by the the refusal to offer up any concrete, last-straw-style argument or conflict.

Not quite so well thought-out, however, is the rather underdeveloped undercurrent of racial unease, most notable in the person of the comatose victim of a hate crime whose attacker Philip is reluctantly defending, and a black tennis pro with whom the family has a strained conversation during an impromptu dinner. The film is about the chameleonic nature of identity, and how much of it is socially proscribed, but the issues around racial identity and white liberal guilt are far too complex to be used as mere background texture.

But Freedom is better at complicating accepted gender norms and for the most part, its portrait of the great taboo that is maternal abandonment is refreshingly non-judgmental, helped by Wokaleks invested yet aloof turn as Nora. Its a performance, well-captured in Tilo Haukes crisp daytime and velvety nighttime photography, that allows Noras motivations to remain mysterious possibly even to herself yet also oddly believable. We can understand her, even if we cant explain her.

Nora picks up a casual lover, then hitchhikes onward to Bratislava, befriends sex worker Etela (Andrea Szabov) and her husband Tamas (Ondrej Koval) and gets a job as a maid in a luxury hotel. And while its a hoary clich that no matter where you run away to, youll always end up running into yourself, at its best moments, Freedom suggests that self-reinvention is entirely possible. You just have to know there will be consequences.

But then, freedom is a grandiose word and attaching it to this small, strange story as its title, even in irony, suggests that Speckenbach has ambitions for his film that are never quite fulfilled. Its an impression compounded by unnecessary flourishes, from the overliteral projections of Noras face that occasionally flood the walls of the familys Berlin apartment, to the Ibsen reference of her name (the heroine of A Dolls House is also Nora, and also leaves her family), to the rather pretentious opening text, which references Lethe, the mythic river of forgetfulness.

Most questionably, theres the frankly baffling end coda in which Nora, shocked into the last of her transformations by a domestic event at Etelas that reminds her forcefully of her family, appears in a kind of fantasy landscape, in which Breugels tower again rears up in the distance. The biblical allusion here is confounding, as the story of Babel is one of humanitys pride being punished by God: Does Speckenbach mean to imply, after all this careful characterization, that Nora deserves to be so harshly judged? Its an unfortunate conclusion when one of the films strengths to that point has been that it dares not just to show a woman more or less successfully leaving her family (who will be traumatized, but ultimately fine without her), but that quietly respects, if not condones, her decision to do so.

Reviewed at Locarno Film Festival (competing), Aug. 3, 2017. Running time: 102 MIN. (Original Title: "Freiheit")

(Germany-Slovakia) A Pluto Film Distribution Network, Film Kino Text presentation of a One Two Films production, in co-production with BFilm, Zak Film Productions, ZDF. (International sales: Pluto Film Distribution Network, Berlin.) Producers: Sol Bondy, Jamila Wenske.

Director: Jan Speckenbach. Screenplay: Speckenbach, Andreas Deinert. Camera (color, DCP): Tilo Hauke. Editor: Jan Speckenbach.

Johanna Wokalek, Hans-Jochen Wagner, Inga Birkenfeld, Andrea Szabov, Ondrej Koval. (German, English, Slovak dialogue)

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Locarno Film Review: 'Freedom' - Variety

Freedom overcome early deficit to beat Otters in road opener in key Frontier League series – User-generated content (press release) (registration)

Overcoming an early two-run deficit, the Florence Freedom, presented by Titan Mechanical Solutions, hung on to win the opening game of a key series over the Evansville Otters, 7-5, on Tuesday night at Bosse Field.

Taking a 2-0 first-inning lead on four consecutive hits, including RBI-singles by Andre Mercurio and Collins Cuthrell, the Freedom (46-28) let the lead slip away the next two innings. John Schultz hit a solo home run in the second off Steve Hagen (6-4), and in the third, the Otters (40-32) tied the score on a Josh Allen RBI-single and jumped on top, 4-2, as Dane Phillips immediately followed with a two-run double to right-center.

But in the top of the fourth, Florence pestered Evansville starter Hunter Ackerman (7-5) for four runs. After Daniel Fraga and Taylor Oldham drew one-out walks, Andrew Godbold singled to left field, scoring Fraga. Mercurio then beat out an infield single, and a late and errant throw on the play by shortstop Chris Riopedre allowed Oldham to score the tying run. Cuthrell followed with go-ahead RBI-single to right field, plating Godbold and moving Mercurio to third.

The next batter, Jordan Brower hit a groundball to first base, where Luke Lowery stepped on first to erase Brower before throwing wildly past second in an attempt to retire Cuthrell, enabling Mercurio to score for a 6-4 Freedom lead.

Keivan Berges added to Florences advantage by opening the seventh with a towering home run to left field, the first of his professional career, before the Otters cut the Freedom lead back to two runs on a Jeff Gardner RBI-double off Mike Anthony in the bottom half.

Jamal Wilson and Patrick McGrath bridged the gap to closer Pete Perez, who ran into trouble in the ninth, allowing a one-out single and a two-out hit-by-pitch. A wild pitch advanced the runners to second and third, but Perez induced a flyout to deep left field from Schultz to end the game, stranding the tying run.

Cuthrell led the Freedom with three hits and two RBI in the game, while Brower extended his hitting streak to a season-high 11 games by beating out an infield single in the ninth inning. The win extended the Freedoms lead over second-place Evansville to five games.

The series continues Wednesday with first pitch scheduled for 6:35 p.m. at Bosse Field. Cody Gray (7-3) will start for the Freedom against a yet-to-be-determined starter for the Otters.

The Florence Freedom are members of the independent Frontier League and play all home games at UC Health Stadium located at 7950 Freedom Way in Florence, KY.The Freedom can be found online at FlorenceFreedom.com, or by phone at 859-594-4487.

Florence Freedom

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Freedom overcome early deficit to beat Otters in road opener in key Frontier League series - User-generated content (press release) (registration)

Editorial: Freedom equals prosperity – Amarillo.com

The state of Texas recently ranked third in the country in the Economic Freedom of North America 2016 list, done by the Fraser Institute.

The aforementioned study ranked the 50 states based on economic freedom.

For the record, Texas came in behind New Hampshire and Florida. The Lone Star State was tied for third with South Dakota with eight points.

Here a few interesting observations from the study:

n As far as North America goes, Canada had three of the top four finishers in the Summary of Ratings for Economic Freedom at the All-Government Level, 2014, which included entities in Canada, the U.S. and Mexico. Speaking of Mexico, it did not make the list until No. 61 Jalisco and Baja California, which tied in this spot.

n As for Texas, the state did well in the three categories of government spending (second overall nationally), taxes (sixth) and labor market freedom (fourth). Texas was first in income tax rate and second in consumption spending, percentage of personal income and income and payroll tax revenue, percentage of personal income.

It is not a coincidence that Mexico would lag behind Canada and the U.S. as far as economic freedom. This is a primary reason why there are an estimated 11.3 million illegal immigrants in America, with half coming from Mexico in 2016, according to the Pew Research Center.

Interestingly, the Fraser Institute also did a study of economic freedom in the Arab world. Nations and countries such as Sudan, Iraq, Libya, Algeria and Syrian Arab Republic were near the bottom as far as economic freedom.

See the connection?

Here is how the Fraser Institute defined economic freedom: The freest economies operate with minimal government interference, relying upon personal choice and markets to answer basic economic questions such as what is to be produced, how it is to be produced, how much is produced, and for whom production is intended. As government imposes restrictions on these choices, there is less economic freedom.

Far too many times, government sticks its nose into the economy for only one reason to make money. While there are regulations and restrictions in America designed to protect the public, there are also regulations and restrictions designed to fatten government coffers. And in countries without the restrictions on government which thankfully exist in America, the goal of government inclusion in the economy is to benefit those in power pure and simple.

Read between the lines of the aforementioned report. The more freedom people have, the more prosperous the country.

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Editorial: Freedom equals prosperity - Amarillo.com

‘We hate the headscarf’: can women find freedom in Tehran’s female-only parks? – The Guardian

Iranian women stroll through a Tehran Park: women-only green spaces are now on the rise in Iran. Photograph: Behrouz Mehri/EPA

I love to take off my headscarf, says Laleh, 47, a hairdresser from Tehran. Shes sitting with a group of friends around one of the many picnic tables in the Mothers Paradise, a park in the Iranian capital. Shes wearing a fringed mint-green T-shirt through which you can see her bare stomach. We can wear airy clothes here, and thats a freedom I really enjoy.

Behind her, a group of women wearing T-shirts and skinny jeans are dancing to loud pop music. One of them climbs on top of a table and sways her hips to the rhythm of the music. A group of schoolgirls wearing white headscarves stop to watch.

We hate the headscarf, says one of Lalehs friends, a retired nurse. We are so happy to be able to go to a place where we can walk around uncovered, do sports and sunbathe.

We can wear airy clothes here and thats a freedom I really enjoy

In the capital of the Islamic Republic of Iran, women must abide by a strict dress code: a headscarf, long trousers and a coat that covers the hips. Those who flaunt the rules risk the wrath of the morality police.

But here at Mothers Paradise park, the women who have hung their headscarves and coats on the branches of trees nearby arent breaking any rules: this is one of Tehrans women-only parks, a popular new development across the country.

The Mothers Paradise was the first to open in the capital, in 2008. Three subsequently materialised in other neighbourhoods and then spread to other cities. In the popular tourist city of Isfahan, for example, there are now five.

While women-only parks also exist in other Islamic countries including Pakistan, Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia to offer women recreational spots safe from sexual harassment, in Iran they have at least ostensibly also been set up for health reasons.

Reza Arjmand, a sociologist at the University of Lund, Sweden, who recently published a book about the parks, says Vitamin D deficiency is a problem in Iranian cities, where women are forced to cover themselves in public and often live in apartments with small windows that dont admit much sunlight. A study in 2001 for the ministry of health revealed an alarming growth in the number of women developing osteoporosis, which Arjmand says inspired the authorities to start building the parks.

Traditionally it wasnt considered decent for Persian women to walk around in parks, Arjmand says. And after the Islamic revolution of 1979 the government deemed parks for women unnecessary. But when it turned out that the next generation runs medical risks because their mothers are unhealthy, the authorities became interested.

According to Arjmand, the parks also offer the authorities a great chance to take segregation of women and men to another level and for this reason many Iranian women are fiercely critical of them.

These parks are an insult and I will never go there. I refuse to be secluded in a reservation, says Roya, a feminist writer who asked for her name to be changed. If you put women in separate parks, men and women will never learn how to interact in a normal way. This can lead to dangerous situations.

These parks are an insult. I refuse to be secluded in a reservation

Criticism has also come from conservative Iranians. The pro-government sociologist Ali Entezahi has stated that parks where headscarves can be removed will only cause confusion among women, because they might start doubting the necessity of covering themselves up in public at all times.

At the Mothers Paradise, women eat lunch in pavilions, some train on outdoor fitness equipment, others buy soft drinks at a kiosks or are busy with their children. There are girls in miniskirts and shorts, but some women prefer to keep their coats and scarves on. A large metal fence shuts out the outside world. Female guards in blue uniforms with white gloves and a whistle keep a keen eye on everything. It is strictly forbidden to take photographs.

And on closer inspection, the parks are not as woman-friendly as their name suggests. Though there are a few playgrounds for children, there are no changing facilities for babies, and boys above the age of five are not allowed to enter. According to Arjmand, it was initially announced that women would be involved in the development of the spaces, but in the end they were designed solely by men. We have many great female architects and urban planners in Iran, but they havent even been asked for their opinion.

Finding suitable locations for the parks has also been problematic, because of the risk that men could see in from a window or a balcony from a neighbouring building. As a result, many of the green spaces are situated in suburban areas, which make them difficult to reach for many women. Some are also required to close early, to prevent a confrontation between unveiled women and male gardeners who come to water the plants meaning working women are unable to use them.

It is a strange paradox: Iran is building parks for women but doesnt seem to have considered the qualities that would make them uniquely attractive to them.

Nevertheless, Arjmand does see a positive side to the development. No matter how you look at it: a group of women will benefit from these parks. For women from religious families this is often the only possibility to spend time outside without a headscarf.

Its true that these parks isolate women, but it also offers a group of them a freedom they formerly did not possess.

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'We hate the headscarf': can women find freedom in Tehran's female-only parks? - The Guardian

Press freedom and the war on leaks: Back off, Mr. Sessions – Chicago Tribune

Which executive of the Justice Department should we believe? Do we trust Attorney General Jeff Sessions when he testily announces that he is reviewing the rules that restrict when federal investigators can issue subpoenas to the news media? Or do we trust Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein when he blithely says, two days later, that "... we're after the leakers, not the journalists."

For now, we'll withhold our trust. Given the fury of a White House frantic to silence reporting on topics that embarrass the Trump administration, Americans who rely on a free press should be angry that Justice's top two officials are playing bad cop-good cop with crucial First Amendment principles. President Donald Trump fulminates bitterly against every story that puts him in an unwanted light. He has denounced the "fake news media" as "the enemy of the people." Senior White House adviser Stephen Bannon has said, "The media should keep its mouth shut."

Fortunately, the First Amendment says otherwise, and under this administration, the news media have done what they did under previous ones: Journalists have tried to find out as much as they can about what government officials are doing and make sense of it for the public. If Trump hoped to intimidate reporters and their editors, he has failed.

But there are solid grounds for worry about the administration's intentions. In February, Trump said he had told Sessions to focus on leaks an example of the sort of direct involvement in prosecutorial matters that presidents generally avoid. Trump has raged against the embarrassing disclosures and disparaged Sessions as "very weak" in pursuing leakers.

On Friday, Sessions appeared to respond to Trump's pressure by announcing that under his leadership, Justice has tripled the number of leak investigations, compared with the pace of Barack Obama's Justice Department. "I strongly agree with the president and condemn in the strongest terms the staggering number of leaks undermining the ability of our government to protect our country," Sessions said.

More disturbing was Sessions' announcement that he has initiated the review of his department's rules on subpoenaing reporters in such probes. Journalists, he declared, "cannot place lives at risk with impunity." He gave no examples, though, of actual news organizations endangering lives.

Maybe this is all for show Sessions trying to appease his ill-tempered boss by echoing his complaints. Sessions' deputy, Rosenstein, struck his calmer note Sunday when he said the department isn't going after reporters in its leak investigations. "We don't prosecute journalists for doing their jobs," he said. "The attorney general has been very clear that we're after the leakers, not the journalists."

Wrong. If the attorney general has been clear about anything, it's that he may try to muzzle journalists who tell American citizens what their government is up to. The federal government legitimately classifies a lot of material, much of it having to do with law enforcement, defense, foreign policy and other matters that require some secrecy. As Rosenstein said in announcing charges in one case, "People who are trusted with classified information and pledge to protect it must be held accountable when they violate that obligation."

Some federal employees are willing to take that risk when they turn over information that exposes corruption, abuses or maladministration. The news media report on such leaks when journalists see some public interest in doing so. But while leakers may be breaking the law to reveal classified material, journalists are generally within their legal rights to report such revelations. "The government has never charged a reporter for publishing restricted information," The New York Times reports.

Those who detest leaks may hope to deter such reporting, though, by subpoenaing reporters to divulge the identity of confidential sources. Forty-nine states and the District of Columbia have laws granting journalists some protection against being required to testify in such instances, but the federal government doesn't. Barack Obama's attorney general, Eric Holder, alarmed journalists by getting phone records from Associated Press reporters and emails from a Fox News reporter. But after a blowback from Congress and the news media Holder tightened his department's own rules on such subpoenas, essentially making them a last resort.

Sessions has no reason to loosen those restrictions and drag journalists into court. The job of preventing leaks belongs to the federal government, which has plenty of existing tools to do so. If the Trump administration can't keep its own secrets, it shouldn't expect the news media to do that job.

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Press freedom and the war on leaks: Back off, Mr. Sessions - Chicago Tribune

DRC: Block on social media images an appalling attack on freedom of expression – Amnesty International

In response to a Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) government order to block the sharing of images on social media websites, Amnesty Internationals DRC researcher Jean-Mobert Senga said:

The order for internet companies to take technical measures to limit social media use is an appalling attack on everyones right to share and receive information.

Most worryingly, it comes amid a worsening political crisis where the risk of human rights violations and abuses and therefore the importance of social media as a documentation tool - is high.

This move is the latest in a series of attacks on freedom of expression in the DRC, including the closure of several media outlets and the harassment of Congolese and international journalists.

This unacceptable measure must be repealed immediately and people must be allowed full access to the internet and social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Whatsapp.

Background

On 7 August, the president of the DRC telecommunications authority sent a letter to telecoms companies that provide internet services in the country.

It read: To prevent abusive sharing of images through social media between clients of your network, I ask you to take the necessary technical measures to restrict the capacity to transfer images to the bare minimum.

The order came ahead of a two-day nationwide general strike called by the main opposition party, which is demanding the publication of the electoral calendar.

The government order followed a day of violence in several neighborhoods in the capital Kinshasa, as well as in the central cities of Matadi and Boma, images of which were shared widely on social media.

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DRC: Block on social media images an appalling attack on freedom of expression - Amnesty International

New Lowcountry festival will include concerts and symposiums focusing on freedom, unity – Charleston Post Courier

A new festival set to take place across the Lowcountry in early September is expected to draw 20,000 people to symposiums and concerts, according to the organizers.

Nowadays, there seems to be a festival for everything under the sun, said John Linton, founder of the Lowcountry Freedom Reigns Festival. Other than the Fourth of July, we rarely come together as a community to celebrate our freedoms, and its our hope that this festival will give us a reason to unite and celebrate our diversities.

Linton on Tuesday announced the creation of the festival, which will run Sept. 2 to 11, flanked by three honorary chairs: Charleston County Council Chairman Vic Rawl, Berkeley County Supervisor Bill Peagler and former Summerville Mayor Bill Collins, standing in for Dorchester County Council Chairman Jay Byars.

The festival will kick off Sept. 2 with family-day events at Charlestons Marion Square and Summervilles Azalea Park and end with the 9/11 Silent Walk, which is expected to draw 2,500 first responders from across the country to walk across the Arthur Ravenel Jr. Bridge in full gear.

In between, there will be symposiums, concerts and other family events.

Quite frankly, the word freedom is utilized in this country a lot, Rawl said. However, the meaning is very, very seldom explained. Its important that we educate and celebrate the cultures and differences within our region, and I think thats the essence of what this is. Freedom is a nice word, its an important word, it epitomizes a great deal of what this country stands for, but to explain it in terms of cultural relationships, cultural backgrounds and the reality of what freedom means to us in the Lowcountry is important.

Freedom Reigns was started in 2005 as a Sept. 11 remembrance service at Pinewood Preparatory School in Summerville. The next year, the Summerville Orchestra was added to the program, which was held annually until 2015.

Speakers over the years have included Phil Lader; former U.S. ambassador to the Court of St. James; U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham; and Sheila Johnson, co-founder of Black Entertainment Television.

This years program will include more than 100 speakers on topics such as civil rights, the evolving role of women in society and What will America look like when the millennials govern? The symposiums are free.

The concerts include The Spirit of Motown, conducted by Charlton Singleton; a concert by Charleston Symphony violinist Alex Agrest, who came to America in pursuit of freedom; and separate Sept. 11 remembrance concerts by the Summerville Orchestra and the Charleston Symphony. Tickets for the concerts range from $30 to $50.

Proceeds from the festival will benefit local child abuse prevention charities and the Charleston Nine Memorial Park.

For more information or a calendar of events, go tofreedomreignsfestival.org.

Reach Brenda Rindge at 843-937-5713. Follow her on Twitter @brindge.

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New Lowcountry festival will include concerts and symposiums focusing on freedom, unity - Charleston Post Courier

Cyborg Movie Still on Track for 2020 Release – cbr.com

Back in 2014, DC Films and Warner Bros. announced its original film slate that included a total of ten films which also promised a Cyborg standalone film. Since then, the studios original plans have been altered quite a bit, with the addition of films such as Suicide Squad, Gotham City Sirens, and Booster Gold just to name a few. Yet, while there have been developments on the other films originally announced, things have been relatively quiet with the Cyborg solo outing, with rumors even suggesting it wasnt going to happen. Those rumors appear to have been nothing more than that, however, as Cyborg actor Ray Fisher has confirmed the film is still very much on track for a 2020 release.

RELATED: Batman v Supermans Snyder Confirms Use of Comics-Based Alien Tech in Cyborgs Origin

The actor confirmed the status of the project during the City of Heroes convention in the UK this weekend.

RELATED: Warner Bros. Offers Glimpses of Flash, Aquaman, Cyborg Concept Art

While this is great news for fans of the character, it is worth noting that, as of right now, there isnt a writer or director attached to the project. And although Fisher seems confident in the film hitting its 2020 release window, the lack of a team at this point in time could very well push the project back. This is something weve seen happen with both The Batman and The Flash, which went through the loss of directors and a change in scripts, forcing them to abandon their original release dates.

In fact, while the project is still alive, its just one of many DC has on board its updated DC Extended Universe slate. With the addition of projects such as Gotham City Sirens, which will re-team Suicide Squad helmer David Ayer with star Margot Robbie, Dark Universe, Black Adam, Batgirl, and Nightwing, there is bound to be a shuffle of release dates especially as creative teams have already been announced for nearly all of those films. In order to stay on schedule for a 2020 release, DC and Warner Bros. will need to secure a writer relatively soon to ensure filming kicks off in early 2019. Perhaps Fisher is teasing possible news in that regard? For now, eager fans will have to wait and see.

RELATED: Warner Bros. Reveals Movie Logos for Flash, Aquaman, Cyborg & Green Lantern

Starring Ray Fisher, Cyborg is currently slated to open on April 3, 2020. Fisher can next be seen as the character in Novembers Justice League, directed by Zack Snyder.

(via Screen Rant)

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Cyborg Movie Still on Track for 2020 Release - cbr.com

Hong Kong beaches close over foul palm oil disaster – New York Post

HONG KONG Hong Kong has closed more than a dozen beaches after a palm oil spill washed foul-smelling, Styrofoam-like clumps ashore, the latest major environmental disaster to blight the territorys waters.

The Chinese-controlled city closed two more beaches in the south of Hong Kong island on Tuesday, bringing to 13 the total shut since two vessels collided in the Pearl River estuary.

It took two days for mainland Chinese authorities to inform Hong Kong about the collision, the government said. Media said the accident happened on Thursday.

The spill has sparked outrage among some residents and environmentalists and comes just a year after mountains of rubbish washed up on Hong Kongs beaches, with labels and packaging indicating most of it had come from mainland China.

It also comes at the height of summer, when beaches and outlying islands are packed with daytrippers, campers and holiday makers, especially at weekends.

The Hong Kong government said it had collected 50 tonnes of oil so far, most of it congealed, while workers scooped up 110 bags of palm oil waste on one beach alone on the popular Lamma Island.

Conservation group Sea Shepherd said there had not been a spill on this scale in Hong Kong, as the clumps kept spreading. The impact on fish farms, helping to meet huge demand in Cantonese restaurants in the densely populated territory, was not immediately clear.

Environmental groups said that oil has seeped up to four inches (10 cm) deep into Hong Kongs sprawling, sandy beaches making it difficult to clean.

Samantha Lee, conservation manager at the World Wildlife Fund in Hong Kong, said that while palm oil is thought of as non-toxic, it would oxidize under Hong Kongs hot sun and it was not clear how harmful the new substance would become.

Apart from beaches which have been shut, the rest of Hong Kongs verdant shoreline is likely to have been impacted with the feeding capabilities of many sea creatures such as barnacles, crabs and shells affected, Lee said.

The possibility of algae bloom which would compete with fish for oxygen would be a huge threat.

Gary Stokes, a director at Sea Shepherd, said the consumption of palm oil in concentrated forms could be hazardous and said the accident was akin to the severity of a marine disaster in 2012 when hundreds of millions of tiny pellets washed up on beaches following a container spill during a typhoon.

Fish are having a feeding frenzy on the palm oil. We are still waiting to see the results of the impact on them, said Stokes, adding that he observed large clumps of palm oil floating in the middle of fish farms in the former British colony.

Media reported that 1,000 tonnes of palm oil spilled into the water after the vessels collided.

The Environmental Protection Department has collected water samples from affected beaches and said it planned to release its results later in the day.

The government said in a statement that palm oil was non-toxic and harmless, but given the large amount that had washed up on beaches and the fact that the laboratory results were not yet available, the beaches would remain closed.

Hong Kongs coastal waters and beaches are often strewn with rubbish from mainland China, where some companies discharge waste into the sea to save the cost of proper disposal, according to conservationists.

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Hong Kong beaches close over foul palm oil disaster - New York Post

Margate dune ponding returns to beaches – Press of Atlantic City

MARGATE Several inches of rainwater have collected again in the drainage areas behind a new sand dune, where the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers pumped out water last week after a severe storm July 30, residents and city officials said Tuesday.

Mayor Michael Becker was surveying the beach at 8 a.m. Tuesday and reported 4 to 6 inches of standing water on the bulkhead side of the dune from Mondays 1.35-inch rainfall. His observations came about two hours before U.S. District Court Judge Renee Bumb, the same judge who ruled against Margate and homeowners efforts to stop the project, was scheduled to hear arguments in a conference hearing at 10 a.m. in Camden.

They tried to make the argument that the first storm was some type of once-in-a-hundred-year event, said Dan Gottlieb, executive director of Margate Citizens Questioning the Beach Project.

You know, it can rain here sometimes for three days and we dont believe that was a once-in-a-hundred-year storm, so even if they were right ... look what happened here after a very minor rainfall.

Gottlieb was at the Franklin Avenue beach, where water pooled once again behind the recently constructed dune.

City officials have been meeting with the state Department of Environmental Protection in court-ordered closed sessions since last Friday to hammer out an agreement on how to correct the problem that has developed on Margates beach since a sand dune was built at elevation 12.75.

Atlantic County Superior Court Judge Julio Mendez, who also ruled against the city previously, called the ponding horrendous and said it must be corrected. He ordered the parties to meet every day to work out a solution and report back to him Aug. 11.

We cannot divulge the details of those meetings, Commissioner John Amodeo said before Tuesdays session. Whats hard is that we are under a gag order from the judge until we get to a point where everyone is happy. We are negotiating to find a solution.

The meetings, attended by the city, DEP and Army Corps, lasted 2 hours Friday and 1 hours Monday.

They are not long, but its all work, said Amodeo, who is out of town, but attending the meetings via conference call.

Becker said the DEP and Army Corps attended the meeting Friday, but the Army Corps was absent Monday.

I dont know why they werent in attendance, he said.

The Army Corps on Monday petitioned to have the case heard in federal court, Becker said.

Hopefully, Judge Bumb will see things our way, he said.

Whether Margate gets its wish to stop the project until a drainage system can be designed and implemented remains to be seen.

Friday will be the tell-tale when we get before the judge, Amodeo said. We feel we have a good case proving what we said would happen happened. We live there, we know our island, and we know the solutions.

Mendez ordered an eight-day work stoppage at a hearing last Thursday so the parties could meet daily on a solution. They are to report back to him at a hearing at 1:30 p.m. Aug. 11 in his Atlantic City courtroom.

Amodeo said although the project has been halted, Mendez permitted the Army Corps to continue building elevated walkways through the ponding areas from street ends to the dune crossovers, so our beach is fully accessible by the weekend. They will also be permitted to pump out standing water.

Design engineers said any water that collects behind the dune should percolate into the sand within 24 to 36 hours, but that has not happened. Instead, each rainfall left standing water that stagnated and became contaminated, prompting residents to gather atop the dune in protest. They also attended two public hearings held in Margate to express their disgust for the project.{div class=asset-content subscriber-premium}Amodeo said residents who have been quite vocal on social media need to remain calm.

They need to know we are working in their best interest, Amodeo said. I believe we have a rock-solid case against the Army Corps and their design.

Amodeo said the Corps one-size-fits-all dune plan simply will not work in Margate, where the city has a border-to-border bulkhead and where much of its stormwater drains onto the beach.

Meanwhile, in Longport, public officials last week expressed concern that if the project is delayed further in Margate, the hopper dredge would move south and start building the dune in Longport during the height of the summer vacation season.

Mayor Nicholas Russo said he spoke with an Army Corps official Friday who said no decision has been made to move the project along while Margate resolves its drainage problem.

Ventnor or Longport could be receiving sand if things are not resolved in Margate. However, we do not know which one will be first, Russo said.

If the project moves to Longport before the early September timeframe the DEP and Army Corps announced earlier this summer, Russo said, Longport would deal with it.

We got through Memorial Day, then we got through June and July and the first couple of weeks in August. If it comes here, we will be flexible, he said.

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Margate dune ponding returns to beaches - Press of Atlantic City

Canary Islands keep beaches open despite algae bloom – Phys.Org

August 8, 2017 A red flag, informing bathers that swimming is not allowed, flies over Tenerife's Las Teresitas beach

Authorities in Spain's Canary Islands kept beaches open to the public Tuesday but warned holidaymakers against touching potentially irritating microalgae blooms that have infested the waters.

The spreading algae, which contain a toxin that can irritate the skin, have produced a greenish brown hue in the waters off some beaches of the hugely popular archipelago near the coast of Africa that attracts millions of visitors every year.

But Jose Juan Aleman, director of public health for the archipelago, told AFP that no beach had "been closed in the Canaries due to the presence of microalgae".

"When microalgae are detected in a bathing zone, swimmers are recommended not to touch them," he said.

On Tuesday a red flag flew on part of Tenerife's Las Teresitas beachmeaning swimming was not allowed.

A yellow flagurging precautionflew on the other section of the beach.

"This morning, we detected a lot of microalgae on the beach and we decided to put up the red flag," a Red Cross lifeguard, who refused to be named, told AFP.

But despite the ban, holidaymakers were still seen swimming.

"We've been giving information all day and blowing the whistle, we get them out of the water and then they just come back," he said.

Others played football on the beach, where traces of the algae and foam could be seen.

The algae are a type of bacteria, trichodesmium erythraeum, also known as sea sawdust, Aleman told AFP on Monday.

"Its proliferation is a natural, temporary phenomenon which is going to disappear" in due course, he added, suggesting global warming was helping the algae spread.

The bacterium "contains a toxin which can lead to skin irritation, dermatitis, hence one must avoid coming into contact with it in the water and on the sand."

Marta Sanson, professor of plant biology at Tenerife's La Laguna university, told AFP that "ideal conditions are allowing proliferation of these microalgae".

Those include "an increase in water temperature" as well as a "dust cloud sweeping in off the Sahara which is rich in iron, a nutrient which micro-organisms like".

Explore further: Algae blooms irk Canaries beachgoers

2017 AFP

Microalgae blooms proliferating in hot weather in Spain's Canary Islands are irritating beachgoers, who should avoid direct contact with them, local authorities said Monday.

A clean-up operation was under way in Hong Kong Monday after a massive palm oil spillage from a ship collision in mainland Chinese waters clogged some of its most popular beaches.

Scientists have long known of the potential of microalgae to aid in the production of biofuels and other valuable chemicals. However, the difficulty and significant cost of growing microalgae have in some ways stalled further ...

Microalgae hold tremendous potential for industrial biotechnology. They are an important resource in the production of food and medications, and in many other applications. In comparison to bacteria and fungi, however, they ...

Southern California waters that draw visitors from around the world are off-limits thanks to a million-gallon sewage spill.

Swimming has been banned along sections of the Italian coastline because of blooms of toxic algae, a report said Tuesday.

A new study by scientists at Portland State University and the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) at the University of Colorado Boulder has found that the effects of climate change, which are apparent in other parts ...

Brutally windy. Unfathomably cold. Disturbingly isolated.

During the 20th century, the average temperature of the continental United States rose by almost 1 degree Fahrenheit (0.5 degree Celsius)everywhere, that is, except in the Southeast. There, until the 1980s, the temperature ...

Environmental scientists led by the Virginia Tech College of Science have discovered that the burning of coal produces incredibly small particles of a highly unusual form of titanium oxide.

While popular with conservation groups, coastal easements that prevent development in order to protect marshland from changes brought about by climate change and rising sea levels are not favored by property owners, according ...

A summer 'vortex' of cold air over the Karakoram mountain range is causing the glaciers in the region to grow in spite of global warming, scientists have shown.

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Canary Islands keep beaches open despite algae bloom - Phys.Org

Watch out for longshore currents on Grand Strand beaches – Myrtle Beach Sun News


Myrtle Beach Sun News
Watch out for longshore currents on Grand Strand beaches
Myrtle Beach Sun News
A beach hazard statement has been issued through this evening for coastal Horry, Georgetown, and Pender County, N.C., and New Hanover County, N.C. due a strong south-to-north longshore current, created by a combination of gusty winds. Longshore ...

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Watch out for longshore currents on Grand Strand beaches - Myrtle Beach Sun News

Atlantic City beach replenishment begins | News | pressofatlanticcity … – Press of Atlantic City

ATLANTIC CITY The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers started replenishing the beaches in the resort this week, but local business owners say the timing could have been better.

The beach needed it desperately, but do it at a date or time that is the off-season, said Nicholas Dounoulis, owner of the Bungalow Restaurant, Lounge and Beach Bar.

The affected beaches are between Belle-vue and Sovereign avenues.

The replenishment is part of a $63.3 million project to place 3.8 million cubic yards of sand on eight miles of beach on Absecon Island, from Atlantic City to Longport.

Bungalow gets most of its business from the beach bar and Boardwalk, Dounoulis said.

It ruined our weekend. I think it was around 50 percent, 52 percent from what we had last week, he said.

Farther along the beach, where construction was actively taking place Tuesday, the Chelsea Beach Bar was empty. A manager said the outdoor bar is usually packed in the early afternoon.

Were happy with the decision, but the timing is wrong, manager Adam Frost said.

On the Boardwalk, the manager at Eats and Treats at the Ritz said business has been declining every year for the past five or six years, and he doesnt think the beach replenishment will affect his business too much more.

(The beach replenishment) doesnt bother us because it is protecting the city, Omar Farooq said.

The beach replenishment project came as a surprise to visitors.

We knew about Margate and all the problems going on down there, said Ron Chrupcala. We came down to go to the beach, not knowing the fact that coming down here, this is what were facing.

Chrupcala is vacationing from West Chester, Pennsylvania, with his wife, and said they and have not been able to go to the beach because of the replenishment project and Mondays rain.

I just think they should let people know, he said. Its a bad time of the year to be doing this. Were here so were going to make the best of it.

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Atlantic City beach replenishment begins | News | pressofatlanticcity ... - Press of Atlantic City

#SaveTheTents, ban umbrellas instead on NJ beaches – New Jersey 101.5 FM Radio

(Toniann Antonelli, Townsquare Media NJ)

The mayor of Belmar wants you to attend a public meeting on Aug. 15 in order to discuss a proposal to pass a town ordinance banning tents on the beach that are larger than 3 feet high, wide and deep. What? Thats even too small to park a stroller underneath. Why the sudden attack on beach tents?

Several NJ towns have already passed ordinances banning the practice of setting up a large tent on the beach. Mayor Matthew Doherty discussed the need for space, views and safety as reasons for the proposed ban. Waitsafety? He actually said its possible that a lifeguards view could be obstructed thereby endangering a swimmer in distress. Come on mayor, were not that stupid. Are your lifeguards sitting so far back out of the water that a tent would obstruct their views? You need better beach safety training if thats the case. Its disingenuous and a clear scare tactic to push through an ordinance that will only serve to discourage beach goers.

Typical NJ politicians looking to ban things based on a couple complaints from locals. At least thats what it sounds like to me. Heres a better idea if you really have a problem of shoobies and/or Bennies setting up shop with something akin to a Ringling Bros. Big Top. How about set up a specific area toward the beach entrance for tents? Or better yet, charge a tag fee for the privilege of bringing a tent? Why not turn this into a revenue opportunity? Better yet, maybe the mayor should focus on real problems at the shore, like drownings after the life guards go home.

NJ beaches should have beach tags available like ski lift passes. Tags already bring in millions for Jersey shore towns. How about raise the revenue and build local business at the same time; full day, half day, twilight. All doable! Have lifeguards on duty in two shifts, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 2 to 8 p.m. Encourage beachgoers to make a day of it. And you pay for it without raising taxes.

User fees workcharge more for tents. The tents will surely help attract larger groups, families and encourage people to stay longer. Have em stay long enough to outlast the cooler of food so they stop in and grab dinner before the trek back to NYC or Philly. Revenue, shoppers, dinersall great for the local summer shore economy. #SaveTheTents.

Oh and while youre at it, if you really need to ban something, how about beach umbrellas? Have you ever had to chase down someones pointed umbrella flying through the air, kicking up sand and potentially impaling someone? If it saves just one person.

Bill Spadea is on weekdays from 6-10 a.m., talkin Jersey and taking your calls at 1-800-283-1015. Tweet him @NJ1015 or @BillSpadea.

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#SaveTheTents, ban umbrellas instead on NJ beaches - New Jersey 101.5 FM Radio