How the social gospel movement explains the roots of today’s religious left – Maryville Daily Times

Throughout American history, religion has played a significant role in promoting social reform. From the abolitionist movement of the early 19th century to the civil rights movement of the 20th century, religious leaders have championed progressive political causes.

This legacy is evident today in the group called religious progressives, or the religious left.

The social gospel movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, as I have explored in my research, has had a particularly significant impact on the development of the religious left.

The social gospels origins are often traced to the rise of late 19th-century urban industrialization, immediately following the Civil War. Largely, but not exclusively, rooted in Protestant churches, the social gospel emphasized how Jesus ethical teachings could remedy the problems caused by Gilded Age capitalism.

Movement leaders took Jesus message love thy neighbor into pulpits, published books and lectured across the country. Other leaders, mostly women, ran settlement houses designed to alleviate the sufferings of immigrants living in cities like Boston, New York and Chicago. Their mission was to draw attention to the problems of poverty and inequality especially in Americas growing cities.

Charles Sheldon, a minister in the city of Topeka, Kan., explained the idea behind the social gospel in his 1897 novel In His Steps. To be a Christian, he argued, one needed to walk in Jesuss footsteps.

The books slogan, What would Jesus do? became a central theme of the social gospel movement which also became tied to a belief in what Ohio minister Washington Gladden called social salvation. This concept emphasized that religions fundamental purpose was to create systemic changes in American political structures.

Consequently, social gospel leaders supported legislation for an eight-hour work day, the abolition of child labor and government regulation of business monopolies.

While the social gospel produced many important figures, its most influential leader was a Baptist minister, Walter Rauschenbusch.

Rauschenbusch began his career in the 1880s as minister of an immigrant church in the Hells Kitchen section of New York. His 1907 book, Christianity and the Social Crisis asserted that religions chief purpose was to create the highest quality of life for all citizens.

Rauschenbusch linked Christianity to emerging theories of democratic socialism which, he believed, would lead to equality and a just society.

Rauschenbuschs writings had a major impact on the development of the religious left in the 20th century. After World War I, several religious leaders expanded upon his ideas to address issues of economic justice, racism and militarism.

Among them was A.J. Muste, known as the American Gandhi, who helped popularize the tactics of nonviolent direct action. His example inspired many mid-20th century activists, including Martin Luther King Jr.

The intellectual influences on King were extensive. However, it was Rauschenbusch who first made King aware of faith-based activism. As King wrote in 1958, It has been my conviction ever since reading Rauschenbusch that any religion which professes to be concerned about the souls of men and is not concerned about the social and economic conditions that scar the soul, is a spiritually moribund religion only waiting for the day to be buried.

Kings statement highlights the importance of the social gospel concept of social salvation for todays religious left.

Although many of its primary leaders come out of liberal Protestant denominations, the religious left is not a monolithic movement. Its leaders include prominent clergy, such as the Lutheran minister Nadia Boltz-Weber, as well as academics such as Cornel West. Some of the movements major figures, notably Rev. Jim Wallis, are evangelicals who identify with what is often called progressive evangelicalism.

Others come from outside of Christianity. Rabbi Michael Lerner, founder of the organization Network of Spiritual Progressives, seeks not only to promote interfaith activism but also to attract persons unaffiliated with any religious institutions.

These leaders often focus on different issues. However, they unite around the social gospel belief that religious faith must be committed to the transformation of social structures.

The Network for Spiritual Progressives mission statement, for example, affirms its desire

To build a social change movement guided by and infused with spiritual and ethical values to transform our society to one that prioritizes and promotes the well-being of the people and the planet, as well as love, justice, peace, and compassion over money, power and profit.

One of the most important voices of the religious left is North Carolina minister William Barber. Barbers organization, Repairers of the Breach, seeks to train clergy and laity from a variety of faith traditions in grassroots activism. Barbers hope is that grassroots activists will be committed to social change by rebuilding, raising up and repairing our moral infrastructure.

Other organizations associated with the religious left express similar goals. Often embracing democratic socialism, these groups engage issues of racial justice (including support for the Black Lives Matter movement), LGBT equality and the defense of religious minorities.

Despite the public visibility of activists like Barber, some question whether the religious left can become a potent political force.

Sociologist James Wellman observes that often religious progressives lack the social infrastructure that creates and sustains a social movement; its leaders are spiritual entrepreneurs rather than institution builders.

Another challenge is the growing secularization of the political left. Only 30 percent of Americans who identify with the political left view religion as a positive force for social change.

At the same time, the religious lefts progressive agenda in particular, its focus on serving societys poor might be an attractive option for younger Americans who seek alternatives to the perceived dogmatism of the religious right. As an activist connected with Jim Walliss Sojourners organization noted, I think the focus on the person of Jesus is birthing a younger generation. ... Their political agenda is shaped by Jesus call to feed the hungry, make sure the thirsty have clean water, make sure all have access to health care, transform America into a welcoming place for immigrants, fix our inequitable penal system, and end abject poverty abroad and in the forgotten corners of our urban and rural communities.

This statement not only circles back to Charles Sheldons 19th century question, what would Jesus do? It illustrates, I argue, the continued resiliency of the core social gospel belief in social salvation for a new generation of activists.

Can the religious left achieve the public status of the religious right? The theme of social salvation that was critical to Walter Rauschenbusch, A.J. Muste and Martin Luther King Jr. might, I believe, very well galvanize the activism of a new generation of religious progressives.

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How the social gospel movement explains the roots of today's religious left - Maryville Daily Times

10 Years Later, Murders Still Haunt Cheshire – NBC New York

It's a day seared into the memories of all involved: The July 23, 2007, home invasion in which two paroled burglars broke into a Cheshire, Connecticut, home after dark, terrorized the family for hours and killed a woman and her two daughters.

The viciousness of the crime upended notions of suburban security, delayed the abolition of Connecticut's death penalty, and became the subject of TV shows, documentaries and books. It drew comparisons to the 1959 killings portrayed in Truman Capote's "In Cold Blood."

Jennifer Hawke-Petit, 48, was strangled. Her daughters, 17-year-old Hayley and 11-year-old Michaela, were tied to their beds and died of smoke inhalation. Hawke-Petit and Michaela also were sexually assaulted. Hawke-Petit's husband and the girls' father, Dr. William Petit Jr., was beaten but survived.

The killers, Joshua Komisarjevsky and Steven Hayes, are serving life in prison. They originally were sentenced to death, but Connecticut abolished capital punishment in 2012.

Komisarjevsky picked Hawke-Petit and Michaela as targets when he saw them at a grocery store. He followed them to their home, left and later returned with Hayes.

The two broke in around 3 a.m., smashed Dr. Petit's head with a baseball bat as he slept and tied him up in the basement. They tied the two girls to their beds. Later in the morning, Hayes drove Hawke-Petit to a bank, where she withdrew $15,000 under the threat of her family being harmed.

After Hawke-Petit and Hayes returned to the house, Hayes sexually assaulted and strangled her. Komisarjevsky had assaulted Michaela. The intruders poured gasoline around the house, including on or around the girls, set it on fire and fled in the Petits' car after police had surrounded the home. They crashed into police cruisers down the street and were arrested.

Dr. Petit managed to free himself and escape out the cellar hatchway as fire consumed the house. He has re-married and was elected to the state House of Representatives in November.

No public remembrances have been announced this year. But as the 10th anniversary approaches, some recollections of that day:

MARY LYONS, bank branch manager

Lyons was working at the Bank of America branch in Cheshire when Hawke-Petit came to withdraw cash. Hayes had driven her to the bank and waited outside, with the threat that her family would be harmed if she didn't get the money.

Lyons said Hawke-Petit did not have any identification, but told Lyons what was going on.

"She explained to me that her family was being held and as long as she got the money and got back to the house everybody would be OK," Lyons said. "I just knew from the look on her face and the look in her eyes that she was telling the truth. Her eyes told me a look from one mom to another mom."

Lyons approved the transaction, and Hawke-Petit left with $15,000. Lyons called police.

Lyons, who retired in 2010, pays an annual visit to a memorial garden on the site of the Petits' former home.

CYNTHIA HAWKE-RENN, Hawke-Petit's sister

Hawke-Renn was at home in North Carolina, getting annoyed. She was trying to plan a family beach vacation, and her sister wasn't returning her messages.

Then came the call around 2 p.m. from Dr. Petit's sister, Johanna Petit Chapman. Hawke-Renn immediately thought something bad, like a car accident, had happened.

"I said, 'Is it the girls? Are they dead?'" she asked. "She said, 'Yes. How did you know?'"

When Chapman explained what happened, Hawke-Renn did not believe it.

"I said to her, 'Hanna, this sounds like a really sick dream,'" she said.

Hawke-Renn remembers screaming, "No, no, no." Reality set in when she saw TV news reports at the airport on her way to her parents' home in Pennsylvania.

Nearly every year on the anniversary, Hawke-Renn said she wakes around 3 a.m., about the time the killers broke into the Petits' home. Over the next seven hours, she imagines her relatives' suffering minute by minute.

"We have horrific grief," she said. "It really does affect you in ways that are hard to describe to people. ... It's not easy to be anywhere on the anniversary date."

BOB PICOZZI, former Petit neighbor

Picozzi drove by the Petits' house on his way to work around 4:30 a.m., 90 minutes after Komisarjevsky and Hayes had broken into the house. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary.

His wife later called to tell him what happened. After work, he joined onlookers outside the Petit house, and then returned home in disbelief.

"I was just stunned," he said. "I dropped my briefcase and I slumped into a chair next to me. I was devastated."

Picozzi didn't know the Petits well, but he said the murders were the worst thing that happened in his life.

"I learned a long time ago I will never ever get over this," he said. "Instead, what I have to do is learn to live with it, and I'm still trying."

Driving by the Petits' property is a constant reminder, he said. He often thinks of what Hayley and Michaela might have been doing now.

MICHAEL MILONE, Cheshire town manager

Milone got a call from the deputy police chief that morning saying there was a potential hostage situation.

"As soon as I got off the phone, just about every apparatus we have fire and police went by my office," he said.

His office and the police department received hateful emails for years after the murders from people upset about the police response. The Petits' relatives and others have suggested police could have entered the home and saved the family.

"Our police did what they were trained to do," Milone said.

After going to the scene that day and taking part in a news conference, Milone sat alone in his office, in shock.

"It was the most surreal experience I've ever had," he said. "It was just horrible. It just sent a chill through everyone, especially because it's a small community. It's a safe community."

Published at 1:28 PM EDT on Jul 21, 2017

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10 Years Later, Murders Still Haunt Cheshire - NBC New York

Lana Del Rey’s ‘Lust For Life’: A Track-by-Track Breakdown – PopCrush

Interscope Records

After months of speculation, some leaks and a steady stream of singles trickling out from the top of the Hollywood Sign, Lana Del Reys Lust For Life dropped on Friday morning (Jul. 21).

The albums tone was set from very first single Love, a hopeful departure from Del Reys usually dark, melancholic fare. The sprawling sixteen song record, her longest to date, is as much a beacon of light as it is a politically-charged reminder of where America is now.

Outside of the shift in themes perhaps notably the outright feminist God Bless America And All the Beautiful Women In it, in which she uses the Statue of Liberty to represent the women left standing amidst the chaos Lana Del Reys fifth release is exciting because of the involvement of other musicians.

From two A$AP Rocky collaborations to appearances by Sean Ono Lennon and Stevie Nicks, LDR proves herself to be a gateway between classic rock and hip-hop; a unique artist capable of keeping one foot in past influences with the other firmly planted in the future.

Regardless of what you think of Lana Del Rey, this exactly the kind of hopeful, poignantly political pop record that we need right now. Lanas lost absolutely none of her edge, but maintains a beautiful outlook on the future. Even as she watches Trumps America unfold from the top of the Hollywood Sign, the girl who was born to die has found her lust for life, and we couldnt be happier for her.

Scroll further down for a track-by-track breakdown of Lust For Life.

Love

The opening track, performed for the first time at this years SXSW at a surprise showcase, also ushered Lana into a new era of sound. Love, taking place against a sparse drum beat and floaty string production, is perhaps the happiest we have ever seen (or heard) the singer. From the somber reflections of heartbreak that put her on the map, shes evolved with this hopeful, minimalistic ode to everyone whos ever been young and in love.

Lust for Life (feat. The Weeknd)

The title track also boasts the albums first feature, with none other than frequent collaborator The Weeknd. The sumptuous, unapologetically poppy track sees both of these gloomy heartbreakers brooding to, and about, each other, but in the hopeful tone of lovers with a future. They sing They say only the good die young / That just aint right / Cause were having too much fun and the lustfor life and otherwiseis palpable. Starboy and Stargirl are reunited at the top of the Hollywood Sign, and the world couldnt be better.

13 Beaches

Del Rey had to give us a touch of somber wandering; it wouldnt be a Lana Del Rey record otherwise. It hurts to love you / But I still love you / Its just the way I feel, she bemoans as she wanders thirteen beaches to find the one where she can be alone. Its a song that speaks to the lonely, star-filled poet that she remains at heart. Lanas learned to smile through the tears, but that doesnt mean shes not still quietly shedding a few.

Cherry

A sensual, sensory experience, LDR conjures cherries, wine, rosemary and thyme amid a sexy downbeat. The slow-burning track is pure, diluted midsummer, and as delicious to listen to as the bodily pleasures that inspired that inspired the song. Would we expect anything less from the self-proclaimed Queen of Coney Island?

White Mustang

Not to be confused with White Ferrari (Im fully kidding; Frank Ocean fans, do not come for me), Del Rey takes a top-down ride in a lovers white mustang. Ever since we saw her hold her own against lumbering motorcycle gangs on ride and driving down a long highway in the video for Burning Desire, weve been waiting another road-trip ready bop. Melancholic motor junkies, rejoice.

Summer Bummer (feat. A$AP Rocky & Playboi Carti)

Turning up the star power by two for A$APs first appearance on the album, Lana plays with the trap beats she began to favor in Honeymoon, and what better pair to traipse this world alongside her than her hip-hop JFK and Cash Carti? She trades verses about lovers not being bummers while Carti and Rocky shower her with, um, compliments: Her sophistication makes you want to quit the bitch youre dating. Cant argue with that logic (or with the delectable beat).

Groupie Love (A$AP Rocky)

A more soulful turn than Summer Bummer, this Rocky duet contemplates the life of a groupie as she has to share her man with the rest of the world. Every time you look up / I know what youre thinking of / You want my groupie love, she swoons. You can perfectly imagine the scene from the National Anthem video where Rocky blows her a kiss and she holds it to her heart.

In My Feelings

What sounds like another doleful ballad turns out to be a bait-and-switch. In My Feelings sees Lana Del Rey at her most independent, as she tosses aside an old lover, devouring the word looooser with a relish befitting of everything shes achieved. She sings about laughing as she takes no prisoners, takes down names, makes good love and makes good money, too. Somebodys obviously been watching Lemonade.

Coachella Woodstock In My Mind

Although some of you might roll your eyes (or, for the purists, openly gasp) at the comparison of Woodstock to Coachella, Del Rey makes a point here about the power and atmosphere of music festivals, and the kind of communities we should all enjoy. When you think about the fact that this song was written amid the backdrop of impending nuclear threat, it becomes an uplifting beacon of hope, a snapshot of joy in the middle of trying times.

God Bless America And All the Beautiful Women In It

Lana Del Rey hasnt played with acoustic guitar sounds since covering Leonard Cohens Chelsea Hotel No. 2, and the opening eventually builds into the electronic orchestra that usually bolsters her work. This song is notable for using the imagery of the Statue of Liberty to empower American women. Listen closely, and theres criticism amidst the empowerment: two gun shots sound every time she sings God bless America.

When the World Was at War We Kept Dancing

Another anthem for the young, Lana Del Rey contemplates the end of America as she surveys the damage, and encourages everyone suffering to keep on dancing. She maintains, in the most political of reality checks, the message of hope that bolsters the entire record: Its only the beginning / if we hold on to hope / Well have a happy ending.

Beautiful People Beautiful Problems (feat. Stevie Nicks) The track that every single music blog has been salivating over since the announcement of these two witchy women teaming up does not disappoint. An ethereal anthem to troubled love by the two women in the world most familiar with the topic, Beautiful People features Stevie Nicks immediately distinguishable voice at its best, playing with Del Reys soft whispers and raising them to new emotional heights.

Tomorrow Never Came (feat. Sean Ono Lennon)

With a refrain that makes a gentle nod to Bob Dylans Lay Lady Lay and Elton Johns Tiny Dancer, Lana Del Rey and Sean Ono Lennon are steeped in classic rock as interpreted by the new generation of musicians. These two show off their musical chops and their deep emotional ties to an era of American music so many think is dead. I adored you / And I just wanted things to be the same, they sing to each other amid soft guitar and Beatles-esque production that would bring the most stone-hearted doubters to tears.

Heroin

A tender song about death in an album full of life, Del Rey pays tribute to the drug thats taken so many of her icons. Its impossible to not think of Lou Reed and The Velvet Undergrounds song of the same name as the track builds to an intensity, to Del Rey writing on the walls in blood and st.

Change

Lana Del Rey hasnt sang over a piano barebones like this since Old Money, a heartbreaking track from Ultraviolence that samples the love theme from Franco Zafirellis Romeo and Juliet. This song, doubling as both personal empowerment and a blanket statement about keeping hope alive during times of great turmoil, is by far her most powerful and heartbreaking as she attempts to be honest, capable, and beautiful in the face of instability.

Get Free

The final track, building into a Beach Boys-like melody, is a song of intense relief after so much contemplation and turmoil. Equal parts calm and danceable, this is the perfect ending to an album so full of deep philosophical thought. She revisits the theme of having a war on her mind, subverting it by finally living her own life away from somebody elses game. Its this independence that gives Del Rey her lust for life, and makes this the perfect closer to an album full of contemplations of intense growth.

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Lana Del Rey's 'Lust For Life': A Track-by-Track Breakdown - PopCrush

Here’s What This ‘Queer Cripple’ Wants You To Know About His Sex Life – HuffPost

Sex Heroes is an ongoing HuffPost Q&A series byVoices Editorial Director Noah Michelsonthat explores the lives and experiences of individuals who are challenging, and thereby changing, mainstream cultures understanding of sex and sexuality.

Andrew Gurza has dedicated his life to sharing his unique experiences as a queer cripple.

The 33-year-old disability awareness consultant, who has cerebral palsy, is the creator of DisabilityAfterDark, a brand that includes podcasts, blogs and presentations about sex, sexuality and disability. According to his website, DisabilityAfterDark offers a unique glimpse into sex and disability that shines a light on the intersectionality of sex and disability, the fun found in sex and disability, and the vulnerability of sex and disability that we very rarely talk about.

Gurzas unflinching approach to these topics, which are often considered taboo (if theyre discussed at all),makes his work enormously compelling, thoroughly necessary and unlike anything anyone else is currently undertaking. The consultant, who is non-ambulatory and a wheelchair user,recently chatted with HuffPost about why he refers to himself as a queer cripple, the biggest challenges he faces when it comes to sex and what he wants everyone to know about having sex with someone with a disability.

Tell me why youve chosen the terms queer and cripple to describe yourself. Ive seen some people especially upset about your use of cripple. I have chosen the words queer and cripple as my chosen descriptors with very specific intent and purpose. First, I use queer in part because I never really felt like I fit into the gay community as it were. My body and experiences didnt fit that mold at all. I also didnt like how many stereotypical assumptions of MSM [male-seeking-male] sexuality was ascribed to the word gay. Queer encompasses, for me at least, that I dont need to adhere to any of those stereotypes that force so many gay men into these narrow homonormative boxes. Queer says, Fuck your boxes, I am doing this my way.

Cripple is a whole different monster entirely. Id be lying if I said that I didnt enjoy the shock value in that word, but it does go so much deeper than that. Cripple, when I use it, allows me to take ownership of everyones misconceptions of disability; it allows me to preemptively say, I know what you may think about disability. I know that youre scared of me; I know you think Im different from you, and guess what? I am. Im owning that as best as I can when I use that word. It is a term of personal empowerment for me. I wouldnt use it to describe another disabled person without their consent, but for me it helps me navigate the experience of disability with an honesty that I think is really important.

To the people who have been upset, I say this: Until you experience disability the way I do, you have no right to police my language.

The pieces you write and the discussions you have about your sex life are really unlike anything Ive read or heard before. What made you decide to be so open and honest about such personal matters? If I really think about it, I made the choice to be so open because I had never seen anything like that out there. Whenever we talk about sex and disability if we dare it is in this painfully sanitized way that tends to tell you nothing about the person with a disability, their sex or what they actually want it doesnt shed any light on how it really feels, and I wanted to take a stab at that. It has also been a cathartic experience for me, writing about this stuff. It allows me to get it out, to tell someone my true feelings.

Alejandro Santiago Photography

Is there anything you consider too personal to write about? When it comes to disability, queerness and intersectionality, I dont think so. This topic is still so shrouded in mystery which is actually just a fuckton of ableism that I think we need those raw, uncomfortable stories to shake things up. People always ask me, What is sex and disability like? That question is precisely why we need this intensely personal narrative.

What kind of responses have you gotten? I have gotten a breadth of responses from people ranging from praise and thanks to strongly worded letters and emails denouncing my work and what I write about. In either case, it means Ive hit a nerve. The fact that I got people talking about it and thinking about it even if they dislike what I am saying means that my goal of bringing a real-life discussion of sex, sexuality, queerness and disability to the forefront of our communitys conscience has worked. Im OK with that.

Why is sex such an important subject for you? Its important because with respect to disability and sex, especially as it intersects with queerness, the subject is all but nonexistent. That sucks. What if LGBTQ+ people had nothing to read that represented them? Thats how so many queer disabled people feel. They want to read about their experiences too, and I want to be one person to provide them that chance. It may also be important to me because I like sex. So, theres that.

What are some of the biggest challenges you face regarding sex? Some of my biggest challenges are: 1) Getting to have sex at all. Finding someone who wants to get naked with the Queer Cripple has been surprisingly difficult. I talk, write, podcast and present a lot on the subject of sex, disability and queerness, but I dont actually get to have that much. Any takers? 2) One of the other biggest challenges I have with sex is finding an emotional connection on the rare occasions that I do have sex. I want sex that means something, and I sometimes feel upset that in my quest to be your No. 1 Queer Cripple, Ill engage in sex that is devoid of feeling because I think to myself, No one else has been here in months, I had better take what I can get. 3) Its challenging to feel sexy, queer and disabled when you constantly have to prove to other people you are sexually viable and worth a good fuck.

You also write about the emotional and psychological side of sex and sexuality as a queer disabled man. My writing on the psychological side of sex, disability and queerness helps me to answer the question How does sex and disability feel? Tapping into the psychological stuff also helps to flesh out the worldview of disabled sex in a way that we dont ever see. I also think when non-disabled people read that stuff, it helps them see sex and disability as more than just two people in chairs getting it on. It shows them that these experiences mean something. And, writing this stuff undoubtedly helps me work through my own shit. Definitely.

Alejandro Santiago Photography

What are the biggest misconceptions about sex when it comes to being a queer person with a disability? The biggest misconceptions are: 1. I cant have it wrong. 2. I dont want it Ha! I would say I have a higher sex drive than most. 3. Specifically in terms of queerness, a lot of LGBTQ+ men assume I must be passive, or a boring lay. They have a lot to learn. There are so many more, but those are some highlights.

What do you want someone who doesnt have a disability to know about having sex with a person who does have a disability? I want them to know that it is OK to not have all the answers. Its OK to have questions, and its OK to ask. Its all about how you ask, though. If you wanna get to know me and/or get naked, please dont start with: So, does your dick work? Ugh. Also, dont ask me, How did you end up in a chair? as that assumes that I was once able, and therefore closer to your definition of normal. But, you can ask: Hi. I see you have a disability or You disclosed [you have a disability] for individuals with invisible disabilities I think youre really cute, and I had some questions about your disability. May I ask them as I undress you at your place? That response is totally acceptable. In all seriousness, I want non-disabled people to know that my disability informs a lot of who I am, so please acknowledge it before we have sex. Ive had guys tell me before we met up that my disability was not an issue only to discover that it really was too much for them. That blows and not in the good way.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Is there a sex hero you think deserves to be covered on HuffPost?Send an email to Noah Michelson.

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Here's What This 'Queer Cripple' Wants You To Know About His Sex Life - HuffPost

Girls on the Run of the North State set to offer empowerment program at more than 35 schools – Gridley Herald

Girls on the Run of the North States registration for the fallseason is now open. Girls on the Run is a physical activity-based, positive youth development program that inspires girls in 3rd through 8th grade to be joyful, healthy and confident. The volunteer-led program brings together groups of 8-15 girls for a ten-week program that encourages personal development, team building and connection to the community.

We start by helping the girls get a better understanding of who they are and whats important to them. We then look at the importance of teamwork and healthy relationships. And, finally, the girls explore how they can positively connect with and shape the world - we are nurturing the 'whole' girl. Claire Johnson, executive director.

"Girls on the run taught me never to give up. I made lots of friends and I met a lot of very nice coaches throughout the season. The coaches built up my confidence by teaching me how to be strong and believe in myself. Girls on the run taught me to collaborate with other girls. The 5K seemed very hard but once I was finished I felt like I could do anything. Now I'm not afraid to try new things. I love GOTR." ~Evelyn, age 8

This fall, Girls on the Run programs will be offered at over 35 locations throughout Butte and Glenn counties. Each team will meet two times a week for 75-90 minutes after school and participate in research-based lessons that use dynamic discussions and fun running games to teach life skills and build confidence. The season will culminate in a 5k event that brings together family, friends and community members to celebrate the girls growth throughout the season.

Our fall season will begin the week of September 4, 2017 and run through the week of November 13, 2017. Our Fall GOTR 5K Fun Run will be held Saturday, November 11, 2017 at 9 am at Bidwell Parks One Mile Recreation Area.

More information about the program, active schools and registration can be found on the Girls on the Run of the North States website at gotrnothstate.org. The program fee for the fall 2017 season is $125. Discounted rates are offered based on yearly, household income. The program fee includes registration for the end-of-season 5k event, a shirt and finishers medal.

About Girls on the Run

Girls on the Run is a national physical activity-based positive youth development program for 3rd-8thgrade girls. Participants develop and improve competence, feel confidence in who they are, develop strength of character, respond to others and oneself with care, create positive connections with peers and adults and make a meaningful contribution to community and society. Each session is led by trained volunteer coaches. Each ten-week program concludes with participants completing a celebratory 5k event which gives them a tangible sense of achievement as well as a framework for setting and achieving life goals. Girls on the Run has served over 1.4 million girls since its inception in 1996.

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Girls on the Run of the North State set to offer empowerment program at more than 35 schools - Gridley Herald

Sauti Sol’s Savara Initiates Women’s Empowerment Program SaWA … – Capital FM Kenya (press release) (blog)

The Savara Womens Advancement Program (SaWA) by Savara Mudigi, a vocalist and a member of the award winning band Sauti Sol, has kicked off its core component, a training program for young women. This has come after a successful launch that featured the SaWA tournament at Camp Toyoyo and the SaWA Concert that featured a Sauti Sol performance in Eastlands.

The SaWA program seeks to inspire and motivate young women to live amazing and impactful lives so as to reach their full potential. The first phase of the training program was rolled out on 8thJuly 2017 in Eastlands, Nairobi.

The project seeks to empower women, motivating them to reach their individual goals while providing the skills and tools they need to achieve those goals. Ultimately, the program hopes to tackle unemployment, inequality in competence and intelligence, and domestic violence.

The SaWA program comprises of eight full day seminars over a period of four months from July 2017-October 2017, plus a boot camp for the 50 ladies on completion of the course. It targets 50 women aged between 18 and 25 years and training focuses on equipping the participants with life skills to make them successful and respected members of the society.

The four major topics to be covered include mindset transformation, facilitated byRe-Wire founder, Angela Kagume.The 50 ladies will also undergo personal financial management with Sheba Njagi. The first cohort of the empowerment are also set to be tutored on art and music by Chiki Onwukwe as well as benefit from a mentorship program providing them with insights into their careers via internships, job shadowing or worksite visits.

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Sauti Sol's Savara Initiates Women's Empowerment Program SaWA ... - Capital FM Kenya (press release) (blog)

Lyft to Develop Self-Driving Car Technology in New Silicon Valley Facility – New York Times

Lyft is taking a markedly different approach from Uber. While Ubers self-driving plans have mostly been a solo effort, Lyft has announced what it calls its Open Platform Initiative, a way to develop autonomous vehicle technology in conjunction with automakers and technology companies.

We want to bring the whole industry together with this, and we think theres a unique opportunity in time right now for Lyft to become a leader while doing it, said Raj Kapoor, Lyfts chief strategy officer, in a press event at the companys San Francisco headquarters.

Perhaps the best way to understand the initiative is through the lens of the smartphone.

Ubers approach is closer to that of Apple: Both companies want to control most of the product, whether the software or the hardware.

Lyft, in contrast, is acting a bit more like Google in its development of the Android operating system. Both companies are creating software that many different hardware manufacturers can use, while developing the technology collaboratively with hardware partners. In Lyfts ideal world, that could mean a quicker spread of Lyfts technology among automakers.

Automakers are scrambling to develop their own self-driving technology as they imagine how they might operate in a future in which fewer people own cars. Collaborating with Lyft could help bring that technology to market faster, while automakers could provide Lyfts ride-hailing network with more cars to serve riders.

Lyft is seeing early signs of traction. Early partners include Waymo, nuTonomy, Jaguar, Land Rover and General Motors. The public details of the partnerships are scant, but all of the companies have committed to working together to make self-driving cars commonplace.

There are potential drawbacks. Partners could decide to leave the Open Platform Initiative and develop their own software. Or companies could be wary of teaming up with Lyft because it is developing its own self-driving system.

Lyft executives believe that the self-driving-car race is in its early days, and that companies that may consider one another rivals still have much to gain from collaborating and learning while building the automobile fleets of the future.

Lyft is not getting into the business of manufacturing a car, Mr. Kapoor said. Were on our way to creating a self-driving system. Then the auto industry can bring it to life.

A version of this article appears in print on July 22, 2017, on Page B6 of the New York edition with the headline: Lyft Sets Open Platform Approach to Self-Driving Cars.

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Lyft to Develop Self-Driving Car Technology in New Silicon Valley Facility - New York Times

New technology making it harder to get free drinks at casinos – WQAD.com

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LAS VEGAS, Nevada-- It's already getting harder to get free drinks while gambling in Las Vegas, thanks to some new technology. That soon could become commonplace, spreading from the strip to local casinos.

Arden Progressive Systems & Games wants to implement their new technology in casinos across the country, including here in the Quad Cities.

It's a green light, red light alert system designed to tell casino staff if you're playing enough to qualify for drinks on the house.

Here's how it works"

"It gets rid of the people that want to hang around and play a quarter and try to basically, I don't want to use the word scam, but basically take advantage of the system," said Albert Tabola, the technology's creator.

He says Ceasars Entertainment already uses the system in their hotels, and they've seen a 35% savings on comped drink costs since the technology roll-out.

Those numbers are too good for casinos around the country to pass up. Tabola is pitching his technology to local casinos, in hopes the technology will become common in casinos everywhere.

Tabola stresses, if you're a consistent player, this won't affect you. You will still get your comped drinks. He says it only affects the people who want something for nothing.

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New technology making it harder to get free drinks at casinos - WQAD.com

Technology Is Biased Too. How Do We Fix It? – FiveThirtyEight

Whether its done consciously or subconsciously, racial discrimination continues to have a serious, measurable impact on the choices our society makes about criminal justice, law enforcement, hiring and financial lending. It might be tempting, then, to feel encouraged as more and more companies and government agencies turn to seemingly dispassionate technologies for help with some of these complicated decisions, which are often influenced by bias. Rather than relying on human judgment alone, organizations are increasingly asking algorithms to weigh in on questions that have profound social ramifications, like whether to recruit someone for a job, give them a loan, identify them as a suspect in a crime, send them to prison or grant them parole.

But an increasing body of research and criticism suggests that algorithms and artificial intelligence arent necessarily a panacea for ending prejudice, and they can have disproportionate impacts on groups that are already socially disadvantaged, particularly people of color. Instead of offering a workaround for human biases, the tools we designed to help us predict the future may be dooming us to repeat the past by replicating and even amplifying societal inequalities that already exist.

These data-fueled predictive technologies arent going away anytime soon. So how can we address the potential for discrimination in incredibly complex tools that have already quietly embedded themselves in our lives and in some of the most powerful institutions in the country?

In 2014, a report from the Obama White House warned that automated decision-making raises difficult questions about how to ensure that discriminatory effects resulting from automated decision processes, whether intended or not, can be detected, measured, and redressed.

Over the last several years, a growing number of experts have been trying to answer those questions by starting conversations, developing best practices and principles of accountability, and exploring solutions for the complex and insidious problem of algorithmic bias.

Although AI decision-making is often regarded as inherently objective, the data and processes that inform it can invisibly bake inequality into systems that are intended to be equitable. Avoiding that bias requires an understanding of both very complex technology and very complex social issues.

Consider COMPAS, a widely used algorithm that assesses whether defendants and convicts are likely to commit crimes in the future. The risk scores it generates are used throughout the criminal justice system to help make sentencing, bail and parole decisions.

At first glance, COMPAS appears fair: White and black defendants given higher risk scores tended to reoffend at roughly the same rate. But an analysis by ProPublica found that, when you examine the types of mistakes the system made, black defendants were almost twice as likely to be mislabeled as likely to reoffend and potentially treated more harshly by the criminal justice system as a result. On the other hand, white defendants who committed a new crime in the two years after their COMPAS assessment were twice as likely as black defendants to have been mislabeled as low-risk. (COMPAS developer Northpointe which recently rebranded as Equivant issued a rebuttal in response to the ProPublica analysis; ProPublica, in turn, issued a counter-rebuttal.)

Northpointe answers the question of how accurate it is for white people and black people, said Cathy ONeil, a data scientist who wrote the National Book Award-nominated Weapons of Math Destruction, but it does not ask or care about the question of how inaccurate it is for white people and black people: How many times are you mislabeling somebody as high-risk?

An even stickier question is whether the data being fed into these systems might reflect and reinforce societal inequality. For example, critics suggest that at least some of the data used by systems like COMPAS is fundamentally tainted by racial inequalities in the criminal justice system.

If youre looking at how many convictions a person has and taking that as a neutral variable well, thats not a neutral variable, said Ifeoma Ajunwa, a law professor who has testified before the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on the implications of big data. The criminal justice system has been shown to have systematic racial biases.

Black people are arrested more often than whites, even when they commit crimes at the same rates. Black people are also sentenced more harshly and are more likely to searched or arrested during a traffic stop. Thats context that could be lost on an algorithm (or an engineer) taking those numbers at face value.

The focus on accuracy implies that the algorithm is searching for a true pattern, but we dont really know if the algorithm is in fact finding a pattern thats true of the population at large or just something it sees in its data, said Suresh Venkatasubramanian, a computing professor at the University of Utah who studies algorithmic fairness.

Biased data can create feedback loops that function like a sort of algorithmic confirmation bias, where the system finds what it expects to find rather than what is objectively there.

Part of the problem is that people trained as data scientists who build models and work with data arent well connected to civil rights advocates a lot of the time, said Aaron Rieke of Upturn, a technology consulting firm that works with civil rights and consumer groups. What I worry most about isnt companies setting out to racially discriminate. I worry far more about companies that arent thinking critically about the way that they might reinforce bias by the source of data they use.

There are similar concerns about algorithmic bias in facial-recognition technology, which already has a far broader impact than most people realize: Over 117 million American adults have had their images entered into a law-enforcement agencys face-recognition database, often without their consent or knowledge, and the technology remains largely unregulated.

A 2012 paper, which was coauthored by a technologist from the FBI, found that the facial-recognition algorithms it studied were less accurate when identifying the faces of black people, along with women and adults under 30. A key finding of a 2016 study by the Georgetown Center on Privacy and Technology, which examined 15,000 pages of documentation, was that police face recognition will disproportionately affect African Americans. (The study also provided models for policy and legislation that could be used to regulate the technology on both federal and state levels.)

Some critics suggest that the solution to these issues is to simply add more diversity to training sets, but its more complicated than that, according to Elke Oberg, the marketing manager at Cognitec, a company whose facial-recognition algorithms have been used by law-enforcement agencies in California, Maryland, Michigan and Pennsylvania.

Unfortunately, it is impossible to make any absolute statements [about facial-recognition technology], Oberg said. Any measurements on face-recognition performance depends on the diversity of the images within the database, as well as their quality and quantity.

Jonathan Frankle, a former staff technologist for the Georgetown University Law Center who has experimented with facial-recognition algorithms, can run through a laundry list of factors that may contribute to the uneven success rates of the many systems currently in use, including the difficulty some systems have in detecting facial landmarks on darker skin, the lack of good training sets available, the complex nature of learning algorithms themselves, and the lack of research on the issue. If it were just about putting more black people in a training set, it would be a very easy fix. But its inherently more complicated than that.

He thinks further study is crucial to finding solutions, and that the research is years behind the way facial recognition is already being used. We dont even fully know what the problems are that we need to fix, which is terrifying and should give any researcher pause, Frankle said.

New laws and better government regulation could be a powerful tool in reforming how companies and government agencies use AI to make decisions.

Last year, the European Union passed a law called the General Data Protection Regulation, which includes numerous restrictions on the automated processing of personal data and requires transparency about the logic involved in those systems. Similar federal regulation does not appear to be forthcoming in the U.S. the FCC and Congress are pushing to either stall or dismantle federal data-privacy protections though some states, including Illinois and Texas, have passed their own biometric privacy laws to protect the type of personal data often used by algorithmic decision-making tools.

However, existing federal laws do protect against certain types of discrimination particularly in areas like hiring, housing and credit though they havent been updated to address the way new technologies intersect with old prejudices.

If were using a predictive sentencing algorithm where we cant interrogate the factors that it is using, or a credit scoring algorithm that cant tell you why you were denied credit thats a place where good regulation is essential, [because] these are civil rights issues, said Frankle. The government should be stepping in.

Another key area where the government could be of use: pushing for more transparency about how these influential predictive tools reach their decisions.

The only people who have access to that are the people who build them. Even the police dont have access to those algorithms, ONeil said. Were handing over the decision of how to police our streets to people who wont tell us how they do it.

Frustrated by the lack of transparency in the field, ONeil started a company to help take a peek inside. Her consultancy conducts algorithmic audits and risk assessments, and it is currently working on a manual for data scientists who want to do data science right.

Complicating any push toward greater transparency is the rise of machine learning systems, which are increasingly involved in decisions around hiring, financial lending and policing. Sometimes described as black boxes, these predictive models are so complex that even the people who create them cant always tell how they arrive at their conclusions.

A lot of these algorithmic systems rely on neural networks which arent really that transparent, said Professor Alvaro Bedoya, the executive director of the Center on Privacy and Technology at Georgetown Law. You cant look under the hood, because theres no such thing as looking under the hood. In these cases, Bedoya said, its important to examine whether the systems results affect different groups in different ways. Increasingly, people are calling for algorithmic accountability, instead of insight into the code, to do rigorous testing of these systems and their outputs, to see if the outputs are biased.

Once we move beyond the technical discussions about how to address algorithmic bias, theres another tricky debate to be had: How are we teaching algorithms to value accuracy and fairness? And what do we decide accuracy and fairness mean? If we want an algorithm to be more accurate, what kind of accuracy do we decide is most important? If we want it to be more fair, whom are we most concerned with treating fairly?

For example, is it more unfair for an algorithm like COMPAS to mislabel someone as high-risk and unfairly penalize them more harshly, or to mislabel someone as low-risk and potentially make it easier for them to commit another crime? AURA, an algorithmic tool used in Los Angeles to help identify victims of child abuse, faces a similarly thorny dilemma: When the evidence is unclear, how should an automated system weigh the harm of accidentally taking a child away from parents who are not abusive against the harm of unwittingly leaving a child in an abusive situation?

In some cases, the most accurate prediction may not be the most socially desirable one, even if the data is unbiased, which is a huge assumption and its often not, Rieke said.

Advocates say the first step is to start demanding that the institutions using these tools make deliberate choices about the moral decisions embedded in their systems, rather than shifting responsibility to the faux neutrality of data and technology.

It cant be a technological solution alone, Ajunwa said. It all goes back to having an element of human discretion and not thinking that all tough questions can be answered by technology.

Others suggest that human decision-making is so prone to cognitive bias that data-driven tools might be the only way to counteract it, assuming we can learn to build them better: by being conscientious, by being transparent and by candidly facing the biases of the past and present in hopes of not coding them into our future.

Algorithms only repeat our past, so they dont have the moral innovation to try and improve our lives or our society, ONeil said. But long as our society is itself imperfect, we are going to have to adjust something to remove the discrimination. I am not a proponent of going back to purely human decision-making because humans arent great. I do think algorithms have the potential for doing better than us. She pauses for a moment. I might change my mind if you ask me in five years, though.

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Technology Is Biased Too. How Do We Fix It? - FiveThirtyEight

State AGs are flexing their muscles to protect your technology privacy – The Hill (blog)

Headlines for state attorneys general (AGs) have been dominated by tangles with the Trump administration from the travel ban case going to the U.S. Supreme Court to challenges to legacy regulations at federal agencies. Less visible are actions by state AGs to push forward their interests and influence in technology-oriented consumer products, as highlighted in panel topics at various attorney general meetings this summer.

An attorney general is often known as the top cop in his or her state. However, rather than having widespread criminal prosecutorial powers, state AGs utilize broad consumer protection authority. Particularly in assessing deceptive and unfair acts and practices with consumer-facing business, AGs are market regulators and enforcers.

For years, data breaches have been big news for state AGs, as there remains no federal compliance standard. Individual states maintain their own requirements for notification in case of a breach, and they are enforced by state AGs. Some states take the opportunity to establish heightened privacy standards for the types of data that companies can collect. For instance, the Illinois legislature recently passed legislation to restrict geolocation data, and the rules are to be enforced by the attorney general. Moving from reactive roles to proactive interests, state AGs are mapping out technology sectors where they see significant instances of security and privacy at stake.

Three huge technologies that will shape the future of consumers have the current interest of state AGs: driverless cars, the internet of things, and artificial intelligence. The interconnectedness of computing devices along with the capture of personal data, including at times when a consumer may be unaware, has some state AGs on high alert.The concern from AGs is not a particular innovation itself, but rather a self-realization of how AGs themselves should react to the seismic shift in consumer preferences where a desire for efficiency, personalization and freedom is trumping traditional notions of consumer protection.

First, with driverless or autonomous vehicles and connected cars, we have the Jetsons becoming reality. A fleet of cars without drivers roams the streets of Pittsburgh, and a production vehicles will show up at your door. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration categorizes five levels of automated driving from level one, which includes cruise control, to levels four and five, in which the vehicle monitors all roadway conditions and reacts appropriately. Between the ends of this spectrum is an incremental revolution, as more and more driver assistance features are introduced into vehicles.

With the productivity and safety gains for those no longer seated behind a steering wheel, state AGs recognize potential privacy concerns with location data, driving habits and occupant identification that could be at risk of unauthorized use or disclosure. State AGs will also seek to defend their state laws from the preemptive effects of federal regulations that may otherwise be necessary to usher the advancement of driverless technology. With state AGs clearly having a role to influence the driverless industry and its future, proactive engagement with AGs, even in spite of their enforcement role, is critical.

Second, the internet of things (IoT) describes smart devices connected together. Smart devices may be activated remotely, may detect information independently, or may be able to learn and repeat functions. IoT devices collect information from a persons home or surroundings, some which may be personal. Earlier this year, for instance, the FTC and the New Jersey attorney general scored a $2.2 million settlement with a TV manufacturer that collected viewing histories.

For state AGs, IoT enforcement considerations involve unfair and deceptive acts and practices. These include, for example, giving no notice to consumers about personally identifiable information that may be collected and possible HIPAA violations in sharing confidential health information. The proliferation of non-secure connected devices creates growing risks.

Last year, the Mirai virus searched the internet for vulnerable IoT devices, attacked them using common manufacturer default settings, and infected devices to control them for additional attacks. State AGs are aware of ways in which IoT devices from cordless tea kettles to connected medical devices could be compromised when poor security opens up possibilities to gain access to a wireless home network.

Third, artificial intelligence, or AI, certainly brings images of science fiction. AI involves computers performing tasks in ways that would otherwise require human intelligence, such as recognizing speech, having visual perception, or making decisions. Last year, an AI robot journalist wrote 450 stories on the Olympics, and sch superhuman feats will continue, as AI learns to understand pictures and videos of events.

State AGs understand how AI may be useful for law enforcement, such as managing unregistered drones by taking them safely out of the sky. This method of using technology advances to manage technology risks is certainly appealing and needs to be better understood by AGs across a variety of industries.

State AGs have already been receiving a similar education with their regulatory and enforcement authority toward the sharing economy, as traditional methods of consumer protection do not fit. More so, AI will transform our economy as a whole, which has state attorneys general considering how their consumer protection roles must change.

Joseph Jacquot is a partner at Foley & Lardner LLP. He previously served as chief deputy attorney general of Florida and as deputy chief counsel for the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee.

The views expressed by contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.

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State AGs are flexing their muscles to protect your technology privacy - The Hill (blog)

How technology can help government fight the war on drugs – The Hill (blog)

Earlier this month, the Nashville District Attorney completely retired charges against a man named Christopher Miller who was arrested in May by the citys police for attempting to sell the botanical substance called kratom.

The move brought renewed attention to this naturally occurring product that the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) last year proposed classifying as an illegal Schedule I substance a plan which the DEA uncharacteristically withdrew, following a public comment period characterized by opposition from a wide range of constituents.

In a previous blog post about competing interests in the e-cigarette market, I described the so-called Bootlegger and Baptist theory of regulation, a realpolitik analysis of perhaps the single most effective type of issue-driven coalitions.

The theorys title refers, of course, to the historical case of alcohol prohibition in America. At the time, those who favored criminalizing booze, beer and wine included mercenary figures who profited handsomely from a black market created by prohibition, along with teetotaling do-gooders concerned with saving souls.

The common purpose of these two disconnected groups with profoundly divergent motivations who nonetheless shared the same goal, led to the prohibition of alcohol in 1920.

It was arguably the governments appetite for lost revenue from taxes on the sale of booze which eventually fueled a successful constitutional amendment in 1933, overturning what the Bootlegger-Baptist coalition had achieved thirteen years earlier.

With current annual opioid sales of around $11 billion in the U.S., projected to grow to $18 billion by 2021, an epidemic of addictions plagues nearly every demographic group in the country.

The fact that kratom helps many hooked individuals kick the dangerous habit, according to various experts and observers, means it has potentially significant economic impacts for pharmaceutical companies selling opioid painkillers.

Given the major addiction epidemic, clearly not all customers for the pharmaceutical companies products are consuming them for legitimate medical reasons.

On the issue of whether kratom should be criminalized, viewed one way opioid pharmaceutical makers approximate the Bootlegger part of the equation, without implying any nefarious intent or negligence.

Ostensibly, these companies would profit or continue to profit, rather from the DEA making kratom a Schedule I substance, since it purportedly functions as a reverse gateway drug, helping opioid addicts beat their habits.

During the public notice and comment process for the DEAs plan to criminalize kratom, no vocal grassroots constituency emerged in support of the rule no Baptist to match whatever economic interests (Bootleggers) may have favored the plan.

According to Regendus data, an analytics solution that applies Natural Language Processing to rapidly analyze sentiment contained in public comments, the vast majority of more than 24,000 submissions were strongly opposed to the DEAs plan.

As a former federal prosecutor and criminal defense attorney, I was personally familiar with the DEA, whose policies and agents I regularly encountered on one side of a courtroom or the other.

On the defense side in particular, the courtroom is where the DEA normally faces opposition to its policies from certain elements of the public, i.e. the accused.

In the war on drugs, the agencys rules have major, life-changing impacts on individuals, their families and communities.

Many observers of the DEAs proposal to outlaw kratom and the agencys eventual withdrawal in the face of strong public opposition on the issue have noted the rarity of the outcome.

In this case, the public leveraged its legal right to comment and influence a rule-making process, to stop a rule in its tracks before their government acted to make them defendants or criminals.

Instead of a loss in the courtroom, anti-kratom interests inside and outside the DEA lost their case in the rule-making process.

John W. Davis II is founder and CEO of N&C Inc., a provider of solutions such as Regendus that help advocates analyze complex content, discover insights, and better represent the interests of clients and stakeholders.

The views expressed by contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.

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How technology can help government fight the war on drugs - The Hill (blog)

On the move: Technology plays increasing role in relocation – Chron.com

Scott Mendell

Scott Mendell

On the move: Technology plays increasing role in relocation

Over the years, the tools of the trade Realtors have at their disposal have changed quite a bit. Due to the advances in technology and the use of various apps, Realtors are able to expedite communication with their clients and connect in a variety of ways.

This is especially helpful when assisting people who are relocating, because Realtors and their clients are often geographically separated during different stages of the process. As such, Realtors have come to rely on certain technologies to help them get the job done.

Scott Mendell, a broker associate with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Anderson Properties, said that when working with relocation clients, being truly mobile is incredibly important, which is made possible through the use of smartphones and tablets.

"I work with an iPad Pro, and I load everything needed for the day's agenda when I am going to be showing properties to relocation buyers. They can use an app called GoodNotes to make notes about each house they see right on the listing sheets," Mendell said.

He added that video chat apps like FaceTime have become invaluable to him when working with relocation clients, because they allow him to virtually show a property.

(Story continues below ...)

This was the case a few weeks ago when Mendell assisted clients who were moving to Houston from Utah. They were not able to find a house during their home-finding trip, but they had at least zeroed in on the area that they wanted. So, Mendell continued to send them information about listings, and then walked through their favorites while connected to them through FaceTime.

"Utilizing technology is really critical when working with relocation clients, because of the pace at which everything moves today," Mendell said. "Many companies are not giving their transferees long home-buying trips like they used to. So, agents have to be able to serve those clients when they are not physically in their office, and the way to do that is through technology."

In the same vein, Mendell said that because of the different modes of communication available today, it is important for agents to match and adapt to the communication styles of each client.

"The ability to use multiple forms of communication is important. Younger clients might like to use Snapchat and WhatsApp, while older clients rely on email. So, I have a form that asks my clients what their preferred method of contact is," said Mendell.

He added, "The No. 1 thing that keeps a relationship working and a transaction running smoothly is communication."

While technology and apps are important tools in an agent's arsenal, Bryan Beene, a sales associate with John Daugherty, Realtors, warned against their overuse, because he thinks it can hinder personal connection.

"I utilize the technologies that save me time, so I can be a bit more present for my clients," Beene said. "There is nothing that can replace the human connection, so whenever a new app comes out or there is new technology, I look at it, but it has to pass the litmus test of whether it's going to enhance my relationship with my clients, or just get in the way. If it gets in the way, it doesn't fly."

For Beene, the two most important apps he uses tend to be the HAR (Houston Association of Realtors) app, and Skype.

"I would say that the HAR app is the most valuable, because it gives me direct access to what my clients have already been looking at, and it's where they have been getting their information. They might see a property online and tell me that it looks like it has been on the market for a long time. Using the app, I can access that record and give them accurate information," Beene said.

He uses Skype primarily as a way of introducing himself to his clients before they arrive in Houston.

"I always use Skype to introduce myself to relocation clients. We talk face to face on Skype, which is usually a long meeting, so that we can get to know each other. We get to establish a relationship, and that is so much more effective than an email or even a phone call," Beene said. "I notice that when I use technology to create a relationship with my clients first, that they have less anxiety about the move and there is a lot more excitement.

"I use technology for the connection, and since we can't meet in person, Skype is basically how I can re-create the experience for them as if they were here in town."

Michelle Sandlin is an award-winning writer, journalist and global mobility industry expert. Her work is frequently featured in Worldwide ERC's Mobility magazine, and in various business and industry related publications and corporate blogs. Follow her on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/TheMichelleSandlin and on Twitter: @MichelleSandlin. Also visit "On the Move" at blog.chron.com/onthemove.

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On the move: Technology plays increasing role in relocation - Chron.com

Micron Technology Inc. in 3 Charts – Motley Fool

Even as the Nasdaq Composite is reaching fresh all-time highs, Micron Technology (NASDAQ:MU) stock's 138% rally over the past 12 months puts the Nasdaq's 25% rise to shame. These numbers certainly don't lie, but they also only tell part of the story when it comes to Micron.

Take a step further back to view the bigger picture, and one sees a company that has experienced both sweeping successes and stinging failures over the years, a point investors enamored by its recent rally must keep in mind. To get a better sense of the company and the forces that drive it, let's examine three charts that sum up Micron Technology and its long-term share price dynamics.

Image Source: Micron Technology

Perhaps the most important thing to understand when looking at Micron is that the DRAM and flash memory chips it sells are effectively commodity products. Market spot prices control what they can charge, which means that Micron's revenue is almost entirely dependent on the current supply-and-demand dynamic for both types of memory chips.

This can lead to the same sort of tremendous top-line fluctuations that are experienced by oil producers or other commodity-based businesses, as you can see from Micron's historical revenue chart.

MU Revenue (TTM) data by YCharts

As you can see, the general direction of Micron's sales has been upward, as technology and computing power have become more integral parts of our everyday lives in recent years.

However, since the year 2000, the company's revenue has experienced four major contractions that, predictably, led to steep losses for Micron shareholders (more on that below). Before turning to its stock price though, we need to look at the rest of Micron's cost structure, which plays an important role in a broader discussion of the giant chipmaker.

As is the case for most companies that lack pricing power, Micron Technology's margin structure shows a tremendous amount of variability. When times are good, the company can produce significant profits. However, when memory chip prices soften -- either due to economic weakness or market-wide supply-and-demand imbalances -- its profits can nosedive deep into the red as the following charts demonstrate.

MU Gross Profit Margin (TTM) data by YCharts

It's also important to note that Micron's cost structure differs from that ofchipmakers like Qualcomm in that it owns and operates its own semiconductor manufacturing plants. This means Micron's cost structure is more rigid than that of firms that outsource their chip fabrication.

The added fixed costs that come with this strategy make Micron's bottom line more sensitive to revenue changes. Big picture, it's important to note that Micron's lack of pricing power (gross margins) and its more rigid cost structure (net margins) go a long way toward explaining the company's highly cyclical stock price.

Because of the above factors, it should come as no surprise that Micron's stock has also swung wildly over the years. Take a look at the company's historical performance against its benchmark, the Nasdaq Composite.

MU data by YCharts

This nicely captures my cautious take on Micron, particularly for long-term buy-and-hold investors. Micron can generate market-beating returns when investors buy its shares during a pricing rut and hold them until memory prices recover, which is exactly the scenario that has played out with Micron over the past year or so.

Unfortunately, shareholders who have mistimed their investments -- we don't believe in trying to time the market here at The Fool -- have lost their shirts. To be sure, times are flush at Micron right now, and the continued recovery in its business has Wall Street analysts as bullish as ever. However, the company's highly cyclical nature and lack of meaningful pricing power suggest this same scenario will eventually take place.

Ultimately, this isn't an attempt to dissuade investors from buying Micron stock. Rather, it's an earnest warning that owning Micron shares comes with legitimate risks that need to be fully understood prior to investing.

Andrew Tonner owns shares of Apple. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Apple. The Motley Fool owns shares of Qualcomm. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Micron Technology Inc. in 3 Charts - Motley Fool

Steady Progress on Ozone and Climate at Bangkok Talks – Natural Resources Defense Council

This post co-authored by Alex Hillbrand

The Montreal Protocols 30th anniversary is shaping up to be a good year for ozone and climate protection.

The parties gathered last week in Bangkok for their midyear meeting to make headway on the ongoing phase-out of ozone-killing HCFCs and to start working implementing the phase-down of climate-damaging HFCs agreed in Kigali, Rwanda, last year.

Although not as glamorous as the Kigali meeting, good progress was made and nearly all countries played constructive roles.

We reported earlier on the progress made by the Montreal Protocols funding body, the Multilateral Fund. Last weeks meeting began with a well-attended Safety Standards Workshop on Monday to discuss the updates to international and national codes and standards needed to assure that the climate-friendly but flammable refrigerant alternatives to HFCs can be used safely. These include some HFCs with relatively low heat-trapping power, and very low GWP compounds such as HFOs and propane.

To use these gases safely, product design standards need to be improved to reflect safety measures (such as better leak prevention and spark avoidance). In many cases, building fire codes also will need to be updated to reflect safe practices for installing and using air conditioning products using flammable refrigerants.

Representatives of international and national safety standards committees presented their plans to update standards and the timelines they hope to follow. They offered reassurance that the Kigali Amendments phase-down timetable leaves enough time for safety standards to be revised. In some places, such as the U.S., states and cities will need assistance to update their building codes quickly.

Following the workshop, the Protocol parties met for four days to consider, among other things, replenishment the Multilateral Fund for the next three years. The Technology and Economic Assessment Panel (TEAP) shared its estimate of the funds needed to help developing countries meet the next stage of their HCFC phase-out obligations, and to get started planning for HFC reductions.

The TEAP estimated that about $600 - $750 million will be needed during 2018-2020, up modestly from just over $500 million required during 2015-2017. About 90-95 percent of this funding would go to the ozone-saving work of phasing out HCFCs. The remainder, TEAP estimates, will go towards early enabling activities to help countries plan for the phase-down of HFCs as agreed in Kigali. Parties were keenly interested whether the estimated amounts would support leap-frogging over HFCs, i.e., going directly to climate-friendlier alternatives when phasing out HCFCs.

But it was energy efficiency that stole the show. Two groups of countries India and several Middle Eastern countries, and the Africa Group submitted statements on energy efficiency to the meeting. A very constructive conversation, kicked off by India, highlighted the critical importance of improving the efficiency of cooling appliances as a means to reduce climate-damaging carbon pollution from power plants.

India called for identifying what part of the energy efficiency picture the Montreal Protocol should address the power consumption of air conditioners, for example, as opposed to whole-building energy efficiency. India called for the TEAP to consider how Protocol could support energy efficiency projects. Nearly 50 countries took the floor in the ensuing discussion. The parties agree to hold workshop on energy efficiency next year to address many of these key questions. Also next year, the parties are to negotiate and agree upon guidelines to govern decisions of the Multilateral Fund on energy efficiency.

NRDC contributed by holding a side event reporting on global pathways to improve the energy-efficiency of air conditioning in tandem with the refrigerant transition. Over the last year, NRDC and our partners interviewed dozens of manufacturers to get a sense for how their product portfolios and product planning take these clean technologies into account, and what would help them move faster.

The meeting closed with delegates in high spirits, their expectations turned to the treatys 30th anniversary celebration, taking place in Montreal this November. There they will complete negotiations on the 2018-2020 funding replenishment and continue developing approaches to leverage big improvements in the energy efficiency of rapidly-growing air conditioning equipment.

Director, Climate & Clean Air program

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Steady Progress on Ozone and Climate at Bangkok Talks - Natural Resources Defense Council

Hamburg Fairgrounds Makes Quick Progress on Cleanup – WGRZ-TV

Cleanup Continues At The Fairgrounds

WGRZ 11:30 PM. EDT July 21, 2017

Photo: WGRZ (Photo: Photo: WGRZ)

HAMBURG, N.Y. - What a difference a day makes.

Almost 36 hours after a tornado tore through the Hamburg Fairgrounds, crews made quick progress on Friday to clear off the debris scattered all across the property. Beginning at 4 a.m., they worked to collect the fallen branches, limbs and hunks of tree that had been tossed around by the sheer force of the storm.

That's good news, since the Erie County Fair is set to begin here in just 19 days. By the end of Friday, fair organizers estimated that most of the debris had already been cleared away from the fairgrounds. It would appear that the fair will begin as scheduled in August.

Although there is significant damage to the grandstands, the fair organizers have portable bleachers and will be able to make due for the concerts and other events held near the raceway.

Meanwhile, the Yankee Reigning Horse Association's "Summer Spectacular" horse show continued as planned on Friday.

Courtney Craig, the president of YRHA, said the tornado came through like a "flash" on Thursday and cut power to the barns. Many people are attending the show from out of town, and Thursday was their "move-in" day. Many campers behind barns had broken glass windows due to the tornado.

Craig had to decide whether to proceed with the show.

"We decided we'd go on with the show," she said. "It was a big decision, because we didn't have power in all of our barns. We didn't have camper power until today. But we decided we'd go on, and have our show, as usual."

So it would seem that not even a tornado can stop the horse show-- or the Erie County Fair.

2017 WGRZ-TV

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Hamburg Fairgrounds Makes Quick Progress on Cleanup - WGRZ-TV

New Superintendent Levett pledges progress for Savannah-Chatham school district – Savannah Morning News

Parents, students and residents alike can expect to see continued improvements in the Savannah-Chatham school district in the upcoming school year, Superintendent Ann Levett said to a packed room of educators Friday.

During her first State of Our Schools Address, Levett touted growth in employment and graduation rates in 2016 and said district progress is slated to continue when school kicks off Aug 3.

Levett said an unprecedented 2,000 graduates received diplomas in May and said the districts graduation rates continue to beat the state average. The Savannah-Chatham school districts graduation rate is about 83.2 percent compared to Georgias rate of 79.2 percent.

This is indeed our season of impact, she said. And we will work to provide another year of excellence.

The school district serves more than 38,000 students throughout 55 schools and employs 5,600 people, Levett said, making it the 10th largest school district in the state.

Officials added to those employment numbers when the district decided to bring its transportation in-house. The change was designed to streamline student experience while saving a few dollars, Levett said. It was also the first time the district handled its own bus transportation and routing since its transportation department was privatized in 1998.

From Tybee to Bloomingdale, we have a large geographic footprint and we cover a lot of miles, she said. By bringing transportation inside, we brought those dollars back and made an investment in our community.

Other noted achievements included the STEM certification of Heard Elementary and new facilities for Haven, May Howard and Juliette Low schools.

In the coming months, residents can expect to see aggressive efforts to get the community more involved in the education process, Levett said.

This year the district is launching literacy and math programs to make resources more readily available to students including a book drive with a million-book goal.

The school board chose Levett from among four superintendent finalists on May 4. The board officially approved her hiring on May 22 in a contentious 5-4 vote. Board members Julie Wade, Michael Johnson and Shawn Kachmar as well as School Board President Jolene Byrne insisted that their criticisms of Levett during that meeting werent personal, and they pledged to follow board policy and support Levett. The board approved Levetts contract June 27. She received a $242,500 salary. Her two-year deal includes a stipend, home workstation and business expenses.

Levett begins the school year as an investigation looms into the school board by the districts accrediting agency, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS).

Mariama Jenkins, spokeswoman for AdvancEd which oversees the SACS accreditation process said in a previous story that SACS received complaints of school board interference and will investigate.

We received complaints in response to allegations that Savannah-Chatham County Public School System is in violation of AdvancED Accreditation Standards for Quality School Systems. Based on the merits of those complaints we will be conducting an on-site review this fall, Jenkins said.

SACS investigators can put districts on probation and revoke accreditation if they find that school boards are disrupting the educational effectiveness of a district. The investigation stems from now retired Superintendent Thomas Lockamys complaints that interference and a lack of support from Byrne hastened his decision to retire and he has provided SACS with a candid account of her alleged interference.

Georgia Milestone scores

Levett said Friday that she recognized that while progress was made there is still much work to be done.

The countywide educator rally comes on the heels of the state release of Georgia Milestones Assessment System scores. The 2017 release shows that the state average is improving, but Savannah-Chatham schools still have a bit of catching up to do.

The percentage of proficient and developing high school learners dropped in five of GMAS test subjects: algebra, biology U.S. history, geometry and economics. There were significant increases in four GMAS test high school subjects: 9th grade literature, American literature, analytical geometry and physical science. Proficiency percentages among elementary and middle school students decreased among grades 5-8. Savannah-Chatham third- and fourth-graders showed increased proficiency across the board.

We may not be doing everything right, but we are doing something right to see some progress, she said. And that progress wont go unnoticed. But we will continue to work hard Our first step is to look at those areas where scores dropped and see what caused the drop and the same with improvements.

To read a complete list of GMAS scores, go to http://bit.ly/2ujFe36.

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New Superintendent Levett pledges progress for Savannah-Chatham school district - Savannah Morning News

Pa. Turnpike making progress on erosion controls near McDonald flooding – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Pa. Turnpike making progress on erosion controls near McDonald flooding
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Additional erosion controls the Pennsylvania Turnpike has completed in the past 10 days near a flood site in McDonald could get a serious test this weekend. The National Weather Service is forecasting heavy rain Saturday and Sunday in that area, where ...

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Pa. Turnpike making progress on erosion controls near McDonald flooding - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Evacuation orders lifted for Mariposa as crews slow progress of massive wildfire – Los Angeles Times

Evacuation orders were lifted for the historic mining town of Mariposa on Friday morning, as firefighters slowed the progress of a massive wildfire burning near Yosemite National Park.

Authorities lifted the evacuation order at 11 a.m., but warned residents: There will still be smoke in the respective areas as firefighters continue firefighting operations. If at anytime you feel unsafe, please call 911.

The blaze, which has scorched more than 70,000 acres, is now 15% contained, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. It has gutted 58 homes, damaged 11 others and triggered the evacuation of approximately 4,000 people in Mariposa County communities.

Dozens of other structures have been destroyed or damaged, Cal Fire said.

Thousands of firefighters plodded through steep hillsides and canyons overnight to reach flames smoldering in chaparral, and at least one firefighter was injured Friday when a fire engine rolled down a hill, officials said. The condition of the firefighter has not yet been made public.

Temperatures should warm up this weekend, but isolated thunderstorms could sweep over the southern Sierra Nevada range on Sunday, according to the National Weather Service in Hanford.

On Thursday night, residents displaced by the Detwiler fire attended a community meeting at the Merced Theatre, where they expressed concerns about security and inquired when they could return home.

Mariposa County Sheriff Doug Binnewies said he hoped downtown Mariposa would reopen Friday, but he warned that some roads would remain closed because firefighters were still trying to mop up.

Binnewies said deputies were patrolling neighborhoods that were abandoned by homeowners who were forced to flee. He said anyone attempting to commit a crime would be arrested.

If youre coming here to do something nefarious, we dont want you here, the sheriff said. Get out.

With officials opening some areas Friday, Allison Byerley, a pastor in Mariposa, said she planned to prepare a special sermon for Sunday to give thanks and raise spirits.

Byerley said she will quote from Isaiah 43, which reads in part: Do not fear, for I have redeemed you. ... When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned; the flames will not set you ablaze.

If prayers could put out fires, this one would have been dead awhile ago, Byerley said.

Sights, sounds, and the people that made the first day of 2017's Comic-Con a sight to behold.

Sights, sounds, and the people that made the first day of 2017's Comic-Con a sight to behold.

Democrats Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Tim Canova are preparing already for their August 2018 congressional primary rematch by raising and spending campaign money.

Democrats Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Tim Canova are preparing already for their August 2018 congressional primary rematch by raising and spending campaign money.

ALSO

The fight to save the gold-mining town of Mariposa from a monster fire

'Explosive' flames destroy 45 homes as 70,000-acre wildfire rages near Yosemite

Whittier fire in Los Padres National Forest consumes more than 18,000 acres

UPDATES:

11:35 a.m.: This article was updated with details on evacuation orders being lifted for Mariposa.

8:35 a.m.: This article was updated with information about the possible return of evacuated Mariposa residents.

7:15 a.m.: This article was updated with new figures on the size of the fire and number of homes destroyed.

This article was originally published at 4 a.m.

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Evacuation orders lifted for Mariposa as crews slow progress of massive wildfire - Los Angeles Times

Federal legislators reflect on progress, look ahead – Petoskey News-Review

WASHINGTON Michigans two U.S. senators say environmental issues will be a big topic of policy discussion in 2017.

At the same time, U.S. Rep. Jack Bergman, who represents Michigans 1st District, said he is focused on the budget.

Federal lawmakers were asked about their accomplishments for the first half of 2017, and what they believe will be the big issues they will be tackling for the next six months.

U.S. Sen. Debbie Stabenow

For the first six months, Stabenow, a Democrat, said she has been focusing on protecting the Great Lakes and strengthening the healthcare system.

Stabenow is a co-chair of the Senates bipartisan Great Lakes task force. She is focused on doing everything possible to preserve the Great Lakes, including controlling the water quality and invasive species like Asian carp, Stabenow said.

Stabenow said shes pushing back on President Donald Trumps budget, which ends all funding for the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative. According to its website, the initiative focuses on cleaning up the Great Lakes areas of concern, preventing and controlling invasive species, reducing nutrient runoff that contributes to harmful algal blooms and protecting native species.

(Protecting the Great Lakes is) about jobs, its about the quality of life, its really who we are in Michigan, Stabenow said.

Stabenow said she is also fighting back efforts to end the Healthy Michigan Plan, which is a program that gives health care to low-income adults who do not qualify for Medicare or Medicaid.

I am always opposed to eliminating health care for millions of people in Michigan, Stabenow said. Instead, I have been focused on lowering the cost of prescription drugs and lowering the cost of health insurance.

Stabenow hopes two of the bills she has introduced will be debated and passed in the next six months. One bill would give a 50 percent tax credit for the cost of small businesses providing healthcare for their employees. The other bill is a five-year farm bill, meant to help people and businesses in the agriculture business.

U.S. Sen. Gary Peters

In a statement, Peters, a Democrat, pointed to legislative efforts he has been working on in 2017.

Peters, along with U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, introduced a bill meant to help local fire departments. The bill would allow fire departments to use Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response grants to promote part-time and on-call firefighters to be full time. Currently, the grants can only be used to hire and train new firefighters.

The legislation has passed the Senates Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, but has not been voted on by the full Senate, the statement said.

Members of the Senates Commerce Committee approved Peters amendments meant to improve airport security outside screening areas. The amendments would allow airports to use already existing funds to update their infrastructure outside Transportation Security Administration-screened areas, such as baggage claims and drop-offs. For example, airport officials could use the funds for ballistic protective podiums and camera installation.

Peters will continue in the next six months to improve public services and strengthen protections for the Great Lakes and Straits of Mackinac, he said in a statement.

U.S. Rep. Jack Bergman

Bergman, R-Watersmeet, said he is proud to have voted for several bills that are now laws. One of those laws is the Department of Veterans Affairs Accountability and Whistleblower Protection Act. Bergman said it gives the VA a streamlined process to fire employees for poor performance. He said employees still have due-process rights.

Before we did this, it took forever (to fire bad employees), and because of that slowness, the veterans floundered, Bergman said.

He said lawmakers got rid of many regulations put in place by the Obama administration. Bergman said the reduction of regulations is going to save businesses billions of dollars. He said representatives also increased defense spending.

Bergman, part of the budget committee, said he has been spending much of his time preparing the fiscal year 2018 budget.

We have too much of the government which on whats called autopilot spending, thats the mandatory spending. We cant continue down a road like that because we are broke at that rate, Bergman said.

Bergman said he is working on legislation to support the Soo Locks in Sault Ste. Marie. He also said he will work on giving more power to the state government and reduce the size of the federal government.

What might work in Michigan, may not work in Mississippi or New Mexico, Bergman said.

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Federal legislators reflect on progress, look ahead - Petoskey News-Review

Pete Mackanin lauds Maikel Franco’s progress after Phillies’ road trip – Philly.com

Its like playing golf, Pete Mackanin said. In golf, you want to let the club do the work, swinging downward to try to elevate the ball. In baseball, the Phillies manager wants hitters still to elevate the ball, but do so by pushing a level swing through the bottom half of the baseball.

In the age of the term launch angle, Mackanin said he believes that metric is overemphasized. It encourages hitters to dip the bat and swing up, which projects the ball at a higher angle andcan result in more unproductive fly balls.

Theres this trend for hitters to want to lift the ball and they do it wrong, Mackanin said. They dont understand the whole concept of getting the ball in the air. And a nice level swing will get the ball in the air.

The manager used the example of Daniel Murphy, who is slugging .576 with 16 home runs for the first-place Washington Nationals. Murphys swing generates backspin to drive the ball out of the park. Mackanin said he believes thats the way to lift the ball, which brought him back to the revival that his own hitter, Maikel Franco, has experienced over the past week.

The manager noticed instantly during the teams trip to Milwaukee last weekend that Franco had leveled out his swing. The third baseman was hitting just .217 with a .384 slugging percentage at the all-star break, in the midst of the worst of his three full seasons with the Phillies. But Mackanin noticed Francos new swing again during batting practice in Miami on Tuesday, and predicted to pitching coach Bob McClure that he would have a good game.

Franco went 3-for-4 with a home run.

Im kind of cautiously optimistic about this, Mackanin said. If he continues to do what hes doing, hes going to have a good second half, I believe.

In the six games since the break, Franco has hit safely in five and gone 11-for-25 with four doubles.

Of course, he has had stretches like this in the past. He strung together six different hitting streaks of five or more games last year, but his batting average only rose above .260 for a couple of weeks after the first month.

Mackanin has reason to believethis time is different. Franco is not just golfing low pitches into the seats. He appears to have made a lasting tweak to his swing.

Thats what hes been doing daily in batting practice, Mackanin said. And the last three or four games he has been swinging like that. So Im pretty excited. Every day I hope to see the same swing path.

POLL: Can Franco and Herrera improve in the second half and help prevent the Phils from a 100-loss season?

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Published: July 21, 2017 3:01 AM EDT | Updated: July 21, 2017 6:31 PM EDT

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Pete Mackanin lauds Maikel Franco's progress after Phillies' road trip - Philly.com