Tufts Medical CEO stands tough, says union hurting Tufts – The Boston Globe

Tufts Medical chief Dr. Michael Wagner says he respects nurses. Those who held a one-day strike were locked out Thursday.

More than once this week, Dr. Michael Wagner has delivered a tough message: We will not be held hostage.

His tone was typically calm and measured but his meaning unmistakable. Wagner, the chief executive of Tufts Medical Center, has taken a notably hard-line approach in his hospitals showdown with the Massachusetts Nurses Association, which this week staged a nurses strike at Tufts, the first such strike in Boston in more than three decades.

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Wagner, a 58-year-old primary care doctor who has led Tufts since 2013, is now in a position that other local hospital chief executives have avoided. He says union leaders are pursuing an agenda to grow their own ranks, and theyre hurting Tufts Medical in the process.

The union went on strike for one day Wednesday, but the hospital plans to keep the nurses out until Monday, while using temporary replacement workers.

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Somebody has to step up and say the intimidation, harassment, and bullying of the MNA has to be stood up against, Wagner said in an interview Thursday, as union nurses picketed outside his office.

A study found that more patients die and are readmitted to the hospital during nurses strikes.

Union leaders say Wagner and other Tufts executives are the ones doing the bullying by denying nurses the compensation and better working conditions they deserve. The strike began after the union and the hospital failed to agree on wages, benefits, and staffing levels for the more than 1,200 unionized nurses at Tufts.

I view [Wagner] as a very capable, very measured and thoughtful health care executive, Ellen Zane, a former Tufts chief executive and vice chairwoman of the hospitals board, said by e-mail.

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In a city of many teaching hospitals, Wagner doesnt wield the same clout as the chief executives of bigger or more prestigious institutions. But he has often spoken out about issues that he sees as threats to Tufts, even when his position may make him unpopular with politicians or other business leaders.

Tufts, with 415 beds in Bostons Chinatown neighborhood, treats many seriously ill children and adults, from premature babies to adults in need of heart transplants. Its patients include many low-income families and children. But Tufts has not enjoyed the kind of brand recognition and high payment rates of its competitors, particularly Partners HealthCare.

Three years ago, Wagner watched with concern as Partners sought a takeover of South Shore Hospital in Weymouth and Hallmark Health System of Medford. He and other Partners competitors worried the deals would make the most dominant health care network in Massachusetts even more powerful.

At Tufts, Wagner convened a meeting that included the chief executives of Beth Israel Deaconess and Lahey Health. They decided to launch a coalition that waged a public campaign to derail Partners expansion plans. Ultimately, following widespread concern that its further growth would raise health care costs and lower competition, Partners abandoned its plans.

Id call him a very, very strong advocate for the medical center, said Dr. Jeffrey Lasker, who ran the network of 1,800 doctors affiliated with Tufts before retiring last year. He loves the organization.

Wagners varied career includes three stints at Tufts. Before he was promoted to chief executive, he was chief medical officer and chief of the physicians organization there. Before that, he ran a physician-staffing organization.

A graduate of Georgetown Universitys medical school, Wagner is known as passionate but mild-mannered and as a clear communicator. Hes comfortable speaking at a podium but also enjoys digging through data and the nuts and bolts of running a hospital.

The married father of four grew up in Connecticut and now lives in Pembroke.

Jessica Rinaldi/Globe Staff

Rob Osgood, Director of Emergency Services Operations (left) held a binder containing Tufts Medical Center Work Stoppage Plan as he stood beside Dr. Michael Wagner.

As chief executive at Tufts, he has tried and sometimes failed to grow the hospitals reach. In 2014, he linked Tufts with Lowell General Hospital under a new parent company called Wellforce. This year, they added Hallmark Health to that system. Wagners growth plan focuses heavily on partnerships with community doctors and hospitals.

Wagner spent many months in 2014 and 2015 negotiating a big merger with Boston Medical Center. The talks fell apart after executives from the two hospitals couldnt overcome differences of culture and strategy.

But Kate Walsh, chief executive of BMC, said she and Wagner walked away as friends. Wagner even invited her to dinner as a goodwill gesture after their merger talks ended, she said. It speaks to his maturity as leader, she said. Hes somebody I would work with again if I had the opportunity to.

Wagner, whose base salary is about $800,000 annually, says he regularly visits different units of the hospital and meets with caregivers. Many people credit him with being rightly focused on patients.

But Evelyn Finn, a union representative at the Mass. Nurses Association who has worked at Tufts for almost 40 years, said Wagner changed when he became chief executive. He became more dollars-and-cents oriented, she said. Its unfortunate to see somebody so patient-focused become so finance-focused.

Mary Havlicek Cornacchia, another union official and longtime nurse, said Wagner despite a somewhat quiet demeanor and other Tufts executives have pursued a strategy of union busting.

The strike is expected to cost Tufts at least $6 million the expense of hiring replacement workers and could ultimately cost more. Wagners hard-line approach with the nurses union is winning him some quiet praise among other hospital leaders, even as it makes him an enemy to some rank-and-file workers. Wagner said he deeply respects nurses and the important role they play in the hospital. His criticism, he said, is directed at union officials.

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Tufts Medical CEO stands tough, says union hurting Tufts - The Boston Globe

Sessions says Trump has directed him to issue guidance on religious liberty protections – The Hill

President Trump has directed Attorney General Jeff SessionsJeff SessionsFreedom Caucus leader warns McConnell over Senate ad Overnight Tech: New FCC effort to crack down on robocalls | Poll finds Trump voters back idea of net neutrality | DraftKings, FanDuel call off merger Sessions says Trump has directed him to issue guidance on religious liberty protections MORE to issue new guidance to governmentagencies for interpreting federal religious liberty protections.

The attorney general revealed the directive on Tuesday in a speech to the conservative Christian legal group Alliance Defending Freedom. The Federalist on Thursday released Sessions'prepared remarks from the event, which members of the press were barred from attending.

"The president has also directed me to issue guidance on how to apply federal religious liberty protections," Sessions said. "The department is finalizing this guidance, and I will soon issue it."

The fact that Sessions has been directed to issue such guidance fulfills a key provision of Trump's May 4 executive order granting religious organizations and churches greater leeway in their political activities, such asendorsing candidates.

It also offers "regulatory relief" to religious groups that object to the Affordable Care Act's provision mandating that employers offer certain health services to their employees, such as access to contraceptives.

That executive order calls for the attorney general to "issue guidance interpreting religious liberty protections in Federal law."

In the address on Tuesday, Sessions vowed that the Trump administration would stand up for "religious Americans," saying that the "cultural climate has become less hospitable to people of faith and to religious belief."

"Under this administration, religious Americans will be treated neither as an afterthought nor as a problem to be managed," he said. "The federal government will actively find ways to accommodate people of all faiths."

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Sessions says Trump has directed him to issue guidance on religious liberty protections - The Hill

Memories of bustling black enclave inspire vision for Liberty District’s future – Columbus Ledger-Enquirer


Columbus Ledger-Enquirer
Memories of bustling black enclave inspire vision for Liberty District's future
Columbus Ledger-Enquirer
The glory days of the Liberty District remain etched in the minds of people who lived, worked and played there. Tax Commissioner Lula Huff remembers what it was like back in the '50s and '60s when the district was a bustling, black enclave with ...

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Memories of bustling black enclave inspire vision for Liberty District's future - Columbus Ledger-Enquirer

Liberty return home to face Chicago (Jul 13, 2017) – FOXSports.com

The New York Liberty and head coach Bill Laimbeer are probably looking forward to returning home.

Coming off a 1-3 road trip, the Liberty (8-8) open a crucial homestand against the Chicago Fire on Friday night at Madison Square Garden.

While closing out the road trip, the Liberty struggled against the Phoenix Mercury on Sunday, shooting only 35.4 percent in a game dominated by Mercury center Brittney Griner (31 points, 13 rebounds and six blocked shots).

Despite trailing by 17 and eventually losing by 12, the Liberty saw a silver lining in the loss.

You want to feel good, especially with the All-Star break approaching, Liberty All-Star Tina Charles said. There was a certain way that we played with energy and great effort. Everybody that stepped on the court contributed and showed what their strength is. We want to keep that rolling.

The Liberty will have that opportunity on Friday at home, where New York is a different team. The Liberty average 82.4 points per game at the Garden where they are 5-3. On the road, New York scores at a 75.3 clip and is 3-5.

The one constant for the Liberty has been Charles. She is second in the league in scoring at 20.8 points per game and contributes 9.1 rebounds per game as well as 2.4 assists.

For her efforts, Charles on Tuesday was selected as a 2017 WNBA All-Star starter for the third time. She will be making her fifth appearance in the All-Star game, scheduled for July 22 in Seattle.

No player in the WNBA works harder or means more to their team than Tina Charles, said Laimbeer, who will coach the Eastern Conference squad.

Chicago (5-12) has a two-game winning streak after handing Dallas a 90-84 loss on Wednesday.

A pair of ex-DePaul players led the way for the Sky. Allie Quigley scored a game-high 22 points while Keisha Hampton came off the bench to toss in a season-high 12 points.

Keisha has a great work ethic and a great basketball mind, Quigley told the Daily Herald of Hampton. Shes always ready to come in and shoot. Hard work has paid off for her.

Hard work also has paid off for Quigley, a two-time WNBA Sixth Woman of the Year Award winner. Chicago is her fifth team and she leads the Sky in scoring at 16.4 points per game.

The Sky and Liberty have yet to play this season but have two more games against each other after Friday.

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Liberty return home to face Chicago (Jul 13, 2017) - FOXSports.com

North Liberty gets a look at new Geico office – The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines

Jul 13, 2017 at 7:54 pm | Print View

Geicos new North Liberty office would stand two-stories tall and have a mix of brick, glass and painted metal.

The North Liberty City Council reviewed a site plan this week for the office, which was first announced in May.

Geico, a Maryland-based insurance company, plans to construct a more than 50,000-square-foot office building in a North Liberty office park along Landon Road, east of Interstate 380 and west of Kansas Avenue.

As part of the project, Geico would move employees from its current Coralville office. Geico has about 400 employees in that location.

In a memo, city staff said the building would be about as long as one city block.

The office would have room for more than 600 work stations, in addition to management offices and conference rooms, according to building plans. A parking lot would sit just north of the office.

The city expects Geicos new office to be open in April 2018. It will be the third tenant in North Libertys the Villas at Liberty Executive Park.

Council members also reviewed plans for a new storage facility by North Liberty Storage LLC. The facility would be built east of I-380 and west of North Madison Avenue.

The property would have seven storage buildings that range from 1,000 to 15,200 square feet.

l Comments: (319) 398-8366; matthew.patane@thegazette.com

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North Liberty gets a look at new Geico office - The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines

Trump Admits His Religious Liberty Order Is Just A Great Thing for Christianity – Religion Dispatches

President Trump sat down with Pat Robertson in the Oval Office on Wednesday to give his first non-Fox News interview in more than two months. The Christian Broadcasting Network just posted the full video of its founders conversation with the president, and while no one was expecting the 87-year-old televangelist to ask hard-hitting questions, the sycophantic glad-handing between the two wealthy, elderly white men was hard to stomach.

After Robertson applauded Trumps willingness to work with Russia, and without question accepted Trumps claim that he gets along really fantastically with every countrys top leaders (despite photographic evidence from the recent G20 summit that suggests otherwise), Robertson turned, predictably, to his fellow white evangelicals support for Trump.

The evangelicals of America voted 83 percent in the last election for you, Robertson said, overstating that percentage and neglecting to clarify that it was roughly 80percent of white evangelical Christianswho supported Trump.And I want you to know there are thousands and thousands of people praying for you all the time and holding you up.

(Of course, Trump already knows this, since he welcomed a veritable whos-who of the anti-gay Christian rightto the Oval Office on Monday, where those faith leaders laid hands on the 45th president, and bragged about the open door policy they enjoy at the White House and the Eisenhower Office building.)

The evangelicals were so great to me, Trump responded. He continued:

And they didthey came out in massive numbers, and on top of that I got 83 percent. But they came out in record numbers; they never came out like that. And weve really helped, because Ive gotten rid of the Johnson Amendment, now were going to go try and get rid of it permanently in Congress, but Ive signed an executive order so that now, people like you, that I want to hear from, ministers and preachers and rabbis, and whoever it may be, they can speak. You know, you couldnt speak politically before. Now you can. And I want to hear from you, and others, that we like. Franklin Graham, I had such a, Dr. Jeffress, Robert Jeffress, who is such a great guy, Pastor Jeffress. He used to go on television, I didnt know who he was, Id see him and he was always speaking so well of me, and, you know, you have so many people that I want to hear from. Now theyre going to be able to speak, and thats going to be a great thing for Christianity, believe me. A great, great thing. And its a great thing for religion.

Trump is overstating the impact of that May executive order, which ultimately amounted to a whole lot of nothing, as Ive reported here on RD. Anddespite the presidents proclamation, the Johnson Amendment remains in force, though it has rarely, if ever, actually been used to penalize a clergyperson for speaking out about politics or a particular candidate.

Of course, the bigger news here is that Trump just admitted (again) that his executive and administrative actions are intended to privilege Christians, and specifically advance the conservative, anti-gay, anti-choiceagendaof people the President loves like Pat Robertson. (In case you need a reminder of just how far-right Robertson lies, check outThe Daily Beasts admirable recounting of all the insane things he has said.)

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Trump Admits His Religious Liberty Order Is Just A Great Thing for Christianity - Religion Dispatches

West Liberty school shooting suspect ordered to mental health hospital – Springfield News Sun

The teen accused of opening fire at West Liberty-Salem High School has been admitted to a mental health hospital because he posed a, substantial risk of physical harm to himself or others, according to court records.

Ely Serna, 17, faces several charges, including attempted murder, in connection with the school shooting on Jan. 20 that left another student seriously injured. He has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity.

RELATED:Judge accepts West Liberty suspects insanity plea, orders hearing

Serna was admitted to Twin Valley Behavioral Healthcare on July 6 after mental health professionals visited him at the Central Ohio Youth Center and said he was, subject to hospitalization by court order, court records say.

His attorney submitted a request to have the teen evaluated for competency on July 7. Prosecutors will respond to the request before the judge decides if the evaluation will be allowed, Champaign County Prosecutor Kevin Talebi said.

Sernas attorney also filed a motion to suppress statements and other evidence in the case, according to court records. A hearing on the matter had been scheduled for Thursday in Champaign County Common Pleas court.

But the hearing has been cancelled until the motion regarding competency is resolved, Champaign County Common Pleas Court Judge Nick Selvaggio said in court records.

RELATED:West Liberty victim attends court hearing for accused school shooter

Sernas case was recently transferred to adult court from Champaign County Juvenile Court. His attorney, Dennis Lieberman, has also requested the case be returned to juvenile court. He previously told the Springfield News-Sun he has specific reasons why he believes his client was insane at the time of the shooting. However, he declined to give those reasons in an interview.

Investigators allege Serna brought a shotgun to school and opened fire. Logan Cole was shot twice and was left with more than 100 shotgun pellets in his body. Another student was grazed by pellets but not seriously injured.

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West Liberty school shooting suspect ordered to mental health hospital - Springfield News Sun

Liberty basketball’s Pacheco-Ortiz wraps up play at FIBA U19 World Cup – Augusta Free Press

Published Thursday, Jul. 13, 2017, 3:44 pm

Front Page Sports Liberty basketballs Pacheco-Ortiz wraps up play at FIBA U19 World Cup

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Liberty basketball point guard Georgie Pacheco-Ortiz wrapped up play at the FIBA U19 World Cup as he represented Puerto Rico. Pacheco-Ortiz and Puerto Rico finished the tournament with three straight wins and a ninth place finish in the World Cup.

I am very proud of this team even though being in the top-10 in the world wasnt our goal Im still very proud of my team, Pacheco-Ortiz said. For being a small island with 3.4 million people and being #9 in the world its great and bring happiness to our little island Puerto Rico.

Pacheco-Ortiz and Puerto Rico played in seven games and finished in ninth place with a 3-4 record. For the tournament, Pacheco-Ortiz averaged 10.7 points, 4.1 rebounds, and a team-leading 3.6 assists. The native of Ponce, Puerto Rico was very efficient on the floor, committing just 1.4 turnovers per game while playing the most minutes of any player for Puerto Rico and posting the third highest efficiency on the team at 7.4 per contest.

Throughout the course of the nine day event, Pacheco-Ortiz faced some of the top competition in the world, playing a handful of players that play for programs like FC Bayern Munich. In addition, Pacheco-Ortiz faced five players playing Division I basketball from schools like Kentucky, Miami and Gonzaga.

Anytime you represent your country it is a great privilege and an honor. As a program we are so proud of Georgie, Liberty mens basketball head coach Ritchie McKay said. I watched each game and he continued to pick up his level of play as the tournament progressed. He was a catalyst for his teams success, much like how he was for Liberty this past year.

As the floor general for Puerto Rico, Pacheco-Ortiz excelled leading the team in assists in five of the seven games he played. Pacheco-Ortiz ranked 14thin the tournament in assists per game, 30thin scoring and 49thin rebounds.

After starting the tournament with four defeats against three of the top-7 teams including Germany and France, Puerto Rico regrouped and rattled off three straight victories to close out the tournament. Pacheco-Ortiz saved his best scoring performance for the last game of the tournament against Japan, shooting 8-of-17 from the field for a team-high 19 points.

Georgie is a smart player and he has so much passion for the game. He did very well because he is so focused on what he needs to do by performing the right way, head coach of Puerto Rico Omar Gonzalez said. We are always proud when Puerto Ricans can play in the United States and in the NCAA so we are really proud that Georgie can play at one of the highest levels.

To help seal the win, Pacheco-Ortiz shot 50 percent (2-4) from three-point range to go along with four rebounds and an assist. In addition to running the offense, Pacheco-Ortiz proved to be a constant scoring threat having recorded double-digit scoring in four of the seven games in the World Cup.

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Liberty basketball's Pacheco-Ortiz wraps up play at FIBA U19 World Cup - Augusta Free Press

Religious Liberty vs. Free Expression – TAPinto.net

Again, while you were planning your Fourth of July activities, during the last week of June, during the closing session of the Supreme Court, two rulings came down.

First, a partial allowance of Trumps travel ban. A quick take: The ban was for only 90 days. So by the time the Supreme Court takes up the case, it should be a moot point. I believe the court just kicked the can down the road knowing this. It will eventually take up a case on the limits of executive power regarding immigration, even though as late as 2013, they have made their rulings on this quite clear. What probably will be challenged is whatever comes after the ban expires. Just my opinion.

Second, the Supreme Court said it will take up the case of the Colorado baker who refused to make a specialty cake for a gay wedding. In spite of whatever coverage you may have read or heard on this, as the Trump ban took up most of the oxygen, this is NOT about reopening the case for or against same-sex marriage. He did not refuse a gay couple a wedding cake, as the Associated Press reported, nor did he refuse to serve a gay couple, as The New York Times reported.

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The fact is, everything in his shop was available to anyone, whether gay or straight. What the bake shop owner, Jack Phillips, would not do was use his special talents in cake artistry to make a unique cake for David Mullins and Charlie Craigs wedding based on his long-standing and widely known religious reasons. The cake the couple wanted was erotic-themed. This case actually centers on whether unelected civil rights commissions are empowered to decide when your religious rights are appropriate.

In this case, the lower courts, like in the Trump Travel ban, took it upon themselves to divine the real intentions as opposed to the spoken and written intentions. The lower courts again gave themselves the power to read minds and hearts.

There are a couple of points omitted from the coverage: This incident happened in 2012. This is important. Neither Colorado nor the Supreme Court ruled at the time the legality of same sex marriage. In Colorado, at the time, it was illegal. This is why, for this case, same-sex marriage is a moot point. A little research would have shown this to the reporters. However, where would the template be?

What the lower courts ruled was that religious liberty takes a back seat to free expression when it crosses hairs with political advocacy or opinion. It gave itself the power to decide when religious beliefs matter to you. You see, in 2014, in the same state of Colorado, a man walked into a bakery (not the same one here) and ordered two cakes in the shape of a bible with these two passages written on them. One: God hates sin, Pslam 45:7. Two: Homosexuality is a detestable sin, Leviticus 18:22. The baker refused. The case was thrown out.

So, here we are. Two cases where the courts have decided they can divine your true intentions. Not on the cases before them, but on what was uttered in different circumstances. This is the real question before the Supreme Court: Are courts or other unelected officials allowed to read your minds and hearts? Can they use that power to make people see the world their way?

This is what I say. What say you?

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Religious Liberty vs. Free Expression - TAPinto.net

Long, Libertarians have common ground – MyWebTimes.com

State Rep. Jerry Long found agreement on Thursday with local Libertarians on his opposition to the recent tax increase and FOID cards, but he encountered differences over marijuana laws.

Long, R-Streator, took questions from the Illinois Valley Libertarian Party at the Prairie Lakes Country Club near Marseilles.

He said conservative Republicans like himself are close philosophically to Libertarians, which favor less government in the economy and social affairs.

Last week, Long voted against the state budget that included an income tax increase. He said Democratic House Speaker Michael Madigan did not budge "one inch" in his negotiations with Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner.

Rauner, meanwhile, offered to support a temporary tax increase with structural economic reforms, yet Madigan got his way, Long said. That proves again Madigan controls Illinois, Long said.

"Michael Madigan is the problem in Illinois. He drove Illinois into the hole," Long said.

Temporarily, he said, the tax increase will bring more revenue to the state. Long-term, though, it will drive more and more people out of Illinois, reducing the state's tax base, he said.

"A lot of people can't pack up and leave. Farmers can't pack up. How can you pack up your acres and leave?" he said.

On another issue, Long said he supported laws to decriminalize marijuana below half an ounce of marijuana, assessing a small fine in those cases. When people have more than that amount, he said, they're likely distributing.

"No one has ever overdosed on marijuana," one Libertarian said.

The local party's chairwoman, Jenae Wise, pushed Long to support marijuana legalization.

"It would bring so much revenue. That is undeniable," she said.

Long asked, "You don't feel marijuana is the gateway to other drugs?"

The Libertarians said they didn't.

Long said he would be happy to revisit the issue.

"We'll talk about it a little bit later," he said.

Sunday car sales: Long said he was open to allowing car sales on Sundays. State law requires car dealerships be closed on Sundays, a law that dealers convinced the Legislature to support decades ago.

Fireworks: Long said he wouldn't mind legalizing fireworks.

FOID cards: Long said he is pushing a bill to ban the cards, which have long been required of gun owners. But he said Madigan and the Democrats prevented the legislation from going anywhere. "The purpose was to curb crime. It hasn't done that. It gives the state strength over individuals," Long said.

Pensions: Long said the state needs to keep the pension promises it has made to government workers. But he said the state needed to find a way to curb pension spending.

Politics: More Republicans need to be elected, Long said. That's the only way to reduce Madigan's power, he said.

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Long, Libertarians have common ground - MyWebTimes.com

Libertarian Party of Arkansas Gets 2018 Ballot Access | KUAR – KUAR

For the fourth election cycle in a row, the Libertarian Party of Arkansas has been officially recognized as a new political party. It needed 10,000 signatures to be able to put its candidates on the 2018 ballot. The Arkansas Secretary of States office has certified that 12,749 out of 15,108 signatures were determined valid.

The party had 90 days to collect signatures. Libertarians submitted them on June 12th. In a statement, LPA Treasurer Stephen Wait said it came at a cost of over $25,000 in addition a lot of volunteer hours.

Political parties in Arkansas need to garner at least 3-percent of the vote in either the governors race or a presidential election to retain automatic ballot access for the next election. In 2016, Presidential candidate Gary Jonson garnered 2.6 percent and in 2014 gubernatorial hopeful Frank Gilbert received 1.9 percent support.

Republican Governor Asa Hutchinson has declared he will run for the states top office again in 2018. No Democrats have announced at this juncture. Libertarian Mark West is seeking his partys nomination. West took in 23.7 percent of the 2016 vote for the U.S. House seat for District 1 in east Arkansas.

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Libertarian Party of Arkansas Gets 2018 Ballot Access | KUAR - KUAR

Libertarians’ Lost Voice in the Paid Leave Debate – Reason.com – Reason

Policy leaders are pressing the government to ensure workers have paid time off. Whether government has any businesses dictating what benefits must be included in the employment packages of Americans is rarely considered. The libertarian perspective is all but entirely absent in the discussion. That needs to change.

Our federal government has limited responsibilities, and micromanaging leave practices isn't one of them. Even the best-intentioned policies have unintended consequences that backfire on those they are supposed to help. We need to call out policymakers who use the excuse of a safety net to justify any new rules and regulations that needlessly restrict options for all Americans.

That's the predictable tactic employed by the Left, which is pushing extensive paid leave programs with increasing success. San Francisco's city council created a city-wide paid leave mandate on top of California's state paid leave program. Washington, DC just created an even more generous program.

Liberal women's groups and progressive activists regularly promote social media memes charging the United States is alone in the world in failing to guarantee paid time off for workers. They imply this deficiency is latent sexism or a lack of compassion for workers, women, and children.

But some on the Right are also embracing this logic. The American Enterprise Instituteconsidered a free-market organizationjust released a joint report with the more liberal Brookings Institution, entitled "Paid Family and Medical Leave: An Issue Whose Time Has Come." The authors noted they'd disagreed about the particulars of the best policy solution, but "unanimously agreed that some form of paid parental leave should be offered to help workers at the time of birth, adoption, or fostering of a child."

They outline a "compromise plan" to provide eligible workers with 70 percent of their wages for eight weeks of gender-neutral paid parental leave. This new federal entitlement program would be funded by a dedicated payroll tax and cuts to other spending.

AEI's report came just after the release of the President's budget outline, which included funding to expand the state-based Unemployment Insurance system with the goal of providing workers with a similar benefit.

There is pushback against sweeping new government entitlements. The Independent Women's Forum (where I work) argues that policymakers should instead seek policy reforms that help workers while minimizing economic disruption. Allowing workers to save tax-free for when they need time off for work is one such idea.

The Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) could also serve as a model to provide a financial boost to lower-income workers who lack paid leave benefits. The IWF argues that any government intervention ought to be need-based, rather than a mandated entitlement program that would effectively do to our compensation system what ObamaCare did to health insurance.

The public likes the idea of government doing something to make sure new parents have a benefit that lets them spend more time at home with their children. But often overlooked is that the money has to come from somewhere. Businesses forced to pay more for benefits have less for increased wages.

Mandates that make employees more expensive offer less incentive for businesses to hire more and more highly skilled employees (that's bad news for lower-wage workers). Employers may avoid hiring those most likely to use benefits, particularly women. A government one-size-fits-all paid leave program would also discourage voluntary alternative work arrangements like job-sharing and telecommuting that benefit employers and employees.

Allowing the government to dictate what must be in our employment contracts is another chip off the block of basic liberty and self-determination. It becomes illegal for an employer to offer a job that doesn't fit the government rule. As an employee, you can't choose to take a greater share of your compensation as take-home pay; you can't decide to save on your own for time away from work in the future; government has decided how this must be handled.

There is also the matter of fairness. A paid leave mandate creates winners and losers. People with families and children will receive the benefits, while those who cannot or choose not to have children will pay for benefits they are far less likely to use.

That doesn't mean that companies shouldn't offer leave benefits. Rather we should allow employers to create a variety of work relationships that appeal to their employees' unique needs. Some workers will gravitate to businesses offering more robust benefits. Others may prefer companies that compensate with higher pay. Enabling people to act on their preferences is what the marketplace is all about.

The United States is a Constitutional Republic with a federal government that is supposed to have limited powers used for very specific purposes. Micromanaging employment contracts or taxing some citizens to give money to others shouldn't be among those powers.

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Libertarians' Lost Voice in the Paid Leave Debate - Reason.com - Reason

Larry Sharpe Announces Run For NY Governorship As a Libertarian – The Libertarian Republic

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Larry Sharpe, the 2nd place runner-up 2016 vice presidential candidate, announced that he was running for Governor of New York in 2018. He did this as a birthday announcement and confirmed he was running as a member of the Libertarian Party, instead of Republican like some libertarians have done, such as Ron Paul and recently Austin Petersen.

In the live stream, he said that he wanted his campaign to be a model for future Libertarian campaigns and stressed that he was in it to win.

I will run as a Libertarian and Libertarian only. I will show the nation that you can win as a Libertarian, that you can run a campaign as a Libertarian, and you can be taken seriously as a Libertarian, he said.

Sharpe is a relative newcomer to the Libertarian Party, having risen from obscurity to almost snatching the vice presidential nominee spot from Bill Weld.

Elliot Axellman, the chairman of the Queens, New York Libertarian Party, wrote last month about Larry Sharpes qualifications:

He is exceptionally kindhearted, a fantastic speaker, and bi-racial. He is experienced and patient and possesses a scholarly type of wisdom; yet he is also young, energetic, and cool enough to easily relate to nearly every type of millennial. Sharpe is a strong advocate in the battle to end drugprohibition, arguing that it is no more effective than alcohol prohibition was, and imprisoning people for smoking it should have stopped decades ago.

Sharpe faces an uphill battle in a state that has elected Democrats to the governorship since 2008. However, he is helped that Cuomo approval rating has dropped recently to 46 percent according to a recent Quinnipiac University poll.

Only Cuomo and Sharpe have announced their intentions to run for governor. No Republicans or Democrats have entered the race yet, as of this publication.

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Larry Sharpe Announces Run For NY Governorship As a Libertarian - The Libertarian Republic

An Open Letter to Roger Stone From a Sandy Hook Mother – The … – The Atlantic

There is so very little about the devastating moments after learning about our daughters murder that I remember clearly. Our brains have this amazing capacity for protecting us by limiting the amount of information that we can take in at one time. For nearly six months after the shooting, I asked myself and those around me daily, Did this really happen?

Thats what I thought about on Monday when I learned that Roger Stone, a political strategist, was attacking the parents of Seth Rich, the Democratic National Committee staffer whose murder has attracted the interest of conspiracy theorists. Does anyone else thinks it's odd that Seth Rich's parents have no interest in finding out who killed their son ? #payoff? he asked on Twitter. I thought of their grief, and remembered my own.

Our 6-year-old daughter Ana Grace was murdered in the nations worst elementary school mass shooting on December 14, 2012, in Newtown, Connecticut. Our son survived. Yet despite hearing from first responders, planning a funeral, and lowering a tiny white coffin into the ground, the idea that we would have to spend the rest of our lives without her was too difficult to accept. I heard her, saw her, and felt her for weeks afterward. I stood in a check-out line at a Target girls section with an arm full of clothing for a boy and a girl the following spring.

A Mother's Fear Post-Sandy Hook

There was just no way I could fathom the amount of pain, the amount of missing, the amount of grief that flooded our world (and continues to) since Anas loss. As the five-year mark of the tragedy approaches, we still struggle. We have done amazing things. We have started a foundation. We have made the world more beautiful and more safe. We have raised tens of thousands of dollars for charity. We have raised awareness and provide funding for programs that reduce social isolation and promote community and connection to reduce violence. Our focus is schools. Our focus is raising our surviving son. Our focus is staying married and healthy and beating dismal odds. And yet for our family, the shock that this is your life for the rest of your life? It never fully goes away.

This level of shock/denial isn't uncommon or even remotely something we should pathologize. In the familiar Kbler-Ross grief stages, denial is the beginning of the journey and acceptance is the final destination. But grief is not linear, nor can it be neatly packaged or compartmentalized into logical phases. Grief is a loopy road full of U-turns and nosedives. Grief is messy and unpredictable. I have often said, Somewhere on the continuum between overwhelmed and overcomingthat is where a griever lives at all times.

I am finally willing to accept that Ana was brutally taken from us. I am willing to accept that my husband and I have joined a large but mostly marginalized tribe called bereaved parents. But I am not willing to accept that we live in an America that normalizes the abuse of bereaved parents who lose their loved ones to tragedy.

Culturally, we have much to understand about grief and providing support to victims. But we are now asking survivors of high-profile tragedy to withstand not only their loss, but flagrant and intentional harm after it.

This harm comes in the form of attacks on parents by conspiracy theorists. My own experience with them has taught me that they come in a few varieties:

Conspiracy theorists have been around for a long time. They shouldn't be confused with those who simply engage in healthy questioning of government, of people, or of ideas. Questioning is necessary and good. The sting of cruelty of those in the second category fades over time. You learn to pick them out and perhaps even feel sorry for them. It is wrong and awful but you come to realize that they are even more miserable than you are. And our local police have been amazing in their response to all of this.

But the third category is where you come in, Roger Stone. You intentionally use your platform to espouse theories debunked by law enforcement and that a bereaved family has expressly asked you to stop promoting.

Your actions have real consequences for those of us grieving. Your continued exploitation of these types of events result in targeted attacks by other hoaxers. Your continued attacks make it nearly impossible for us to heal. It is our job to handle the business of surviving child lossforging a path on a planet with an incomplete family. It should not be our job to deal with the likes of the bullshit you put out.

You identify as a libertarian, conservative, rabble rouser and I counter that you are none of what you describe. There is nothing libertarian about attacking bereaved parents. There is nothing conservative about suggesting that Seth Richs family was paid off. There is no amount of money in the world that would be enough to take part in anything like this.

Be careful when you mess with the bereaved. We are starting to speak out and stand up for each other. Hear the rally cry of a small but fearless group of hurting people reminding you that this isn't funny. This is real.

You are not a rabble rouser. You are irresponsible. You are cruel. You are a bully. You are careless in word and deed. And I will not normalize this. We will not normalize this. None of us should.

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An Open Letter to Roger Stone From a Sandy Hook Mother - The ... - The Atlantic

Cook Islands creates huge Pacific Ocean reserve – Phys.Org

July 14, 2017 Environmentalist Kevin Iro has been campaigning for the creation of the Cook Island's marine sanctuary Marae Moana for more than five years

The Cook Islands has created one of the world's largest marine sanctuaries, protecting a vast swathe of the Pacific Ocean more than three times the size of France.

Legislation setting up the 1.9 million square kilometre (735,000 square mile) reserve passed through the tiny nation's parliament late Thursday.

Environmentalist Kevin Iro, who first proposed the idea more than five years ago, said it was a landmark achievement that would help preserve the ocean for future generations.

"It's a historic time, particularly because everyone supported it, including our traditional leaders who spearheaded the whole thing," he told AFP.

The Cook Islands has a population of just 10,000 and its 15 islands have a combined landmass of 236 sq km, barely the size of Washington DC.

But its isolated position in the Pacific, about halfway between New Zealand and Hawaii with no near neighbours, means it has a huge maritime territory.

Iro said Cook Islanders had an affinity with the ocean and viewed it as sacred but overfishing and pollution had damaged the marine environment, including the coral reefs that once ringed all the islands.

He said the marine reserve, known as Marae Moana, would give the environment a chance to heal, allowing the islanders to protect their legacy.

"When I moved back here (from New Zealand) about 16 years ago I saw what was happening to the lagoons and reefs and really wanted to protect them for my kids," he said.

"I want them to have the same experience I did as a boy growing up."

The idea is not to ban commercial fishing or mineral exploration outright, but to ensure it is carried out in a sustainable manner.

However, there will be a core no-fishing zone totalling about 320,000 sq km, extending 50 nautical miles from the coastline of each island.

Prime Minister Henry Puna said Marae Moana provided a blueprint for managing ocean environments worldwide.

"Together we had a vision to turn our little country into the cleanest and greenest tourism destination in the whole wide world," the Cook Islands News quoted him as telling parliament.

"We not only recognise that the ocean brings us revenue in terms of fishery and tourism and potentially sea bed minerals - it also provides us with clean air, clean water, and clean food to nourish and sustain us."

Puna's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Explore further: Cook Islands declares world's largest marine park

2017 AFP

The Cook Islands announced the creation of world's largest marine park at the opening of the Pacific Islands Forum, a vast swathe of ocean almost twice the size of France.

An ambitious plan to link marine parks across a vast swathe of oceanwhose surface area would equal that of the Moonis slowly coming together piece by piece, say conservationists.

The tiny Pacific island nation of Palau created a vast marine sanctuary the size of Spain on Wednesday, banning fishing across the bulk of its waters to preserve the ocean for future generations.

Britain on Thursday announced plans to double the area of ocean under marine protection around the country's overseas territories to a size greater than the landmass of India.

Britain on Wednesday said it intended to create what will be the world's biggest fully-protected marine reserve, covering an area nearly the size of France and Germany put together in the Pacific Ocean.

Victoria University of Wellington student Lea Raymond is gaining new insights into a Cook Islands "brain drain", as part of her Master of Development Studies.

Land mammals and reptiles in the Pacific islands facing extinction due to habitat loss, hunting and other threats could be decimated by climate change, a study published Thursday said.

More than 170 years after Edgar Allan Poe's fictional raven croaked, "Nevermore," scientists are reporting that real-life ravens think about the future.

Stress is a major risk factor for a range of psychopathologies. However, stress does not affect everyone equally: in the face of sustained adversity, some people develop depression symptoms while others adapt and remain resilient. ...

Scientists have made an important step in understanding how cells keep themselves clean and healthy - a finding that may have implications for combating neurodegenerative diseases and cancer.

Squirrels can remember problem-solving techniques for long periods and can apply them to new situations, researchers have discovered.

The malaria parasite's success is owed to the stripping down of its genome to the bare essential genes, scientists at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and their collaborators have found. In the first ever large-scale study ...

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Cook Islands creates huge Pacific Ocean reserve - Phys.Org

Former employees indicted for leaking nude images of Virgin Islands delegate – Politico

Two former employees of Stacey Plaskett, Congress delegate from the Virgin Islands, have been indicted in connection with the circulation of nude images of Plaskett and her husband.

One former aide, Juan McCullum, was charged with two counts of cyberstalking, and the other, Dorene Browne-Louis, faces two obstruction of justice charges in a case investigated by the U.S. Capitol Police and prosecuted by the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia.

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According to authorities, both aides worked for Plaskett for more than a year before they departed in mid-2016. The images had been circulated widely by late July 2016 and Plaskett confirmed at the time they had been stolen from her.

According to the U.S. attorneys description of the charges, in March 2016, Plaskett asked McCullum to take her iPhone to an Apple store for repairs. While he had her phone, he created Hotmail and Facebook accounts under a pseudonym to distribute and post nude images of Plaskett and her spouse. He used these social media accounts to encourage others to spread the images and videos around Plasketts congressional district, according to the U.S. attorneys office.

McCullum allegedly alerted Browne-Louis to his actions, who later deleted his text messages from her phone and gave false, incomplete, and misleading statements to law enforcement about her knowledge of McCullums actions. She is due to appear in federal court on July 19, while McCullums first appearance has yet to be scheduled.

The allegations, if proved, would represent a shocking betrayal by the delegates own staff, and a turnabout from her initial suggestion that her political enemies had hacked her computer and distributed the files.

The theft and distribution of these personal images via the internet marks a new low in Virgin Islands politics, she said at the time. I am shocked and deeply saddened that someone would stoop to such a level as to invade my marriage and the love of my family in an attempt to besmirch me politically.

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Private photographs shared between my husband and me, as well as a private playful video of our family, including one of our children, were illegally obtained and disseminated via the internet. To say my family and I are greatly upset would be a tremendous understatement," Plaskett added. "As a mother I am outraged that one of my children was exploited in such a way. The theft and dissemination of these images via the internet is a shockingly disgusting invasion of my familys and my privacy - not to mention criminal acts in violation of both territorial and federal law."

Plaskett, a lawyer and former congressional staffer, is in her second term as a delegate.

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Former employees indicted for leaking nude images of Virgin Islands delegate - Politico

33 beautiful islands to visit in South Korea – CNN

(CNN) Fact: If you tried to visit one South Korean island a day, it would take you more than nine years to get to them all (there are 3,358 officially affirmed islands off the South Korean coast).

While most travelers in the region have most likely heard of Jeju, South Korea's most famous island and one of the New 7 Wonders of Nature, the seas surrounding the Korean Peninsula are peppered with lesser-known islands with spectacular views and awesome fishing.

Many are familiar with Moses dividing the Red Sea, but this biblical story has its own, more scientifically plausible version on Seonjaedo.

At low tide, the ocean parts to reveal a sandy path from Seonjaedo to the smaller satellite island of Mok. Who knew the city of Incheon, best known for its airport, had such a patch of natural beauty?

Sinuido, which was featured in a 2008 episode of the KBS2 channel's travel program, "1 night 2 days" (1 2), is the largest producer of sea salt in South Korea.

One visits this island not for the fishing, hiking or swimming -- but rather, to gawk at the surreal mounds of salt in the salterns, waiting to be harvested.

The rocky, diminutive (6.47 square kilometers) Hongdo, with its killer sunrises and wealth of peculiar rock formations, has been likened to a flower floating on the water.

Named for the crimson light that envelops the entire island at sunset (hong is Korean for "crimson"), Hongdo's 6.47 square kilometers is home to about 270 subspecies of evergreen and about 170 species of animals.

With turtledoves and black coral, mountain goats and clean seas, it's not surprising that in the past people once (well, more than once) fought over possession of Cheongsando.

It also doesn't hurt that the fishing is superb, with abalone porridge and hoe (raw fish) as local specialties.

This popular vacation destination is the major fishery of the eastern coast -- that is, even more so than all the other coastal fishing villages along South Korea's peninsular shoreline. This, as we know by now, translates into good seafood. Ulleungdo's signature catch is the cuttlefish.

Otherwise the island is packed with dazzling little nooks -- caves, waterfalls, seaside walks and ancient trees -- all very well-equipped for visitors.

Deokjeokdo's formula of forest, mountain and shore may not be anything particularly new, but it works.

Near Incheon, this northern island of mud flats, pebbled beaches and 300-year-old pines can nonetheless hold its own in a beauty contest against some of South Korea's better-known southern beauties.

We already have an island that looks like a cow (Udo). But who knew? We also have the Yellow Sea's Uido, Uido meaning "cow ear."

And while this resemblance is even more tenuous, Uido also has beaches for swimming and fishing, and a rather famous sand dune.

As the fifth largest island in South Korea, Ganghwado, accessible via a short drive over a bridge, doesn't really feel like an island.

Its main attractions are its many mountains, rather than its beaches -- the tallest and most popular being 468-meter Mount Mani.

Not to say there aren't other activities: You can check out the 120-odd dolmen at the foot of Mount Goryeo, which date back to the Bronze Age, or roll around in the mud flats.

The "Wan" in Wando means "to smile broadly."

Easily done on Wando -- from hiking to the top of 644-meter Sanghwang Peak (or any of its lesser neighboring peaks) to fishing. The island, from beach to peak, is bustling and wonderfully scenic.

While it may be a difficult and lonely place to live, lacking its own water source (water is either collected rainwater or water brought over from neighboring Ulleungdo) and difficult to come and go (the only entrance to the island is a spiral staircase of 365 steps), Jukdo's attractiveness lies in its tranquil seclusion -- its current population is two.

With a prospering tourist industry, Geojedo, the second largest island in Korea (second only to Jejudo), while smack at the center of the beaten track, is remarkably clean and well preserved.

Representative attractions include the grassy green hill by the sea, "The Hill of the Wind," and Hakdong Black Pearl Mongdol Beach, where the beach is composed of round, black pebbles that make muted jangling noises when the waves splash against the shore.

Although but four kilometers away from Geojedo, the subtropical Oedo was once a lonely, craggy place without electricity.

Today it is one huge (over 132 square kilometers) botanical garden with over 3,000 species of exotic plant life and fetching Western-style buildings and sculptures, a regular backdrop for K-Dramas and often called a "paradise."

Somaemuldo, one of Hallyeo Hasesang (Maritime) National Park's main attractions, actually owes a great deal of its popularity to another tiny island right off its own coast.

The "Deungdaeseom" or "Lighthouse Island" is nonetheless still considered a part of Somaemuldo, much in the same way that even if you eat a cookie crumb, you're still kind of eating the cookie.

Speaking of cookies -- Somaemuldo's Lighthouse Island is also known for being featured in an advertisement for "Couque D'asse," a Korean biscuit snack.

Udo has South Korea's only coral beach (Seobin Beach), black lava cliffs and a lighthouse with a view of the surrounding countryside.

It is also known for its haenyeo ("sea women") -- tough, resilient female divers who traditionally made their living (and their families' livings) by diving for abalone and shellfish.

Seonyudo, named for its 100-meter mountain, Seonyu Peak, which supposedly resembles two gods playing Go (baduk) with each other, packs a lot of view.

Popular sights are the sunset, the three tiny uninhabited islands tucked into a cove literally a stone's throw away, the autumn leaves of Weolyeong Peak, the sandbar shaped like a seagull, the beach in the moonlight, and Mangju Waterfull.

Bogildo, covered in evergreens, is best known as the home of Joseon-era poet Yun Seon-do and his remaining relics.

Best known amongst Yun's relics is Seyeonjeong, a pavilion in which he composed poetry, built over a pond he dug. The name means "to wash away the grime of the world."

Gageodo is famous for its beautiful, rocky seashores and insanely good fishing.

While in some ways it's similar to the other islands along this coast, with the rocks and the fishing communities, the isolation is what sets Gageodo apart. Literally.

Geomundo actually refers to three separate islands -- Seodo, Dongdo and Godo -- clustered tightly together in a ring, forming a lake-shaped bay in a quasi-enclosure.

The island was claimed by British sailors in 1885, but was almost immediately taken back by Admiral Jeong Yeochang. For treasure hunters: centuries-old coins and celadon have been discovered on the island..

"Eocheong" means "water mirror." Eocheongdo was named thus because of the surrounding sea, clear as a mirror, supposedly due its location, relatively far out in the ocean.

The island is also known for its rare and varied species of birds.

Gwanmaedo, with three villages and 300 residents, is an attractive island of wide, white beaches and shallow, family-friendly waters bordered by dense forests of black pines, and ludicrous (but entertaining) legends.

For example, at the north of the island is the adjacent Bangado, upon which a small rock sits balanced precariously on a hill.

Supposedly the balancing rock is a masculine emblem where infertile women can go to pray for babies.

A mere two kilometers below the 38th parallel, Baeknyeong Island is the further north you can get by island hopping in South Korea. But the place is more than just a strategic military point.

While some of its attractions (like enormous piles of shells from our early ancestors) aren't as attractive as others (spotted seals plashing in protected habitats), there is a lot to pick from.

Such as Sagot Beach, where the hardness of the sand also makes the beach a great natural airstrip; Sagot Beach is only one of two such naturally occurring airstrips in the world (the other is in Naples, Italy), and served as a temporary runway for United Nations' aircraft during the Korean War.

Today it's just an awesome beach.

Dokdo (called Takeshima in Japan) is best known for its central role in a property dispute between Japan and South Korea that dates back to the 15th century.

Dokdo actually consists of multiple islands, with the two largest East Island (Dongdo) and West Island (Seodo) and 89 even smaller islands scattered around. And despite its heavily politicized reputation, it's actually quite important ecologically, too.

Because of its delicate ecosystem, visits to Dokdo are still limited; tourists must fill out an application and reserve with a travel agency. Call the Ulleung-gundo Administration Office for more information at +82 54 790 6645, 6646.

Heuksando, "black mountain island," is where classical scholars (sunbi) of antiquity were banished when they managed to displease the higher-ups. (Like 17th-century scholar Jeong Yak-jeong, who spent his exile here writing an important treatise on fish).

But it couldn't have been that bad; Heuksando and its people supposedly so charmed these academics on time out that they were sorry to leave.

Maybe it was the local delicacy, fermented skate ray, said to taste great with a swig of makgeolli. You can taste it at any of the pubs crowding Heuksando's relatively sizable port, Yerihang.

One of Korea's best-known folk songs, the Jindo Arirang, originated here; Jindo is also hometown to the beloved Jindo dog, a domestic hunting breed known for its loyalty and intelligence.

Once a year, in either February or March, the sea parts to open a 35-meter wide, 2.8-kilometer-long path between Jindo and neighboring Modo.

This tidal "miracle" is celebrated each year with a huge festival that attracts thousands of visitors.

This island in the south sea (namhae) is so densely packed with trees it would not be an exaggeration to call it a floating forest. Out of Jisimdo's 37 species of trees, about 60% to 70% are Japanese Camellias. These "winter rose" trees bloom from early December to late April.

This distant island (53 kilometers from the nearest port, Daecheon Harbor) is relatively untouched by tourist hordes.

It also has a small claim to fame in its wall art, part of a 2011 project to make the island more tourist-friendly.

Supposedly, the island is closer to the Chinese shore than to the Korean coastline, and people say that on quiet windless mornings, you can hear roosters crowing on the Chinese mainland.

Sado consists of seven islands that remain separate for most of the year but connect to form an angular, rough "C" shape every February when tide fluctuations part the sea to reveal natural underwater bridges.

Sado is also known for its rocks -- or rather, the tall tales surrounding them; there is one turtle-shaped lump that is said to have inspired national hero General Yi Sun-shin's "turtle ship."

As the sixth largest South Korean island, this 113-square-kilometer weekend getaway spot is known for its fishing (and to those who don't enjoy this hobby, this translates into fresh, delicious seafood), its verdant pine forests and its beaches.

This finger-shaped island was actually once a peninsula, connected to the mainland by a thin band of land. During the Joseon Dynasty, however, this thin band was flooded to make it easier for ships to pass through.

In 1970 a bridge was built to reconnect Anmyeondo to the mainland. Talk about an identity crisis.

Besides the distinction of being home to South Korea's first modern lighthouse, erected in 1903, Palmido was also the launching point for the pivotal Battle of Incheon (1950) in the Korean War. As a militarily sensitive area, the island was also closed to the public until 2009.

Since then the island has also featured in scenes from the hit TV drama "Boys Over Flowers."

Not bad for an island that was closed for over a century.

Marado, shaped like a sweet potato, is South Korea's southernmost point (about 10 kilometers south of Jeju).

The coastline is rocky and dotted with caves, the white-painted buildings are low and pleasing and further inland (as far inland as you can get on an island of 0.3 square kilometers) there are meadows of flame grass.

With the longest sand beach in South Korea (12 kilometers), sandy plains that resemble a desert and an enviable breadth to the beach (over 300 meters when the tide has receded) that make you wonder why the hell people are still crowding to claustrophobic sweat fests like Haeundae, Imjado is, unsurprisingly, famous for its sand.

With Bogildo to the west and Wando to the north, fishing community Soando is best known for being a focal point in the anti-Japanese Colonialism movement in the early 20th century.

It's always had a reputation for courageous residents defending Soando against potential intruders; the name "Soando" originates from this legendary reputation.

Excellent fishing, pristine beaches and still relatively unknown -- Hyojado is small (two hours is enough for a full tour), with just enough community to be cozy.

The name, which comes from the Korean word for "dutiful son or child," hyoja, is supposedly a reference to the virtuous sons and daughters of the island.

The island makes good on its name, honoring one of its own with a stone monument that tells the legend of a certain Mr. Choi who cut off flesh from his own thigh to feed his starving parents.

OK, so maybe that story doesn't exactly strike us as cozy. But the fishing is still great.

Editor's note: This article was previously published in 2012. It was reformatted and republished in 2017.

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33 beautiful islands to visit in South Korea - CNN

Balearic islands ask EU to ban alcohol on flights – The Independent

Authorities in the Balearic Islands have asked for an alcohol ban on flights and in airports as they try to crack down on anti-social tourism.

The request was made to Spain and the EU in Brussels on Tuesday by Pilar Carbonell, Head of Tourism for the islands. In astatement reported by the BBC, she wrote:We ask the central government and the European commission to ban the consumption of alcoholic drinks on flights and in airports.

The aim of the measure is to improve passenger security and also that of security forces in planes and airports in our islands, who are often faced with drunk passengers.

Carbonell explained that the ban was being sought to guarantee security ... and tackle anti-social tourism.

The plea follows a series of alcohol fuelled incidents that have drawn attention to the holiday destination. Resorts such as San Antonio in Ibiza and Magaluf in Mallorca have long attracted fun-seeking crowds,but some holidaymakers now choose to start the party en route, causing problems for fellow travellers, airlines and the police.

In May, Spanish police arrested three members of a stag party on a Manchester to Palma Ryanair flight, according to a report in the Manchester Evening News. The group drank wine and Jgermeister on the 6.20am flight before brawling in the aisle, preventing staff and passengers from moving around the aircraft.

Last month two strangers allegedly had sex in a window seat on a Manchester to Ibiza Ryanair flight. The incident was filmed by a fellow passenger who reported that they were both drunk.

After the footage went viral, a Ryanair spokesperson said: We will not tolerate unruly, disruptive or inappropriate behaviour at any time and any passengers who appear to behave in an unacceptable manner may be liable for further sanctions.

The statement did not specify whether local authorities were seeking a ban on all EU flights, or a special exemption for those travelling to the Balearic Islands.

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Balearic islands ask EU to ban alcohol on flights - The Independent

Artificial floating islands could expand liveable space at sea – New Atlas

The Maritime Research Institute Netherlands is testing a floating mega island that may one day expand the liveable space offshore (Credit: MARIN)

The Netherlands is a fairly small country, so to support a growing population, the Dutch people have historically expanded out to sea. It's a remarkable feat of engineering how much land they've managed to reclaim by building dikes, but it might not be a sustainable solution nowadays. To update that tradition, the Maritime Research Institute Netherlands (MARIN) is testing the concept of an artificial floating island.

MARIN's floating island is made up of large triangles that connect to each other in a modular fashion. Structurally, it works like the Italian Floating Piers and walkways we saw last year, but on a much bigger scale: MARIN says that floating islands built in this way could be as big as 5 km (3.1 miles) wide, and used for a variety of purposes.

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"As sea level rises, cities become overcrowded and more activities are carried out at sea, raising the dikes and reclaiming land from the seas are perhaps no longer an effective solution," says Olaf Waals, project manager of MARIN's floating islands. "An innovative alternative that fits with the Dutch maritime tradition is floating ports and cities."

An artist's representation of how the final floating island might look (Credit: MARIN)

These new floating spaces could support offshore homes, public spaces, docks for the loading and unloading of ships, fishing and seaweed-harvesting facilities, and renewable energy systems like wind, solar, tidal or wave energy generators.

But there are still plenty of questions surrounding the project's viability. The MARIN team is investigating the best ways to lock the triangles together and anchor the island to the seabed. Whether the undulations of the water will be too disruptive to the structures or people onboard, and how to minimize the environmental effects of the new islands are other issues that need to be addressed.

To answer these questions, MARIN is running computer simulations and testing the idea with a scale model island made up of 87 triangles, in a facility it calls the Offshore Basin. This 40 x 40 m (131 x 131 ft) pool allows the team to simulate wind, waves and currents, and study how the island would handle these conditions in the real world.

The team's tests, as well as computer images of what the end result might look like, can be seen in the video below.

Source: MARIN

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Artificial floating islands could expand liveable space at sea - New Atlas

‘The island is being eaten’: how climate change is threatening the Torres Strait – The Guardian

Joseph Billy says his community is losing land to climate change every year. Photograph: Brian Cassey/Oxfam Australia

Torres Strait residents face being forced from their homes by climate change, as their islands are lost to rising seas.

On Boigu Island, the most northerly inhabited island in Australia, just six kilometres from Papua New Guinea, the communitys cemetery faces inundation and roads are being washed into the sea. A seawall installed to protect the community is already failing.

Boigu elder Dennis Gibuma says the situation is worsening every season.

Every year I have moved my shed back from the beach another few metres.

Our seawall is no longer any good, he says. When the high tide and strong winds come together, it breaks. We pray we dont lose our homes. We dont want to leave this place.

Masig Island, to the south-east of Boigu, is less than three kilometres long, and just 800m across at its widest point. Also known as Yorke Island, the low-lying coral cay is steadily being lost to the waves.

The island is being eaten, says Songhi Billy, an engineering officer on Masig. This is a big issue. I kind of feel hopeless in a sense. Our land is part of us.

In the short term, we can do what we can. We cant stop the erosion, our hope is to slow it down.

But he says he has to face the possibility that his people may have to abandon their ancestral home.

Long term, we may have to evacuate the island, he says. But I am not going. Slowly, I see Masig Island getting out of something I can control.

Fisherman Joseph Billy says his community is losing land every year.

Last five year, every year, I have moved my shed back from the beach another few metres. We used to have a road that went all around the island but now it is broken. We will lose our land eventually.

Sea levels around the world are expected to rise between 75cm and 1.5m by the end of the century, depending on greenhouse gas emissions. According to the Australian Department of Environment and Energy, a rise of just 50cm would increase the risk of flooding around Australia by 300 times making a once a century flood likely to occur several times a year. In some areas of Australia, flooding risk would rise much more up to 10,000 times.

The precise sea level rise around the Torres Strait, and the projected inundation, has not been calculated but low-lying islands are expected to experience a much greater flooding risk than mainland Australia. The department identifies the remote islands of the Torres Strait as some of the most vulnerable, as does the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which warns communities they may be forced to relocate.

The chief executive of Oxfam Australia, Helen Szoke, who visited the Torres Strait at the invitation of the Torres council mayor, Vonda Malone, says the people of the strait have contributed almost nothing to the causes of climate change but are being hit first and hardest by its impacts.

The islands face a combination of risks including coastal erosion and inundation from rising seas, damage to the critical marine ecosystems on which their livelihoods depend, higher temperatures and shifting rainfall. Roads are being washed away and seawalls cannot protect communities from flooding.

The strong, flourishing communities of the Torres Strait have a powerful connection to their land and sea country, Szoke says.

The gravest fear among community members is the loss of their connection to land and culture if they are faced with the last resort being forced to leave their islands. The longer-term challenges, including the threat of eventually being forced from their land, are complex and extremely confronting for communities with such a deep connection to their islands.

We have been advocating for years but it just does not seem to get enough attention.

Malone says leaving the islands is a last resort and the people of the Torres Strait want to do everything possible to remain.

These communities are facing ongoing challenges in retaining their foreshore and their gathering places this is their land and the land of their ancestors. These communities are seeing their land washed away. We have been advocating for years but it just does not seem to get enough attention.

Malone says while some funding for climate change adaptation is filtering through, there were few resources to address the social impacts of potential dislocation.

There is a feeling of hopelessness as communities do not know where this is going to lead to, Malone says.

Displacement caused by climate change is forecast to be a driver of massive forced migration movements in the 21st century.

Low-lying islands in the Pacific and Torres Strait islands like Masig and Boigu are likely to be at the forefront of forced displacement but large and densely populated countries such as Bangladesh also face widespread inundation.

Some forecasts have predicted up to 150 million people could be forcibly displaced by climate change by 2040 larger than the record number of people already forced from their homes globally.

The US and other militaries have said that climate change poses the greatest security threat to the Asia-Pacific.

But the global legal framework for resettling people displaced from their homes lost to natural disasters or climate change is unclear. The refugee convention established in 1951 to regularise the resettlement of those displaced by the second world war does not recognise someone forced from their home by rising seas, or natural disaster, as requiring protection.

Already, more than a dozen Pacific Islanders have attempted to claim refugee status in New Zealand on the grounds that their homes are uninhabitable because of rising seas or climate-related disaster. All have had their claims rejected.

On Masig Island, Hilda Mosby says climate change is already affecting the marine ecosystems on which communities depend for their livelihoods. Climate change is already affecting her community big time, she says.

But the greater existential threat for her home lies ahead.

When we talk about relocation, it is clear this is very much a last resort, Mosby says. This is our home. No one is willing to leave, to lose their cultural ties, the loved ones they have laid to rest here. We want to try everything to keep our community here.

Read more:

'The island is being eaten': how climate change is threatening the Torres Strait - The Guardian