Maine deserves a chance to capitalize on the North Woods monument – Bangor Daily News

Gov. Paul LePages latest political attack on the Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument is a colossal blunder. On Feb. 14, he sent a letter to President Donald Trump asking him to rescind the executive order that created the national monument. For a governor who touts his pro-economy and pro-business approach to governing, he sure finds a way to undermine these on a regular basis. What he doesnt seems to understand is that national monuments and parks provide tremendous, long-term economic benefits for the communities around them and the states where theyre located.

Acadia National Park officials estimated that 2.8 million people visited Acadia in 2015, and they directly spent $248 million in the local economy. That spending supported 3,878 jobs. When the exponential benefits to other businesses are factored in, it leads to a cumulative economic impact of $305 million. In 2016, Acadia received an estimated 3.3 million visitors, the highest since 1989. Thats an increase of 17 percent, which likely means its economic impact in 2016 was $356 million.

Tourism is a large economic engine and contributes about $5.6 billion to the Maine economy. Maine is marketed as The Vacationland, and the value of tourism to Maine has been increasing on average 4.5 percent per year. Tourism is our golden goose; it is growing and sustainable. Many of us in Bar Harbor remember the days when tourism slowed down around Labor Day. Now October is the new August, with most of the hotels and restaurants filling up each night.

Many of us who guide tours through Acadia are excited for the national monument. We are promoting that region and encouraging our tourists to travel north. Certainly, the people of the Katahdin region deserve a chance to capitalize on the growing tourism industry. Regional reports are coming in that real estate sales are improving. With the monument and the Millinocket Marathon, there is a feeling the tide has turned. To pull the rug out now would be meddling, myopic and a grave injustice.

Throughout history there have been many examples of narrow-minded local or state officials initially opposing the creation of national parks and monuments. When the Glacier Bay National Monument was established in the 1920s, an Alaskan paper said, This [designation] is a monstrous crime against development and advancement. It leads one to wonder if Washington has gone crazy catering to conservation faddists. Today, that park contributes $179 million to the local economy. In 1980, the city of Seward in Alaska passed two resolutions renouncing the creation of Kenai Fjords National Park, but within a few years rescinded those and asked for the park to be expanded as it became clear it was in their best interests to do so.

LePage has offered no alternative solutions for the people of the region to improve economically. In the last three years, five Maine paper mills have closed, and this resource-based economy is becoming less viable for people to make a livelihood. Proponents of the monument, such as Lucas St. Clair, have gone to great lengths to maintain the expressed regional interest in traditional uses. For example, hunting will be allowed on land east of the East Branch of the Penobscot River, and many snowmobile routes will be preserved.

Last summer, one of my best friends took his family on a two-month camping trip across the country to visit the national parks. His two sons were amazed, and it was a truly life-changing experience. Why wouldnt we want to create that same opportunity for hardworking families to have profound outdoor experiences in our beautiful state?

Lets not forget that many retailers such as L.L. Bean, Cabelas, Patagonia, Cadillac Mountain Sports and others may have interest in expanding into the monument region. How many more lobster dinners would we sell? The time is long overdue for this governor to join U.S. Sens. Susan Collins and King in supporting the monument. LePages letter to Trump was shortsighted, mean-spirited and based on a stubborn, insular and narrow ideology that hurts the people of Maine.

Zack Klyver has worked in the tourism industry in Bar Harbor for 30 years. He is from Eastport.

Read the original here:

Maine deserves a chance to capitalize on the North Woods monument - Bangor Daily News

Basic Income in Argentine News – Basic Income News

The issue of the basic income, its pros and cons and the feasibility of its implementation have occupied space in media outlets in recent years, mainly due to the visibility it gained after the referendum in Switzerland and the experiment started this year by the Finnish government. However, this discussion has not reached all corners of the planet. Or at least not until recently.

On February 1st of this year, the Argentine conservative-leaning newspaper La Nacin published an opinion piece entitled An universal income that compensates for poverty and unemployment. The author of the article, Eduardo Levy Yeyati, is an economist, writer, and civil engineer, with a PhD in Economics from the University of Pennsylvania. Yeyati introduces the concept of universal income and describes the historical dimensions of this idea, as its discussion has spanned the centuries, from Thomas More, to Martin Luther King, to its contemporary promoters such as the British Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn and the French presidential candidate Benot Hamon.

However, the text mainly discusses three fundamental complications surrounding the idea of basic income. First, despite having multiple detractors and defenders, the basic income is still an idea in search of a design. According to Yeyati, there is a rather classic proposal such as an unconditional basic income (the model advocated by the most ardent supporters of the initiative), a conservative proposal that would be represented by the negative income tax defended by Milton Friedman and a compromise third-way between these more extreme positions that seeks to guarantee a basic salary floor for those who already receive some type of income.

Second, the author identifies two moral dilemmas that must be addressed and answered by any definition and operationalization of the basic income. First, should it be paid only to those who have a registered job, in the style of an addendum and prize to effort, or should it be paid to everybody, even to those who have no intention of working? Second, should the person who has a lower income receive more money, should everybody receive the same amount or should the person who works the most receive more? For many advocates of this initiative, a basic income basically implies answering these dilemmas in the most generous way: it should be paid to everybody and everyone should receive the same. In this sense, it seems that Yeyati uses the term more broadly than a lot of speakers in other countries, not compromising to any of the possibilities.

Finally, the author ventures one last idea in which he discusses the feasibility of thinking and discussing the implementation of a basic income in Argentina today. And despite some pessimism on his behalf and considering that it would take several years of political maturation to reach the appropriate level of discussion, Yeyati does believe that it is possible to move towards the realization of a basic income today through the design and implementation of a Finnish-style pilot in Argentina. Basically, the author argues that this would not be very costly, that the twin challenges of poverty and unemployment will dominate the development agenda in the coming years and that, in order to move forward, this debate needs information that we do not currently have. In this sense, despite the fact that this issue it not yet in the agenda in the Latin American and Argentine context, at least there are people who are encouraged to discuss its implications and there are media outlets, however conservative they may be, willing to publish them.

Featured Image CC Mike Ramsey (via flickr, Scott Santens)

Gonzalo Ibez Mestres has written 1 articles.

Read the original here:

Basic Income in Argentine News - Basic Income News

Private search firm migrates to OpenStack as it adopts automation – Network World

Nate Baechtold, Enterprise Architect at EBSCO Information Services, says it was going to be too hard to automate the companys VMware environment so the firm shifted to OpenStack, which natively abstracts underlying components much like AWS. But the next sticking point was how to enable developers to build in load balancing? A self-service model using the existing hardware-based system was too complex, Baechtold tells Network World Editor in Chief John Dix, but a new software-defined tool fit the bill.

Nate Baechtold, Enterprise Architect at EBSCO Information Services

Lets start with a thumbnail description of your organization.

EBSCO Information Services is a discovery service provider for many things, including private journals, research databases, historical archives, medical reference databases, ebooks and corporate learning tools. Many of these are things you couldnt find on the public Internet. So, universities and other organizations subscribe to our services and we are able to federate searches over all these databases to provide the information they are looking for. This past year we peaked at somewhere close to 400 million searches per day.

Does it appeal to certain vertical markets, say legal or healthcare, or is it any and all of them?

Any and all of them. A large amount of traffic comes from libraries and universities providing research services to students.

What does the technical environment look like?

We have a public cloud based in AWS and three private data centers, two that support our live application and one that primarily supports development resources. The majority of our live runtime apps are supported by a private cloud we built on top of OpenStack.

The main data centers are in Boston and Ipswich Mass. for redundancy sake and to create failure domains, and we have a large fiber link between them, but the idea is each data center is autonomous and can run without the other one. We have roughly 400 physical servers in each data center, and the majority of our workloads are virtualized, so we have 5,000-6,000 VMs. From a virtualization perspective, were using a combination of VMware and OpenStack, but were actually migrating everything over to OpenStack which is built on top of KVM.

How long have you been building the OpenStack environment?

We opened it up for development two years ago, and about a year ago we started using it for our live resources. Ever since then weve had a large percentage of developers using it for self-service provisioning, and that adapted into a model where we started automating provisioning, automating deployments, really trying to automate all of our infrastructure.

Why the shift to OpenStack?

Because it was going to be too hard to automate our VMware platform. When you look at a cloud platform like AWS, you go in and get a VM and it is automatically assigned an IP address and receives everything it needs to run from the cloud platform. You are insulated from a lot of the other underlying hardware implementation. VMware abstracts some elements of that, but ultimately you still need to know what data store to put on it, you need to name the network, maybe a VLAN identifier or something else that ties it to your infrastructure. Theres very little abstraction, and trying to build a fully automated model on top of that was going to be really difficult.

Thats why there are so many management platforms on top of VMware -- to insulate you from that API -- whereas OpenStack natively abstracts the underlying implementation. You create a consistent platform the same way you do in AWS, so you have an instance very analogous to Amazons EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud), you have a volume in OpenStack thats just like an EBS (Elastic Block Store) volume in AWS, youve got load balancing as a service, youve got images and many other things. Theyre not API compatible, but they operate in a very similar way so it is easy to build infrastructure automation for your continuous integration/continuous deployment (CI/CD) pipeline.

We viewed the adoption of the OpenStack API as an easy onramp for getting full infrastructure automation and also getting integration with our CI/CD processes. Additionally, since its built to be a public cloud product, we didnt have to fight with permissions. With vSphere you have to deal with permissions to folders, resource groups, and many other things. Instead of having to fight with individual permissions, we give developers a project. That project is logically separated from all the other infrastructure, like theyre operating their own private data center.

It makes it easy for them to write automation because they dont need to worry about breaking things, bringing down the whole environment or affecting people on shared resources. It lowers the barrier to entry to write automation, to experiment and test. Those are really the core capabilities that OpenStack gave us, which is why we went with it. It was mostly focused around the API and accelerating our development efforts and accelerating our infrastructure automation efforts.

What percentage of your workloads are on OpenStack at this point?

Of our virtualized infrastructure, I would say around half. The goal is to migrate everything.

You mentioned you have some AWS cloud resources. Is part of the reason to go with OpenStack because it will make it easier to use AWS in a spillover capacity?

Due to data locality and a whole bunch of other problems, it isnt easy to realize a hybrid cloud where you transparently migrate workloads back and forth. We, like probably most companies, are actively working to get into AWS and to get to the public cloud, but we realize we still need a private cloud to be able to serve our own internal data centers in the meantime.

Do you think long term youll be all-in with a public IaaS service, getting away from managing your own stuff?

Yeah. I would say that is our long-term goal. How long it takes to get there is another question, but that would be our long-term goal. Today we use AWS for BI processing and hosting some of our runtime services.

As I understand it, another thing you virtualized was your Application Delivery Controllers. What lead you down that path?

We created this private cloud where users could provision and tear down VMs to their hearts content, and they did it very, very frequently. The level of change velocity in this environment is incredible. Weve had over 420,000 VMs created and destroyed in the past two years.

But really a cloud isnt useful until youve given your development and operations teams the ability to self-service all the capabilities they need to build their live applications. Out of the box they can build VMs. Thats great. However, they couldnt hook them up to load balancing or many of the other things they needed. Load balancing was the number one pain point because you couldnt build a highly available application without some semblance of load balancing.

So first we tried to create a self-service model on top of our existing hardware-based load balancing system, where we could enable teams to provision new content rules, new virtual IPs, everything they need to build and manage their applications. But it was surprisingly hard to do. To create a system that could be fully automated was almost impossible on our existing solution.

Did your hardware ADC provider offer a software version of their appliance?

Yes, they did. They offered a VM version but all it did was shift the problem. It didnt solve the problem. The only way it helped us was to say, Okay teams, now you configure and manage your own virtual load balancers. They werent too happy with that because it added complexity.

It wouldnt have been very efficient to take this problem that was solved before by a dedicated load balancing team and shift it so that now everyone had to become subject matter experts on a specific load balancing technology. So we looked into tapping into load balancer as a service on OpenStack and pointing it to our existing vendor, and that didnt work out very well. The driver wasnt very mature at that point in time and it wound up causing all sorts of problems. Thats what caused us to start looking for alternatives.

Can you give us some perspective in terms of what the load balancers were being asked to do?

We had a very SOA-heavy architecture. We probably had around 80 or so services in our mid- and back-tiers communicating with each other, so the edge, the front tier, was a small portion of what the load balancers were doing in this environment.

And what solved the problem for you?

We wound up seeing a company called Avi Networks at the OpenStack Summit and they had some really interesting demos. The attraction was multifold:

* First, from an access perspective and API perspective, they aligned perfectly with OpenStacks multitenancy system. What they do is view a load balancer as a project, a tenant, just like OpenStack creates a project and a tenant, and that represents your view of the world. You can only see things in your tenant, you can only affect things in your tenant. If I give you a logical slice of Avi through a tenant, just like through OpenStack, you can only break things in your own world. It makes it easy to hand load balancing responsibilities off to different teams. We give you access to your view of the load balancer and you can perform all of the functions you need to build and manage your applications from the ground up automatically. That was really cool.

* The second thing, which wound up appealing to us even more, was the insight and analytics engine that came with it. We used to get some very raw metrics from a load balancer, but the analytics we get out of Avi are extremely valuable; things like better end-to-end performance results and automatic anomaly detection and tracking. And something that wound up being very useful was significant event detection. It logs what it sees as significant events and weve used that to find network issues that werent detected before.

Our development operations teams wound up liking that element probably the most out of all because now theyve got all this visibility, all this insight into application performance they didnt have before. It created a strong desire to migrate over to the product.

How did Avi address the need for simplicity, the problem you were having with the other product?

The setup and usage of Avi was straightforward. It literally took us 20 minutes to get a highly available instance deployed, configured and integrated into our OpenStack cloud, which was awesome.

From a user perspective, the interface is very intuitive and easy to use. There arent any superfluous options, and if there are they are cordoned off into their own little bounded context area; network settings, for example, are in a network profile section and, unless you care about that, you dont need to deal with it or know it exists. You just take whatever the standard is. We were able to point dev teams at it and people with no load balancing experience were able to quickly create highly available load balanced environments.

Where we used to have a centralized network team do all of our load balancing functions, writing custom rules trying to distill them down for other people to use, now were able to distribute these functions to all the operations team because they are so much simpler.

How is it deployed?

We point it at our OpenStack cloud and it integrates with it. It integrates with the projects, aligns with its multitenancy model, and provisions load balancers on the OpenStack cloud to use. Theyre called the service engines. It automatically scales up and scales down the service engines based on demand. From our perspective, pretty much we carved out an OpenStack project, we told Avi to put load balancer VMs here and it autoscales them in and out as it sees fit.

Were you concerned at all about a potential performance hit, shifting from a hardware to a software-based product?

Initially we were concerned, but so far every single performance test weve done, and every single live application we converted, hasnt shown any performance hit. In fact, in some cases we wound up getting better performance due to the insight and analytics engine pointing out inefficiencies that we had not noticed before.

Did you justify the migration on the promised ease of use, or was there a cost factor as well?

I would say the ease of use. The integration with our strategy, with our private cloud, were the real drivers, but there was a cost-saving element to it as well. It wound up being considerably cheaper than our existing solution because it didnt rely on proprietary hardware, we are just paying for the software, and it is scaling on the same x86 virtualization platform all of our systems are running on.

Any hiccups along the way in terms of implementation or lessons learned?

There are always hiccups. In converting one of our applications over we found one of the performance settings we had set wound up being inefficient for the type of application, and it was sending very large quantities of HTTP post data to this service and we didnt know it. It wound up being an application where we saw performance increase once wetuned the TCP Windows scaling settings.

It sounds like the product has worked out well for you.

It has. Weve gotten to the point where now were using it to do blue-green deployments of our applications to achieve full infrastructure automation. As part of a software release well spin up an entire new farm of servers, hook it up to our load balancer, validate it independently, and just switch the load balancer to feed traffic to the new software in one atomic action. Were automatically standing up new environments, virtual services and load balancer rules through complete automation, and we still get the visibility required. Its been one of the more successful things at our company.

View original post here:

Private search firm migrates to OpenStack as it adopts automation - Network World

Michael Hicks: We need better planning for automation – Kokomo Tribune

There is remarkable angst growing over the role of machines in the production of goods and services. While we are right to be concerned over the labor market effects of automation, most folks worry about the wrong things. That can lead to some stunningly wasteful, if not outright hurtful, public policies. Heres why.

All technological change, from the shovel to the microcomputer, is designed to save labor. At the same time and only in market-based economies new work continues to materialize and business endeavors to hire more workers. For all of recorded history, automation and productivity improvement creates demand for workers while making some tasks unneeded.

Productivity growth is the very essence of economic growth, and we should not fear it. Very real worries come not from the automation itself, but from our inability to adapt to it. It is clearly true that the new jobs created by automation are oftentimes not in the same location, or do not require the same skills as those that automation destroys. This leaves large numbers of people with redundant skills living in clusters of other people with the same skills. Thus, today the antipode of any Rust Belt city is Palo Alto.

This fear of job losses and the obvious distress it causes leads us to ill-considered policy interventions. This is especially true because the labor market signals of supply and demand are hard to read from a state capital or Washington office. Lets consider the example of todays businesses clamoring for more, better-trained, young workers. As I write this column, a search for truck drivers in Muncie yields dozens of jobs, with pay exceeding $50,000 a year.

Naturally, Indianas regional workforce officials are eager to help fill those jobs and subsidize training for truck drivers. Indeed, truck driver ranks third out of 50 "Hot Jobs" for Indiana. I personally know many employers desperate for more truck drivers, but the apparent excess demand for workers might well be a signal of something else. Impending automation.

On the labor demand side, there is nothing like a labor shortfall to incentivize automation. As anyone who pays any attention knows, tests of driverless vehicles are underway on public roads. I predict that by 2030, commercial trucks will no longer be built for drivers. Oh, sure, theyll still have steering wheels and a place to sit, but that will be incidental to the automation. While the Teamsters Union will fight tooth and nail to keep a driver in the seat, it will ultimately fail.

On the labor supply side, workers know this all too well. Many workers will find other things to do in anticipation of technologies that will shake up many common jobs. Workers typically understand that the future of employment requires skills that are not substitutes for machines. Government is a lot worse at figuring this out, and drives some potentially costly mistakes in public policy.

Workers of the future will increasingly need skills that are complemented by automation and technology. These sorts of skills come directly from math, science and liberal arts. Without enduring aptitude in these areas, most of todays young workers will be displaced by automation long before they hit middle age. Policies that lose sight of the imminent role of automation on workers is destined to fail, at a heavy and enduring cost.

Michael J. Hicks, Ph.D., is director of the Center for Business and Economic Research and professor of economics at Ball State University. Contact him at cberdirector@bsu.edu.

Originally posted here:

Michael Hicks: We need better planning for automation - Kokomo Tribune

New Reality For Talent Recruitment: Personalization, Relevance And Automation – Forbes


Forbes
New Reality For Talent Recruitment: Personalization, Relevance And Automation
Forbes
Applying for a job can be an arduous process. In most cases, the candidate's resume either disappears into a bureaucratic black hole or gets lost in a corporate filing cabinet never to be found again. In fact, company recruiting methods often use ...

Link:

New Reality For Talent Recruitment: Personalization, Relevance And Automation - Forbes

Swedish economist says half of all jobs will be eliminated by automation within two decades and 98 percent of models – Business Insider Nordic

A robot will replace one in two of your colleagues within 20 years.

In the past five years, almost half a million jobs have vanished due to automation in Sweden, says Stefan Flster, head of the libertarian think thank Reforminstitutet.

The pace is accelerating faster than many economists could expect.

According to a report, carried out by the Swedish Foundation for Strategic Science, this would imply that more than half, or around 2,5 million jobs, will vanish form the labour market in Sweden - arguably a representative picture of any given developing nation. No wonder then, that robot taxes are already a hot topic (and a bad idea according to Flster, as it would in effect be a tax on exports).

It seems like todays professionals are underestimating the approaching revolution. A post, published on the Bank of Englands staff blog, cited by Bloomberg, concludes that the risks associated with the fourth industrial revolution likely are being dismissed too lightly.

Its a common perception that machines are likely to keep on replacing jobs in manufacturing, warehouses and agriculture. But what's become clear through recent years' technological advancements, is that robots will be replacing a lot of human traits.

Also Read:With the rise of automation, women in tech is no longer a nice-to-have but a need-to-have

Jobs within health care and retail are especially endangered; hundreds of thousands of them are to vanish in Sweden in the next two decades.

Other at risk professions, accordingSwedish Foundation for Strategic Science's report, areaccounting assistants and high-skilled professions like economists and engineers.

People working within fields that require originality, artistic qualities, social skills, negotiating, persuasion, and emotional intelligence are the least likely to find themselves replaced by machines.

The risk for being replaced by a digital technology in the next 20 years, according toSwedish Foundation for Strategic Science:

- Photo Model: 98 percent - Accountancy assistant: 97 percent - Engineer: 56 percent - Economist/Businessman: 46 percent

Don't Miss:Heres how to keep your job from being stolen by a robot

Go here to read the rest:

Swedish economist says half of all jobs will be eliminated by automation within two decades and 98 percent of models - Business Insider Nordic

Pauline Hanson still a work in progress after all these years – The Australian Financial Review

Pauline Hanson at a meeting at the Paddington Ale House in Perth as she met potential One Nation candidates for Western Australia.

According to Pauline Hanson it's "a load of rubbish and a most ridiculous statement".

She's talking to AFR Weekend about descriptions of One Nation as a "populist" party, meaning it offers simple, appealing solutions for complex problems like migration (ban Muslims), restricting foreign investment, and banking (hold a royal commission).

As the One Nation leader has flown around West Australia in the past week preparing for Saturday's state election, she's been followed by a flurry of contradictory forecasts: the party has peaked, its polling numbers are up (then down), it will (won't) hold the balance of power in the WA Upper House, Senator Hanson made a mistake entering into a preference deal with the Liberal Party, and so on.

The one point all this attention confirms is that eight months after her Lazarus-like re-emergence on the Australian political scene, Pauline Hanson may not be calling the shots yet. But her actions are having a significant bearing on the fortunes of the major parties and their leaders, particularly Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.

So it's significant that the One Nation leader is now in stabilisation mode. After a week in which she encountered strong push back over on-again, off-again comments about parents refusing to have vaccinations given to their children; disputes among WA One Nation supporters concerning a preference deal with the Liberals; threats of legal action following the abrupt dismissal of local One Nation staff and speculation about Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull's future, Senator Hanson is adopting a "steady as she goes" posture.

Criss-crossing the backblocks of Australia's biggest state, she alights from a flight to Geraldton, north of Perth, to tell AFR Weekend that "the future voting pattern" throughout Australia "is hard to predict" and "we've got a long way to go". Emphasising a longer-term approach, she opines: "We have to gain the trust of people."

Senator Hanson's measured tone is a long way from vapid "please explain" comments made during TV interviews after One Nation first burst on the scene in the late '90s.

Now she says "people just want honesty, they want integrity. There's so much room in Australian politics for the policies of One Nation." However, "I've got to prove myself to people" so "more [One Nation candidates] will get elected to Parliament and people will start to realise we're not in extremis."

But if One Nation is not "in extremis," then what is it? Alexander Lefebvre, a professor in the departments of Government and International Relations, and Philosophy, at Sydney University, says "the nativism of her Party", like calling for the banning of Muslim migration to Australia and banning Muslim women from covering their faces by wearing the burqa in public, "strikes me as a right [wing] version of populism".

Professor Lefebvre says "this is the populism we're seeing all over the world". It will be tested in elections in Holland on Wednesday where the poll-topping, far-right Party for Freedom wants to close all mosques, Islamic schools and asylum centres, impose a blanket ban on migration from Islamic countries, and stop women from wearing a headscarf in public.

Meanwhile in France, the leader of the far-right National Front, Marine le Pen, who faces presidential elections in April-May, wants to "expel foreigners who preach hatred on our soil" and to strip dual-nationality Muslims with extremist views of their French citizenship.

According to Lefebvre, this is the sort of populism that is "predominantly based on contempt for foreigners and contempt for elites". It received a global boost when Donald Trump won the US Presidential election on November 8 last year, and followed up with temporary entry bans into the US of people from six (at first it was seven) Muslim majority countries.

She may eschew the populist mantle, but Pauline Hanson says "people have been screaming out to governments to listen to their concerns. Governments have failed to listen to their concerns and treated them like morons and taken them for granted. That's why people speak to us."

The major political parties "have picked up many of my policies," she says, instancing the abolition of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission and introduction of offshore processing of refugees who arrive off Australia's shores by boat, plus temporary protection visas under the Howard government.

She acknowledges her hardline stance on Islam is "possibly" part of the reason why One Nation has been faring better in national polls since the federal election, "but not all of it. I haven't spoken very much about Islam" compared with issues like the level of foreign investment in Australia.

Meanwhile her support for the Fair Work Commission's decision to cut Sunday penalty rates for retail and hospitality workers and back further spending cuts in May's Budget are examples of more mainstream conservatism.

So Pauline Hanson is a work in progress.

Continue reading here:

Pauline Hanson still a work in progress after all these years - The Australian Financial Review

Who’s who in Dutch politics – SBS

In this system of proportional representation, even the smallest parties can play an outsize role as kingmakers in building a 76-seat majority.

Here is a guide for navigating the alphabet soup of Dutch politics:

Liberal party. Led by Prime Minister Mark Rutte, the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy leans towards the right on the economy but is more progressive on social issues. Founded in 1948, it has been the ruling coalition partner in two successive governments since 2010. Rutte is vying for a third term as premier, but has vowed not to work with anti-Islam MP Geert Wilders.

Campaign theme: "Act. Normally." Despite positioning itself as the party of the status quo, Rutte has hardened his tone and recently told immigrants they should respect the country's norms "or leave".

Poll position: 1st, with 23-27 seats

Dutch Prime Minister Rutte.

Far-right, anti-Islam, anti-EU. Led by outspoken MP Geert Wilders, known for his blonde bouffant hair. With his Freedom Party (PVV) topping the polls he is eyeing the premiership but many say they will not work with him. Campaign theme: "Reclaim The Netherlands For Us". He has vowed to bar Muslim immigrants, close mosques, ban sales of the Koran and quit the EU.

The party is officially an association with just one member - Wilders.

Poll position: 2nd, with 21-25 seats

Dutch populist anti-Islam lawmaker Geert Wilders.

The centrist Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA), now led by Sybrand Buma, was founded in 1980. It has long held an important place in Dutch politics but as the country has become more secular, support has waned. Campaign slogan: "Choice for a better Netherlands". Its themes revolve around a strong society and the family.

Poll position: 3rd, with 18-20 seats

Leader of the Christian Democratic Appeal party Sybrand Buma, right, takes the escalator to the news desk of De Telegraaf newspaper.

Progressive and pro-European, D66, led by Alexander Pechthold is the Democracy party founded in 1966. Campaign slogan: "Together Stronger. Chances for Everyone" stressing education and jobs.

Poll position: 4th, with 17-19 seats

Alexander Pechtold of the D66 party stands second from the right for a group picture at De Telegraaf.

Ecologist. Founded in 1990, the "GreenLeft" party is led by Jesse Klaver, at 30 the country's youngest party leader. Amid a certain weariness with traditional politics, it has drawn increasing support, particularly among young voters. Campaign theme: "Time For Change".

Poll position: 5th, with 16-18 seats

Green Left party leader Jesse Klaver.

Founded in 1972, the Socialist Party is anti-EU. Campaign slogan: "Seize the Power". Has called for a fight against poverty, an increase of the minimum wage and the abolition of the European Commission.

Polls position: 6th with 13-15 seats

Socialist Party leader Emile Roemer laughs when talking to firebrand anti Islam lawmaker Geert Wilders.

Labour. Founded in 1946, it is the junior party in the outgoing coalition. Campaign slogan: "Forward Together". It has been campaigning on jobs, better housing, health and education. It has sought to reposition itself on the left, but lacks credibility after four years in government.

Poll position: 7th, with 11-13 seats

Leader of the Dutch Labour party PvdA Lodewijk Asscher.

SGP: Orthodox Protestant Calvinist, the Reformed Political Party was founded in 1918. It did not admit women members until 2006. Is against abortion and euthanasia. Could win three to five seats.

Christian Union (CU): May also take five to seven seats.

50+: The party for the over 50s. Could boost its seats to between four and six.

Animal Party: founded in 2002, works for animal rights. May take four to six seats.

Denk: Founded in 2015 by immigrants. Drawing increasing support from the Turkish and Moroccan communities. May take up to two seats.

Niet-stemmers: The party of non-voters. Has vowed never to vote in parliament.

FVD: Forum for Democracy, led by eurosceptic Thierry Baudet. Helped initiate last year's referendum against the EU-Ukraine treaty.

Artikel 1: The country's newest party launched in December by black TV presenter Sylvana Simons to fight racism.

Jesus Lives: Evangelist, founded in 2013 and says it lives by the commands of Jesus.

More:

Who's who in Dutch politics - SBS

How Republicans Might Fudge the Numbers to Make Their Health Care Bill Seem Less Irresponsible – New York Magazine

Ad will collapse in seconds CLOSE March 9, 2017 03/09/2017 10:15 a.m. By Ed Kilgore

Share

There have been a lot of raised eyebrows about congressional Republicans rushing out an Obamacare repeal-and-replace bill before it could be scored that is, evaluated for its impact on federal spending and revenues and health-care coverage by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. Generally, CBO scoring would be a foundational step before trying to advance legislation significantly overhauling an industry that constitutes 20 percent of the national economy. One reason for the hastiness is that Republicans wanted to get something out there before its members go home for a long and potentially protest-filled Easter recess and perhaps come back gun-shy. Another is that they are on a self-imposed (and potentially self-imploding) timetable to get health care out of the way so they can deal with other legislative priorities, including a giant tax-cut bill.

But it is the third reason for not waiting on CBO that is looking most compelling right now: Republicans are terrified that CBOs numbers will paint a disastrous picture of the American Health Care Acts impact. The bill has problems enough without being described by Congresss own hirelings as a bill that blows up budget deficits, throws many millions of people out of their health insurance, and, perhaps most importantly, undermines the tax cuts and defense-spending increases Republicans are itching to enact by setting a baseline that already looks bad.

Indeed, as Jennifer Haberkorn reports, there is so much Republican angst over what CBO might say that there is a sudden barrage of advance criticism of the agency, which is likely to reveal its score later this week or early next week:

If you go back to what CBO predicted would be covered on the exchanges today [under the ACA] theyre only off by only a two-to-one ratio, Energy and Commerce Chairman Greg Walden (R-Ore.) told reporters. CBO said 21 million projected would be covered, but only 10 million people are covered.

When former House Speaker Newt Gingrich called for the abolition of CBO back in January, most observers probably chuckled at the old bomb-thrower insisting that an objective assessment of GOP plans would screw everything up. Now thats rapidly becoming the conventional wisdom. Keep in mind that Republicans, after taking control of both congressional chambers in 2014, hired CBOs current director, George W. Bush administration veteran Keith Hall. Its safe to say that Hall hardly resembles Gingrichs description of CBO as a left-wing, corrupt, bureaucratic defender of big government and liberalism.

So whats the solution? Republicans seem to have found an alternative source of authoritative-sounding numbers that is more ideologically reliable: the Office of Management and Budget, which is directly under the control of the president.

This helps explain why Trumps OMB director, Mick Mulvaney, is suddenly being described as a player in the GOPs very crowded health-care-policy arena. As budget maven Stan Collender pointed out when Gingrich proposed eliminating CBO, such a step would quite literally turn the clock back to those pre-1974 days when OMB was the only scoring entity, and Congress had no independent source of information. In the end Congress can use whatever numbers it chooses. But trying to boost the credibility of its agenda by cooking the books is probably not going to be a very persuasive approach.

One would normally think Mulvaney had enough on his plate developing Trumps first budget, for example without having to leap into the middle of the health-care fray. Thats how panicked Republicans have become by the consequences of their shoddy work on repealing and replacing Obamacare. Its one thing to work the refs when you are in danger of losing a game. Its another thing altogether to fire and replace the scorekeeper while the balls in play.

Watch Paul Ryans Adams Apple When Hes Asked Why His Health Plan Cuts Taxes for the Rich

David Letterman on Life After TV, Late Night Today, and the Man He Calls Trumpy

We Salute This Mans Tireless Quest to Roast the Hell Out of Idiots on Twitter During International Womens Day

Pregnant Woman Bestows Trophy Upon First Man to Offer Her His Subway Seat

Why Is the Prince in Beauty and the Beast Always Less Hot Than the Beast?

There Are 3 Kinds of Porn Users

The Owner of a Popular Houston Taco Truck Is Being Deported

The Absolute Best Steakhouses in New York

The Problem With the Democratic Party in One Milquetoast Tweet

What Camille Paglia Understands About the Trump Era

Most Popular Video On Daily Intelligencer

Hes avoided questions from reporters, and wont take any members of the press on his trip to Asia.

Its still unclear what the barrier will look like, and even Republicans are questioning how it will be paid for.

Her ouster following a corruption scandal could have a major impact on how Asia and the U.S. handle North Korea.

Tom Cotton tells CNN that Paul Ryans bill would not solve the problems of our health-care system and would make things probably worse.

A suspect was arrested in the rampage that occurred at the main train station in Dusseldorf. Police have not named a motive.

He appears ready to move from one doomed bill to another.

Low unemployment and minimum-wage increases sparked strong wage growth at the bottom of Americas income ladder in Obamas final year.

The space probe Cassini captured these shots as its mission nears the end.

Police say the person is likely using a spoofer device, which makes it seem as if the threat is coming from the inside.

He also addressed domestic-violence allegations raised against him.

Three states will ask him to rule that his suspension of the first travel ban applies to the second.

Temperatures in the 50s and 60s Thursday, three to five inches of snow Friday.

Even as Trumpcare hemorrhages support, Republicans are working around the clock to get it to the floor.

Landlords also continued offering near-record levels of sweeteners, such as a months free rent.

Once hes done with Obamacare and tax reform, Trump hopes to fund highway renovation, high-speed rail, and, possibly, Elon Musks Hyperloop.

One British paper is reporting that Farage and Assange met at the Ecuadorian embassy.

One of its attorneys tells the Washingtonian that hes clearly using the office to gain an advantage over local businesses.

A decrease of about 40 percent from January, and coyotes have more than doubled their fees since November.

That puts him at odds with NASA and NOAA, among many others.

Gulp.

Read the original post:

How Republicans Might Fudge the Numbers to Make Their Health Care Bill Seem Less Irresponsible - New York Magazine

Technology behind ‘all serious crime" – BBC News


Reuters
Technology behind 'all serious crime"
BBC News
Technology is now at the "root" of all serious criminality, says Europe's police agency. The returns generated by document fraud, money laundering and online trade in illegal goods helps to pay for other damaging crimes, said Europol. The wider use of ...
Technology is now at root of almost all serious crime: EuropolReuters

all 16 news articles »

The rest is here:

Technology behind 'all serious crime" - BBC News

Video technology to reduce cheating – former referee David Elleray – ESPN FC

Feyenoord were denied a potential goal in the Rotterdam derby against Sparta. With a number of difficult calls against Burnley, Paul Clement says video replay technology needs to be implemented quickly. Claude Puel shares his disappointment and thoughts on video technology after Southampton's 3-2 loss in the EFL Cup final. The Bundesliga will introduce video assistant referees next season. When will video technology come to the Premier League? FIFA Secretary General Jerome Valcke has expressed his concern at proposals put forward for football referees to utilise video technology during games. Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho believes the Premier League should introduce video reviews to assist referees in clarifying contentious decisions.

The use of video technology in football will make it harder for players to cheat, according to technical director for the International Football Association Board, David Elleray.

The video assistant referee (VAR) system is to be trialled in the FA Cup from the third round next season.

The VAR is permitted to assist the match referee when there are clear-cut decisions in four separate situations: for irregularities in the case of a goal decision; penalty calls; red card offences unnoticed by the referee; and in cases of mistaken identity over a yellow or red card.

Former Premier League referee Elleray said in The Times: "This could change the face of football in terms of player behaviour. It will be much more difficult for players to dive and get a penalty because they'll be reviewed.

"It will be much more difficult for them to get away with violent conduct and serious foul play because red-card offences will be detected during the match and punished during the match.

"And it will also help fight match manipulation. If you look back at some of the worst manipulated matches, they were often the result of dodgy penalty decisions -- clearly wrong penalties being awarded to affect the outcome of a match."

On Thursday, FIFA president Gianni Infantino said that VARs will ensure "clear mistakes" will be corrected.

Follow @ESPNFC on Twitter to keep up with the latest football updates.

Read the original here:

Video technology to reduce cheating - former referee David Elleray - ESPN FC

Design and technology GCSE axed from nearly half of schools, survey finds – Telegraph.co.uk

A fifth of teachers surveyed by ASCL reported that their schools (18 per cent) have also dropped Music and Art as GCSE options in the last twelve months.

Researchers from Sussex Universitys School of Education and Social Work warned that music could be facing extinction in the classroom, following a study which revealed a steady decline of the subject being taught in schools.

The survey also revealed more than 80 per cent of respondents said their classes had grown in size in the past year, with teachers reporting that the largest class size was 33 pupils, on average.

Malcolm Trobe, the interim general secretary of ASCL said that the survey shows the impossible choices school leaders are having to make.

Reduced budgets means fewer staff and, with fewer staff, class sizes have to increase, he said. Schools cannot sustain the level of support they provide to pupils, or the range of subject options and enrichment activities.

A Department for Education spokesperson said:As this weeks Budget demonstrates, the government is determined to ensure every child has access to a good school place and is given the opportunity to fulfil their potential.

The government has protected the core schools budget in real terms since 2010, with school funding at its highest level on record at more than 40bn in 2016-17 and that is set to rise, as pupil numbers rise over the next two years, to 42 billion by 2019-20.

See the original post:

Design and technology GCSE axed from nearly half of schools, survey finds - Telegraph.co.uk

Why Stratasys, International Game Technology, and Momo Slumped Today – Motley Fool

The bull market in stocks has now been running strong for eight full years, and investors who have seen major market benchmarks triple from their 2009 lows were in a reasonably good mood on Thursday. Stocks didn't move much, with the Dow rising just 3 points on the day, as a generally favorable market environment was tempered somewhat by declines in U.S. crude oil prices below the $50-per-barrel level.

Yet even though the overall market remained resilient in the face of some threats to positive sentiment among investors, some stocks posted substantial losses. Stratasys (NASDAQ:SSYS), International Game Technology (NYSE:IGT), and Momo (NASDAQ:MOMO) were among the worst performers on the day. Below, we'll look more closely at these stocks to tell you why they did so poorly.

Shares of Stratasys dropped 9% after the 3D printing specialist released its fourth-quarter financial report. The company said that revenue rose just 1% from year-ago levels, and although it managed to post an adjusted profit of $0.15 per share during the quarter, 2017 financial guidance wasn't quite as upbeat as investors would have liked to see. In particular, Stratasys expects revenue of $645 million to $680 million this year, and even after adjusting for extraordinary items, adjusted net income of just $0.19 to $0.37 per share was also well below the consensus forecast among those following the stock. The promise of 3D printing hasn't translated into lasting gains for investors in Stratasys, and some believe that it won't be able to rebound from share-price declines of roughly 85% since 2014.

Image source: Stratasys.

International Game Technology stock plunged 15% in the wake of the company's fourth-quarter financial report. Total revenue for the quarter was down 3% from year-ago levels, but a big foreign exchange-related gain helped IGT triple its GAAP net income compared to the fourth quarter of 2015. Even after adjusting for one-time items, IGT's bottom line was up more than 40%. Yet investors seem increasingly nervous about International Game Technology's outstanding debt, which includes more than $520 million in senior notes coming due next year and a total of more than $3.8 billion in notes and term loan facilities with maturities of 2020 or earlier. If interest rates do indeed go up from here, then the financing costs associated with IGT's debt could become increasingly difficult to maintain, and that could cause problems for a stock that has been performing extremely well over the past year.

Finally, shares of Momo finished down 12%. The Chinese social networking platform company had been on a huge tear higher after reporting favorable financial results earlier in the week, but on Thursday, investors decided that the stock had run too far, too quickly. Nevertheless, many investors remain extremely positive about Momo, which combines location-based services with social offerings to allow users to meet more easily. In addition, Momo has joined other social media stocks in offering services like live video and mobile marketing, and with expectations for sales to quadruple in the first quarter of 2017 compared to year-ago levels, the Chinese mid-cap could easily keep climbing from here. Moreover, even with today's drop, Momo is still up more than 10% just this week.

Dan Caplinger has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Stratasys. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Continued here:

Why Stratasys, International Game Technology, and Momo Slumped Today - Motley Fool

The Nelson-Atkins’ Bloch Galleries Feature Old Masterworks And New Technology – KCUR

The newBloch Galleriesat The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art showcase European artT from the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. This includesmasterpieces of Impressionism and post-Impressionism collected by Marion and Henry Bloch artists such as Edward Degas, Claude Monet, and Vincent van Gogh.

But visitors to the galleries might also be dazzled by some of the technological upgrades from sound to lighting.

Related: Live From The Nelson-Atkins Museum Of Art: First Impressions Of The New Bloch Galleries

At a preview for museum members, Denise Dowd and Jill Burton sit on a bench with an iPad in front of Claude Monet's large painting Water Lilies. They are trying out a new app called Gallery+.

"You can figure out which artist you would be, it's just this interactive thing," says Dowd. "We've been mostly really fascinated with playing around with the light on this Monetthat's in front of us here. Different lights emphasize the purples or the greens. It's just amazing how it changes."

Dowd and Burton live nearby, and they've been monitoring the progress from outside the Nelson's original 1933 building just waiting until they could take a look inside.

Museum officials have also been waiting. A decade ago, theBloch Building opened with a temporary exhibition of Marion and Henry Bloch's collection of Impressionist and post-Impressionist artists with works likePaul CzannesMan with a Pipe,Edgar Degas's pastel Dancer Making Points,andEdouard Manet's The Croquet Party. In 2010, the Blochs gifted the 29 works to the museum. But questions remained: How and where would the museum display them all?

In 2015, a $12 million gift from the Marion and Henry Bloch Family Foundation funded a new suite of galleries, merging the Blochs' collection with the museum's.

"What was important for us was that his [Henry Bloch's] collection would marry literally the collection and the DNA of the Nelson-Atkins," says director and CEO Julin Zugazagoitia.

The design team wanted to create a dynamic new installation for the Bloch Galleries. Eric Heitman, project architect and project manager with BNIM Architects, says a narrow corridor used to connect about 12 small rooms. They opened the space to create seven galleries with the latest in lighting,Wi-Fi and sound tucked into walls and ceilings.

"Not only was it important to have this technology, but it was also important to have this technology be seamlessly integrated in to the space," saysHeitman. "Mr. Bloch loves technology, but he doesn't like to see it."

When it comes to technology, audio guides are not new to museums. But The Nelson-Atkins is only the second museum in the country, after the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, to offer a walking tour app called Detour. Chief Information Officer Doug Allen says visitors will no longer have to check a number on the wall.

"They simply walk into a new space and the objects magically appear on their phone," said Allen.

Director of curatorial affairs Catherine Futter says these immersive walks will help guide visitors through the galleries.

"One of the things that we hope is that by freeing your hands you really start engaging with the artwork," says Futter, "and that the object in your hand your phone or an iPad is not distracting. And so you're listening and you're able to really look."

"It's like the galleries are beginning to recognize that people are in them. The galleries are beginning to animate for people," says Steve Waterman, the museum's director of presentation and experience.

The museum installed a new LED lighting system that's tunable; the light on each painting can be adjusted to enhance the viewer's experience.

Waterman demonstrates this with Claude Monet's iconic paintingWater Lilies. The blue of the lily pond became more vivid. He made a few more tweaks to bring out the light purple, and then returned the lighting to the original setting.

"And we basically did that as we worked through all of these paintings to try to tune each one," Waterman says, "not to its extreme, but just to the right place."

Dana Castro of Overland Park is taking an early look around the galleries with her six-year-old son, Isaac. He looks small, standing next to a large painting that he declared was his favorite.

"Claude Monet," he pipes up.

"He likes the water lilies, the water and the green colors and stuff," his mom adds. "That's his favorite artist."

What's most important for director JulinZugazagoitiais that people visit and discover the museum. And he says there's really not just one way to do that.

"I think each of us individually have works that we are moved to, that vibrate with us, what we want to encourage is that each visitor come with their own feelings and sensitivity," he says. "Because each one discovers not only the works of art, but, by doing so, they discover one's self."

The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 4525 Oak Street in Kansas City, Missouri, opens theBloch Galleries to the public on March 11. Admission is free but timed tickets are required for March 11 - 12.816-751-1ART.

Laura Spencer is an arts reporter at KCUR 89.3. You can reach her on Twitter@lauraspencer.

See the original post:

The Nelson-Atkins' Bloch Galleries Feature Old Masterworks And New Technology - KCUR

Ex-NHLer Craig Cunningham makes amazing progress after leg … – FOXSports.com

One of the most emotional stories of this hockey season was that ofCraig Cunningham, who collapsed on the ice before an AHL game late last year.

Cunningham, who spent time in the NHL with the Bruins and Coyotes, went into cardiac arrest just prior toa Tucson Roadrunnersgame in November. His hearted stopped beating for two days before doctors were able to save his life through a complicated procedure that involved a ventricular assist device and an oxygenator that served as an artificial lung.

That procedure affectedhis circulation, resultinginCunningham losingpart of his left leg, ending his playingcareer.

Despite the amputation, many people close to Cunningham have relayed that the 26-year-oldhasremained in good spirits and is just thankful to be alive. On Wednesday, it was also revealed that hes making outstanding progress in his rehabilitation.

TSN reporter Ray Ferraro shared thisvideo of Cunningham walking on his prosthetic leg with the help of a walker.

It obviously cant be easy for a pro athlete to have their lifetime passion and livelihood taken from them in such swift fashion, especially the wayit was taken from Cunningham. But its pretty inspiring to and uplifting to see how he seems to be making the most of the tough hand that was dealt to him.

Heres hopingCunningham will make his way back to full healthand find a way backinto the hockey world.

Brad Penner-USA TODAY Sports | Brad Penner

Excerpt from:

Ex-NHLer Craig Cunningham makes amazing progress after leg ... - FOXSports.com

Scientists Make Progress Toward Engineering Synthetic Yeast – Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Scientists Make Progress Toward Engineering Synthetic Yeast
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Designer biologists are nearing completion of the first completely synthetic Baker's yeastthe single-celled workhorse of commercial biotechnology used in products from beer and biofuels to medicine. Reporting in Science on Thursday, researchers in ...

View original post here:

Scientists Make Progress Toward Engineering Synthetic Yeast - Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Wagoner County Jail sees progress in long list of necessary repairs – KTUL

A holding cell in the booking room at the Wagoner County Jail, in this picture taken March 9, 2017./KTUL

WAGONER, Okla. (KTUL) - Tax dollars are hard at to work to repair a long list of maintenance issues at the Wagoner County Jail. Sheriff Chris Elliot said the biggest problem is plumbing, also mentioning not one cell is 100 percent operational.

You might have a jail cell that has hot water but no cold water. you might have a jail cell where the toilets not flushing properly. As were repairing things were also finding other issues, said the sheriff.

Elliott said theyve had to move inmates to different pods and cells while pipes for sinks and toilets get fixed, though most days are tough considering the jail is at its capacity of 120 inmates.

We were actually having to put jugs of cold water in the jail cells for them, insulated jugs of cold water, so if the inmate needed to drink some water in the middle of the night, they would have access to water, said Elliott.

The sheriff pointed out these were problems he inherited when he took office in July 2016 after a special election. Elliott said progress is moving along, as theyve already made several plumbing repairs and upgraded everything in the kitchen.

Were not at 100 percent operational, not yet because were waiting on parts. But every inmate now has access to good, clean drinking water without having to go to a jug and theyve got access to good, clean functioning toilet facilities, said the sheriff.

There still is, however, speculation around townraising the question why tax dollars werent being used to maintain the jail before.

It was the top thing on my priority list that weve got to get this deal fixed. how it got therethats just a conjecture. You would have to talk to the people in the previous administration, said Elliott.

The sheriff mentioned the maintenance problems sheds some light on an issue theyll have to deal with in the futurespace. Elliott said the jail is at capacity most nights and theyre often squeezing in an extra 15 to 20 inmates. Elliott said Wagoner is the second fastest growing county in Oklahoma, and with more people comes more crime. He said the current jail wont be sufficient to hold more people in the near future and the area may have to look into options to build a new jail that can last 25 years.

Focusing on the task at hand now, Elliott hes working closely with the Wagoner County Commission to turn things around, realizing the repairs are going to take time. However, the sheriff said he still wants to assure the public their commitment to the project.

I want everyone to know the jail is safe, secure, the inmates are safe, theyre secure. Were just starting to fix all the smaller, nagging problems, said Elliott.

Repairs have cost about $20,000 so far. Elliott said they dont have a certain timeframe when the upgrades will be done because each repair requires specialized parts made for correctional facilities. These parts take about two to three weeks to deliver.

Read more from the original source:

Wagoner County Jail sees progress in long list of necessary repairs - KTUL

Education Department reports progress in improving reading for K … – Radio Iowa

Amy Williamson

The Iowa Department of Education released a policy paper today which shows the statewide effort by Iowa schools to catch and correct reading problems in students early on is showing progress.

The paper says nearly 9,000 students in kindergarten through third grade who had fallen short of benchmarks in reading in the fall of 2015 met or surpassed benchmarks by the spring of 2016, an increase of 4.2 percentage points.

The Ed Departments Amy Williamson oversees the Bureau of School Improvement. She says the early warning system implemented in 2014 is a key part of helping kids improve their reading.

What we are doing is measuring something that teachers can use on a three-times-a-year basis,or even progress monitor on a weekly basis with universal screening assessments, Williamson says. That has to be something that can be done quickly and detect very fine increments of progress. Williamson says it gives a much better picture of whats happening with students than the annual assessments.

She says the annual assessments are like a weight loss plan where you dont weigh yourself every day and see changes by the ounce. But she says they have to see fine increments on a weekly basis to change the reading instruction.

The 398 public and non-public schools using the early warning system saw a nearly 61 percent increase in the percentage of students in kindergarten through third grade that were at or above the state benchmark for reading.

Jane Lindaman

Waterloo saw the biggest increase among urban districts at 14.6 percent from the fall of 2015 to the spring of 2016. Jane Lindaman, the districts superintendent, says it has been a group effort. There is not doubt that the district, the implementation, the buy-in from the teachers, the leadership matters. And so when people believe in the system, when they believe in kids and they are tracking it all along the way I think it is truly about the work ongoing, Lindaman says.

She says getting kids to become better readers goes beyond trying to meet some state requirement. For us it is not just something that we do for compliance, Lindaman says,we dont just do it and then turn in the scores and have then have the state look at them. For us in Waterloo it doesnt have much to do with the state at all. It has everything to do with our Waterloo kids.

Lindaman says parents are also coming along. I would say that right now our parents probably have more questions that answers, but they are asking the questions, which is part of the process, Lindaman says. So they are starting to say how does this work? And so we are along the journey, we are down the road a little bit on our working with parents and letting them know. They fit in because they can support the work at home, but right now we need them to understand where they students are and what the school is doing to help them improve.

Tynne Sulser

Centerville third-grade teacher, Tynne Sulser, says the last 3 years of implementing the program have been a learning experience for her as a teacher.

I thought that I was doing the best that I could. And it turns out I needed to look at what I needed to do in the classroom and I did need to make changes in my core instruction, Sulser says. And by doing that I cannot tell you, it brings tears to my eyes the first time my kids they were so excited, they were self-confident. These are kids who struggle in reading every single day.

She says shes seen improvement in the kids who struggle the most. They may be a lot lower than proficiency and so when they are gaining 40 correct words per minute in 2 months, 3 months, and they are still not proficient you cant ask any more for that child, Sulser says.

Sulser says the kids gain confidence in the progress they have made and it will continue. You just keep on going and you keep on going and that confidence is going to get them there, Sulser says. It might not be in third grade, but its going to be in fourth grade.

Increases in the highest-growth school districts ranged from 19 to 32 percentage points. Iowas early literacy law passed by the Legislature in 2012, focuses on making sure all students are proficient readers by the end of third grade.

The rest is here:

Education Department reports progress in improving reading for K ... - Radio Iowa

Shelby County making progress on Cahaba River Park – Alabama’s News Leader

Fifteen hundred acres along the Cahaba River will soon have canoe access points, hiking and biking trails.

Shelby County is making progress on Cahaba River Park. It just finished River Road, connecting County Road 13 to the Cahaba River.

Now that people have better access to the river, the next step is to add recreation opportunities.

You can just relax, you know, without having all the troubles, Larry Norris told ABC 33/40.

The river is a usual rest spot for Norris.

I just love getting outdoors you know because of my health and everything like that, said Norris. I want a place to come to that's beautiful.

Norris lives nearby Cahaba River Park. He smiles at the idea of the county building new amenities.

Everything they're going to do is going to be pretty cool, Norris said.

Shelby county and Forever Wild own the land.

The plan is to add several canoe access points along seven miles of the Cahaba. A parking lot will be added at the end of River Road, along with restrooms and a pavilion.

The county also applied for grants for hiking and biking trails.

The county's owned its part of the land for about ten years but during tough economic times, didn't put a lot of resources into developing it. Now, it will use about $1 million for the new amenities aimed at increasing quality of life for the residents.

There's a demand for nice, enjoyable spaces out in the environment where people can go out and feel and touch wild life, said Chad Scroogins, Chief Development Officer for the county.

Scroogins expects all amenities to be complete this fall, including a caretaker house aimed at increasing safety.

The caretaker is usually someone in law enforcement that allows us to have some security there but they also have general responsibilities with upkeep and maintenance with various aspects of the park, explained Scroogins.

There are also plans to resurface county road 13, which leads to River Road.

Follow this link:

Shelby County making progress on Cahaba River Park - Alabama's News Leader

GRTC Pulse construction progress questioned – wtvr.com

Please enable Javascript to watch this video

RICHMOND, Va. If youve driven down Broad Street, you have most likely come across the construction for the GRTC Pulse project.

The construction has been a bit of a headache, said Josephine Flemotomos.

Flemotomos owns Gus Bar and Grill on Broad Street and said though shes excited for the project, shes had some issues with parking.

Along with parking concerns, others have asked why it appears that only some parts of Broad Street are being worked on, when the whole street is blocked off.

GRTC Pulse construction is underway all along Broad Street.

Flemotomos said she has noticed thatbut isnt bothered by it.

It would be nice if it was blocked off where they were working, but I think a lot of that has to do with the fact that theyre trying to keep people contained, she said.

We took questions some had about the construction to GRTC Spokeswoman Carrie Rose Pace.

The express bus route is expected to begin operating this year.

Our goal was to make sure we minimize impacts, and some of that means were performing in such a way that might not be obvious to people that are passing by, she said.

Rose Pace said they have already worked from Hamilton to 1st Street, including saw cutting, which many may not notice.

You can see that saw cut line meaning we have literally cut into the road and youll see it along that yellow line, said Rose Pace.

Ten new 40-foot buses will serve the Pulse Rapid Transit Route, a 7.6-mile stretch between Rocketts Landing and Willow Lawn. Among its features is that it is considered eco-friendly and runs on compressed natural gas.

"This has 38 seats as well as rooms for 15 standees -- meaning people standing up holding as they ride. We have better bike capacities, so we can hold up to three bikes on the front of the bus as opposed to two, which is great," Rose Pace said.

The express routes will be madepossiblethrough Transit Signal Priority. The buses will be communicating with the traffic lights.

"The traffic signals know where the buses are at all times. If they can hear a ping, and tell the bus they're coming and wait for me, then it'll hold the light green long enough to get that bus through," Pace said.

GRTC Pulse hopes to test the new route as early as August 2017. GRTC Pulse plansto start operating in October 2017.

The $49 million dollar project will transform Broad Street into a 7-mile stretch of frequently running buses, stretching from Willow Lawn to Rockets Landing.

Read more from the original source:

GRTC Pulse construction progress questioned - wtvr.com