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Monthly Archives: March 2017
Adelaide Airport heads to the cloud for automation | ZDNet – ZDNet
Posted: March 7, 2017 at 10:13 pm
Adelaide Airport has announced it has replaced its key operational IT systems with automated solutions provided by Madrid-based IT firm Amadeus.
The airport has adopted Amadeus' full suite of cloud-based airport data management systems, which is expected to streamline Adelaide Airport's management of aircraft parking, boarding gates, check-in desks, customer information, and other mission critical airport terminal services.
"With our new terminal hotel about to start construction, the plans for the expansion of the terminal well advanced and new check-in kiosks and automated baggage systems being deployed, we need the right airport technology partner that can support our growth," said David Blackwell, Adelaide Airport executive general manager for customer service.
With more than 8 million passengers annually and a forecast of more than 18 million passengers by 2034, Adelaide Airport said it has implemented three Amadeus' Airport Solutions -- Airport Operational Database, Airport Fixed Resource Management Solution, and Flight Information Display System -- in a bid to meet growth plans and be "future-ready".
"These sophisticated aeronautical airport data management systems are the first cloud-hosted systems in Australasia and this partnership positions Adelaide Airport as a leader in airport operational data management," Amadeus added.
As a result of its new technology, Adelaide Airport said it will receive accurate and timely data from its daily operations, including information on flights, passengers, baggage, and equipment.
Over 124 airlines in more than 190 countries currently rely on Amadeus systems to manage travel reservations.
Speaking with ZDNet earlier this year, Olaf Schnapauff, CTO of global operations at Amadeus, explained that when taking a flight anywhere in the world, the technology will likely be run by Amadeus.
"Amadeus provides the technology that keeps the travel sector moving. From the initial search to find what you want, to making a booking, to pricing, ticketing, reservations, check-in and departure, hotels, rail, and the overall travel experience," Schnapauff said.
In 2015, Amadeus handled almost 450 million passengers, 4 million booking at peak times each day, according to the CTO.
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Latin America’s Moment – Council on Foreign Relations (blog)
Posted: at 10:13 pm
4761 16
by Shannon K. O'Neil March 7, 2017
While politicians have focused primarily on the effects of trade, automation is rapidly transforming the nature of work. A recent McKinsey report estimates that half of the labor done today can be turned over to machines, fundamentally changing the nature of manufacturing, retail, food services, and data processing among other sectors. They predict that China, India, the United States, and Japan will see the largest and fastest shifts as a combination of easy capital, aging populations, and falling productivity speeds the transition away from a human workforce. By their calculations, nearly 400 million Chinese and 235 million Indian workers compete with robots today. In the United States and Japan, some 60 percent of jobs are susceptible to change. Although positions may not disappear altogether, the work people do will change, as roughly a third of todays repetitive tasks could be taken over by machines.
Latin America will also see significant change with roughly half of the current labor mix in Mexico, Brazil, and Argentina vulnerable to automation, a higher percentage than the United States. Sales of robots already top $2 billion a year, showing that the shift is already underway.
Brazil looks the most vulnerable to change, as its mix of stagnant productivity, an aging population, and the infamous Brazil cost make labor expensive. In manufacturing, retail, transportation, and agriculture more than half the work done by 32 million employees could be automated.
Though Argentinas economy is slightly less susceptible to automation, its aging population combined with a decade long lack of investment could lead companies to step up capital spending on robotics under the more market friendly Macri government. Slowing the process down are strong unions and unreliable electricity. But over half of its agricultural and manufacturing jobs are vulnerable.
Structurally, Mexico has the highest potential to automate, as almost two-thirds of the work done in advanced manufacturing plastic, auto, and aerospace sectors could be phased out, affecting some five million workers. Yet the process in Mexico will likely be slower, cushioned by its younger population and lower wages.
The global question is what comes afterward. The majority techno-optimists believe new jobs will emerge for these displaced workers, following the industrial and agricultural revolutions before. They point to car mechanics, coal miners, engineers and more recently app developers as previously unimaginable gigs that have appeared. The pessimists see this time as indeed different, as with the rise of artificial intelligence making machines viable substitutes for people.
Leaning optimistic, McKinseys advice for advanced nations rings just as true for Latin America. Governments need to expand social safety nets to protect those most vulnerable to these coming labor upheavals. They also need to transform schools and educational curriculums to train a twenty-first century workforce that complements rather competes with robots, encouraging creativity, flexibility, and entrepreneurship. And governments need to support basic research and innovation, helping them shape the ongoing revolution. For Latin America especially, it means promoting these types of investments, as even though they disrupt todays status quo they will help ensure the region isnt left behind in these global shifts.
CFR seeks to foster civil and informed discussion of foreign policy issues. Opinions expressed on CFR blogs are solely those of the author or commenter, not of CFR, which takes no institutional positions. All comments must abide by CFR's guidelines and will be moderated prior to posting.
Latin Americas Moment looks at economic, political, and social issues and trends throughout the Western Hemisphere.
While politicians have focused primarily on the effects of trade, automation is rapidly transforming the nature of work. A recent
This morning, I had the privilege of testifying before the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations at a hearing titled
View article in Spanish, originally published in El Financiero. Mexicos presidential elections for decades have been a one shot deal.
A wave of corruption scandals has roiled Latin America in recent years, from Chiles campaign finance affairs, through Mexicos Casa
Last week while in Mexico I had the chance to talk to Alejandro Domnguez, Reporter for Milenio TV about U.S.-Mexico
In The Hacked World Order, CFR Senior Fellow Adam Segal shows how governments use the web to wage war and spy on, coerce, and damage each other. More
Red Team provides an in-depth investigation into the work of red teams, revealing the best practices, most common pitfalls, and most effective applications of these modern-day devil's advocates. More
Through insightful analysis and engaging graphics, How America Stacks Up explores how the United States can keep pace with global economic competition. More
View Complete List
Williams argues that the status quo for peace operations in untenable and that greater U.S. involvement is necessary to enhance the quality and success of peacekeeping missions.
The authors argue that the United States has responded inadequately to the rise of Chinese power and recommend placing less strategic emphasis on the goal of integrating China into the international system and more on balancing China's rise.
Campbell evaluates the implications of the Boko Haram insurgency and recommends that the United States support Nigerian efforts to address the drivers of Boko Haram, such as poverty and corruption, and to foster stronger ties with Nigerian civil society.
Complete list of Council Special Reports
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How automation, new tech helps one nonprofit increase revenue by 300% – WRAL Tech Wire
Posted: at 10:12 pm
Posted Mar. 7, 2017 at 10:00 a.m.
Published: 2017-03-07 10:00:11 Updated: 2017-03-07 10:00:11
By STACI BARFIELD, Children's Flight of Hope
Editor's note: Children's Flight of Hope is proving that investing in technological infrastructure has exponentially magnified our organization's ability to execute our mission, says CEO Staci Barfield.
MORRISVILLE - In the not-for-profit sector, technology is often an afterthought. It is not uncommon, even with todays advances, for nonprofit staff to utilize donated computer equipment and software deemed obsolete by their for-profit cohorts. In trying to keep down the costs of what has traditionally been referred to as overhead, investments in technology are often viewed by nonprofits as unnecessary, expensive, and/or frivolous.
At Childrens Flight of Hope (CFOH), however, we have proven that investing in technological infrastructure has exponentially magnified our organizations ability to execute our mission. CFOH is a 501(c)(3) organization that provides air transportation for children to access specialized medical care. We work to ensure all children have equal access to the health care they need, providing flights to and from medical treatment that can save, prolong or improve their quality of life.The process consists of four key steps:
Many CFOH clients have diagnoses that require long-term care and multiple rounds of treatment. Once accepted into our program, CFOH commits to the child, which means we will fly them for as long and as often as their treatment plan dictates. As such, the process above can be repeated many times for each child.
While seemingly straightforward, many stakeholders are involved in executing CFOHs mission. These include clients, family members and travel companions, healthcare professionals, charter service operators, corporate flight providers, commercial airlines, donors, volunteers, and resource partners.
Until a few years ago, requests for CFOH services were submitted by phone or email and stakeholder information was predominantly paper-based. In 2013 we initiated a review of internal processes, with the goal of eliminating redundant and non-value-add activities.
Believing technology could transform our organization, we embarked on a wholesale infrastructure change. To support anticipated growth and geographic dispersion, we implemented cloud-based solutions Salesforce, Office 365, and Adobe Creative Cloud that allow data and functionality to be accessible from any location. To facilitate staff productivity, we standardized on Lenovo laptops, added secondary monitors, upgraded software to the most current versions, and provided technical training opportunities.
Working with RTP-based Cloud Giants, we designed and implemented a custom mission management application that allows for online request submission, single-entry data collection, automated workflow, and the elimination of paper. As a result, the client process was reduced from five-and-a-half hours per request to slightly over an hour. This has allowed CFOH to grow from providing 69 flights (in 2012) to 510 flights (in 2016) with the same manpower, while simultaneously decreasing per flight cost by 87 percent.
Leveraging existing (and often free) applications available on the Salesforce platform, we support fundraising, volunteer management, operations, and communications activities. Having a consolidated view of donors, partners, and volunteers allows for real-time data analysis, which has been a major factor in CFOHs 300 percent revenue growth over the last four years.
I offer the following advice for nonprofits considering an investment in technology:
About the author: Staci Barfield has served as the President and CEO of Childrens Flight of Hope for the last four years, during which time she has led the organization in its transformation from a regional to international operation. For more information about Childrens Flight of Hope, visitwww.childrensflightofhope.org.
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Global $231.11 Billion Factory Automation Market 2017- Forecasts … – Yahoo Finance
Posted: at 10:12 pm
DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Research and Markets has announced the addition of the "Factory Automation Market - Forecasts from 2016 to 2021" report to their offering.
Factory Automation market is projected to witness CAGR of 5.34% over the forecast period to reach US$231.110 billion by 2021, increasing from US$178.160 billion in 2016.
Rising adoption of automated technologies coupled with the growing internet and information technology in order to reduce manufacturing cycle time and increase the efficiency of the production process is the key driver of global factory automation market.
Stringent regulations regarding workers' safety in hazardous working areas is another major factor that is spurring the demand for factory automation by various end-use industries. As the labor costs are escalating, the need to reduce the amount of direct labor and decrease operational costs will propel the growth of global factory automation market in the forthcoming years.
By product, the MES (Manufacturing Execution System) is projected to grow at the highest CAGR during the forecast period due to increased focus on reduction in operational costs, better utilization of production assets across the supply chain, and improvement in operation. Automated products based on sensor technology are also poised to grow at a significant rate owing to declining prices of sensors worldwide.
Geographically, North America holds the largest share of global factory automation market owing to a booming automotive industry which heavily relies on robotic systems and automation equipment to perform multiple tasks rapidly. Europe will also witness a significant growth due to increasing labor costs along with the presence of key factory automation market players, such as Schneider Electric and ABB, in the region. However, APAC region is anticipated to witness the fastest market growth during the forecast period.
This growth is attributed to growing industrial sectors in China, Japan, India, and South Korea. Furthermore, offshore assembling for major MNCs by contract manufacturing companies in the emerging economies will boost the regional growth in the coming years. Restraints such as high initial investment and operational costs coupled with a lack of skilled personnel will hinder the growth of global factory automation market during the forecast period.
Key industry players profiled as part of this section are Bosch, Schneider Electric, Honeywell International, Siemens AG, and General Electric Co among others.
Key Topics Covered:
1. Introduction
2. Research Methodology
3. Executive Summary
4. Market Dynamics
5. Factory Automation Market Forecast by Type (US$ billion)
6. Factory Automation Market Forecast by Industry Verticals (US$ billion)
7. Factory Automation Market Forecast by Geography (US$ billion)
8. Competitive Intelligence
9. Company Profiles
For more information about this report visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/hf7hm5/factory
View source version on businesswire.com: http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20170307005998/en/
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The robots are coming: How will automation affect London’s economy? – CityMetric
Posted: at 10:12 pm
Utopia, a book by English statesman, lawyer and clergyman Thomas More (1487-1535), turned 500 years old last year. A fictional rendering of social philosophy, the book describes an exemplary society on an imaginary island in an unknown place faraway across the seas. Coined by More from the Greek ou-topos, meaning no place, or nowhere, the word utopia has become adopted in the English language to mean a place where everything is ideal or perfect.
In celebrating Utopias 500th birthday, the Ecotopia 2121 project, of which I am the coordinator, is harnessing Thomas Mores spirit to predict the futures of 100 real cities around the world if they somehow managed to become super eco-friendly.
Of course, modern utopias need to be eco-friendly to overcome the global environmental crisis. Given that cities may be home to 80 per cent of humanity by the end of the century, they can only be sustainable if environmentalism is one of their core features.
The cities of Ecotopia 2121 are presented in the form of scenario art, which involves a review of both global and local environmental challenges as well as their unique histories and cultures. This allows for a diversity of future scenarios rather than one common vision of the future city.
What you will see below are a series of artworks, but this is not an art project. We use art as a means of analysis and communication.
With that in mind, here are six ecotopian cities of my own creation that emerged from the project, one from each inhabited continent.
Accra, the capital of Ghana, is exposed to disastrous floods every year. This has been made worse by climate change, as well as unregulated construction and dumping in and around its waterways.
In our imagined future, locals seek to procure housing above the floodline, by building low-cost tree cabins in the nearby forest.
Accra 2121. Image: Alan Marshall/author provided.
Ghana has one of the highest deforestation rates in the world, but by 2121, the forest has become a home for some of its citizens.
Accras new residents would protect the forest ecosystem from those who would destroy it, such as the logging, mining and oil companies.
In the summer of 2121, during an economic downturn, 100,000 pensioners take to the streets of London, the British capital, to protest cuts in pensions and education, shutting down the entire city.
They bring along their grandchildren to give them something interesting to do as they mind them. By summers end, the protesters despair at the governments poor response, so they take matters into their own hands, staging a permanent occupation.
London 2121. Image: Alan Marshall/author provided.
The pensioners convert some 20km of London into a large eco-village, transforming unoccupied offices into homes, sowing garden lots on street corners, and setting up eco-businesses to trade products and services.
In the process, all the children get free education from their experienced elders in these various green arts and crafts.
The southern Californian city of Los Angeles once had a great network of tramways, but this was systematically bought up and then closed down by a group of conspiring auto-manufacturing companies.
Los Angeles 2121. Image: Alan Marshall/author provided.
As the worlds oil is depleted by the end of this century, cars will become useless and trams could make a comeback in Los Angeles. The unused freeways could then be redeveloped into vegetated greenways. Such greenways are suited for pedestrians and cyclists, but they could also act as ecological corridors, connecting populations of wild plants and animals around the city that would otherwise be isolated.
Retired cars could then serve as part of the fabric of high-density buildings, creating an architectural style whereby people live and work in smaller structures and within tighter-knit communities. This would mean cities such as Los Angeles would not need to sprawl further into the countryside and wild lands.
Known in English as the Chatham Islands, Rkohu is an archipelago in the Pacific Ocean, 680km southeast of New Zealand. Its the ancestral home of the pacifist Moriori people, who came to wear the feathers of the native albatross in their hair to symbolise peace during the 500 years they lived on the archipelago.
In the 19th century, British sealers and Maori warriors from New Zealand discovered the islands. The sealers decimated the colonies of the animals and introduced devastating diseases to which the Moriori had no immunity. Then the Maori staged a violent takeover of the islands, slaughtering or enslaving the remaining Moriori.
Rkohu 2121. Image: Alan Marshall/author provided.
The Moriori refused to give up their pacifist ideals to fight against the invaders. While this history suggests pacifism is only going to get you killed or enslaved, the Moriori who survive today believe otherwise. They maintain that their pacifism meant that they lived in a peaceful society for five centuries.
By 2121, their small capital city on the lagoon is home to a peace school that expounds the virtues of pacifism to the rest of the world.
The Guair Falls along the border of Paraguay and Brazil were once a natural wonder. The cacophonous roar of their seven columns could be heard many kilometres away and, for many years, the falls were a major attraction. They were also the economic lifeblood of the nearby Paraguayan city of Salto del Guair, which thrived on tourism.
In 1982, however, the Brazilian military government blew away the rocks over which the water fell, to create a reservoir for a dam. Many Paraguayans mourned the passing of their much-loved falls.
Salto del Guair 2121. Image: Alan Marshall/author provided.
By 2121, though, both the falls and the city have re-emerged in splendid style. The dam has collapsed through neglect and local people have regained control of their land. They set about rehabilitating the falls as best they can, turning their home into a scenic eco-city that attracts tourists once again.
After a nuclear meltdown just out of town, a vast radioactive cloud sweeps over future Tokyo. Everyone must be evacuated. A few hardy nuclear families tough it out in moonbase homes, which are impervious to radiation.
Everything these families eat and drink must be produced and recycled within these homes. When they step outside, they must don protective clothing or moonsuits.
Tokyo 2121. Image: Alan Marshall/author provided.
But because Tokyo is suddenly depopulated, its not nearly as noisy and stressful as before. If hell is other people, as French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre suggested, then Tokyo 2121 is utopia.
Wildlife also rebounds, albeit in a mutated manner.
These six scenarios are but a small sample of the 100 that were produced within the Ecotopia 2121 project. Some readers will be delighted and others confused by the method of the project and its results.
Part of the point of utopianism is to be provocative. If you like your future riddled with self-driving cars and the magic of nuclear energy, then maybe these scenarios are not for you. And youre likely to dismiss them as fantasy anyway.
But to study utopias and formulate alternative scenarios to how we now live on this planet is not an escape into fantasy. It is an active response to the many technological fantasies cast about with extravagance and excess into our lives right now.
These fantasies bind us to an unsustainable and unlivable future. If Ecotopia 2121 is but a collection of fantasies, at least they would do less harm to the planet we live on.
Alan Marshall is a lecturer in environmental social sciences at Mahidol University.
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
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The robots are coming: How will automation affect London's economy? - CityMetric
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Think your job is safe from automation? Think again! – New Jersey 101.5 FM Radio
Posted: at 10:12 pm
Thinkstock
As more and more businesses find ways to eliminate employees, Wendys being the latest, its predicted by Yuval Noah Harari in his new book Homo Deus; A Brief History of Tomorrow that in the coming years by 2020 artificial intelligence will make it possible to eliminate much more than service and manufacturing jobs. How about doctors, teachers, soldiers, and truckers to name a few? Harrari tells the New York Posts Reed Tucker I think we should be worried and worried now
According to a report issued in 2015 by McKinsey Global Institute, a business think tank, 95 percent of jobs should be safe until 2020, then technology will change the landscape rapidly.
Self driving cars will wipe out the trucking industry. An Uber truck has already made its first driverless delivery taking 50,000 cans of beer 120 miles from Fort Collins to Colorado Springs. Amazon has already opened stores where sales people and cashiers are not needed. In the military, soldiers can be replaced by robots and drones that will always get it right and cannot be tortured.
What about the higher paying jobs like teachers and doctors? A recent experiment found that a computer algorithm correctly diagnosed 90 percent of the lung cancer cases presented to it. This could make the general practitioner obsolete as well as schools. Teachers could be replaced by AIs which can be tailored for the specific needs of the student and placed in a smart phone.
So whats a worker to do? That will be the big question facing the future leaders as not everyone will be able to get a job in these new fields, yet we all will need to be supported.
Harrari talks about people dealing with not being needed and what they will do with their time. Will they immerse themselves in video games? drugs? What will drugs be like in the coming years? Will less harmful ones be developed and legalized?
The only way I can see for us to stay ahead of this rapidly advancing curve is to learn to do as many things as you possibly can and be ready to change and adapt to new things at a moments notice. Is your job robot proof? Is there something else that you can do that isnt? You should think about it, just in case.
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CG Power sells automation business – The Hindu
Posted: at 10:12 pm
Moneycontrol.com | CG Power sells automation business The Hindu CG Power and Industrial Solutions Ltd. (formerly Crompton Greaves Ltd.) of the Avantha Group, has announced the sale of its B2B automation business to Alfanar for an enterprise value of 120 million (more than 840 crore). The deal is effective March 6. Crompton up over 4% on close of stake sale in automation biz CG announces sale of B2B automation business to Alfanar Crompton Greaves closes automation biz sale to Alfanar |
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Retailers Eye Machine Learning, Automation and the IoT to Evolve Shopping Experience – WWD
Posted: at 10:12 pm
WWD | Retailers Eye Machine Learning, Automation and the IoT to Evolve Shopping Experience WWD After years of investments to support omnichannel commerce, retailers and brands are now looking at automation, machine learning, cognitive computing and the Internet of Things (IoT) technologies to evolve the shopping experience as well as improve ... |
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Ben Carson Says Slaves In America Were Just Low Wage Immigrants – The Ring of Fire Network
Posted: at 10:12 pm
Dr. Ben Carson stated during a speech this week that many immigrants came to the US in the bottom of slave ships and worked longer hours for less pay, but they did it because they had a dream of a better life for themselves and their children. No, Ben, those were slaves. They were brought here against their will to work for literally nothing.Ring of Fires Farron Cousins discusses this.
Transcript of the above video:
Cousins: Dr. Ben Carson may have a PhD. He may have gone to medical school, but what this man really needs right now is a history lesson. Take a look at what he said during a speech earlier this week.
Carson: A man of dreams and opportunity. There were other immigrants who came here in the bottom of slave ships, worked even longer, even harder for less, but they too had a dream that one day their sons, daughter, grandsons, granddaughters, great grandson, great granddaughters might pursue prosperity and happiness in this land.
Cousins: Thats right, folks. Those people that the United States went overseas and rounded up, stole from their homes, stole from their homelands, those were just immigrants. They wanted to come over here stuffed in the bottom of those ships and work for lower wages than the white man because they all had a dream. They all thought they were going to come over here and make a better life for themselves and their kids. I am not a history buff. I dont know everything about US history, but I do know enough that thats not even close to what happened, Dr. Carson. At this point, its almost insulting to other doctors to even refer to you as Dr., so Im not going to call you that anymore. Youre just Ben because you are so ignorant that you do not deserve the title of Dr. at this point.
Those people that the United States ripped from their homelands were not immigrants. They were slaves. They were brought over here to work under hellish conditions for absolutely no pay what so ever and thats what they were. They werent immigrants. They didnt want to come here. They were kidnapped. They were stolen. Families were torn apart. They had no idea what happened. Thats what happened in United States history, Ben Carson. Your disgusting revisionist version of this isnt a front to every single American citizen, not just African Americans. Youre re-writing one of the ugliest parts of American history and ugly or not, it is part of our history. If we pretend that it didnt happen, thats even more insulting, but that is exactly what you are doing, Ben.
You know, at this point I have to wonder if any of the stories about you, that movie with Cuba Gooding Jr., did any of that shit actually happen? You are by far one of the dumbest people in American politics today. Im sorry, I find that hard to believe that you could have ever been successful at cutting open peoples heads and tinkering with their brains when you dont even know that slaves were slaves and not immigrants. Thats very concerning to me, Ben, because this is basic US history. My children are in elementary school and they know more about US slavery than you do. That shouldnt be the case.
Im at a loss at this point for the rampant stupidity in revisionist history coming out of not just the Republican Party, but mainly the Trump Administration itself. These people are so disconnected from reality that theyre actually causing harm to the American public and to American discourse at this point. You cant have an intelligent conversation with these people. You cant have a rational conversation with these people. All you can do is sit back and watch as the flurry of stupid flies from their mouths and hope that nobody in that crowd, nobody listening to this garbage actually believes it. Unfortunately, theyre Republicans so they probably do.
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Wash Post: At Least 60000 Immigrants Were Forced to Work for $1 or Less Per Day – Newsmax
Posted: at 10:12 pm
A class-action lawsuit alleges at least 60,000 immigrants detained byU.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement were forced to work for $1 per day or less at animmigrantdetention center, a violation of federal anti-slavery laws, the Washington Post reports.
The prison, the Denver Contract Detention Facility, detains immigrants waiting for court appearances. The lawsuit was filed in 2014 and gained class action status last week following a ruling by U.S. District Judge John Kane. The facility, operated out of Aurora, Colorado by GEO Group, is under contract with ICE.
It's the first time in history where a class-actionlawsuit accusing aU.S. prison company of forced labor has been allowed to progress.
"That's obviously a big deal; it's recognizing the possibility that a government contractor could be engaging in forced labor," Nina DiSalvo, executive director of Towards Justice, a Colorado-based nonprofit group that represents low-wage workers, told the Post. "Certification of the class is perhaps the only mechanism by which these vulnerable individuals who were dispersed across the country and across the world would ever be able to vindicate their rights."
GEO allegedly paysdetainees $8 less than the state's minimum wage in Colorado, which is set at $9, and has not denied doing so -- saying that paying $1 a day does not violate any laws.
"We intend to continue to vigorously defend our company against these claims," GEO Group spokesman Pablo Paez said in a statement, reports the Post. "The volunteer work program at immigration facilities as well as the wage rates and standards associated with the program are set by the federal government. Our facilities, including the Aurora, Colo. Facility, are highly rated and provide high-quality services in safe, secure, and humane residential environments pursuant to the federal governments national standards."
The nine plaintiffs who were part of the original lawsuit claim that detaineeswho refuse to workare threatened with solitary confinement.
The lawsuit allegessix prisoners are selectedevery day randomly and forced to clean the facilitys housing units. The practice, the suit claims, violates the federal Trafficking Victims Protection Act, which prohibits modern-day slavery.
"Forcedlabor is a particular violation of the statute that we've alleged,"Andrew Free, one of the plaintiffs'attorneys, told the Post. "Whether you're calling it forced labor or slavery, the practical reality for the plaintiffs is much the same. You're being compelled to work against your will under the threat of force or use of force."
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Wash Post: At Least 60000 Immigrants Were Forced to Work for $1 or Less Per Day - Newsmax
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