Daily Archives: May 11, 2017

Batman to defend Buckhannon as festival’s parade marshal – Record Delta

Posted: May 11, 2017 at 12:45 pm

BUCKHANNON This years West Virginia Strawberry Festival parade marshal is none other than the caped crusader himself. But this Batman and his Batmobile will be going down Strawberry Lane on Saturday, May 20 with a special message. John Buckland founded Heroes-4-Higher in 2012 and seeks to inspire children to be the hero in their own world. His four principles are to never give up, always do the right thing, help other people and never be a bully. These lessons are taught in all of Bucklands programs. He has been featured on The Today Show, Good Morning America and news channels including CNN, ABC and CBS. After returning to the United States from his job as a firefighter with the Department of Defense in Iraq, Buckland realized how much drugs, bullying, abuse and broken homes were affecting the youth in the country. These issues are very personal to me, as I was a victim of many of these issues myself growing up, he said. It was because of these struggles that the hero characters, especially Batman, along with extensive therapy and support, gave me the inspiration I needed to overcome and then reach out to help others through their pain. I learned through Batman to turn my pain into personal empowerment and use that to help others overcome their own pain. So, I figure Im going to bring Batman to life for the kids in the community with a positive message. Ive literally been a full-time Batman for almost five years now. Buckland has a team at Heroes 4 Higher but says he keeps his squad small and limited to people like him who have risen above their circumstances and can use their own stories to help others. When you are teaching the kids in the community and delivering the message, you want it to come from a genuine place, he said. You dont want to be a costumed character going through the motions. And just like Buckland wants Batman to be more than a costumed character in Heroes 4 Higher, the Batmobile is not just Batmans means of travel for Buckland. It presents another way for Buckland to spread his message. The Batmobile is actually a rolling memorial, he said. Its not just a cool car. Ive made the car a rolling memorial for kids we have been honored to be pall-bearers for that have passed away from cancer. When the hood is lifted, it reveals special plaques with the names and ages of their children, something Buckland wanted to do to carry their memory wherever the Batmobile travels. What good is it to have a car that attracts that much attention, if its all only about the car? Buckland asked. In my opinion, you failed. What I want to do is bring people to see the car, open up the hood and it redirects the attention to who really needs the attention the kids who fought the big battle. Heroes 4 Higher regularly goes into schools as far north as Gettysburg, Pa. and throughout West Virginia. More than 300,000 have heard Bucklands Be the Hero Message and Heroes 4 Higher has visited over 300 schools for its Be the Hero Against Drugs and Bullying Tour since September 2013. Heroes 4 Higher even received a State of West Virginia Legislative Citation for its mission in 2014. Buckland has been at other festivals, including regular appearances at the Pumpkin Festival, but this will be his first time at an event in Buckhannon and his first Strawberry Festival. I have done things up and around that area, he said. We supported a few kids from the area. Buckland is looking forward to visiting Buckhannon. What Im trying to establish is a relationship with the community to where it will hopefully become an annual event like we are with the Pumpkin Festival, he said. The community looks forward to the message that we are blasting out and they look forward to our anti-drug and anti-bullying efforts. Thats what it is all about. If I come out there and all Im remembered for is a cool costume and a cool car, it really hasnt met the need. There is a huge drug epidemic and bullying problem. Kids and families need motivation through that, thats the whole reason of why we do that.

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Press freedom advocates condemn arrest of journalist in West Virginia – ABC News

Posted: at 12:44 pm

Press freedom advocates have condemned the arrest of a journalist in West Virginia, who was apprehended as he questioned a Trump administration official at the State Capitol in Charleston on Tuesday.

Police arrested veteran broadcast journalist Dan Heyman of Public News Service West Virginia on Tuesday and charged him with willful disruption of government processes, a misdemeanor, alleging that Heyman was aggressively breaching the secret service agents and causing a disturbance by yelling questions about the health care bill at Secretary of Health and Human Services Tom Price as he walked alongside senior White House aide Kellyanne Conway. If convicted, he faces up to six months in jail and a $100 fine.

The Committee to Protect Journalists, a leading press freedom watchdog group, characterized the arrest as a clear affront to press freedom and called for the immediate dismissal of the charges.

"The arrest of a journalist trying to ask a question in the public interest is a clear affront to press freedom," said Alexandra Ellerbeck, senior U.S. and Americas researcher at the Committee to Protect Journalists. "West Virginia authorities should drop all charges against Dan Heyman immediately and respect journalists' right to question government officials."

After a few hours in custody, Heyman was released on bail, and he held a press conference in which he told reporters that he had only been doing his job.

"At some point they decided I was too persistent in trying to ask this question and do my job, so they arrested me," Heyman said.

Heymans lawyer. J. Timothy DiPiero, told ABC News that it was crazy to arrest a credentialed journalist but he remains hopeful that prosecutors wont go forward with the case.

They put him in an orange jumpsuit and put his mugshot online, DiPiero said. Thats really degrading and humiliating for a guy just trying to do his job. This is not a good sign for reporters.

Price addressed the incident while speaking in New Hampshire on Wednesday and commended the police for doing what they felt was appropriate, though he added that arresting Heyman was "not my decision to make."

According to Peter Sterne, a senior reporter at the Freedom of the Press Foundation who has been collecting data on press freedom incidents in the U.S. in preparation for the foundations launch of a U.S. Press Freedom Tracker this summer, 15 journalists (including Heyman) have been arrested in the U.S. since the start of the year. Sterne says 14 of them (including Heyman) are currently facing charges as a direct result of their work.

"It's very concerning that Dan was removed from the capitol and arrested, simply for attempting to do his job and ask Secretary Price a question about the controversial health care law, Sterne told ABC News. I hope that the authorities in West Virginia will acknowledge their mistake and drop the charges against him."

Heymans arrest also caught the attention of the West Virginia chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, whose legal director, Jamie Lynn Crofts, told ABC News that the organization stands ready to throw the weight of its office behind Heyman because they view his arrest as a troubling sign of a trickle-down effect.

Were absolutely concerned that this is something thats trickling down from the highest levels of the administration, Crofts said. We have a president who every day is saying the media is fake news and is refusing to call on reporters he doesnt like. Eventually thats going to seep down to other areas, including law enforcement.

For Crofts, Heymans arrest raised concerns that such incidents, if left unaddressed, could put a chill on critical reporting designed to hold our elected officials to account.

If this kind of behavior continues, its just going to result in reporters being afraid to ask questions and people being afraid to stand up to their representatives, Crofts continued. A free press is one of the building blocks of our democracy. Without it, were not the same country. Americans, regardless of their political beliefs, have the right to stand up and ask tough questions.

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Creative Freedom – The Source Weekly (press release) (registration) (blog)

Posted: at 12:44 pm

Upon the announcement of De La Soul's upcoming performance at the 10 Barrel 10th Anniversary Party, everyone I talked to had a similar reaction. "Aw man! No way! De La Soul reminds me of high school." Of course, as someone in her 30s, that's the reaction one could expect. But nonetheless, De La Soul reminds listeners of a certain time in their life. No surprise, since until last year, the hip-hop trio hadn't released an album in 12 years.

The group comes to Bend in support of its most recent album, "And the Anonymous Nobody..." For the past 10 years, they've remained independent, free of a record label interfering in their creative process. For the new record, De La Soul went directly to the source the fans for financing. "And the Anonymous Nobody..." gained funding via a Kickstarter campaign, meeting its goal in a few short hours, then surpassing it six times over. The album was the first by a major hip-hop group financed completely by crowdfunding.

While De La Soul has always sampled, experimented and blended genres, "And the Anonymous Nobody..." takes it to another level. The album features collaborations with a breadth of artists and includes songs you won't typically expect from a hip-hop trio. De La Soul brings typical hip-hop players, including the likes of Usher, 2 Chainz, Snoop Dogg and Jill Scott, to the album. But it's the less conspicuous guests that make the album truly unique.

"Snoopies" features Talking Heads singer David Byrne. Swedish dreamy electro-pop band Little Dragon makes a guest appearance on the less than typical joint, "Drawn." In that song, Little Dragon takes the lead for nearly five minutes before De La Soul even utters a word. A song like this may never have made it onto a major label record release, which is why Kickstarter provided the perfect platform for the artists to have complete creative freedom. These two songs cross genre lines and challenge the idea of modern hip-hop.

On the crowd funding side of things, some question why you would pay for your favorite hip-hop pioneers to make a new album. As independent artists, it hearkens back to the quest for freedom over the entire creative process. Giving your favorite artists free reign to create exactly what they want and not what the record label wants pushes music to the pinnacle of artistic expression.

For fans, contributing $15 to the De La Soul Kickstarter got them a digital copy of the album with bonus songs. At that price point, you're basically paying for the album, which you would have done anyway. With Kickstarter, it allows you to feel personally invested in the production of the album. For super fans, higher donations led to more imaginative rewards. From shopping for new kicks with Posdnous to appearing on a skit on the album, to Dave's own platinum record plaque, donors had the chance to realize their dreams within the De La Soul universe.

No matter where De La Soul falls in your "time-of-life" experience, their genre-pushing blend of hip-hop with jazz, funk, rock, electronicand anything else they feel in the momentwill have you on your feet. Dance freely, knowing you'll be supporting independent musicians and artists who've been allowed to exercise their creative freedom.

Saturday May 13, 8:45pm

10 Barrel 10th Anniversary Party

10 Barrel Brewing Co. Brewing Facility

62970 NE 18th St., Bend

Free

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Saudi Arabia is giving women more freedom as it looks beyond oil – CNNMoney

Posted: at 12:44 pm

King Salman has ordered a review of laws that still make it hard for many women to work, travel, undergo medical procedures and go to university without the permission of a male relative or spouse, human rights organizations said this week. The review could last three months.

"The order, if adequately enforced, could end arbitrary guardian consent requirements imposed on women by government officials," Human Rights Watch said Tuesday.

The Saudi government has not yet published an official decree setting out in detail which laws could be eased, and there have been conflicting reports in Saudi media.

That likely reflects the very sensitive nature of any such change. Deputy crown prince Mohammed Bin Salman is leading a bold plan to break the kingdom's reliance on oil, which requires a transformation of the economy and Saudi society.

Analysts say that the ruling royal family is likely to tread carefully to avoid a backlash from conservative religious authorities who, for decades, have exercised enormous influence in the home of Islam's holiest sites.

Despite the uncertainty, the review has been welcomed by some in the kingdom.

"It will allow for greater mobility inside and outside the country, which allows for more efficient economic activity and happiness," said John Sfakianakis, director of economic research at the Gulf Research Center in Riyadh.

Related: Saudi Arabia pushes through pain of breaking oil habit

In the year since Bin Salman unveiled Vision 2030, Saudi Arabia has made progress on stabilizing the economy. It has cut government subsidies, announced new taxes and borrowed billions to balance its books. Higher oil prices have helped.

Good for women, good for the economy

There are also signs of progress towards increasing the participation of women in the workforce -- a key Vision 2030 goal -- particularly in finance and technology. In February, three top jobs in finance, including the head of the stock exchange, were filled by women. Citigroup has just appointed a woman to head the bank's operations in the kingdom.

Still, women are far more likely to be unemployed than men, making up 63% of people out of work and looking for a job, according to Mazen Al Sudairi, head of research at Al Rajhi Capital. The official unemployment rate is 11.6%.

"[There's] no doubt that easing guardianship laws will effect positively the local economy," Al Sudairi said. "It will enhance female productivity and participation that will be seen in term of investments and job creation."

Restrictions on women are already being relaxed in Saudi Arabia's major cities. At a business conference in Riyadh earlier this month, men and women were allowed to sit together. That is still a rare sight in a country where gender segregation is imposed in many public places.

Change is already underway

The religious police, who enforce Islamic law, are still present but have a less prominent role. A year ago, they were stripped of their power to arrest and can now only report people to the state police. Women can sometimes be seen with their hair showing but are still expected to wear an abaya, a long robe-like dress, and a headscarf.

Related: Crowds flock to Saudi Arabia's first Comic Con

Laws preventing women getting a job or some healthcare services without male permission are already being less rigorously applied, according to a member of the Shura Council, which advises the King on legislation.

"These are things that women can do," said Hoda Al-Helaissi. "What has happened now is necessary before [new] laws here are passed."

Saudi Arabia is going through a transitional phase that requires a change in thinking, she added.

"This is a new modernity in Saudi Arabia and it is specific to Saudi Arabia with its identity and religion," Al-Helaissi said.

Clock ticking on driving ban?

However, the review does not appear to address one of the most contentious issues: women driving.

There's no law that specifically bars women from driving, but religious edicts are often interpreted to mean it is illegal for females to do so.

Still, some Saudi political analysts say the driving ban's days are numbered.

"I can't imagine the next year coming without Saudi lifting the ban," said Salman Al-Ansari, president of the Saudi American Public Relation Affairs Committee. "Mohammed Bin Salman understands the fact that granting women their basic rights is an essential factor for the success of his vision 2030."

CNNMoney (Dubai) First published May 10, 2017: 9:15 AM ET

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Saudi Arabia is giving women more freedom as it looks beyond oil - CNNMoney

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Trump’s religious freedom order no more than a symbolic statement – The Hill (blog)

Posted: at 12:44 pm

According to White House officials the day before the release of President Trumps Executive Order Promoting Free Speech and Religious Liberty," it was going to direct the IRS to exercise maximum discretion to alleviate the burden of the Johnson Amendment, which prohibits religious leaders from speaker about politics and candidates from the pulpit.

The actual May 4 Executive Order took no such action. Instead, it directs the Secretary of Treasury not to take any adverse action against any individual, house of worship, or other religious organization for speech of similar character that, consistent with law, the Department of the Treasury has not ordinarily . . . treated as participation or intervention in a political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for public office.

Moreover, the IRS has long exercised discretion in this sensitive area. In a so-called Political Activity Compliance Initiative, the IRS examined possible political activity among some 100 exempt organizations in each of the 2004, 2006 and 2008 election cycles. For these election cycles, the most common violations among those organizations selected for examination were distribution of printed documents supporting candidates, statements endorsing candidates during normal services, well-known individuals endorsing a candidate at an official church function, candidates speaking at official functions and distributions of partisan voter guides.

The Free Speech Fairness Act restores #freespeech, not 'dark money.' https://t.co/a32Qpfsp10 @thehill

Although the statutory prohibition by its terms is absolute such that even a de minimis amount of political campaign intervention could result in loss of exemption, the IRS did not revoke exemption in any of these cases. Neither did it impose the available excise tax of 10 percent on campaign intervention expenditures. It instead issued written advisories because either the act of intervention was shown to be an anomaly or because the organization corrected the intervention and took steps to prevent future intervention.

During every election cycle, including the most recent, violations of the campaign intervention prohibition occur weekly. Candidates, from both the right and the left, visit houses of worship to speak about their candidacy.

Unless those houses of worship have also invited the candidates opponent to make a similar presentation a very unlikely situation the prohibition has been violated. The IRS has never taken any action in these cases. In fact, the Internal Revenue Code already includes special and particular procedural requirements before the IRS can audit a church.

"What does Trump's religious freedom order actually do? Not much..." https://t.co/vXLPcxN279 pic.twitter.com/7NFcqfeNXc

In situations that blatantly disregard the law, the Department of Treasury has taken enforcement action, and the courts have supported such efforts.

In 2000, in a case called Branch Ministries v. Rossotti the Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit upheld IRS revocation of the exemption of a church for campaign intervention. Four days before the presidential election in 1992, the church had run ran full-page advertisements in USA Today and the Washington Times urging Christians not to vote for then-Governor Bill ClintonBill ClintonConway links Anderson Cooper's eye roll to sexism Meet the incorruptible, nonpartisan FBI director the nation needs American innovation is the winner as the FCC tackles net neutrality MORE because his position on such issues as abortion and homosexuality violated Biblical precepts. The ads also solicited tax-deductible contributions.

This case demonstrated the sort of flagrant violation squarely within the zone of ordinary enforcement, and nothing in the May 4 executive order suggests that the IRS should cease enforcement of such glaring violations in the future.

As President Trumps executive order acknowledges, it does not change applicable law. It does not change the status quo. As far as the tax law is concerned, it is no more than a symbolic statement.It may, however, suggest actions to come.

Ellen P. Aprill is the John E. Anderson Chair in Tax Law at Loyola Law School, Los Angeles, where she teaches Nonprofit Organizations and founded the Western Conference on Tax-Exempt Organizations.

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

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Freedom of religion in EU diplomacy: Defending a cause or promoting divergent interests? – EURACTIV

Posted: at 12:44 pm

In recent years, the EU has taken several initiatives to promote freedom of religion across the world, even though the cause has been losing some of its lustre within international relations and has thrown into question the idea of basic rights as an indivisible whole, writes Professor Franois Foret.

Franois Foret is a professor of political science at Universit Libre de Bruxelles.

It reveals a search for a balance between various factors: a symbolic display of unity around fundamental principles vs a calculated defence of the sometimes divergent interests of the EU as a whole, of member states and different Community institutions; preference for law over politics to contain the conflictual dimension of religion vs pragmatism leading sometimes to bend principles to comply with conditions on the field.

The emergence of a European strategy for promoting religious freedom is not a direct result of treaties, since the EU has no competence in this matter, particularly as regards defining what (and who) is a religion.

The prism of human rights, the fundamental mission and ultimate justification for the EU, thus offers the only possible action repertoire. Its consensual dimension suits best diplomats that have the difficult task of getting twenty-eight member states to speak with one voice.

This explains why the European External Action Service (EEAS) launched in 2011 has found that freedom of religion offers a symbolic cause with which it can assert itself at little cost as a political actor in dealings with third countries as well as other EU institutions.

However, things become appreciably more complicated as soon as one moves from upholding principles to putting them into practice. Our research has analysed the case of the EU Guidelines on the promotion and protection of freedom of religion or belief, a document intended to inform the approach taken by agents and partners of European diplomacy in the field.

Published in 2013, the document was the subject of our survey of EEAS Delegations around the world in 2015-2016 and should be subjected to an official impact assessment in 2017.

The main findings of this research first of all confirm the secondary importance of religion in diplomatic practice. Whatever its salience as a problem needing to be dealt with, and its political visibility, it continues to meet indifference, mistrust or hostility among foreign affairs professionals whose ethos calls for issues to be rationalised with a view to finding compromises recognising the interests of all parties.

Even reduced to the notion of freedom of religion, in itself a legal codification limiting its potential for controversy, religion remains too uncontrollable a variable to easily find a place in the diplomats tool kit.

The EU is exposed to the flaws inherent in any policy promoting religious freedom. Three dangers are lying in wait: regionalisation, confessionalisation and religionisation.

Regionalisation: reducing religion to freedom of religion ends up with religion becoming visible only where freedom of religion is under threat, thus masking it as a political variable at work within established democracies and increasing the risk of opposing a secular, pacified Western world to a developing world dominated by religious passions and violations of fundamental rights.

Confessionalisation: attempts to measure religious freedom stress individual practices, based on a conception of religion strongly influenced by the Judeo-Christian model which does not necessarily take account of the realities of other spiritual traditions with their less marked distinction between the sacred and the profane and between the individual and the collective.

Inequalities between religions may be increased to the benefit of those of them which have a hierarchy and spokespersons to make themselves heard. In certain cases, the break with equality is explicit, for example when some European political actors defend the idea that the EU should prioritize the protection of Christian minorities in danger in third countries, because of its civilizational heritage.

Religionalisation: the umbrella of religious freedom held out by the EU and other international organisations may lead some social groups or individuals to reformulate their originally secular claims in religious terms in order to benefit from the golden opportunity thus provided. Social, economic, cultural or territorial divisions may thus be invested with a spiritual dimension which makes it harder to resolve differences.

A final manifestation of European policy on religious freedom which has led to polemics was the 2016 appointment by the President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Junker of a special envoy for the promotion of freedom of religion or belief.

This singularisation of the notion has emphasised the break with the European vision of fundamental rights as an indivisible whole. The personality of the holder of this office (Slovak Jan Figel, a former Commissioner known to be a fervent Catholic) and the announcement of its creation in the presence of the Pope in the Vatican has given the post a culturalist connotation.

Finally, the fact that this Special Envoy reports not to the EEAS but to the Commissioner in charge of International Cooperation and Development has increased the perception of religious problems as particular to the most deprived parts of the world and does little to clarify the EUs bureaucratic framework.

During Jan Figels first twelve-month period in office, the post gained a certain amount of visibility and took its place without major clashes in the institutional galaxy of the Community, but its real impact remains uncertain. The reappointment of the Special Envoy for an extra year announced in April 2017 did not resolve the ambiguities in his role or overcome resistance to it.

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Blue Devils encouraged after tough loss to Freedom South-Riding – The Daily Progress

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CULPEPER The Culpeper boys lacrosse team played like an inspired bunch during the early stages of Wednesday nights senior day matchup against Freedom South-Riding.

After goals from Will Clark, Ashton Short, Thomas Armel and Dillon Grenke, Culpeper (6-6) held a 4-1 lead early into the second quarter against one of the top-ranked 4A programs in the state.

As it turned out, the Eagles (10-1) took Culpepers best punch and countered. Freedom scored seven consecutive goals over the final 7:24 of the first half to take an 8-4 lead into the locker room. When it was all said and done, the Eagles came away victorious, 16-9.

If you look at them, thats one of the top teams in the state, Culpeper head coach Scott Found said. I thought we did a pretty good job and the kids never stopped fighting.

The Blue Devils played like a team up to the task of pulling an upset in the first quarter of Wednesdays game. They held a demanding 9-1 lead on ground balls and only lost the faceoff margin, 3-2.

Culpeper sophomore Joe Davis was in net for the third consecutive game. His solid play, combined with a new defensive wrinkle, limited Freedom to just one goal in the first 12 minutes.

Culpepers defense has struggled at times throughout the year. In losses, the Blue Devils are giving up an average of about 17 goals per game. Theyve given up no more than 14 goals in wins.

Found switched Culpepers defense from a man-to-man to zone as a way to try and protect the crease, he said. That change in scheme threw Freedom in for a loop, head coach Warren Dazenbaker said. A zone defense isnt seen too often.

I think that threw our guys off a little, Dazenbaker said. Its not something you typically see. It took our guys a little longer to start finding the right cuts and firing off the right shots. A lot of credit has to go to Culpeper, too. They have a great program and we like coming here to play.

As the game went on, Freedom settled in more and more offensively. Their comfort against the zone defense increased thanks to some dominating possession time.

That, of course, can be traced back to faceoffs. Culpeper held their own in the first quarter but had no such luck in the second. Freedom held a 7-2 faceoff advantage and rattled off seven straight goals because of it.

It really just came down to possession, Dazenbaker said. Culpeper won a lot of groundballs in that first quarter. We kind of regrouped and started winning faceoffs, which was important.

Freedom took a four-goal lead into halftime and the score would never get closer. Grenke led Culpeper with four goals. Cole Boddery (two), Armel (one), Short (one) and Clark (one) added to the Culpeper scoring.

Wednesdays result locked in Culpepers seeding for the Evergreen Section tournament. Culpeper will play Eastern View on Monday.

Chris Cappella is the sports editor of the Culpeper Star-Exponent. He can be reached at ccappella@starexponent.com or (540) 825-0771 ext. 4128. Follow him on Twitter @C_Cappella and @CSEpreps.

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Blue Devils encouraged after tough loss to Freedom South-Riding - The Daily Progress

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cAirlines Are Letting Old Technology Abuse Their Customers – Backchannel

Posted: at 12:43 pm

John Stanton, an attorney for the US Department of Justice, travels often for work. Hes deaf, which he notes in his profile whenever he buys a plane ticket.

Last year, when traveling to San Francisco via United Airlines, Stanton disembarked from his flight to find an attendant waiting with a wheelchair. He looked up, to see the aide was carrying his name on a sign. Stanton, who played football in college and has run seven marathons, was confused. I told him, Thanks, buddy, but I dont need that, he recalls.

Talk to a person who is deaf or hard of hearing, and youll hear a litany of travel horror stories. Take Laura Gold, who once found herself on the wrong airplane because the ticket counter didnt tell her that her flight had changed gates. Or Carly Armour, who missed a flight that would reunite her with a long-lost older brother when she couldnt hear the announcer calling her name.

These kinds of mishaps arent limited to people who are deaf or hard of hearing, and they happen all the time. The millions of Americans with disabilities, who require accommodations when they travel, are dealt slipshod fixes when they travel by air. Often this happens because passengers are classified under the broad umbrella of disabled, as if someone who is paraplegic requires the same accommodations as someone who is deaf. But the system also fails because the technology it relies on is just plain outdated.

There are few recourses. The Americans with Disabilities Act, which was passed by Congress in 1990 to ensure equal access for people with disabilities, only partially addresses air travel under its broad umbrella of mandates. Thats because the Air Carrier Access Act, an earlier bill passed in 1986, covers accessibility issues in airline travel. The ACAA is enforced by the Department of Transit, while the ADA is usually covered by the Department of Justice. The split responsibilities make the ACAA difficult to enforce.

That means that airlines have less of an incentive than other companies and public agencies to alter their typical user experiences. So as terrible as airline travel is, if you have any kind of unusual need, its invariably worse.

Most of the problems encountered by passengers are technologicaltied to arcane classification systems that enhance the confusion of traveling-while-disabled. Airlines classify passenger information through Special Service Request (SSR) codes: four-letter acronyms that alert staff to a passengers needs. (The code for someone who is deaf or hard of hearing is DEAF.)

But these codes are often misused, according to Eric Lipp, the executive director of the Open Doors Organization, a nonprofit that aims to improve travel and tourism accessibility. Airlines often just plug in the code MAAS, which stands for Meet and Assist, for passengers who are blind or deafwhich leads to the automatic wheelchair meet-and-greet.

These codes are often the only information airport staff and other customer service representatives receive, because airlines withhold personal passenger information from contractors. Depending on the city and service provider, software often doesnt recognize the SSR codes, Lipp says, or airlines use the wrong code, which gets misconstrued as it makes its way through the chain. Thats why Lipp, who travels with his own scooter, inevitably finds a wheelchair waiting when he deplanes.

United Airlinesa company where many of my sources experienced problems while travelingtold me they use the SSR code HI for Hearing Impaired. But according to Lipp, all codes are four letters, and this code doesnt exist. And changing a code isnt easy, says Lipp, because the codes are used internationally. Many underdeveloped countries would have to change their processes, which could be a financial burden to some, he adds. Its easier for service providers to join the software systems used by airlines, allowing for a continuous thread of information.

And despite upgrades to airline comfort, in-flight entertainment still doesnt include captions, aural action descriptions, or other ways of letting deaf and blind people participate. For the first time last fall, the US Department of Transportation drafted regulations related to captions for in-flight entertainment. The final agreement mandates that the same in-flight entertainment thats available to all passengers also be accessible to passengers who are deaf, hard of hearing, blind, or visually impaired.

Delta now provides captioning on in-flight entertainment on both seat-back displays and personal wifi devices, but only 20 percent of its airplanes have upgraded. Captioning is also available on JetBlue through its DirectTV service on all Airbus A321 aircraft, and will eventually expand to the rest of its fleet.

Its difficult for anyone to hear airline announcements, but for people who are deaf or hard of hearing, its decidedly harder. Airlines are becoming more tech savvy, but Lipp says the industry is concentrating on mobile apps and devices. Mobile apps often include push alerts covering major announcements, such as gate changes or flight delays. Yet these alerts are often delayed compared to the immediacy of an announcement, and smaller announcements, such as an overbooked flight or a standby notification, arent included. Visual pagingwhen an audio page is posted in text form on screensis becoming very easy, but its not yet ubiquitous.

And what happens when a deaf person tries to complain? When I tried to contact Delta Airlines using the Relay, a calling system used by people who are deaf or hard of hearing, I received several hang-ups and long hold times. Corporate Care transferred me to the reservation desk; the reservation desk transferred me back to Corporate Care. Theres no email address for media relations or customer service. And Delta is supposedly one of the most accessible airlines.

In 1986, as a result of the ACAA, airlines launched a system of complaints resolution officialsstaff who are specially trained to handle disability-related issues for airlines. The CRO can handle all situations on behalf of the carrier, and all carriers have a central CRO at corporate.

But that doesnt solve all of the problems. Lynn Rousseau, a member of the United Airlines Accessibility Board, agrees that the lack of accessibility at airports is frustrating. Travel has become accessible to so many more people, Rousseau tells me, but it still hasnt adapted to meet the needs of every customer. Those customers are already advocating for themselvestheyre just waiting for the industry to catch up.

Important information for deaf/HOH flyers:

A Complaints Resolution Official (CRO) should be available to help people with disabilities. If the airline doesnt comply with your request for a CRO, they will receive a hefty fine.

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We’re giving away $500000 to foster art and technology – Engadget

Posted: at 12:43 pm

With technologies such as augmented reality, virtual reality and artificial intelligence finally reaching the mainstream, we're on the cusp of a creative revolution. New mediums have given birth to a new class of artists, entertainers, filmmakers and musicians, limited only by their access to and understanding of technology. Despite this explosion in creative possibilities, however, artists, entertainers and technologists often exist in distinct, isolated worlds. Today, Engadget is doing its part to bring those worlds together.

On November 16th, 2017, we'll bring together some of the brightest minds in art, entertainment and technology to explore the unique challenges facing today's creative pioneers. With The Engadget Experience, a one-day event in the historic United Artists Theatre at the Ace Hotel in Downtown Los Angeles, California, we'll attempt to bridge the gap between these often-disparate worlds, through a series of talks, interviews, screenings and installations.

But we're not just paying lip service -- we're paying artists. To be specific, we've gathered a small committee of technology and art tastemakers to award five grants of up to $100,000 a piece toward the production of ongoing or original works addressing the theme of alternate realities.

We'll select, fund and showcase works that demonstrate the potential of new, immersive mediums and give our audience the chance to engage, not only with the art but also with the people making it. A short documentary series, which will debut alongside those five projects at The Engadget Experience, will follow our committee as they bring the show together and the selected artists as they create their projects.

For more information on The Engadget Experience and the Alternate Realities grant program, visit our events page.

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We're giving away $500000 to foster art and technology - Engadget

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New technology monitors and maintains drug levels – Stanford University News

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As with coffee or alcohol, the way each person processes medication is unique. One persons perfect dose may be another persons deadly overdose. With such variability, it can be hard to prescribe exactly the right amount of critical drugs, such as chemotherapy or insulin.

A researcher holds a prototype of a biosensor designed to detect active levels of a medicine in the bloodstream, as part of a system to personalize drug dosing. (Image credit: Soh Lab)

Now, a team led by Stanford electrical engineer H. Tom Soh and postdoctoral fellow Peter Mage has developed a drug delivery tool that could make it easier for people to get the correct dose of lifesaving drugs. In a paper published May 10 in Nature Biomedical Engineering, the group showed that the technology could continuously regulate the level of a chemotherapy drug in living animals.

This is the first time anyone has been able to continuously control the drug levels in the body in real time, Soh said. This is a novel concept with big implications because we believe we can adapt our technology to control the levels of a wide range of drugs.

The new technology has three basic components: a real-time biosensor to continuously monitor drug levels in the bloodstream, a control system to calculate the right dose and a programmable pump that delivers just enough medicine to maintain a desired dose.

The sensor contains molecules called aptamers that are specially designed to bind a drug of interest. (These aptamers are a focus of Sohs lab.) When the drug is present in the bloodstream, the aptamer changes shape, which an electric sensor detects. The more drug, the more aptamers change shape.

That information, captured every few seconds, is routed through software that controls the pump to deliver additional drugs as needed. Researchers call this a closed-loop system, one that monitors and adjusts continuously.

The group tested the technology by administering the chemotherapy drug doxorubicin in animals. Despite physiological and metabolic differences among individual animals, they were able to keep a constant dosage among all the animals in the study group, something not possible with current drug delivery methods. The researchers also tested for acute drug-drug interactions, deliberately introducing a second drug that is known to cause wide swings in chemotherapy drug levels. Again they found that their system could stabilize drug levels to moderate what might otherwise be a dangerous spike or dip.

If the technology works as well in people as in their animal studies, it could have big implications, Soh said. For example, what if we could detect and control the levels not only of glucose but also of insulin and glucagon that regulate glucose levels? he said. That could allow researchers to create an electronic system to replicate the function of the dysfunctional pancreas for patients with type 1 diabetes. Now that is an exciting future, Soh said.

Many years of tests lie ahead to ensure that this technology is safe and effective for people, but the researchers believe it may be big step toward personalized medicine. Doctors already know that the same drug can have different effects on people with different genetic makeups. They also know that patients who take more than one medication can experience unwanted drug interactions. But they lack tools to deal with this.

Monitoring and controlling the actual dosage a patient is receiving is a practical way to take individual factors into account, said Soh. He said the technology could be especially helpful for pediatric cancer patients, who are notoriously difficult to dose because childrens metabolism is usually different from adults.

The team plans to miniaturize the system so that it can be implanted or worn by the patient. At present the technology is an external apparatus, like a smart IV drip. The biosensor is a device about the size of a microscope slide. The current setup might be suitable for a chemotherapy drug, but not for continual use. The group is also adapting this system with different aptamers so that it can sense and regulate the levels of other biomolecules in the body.

Other authors on this study, Closed-Loop Control of Circulating Drug Levels in Live Animals, include B. Scott Ferguson, Daniel Maliniak, Kyle Ploense and Tod Kippin from the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Funding sources include the Garland Initiative, Army Research Office and W.M. Keck Foundation Medical Research Program.

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New technology monitors and maintains drug levels - Stanford University News

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