Daily Archives: May 14, 2017

The present, and future, of transportation includes automation that makes trucks safer – Fort Dodge Messenger

Posted: May 14, 2017 at 5:43 pm

Local Business

May 14, 2017

According to Dale Decker, executive vice president of Decker Truck Lines Inc., Fort Dodge, automation within the trucking industry is continuously being developed.

For the trucking industry, automation has helped to make the jobs of truckers as theyre on the road safer as it protects them from traffic issues.

And automation continues to evolve for the trucking industry, according to Dale Decker, executive vice president of Decker Truck Line Inc. in Fort Dodge.

Decker said most people arent even aware that automation exists.

Weve been a part of it without knowing, he said, adding that most common methods of automation are part of truckers daily lives.

In fact, Decker said trucks without any form of automation are rare today.

At level zero (of automation), the human does everything, he said. Youd probably have to go far back in time to see that.

The most common level of automation is level one, which includes traction control and stability control.

Level zero would include blind spot detection and turn assistance.

Its kind of the first stage of the autonomous vehicle, he said.

Decker added that automation within the trucking industry is continuously being developed.

Eventually, it may get to the point where the trucks are able to drive themselves without drivers.

But Decker said thats still a long way down the road.

Theyre not talking fully automated vehicles until 2025, he said.

And even if fully automated trucking does come on board, Decker said thats not something Decker Truck Line Inc. is interested in pursuing.

Our purpose with automation is not to eliminate the driver, he said, but give them the tools to make their jobs easier through advancements in technology.

Decker said the push for driverless trucks is mostly coming from the freight market. Because there is a shortage of truck drivers, Decker said the capacity of shipments made via trucking isnt as much as it could be.

But he added truck drivers are critical to the success of the trucking industry.

We know the importance of the professional driver in our industry and economy, he said. Were focusing on the role they play, but giving them the tools through professional automation to make them do their jobs easier and more effectively.

Cutting drivers jobs is not something the company wants to do.

But we dont like looking at eliminating drivers, he said. In science fiction, maybe youll see that (driverless trucks), but not in the real world. Its not really on our radars.

Automation has improved the jobs of truck drivers in multiple ways, according to Decker.

Its made their jobs safer, he said. Theres a collision mitigation system to reduce the chance of a collision. We look at adaptive cruise systems. Stability control systems to reduce rollovers. All of these increase the safety of the vehicles.

And the technology continues to evolve, according to Decker.

One piece of technology that is being developed is known as platooning.

He said this will allow trucks to speak to each other wirelessly so they can interact. If theyre all heading the same direction, one truck will serve as the leader and the other trucks will fall in line behind that one.

The trucks will then automatically go the same speed as each other to stay in line and travel together.

But when its time to make deliveries, the drivers will be able to take over for the last few miles before their stop, he said.

There are many different levels of autonomy and different applications of autonomy, he said.

NEVADA Read a 17-page speech written by USDA staff, or speak from the heart? U.S. Secretary of Agriculture ...

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The present, and future, of transportation includes automation that makes trucks safer - Fort Dodge Messenger

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Make the automation conundrum job No. 1 – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Posted: at 5:43 pm


Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Make the automation conundrum job No. 1
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
That's because digitization and automation continued to grind away in the background, and not just in the U.S., but around the world. Computer systems and software are like rust they never sleep and they consume a greater slice of Gross Domestic ...

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Make the automation conundrum job No. 1 - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

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The terrifying untold story of QF72: What happens when ‘psycho’ automation leaves pilots powerless? – Stuff.co.nz

Posted: at 5:43 pm

MATT O'SULLIVAN

Last updated08:43, May 14 2017

For the first time, the captain of the imperilled Qantas Flight 72 reveals his horrific experience of automation's dark side.

Returning from the toilet,second officer Ross Hales straps into the right-hand-side seat beside Captain Kevin Sullivan in the Qantas jet's cockpit. "No change," Sullivan tells him in his American accent. He is referring to the Airbus A330-300's autopilot and altitude as it cruises at 37,000 feet above the Indian Ocean on a blue-sky day.

Within a minute, the plane's autopilot disconnects. It forces Sullivan to take manual control of Qantas Flight 72, carrying 303 passengers and 12 crew from Singapore to Perth. Five seconds later, stall and over-speed warnings begin blaring.St-aaa-ll, st-aaa-ll,they screech. The over-speed warnings are louder, sounding like a fire bell.Ding, ding, ding, ding. Caution messages light up the instrument panel.

"That's not right," Sullivan exclaims to Hales, who he met for the first time earlier in the day on a bus taking crew from a Singapore hotel to Changi Airport. His reasoning is simple: how can the plane stall and over-speed at the same time? The aircraft is telling him it is flying at both maximum and minimum speeds. Barely 30 seconds earlier, nothing was untoward. He can see the horizon through the cockpit windows and cross-check instruments to determine that the plane is flying as it should.

SYDNEY MORNING HERALD

Captain Kevin Sullivan: "We were never given any hint during our conversion course to fly this aeroplane that this could happen. And even, I think, the manufacturer felt this could never happen. It's not their intention to build an aeroplane that is going to go completely haywire and try and kill you."

"You'd better get Peter back," Sullivan says, urgency in his voice. Minutes earlier, first officer Peter Lipsett, a former Navy Seahawk pilot, left for his scheduled break. Hales picks up the plane's interphone to call the customer service manager to track down the first officer.

READ MORE: *Glitch blamed for Qantas plane plunge *Couple seek compo over Qantas flight

CHRIS SKELTON

Former flight attendant Fuzzy Maiava - once an Auckland policeman - has not worked since the incident aboard QF72 and suffers chronic physical and psychological injuries.

In the rear galley, flight attendant Fuzzy Maiava slides his meal into an oven. He can relax slightly after collecting meal trays from passengers. Window blinds are drawn in the cabin, and calm has descended following lunch service. Some passengers queue for toilets. As Maiava closes the oven door, an off-duty Qantas captain and his wife, who have been on holiday, join him in the galley.

"Hey Fuzz, where's your wine?" they ask.

"Just help yourself you know where it is," Maiava laughs. As they pour a glass, Maiava glances at the oven's timer. There are 13 seconds left.

"It just looked like the Incredible Hulk had gone through [the plane] in a rage and ripped the place apart," Sullivan says.

Booooom.A crashing sound tears through the cabin. In a split second, the galley floor disappears beneath Maiava's feet, momentarily giving him a sense of floating in space. Blood rushes to his head as he, the off-duty captain and his wife are propelled into the ceiling, knocking them out.

In the cockpit, Sullivan instinctively grabs the control stick the moment he feels the plane's nose pitch down violently at 12.42pm (Western Australia time). The former US Navy fighter pilot pulls back on the stick to thwart the jet's rapid descent, bracing himself against an instrument panel shade. Nothing happens. So he lets go. Pulling back on the stick does not halt the plunge. If the plane suddenly returns control, pulling back might worsen their situation by pitching the nose up and causing a dangerous stall.

Within two seconds, the plane dives 150 feet. In a gut-wrenching moment, all the two pilots can see through the cockpit window is the blue of the Indian Ocean. "Is my life going to end here today?" Sullivan asks himself. His heart is thumping. Those on board QF72 are in dire trouble. There are no ejection seats like the combat jets Sullivan flew in the US Navy. He has no control over this plane.

JASON REED/REUTERS

In the air, complex computer systems oversee a new generation of planes, reducing the control of pilots who spend long periods of flights keeping watch.

"It's the worst thing that can happen when you are in an aeroplane when you are not in control," he recalls. "And you have a choice. You can either succumb to that or you fight it. I was fighting that outcome and have been ever since."

Eight years after QF72 dived towards the ocean,the Top Gun pilot nicknamed "Sully" since his teens is breaking his silence. "We're in an out-of-control aeroplane, we're all juiced up by our own bodies because, we thought, we are in a near-death situation, and we've got to be rocket scientists to figure out how we can go in there and land the plane outside of any established procedures," he says.

"We were never given any hint during our conversion course to fly this aeroplane that this could happen. And even, I think, the manufacturer felt this could never happen. It's not their intention to build an aeroplane that is going to go completely haywire and try and kill you."

Passengers and crew hit the ceiling as QF72 went into a sudden nosedive, suffering moderate to severe injuries.

The events of October 7, 2008, are not merely about how three Qantas pilots found themselves fighting to save a passenger plane from itself. It serves as a cautionary tale as society accelerates towards a world of automation and artificial intelligence.

The days of driverless cars, trucks and trains becoming commonplace are fast approaching. South Australia ran the country's first on-road trial of driverless cars in 2015. In two years, Sydney will become the first city in Australia to run driverless passenger trains ona new A$20 billion (NZ$21.5 billion) metro railway. Proponents tout the multiple benefits of autonomous vehicles, such as the removal of human error dramatically reducing crashes.

In the air, complex computer systems already oversee a new generation of planes, reducing the control of pilots who spend long periods of flights keeping watch. The technology has helped make the world's ever-more crowded skies safer. Yet paradoxically, it is technology that threatened the lives of those on QF72. And Sullivan still harbours fears about greater automation of flying after the computer system on the Airbus aircraft he was captaining wrenched control from its three pilots in 2008.

Paramedics assess injured passengers after QF72's emergency landing at a West Australian RAAF base.

"Even though these planes are super-safe and they're so easy to fly, when they fail they are presenting pilots with situations that are confusing and potentially outside their realms to recover," he says. "For pilots to me it's leading you down the garden path to say, 'You don't need to know how to fly anymore.' You just sit there until things go wrong."

CABIN CARNAGE

Seconds after the A330 nosedives, Sullivan begins to receive responses to his control-stick movements. Slowly, it starts to give him control. As it does, he lets the plane continue to descend before gingerly levelling off and climbing back to 37,000 feet. Sullivan knows intuitively there will be serious injuries in the cabin. The plunge is of a magnitude he generated in fighter jets during his days flying from US aircraft carriers in the Persian Gulf and North Atlantic during the Cold War.

Yet this is apassenger plane. In less than a second, the gravitational force bearing on those on board switches from positive 1G to negative 0.8G. As the plane drops, it literally flings into orbit people not belted into their seats. A G-force of 1G allows you to keep your feet on the Earth's surface, while 0G creates weightlessness. Negative 1G will propel you at your body weight into freefall. In all, the Qantas aircraft drops 690 feet in 23 seconds. A savinggrace is that Hales, the second officer, presses a button for the seatbelt sign to alert passengers the moment he feels the plane lurch.

It is too late for more than 60 passengers and crew, bouncing about like in a pinball machine. Malcolm Yeo is standing near the rear galley, talking with a flight attendant about buying a duty-free watch when he hears the engines reduce power. The then aviation lecturer at Perth's Edith Cowan University assumes the pilots are preparing for clear-air turbulence. It is common at high altitudes and occurs in cloudless skies when air masses collide, causing severe buffeting of planes. Seconds after gazing out a window, Yeo is propelled into the cabin ceiling. The sound of passengers screaming and glass breaking rips through the cabin. Seated in the middle of the cabin, Yeo's wife, Shirley, is worried sick about her husband. She was dozing when he left his seat.

A few metres from Yeo, Maiava lies on the rear-galley floor after hitting the ceiling. On the way down, he hit the galley bench and was thrown against the meal-cart storage. Regaining his senses, Maiava sees blood gushing from the off-duty Qantas captain's head. He lies unconscious on the floor. The captain's wife also a senior Qantas flight attendant begins to regain consciousness.

Beyond the galley curtain, two unaccompanied sisters Maiava has been watching over scream. Fear in her eyes, the youngest reaches a hand out to Maiava. Barely conscious, he cannot do a thing to comfort her. Oxygen masks dangle from the ceiling, swaying from side to side. Baggage and broken bottles litter the cabin floor.

Suddenly, a passenger from an Indian tour group rushes into the galley in a panic, pointing at an inflated life jacket around his neck. His face is turning blue.

"The guy's choking," Maiava shouts. Maiava knows how to deflate the jacket. But in a semi-conscious state, his mind freezes. The off-duty captain's wife thrusts a pen at the passenger, pointing at a nozzle in the life jacket.Thrusting the pen into the nozzle, the passenger deflates his jacket and gasps for breath. Seconds later, he bows in gratitude. Maiava tells him bluntly to get back to his seat.

SECOND NOSEDIVE

In the cockpit, over-speed and stall warnings keep ringing in the pilots' ears as the plane recovers to 37,000 feet above the Indian Ocean, about 150 kilometres west of the small Western Australian town of Exmouth. Sullivan and Hales have no idea what caused the plane to dive. The computer system does not tell them. Sullivan hand-flies as they begin responding to fault and warning messages. One of the aircraft's three flight control primary computers which pilots refer to as PRIMs is faulty. They begin to reset it by flicking the on-off switch.

Then without warning, the plane dives again. Sullivan pulls back on his control stick like he did in the first pitch down. Again, he lets go. It takes several seconds for the plane to respond to the commands. In little more than 15 seconds, the Qantas jet falls 400 feet.

In the rear galley, Maiava senses the aircraft is about to plunge the moment he hears a roar. It sounds like a speedboat running at full throttle as it is suddenly thrown into reverse. In absolute fear, he locks eyes with the wife of the off-duty Qantas captain. The second nosedive less than three minutes after the first propels them towards the ceiling. This time, they avoid hitting it by hanging onto a handrail. Lying on the floor seconds later, Maiava fears they are about to die. He prays death will come quickly and without pain.

"What the hell was that?" second officer Hales exclaims to Sullivan.

"It's the PRIM," the captain replies.

A realisation of their predicament has dawned on Sullivan. The flight control computers the brains of the plane are supposed to keep the plane within an "operating envelope": maximum altitude, maximum and minimum G-force, speed and so on. Yet against the pilots' will, the computers are making commands that are imperilling all on board.

In a conventional aircraft without flight control computers, pilots are responsible for keeping it within the bounds of safe flying. In a passenger jet like the A330, the computers have unfettered control over the horizontal tail 3000 pounds per square inch of pressure that can be moved at the speed of light. It enables the aircraft to descend or climb. For reasons unknown to the pilots, the computer system has switched on "protections".

"The plane is not communicating with me. It's in meltdown. The systems are all vying for attention but they are not telling me anything," Sullivan recalls. "It's high-risk and I don't know what's going to happen."

TOP GUN TO TRAUMA

For a six-year-old,San Diego's North Island is beyond imagination. Perched on a peninsula in San Diego Bay, the naval base is home to aircraft carriers and fighter jet squadrons. On a clear day in 1961, a mass of steel glistens in the sun and American flags flutter in the breeze. John Sullivan, a World War II submariner, has brought his eldest son to see the Blue Angels. The aerial acrobatics of the US Navy's precision flying team leaves a young Kevin Sullivan in awe. "One plane came out of nowhere about 50 feet [15 metres] over the top of me and scared the s...out of me," he recalls. "As soon as I saw that, and I saw the power and I heard the noise, what little boy wouldn't want to be in one of those?"

Eighteen years later, the third-eldest of five children became a US Navy pilot. Within two years, he was flying F-14 jets for the Fighting Aardvarks from the USS America during the Iran hostage crisis. In 1982, his squadron selected him forTop Gun, the Navy's fighter weapon school, made famous by the film of the same name. (His flying "buddies" later featured as extras in the opening scenes ofTop Gunfilmed on the USS Enterprise). In a matter of a few years, he was living an adventure.

His life took another twist in 1983 when he became the first US Navy exchange pilot to the RAAF. His stay in Australia was meant to last three years. But after marrying an Australian and having a daughter, he decided against returning to the US. He joined Qantas.

Three decades later, home is Seaforth in Sydney's northern suburbs and his flying career and marriage are behind him. Now in his early sixties, his silver hair has thinned. As much as he can, he wants to retain control over his life. He guards his privacy and that of those close to him.

Despite intense interest in QF72 in its aftermath, the identity of Sullivan and the two other pilots has remained largely unknown outside Qantas. I contacted Sullivan almost three years ago to hear his account. He was still flying and declined due to sensitivities within Qantas about him talking. His silence ended last year when he left the airline and he got in touch. Over several months, we meet about five times to talk about the event that upended his life.

His former colleagues have noticed changes. "A lot of people mistake Kev for being Canadian because he is not in-your-face," one pilot says. "He has become much more reserved, and he is much more guarded about what he says. He was much more laid-back and laconic in the past."

In reliving QF72 during our meetings, Sullivan's face reddens and he breathes sharply. For a long time afterwards, he did not want to talk about it. Many passengers and crew still don't. It sits apart from other emergencies because it challenges the notion that technology is near fail-safe and superior to pilots' frailties.

CONFUSION RISK

The fly-by-wire systems of modern airliners are a world away from earlier generations of planes flown using stick and rudder. In the Boeing 747 jumbo the backbone of global aviation for almost five decades pilots' control sticks are connected by wires and pulleys to parts of the plane such as the tail. In newer planes, pilots adjust a side-stick to make requests of the flight computer to move. The computer has command over "flight control surfaces" such as the tail or rudder. It sends an electronic signal to move those parts of the plane. A direct mechanical link between most pilots' controls and parts such as wing flaps has been removed.

The intent of the technology is to make flying safer and it has. In the past decade, the number of commercial flights worldwide has surged by almost a quarter to about 40.5 million last year. Despite the surge in flying, fatalities in accidents involving planes carrying more than 14 passengers have fallen from 773 in 2007 to 258 last year, according to the Aviation Safety Network.

While flying is indeed safer, Sullivan's fear is that greater automation risks confusing pilots in an emergency. Eight months after QF72, an Air France A330 jet carrying 228 people on a flight from Rio de Janeiro to Pariscrashed into the Atlantic Ocean, killing all of those on board. Investigators found incorrect speeddata was sent to the plane's flight control systems after ice crystals formed on air-pressure probes mounted on the nose. The autopilot disconnected, surprising the pilots and causing them to react to the false information displayed. They incorrectly pulled up the plane's nose, and seconds later it stalled before plunging into the ocean.

After QF72's second dive,the number three flight control primary computer faults again. Sullivan tells second officer Hales they will not touch it. He knows from a previous check of faults that the plane plunged as soon as they reset PRIM three to operational status. A minute later, Sullivan tells the passengers over the PA system they are dealing with flight control problems, and to stay seated and fasten their seatbelts.

The flight attendants call the pilots on the interphone to find out what is happening. Sullivan is too busy to talk. His priority is to get the first officer, Peter Lipsett, back to the flight deck. Following plane hijackings in the US on September 11, 2001, passengers are banned from entering cockpits in-flight. The crew of QF72 will need to go through a cockpit access procedure an ordeal that takes several minutes when every second matters. Nursing a broken nose from hitting the cabin ceiling, Lipsett eventually rushes into the cockpit.

"It's carnage out there," he exclaims.

"Sit down, strap in, we're in trouble," Sullivan replies. In more than three decades of flying, Sullivan has never before uttered those words. The then 53-year-old has no idea whether they can safely land the plane. At any second, it could lurch into another dive. The systems are going haywire. Stall and over-speed warnings continue to blare. Most of the caution messages want the pilots to give them priority. The pilots face no end to the distractions as they begin intricate work. The button to silence aural warnings is not working.

Harnessed in his seat, Lipsett asks Sullivan whether he wants to declare a PAN, a warning one step from a mayday. "Yes," he responds. Shortly before the plane dived, they had flown past a RAAF base at Learmonth, near Exmouth on the North West Cape. Learmonth is the diversionary airport for north-west Australia, its runway long enough to handle an A330.

Knowing passengers are likely to be badly injured, the second officer Hales asks for adamage report from the flight attendants. The response shocks: passengers and crew suffering moderate to severe injuries with broken bones and lacerations.

"That's it declare a mayday," Sullivan says.

'WE'RE IN DEEP S....'

Lying on the ground near the rear galley, Malcolm Yeo feels his body for breakages. His hip, shoulder and head are sore. Anxious about his wife, he decides to make his way back. The scene that confronts him is distressing. Passengers groan and cry; ceiling panels lie everywhere. Yeo eventually makes it to his seat, where his wife meets him with relief.

In the rear galley, the wife of the off-duty Qantas captain helps her husband and Maiava as best she can. She calls the flight deck, telling first officer Lipsett that both men are seriously injured. He warns her that the plane could dive again. Maiava is eager to get seated. "We have to move we have to get to our seats," he says. Together, they shuffle to nearby jump seats.

Minutes later, they hear another announcement over the PA from the captain. Sullivan tells passengers he expects to land within 15 minutes at Learmonth where emergency services will be waiting. They need to stay seated with their seatbelts fastened.

As soon as air-traffic control in Melbourne responds to the mayday, alerts stream to authorities around the country. Planes in northern Western Australia on the same radio frequency hear the distress call, and controllers broadcast QF72's plight to the rest of the country's airspace. With QF72 diverting, Qantas' crisis centre in Sydney is activated while West Australian police and a small medical centre at Exmouth kick into gear. Because of the airfield's remoteness, emergency services need at least 30 minutes to prepare. The services in the area are basic: a fire truck and two ambulances.

Yet Sullivan still does not know whether they can land. The computer system is not telling them what data it is sampling and what it is doing. Thoughts race through the captain's mind: "What is my strategy? How will I stop a pitch down if it happens during landing?" In less than three minutes, the A330 has dived twice. Will it do it again?

Yet their only real option is landing at Learmonth. Flying on to Perth could worsen matters. "I have nine crew injured out of 12 and mass casualties that is serious," Sullivan recalls. "It means we're in deep s...." They punch "Learmonth Airport" into the computer used for navigation. The computer shows an error.

"After that second pitch down, I was really furious I was being put in a position to question my mortality," Sullivan says. "I was cursing like a drunken sailor." As best they can, the pilots have to suppress their physiological reactions. These might help someone lift a car in a life-or-death situation, but they cloud thinking.

LANDING BLIND

Circling Learmonth, the pilots run through a checklist. The plane's two engines are functioning. But they do not know if the landing gear can be lowered or wing flaps extended for landing. And if they can extend the flaps, they have no idea how the plane will react. As much as they can, the pilots try to assert control over the A330 while the computer system operates. It cannot be fully disengaged. Turning off the three flight control computers could trigger unintended consequences. They may fail or fault.

Pulling paper charts out for Learmonth, the pilots make more inputs into the system, to no avail. It means they will have to conduct a visual approach. The precariousness of their situation islaid bare in a lengthy summary of faults on their screens. They include the loss of automatic braking and spoilers to prevent lift once the plane is on the runway. The pilots do not know whether they can use the nose-wheel to steer the plane until it is on the ground.

Sullivan plans to rely on a strategy he practised in fighter jets. Flying at 10,000 feet above the airfield, he intends to reduce power and descend into a high-angle, high-energy spiral before lining up the runway and flying in fast in the hope of preventing another nosedive.

But before they can land, they have to check whether their flight control system is working properly. Flying over Learmonth, the wing flaps are extended as the pilots conduct two S-turns to confirm they are OK, and the landing gear is lowered. It is enough for Sullivan. He is desperate to get the plane on the ground. The extent of injuries will not be known until emergency services are on board.

The first officer, Peter Lipsett, makes a final announcement, telling passengers to follow instructions. Minutes later, Sullivan lowers the A330's nose, and power to idle as he begins a final approach. Lipsett reminds him the speed is greater than it should be. "Noted," Sullivan replies. None of them know whether it will pitch down again. That is the risk they take. They have little choice.

Fifty minutes after the first dive, the A330's wheels scrape the runway at Learmonth. Passengers clap wildly as it glides along the tarmac. The pilots hear the cheering through the cockpit door, the sense of relief almost overwhelming.

As the plane grinds to a halt, Sullivan turns to his pilots. "So, a little excitement in an otherwise dull day," he quips, imitating Arnold Schwarzenegger inTrue Lies. In the US Navy, Sullivan used humour to relax in highly stressed environments. It is to be a rare bit of levity on this day in 2008. Sullivan knows the satellite phone is about to ring incessantly. Before it does, he sends a text to his 20-something daughter travelling in Europe. "I'm OK and I love you," it reads.

10 SIMULTANEOUS FAILURES

The pilots cannot allow themselves to relax. Passengers and crew suffering moderate to severe injuries have to be evacuated from an airfield in the middle of nowhere. Despite being parked on the ground, stall and over-speed warnings keep blaring in the cockpit. In a shocked state, the plane's customer service manager rushes in from the cabin.

"What was that?" she exclaims.

"I don't know. I don't know what happened," Sullivan replies.

He grabs her hand, assuring her they are safe. Co-ordinating with emergency services to help the injured now rests on her shoulders. The pilots will be tied up dealing with all manner of questions. The satellite phone is ringing.

Lipsett begins to check a summary from the plane's maintenance computer. "Well, here's the problem," he says, pulling out a printout half a metre long. It shows 10 simultaneous failures at the same time-mark. Further down the page, they learn the flight control primary computers have failed or faulted.

"It was basically a computer crash," Sullivan recalls. "It had stopped communicating with us and was distracting us. It started confusing us."

After dealing with multiple calls over the satellite phone, Sullivan is finally able to enter the cabin more than an hour after landing. Before him ambulance officers nurse passengers; compartment doors ripped from hinges; smashed bottles, glasses and baggage strewn on the floor. The further along he walks, the greater the destruction and injuries. "It just looked like the Incredible Hulk had gone through there in a rage and ripped the place apart," he recalls.

Parents hold bandaged children. They stare at Sullivan, some with accusing looks. He tells them he does not know what caused the nosedives, but he and his co-pilots tried to stop them. It's the only assurance he can give. The sight of injured children will stick with him for years.

PTSDAND LAWSUITS

The events still haunt Sullivan and Maiava.They have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder and, with other crew members, remain part of a lawsuit in the US against Airbus and aerospace company Northrop Grumman. (About 100 passengers injured in the mishap have settled compensation claims.)

Michael Hyland, an aviation lawyer at Sydney firm LHD who is advising Sullivan, says it has had a devastating impact. "The QF72 incident was a science-fiction nightmare that became a reality," he says.

Sullivan knew his life and career would change forever. He took eight months off. When he returned, he was hyper-alert and concerned about another potential loss of control. He no longer enjoyed a job that had defined him. His professional attitude meant he would not continue his flying career beyond his ability to do so effectively. He reached that point last year after three decades at Qantas.

"The cards of life, in your poker hand of life, those cards have been taken off the table. I've got some pretty crappy cards now," Sullivan says. Instead of suppressing thoughts of QF72, he believes it better to admit it has affected him and seek help. "I can still play those cards, I have to. Otherwise, as we see with returning defence force personnel, police, first responders, there is the potential for depression, substance abuse or self-harm."

Maiava, a former policeman from Auckland, cherished his job as a flight attendant. It was glamorous; every trip different. "I was going to retire in that job until that happened, and my whole life just turned around," he says. He has not had paid work since and suffers chronic physical and psychological injuries. "I get spasms continuously, every day, non-stop. Those are what trigger the flashbacks, the memories, the nightmares it just hasn't gone away," he says. He has endured six operations since 2008. "The pain is chronic; the medication I'm on is unreal. I hate it but I have to take it because it's helping me."

It has taken a toll on those closest to him. A father of five children and grandfather to eight, Maiava withdrew from family and friends, holed up in his bedroom staring out the window for hours on end. He reached a low in 2012 when he tried to take his life. He woke from a coma to find his family at his hospital bedside in tears. He now relies on strategies from psychiatrists and psychologiststo improve his life, and believes telling his story will aid his recovery. "The QF72 incident has lived inside me every single day, 24/7," he says. "It controlled my life but I intend to get better."

Three years after the near-disaster,the Australian Transport Safety Bureau issuesa final report.It finds incorrect data on measures such as airspeed and angle of attack (a critical parameter used to control an aircraft's pitch) was sent by one of the A330's three air-data computers each of which has its own sensors on the fuselage to other systems on the plane. One of the three flight control primary computers then reacted to the angle-of-attack data by commanding the plane to nosedive.

NO CLOSURE

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The terrifying untold story of QF72: What happens when 'psycho' automation leaves pilots powerless? - Stuff.co.nz

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Here’s How to Retire Early – Bloomington Pantagraph

Posted: at 5:42 pm

The dream of retiring early has nothing to do with wearing your pajamas all day, or spending every afternoon at the golf course -- study anyone who has actually called it quits in their 30s, 40s, or 50s, and you'll see that's not the case.

Instead, retiring early is all about gaining financial independence: the ability to choose what to work on, when to work on it, and how that work will be done. In the simplest sense, it is about the intersection of autonomy and purpose.

Are you ready to take the plunge into early retirement? Image source: Getty Images

If retiring in the next decade sounds like something you'd like to do, these are the four simple (even ifsimple does not mean easy) steps to get you there.

It's one thing to dream about being free from mandatory work; it's quite another to actually accomplish it. Setting an intention helps transform a short-term impulse into a long-term reality.

Researchconfirms that when language learners are forced to identify specific goals before entering class, they fare far better than those who don't on cognitive tests. That's because they know what to look for, are better at maintaining their focus, and are continuously evaluating how they're doing.

As Annie Murphy Paul of PBS puts it:

"Listening and observing can be passive activities...Or they can be rich, active, intense experiences...The difference lies in our intention: the purpose and awareness with which we approach the occasion."

The same goes for financial independence: if you have an intention, it can lead to a rich and active experience with your own life.

Here's my surprising suggestion, though: do not make retiring early your intention. Outcome-based goals are for suckers; process goals are what you should be focusing on. This distinction is the difference between a happy and miserable existence.

Consider a tennis player: one whose goal is to win Wimbledon may accomplish the goal, but will only experience success once, and then need to climb back onto the hedonic treadmill. Another who wishes to improve their tennis process every day may end up winning Wimbledon as well, but she will do so while enjoying every step of the way.

Here's what it looks like

There's no blueprint for process goals and early retirement, but here are some suggestions to get you thinking:

Stories are potent tools. As former Fool Morgan Housel recently demonstrated, while we have more data than ever right now, stories remain more powerful and persuasive by an order of magnitude.

In American society, there's a dominant -- if under-recognized -- story we live by: do well in school to get into a good college. Do well in college to get a good paying job. Get a good paying job to live in big house, drive a nice car, and send your kids to a better school than you went to. Continue on this path for 40 years before retiring.

Early retirees have a different story: follow your interests and passions in school, live below your means while working, and free yourself from wage slavery as soon as possible.

As someone who quit his job and moved with his wife to Costa Rica at 29, I can tell you that there will be two reactions to your decision: ridicule from disciples of the former, and curiosity from others interested in the latter. They are two sides of the same coin; prepare for both.

"Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away."

-- Antoine de Saint-Exupery

Too often, we believe if we just add [insert material good] into our life, things will be perfect. But life doesn't work that way. The more we have, the more we want, and the more complicated our lives become.

Take the opposite approach. By removing the clutter from your life -- stuff, friends, and activities that don't add value -- there's more room for what matters. Indeed, it is everything that remains.

Financially, here's the key benefit of finding your level of "Enough" using "via negativa":

In the end, you don't need to be an investing wizard to retire early. Simply putting your money in a low-fee index fund can get the job done.

It's your savings rate that makes the biggest difference.

Start living off of 35% of your income today, and even if you haven't saved a dime, you can retire in 10 years or less.

While the messages surrounding us don't encourage this path, by setting a process-oriented intention, preparing for strong reactions from peers, practicing via negativa, and regularly investing in stocks, you can retire sooner than you might think.

The $16,122 Social Security bonus most retirees completely overlook

If you're like most Americans, you're a few years (or more) behind on your retirement savings. But a handful of little-known "Social Security secrets" could help ensure a boost in your retirement income. For example: one easy trick could pay you as much as $16,122 more... each year! Once you learn how to maximize your Social Security benefits, we think you could retire confidently with the peace of mind we're all after.Simply click here to discover how to learn more about these strategies.

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New pledge aims to amplify Catholic opposition to death penalty – Catholic News Agency

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Washington D.C., May 14, 2017 / 06:01 am (CNA).- A Catholic pledge against the death penalty cites Pope Francis stand as a motive to increase Catholic action against capital punishment.

Catholics and all like-minded individuals need to sign it; it is a pledge that will go about urging people to educate, advocate, and pray for an end to capital punishment, Bishop Frank Dewane of Venice, Florida said.

The bishop, who heads the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development, told a press call May 11 that he had signed the anti-death penalty pledge from the Catholic Mobilizing Network.

Bishop Dewane said the pledge will encourage parish priests to talk more about the death penalty.

It is a matter of life, so they need to be talking about it, he said.

Pope Francis comments on the death penalty feature prominently in the pledge.

All Christians and people of good will are thus called today to fightfor the abolition of the death penalty, whether legal or illegal, and in all its forms, the Pope said in Oct. 23, 2014 remarks to the International Association of Penal Law.

The pledge commits the signer to educate himself or herself and the community about the death penaltys injustices, including the ways it risks innocent life, fails victims families, and contradicts the Catholic Churchs pro-life teaching.

The signer pledges to advocate for the dignity of all life and to be actively working to end the death penalty in my state and in my country. The signer also pledges to pray for mercy and healing for all who are involved in the criminal justice system.

Among the other backers of the pledge is Marietta Jaeger-Lane, whose daughter was murdered in 1973. She rejected claims that the death penalty brings closure to victims families.

I spend a lot of time thinking about Gods idea of justice. When I see Jesus life in Scripture, I see someone who came to heal us, to restore the life that has been lost to us, she said. I have signed this pledge, and I believe that the Catholic community can be the one to end the death penalty.

Karen Clifton, the Catholic Mobilizing Networks executive director, said the network launched the pledge to amplify the Churchs work to end the death penalty. She said there is growing opposition to the death penalty, especially following the April executions in Arkansas, where the governor tried to execute eight men in 11 days, and ended up executing four of them.

Clifton said the effort amplifies Pope Francis call while continuing the work of the U.S. bishops Catholic Campaign to End the Use of the Death Penalty.

The Catholic Mobilizing Network is a sponsored ministry of the Congregation of St. Joseph.

The pledge is located at http://catholicsmobilizing.org/pledge.

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When Mother’s Day Is ‘Empowering’ – The Atlantic

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Mothers Day was created when, in 1908, Anna Jarvis invented the holiday as a gesture to honor her own mother. Her idea caught on quickly: By 1914, in large part because of a campaign Jarvis waged to have her celebration of motherhood more widely recognized, Congress gave the day status as an official national holiday. Companies, as they do, did their part to further institutionalize Mothers Day, marketing flowers and candies and greeting cards as the proper ways to celebrate Mom.

Soon, Jarvis came to regret the holiday she had put on the American calendar. In 1920, she wrote a press release declaring florists and greeting card manufacturers to be charlatans, bandits, pirates, racketeers, kidnappers, and termites that would undermine with their greed one of the finest, noblest and truest movements and celebrations. And, as Nicole Russell wrote in The Atlantic in 2013, she spent the rest of her life trying to abolish the holiday she founded. This time, of course, Jarviss powers of persuasion failed her. Mothers Day would remainnot just a Hallmark holiday, but a Teleflora one.

Galentine's Day: How a Beloved Fiction Became a Beloved Tradition

I thought of Jarvis when I saw, on Amazon, the section of that massive marketplace that is currently devoted to Mothers Day. The section, backgrounded in pastel pink and decorated at the edges with origami roses rendered in muted corals, offers in one way pretty much the stuff youd expect a Mothers Day-devoted page to put on display: gadgets organized under headings like Food & Kitchen, Style, Spa Days, Creative Hobbies. Commercial goods that range from the practical to the whimsical and that are, all in all, pretty much the stuff of Jarvisian nightmare.

Amazons Mothers Day offerings, however, contain a newer addition to the traditional gift selections: a section claiming to offer Empowering Keepsakesfor the mom, the section explains, who loves feeling inspired. Empowering Keepsakes links to items on offer at Amazons Girl Power and Sorry Not Sorry boutiques; through them, you can order Mom a hardcover copy of Sheryl Sandbergs Lean In, or a silver necklace with fearless etched in a pendant, or a Rosie the Riveter cuff bracelet, or a plastic iPhone cover scrawled with the intriguingly punctuated phrase im not Bossy im The Boss, or a mug printed with an all-caps reminder to GET IT GIRL. You can order your mother, basically, some cheerfully commercialized feminism.

Its an old story that feminism itself has been co-opted by consumerism (you can buy that book on Amazon, too, for $16.06 plus shipping); here, though, through Amazons massive online marketplace, is an everyday reminder of that co-optation, rendered in mugs and mousepads and slim-fit t-shirts with BELIEVE IN YOURSELF silkscreened onto their surfaces. Here is Empowerment, transformed into a Keepsake. Empowerment got its start, as a political ethos, in the social work of the American 1970sa term meant to encourage marginalized communities to fight against paternalism, in the ways they saw fit for themselves; in the early 1980s, Jia Tolentino notes in The New York Times, the psychologist Julian Rappaport broadened it into a political theory of power that viewed personal competency as fundamentally limitlessone that placed faith in the individual and laid at her feet a corresponding amount of responsibility too.

Compare that to Empowering Keepsakes, which is not at all about moral libertarianism and only in the most superficial sense about power, personal or otherwise, at all. Amazon is selling its Empowering Keepsakes against a political backdrop of wage disparities, rampant misogyny, and structural forces that make it exceedingly difficult for all women, mothers or not, to GET IT GIRL.

The rhetoric of commercialized empowerment is also striking in the context of Mothers Day itself, which is not merely a celebration of motherhood, but which is also coded as a celebration of extremely traditional femininity. There are the pinks and the petunias, yes, but there are also the (slightly) subtler genderings: the fact, say, that Food Networks advice on throwing the perfect Mothers Day brunch involves recipes for light frittatas and sweet baked goods, while its Fathers Day offerings will inevitably involve tips for grilling cuts of manly meat. As Jill Filipovic points out in her book The H-Spot, the association of light food with women, and of substantial food with men, has a long historywith, among other things, smaller-is-better assumptions about womens bodies, and notions that women, as the weaker sex, should save the meat for the strong men and growing kids while they make do with whats left over.

Theres nothing wrong with an omelette, of course. But taken together, the commercialized offerings of Mothers Day suggest how conflicted American culture remains when it comes to feminism, and motherhood, and womanhood itself. Mothers Day, as observed in 2017, remains, technically, what it was back in 1914: a celebration of motherhood, its joys, its sacrifices. In practice, however, the holiday functions much as Valentines Day does, as a commercialized endorsement of traditional femininity. All those flowers. All that chocolate. All that Food & Kitchen. All that pink.

And: All that money. The Baltimore Sun, examining data from the National Retail Federation, reports that Mothers Day now ranks third out of all yearly holidays when it comes to consumer spendingjust below the Christmas/Hanukkah celebrations and the fall back-to-school season. (And just above Valentines Day.) This year should be a record-breaking one for Mothers Day spending: American shoppers are expected to spend around $186 on average on the mothers in their lives, for a total of nearly $24 billion nationally. Some of those billions will be devoted to gifts that profess to celebrate womens empowermentall in a political and economic environment that finds womens actual power to be under threat. Anna Jarvis, on some level, realized what shed started; she simply realized it too late.

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Secret Searches and Digital Civil Liberties – Constitution Daily (blog)

Posted: at 5:41 pm

In this excerpt from our new Digital Privacy initiative, Neil Richards from Washington University School of Law tackles the issue of secret government searchesnamely, instances of government surveillance that remain secret to the search target.

You can read the full text of Richards white paper at our special section, A Twenty-First Century Framework for Digital Privacy, at https://constitutioncenter.org/digital-privacy

Perhaps surprisingly, the most compelling moment in Oliver Stones Snowden biopic is the sex scene. Halfway through this movie about government surveillance and whistleblowing, the audience is shown a graphic and seemingly gratuitous sexual encounter involving Edward Snowden (played by Joseph Gordon Levitt) and his girlfriend Lindsay Mills (played by Shailene Woodley). In the midst of their passion, Snowdens eyes rest on Lindsays open laptop, the empty eye of its camera gazing towards them. In a flash, he recalls an earlier event in which NSA contractors hacked laptop cameras to secretly spy on surveillance subjects in real time. Edward and Lindsays mood was ruined, to say the least, by the prospect of government agents secretly watching their intimate activities.

The scene evokes George Orwells famous warning about telescreens, the omnipresent surveillance devices in Big Brothers Oceania, by which the Thought Police could secretly watch anyone at any time. It also has grounding in reality. The use of millions of hacked webcams as monitoring devices was a program known as Optic Nerve, which was part of the Snowden revelations. Another program leaked by Snowden involved the surveillance of the pornography preferences of jihadi radicalizers (including at least one U.S. person), with the intention being the exposure of their sexual fantasies to discredit them in the Muslim world. Snowden himself famously appeared on John Olivers HBO show Last Week Tonight, humorously but effectively reducing unchecked government surveillance to the basic proposition that secret surveillance allowed the government, among other things, to get your dick pics.

Sexual surveillance may get our attention, but in our digital networked society, in which many of our documents are stored in the cloud, secret government surveillance powers are vastly broader than the power to be an electronic Peeping Tom. Today, the U.S. government has a wide variety of means of secretly watching and searching the people who live in the United States, whether they are citizens, permanent residents, or visitors.

How did we get to a place where secret government surveillance seems both omnipresent and unavoidable? It may be hard to believe these days, but when the Internet first jumped into the public consciousness in the mid-1990s, it was touted as a realm of anarchy and personal empowerment, a tool of freedom rather than of oppression. At the time, the specter of always-on secret surveillance was unthinkable for a variety of technical, political, and legal reasons. Such surveillance was technologically impossible in a pre-broadband world of modems and computers that were usually not connected to the network and in which the Cloud was a dream of technologists and science fiction writers. It was practically impossible, because of the high costs of in-person surveillance. It was politically impossible, too, with many politicians having first-hand memory of the totalitarian regimes of the Axis Powers. Legally, too, the law was settled that the government needed to get a warrant before it tapped a phone, searched papers, or intercepted an email.

How times have changed. These well-established technical and political roadblocks to widespread secret surveillance vanished rapidly in the early months of the twenty-first century. When Al Qaeda terrorists turned four commercial airlines into missiles and attacked New York and Washington, D.C. in September 2001, a stunned American President without a strong commitment to civil liberties began to authorize unprecedented levels of digital surveillance. From a technological perspective, the attacks occurred just after the mass adoption of the Internet, and just before the social media and smartphone phases of the digital revolution. These advances and adoptions, running on a stream of previously uncollected personal data, made it technically possible for the government to read a persons emails or documents stored in the cloud, or obtain a minutely-detailed transcript of their location logged from the GPS chip in their phone. At the same time, these new technologies started to blur the lines between public and private, destabilizing settled legal understandings of the boundaries between what was private and what was not. In this environment, law enforcement often took the position that in doing their job of promoting security, it was better to ask for forgiveness than permission in attacking the newly-available digital evidence.

Yet despite the growth of the surveillance-industrial complex, there are hopeful signs. Apple and Microsoft, among other technology companies, have engaged in high-profile litigation with the federal government on behalf of their users privacy, including litigation over the security of iPhones and the governments ability to place gag orders on its searches of Microsofts cloud and email services.

The result of these changes is the rise of a phenomenon I shall call the secret government search. This is, as the name suggests, a search by law enforcement of information relating to an individual. Secret government searches can be diversethey can be physical or increasingly digital; they can be executed under a warrant, under no warrant, or under some intermediate authorization; they can be unknown to all, or served on a trusted digital service accompanied by an injunction forbidding notice to the target; and the target may get delayed notice of the search or no notice ever. Different kinds of secret government searches can raise different problems, and these problems may require different solutions. But at bottom, secret government searches share the essential characteristic of being government surveillance of which the target has no notice at the time of the search.

In this essay, I attempt to put the rise of secret government searches into contexthistorical, technological, and most importantly constitutional. My argument is straightforwardthe current state of secret government searches is a dangerous anomaly in our democratic order. It is unprecedented as a technological and historical matter, and it is inconsistent with what I believe is the best reading of our constitutional traditions protecting freedom of thought, freedom of expression, and freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures. If we are to faithfully translate our hard-won civil liberties against the state from the physical realm to the digital, we need to do better to limit the ability of the government to peer into the lives of its citizens in ways that are not only secret but also relatively unconstrained. It is important to recognize, however, that this is not a question of civil liberties in cyberspace, as if the digital realm is somehow a separate one. While the fiction of separate physical and virtual worlds may have been a useful one twenty years ago, in todays networked, mobile era of ubiquitous personal computers, the overwhelming majority of ordinary people use digital platforms and technologies to live their everyday lives. Recognition of this fact must also cause us to recognize that there is not really any such place as cyberspace. On the contrary, there is only space, and humans in that space trying to live their livessometimes using digital tools, sometimes using pre-digital ones, and frequently using a combination of the two. Yet if we fail to fully extend our hard-won rights in traditional activities to digital, networked activities, those rights will be substantially and perhaps even fatally diminished. If that were to happen, we would all be less safe as a result.

This argument proceeds in four steps. First, I will describe the lay of the land with respect to secret government searches, a phenomenon I term the secret search epidemic. I argue that it is impossible to fully understand the constitutional issues these searches raise without an appreciation of the essential technical and other roles played by the technology companies whose businesses enable the creation of this data in the first place. Second, I examine these secret searches as searches, and consider them from the perspective of Fourth Amendment law. This focuses our attention on the search part of secret government searches. I argue that the best reading of the Fourth Amendment in this context is that secret searches are unreasonable, and that if we permit them, we risk repeating the mistakes of the past with respect to the Fourth Amendment and new technologies. Third, I consider whether secret searches are a threat to First Amendment values, either by virtue of their secrecy or by the fact that in the digital context they are often served on cloud providers and accompanied by injunctions forbidding those companies to ever tell their customers about the governments accessing their data. I conclude that secret, unconstrained searches of this kind represent a serious threat to our First Amendment values. Finally, I chart a path forward for secret surveillance law, offering four principles that should govern the delicate task of translating our civil liberties into the digital society.

Read more at: https://constitutioncenter.org/digital-privacy/secret-searches-and-digital-civil-liberties

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Freedom of Information Act document leaks could become criminal – The Guardian

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People who reveal information obtained under the Freedom of Information Act could be jailed under new legal proposals. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA

Whistleblowers and journalists could be imprisoned for revealing documents that can be obtained through freedom of information requests, campaigners have warned.

Responding to the consultation on Law Commission proposals for a new espionage act with more punitive powers, freedom of speech organisations have condemned plans for lowering the threshold for prosecutions.

The Campaign for Freedom of Information and the rights group Article 19 fear that the proposals would make it easier to secure convictions by weakening the test for proving an offence and even criminalise passing on information discoverable under FoI requests.

Under the 1989 Official Secrets Act, some offences require proof that a disclosure is likely to damage defence, international relations or law enforcement, or fall into a class of information likely to damage the security services work.

The Law Commission says the likely to damage test prevents prosecutions being brought because proving this requires more damaging information to be revealed in court. It wants the harm test to be reduced from likely to cause harm to capable of causing harm.

The Freedom of Information Act, however, only exempts information about defence, international relations and law enforcement using the threshold of likely to harm. Leaking information which is capable of, but very unlikely to, cause harm would therefore potentially become an offence, it is claimed.

The Liberal Democrat Foreign Affairs spokesperson Tom Brake said: These draconian proposals beg the question of what the government has to hide. It is a hallmark of our democracy that government should be accountable and transparent.

The Lib Dem manifesto will include a commitment to end the ministerial veto on release of information under the FoI Act. The party will also pledge to reduce the proportion of FoI requests that result in information being withheld by government departments.

We would expand the Freedom of Information act to stop ministers and departments from being able to block the publication of information they see as politically inconvenient, Brake said.

Maurice Frankel, the director of the Campaign for Freedom of Information, said: These proposals are not only oppressive but unworkable. It is beyond common sense to make it an official secrets offence to leak information which anyone could obtain under FoI.

The proposals would deter officials from discussing information that has lawfully been made public. It will set the FoI Act and the Official Secrets Act on a collision course. It is not the Law Commissions job to make an ass of the law but thats what its proposals would do.

Thomas Hughes, the executive director of Article 19, said: The Law Commissions proposals would move the clock backwards, undoing improvements in the UKs 1989 Official Secrets Acts, and setting a dangerous example of eroding freedom of expression protections, which may be copied by oppressive regimes globally.

The consultation on how to reform the Official Secrets Acts in the digital age was headed by the law commissioner, Prof David Ormerod QC. The initiative for the review came from the Cabinet Office in 2015. Ormerod has said that he relished the opportunity to update archaic legislation that was ripe for reform in the digital age.

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Freedom of information in peril: What transparency looks like in Trump’s government – Salon

Posted: at 5:41 pm

More than two decades ago, with the aim of foster[ing] democracy by ensuring public access to agency records and information, Congress amended the Freedom of Information Act to require agencies to proactively post frequently requested records online. As the legislative history makes clear, the purpose of this mandate was to prompt agencies to make information available affirmatively on their own initiative in order to meet anticipated public demand for it.

Pursuant to this amendment, the U.S. Department of Agricultures (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service began posting records online related to its enforcement of the Animal Welfare Act (AWA) our nations most significant animal protection law. In doing so, the agency noted that it received more requests for these documents than for any other category of records and acknowledged that, given this frequency and the continuing high interest from animal interest groups as well as the general public, the law required such posting.

Despite this clear recognition of its legal duties, in amuchpublicizedmove earlier this year, the agency abruptly took all of these records down from its website. Dubbed the#USDAblackout, the action was almost universally condemned, not just by animal advocates but also by more than 100 members of Congress and even those in the very industries regulated by the AWA and subject to the disclosures, including zoos, research institutions and the pet trade. The takedown of the website was Orwellian the agency claimed it was done [b]ased on [its] commitment to being transparent [and] remaining responsive to [its] stakeholders informational needs. But what has ensued since is perhaps even more surreal.

Now, in an attempt to persuade a court to dismissa lawsuit filed by myself and otherschallenging the blackout, the USDA hasasserted that it was never under any legal duty to post the records this despite the clear statutory mandate that agencies proactively post frequently requested records, the agencys acknowledgement that the records at issue werethesingle most frequently requested, and even its prior recognition that it was legally required to post the records. It seems, to crib from Lewis Carroll, that the law means just what [the USDA] chooses it to mean neither more nor less. And apparently that meaning can shift at whim.

On the heels of this move, the USDA demonstrated total contempt for yet another mandate of the Freedom of Information Act the requirement that, even if parts of records are exempt from disclosure, [a]ny reasonably segregable portion of a record shall be provided to any person requesting such record after deletion of the portions which are exempt under this subsection. As the government has long recognized, the clear purpose of this requirement is to prevent the withholding of entire records or files merely because portions of them are exempt, and to require the release of nonexempt portions. Yet withhold entire documents is precisely what the USDA did: In response to a Freedom of Information Act request for records about the decision to take down the website, the USDA sent me1,771 pages, every one of them completely blacked out. It blacked out the records about the blackout.

Is this the new normal? Total disregard of longstanding duties under the Freedom of Information Act? Government agencies thumbing their noses at the intense public interest in what theyre up to? Its bad enough that the AWAhas never been properly enforceddespite keen and abiding public interest in animal welfare when the AWA was initially passed in the 1960s, Congress received more public communications related to concerns about animal welfare than about civil rights and the Vietnam War combined. Eviscerating transparency making government operations into a black hole will not be tolerated. Its a shame that in this new era advocates are having to redirect their time and resources to getting basic information that they are clearly entitled to under the law. But make no mistake about it we will fight for what is rightfully ours. Ive filed anappealchallenging the USDAs wholesale redactions. The agency has untilMay 30to respond.

The opening words of Harold L. Crosss 1953 text The Peoples Right to Know, which became the foundation of the Freedom of Information Act, ring truer today than ever before: Public business is the publics business. The people have the right to know. Freedom of information is their just heritage. Without that the citizens of a democracy have but changed their kings.

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Freedom begin season with two wins in a row, look to sweep Grizzlies on Mother’s day – User-generated content (press release) (registration)

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Another first-inning lead proved advantageous Saturday night as the Florence Freedom, presented by Titan Mechanical Solutions, rode a strong pitching performance to a 3-1 win over the Gateway Grizzlies at GCS Ballpark.

Tony Vocca (1-0) turned in the second straight quality start for the Freedom (2-0), striking out six batters while allowing only two hits through his six innings on the mound.

I attacked them with fastballs, working both sides of the plate, Vocca said. (Catcher Garrett) Vail and I were on the same page throughout, and it makes it even easier when the defense is solid like ours has been.

Logan Longwith provided two innings of scoreless relief in his Frontier League debut, and Matt Pobereyko struck out the side in order in the ninth to record the save, positioning the Freedom for a chance at a series sweep in Sundays finale.

Andre Mercurios first-inning RBI-single put Florence on top early for the second straight night, and after the Grizzlies (0-2) tied the score on a sacrifice fly in the third, Mercurio delivered a second RBI-single in the fifth to give the Freedom a permanent lead.

Jordan Brower homered to right-center in the top of the sixth, ending the night for Gateway starter Will Anderson (0-1). The righty struck out five, but allowed ten Florence hits prior to yielding to the bullpen, which held the Freedom scoreless over the final three innings.

In the sixth, seventh and eighth innings, the Grizzlies put one runner aboard to bring the tying run to the plate, but failed to score in each instance.

The Freedom will play for the series sweep Sunday with first pitch scheduled for 7:05 p.m. at GCS Ballpark. Right-hander Cody Gray will start for Florence against Grizzlies left-hander Dylan Craig.

The Freedom home opener of the regular season is on Wednesday, May 17. Group tickets and season ticket plans are currently on sale for the 2017 campaign. Fans can guarantee seating for premium promotional dates by calling the Freedom at 859-594-4487.

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