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Monthly Archives: May 2017
Biodesix’s VeriStrat Test Is Cost Saving, Can Help Optimize End-of-Life Care – Technology Networks
Posted: May 23, 2017 at 10:47 pm
Today, Biodesix, Inc. will present the results of a new study demonstrating that VeriStrat testing and other tools can help physicians improve quality care and cancer care planning for patients with advanced non-small cell lung cancer enabling them to achieve and improve their quality metrics.
The data will be presented at the 22nd Annual Meeting of the International Society For Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research, in Boston, MA, USA. Poster Title: Precise prognosis, key to cancer care planning and reaching Medicare quality measures; how the VeriStrat test can help; Argento C.; Arnaud A. Poster Presentation: 3:45PM-7:45PM, May 22 Location: Board K18, Hynes Convention Center, Hall C.
Increased focus on quality of care and pay-for-performance programs have driven new attention to prognosis and cancer care planning. While prognosis is central to quality cancer care planning, prognosis based on observable patient characteristics such as age, performance status and cancer stage is imprecise. VeriStrat can help physicians make more informed survival estimates and improve cancer care planning to reach high quality care, as defined by the various Medicare pay-for-performance quality metrics.
Prognosis is central to advanced care planning, and prognostic test results can help physicians reach Medicare pay-for-performance metrics, while improving quality of life for patients, said David Brunel, CEO of Biodesix.
The study is based on a systematic literature review of publications in NCBI of clinical trials, survey-based studies, guidelines and reports on four oncology topics: the impact of knowing prognosis on treatment decisions; the components of advanced care planning (prognosis, goals of treatment and expected response to treatment); the impact of care planning on quality of life and costs; and current tools and prognostication methods. 308 publications relevant to the topics were reviewed.
Among the studys findings:
Patients with poor prognosis are more likely to favor quality of life over life extension when planning for care. Patients who thought they had at least a 10% chance they would not live 6 months were less likely to favor life-extending therapy over comfort care compared to patients who thought were going to live for at least 6 months.
Despite it being a difficult conversation, patients want to know their prognosis. Studies consistently report that over 95% of patients want to know their prognosis even if it is poor. Precise prognosis is difficult to estimate using normal patient characteristics and the VeriStrat tests prognostic value can help predict prognosis in patients with cancer. The VeriStrat test is a predictive and prognostic blood-based proteomic test that helps guide treatment decisions for patients with advanced non-small-cell lung cancer. The test is used to assess disease aggressiveness by characterizing host response to the tumor, classifying patients as either VeriStrat-Good or VeriStrat-Poor.
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Colorado Master Gardeners: Junior Master Gardeners in Routt County – Steamboat Pilot & Today
Posted: at 10:47 pm
Summer 2017 will mark the third season of the Junior Master Gardner program. In collaboration with Routt County Master Gardeners and the Yampa River Botanic Park, four Junior Master Gardening workshops will be offered for third- through fifth-graders.
CSU Master Gardeners are available to answer questions each from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Thursdays at the Extension Office. Stop by 136 Sixth Street, call 970-870-5241 or email csumgprogram@co.r...
The Junior Master Gardener program was developed by Texas A&M Agri Life Extension Service. It is modeled after the successful Master Gardener program and offers horticultural and environmental science education through fun and creative activities. The program is committed to helping young people become good gardeners and good citizens so they can make a positive contribution to their community, school and family.
Participation in all Junior Master Gardener sessions eight, total with a community service component qualifies a student to become a certified Junior Master Gardener. The Routt County program offers four workshops each summer.
In 2016, 10 junior gardeners enjoyed learning about gardening in Routt County. Four workshops were held Sunday mornings during the summer at the Trillium House at the Yampa River Botanic Park, and students could attend any or all of the sessions. Earlier in the spring, the YRBP had constructed a raised bed specifically for this program. This small garden is located in the Childrens Garden section at the north end of the park.
At the first workshop, participants planted the raised bed, toured the gardens and learned how to keep a garden journal. In the second workshop, the kids experienced the ongoing tasks of maintaining a garden: fertilizing, weeding, and managing pests. The third workshop focused on insects in the garden, with a great presentation from the Routt County Beekeeping Association. During the last workshop, the students harvested the garden and learned how to save seeds, dry and arrange flowers and preserve garden produce.
Six Routt County Master Gardeners, along with Gayle Lehman, YRBP manager, provided instruction and insights into gardening in the valley. Students enjoyed the workshops, and several attended all four sessions. Ruth Peterson, of Hayden, was awarded the Junior Master Gardener certification at the end of the summer, as she, through the course of two summers, had attended all eight workshops.
New sessions for Junior Master Gardening will be offered during summer 2017. Participants will once again design, plant, tend and harvest the Junior Master Gardener plot at the park. In addition to the garden, students will learn how to identify plants, what organisms are found in a garden ecosystem and how to maintain and harvest a garden.
All workshops include short, informational components, with accompanying hands-on activities. Participants at each workshop take home a project to extend their learning. Sessions will be held June 10, July 1 and 22, and Aug. 5, and each runs from 9 a.m. to noon.
The Junior Master Gardener program, open to all Routt County residents, is a great way to get kids interested in gardening. Registration is at the CSU Routt County Extension Office, 136 Sixth St., and sessions require a $12 materials fee.
A snack and water are provided, and sessions are limited to 12 participants .
Jo Smith is a member of the 2013 class of Routt County Master Gardeners. She is a retired biology teacher and enjoys the kid and gardening connections in the Junior Master Gardening program.
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Colorado Master Gardeners: Junior Master Gardeners in Routt County - Steamboat Pilot & Today
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Vinterberg presents a ’70s commune, in theory and practice – SFGate
Posted: at 10:47 pm
A scene from Danish film "The Commune," directed by Thomas Vinterberg. Individual actors not ID'd.
A scene from Danish film "The Commune," directed by Thomas Vinterberg. Individual actors not ID'd.
Vinterberg presents a 70s commune, in theory and practice
Young and not-so-young adults considering a communal lifestyle will find little encouragement in Thomas Vinterbergs new film. The Commune doesnt pull its punches: Were shown that nontraditional households can be very taxing on individuals and are anything but good medicine for stale marriages.
This is an ensemble drama, a type in which this highly capable Danish filmmaker has excelled in the past (The Celebration, 1999). Viewers may recall that Vinterberg was a co-founder, with Lars von Trier, of the Dogme 95 movement, which advocated a highly stripped-down version of moviemaking. Both filmmakers have since moved in a less austere direction.
The setting is Copenhagen in the late 1970s. Erik (Ulrich Thomsen like many members of the cast, a Vinterberg regular) is a professor of architecture with anger issues who has just inherited a large house. Its too much for his family newscaster wife Anna (an excellent Trine Dyrholm) and teenage daughter Freja (Martha Sofie Wallstrom Hansen).
Instead of selling the residence, as Erik plans, Anna proposes that they fill up the empty space with bodies. Friends, acquaintances, strangers anyone who passes the groups scrutiny and is willing to abide by the rules will receive a share of ownership. When the initial members OK the plan, everyone celebrates by going skinny-dipping.
What could go wrong?
A couple of shadows fall on the euphoric early days of the venture. Among them: Weve heard Anna inform Erik that she has suggested collective living because she is, well, bored, and wants to hear some fresh voices when she gets home. There are also disturbing notes sounded in how the group deals with one potential housemate, a weak individual with a spotty source of income.
The housemates share not only their meals, but their feelings, and at length. Secrets are considered dangerous (which, of course, doesnt mean they dont exist). All are supposed to be equal, but a leader, whos a bit of a bully, emerges. Things really start to get hairy when Erik begins an affair with a female graduate student, and informs Anna (not entirely willingly).
Instead of giving him the bums rush, she succumbs to the zeitgeist and suggests that he bring the young woman home to join the commune. He does so, and I can say without spoiling anything that there certainly are repercussions, most notably for Anna and Freja.
Vinterberg, who also co-wrote the script (with Tobias Lindholm), grew up in a commune, and you get the feeling he knows what hes talking about. Hes a sharp observer of the members of this household, and has an acerbic side that doesnt cut them a lot of slack. But theres quiet compassion as well, and not only for Eriks wife and daughter.
The films melodramatic streak is rescued by the exceptional performance from Dyrholm (who also appeared in Celebration). You get the sense that her Anna is rather shocked when communal living fails to create the utopia it promises, and the actress is remarkable at registering the ptofound emotional price it extracts in reality.
Walter Addiego is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: waddiego@sfchronicle.com.
The Commune
Drama. With Trine Dyrholm, Ulrich Thomsen, Martha Sofie Wallstrom Hansen. Directed by Thomas Vinterberg. In Danish with English subtitles. Not rated. 111 minutes.
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What Bill Nye and the science movement can learn from religion – Houston Chronicle
Posted: at 10:47 pm
Begin Slideshow 4
Photo: The Washington Post
Bill Nye stars in "Bill Nye Saves the World," which is available on Netflix.
Bill Nye stars in "Bill Nye Saves the World," which is available on Netflix.
dc TALK, a Christian Rap group
dc TALK, a Christian Rap group
What Bill Nye and the science movement can learn from religion
There is no end to the truly regrettable moments in "Bill Nye Saves the World," Netflix's attempt to rebottle the '90s-era lightning of a nebbishy but dapper science guy for a new generation.
But one stands out.
Rachel Bloom, decked out in avante garde '80s pop gear, sings a cringeworthy song about the spectrum of sexuality called "My Sex Junk." You can watch it if you like, but I can't say I recommend it.
I'm a huge fan of Bloom. "My Crazy Ex-Girlfriend," the CW rom-com musical series she created and stars in, is spectacularly funny, largely thanks to her note-perfect performance. I'm also a fan of Nye, or, at least, I was a fan as a 10-year-old, which makes me the target market for his new Netflix series. But this is television, and in television, two positives can sometimes make a negative.
From Nye's new show to April's March for Science, science is enjoying a much-needed moment in the cultural zeitgeist, but it's in danger of the same pratfalls that have hamstrung another subculture with which it has more in common than its stewards might care to admit: the religious one.
Religious entertainment could teach science a thing or two about the danger of pandering to pop culture.
To read this article in one of Houston's most-spoken languages, click on the button below.
Both science and faith try to use pop culture to get you to buy into a certain set of beliefs without boring you out of your skull. Both can safely assume a fair number of skeptics in their audiences, and both are trying to convince you that - contrary to what you may have heard - the subject in question is both cool and relevant.
Take American evangelicalism's numerous failures in trying to be cool and relevant. In the '90s, a cottage industry offered Bible-ified takes on pop culture. Like Nirvana? Try DC Talk. Into 'N Sync? Well, have you ever heard of Plus One? And why wear an Abercrombie & Fitch T-shirt when you could wear Breadcrumb and Fish?
That industry isn't dead by any stretch, but it has faded as it became increasingly clear that wherever else faith's natural habitat may be, it's not in the entertainment industry. The whiz-bang pyrotechnics and giddy razzle-dazzle of mainstream pop culture simply don't lend themselves to faith, which thrives best in contemplation and reflection.
Science, in the meantime, thrives in study. It is, as Carl Sagan put it, "a way of thinking much more than it is a body of knowledge." But you wouldn't know that from the hugely popular I F-ing Love Science site, whose Facebook page boasts 25 million likes. It may love science, but that love manifests itself as neither a body of knowledge nor a way of thinking so much as a collection of clicky memes and headlines of questionable scientific relevance ("Deer Caught Gnawing on Human Remains").
Likewise, Nye's fellow celebrity science whiz Neil deGrasse Tyson is far too often reduced to generating headlines. His reliably sour fact checks of science in movies (he recently weighed in on "Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2," a movie that features, among other things, a raccoon voiced by Bradley Cooper) has earned him a reputation as a buzzkill.
That, too, is reminiscent of some of the evangelical subculture at its most patronizing, butting in to tut-tut movies and music that step out of line with its worldview. Faith and culture will always necessarily be in conversation, but does anyone out there really need Focus on the Family's analysis of the spiritual elements in "Resident Evil: The Final Chapter"?
This is doubly unfortunate, because Tyson is a man of obvious intelligence and charm, and his "Cosmos" reboot was as good as Nye's series is bad. There is no reason that such a naturally gifted communicator should waste his considerable talents on being the fun police for a superhero space romp. Doing so degrades his scientific brilliance to the same realm as the worst elements of the Christian subculture: turning a fascinating, mind-expanding tool for understanding reality into nothing more than a wet blanket.
Science, like religion, provides a profoundly beautiful prism through which to help interpret the world. It is organized knowledge that, in its truest essence, uses what we know about the universe to help us grasp at those things that we don't. And science, like religion, has seen better days in America. Dangerous, anti-intellectual bile about the "myth" of climate change and the "danger" of vaccines is being thrown around at the highest levels of government. Some solid science would go a long way toward fixing these and other disquieting trends coursing through the country.
In dark times, it's easy to take any tiny win as progress, even something as dubious as a few extra retweets. The temptation to cater to the social media masses is understandably huge. Gotta keep the lights on, and all that.
But you need only look so far as religion to see just where such tricks will take you. The infantilization of religious discourse has elevated its worst elements, making heroes of people not fit to clean the boots of the likes of Augustine, Flannery O'Connor and Martin Luther King Jr. Science's current moment isn't immune to such a fate. It may already be succumbing to it.
But all isn't lost. For all its mainstream embarrassments, rigorous, insightful conversations around religion are happening, albeit in smaller pockets, away from the spotlight. Science, obviously, continues to thrive in institutions of higher learning, where the discoveries being made have as much to do with the I F-ing Love Science crowd as a model rocket does with NASA.
If the people who truly love science want to make sure the current surge gains real momentum, they'll want to highlight that discourse over the shallow alternatives. After all, as scientists and their fans know better than anyone, success often lies in replication.
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What Bill Nye and the science movement can learn from religion - Houston Chronicle
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Minnesota designers fueling feminist T-shirt craze – Bend Bulletin
Posted: at 10:47 pm
By Jenna RossStar Tribune (Minneapolis) Published May 23, 2017 at 12:02AM
MINNEAPOLIS The messages are strong and sometimes funny. One is feisty; another is in French. But always, theyre wearable.
Matriarch
She persisted
Anarchy is female
Solidarit fminine
Feminism: Back by popular demand
The feminist T-shirt is having a moment. Fueled by people who want to express their support for womens rights at marches but also at work, out for dinner, on Instagram the shirts are growing in popularity and power. Sure, luxury brand Dior is selling a $700 feminist tee, but the trend is rooted in a $30 unisex shirt from the Los Angeles shop Otherwild. The Future Is Female, the shirt declares.
Minnesota artists and designers are creating some of the more popular designs, using the T-shirts to raise money for nonprofits focused on womens health and equality. Theyre also gathering around the messages, hosting printing workshops and discussions.
I think this activism zeitgeist just overlapped with a renewed interest in graphic tees as a medium for artists and designers, said Minneapolis designer Maddy Nye. Of course its only a T-shirt, but its contributing to a larger paradigm shift in awareness and action.
Protest art and imagery hangs from the walls of Nyes sunny home studio. For her Matriarch shirt, Nye used a bulbous typeface that had its heyday during the environmental and womens movements in the 1970s, she said, but I like to use it in a contemporary context.
So with just one word, the design asks questions about whats changed since then and what hasnt. Some people have bought Nyes tees for their mothers, women who fought earlier battles.
Angie Toner is not shy about being a feminist. But working in the beauty industry a few years back, she had conversation after conversation with women who eschewed that label. It got her thinking about the backlash against the word, the movement. Then she came across a photograph of a woman holding a sign: Feminism: Back by popular demand.
I need a sign like that, she decided, if only to hang on her wall.
Toner asked local sign painter Phil Vandervaart to draw the design. The drawing was so great, she said, that I was like, you know what? Id like to move this around.
So she printed it onto T-shirts and bags at Gee Teez, a screen printing shop in south Minneapolis, and put them on Etsy in 2015: A Grassroots Feminist Fashion Action, she calls it. Orders poured in. Since then, Toner has tried to quit the project a few times, to move on to new things. But Ive kept it going because anytime I try to let it fade out, someone will reach out, she said.
The day after President Donald Trump was elected, Toner gave the shirts away on the street.
Politics and protests are inspiring big retailers to print Feminist on cheap totes and plastic jewelry. But its also fueling local artists and small companies longer-standing projects. My Sister, a Minneapolis-based company that uses sweatshop-free clothing to help fight sex trafficking, has been around for two years, raising $93,000 over that time.
Beyond the money, the messages themselves tackle gender inequality, one of traffickings root causes, said Mandy Multerer, the companys co-founder and CEO. Stop Traffick is the benefit corporations bestseller, she said, but in recent months, a tank is trending. Its my body, the shirt reads on one side, outlining the shape of a breast. Its my choice.
Its all correct
The image came to Crystal Quinn one night as she was falling asleep.
The Minneapolis-based artist had been reading The Dispossessed, a 1974 science-fiction novel by Ursula K. Le Guin, turning over one of its ideas in her head: Because our culture is a patriarchy, run by men, then the opposition, inherently, must be female.
That night, the idea merged with a classic protest sign: the abortion-rights slogan Keep Abortion Legal, in bold typeface, within a circle.
I just put those two together in a very natural way, said Quinn.
She got out of bed and started drawing. The result: Anarchy is female, in 70s script, pushing up against the black circle containing it.
Putting it on T-shirts was the first thought I had, said Quinn, partly because she appreciates how, like those sold at concerts, they reference a specific moment. The design has since landed on mugs, buttons and protest signs. In January, Quinn co-hosted a workshop for protesters to print the image.
When I came up with the design, it had nothing to do with politics, at all, or Hillary Clinton, said Quinn, a multidisciplinary artist who has designed and made shoes, pompoms and posters.
While some sketched their designs before last years election, others were spurred by it: A peach T-shirt for sale at Mille, a south Minneapolis boutique with an online following, grew out of a postelection conversation between owner Michelle LeBlanc and designer Nye.
After the election, we were kind of devastated, LeBlanc said. What can we do to be more active? What can we do to give back more?
Half the proceeds from the Solidarit fminine shirt, which translates to women solidarity, goes to Planned Parenthood. Already, the shop has donated $2,000 to the health care nonprofit. Money from a second T-shirt which quotes Michelle Obamas Go high in bubbly typeface goes to DonorsChoose, a nonprofit that allows donors to pick projects in public schools.
She persisted
For Chelsea Brink, the donations made the difference.
The freelance designer and art director had supplied the hand-lettering a fancier version of my own handwriting for a She persisted tattoo party that accidentally went public, then viral. In February, more than 100 women and a couple of men lined up at a Minneapolis tattoo shop to get the quote, referencing an attempt to silence Sen. Elizabeth Warren, inked on their bodies. Women worldwide followed suit, turning Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnells words into protest.
But when one of her friends requested a less-than-permanent version of the design, Brink hesitated.
I have mixed feelings about the whole T-shirt-message culture, she said. What are we really doing here and what kind of difference are we actually making?
But the ability to donate convinced her. Profits from her She persisted shirt have gone to the Malala Fund, She Should Run and the National Womens Law Center. Brink chose organizations focused on equality but that arent aligned with a particular political party, she said.
In the end, Brink has appreciated that a little lettering has caused people to think about big issues: tolerance, inclusion, equality. If one person sees it and is affected by it, she said, that makes a huge difference to me.
Fashion Revolution MN hosted 'upcycling' your clothing, an event where guests picked an old tee to bring in and have it live screenprinted with a feminist design made specially for the event at Twin Spirits Distillery on April 29, 2017, in Minneapolis. Here, silkscreen artist Emma Johnson, of Minneapolis, prints a shirt with her design at the event. (David Joles/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS)
From left, Maddy Nye, Chelsea Brink, Crystal Quinn, and Mandy Multerer show off their feminist T-shirts in Minneapolis. There has been a recent explosion of feminist T-shirts designed in Minnesota. (Carlos Gonzalez/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS)
Maddy Nye, designer and Yours Madly stationer, on May 3, 2017, in Minneapolis. There has been an explosion of feminist T-shirts designed in Minnesota. (Carlos Gonzalez/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS)
Crystal Quinn, multi-disciplined artist, on May 3, 2017, in Minneapolis. There has been an explosion of feminist T-shirts designed in Minnesota. (Carlos Gonzalez/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS)
Chelsea Brink, "She persisted" shirt a designer, on May 3, 2017, in Minneapolis. There has been an explosion of feminist T-shirts designed in Minnesota. (Carlos Gonzalez/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS)
Mandy Multerer, co-founder and CEO of My Sister, on May 3, 2017, in Minneapolis. There has been an explosion of feminist T-shirts designed in Minnesota. (Carlos Gonzalez/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS)
Silkscreen artists Emma Johnson, right, and Sarah Mering, both of Minneapolis, prepare to print shirts at an upcycling event, in which people take in their old T-shirts and get them reprinted with feminist designs. (David Joles/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS)
There has been an explosion of feminist T-shirts designed in Minnesota. (Carlos Gonzalez/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS)
Fashion Revolution MN hosted 'upcycling' your clothing, an event where guests picked an old tee to bring in and have it live screenprinted with a feminist design made specially for the event at Twin Spirits Distillery on April 29, 2017, in Minneapolis. Here, silkscreen artists Emma Johnson, right, and Sarah Mering, both of Minneapolis, print shirts at the event as Riveter Magazine co-founder Kaylen Ralph, left, looks on. (David Joles/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS)
Fashion Revolution MN hosted 'upcycling' your clothing, an event where guests picked an old tee to bring in and have it live screenprinted with a feminist design made specially for the event at Twin Spirits Distillery on April 29, 2017, in Minneapolis. Here, silkscreen artist Sarah Mering, of Minneapolis, with a freshly printed shirt and her design at the event. (David Joles/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS)
Fashion Revolution MN hosted 'upcycling' your clothing, an event where guests picked an old tee to bring in and have it live screenprinted with a feminist design made specially for the event at Twin Spirits Distillery on April 29, 2017, in Minneapolis. Here, silkscreen artist Sarah Mering, of Minneapolis, with a freshly printed shirt and her design at the event. (David Joles/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS)
Hilal Abraham, CEO of Henna & Hijabs, on May 3, 2017, in Minneapolis. There has been an explosion of feminist T-shirts designed in Minnesota. (Carlos Gonzalez/Minneapolis Star Tribune/TNS)
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This Land Is … Cut Under Trump’s Budget? – NPR
Posted: at 10:46 pm
Desert lands run by the U.S. Department of Interior in Utah. Kirk Siegler/Kirk Siegler hide caption
Desert lands run by the U.S. Department of Interior in Utah.
Rural communities dependent on U.S. public lands for everything from outdoor recreation to hunting to livestock grazing could be hit hard under the Trump administration's latest budget proposal unveiled Tuesday.
Still subject to approval by Congress, the president's budget includes a roughly $1.4 billion cut to the Department of Interior and far deeper cuts to the Department of Agriculture: combined the two agencies own and manage more than 700 million acres of public lands, mostly in the West.
Here are three items of note in the Department of Interior budget alone that aren't generating much attention so far. But they could disproportionately hit rural communities, many of which tended to support President Trump in last year's election.
As a congressman representing Montana, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke was a vocal supporter of the Land and Conservation fund. But at a budget briefing for reporters Tuesday he appeared to sound a different tune on future land acquisition and conservation more generally.
"Rather than simply adding more land, we want to make sure we take care of what we have," Zinke said.
Like many of his predecessors, Secretary Zinke has articulated a broad, if sometimes complicated, vision for the future of public lands management. On the one hand, he's pledged to be a conservation champion in the spirit of Teddy Roosevelt. But he's also promised to boost the economies of rural American towns by increasing mining and other development on public lands that surround them.
For sure, this reflects the often competing "multiple use" mission of DOI agencies such as the Bureau of Land Management. But Zinke predicted that reversing Obama-era policies restricting off-shore drilling alone could bring revenue back for many of the restoration and conservation programs currently facing cuts.
"Some of it has been due to oil and gas pricing, but not all," Zinke said. "A lot of it is uncertainty that we have not been a good partner with industry."
Still, many influential sportsmen and public lands groups say the administration's budget is directly at odds with many of the conservation values Mr. Zinke espouses.
"When you talk about on the one hand, increasing access, and then you cut out the very tool to do that, it's hard to reconcile," said Land Tawney, executive director of Backcountry Hunters and Anglers.
Tawney says the DOI's budget proposal is reflective of a broader trend that he says has been building in Washington in recent years: "when you starve these agencies of their budgets, you make them look sick, so we can [then] think about divesting in them."
As much of the rural West in particular has been transitioning from a resource-based economy to one more dependent on outdoor recreation, groups like Tawney's have flexed their political muscle recently. They say they plan to press Congress in the coming weeks as well, if the administration's budget proposal moves forward.
Meantime there is early and widespread speculation that much of the budget stands little chance of passing Congress, at least in its current form, even with the president's party in control of both the House and the Senate.
For his part Tuesday, Secretary Zinke seemed to view the latest budget proposal as a conversation starter, even if it's controversial. He argued that many federal land agencies need to be overhauled and updated with a longer term vision.
"I view this as a reorganization to look at how best to manage, protect and use our public lands in the next 100 years, given that we have a number of challenges," Zinke said.
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Australia’s Mining Bust Town Reawakens – Bloomberg – Bloomberg
Posted: at 10:46 pm
A mining port facility in Port Hedland, Australia.
House-buyers seeking a bargain amid the wreckage of Australias mining boom might want to get in quick.
Port Hedland, a shipping hub for the Pilbara iron ore region in Western Australia, saw house prices collapse nearly 70 percent in the past four years as workers lost their jobs and left amid theend of a resources investment boom. But prices there have reached a bottom and are now even rising.
"Were starting to get multiple offers on properties," said Peter Dunning, a real estate agentat Ray White Group in Port Hedland, who says local values have risen about A$50,000 ($37,470) in the past six months."People realized that prices had got so cheap, they probably werent going to get any cheaper. So they started buying.
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Brighter spots in housing is one of three chunks of evidence adding to a growing sense that Australias resource-based economies are improving. The Reserve Bank of Australias liaison with businesses and its data analysis show emerging signs that the Queensland and Western Australian slowdowns are coming to an end, it said earlier this month. The regions jobs markets, meanwhile, showed a healthy pickup in April.
The recent commodities rally has laid a foundation for recovery. While the price of iron ore -- Australias biggest export -- has slipped after unexpectedly rebounding toward the end of last year, it remains well above the lows beneath $40 seen in late 2015. Still, there is potential for the steel-making metal to fall further as no.1 trading partner China stockpiles its holdings.
Port Hedland last month approved BHP Billiton Ltd.s request to boost the amount of iron ore it ships through the port by 5 million tons to 275 million tonnes a year, after the miner initially sought an increase to 290 million tons. The coal-mining state of Queensland, meanwhile, is starting to reap benefits from large-scale liquefied natural gas projects coming on stream.
A CoreLogic report earlier this month found that many mining towns across Australia were seeing sales volumes of houses lift and the rate of price declines starting to slow. But its still a far cry from the good times, when median prices in the fly-ridden, cyclone-prone outpost of Karratha, the Pilbaras biggest town, topped Sydneys by 49 percent.
Read more about the peak of Western Australias housing boom
Nobodys expecting a return to the boom years, when mining workers with no degrees were commanding salaries akin to that of Wall Street bankers. The bonanza lasted for much of the decade though 2012. But recent green shoots bolster the RBAs case that the unwinding of the mining investment boom is almost done, as the central bank seeks to diversify the economy toward services industries.
Drivers of growth in mining states appear to be broader-based than just commodities. Western Australia is getting a A$2.3 billion overhaul of its roads and rails, with a new 60,000-seat stadium also under construction, while works are well underway on Queenslands Gold Coast in preparation for the city hosting next years Commonwealth Games.
Queensland has got a pretty good spread of industries, for example tourism and education, so once the worst of this mining pullback is done, then the prospects are pretty good," said Steven Milch, chief economist at Suncorp Corporate Services Pty.
Deloitte Access Economics is also optimistic about Queensland. It forecasts the north-east state to grow 4.5 percent in fiscal 2018, outstripping New South Waless 3 percent and Victorias 3.4 percent.Growth in Western Australia, the state hardest hit by the mining downturn, is tipped to accelerate from 0.2 percent in fiscal 2018 to 2.2 percent the next year.
Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. gave a tempered assessment in a May survey:"While activity in Western Australia continues to expand well below trend pace, the weight of the downturn is lifting." The banks Queensland index also improved, but it said that labor-market slack was still a drag on economic activity.
April data showed improvement in the resource states job markets. Queensland added a net 62,100 roles in the six months through April, the most of any state during the period. Western Australias jobless rate dropped 0.6 percentage points to 5.9 percent, the biggest decline in almost two years.
"It is busy over here," said Guy Fulcher, a recruitment consultant at Zenith Search agency in Perth. "Its been slowly picking up in the past 12 months. Its still nowhere near where it was in the boom time, but compared with how quiet it was, its a lot better."
With soaring property prices in Sydney and Melbourne far out of reach for many workers, some economists also expect to see northward migration to Queensland increase. That might go some way to easing an apartment supply glut in Brisbane, which the RBA has identified as a significant restraint on prices in the states biggest city.
Its still a stretch to suggest that resurgent mining states can pick up Australias growth baton should east-coast property markets stutter.
Back in Port Hedlands real estate market, Dunning saidhes also seen a sharp drop in rental vacancies, usually a sign that employers are in hiring mode, while buyer demand is almost entirely from owner-occupiers. He says the real gains wont come until a different type of bargain hunter reappears.
Nothing will happen dramatically until the investors start to come back,"said Dunning. For investors, Port Hedland has got a skull and crossbones on it.
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USAID country director lauds one district, one factory policy … – GhanaWeb
Posted: at 10:46 pm
Business News of Tuesday, 23 May 2017
Source: http://www.ghanaweb.com
USAID Ghana Country Director, Girmay Haile
The Country Director of USAIDS Ghana, Girmay Haile has lauded the governments decision to introduce the 1 district 1 factory policy. The policy he intimated will help transform the country from a resource based economy to an industrialised one.
He bemoaned the absence of value addition on the resources we have in the country and explained that the decision to introduce such a project will go a long way to strengthen the economy.
The policy is to industrialise the country, the interpretation of the government is to start from the community with a factory. That way they have pushed the agenda to the community they have pushed the district to the expert, they have pushed the agenda to the investor. He stated.
He added that the policy also gives the opportunity to the community to focus more on it capacity and what it can contribute to the growth and development of its inhabitants and the country by extension We need to look at Ghana and identify what is feasible in terms of industrialisation in each district and each district will have to identify what its actual wealth and capacities are in order for it to start to plan at the district level, a development plan. So I think its a right step In the right direction and we need to and should benefit from that policy, he insisted.
He, however, cautioned that for districts to have the full benefits of the policy, government must dialogue with stakeholders and have broad consultations.
He was sad that a sector like Agriculture which is touted as the backbone of the economy and contributes about 17%-20% to the economy but investment in less than 5% of government expenditure.
The USAID Ghana Country Director expressed worry that most transnational companies that operate in the country end up remitting most of its returns leaving Ghana with nothing.
He called for a proper policy framework to correct such business practices as the country is on the losing side most of the time.
He made these revelations to http://www.ghanaweb.com on the sidelines of day two of the Ghana CEOs Summit held at the Kempinski Hotel Gold Coast City in Accra on Tuesday.
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The Evolution Of Sustainability Education – HuffPost
Posted: at 10:46 pm
This past week we celebrated graduation at Columbia University. Throughout the week, schools gathered under tents on campus, and on Wednesday the entire university gathered for the official commencement and to hear Columbias President Lee Bollinger speak on the importance of free speech and the free global exchange of ideas. Some advocates of sustainability push a particular ideology or set of answers to these pressing problems, but at Columbia we have worked hard to ensure that multiple perspectives are part of our teaching and learning. We teach climate law and command and control regulation, and at the same time offer a certificate in sustainability finance that focuses on market-based solutions to the challenges of transitioning to a renewable resource-based economy. Our search for sustainability must be an open and honest one. My favorite part of President Bollingers speech was when he put his own office and prestige behind his advocacy of free speech and observed that:
Anyone with a voice can shout over a speaker; but being able to listen to and then effectively rebut those with whom we disagreeparticularly those who themselves peddle intoleranceis one of the greatest skills our education can bestow. And it is something our democracy desperately needs more of. That is why, I say to you now, if speakers who are being denied access to other campuses were to come here, I will personally volunteer to introduce them, and listen to them, however much I may disagree with them. But I will also never hesitate to make clear why I disagree with them.
There are environmental advocates who believe that they have a monopoly on wisdom. They dont. Ive been working on environmental policy for over four decades and I have made many mistakes. Over time, I think Ive learned some hard lessons and come to understand that listening is central to learning. Hearing contrary perspectives and stories drawn from many experiences is essential to intellectual growth. Columbias sustainability curriculum and co-curricular programming provides opportunities for choice and different approaches. I dont always agree with the faculty I recruit to teach and I know they dont always agree with me. And following the lead of our universitys president, one of my jobs as an educator is to ensure the respectful airing of disagreements and to insist on dialogue and genuine free speech. The goal of sustainability is an economy that does not damage the planet beyond repair. There are many ways to achieve that goal; some have not yet been invented.
I direct and teach in two masters programs at Columbia, the Master of Public Administration in Environmental Science and Policy at the School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA) and the Master of Science in Sustainability Management at the School of Professional Studies. While Ive participated in many commencement ceremonies, they never get old. This weeks school ceremonies were thrilling. On Monday, I greeted well over one hundred Sustainability Management graduates and witnessed our students and faculty winning several school awards for outstanding achievements. On Thursday, I celebrated with about 50 MPAs in Environmental Science and Policy as they graduated from SIPA. The student bodies of both schools were diverse, happy and surrounded by family and friends. Families travel thousands of miles to participate in this educational rite of passage. At SIPAs graduation, graduates carried flags from scores of nations. From the stage, the faculty viewed a sea of colors of nations and faces celebrating a globalism that cannot and will not be stopped by the forces of reaction and xenophobia.
Our economic life is changing, and for some the transition has been painful. Education at every levelfrom K-12 through community college and from college to graduate schoolhas become key to economic survival in this changing world. So too has specialized technical and vocational training. Last week I saw proud parents who have struggled and sacrificed to ensure that their children could succeed in this changing world. It doesnt get much more expensive than New York Citys cost of living and Columbias tuition. The faces of parents seemed to reflect pride of accomplishment and a little sense of relief. As faculty, it is critical that we always remember our responsibility to deliver on our end of the bargain. Educators must be life-long learners themselves, in order to ensure that we are able to prepare our students for the dynamic environment they are entering.
When I first studied and taught about environmental policy, my focus was on pollution and its impact on ecology and human health. Today, the field of sustainability management seeks to integrate understanding of the physical dimensions of sustainability into routine management decision-making. I am teaching tomorrows CEOs to manage their organizations waste, use of energy, water and other raw materialsto ensure sustainability throughout supply chains and to be aware of the financial risks posed by environmental accidents, pollution and climate change. The field continues to study conservation and pollution, but now encompasses a far broader set of concerns and has come to include the built environment, management, and the transition to sustainable cities. Students are pushing us to teach about start-ups, locally sourced food, and the environmental benefits of the sharing economy.
While the content of our courses evolves, some basics remain. Understanding the planets physics, chemistry, ecology, biology, culture, technology, politics, organizations, economics and values are at the center of our curriculum. Academic integrity, civility and hard work are as important as ever. Students of environment and sustainability can be wonderful to teach because they are often idealists with a deep sense of mission. They are determined to apply their new knowledge in the real world and spend a great deal of time and effort networking to find meaningful work in an unstructured but rapidly growing profession.
I hear often from our graduates who are applying the knowledge they gained in our programs to the problems they address every day. They are not shy about suggesting improvements, relaying trends and telling me the positive value of the lessons they learned with us. A number have come back to teach or give talks. Many mentor current students, and many are extraordinarily generous with their time. I am sure these experiences feed my optimism that we will meet the challenges of the crisis of global sustainability. A positive, creative and energetic community of sustainability professionals has emerged over the past decade. Many environmental scholars and advocates are skilled at communicating worst-case scenarios. They believe that gloom and doom conveys the sense of urgency that they feel. But spend a few months with our students and alums and you start to believe that even the most urgent crises can be addressed.
The most fundamental evolution of the field from environmental policy to sustainability management is that our profession is no longer limited to advocates, lobbyists and policy makers, but now includes entrepreneurs, green financiers, builders, managers and owners. We know we need to change the world, but the process will take place piece by piece, block by block, within distinct organizations, specific neighborhoods, cities and states. Our graduates are working to improve the quality of our lives while maintaining the quality of the environment. They are trained to do that. They know the questions to ask and how to find the experts needed to provide answers. And each year American universities are producing more and more graduates like the ones we educate at Columbia University.
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Iran Swiftly Moving Towards a Knowledge-Based Economy Part 1 – TechRasa (press release) (blog)
Posted: at 10:46 pm
A report recently published by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) revealed that Iran has made significant progress towards a knowledge-based economy, powered by science and innovation. However, the report indicates that certain measures should be taken to fully harness the potential of the country.
In a 3-part articlewe will highlight the main findings of the 100 page report on Irans science, technology and innovation standing. The first part will focus on the human resource base of Iran. In the next two parts, infrastructure and the role of knowledge-based firms in the transition towards a knowledge-based economy will be discussed.
In recent years, Iran has been moving swiftly towards a more diverse economy that is less dependent on oil. Statistics show that the number of knowledge-based firms and S&T parks, and the amount of technology-based and knowledge-based exports have increased noticeably. These statistics indicate a national commitment to foster economic growth and sustainable development.
While not long age sanctions had almost left Iran no choice other than to opt a self-reliance strategy, recent political developments have provided grounds for Iran to collaborate internationally, exchange technology and know-how and engage in more innovative and scientific economic activities. Using the revenues from Oil and Gas to finance innovative endeavors and invest in other industrial sectors, Iran has been steadily moving away from an economy that was once almost solely dependent on oil.
The devotion of the country to develop a knowledge-based innovative economy has led to a strong human resource base. Iran has now one of the highest numbers of young educated adults. It ranks second globally in the number of engineering graduates per capita. Many well-educated and trained Iranians also live abroad as scientists and entrepreneurs, some of which are returning or plan to return to Iran following the optimism regarding the economy and politics of the country.
Iran has made significant progress in science; Higher education enrollment has almost doubled, the number of PhD students has tripled in the last 10 years, and the country is now ranked 16th globally and first in the middle east in terms of scientific publications, a significant improvement since 2005. New areas of research including nanotechnology, biotechnology and renewable energies have gained popularity among Iranian academics, ranking 15th in the world in 2016.
Despite these promising prospects, Iran still suffers from an illiteracy rate of around 13% among adults, an issue that the government should tackle. The unemployment rate among educated adults is twice the national average, which highlights the need to improve training and include vocational and technical education to deliver a better match between the skills of this group and industry needs.
The Human Development Index (HDI) shows Iran has moved from countries with low human development to countries with medium human development, from the 1980s to 2002. Womens participation in higher education has now reached the position of near equality. Female students now account for more than half the student population in social and medical sciences and while the engineering sciences are still dominated by men, women account for 35% of the total engineering students.
The highly educated and skilled labour force in Iran is a major resource for economic development, however, to ensure a fast and reliable transition towards a knowledge-based economy policymakers should plan to fully leverage this valuable resource.
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Iran Swiftly Moving Towards a Knowledge-Based Economy Part 1 - TechRasa (press release) (blog)
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