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Daily Archives: June 29, 2017
Cumberland County police roll out finger print ID technology – The Sentinel
Posted: June 29, 2017 at 11:07 am
Police in Cumberland County have a new piece of technology aimed at promoting public safety that many people have only seen in the movies and on television.
On Wednesday, Cumberland County District Attorney David Freed, along with members of local law enforcement, announced the roll out of mobile finger printer ID units in four municipalities.
I dont think it takes too long out on the streets to determine when somebody is not sharing the whole truth or being evasive with their identity, Freed said. Its very important for that police-citizen interaction for the police to know who they are dealing with.
A total of eight units have been provided to Upper Allen Township, Camp Hill, Mechanicsburg and Hampden Township police departments by the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency and the Pennsylvania Chiefs of Police Association at no cost to the departments.
The devices, essentially modified Samsung smart phones equipped with new software and hardware, are able to scan fingerprints and compare them to FBI and Pennsylvania State Police databases to better identify people in the field.
Unfortunately, with todays technology anyone can go on the internet and buy false ID and get your picture on it with all kinds of information, Upper Allen Township Police Chief James Adams said. Sadly, its very popular in a lot of your college communities, but its also very popular with the criminal element.
The device takes about three minutes to scan both databases, which Freed said includes people who have been arrested and processed by law enforcement.
If youve been arrested and processed in Pennsylvania and that has not been expunged, your prints will be in there and it will come back with a hit, Freed said.
The databases do not include people who have been fingerprinted for things like work clearance, according to Pennsylvania State Police Cpl. Adam Reed said.
Its another piece of equipment that I think will make the officers safer, Adams said. As (Freed) alluded to, this type of technology has been seen on TV and in movies for years. People expect that of us. This is just one of many success stories when it comes to technology.
The devices do not retain search records and do not add fingerprints to the database, Freed said.
Philadelphia, Lehigh and Montgomery counties have also implemented the mobile finger print ID devices.
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The Energy 202: Rick Perry touts carbon-cutting technology while simultaneously trying to cut its funding – Washington Post
Posted: at 11:07 am
THE LIGHTBULB
Its turning into a no good, very bad week for the clean coal technology that Energy Secretary Rick Perry has made a point of emphasis during the White House's Energy Week.
One of the countrys most highly touted "clean coal" projects announced Wednesdaythat it will no longer burn coal. After years of cost overruns and delays, Southern Co. pulled the plug on a once-promising carbon capture and coal gasification projectat a power plant in Mississippi's Kemper County. The project was meant to showcase carbon capture and storage, a process by whichcarbon dioxide emissions fromthe burning of fossil fuels arecollected and stored, usually underground, instead of being sent into the atmosphere.
The company decided it could not surmount the technical challenge of making equipment designed to cool synthetic gas before carbon dioxide is stripped out work. The Posts Stephen Mufson explains more on what happened:
The plant was once held up as an example of promising technologies that could help fight climate change.
In 2014, then-Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz flew to see the plant and declared, I consider seeing this plant a look at the future. Instead, Kemper has imposed financial burdens on tax payers and local households.
Thanks to legislation passed by the Mississippi legislature, Southern has been able to pass along about $800 million of those costs to ratepayers, the company said.
Perry sung adecidedlydifferent tune on carbon capture and storage during Tuesday's White House press briefing, praising the progress being made on the technology. Instead of highlighting the Kemper plant, Perry praised a much less problem-plagued showcase in his home state that he visited in April.
We've already seen the fruits of innovative, clean technology, like CCUS -- carbon capture, utilization and sequestration, Perrysaid Tuesday. The Petra Nova plant, just on the outskirts of Houston, Texas, uses a process to remove 90 percent of the carbon dioxide after coal is burned to generate energy in a clean way.
At first glance, the comments may be a bit baffling, if youve followed Perry up to this point. Perry said no when asked on CNBC last week if the compound captured in CCS -- carbon dioxide -- was the primary control knob for the temperature of the Earth and for climate.
The comment set off a new firestorm of criticism as it appears Perry is increasingly bendinginto the mold of White House chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon and Environmental Protection Agency AdministratorScott Pruitt in their adamancy with which they have dismissed climate-change science.
So it raises the question: Why should the Energy Department highlight the technology when its secretaryisnt convinced carbon dioxide is that primary control knob in warming the atmosphere? (Indeed, one of NASAs top climate scientists described it as just that in a 2010 paper.)
One reason is that captured carbon dioxide has an industrial use. It can be pumped back underground in order to not just store it but to boost the recovery of oil from otherwise difficult-to-reach pockets. With most of the easy-to-get oil, lifted to the surface by its own internal pressure or by water pumped underground, already been recovered, oil companies will have to increasingly rely on so-called enhanced oil recovery in order to keep their reserves stable.
But Perry faces an even bigger incongruity between his rhetoric and actions on carbon capture and storage. The Energy Department budget the Trump administration proposed and Perry defended in Congress would cut funding fromthe Office of Fossil Energy,the office spearheadingCCS research, from $631 million in 2017 to $280 million in 2018 -- a 56 percent cut.
Why praise handiwork of researchers and businesses trying to make carbon capture and storage happen while simultaneously threatening to chop off the head of the office pushing that technology?
POWER PLAYS
-- As President Trump and members of his administration tout American energy dominance during this themed Energy Week, analysts have pointed out that some of the White Houses claims dont add up,write The Post'sSteven Mufson and Chris Mooney.Here are a just a few of the disputed claims from Trumps energy week:
Claim1:The White House said the United States has 20 percent more oil reserves than Saudi Arabia.
Fact: The Energy Information Administration reports that the United States had 32.3 billion barrels as of the end of last year, Mufson and Mooney write, just a small fraction of Saudi Arabias 268 billion barrels.
A senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies said the White House is building a narrative on false premises. Im disappointed that messaging has overtaken substance here.
Claim 2: Perry, EPA head Scott Pruitt and Interior SecretaryZinke wrote an op-ed asserting that energy dominance is about becoming an energy exporter.
Fact: That could be a ways away. Mufson and Mooney write: The U.S. Energy Information Administration forecast that the United States will become a net energy exporter by 2026 although it could be earlier if oil prices rise, and later if oil prices fall.
Claim3: The White House said the Keystone XL pipeline would support more than 42,000 jobs.
Fact: The State Department reports only 4,000 construction jobs would be created on a temporary basis. Fewer than 100 jobs would be created permanently.
--Yucca moves forward. Despite some waffling from the Trump administration, the House of Representativesisforging ahead with a bill to finally open Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository.House Energy and Commerce Committee voted 49-4 to send a bill reviving the long-dormant nuclear waste site to the full House.
Sen.Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) issued a blistering statement following thevote. "It is unjust and unfair to force Nevadans to live next to a nuclear waste dump that could harm both their health and livelihood" she said. "This bill ignores the detrimental impacts to Nevadas communities and economy if Yucca Mountain moves forward." Her Republican counterpart representing Nevada in the Senate, Dean Heller, opposes the project as well.
After emphasizing the necessity of finishing the Yucca Mountain project in Senate testimonylast week, Perry backed down slightly in a White House news conference on Tuesday. "Weve made no decisions at DOE," Perry saidwhenasked about Yucca.
As one of the most vulnerable Republicans up for reelection in 2018, Heller may be able to get Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) to stymie the Yucca proposal at the behest of the blue-state GOP senator."
-- "We love Indian Country, right?": Speaking before a meeting with local and tribal leaders as part of his series of Energy Week events, President Trump pledged that his administration would bring a golden age of American energy dominance to the nation.
For too long the federal government has put up restrictions and regulations that put this energy wealth out of reach. Its just totally out of reach, he said. Its been really restricted, the development itself has been restricted and vast amounts of deposits of coal and other resources have, in a way, been taken out of your hands and were going to have that change. Were going to put it back in your hands.
Despite high-profile protests from Native Americans against the Dakota Access pipeline over the last year, the Trump administration has decided to make developing fossil fuel resources on reservations a cornerstone of his "energy dominance" agenda. Indeed, there are several tribes with leaders eager to mine coal or pump oil on their lands, includingCrow Nation in Montana andNavajo Nation in New Mexico andArizona, who sent representatives to the White House on Wednesday.
"Im proud to have such a large gathering of tribal leaders here at the White House," Trump said."I look forward to more government-to-government consultations with tribal leaders about the issues important to Indian Country. We love Indian Country, right?"
--The House Energy and Commerce committee approved a bill that would decrease the frequency of ozone regulation. The panel voted 29-24 to approve the bill, The Hill reported, which would require the EPA to update ozone limits every decade rather than the current timeline of every five years. The bill first passed in the House under the previous administration but did not make it to the Senate floor.
THERMOMETER
--Massive melting and general warming in Antarctica may allow for new habitats to emerge for wildlife, according to a report from Chelsea Harvey for The Post.
More ice-free space will allow previously isolated species to live alongside others, which could lead to a evolutionary battle as some organisms die off as others prove dominant, Harvey reports, citing a study in the journal Nature.
Harvey writes: Secluded as they may be in some cases, these areas can be home to various species of vegetation, microbes, worms or insects and other small organisms, and may also serve as breeding grounds for animals like seals and seabirds. These species tend to be highly specialized for the extreme conditions in which they live, said Peter Convey, a terrestrial ecologist with the British Antarctic Survey, who was not involved with the new study. Some of them may be dormant throughout much of the year. Others may have developed specific adaptations that allow them to survive in conditions with high winds, little water or extreme low temperatures.
The new study shows that theres been a sparse amount of research until now on how climate change will affect Antarcticas biodiversity. But researchers found that the Antarctic Peninsula one of the most rapidly warming areas on the continent, where large levels of glacial ice loss are already occurring will likely suffer the most extreme changes through the rest of this century.
-- Waiting to Larsen C what happens: A massive crack in Antarcticas largest floating ice platform is hours, days, or weeks away from breaking away, according to researchers, creating an iceberg the size of Delaware.
The outer endis moving at the highest speed ever recorded on this ice shelf, said Adrian Luckman of Project MIDAS, the British Antarctic research project monitoring the shelf, USA Today reported.
In another sign that the iceberg calving is imminent, the soon-to-be-iceberg part of Larsen C Ice Shelf has tripled in speed to more than 10 meters per day between June 24th and June 27th," Luckman said.
Luckman added that once it separates from the shelf, the iceberg will fundamentally change the landscape of the Antarctic Peninsula.
The Post's Chris Mooney wrote more about this last month.
--Talk about a deadline.A groupof experts iswarning that there is just three years left for the world to set carbon dioxide emissions on a downward path if we are to holdthe rise in planetary temperatures between1.5 to 2 degrees Celsius, The Post's Chris Mooney reports.In a new commentary published in the journal Nature, the authors, led by former United Nations climate chief Christiana Figures, urge that if carbon emissions can begin declining by 2020, there may be some hope to avoid the worst consequences of climate change that the Paris accord sought to address.
DAYBOOK
EXTRA MILEAGE
Trump hosts tribal, local leaders for energy meeting:
Thousands of sea pickles float off coast of California:
Republicans are pushing for a speedy new health care draft:
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Ignore Micron Technology, Inc.: Here Are 3 Better Stocks – Motley Fool
Posted: at 11:07 am
Memory-chip giant Micron Technology(NASDAQ:MU) has garnered headlines and captured investor attention lately, and rightfully so.
After losing roughly two-thirds of its value from late 2014 to early 2016,Micron stock has essentially marched straight upward over the past 12 months, to the tune of a 150% increase.
MU data by YCharts
However, the commoditized nature of Micron's memory business tends to make Micron something of a boom-and-bust enterprise. The company can generate ample profits when memory prices are strong, but its earnings will fall off a cliff when, prices soften. My thoughts on Micron's risk-reward profile are well documented.
The good news is that the semiconductor industry has plenty of companies with far more favorable long-term dynamics. Here are three of them.
Image Source: NVIDIA
NVIDIA's (NASDAQ:NVDA) stock is up 226% over the past 12 months, as the maker of graphics processing units (GPUs) is one of the few companies to match Micron's recent rally.Even better, being the leading graphics-chip maker aligns the company with some of the fastest-growing areas of the technology market.
GPUs have become an area of intense interest in recent years, as technologies including artificial intelligence, deep learning, self-driving cars, and more rely on converting real-world images into usable digital information. NVIDIA has benefited, having formed partnerships with automakers including Toyota, Audi, BMW, Tesla, and many moreto provide the GPUs for their various autonomous-vehicle initiatives.
NVIDIA's enviable competitive position should allow it to grow at above average rates for years to come. In fact, the consensus among sell-side analysts calls for NVIDIA to grow sales by 19.4% this year and 12.4% next year.Its shares trade at a decent premium to the market, and that's to be expected, but the company's long-term fundamentals make it one of the top growth stocks in the semiconductor market -- and a far more appealing long-term holding than Micron.
The world's largest semiconductor company, Intel(NASDAQ:INTC) dominates the realm of PC and server microprocessors. The de facto standardization of x86 architecture in each of these large global markets, along with Intel's unique ability to fund massive research-and-development investments, allows the company to consistently produce the fastest microprocessors. The result is an enviable gross margin that compares favorably against the likes of Advanced Micro Devices, the longtime second fiddle in the PC and server chip market.
INTC Gross Profit Margin (TTM) data by YCharts
As Intel's core businesses are mature, the company has been focusing on increasing its exposure to emerging growth markets. It's done so by investing aggressively in its budding Internet of Things (IoT) chips business and by acquiring artificial-intelligence companies, most notably with its $15.3 billion buyout earlier this year of Israeli-based self-driving-car companyMobileye earlier this year. Especially for investors seeking income from their investments, Intel is among the best options in the chip space today.
Shares of video-processing chip companyAmbarella(NASDAQ:AMBA) have fallen back to Earth over the past two years, though they've still trounced the market indices over longer time horizons.
AMBA data by YCharts
However, the reset in investor expectations reflects the company's continued evolution, from something of a one-trick pony to a diversified, mature company capable of producing sustainable, above-average growth for years to come.
Ambarella designs, produces, and sells power-efficient high-definition video-compression and image-processing semiconductors. The company rose to prominence as the go-to chip supplier for GoPro's action camera, and revenue concentration remains an important risk factor for the company today. The company's five largest customers accounted for 56% of total fiscal 2017 sales.
That number has, however, declined in each of the past two years, and the long-term nature of Ambarella's many growth markets suggest that it will continue to fall. Ambarella sees opportunities to become a leading supplier of image processing chips for growing industries including drones, dashboard cameras, wearables, internet-connected security cameras, and much more.
Perhaps most appealing, though, is that Ambarella's stock carries current and forward P/E ratios of 29.3 and 20.8 times earnings, respectively.Contrast that against its consensus average five-year EPS growth estimate of 16.3% per year,and Ambarella stock starts to look like an attractively priced growth stock whose solid business fundamentals make it a far superior option to Micron for long-term semiconductor investors.
Andrew Tonner has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Ambarella, GoPro, Nvidia, and Tesla. The Motley Fool has the following options: short January 2019 $12 calls on GoPro and long January 2019 $12 puts on GoPro. The Motley Fool recommends BMW and Intel. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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New Technology Targeting Fungi Could Speed Up Drug-Discovery Process – Wisconsin Public Radio News
Posted: at 11:07 am
Wisconsin Public Radio News | New Technology Targeting Fungi Could Speed Up Drug-Discovery Process Wisconsin Public Radio News New technology developed in part by UW-Madison researchers is speeding up the discovery time for new molecules from fungi. We'll find out how it works and why fungi are a potential-rich place to look for new disease-fighting agents. Host:. |
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Affront to Florida’s Agency for State Technology Officially Dies by Governor’s Veto – Government Technology
Posted: at 11:07 am
In early 2017, Floridas House Government Operations and Technology Appropriations subcommittee launched a legislative assault on the autonomy of the states centralized IT shop, the Agency for State Technology (AST). That affront, better known as House Bill 5301, did not survive Gov. Rick Scotts veto June 26.
When the bill was originally introduced in March, the chief sponsor of the bill, Rep. Blaise Ingoglia, R-District 35, raised issue with the 3-year-old agencys authority over the states data center oversight, and targeted what he perceived as unnecessary costs and ballooning IT expenses.
He called for agencies to conduct their own cost-benefit analyses around data center use, which would have allowed them to unilaterally move to individual cloud services at will. Experts worried the plan would have driven up costs for agencies remaining under the data centers cost recovery model.
Officials within the agency and experts in the states tech community voiced concern about the plan to essentially decentralize the agency, but the bill proceeded, eventually being tied to the states budgeting and appropriations process. In May, word filtered down that through budget conference negotiations, the agency had secured its at-risk funding and would remain intact.
As a result of the budget conference, AST was able to increase some measure of authority in the form of a new chief data officer position and the creation of the geographic information office, though 20 positions would be cut eight of which were staffed as of May 4.
The negotiations also netted some additional reporting requirements for AST, but those leading the agency said they were happy to oblige.
Though officials within the agency are pleased their charge will remain, they are not dwelling on the events of the past several months. Rather, Erin Choy, spokesperson for the agency, told Government Technology that they are focused on the upcoming legislative session, which begins in January, and the many initiatives they would like to see come to fruition.
Because of the way, in even-numbered years, the legislative session begins the second week in January, AST folks are working on proposed legislative budget requests and policy proposals, she said. So, yes, we were waiting for the governors action on the bill, but we are very focused on improving the current environment.
As Government Technology has reported, Florida's IT agencies have faced considerable challenges at the hands of the states Legislature to this point. In 2005, the Florida State Technology Office was shuttered after losing its funding. And in 2012, the Agency for Enterprise Information Technology was pulled by Scott rather than allowing it to stand in title and function without funding.
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Progress buys mobile backend start-up Kinvey for $49 million – CNBC
Posted: at 11:07 am
Progress Software on Wednesday announced that it has acquired Kinvey, a start-up that offers a service that developers can use to build and host mobile apps that integrate with existing enterprise software systems. The deal cost Progress $49 million.
Progress, which makes software for companies to build cross-platform applications and claims 80,000 enterprise customers, made the announcement alongside its earnings report for the quarter ended May 31. The company earned $0.21 per share on $93.2 million in revenue during the quarter. Progress stock was up 4 percent in after-hours trading.
Earlier this year Progress unveiled a new strategic plan that emphasizes cognitive application development. The word "cognitive," a nod to computing in a way that's similar to what the human brain can do, has been popularized by IBM in recent years. The push comes during a phase of industry-wide investment in artificial intelligence (AI).
"In the future, the market is trending to the point where app development platforms have to exhibit certain new characteristics to enable intelligent and useful apps that come to you, instead of you going to an app," Kinvey cofounder and CEO Sravish Sridhar told CNBC in an email.
Kinvey was founded in 2010 and based in Boston. Over the years Kinvey became known as a key provider of mobile backend as a service, which provides the underlying necessary computing and storage infrastructure for apps, with customers such as Schneider Electric and VMware. The company had raised nearly $18 million in venture capital from investors such as Verizon Ventures and NTT Docomo.
One of Kinvey's competitors, Parse, was acquired by Facebook in 2013 and subsequently shut down.
Kinvey will remain available as a standalone product but will be integrated with existing Progress tools such as NativeScript and DataDirect, wrote Sridhar, who will report to Progress CEO Yogesh Gupta.
Progress acquired predictive maintenance start-up DataRPM for $30 million in March.
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Progress on I-90 light-rail work – The Seattle Times
Posted: at 11:07 am
The Seattle Times | Progress on I-90 light-rail work The Seattle Times Standing within an Interstate 90 bridge pontoon, project manager Brawn Lausen, of Kiewit-Hoffman Construction, describes how four long cables of steel will be threaded through dozens of cell walls, cinching all 18 pontoons into one unit. This is ... |
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State makes ‘shockingly little progress’ in mending SNAP scandal – New Mexico Political Report
Posted: at 11:07 am
9 hours ago Brent Earnest By Joey Peters | 9 hours ago
More than one year after three top state officials refused to answer questions in federal court about fraud allegations and nine months after a federal judge held their cabinet secretary in contempt of court, the state Human Services Department (HSD) appears to still be seriously mishandling how it processes federal benefits to New Mexicos poor.
No ads. No clickbait. Just news.
Now, the advocacy organization representing plaintiffs in a decades-long lawsuit against HSD is asking a judge to impose monetary sanctions on HSD and its secretary, Brent Earnest. The call for sanctions comes over the departments alleged failures to meet federal guidelines on processing Medicaid and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits.
Related: Read NM Political Reports award-winning coverage on the states SNAP scandal
Medicaid is the federal health care program for the poor while SNAP, formerly known as food stamps, provides federal food aid to the poor.
Until the department comes into federal compliance with processing these benefits, the New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty wants the judge to fine Earnest $100 a day.
In the meantime, poor New Mexicans are suffering, according to a legal memo filed in federal court this week by the Center.
Eligible New Mexicans are without food and medical assistance because [HSD] has a backlog of tens of thousands of unprocessed cases, the memo reads. The vast majority of clients cannot get through by phone and systemic changes required by multiple court orders have not been enacted.
The current controversy dates to last spring, when the Center argued that HSD was failing to comply with a consent decree from the Debra Hatten-Gonzales v. HSD lawsuit. The lawsuit originally alleged the state failed to adequately process Medicaid and SNAP benefits. Its 1990 settlement set forth new guidelines through the consent decree that the state is required to follow to meet federal law.
The case once again propelled to the forefront last summer after nine employees in HSDs Income Support Division were called to testify by the Center. Before federal court, the employees made shocking allegations of a longstanding department policy to falsify SNAP applications. The workers alleged superiors told them to adding fake assets to emergency SNAP applications so the department could cut down on its backlog of SNAP cases to avoid getting in trouble from the federal government.
A federal judge agreed with the Centers assessment last fall and held Earnest in contempt for failing to follow the consent decree. The court also appointed an independent special master to steer HSD into federal compliance.
But the state department has made shockingly little progress in righting its ship in the six months since the special master came on board, according to the memo.
Lawrence Parker, the special master and former Texas state administrator who District Judge Kenneth Gonzales picked last fall to oversee HSDs handling of federal benefits, is expected to give recommendations to the court Thursday afternoon on how the department should proceed from here. Gonzales scheduled the status conference for the afternoon and required Earnest to attend.
An HSD spokesman, through an automatic email message, referred NM Political Reports questions to a spokesman for Gov. Susana Martinez, who did not answer them before press time.
Multiple deficiencies
The Centers latest memo reveals alleged systematic problems with how HSD responds to requests for help from some of New Mexicos most vulnerable.
The Centers memo lays out problems including:
HSDs lack of a functional phone system in its customer service call center for SNAP and Medicaid applicants and recipients. Currently, the call center answers just 35 percent of its calls from English language speakers and 19 percent of its calls from Spanish speakers.
HSD own illegal directives that restrict access benefits and instruct workers to misrepresent facts, including one order to stop all SNAP and Medicaid interviews after 3:30 p.m. Another order instructs workers to withhold information from applications and give false information about the clients wish to reschedule the interview to their superiors.
The departments proposed new SNAP regulations that contain many errors and delete entire sections that explain verification requirements for non-citizens in apparent violation of federal law.
HSD overall lack of processing SNAP renewal applications in a timely manner, despite progress.
The departments delays on Medicaid applications, which continue to increase. Overdue Medicaid renewals, for example, more than doubled between January and early June from nearly 24,000 to almost 53,000 and then dropped to 38,000 by June 21.
Two HSD administrators, Laura Galindo and Marilyn Martinez, remain employed with the department one year after asserting their Fifth Amendment rights numerous times in court by refusing to answer questions about their involvement in allegedly instructing employees to falsify emergency SNAP applications. Galindo is currently the departments director of child support enforcement while Martinez is chief of the departments financial services bureau in the administrative services division.
Perhaps most serious of these detailed allegations is the revelation of an internal HSD directive from April obtained by the Center.
Illegal policy
The order, written by Customer Service Center Staff Manager Gwen Brubaker, instructs state employees to cease interviews and communications with Medicaid and SNAP recipients and applicants every day at 3:30 p.m. and to lie to the clients and their office superiors about the interview limits.
We discussed in the managers meeting today that we are not going to do interviews after 3:30, effective immediately, Brubaker wrote in the April email to staffers.
She went on to admonish employees for telling applicants the truth about the policy.
We also discussed that we were not saying this to clients, but I have seen 3 emails go out to offices since that that state per directive/instructions interviews are not being done after 3:30, Brubaker wrote. Please make sure that staff are not saying this to the clients, including in emails to offices or in case notes.
And instead of informing the office about the new policy, Brubaker instructed her workers to lie and just say to the client that they are not available and to the office that the client has requested the interview to be rescheduled.
Brubaker ended her with Thank you!
Sovereign Hager, a staff attorney with the Center, sees a lot of problems with the directive.
Off the bat, the policy is wrong. Its illegal, she said in an interview.
Hager added that apart from instructing state employees to lie, the policy to reschedule interviews causes some clients to wait for months to receive the federal benefits for which they are otherwise eligible.
Its just really a horrible tactic thats dishonest, she said.
Its unclear if and to what extent HSD management was aware of or responsible for this policy.
Customer service problems still apparent
A big part of HSDs problems, according to the Centers memo, is that the department doesnt have enough staffers to meet its mission. A June email from HSD to the Center reveals the state has more than 100 vacancies in the departments Income Support Division, which manages federal benefits for New Mexicans.
To fix problems with the customer service phone line, HSD contracted with Conduent, the company formally known as Xerox. Its not clear when the contract, which does not show up in the states Sunshine Portal, will begin.
Hager questioned how effective this contract can be since federal law mandates that only public employees are allowed to work on SNAP benefits.
They cant really do anything on peoples cases because theyre not state employees, Hager said of Conduent.
Altogether, the poor customer service means people get caught in a web of not getting answers to questions, Hager said, and showing up at an HSD office in person is a multi-hour wait.
The departments leadership has apparently suffered as well. After the department demoted ISD Director Marilyn Martinez, who refused to answer questions about her alleged involvement in systemic fraud last year by pleading her Fifth Amendment rights, it left her position unfilled for more than one year.
The Center also argues that HSD is wasting what limited resources it has on new and unneeded programs like requiring more Medicaid patients to pay co-pays for service.
The special master, in some ways, echoed this criticism. In March, Parker recommended HSD cease all efforts to plan, develop or implement new programs, with the exception of programs required by state or federal agencies to meet requirements within regulations.
It isnt clear what, if any, decision Gonzales will make during or after the Thursday hearing.
Parker is ordered to serve as special master through the calendar year. If by then the court finds that HSD is still not in or on its way to federal compliance, the judge could appoint a federal receiver with much broader authority to come in and fix the problems.
Read the Centers legal memo below:
Show Temp.pl by New Mexico Political Report on Scribd
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Britain’s progress on climate change is stalling, government advisers say – Reuters
Posted: at 11:07 am
LONDON Britain's progress in tackling climate change is stalling and new strategies and policies are needed to ensure ambitious greenhouse gas emissions cuts continue, the government's climate advisers said in a report on Thursday.
Britain's greenhouse gas emissions are around 42 percent lower than in 1990, which is around half way towards the government's legally binding target to slash them by 80 percent by 2050 from 1990 levels, the Committee on Climate Change report said.
The progress so far has been achieved even though gross domestic product has risen by more than 65 percent since 1990.
However, most of the emissions reductions have occurred in the power and waste sectors. Emissions in the transport and building sectors are rising and infrastructure remains vulnerable to severe weather.
"The good news is we have got half way. But the way we have achieved this is almost entirely focused on the power sector," Matthew Bell, chief executive of the committee, told Reuters.
"We cannot extrapolate that to 2050. Power sector emissions have been lowered so much ... We won't get the remaining distance we need if other sectors don't start contributing," he said.
Earlier this week, Britain's new climate change minister, Claire Perry, said the government would publish its Clean Growth Plan - a framework for how Britain will reduce emissions in the 2020s and 2030s - after the parliamentary summer recess.
Parliament closes on July 20 and reconvenes on Sept. 5.
The plan's release was originally scheduled for late 2016. The delay has been criticized by investors who are looking for policy certainty.
Under current policies, Britain is on track to miss its legally-binding emission reduction targets for the mid-2020s onwards, prompting calls for more action in the heat, buildings, industry, transport and agriculture sectors.
The government also needs to present Parliament with detailed measures to address climate risks, such as risks to households and businesses from flooding, so its national adaptation program can be published early next year, the report said.
Britain has experienced significant political upheaval over the past year after a referendum resulted in the move to leave the European Union.
"There is concern Brexit negotiations divert a lot of attention and resources but we also need to think about climate change issues," Bell added.
(Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)
BERLIN In the aftermath of Britain's departure from the European Union and the U.S.'s withdrawal from the Paris climate pact, the bloc's remaining members must take greater responsibility for "existential" challenges the world faces, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said.
Hot, dry weather forecast for Thursday could stoke a fast-growing wildfire in central Arizona that firefighters are struggling to contain, authorities said.
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Posthumanism | Literature in a Wired World Wiki | Fandom …
Posted: at 11:06 am
What is Posthumanism?Edit
According to the Oxford English Dictionary:
1. post-humanism: A system of thought formulated in reaction to the basic tenets of humanism, esp. its focus on humanity rather than the divine or supernatural
2. posthumanism: The idea that humanity can be transformed, transcended, or eliminated either by technological advances or the evolutionary processl artistic, scientific, or philosophical practice which also reflects this belief
...to find more information on this history of the word Posthumanism, click HERE
N. Katherine Hayles was born in St. Louis Missouri on December 16, 1943. She attended Rochester Institute of Technology where she earned a B.S. in Chemistry. She then attended the California Institute of Technology and earned a M.S. in Chemistry as well. In 1977, she went to the University of Rochester and earned a Ph.D. in English Literature.
N. Katherine Hayles is popular critic of posthumanism. She is most known for being the author of "How We Became Posthuman". She believes that although we can put our intellect into another machine, we still need to keep in mind who we are and that our information is not completely transferable-- we still need the use of our own bodies. She has become a critic to many believers of posthumanism who believe the body acts as a piece of hardware just as any other computer.
thumb|316px|left|Interview with N. Katherine Hayles by Stacey Cochran
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep and Hayles' paper on posthumanism intertwine with one another as Hayles believes in a "Separation between body and mind is a consequence of historical change rather than what must inevitably happen as part of their materialized life." As we progress further into a new age of humans slowly developing into an android-like state (people getting prosthesis to help them function better) we are not going against humanity but simply flowing with the tides of history. With this kind of change, we are brought with the question: what makes us human? In DADES the only method to determine who is a human and android is by one concept: empathy. Some of the humans follow a religion known as Mercerism which is based on empathy. By utilizing an empathy box, it links them to other humans as they take upon the obstacles that Mercer faces as a cohesive unit. We are brought upon a concept of how humans, identify ourselves as individuals and as members of a group through Mercerism by being able to feel empathy towards each other. The novel toys with the concept of expanding this group to the few existing animals on Earth, and even androids. These androids are advanced to the point where it is only possible to determine whether or not one is human or android by a test involving empathy. When the bountyhunter in DADES, Deckard, has to retire these androids, he begins to ponder if he in fact is human. He believes that if being human is the ability to feel empathy, then how can he truly be human without feeling empathy when he retires the androids. In order to expand the definition of human to androids, Hayles and Dick both believe that a new mixture of man and machine must occur to fulfill this expanded category to androids. A mixture of machine and man are already amongst us (as shown in one group's presentation of a man with a robot eyeball) and many already have robotic arms/legs etc.
Bladerunner is a movie based on the novel Do Androids Dream of Electric sheep. The film did not fare well in box offices, but has since become a classic. Some may say the film needed time to catch on but it is used in classrooms all around the United States to teach about posthumanism.
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Shelley Jackson was born in the Phillippines in 1963. Jackson attended Stanford undergraduate and Brown for her M.F.A. in creative writing. While at Brown Jackson was inspired to create her first hypertext fiction titled, Patchwork Girl. This work at the time was the best selling CD for electronic litterature and is considered a cornerstone in starting the electronic litterature movement. Jackson is currently teaching in The New School in New York City.
Similar to These Waves of Girls, "My Body" is a Hypertext Fiction that explores a young girl's memories of childhood and growing up. Many of the memories involve stories relating to growing up, sexuality, and body development. This hypertext fiction maps out different parts of a woman's body for readers to click and to discover the author's inner thoughts.
To navigate for yourself click HERE
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