Monthly Archives: June 2017

Forsyth County’s top agricultural adviser heads back to the farm after 30- year career – Winston-Salem Journal

Posted: June 30, 2017 at 12:14 am

Mark Tucker found his passion early, spending his entire 30-year career more than half his life working for the Forsyth County Cooperative Extension Service.

Tucker, the countys extension director, retires today, which he describes as bittersweet.

Every time Im working on a project it hits me that I wont be able to see this through and my stomach kind of sinks, Tucker said.

At the same time, Im looking forward to retirement and Im very confident everyone here will continue to do great things.

Working for the countys Cooperative Extension Service was Tuckers first job after graduating from N.C. State University with a Bachelor in Science degree and a masters degree in 1987.

The organization is made up of county agents, professors, scientists and volunteers who work to improve the quality of life in the state at an agricultural and environmental level.

The department is a partnership between county government, the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at N.C. State and the School of Agriculture at N.C. A&T State University.

Tucker said he spent the first half of his career working directly with farmers to increase profitability and sustainability.

Farming is hard work and not the highest-paid profession in the world, he said. Working hand-in-hand with farmers was enjoyable, helping with new techniques and new varieties to make their work easier and more profitable.

In the second half of his career, Tucker became director, which he said was gratifying in that he helped initiate new programs and projects.

Tony Bost, a retired extension agent who worked with Tucker for 20 years, said Tucker is leaving big shoes to fill.

As a person, you wont find a person with higher integrity or moral character, Bost said.

Marks fantastic, a gem of a person, and hes known locally and nationally for his leadership, Bost said.

Bost, the chairman of the Forsyth Soil and Water Conservation Districts board of supervisors, said perhaps Tuckers greatest legacy is helping local farmers transition from the tobacco quota program that was phased out roughly 20 years ago.

Mark helped farmers with the logistics of shifting from quota to contracts and understanding what their options are, Bost said. He has been a tremendous advocate for farmers.

Tuckers passion for farming is rooted in his childhood, which he spent on a 100-acre farm in Rockingham County. His parents grew grains, vegetables and tobacco a major cash crop at the time.

I was not the typical high school student. I lived and breathed farming, he said. I was lucky to be able to continue that with the extension service.

Some of Tuckers proudest career achievements include the establishment of Voluntary Agricultural Districts and the recently completed Farmland Protection Plan, which aims to preserve farmland in the county.

Will Strader, the director of the Rockingham County Cooperate Extension Service,said Tuckers dedication to the service will be missed.

He has been a huge asset to the organization over the years, and his leadership has really set an example for the rest of us, said Strader, who will be Forsyth Countys interim director during the search for Tuckers successor over the next couple months.

Im happy for his retirement, but sad to see him go, Strader said.

In retirement, Tucker plans to spend more time with his wife, Ronda, and three children, Kaitlyn, 26; Morgan, 23 and Luke, 21.

He is living on the same farm he grew up on and would like to devote more of his spare time to farming.

Thirty years is a good bit of time. Ive spent over half my life here doing this, Tucker said of his career. Ive been very fortunate to have a job Ive loved the entire time.

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Further troubles lie ahead as Ottawa’s attempt at modernizing project reviews reveals a divided Canada – JWN

Posted: at 12:13 am

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in his parliament office in Ottawa. Image: Flickr/Justin Trudeau

Call it an exercise in herding cats.

Only one year into the federal governments efforts to reshape Canadas environmental and regulatory processes surrounding resource development, and its already revealed a country deeply divided on how to assess environmental concerns with new projects and how to regulate industry to mitigate any issues.

The federal government launched its multi-department review last June after instituting a temporary system in January for projects already under environmental assessment. The goal is to replace the environmental assessment legislation put in place by Stephen Harpers Conservatives in 2012, while modernizing the National Energy Board (NEB), Fisheries Act, and Navigation Protection Act.

The rationale for the review is to restore Canadians trust in environmental assessments, said Catherine McKenna, the federal minister of environment and climate change.

Check out the latest Oilweek now for insight into Canada's oilpatch people, technology and trends.

The review of Canadas environmental and regulatory practices will ensure that decisions are based on science, facts and evidence, added Kirsty Duncan, the federal minister of science.

Over the last year, the government has been gathering submissions and holding public hearings to get input from Canadians across the country. In early April, the expert panel reviewing the environmental assessment process released its recommendations. A similar report concerning the modernization of the NEB was released in mid-May.

The preliminary results from the environmental review show the challenges of trying to balance environmental stewardship with industrial growth.

Views about federal environmental assessment across the various interests ranged from support to all-out opposition, the environmental panel said in its report to the government.

The view from industry

Industry was looking for a number of things from the review, including assurances that any new regulations wouldnt further harm the countrys competitiveness.

Canada is competing globally for capital investment in our oil and gas resources, and it is imperative for the Canadian economy that Canada remain competitive with other jurisdictions, Jim Campbell, Cenovus Energys vice-president of government and community affairs, told the task force on behalf of his company.

Campbell pointed to a recent study and survey showing the Canadian industry is falling behind competitors when it comes to competing for capital. Primary reasons cited Canadas decline include regulatory duplication and inconsistencies and complexity of environmental regulations, he noted.

In its submission to the task force, Suncor Energy, like most others from industry who offered input, said the federal review process should dovetail with, rather than overlap, provincial and local review processes. The process should, accent, not duplicate, provincial reviews, said Suncor. One project, one assessment. Duplicate reviews do not add additional protections and can add years to project applications.

The federal assessment should be a process to assess residual environmental risks in areas of federal jurisdiction, Suncor added.

Cenovus, with most of its primary assets in Alberta, agreed primary responsibility for environmental assessments should remain with the provinces.

Local regulators have the experience and technical expertise to best evaluate projects, work with local communities and perform follow-up monitoring and compliance, noted Campbell.

Campbell also said federal and provincial environmental assessment processes should be streamlined by allowing for substitution and equivalency agreements based on the principles of the best-placed regulator to do the work and a single-window approach.

When it comes to addressing First Nations concerns, Suncor said the federal government, rather than industry, must take a leadership role, pointing out that the review must ensure the Crown is upholding its duty to consult.

Proponents have the responsibility to support the Crown through direct engagement and partnership with affected communities, incorporating traditional knowledge through applications and developing projects in a sustainable manner, Suncor added.

The oilsands giant said the people and communities closest to projects should be at the front of the line when it comes to consultations in environmental assessments.

Reviews must allow those most directly affected by the outcome of a particular project to have the greatest opportunity to participate and have a voice in the process, it noted. Input from affected stakeholders can get diluted when the process is used for purposes other than gathering information on a specific project.

Suncor and other resource companies and associations also said they dont believe the review process should be hijacked by groups wanting to debate larger public concerns outside the boundaries of the project. Governments should first set public policy direction on these broader issues like climate change, and then the review process should ensure public policy standards are met.

The review process is not the appropriate venue for debating broader public policy, the company said.

Another key element for industry and provinces with resource-based economies in the review process was ensuring the designated projects section of the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, 2012 remained in place. Projects including minerals mining (such as potash), linear developments (transmission lines and highways) that do not cross provincial boundaries, extraction of non-potable groundwater, in situ oilsands developments and natural gas facilities were removed from the list of projects requiring federal assessments in the 2012 legislation.

Removing these projects from federal [environmental assessment] review saved time and cost by greatly reducing unnecessary duplication of [assessments] and other regulatory processes, reducing red tape for proponents while maintaining robust provincial environmental safeguards, said the government of Saskatchewan in its submission. The province advocates for the exclusion of such projects from federal review, recognizing mature and effective provincial environmental regulatory review processes.

Green groups, First Nations look for greater participation in process

While industry looked to streamline the environmental assessment process and provide certainty to investors, environmentalists and First Nations looked for greater input into the process and for the federal government to expand the list of designated projects that require federal approval. Many also requested a climate test be included in the process.

West Coast Environmental Law said it was looking for a next-generation assessment law that accounted for the economic, ecological and social aspects of sustainability, that respected First Nations authority and governance, that provided for full public participation, and that connected the assessment, decision-making and action of different levels of government.

They also wanted the law to address the causes and effects of climate change, include strategic and regional assessment as fundamental components, and to require appropriate assessment of the thousands of smaller projects currently not being studied.

This isnt the time to make small adjustments to a deeply flawed processwe need a new law that ensures the health of Canadians and the environment, and this is our chance to get it right, said Stephen Hazell, the director of conservation and general counsel at Nature Canada.

Recommendations favour expansion of federal role in assessments

The initial report from the expert panel is promising many of the big changes environmentalists and others who submitted opinions wanted. The first is a major expansion in the assessment process beyond the environmental impacts of a project.

We outline that, in our view, assessment processes must move beyond the bio-physical environment to encompass all impacts likely to result from a project, both positive and negative. Therefore, what is now environmental assessment should become impact assessment, the panel said. Changing the name of the federal process to impact assessment underscores the shift in thinking necessary to enable practitioners and Canadians to understand the substantive changes being proposed in our report.

This new assessment process would cover what the panel calls the five pillars of sustainability: environmental, social, economic, health and cultural impacts.

While industry said it would like to see public input limited to those most affected by the project, the panel also sided with environmental groups wanting to see broader public input. The panel also said that more meaningful public participation in the assessment process is a must.

An overarching criterion of public participation opportunities in impact assessment processes is that these opportunities must be meaningful, the report added. A meaningful participation process needs to have the inherent potential to influence decisions made throughout the assessment, provide inclusive and accessible opportunities for early and ongoing engagement from the public and indigenous groups, and provide the capacity required for active participation in the engagement.

The panel said current rules regarding public participation are lacking and have been perceived as having been designed to limit public participation in the assessment process.

The panel believes the NEBs adoption of the standing test has greatly hindered trust in its assessments.

The degree to which this test has limited participation is evident through NEB participation data. The outcome of this is not an efficient assessment process or timely incorporation of public input into a decision-making process, the panel said. In the case of the Trans Mountain Expansion project review, a ministerial panel was convened after the NEB assessment process was completed, at least in part to hear from those who felt shut out of the initial process. In short, limiting public participation reduces the trust and confidence in assessment processes without bringing any obvious process efficiency.

The panel recommends thatlegislation require that [an impact assessment] provide early and ongoing participation opportunities that are open to all, the report said. Results of public participation should have the potential to impact decisions.

The expert panel also questioned the need for time limits on the review process, suggesting that instead, the time frame of the review process be project-specific. The current process, put in place in 2012, requires environmental assessments of projects that occur on federal lands, such as pipelines, to be completed within one or two years, depending on the projects size and complexity.

This has not met the objective of delivering cost- and time-certainty to proponents, the report said. Our recommended approach seeks to build public confidence in the assessment process. We believe that public trust can lead to more efficient and timely reviews. It may also support getting resources to market.

The expert panel also recommended a number of ways to increase First Nations participation in the assessment process, including implementing the principles of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), especially with respect to the manner in which environmental assessment processes can be used to address potential impacts to potential or established aboriginal or treaty rights.

The panel recognized that there are broader discussions that need to occur between the federal government and indigenous peoples with respect to nation-to-nation relationships, overlapping and unresolved claims to aboriginal rights and titles, reconciliation, treaty implementation and the broader implementation of UNDRIP. According to the panel, many of these discussions will be necessary prerequisites for the full and effective implementation of the recommendations contained in the report.

Among its recommendations regarding indigenous people, the panel suggested that indigenous peoples be included in decision-making at all stages of the assessment process, in accordance with their own laws and customs.

It also suggests First Nations be funded adequately to allow meaningful participation in the process and be given the time to review information.

The panel report defines the criteria for the type of projects that should be federally reviewed and limits the criteria of projects that are included for federal review in the designated projects list.

Many participants favoured the continued use of a project list approach to trigger federal assessments because it is predictable and clear and places the focus on major resource projects, wrote the panel.

Requiring an assessment for projects with minor impacts was described as too burdensome and time-consuming for proponents and lacking proportionality. Participants also said, however, that the current project list is too focused on certain industries, such as mining, and should be revisited to ensure that the list more accurately reflects projects with the highest potential for adverse effects, with some participants indicating that in situ oilsands projects and hydraulic fracturing activities should be included.

The committee recommended only projects that affect federal interests should be included on the list. This differs from the current approach that includes projects that may not affect matters of federal interest. And it said there should be an appropriate threshold for effects on federal interests so that a trivial impact does not trigger an assessment.

A new project list should be created that would include only projects that are likely to adversely impact matters of federal interest in a way that is consequential for present and future generations, said the committee.

On the issue of government jurisdiction, there was widespread support for the idea of one project, one assessment.

However, a key goal of the assessment process is to leverage the knowledge of all government levels.

In Canada, many jurisdictions have the expertise, knowledge, best practices and capacity to contribute to impact assessments, said the panel. For example, the federal and provincial governments may focus on closely related issues, such as impacts to water quality versus impacts to a fishery. Yet indigenous groups also have relevant knowledge on these topics related to the practice of their aboriginal and treaty rights, their traditional and ongoing land use, and their laws, customs and institutions. Similarly, municipalities are the custodians of land use and the full range of local impacts that affect residents and their communities.

The committee said it believes the best way to connect all these areas of expertise is through a co-operative approach.

To date, the best examples of co-operation among jurisdictions have been joint-review panels backed up by general co-operation agreements between Canada and many provinces, said the committee. As such, expanding the co-operation model to include all relevant jurisdictions is the preferred method to carry out jurisdictional co-ordination.

Climate change a sticky issue

The expert panel said the issue of climate change has proved difficult to address under existing environmental assessment regulations.

Current processes and interim principles take into account some aspects of climate change, but there is an urgent national need for clarity and consistency on how to consider climate change in project and regional assessments, it said.

The panel said criteria, modelling and methodology must be established to assess a projects contribution to climate change, consider how climate change may impact the future environmental setting of a project, and consider a projects or regions long-term sustainability and resiliency in a changing environmental setting.

Industry is concerned the issue of climate change has sidelined project assessments and turned them into debates over government policy. The panel addressed this issue by recommending the federal government lead a strategic impact assessment or similar co-operative and collaborative mechanism on the Pan-Canadian Framework on Clean Growth and Climate Change to provide direction on how to implement the framework and related initiatives in future federal project and regional assessments.

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Women, Minorities Are More Likely To Lose Jobs To Automation – KNPR

Posted: at 12:11 am

The next wave of job automation has landed in Las Vegas.

A bar staffed by robots, called The Tipsy Robot, will open Friday on the Strip and the trend is likely here to stay. (Ed. Note:The bar is also staffed by people. The robots are are an entertainment attraction, but robot bartenders could become more common in the future.)

Of all American cities, Las Vegas is most susceptible to automation due to its high number of service industry job, and a new study from the University of Redlands says that women, minorities, and teenagers hold jobs that are most likely to be automated.

Johannes Moenius is a professor at the University of Redlands who helped conduct the survey. He was quick to point to the reason for that.

If you look at the jobs that are most susceptible to automation ... there'sa lot more women working in those jobs than men," he said.

Moenius pointed to the grocery store clerk as an example of a job that is slowly being taken over by self-serve kiosks and bank teller positions are almost entirely taken by ATMs.

It is not just about the job, Moenius said, it is really about how much education a person has.

People who have no high school degree, no high school diploma, have an almost a 75 percent chance of being automated away, he said.

Moenius said the higher the degree a person obtains the lower the chances that his or her jobwill be replaced by automation. In the survey, Asians fared much better at having a job that wasn't going to be replaced by a robot, he said. He credited that to the fact that Asians are more likely to have at least a bachelor degree.

The more education you have the higher insurance you have, he said.

Many people have decried the high cost of a college degree, which is why a technical degree is often suggested as an alternative to a bachelor degree. Moenius agrees that a technical degree has its merits he believes it only goes so far.

It is definitely true that if you get a technical degree and you continue to get an education on the side then you will get work less and less repetitive type tasks that make you less likely, less susceptible to getting a job automated away," he said."However, its the creative, problem-solving part that allows people to avoid the risk of automation.

One of the trickiest parts of the equation is young people. The study found that teenagers are also more likely to have their jobs automated away. However, many don't have the job experience to get a highly skilled job. Moenius also said young people who haven't gone to college should look to go to college. His concern is the people who didn't make that choice.

If youre dropping out of high school at age 16, you start working, you get some expertise, you become even a schooled artisan in your job, the probability that you wont have a job 10 years or 20 years down the road is very, very, very high, he said.

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UK workers optimistic about automation – BetaNews

Posted: at 12:11 am

Every second office worker in the UK (48 percent) is optimistic about what automation technologies will do to their workplace in the future. The only problems are thatits expensive and infrastructure is lacking.

This is according to a new report byCapgemini, based on a poll of more than 1,000 UK office workers.

Four in ten (40 percent) believe machine learning will have a positive impact, while 32 percent said the same for robotics. Only 10 percent said automation might have a negative impact.

Almost half (47 percent) have seriously thought about how automation can support their departments on a daily basis. When it comes to finances, the percentage jumps to 85. Business owners and directors think as much as 40 percent of business tasks could be automated before 2020. That includes invoicing, managing expense claims and admin tasks.

Office workers, however, arent afraid of losing their jobs. They see automation as a way to free up time, so that they could do tasks of higher value.

"Its really heartening to see the optimism for automation technologies among the UKs office workers --particularly when nearly half have given serious thought to implementation in their own workplace," said Lee Beardmore, vice president and chief technology officer of Capgeminis Business Services Unit.

"At present our survey estimates that around 13percent of businesses in the UK are benefiting from automation, but theres still a lot that havent seen anything yet. We certainly expect this figure to rise in the near future as more and more businesses realize the transformational power of technologies such as AI, robotics and automation. All of these technologies represent an opportunity for growth for businesses in every industry sector."

Published under license from ITProPortal.com, a Future plc Publication. All rights reserved.

Photo Credit: Wright Studio/Shutterstock

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White House considers effects of automation "a policy challenge" – Axios

Posted: at 12:11 am

Hawaii is asking a federal judge to rule that President Trump's move to re-introduce parts of his travel ban is at odds with a Supreme Court ruling earlier this week. From the court filing:

"The Government does not have discretion to ignore the Court's injunction as it sees fit. The State of Hawaii is entitled to the enforcement of the injunction that it has successfully defended."

The issue: The ruling stated that citizens of the countries subject to the ban who have "bonafide" relationships with people in the U.S. could not be barred. The Trump administration's interpretation of that ruling excludes grandparents, aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, in-laws, and other extended family members.

The travel ban protocol went into effect at 8pm ET. More on who Trump's protocols would affect, here.

Update: The State Department website says fiancs now counts as close relationships, per Reuters.

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Where Despots Rule – Jacobin – Jacobin magazine

Posted: at 12:11 am

Elizabeth S. Anderson

First, there are some easy fixes that could be achieved within the terms of current law, or with some modifications of current law.

Chief among these would be rigorous enforcement of existing labor laws, abolition of mandatory arbitration over violations of wages and hours regulations, and abolition of bans on class action suits by groups of workers over unfair treatment by their employer. Rigorous enforcement especially needs to include protecting the free speech and association rights of workers to complain about working conditions and to organize labor unions at the workplace.

In addition, non-compete agreements need to be banned. These prevent workers from taking their human capital with them when they quit or are fired. If workers cant exit without abandoning the use of their skills, their already weak bargaining power within the firm is destroyed.

Immigrant workers, too, need the freedom to quit. Without that freedom, they are grievously exploited. Interns, who do work of economic value to their employers, should have the same rights to pay and other legal rights as any other employee. So-called independent contractors are often functionally employees, and should have the same rights as employees. Temps should enjoy the same pay, benefits, conditions, and rights as regular employees of the firm.

Second and more ambitiously, the rules of workplace governance need to be changed to give workers a permanent institutionalized voice at work, whether or not they belong to a labor union.

This is the system that prevails among larger employers in many rich European countries. It requires that workers be consulted about how the work process is organized. In such systems of co-determination, workers have a real say in how they are governed, and the work process is jointly determined by workers and managers.

Labor unions engage in collective bargaining over wages and benefits, but the conditions on the shop floor are managed by co-determination. This means that workers are entitled to a real say in how they are governed even if they have not elected a labor union to represent them exclusively in collective bargaining.

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NEC okays states’ rehabilitation of prisons – NIGERIAN TRIBUNE (press release) (blog)

Posted: at 12:11 am

THE National Economic Council (NEC) has resolved that state government with the capacity should rehabilitate prisons and provide facilities to decongest them.

Arising from its 78th session presided over by acting President Yemi Osinbajo at the Presidential Villa, Abujaon Thursday, it expressed worries over the appalling conditions of structures and logistics in the nations prisons.

This followed a presentation to the council made by the Minister of Interior.

Briefing State House correspondents after the meeting, Governor Dave Umahi of Ebonyi State said the governors were unanimouson the need to rehabilitate prisons in the country.

He added: It was indicated that States that have the capacity should as soon as practicable lend a helping hand to provide facilities that will help decongest the prisons and help improve the state of the inmates.

Council expresses the need for private and the public sectors to collaborate for more effective and humane prison services.

Stated the need to visit the Prisons regularly in order to determine those that are supposed to be there and those that should be out of prison.

Also speaking, Governor Ibrahim Dankwambo of Gombe State, gave an update on the Excess Crude Account (ECA) put at $2.3billion as well as Stabilization, Natural Resources Development and Ecological Funds.

Damkwambo who gave NEC a brief update on the progress of work of NECs Ad-hoc Committee on Excess Crude,disclosed that about 18 Ministry. Department and Agencies (MDAs) were now being audited, and in 10, the audits have being completed already.

He said a more comprehensive report was expected by next NEC meeting.

According to him, NEC was informed thatStabilisation Balance isN28.5 billion as at

28/6/17;Natural Resources Development Fund,N87.6 billion andEcological FundN28.9 billion.

On Budget Support Loan Facility, Dankwambo said although Finance Minister presented that the facility has being fully disbursed, she also announced that the Acting President has directed that the facility continues until other states claim are paid.

The Budget Support Loan Facility is an initiation of the Buhari administration to help states get boost in their funding in the light of the dwindling Federal Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC) allocations.

NEC also received briefing on HIV update in the country, noting that an estimated three million were living with the virus in the country.

The Director General of the National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA), Dr. Sani Aliyu, who spoke on the subject at the briefing, said some states have budget allocation for HIV programmes but not released.

He said Issues of HIV needed to be prioritized, noting that atleast 0.5% to 1% of monthly Federation allocation to states be set aside for financing the implementation of the HIV/AIDS programme.

He added: A universal free antenatal services and abolition of user fees associated with accessing prevention of Mother-To-Child Transmission (PMTCT) services.

Each State to set up an ANC/PMTCT revolving fund.

State Health Insurance and contributory schemes include HIV as an indicator disease for both testing and treatment particularly as it relates to community health insurance programme.

NEC also received an update on Improving Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and its implementation in the country.

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Princess Diana’s hidden Irish roots – Irish Examiner

Posted: at 12:11 am

On the eve of what would have been Princess Dianas 56th birthday, Ryle Dwyer reveals her hidden Irish connections.

On the eve of what would have been the late Princess Dianas fifty-sixth birthday, it may seem like everything of interest or historical significance about her has already been written, but an extraordinary Cork/Kerry link has essentially been ignored.

At this time of the year we read and hear so much about Killarney, but how many people know that Dianas great, grandfather was the MP representing Killarney at the turn of the last century?

James Boothby Burke Roche had a colourful past that the people of Killarney could not forget fast enough, but maybe this will change when they realise his future significance.

In the wake of the Irish Parliamentary Partys split over Charles Stewart Parnells involvement in Kitty OShea divorce, Roche was elected to Parliament for East Kerry as an anti-Parnellite nationalist, which seemed particularly incongruous because Burke Roche was divorced himself five years earlier.

As such he was a real historical curiosity.

He was the third son of Edmond Burke Roche (1815-1874), who lived at Trabolgan House, Trabolgan, and owned extensive property in north and east Cork, as well as in the Dungarvan area of Waterford. A staunch backer of Irish causes, Edmond Burke Roche was MP for County Cork from 1837 to 1855.

He was closely associated with Daniel OConnell in the repeal movement. In 1865 Queen Victoria conferred the title of Baron Fermoy on Roche, who then sat in the House of Lords, where he continued to take an active interest in Irish affairs.

His son, James, lacked the fathers drive, and, as a result, developed into the classical neer do well. While on a visit to the United States in 1880 he met and married Frances Fannie Work, the daughter of Frank Work, one of New Yorks richest bankers. James and Fannie lived together in London, but she later testified that he never contributed anything towards her support.

James Boothby Burke Roche.

Her father provided her with $7,000 a year, and she gave it to her husband, who used some of it to fund his gambling. In December 1886 Roche sent his wife to New York to ask her father for more money. She brought their daughter with her, while he held on to their twin sons to ensure her return.

By then, however, her father had enough of his son-in-laws profligate ways. Work refused to provide further money for her reckless husband, and persuaded her not to return to London.

If I had my way I would make international marriage a hanging offense, Work stated. Its time this international marrying came to a stop, for our American girls are ruining our country by it. Roche arrived in New York with the twin boys in February 1887. He sent a message asking Frank Work to meet him and the boys at the steamer wharf, but his father-in-law sent a servant instead.

Roche met his wife the following day at her fathers mansion in the presence of her father, who flatly refused to provide any further money. This was possibly the last time Fannie saw her husband.

One day, shortly afterwards, Roche arrived at his father-in-laws mansion with the twins who were almost two years old. He rang the doorbell, and abandoned the boys on the doorstep. He just took off in his carriage without speaking to anyone.

Fannie Roche was granted a divorce on the grounds of desertion in March 1891. The case received widespread coverage in the United States, especially in New York, where it was front-page news in The Sun, and The Evening World, which reported that Scotland Yard detectives were unable to find her husband to serve the papers on him. The case was also reported in Irish newspapers, because of the familys political prominence. The Cork Examiner had carried an extensive report of the divorce case on March 2, 1891. It therefore seemed strange that people did not know that James Burke Roche had been divorced when he was selected to run for parliament in East Kerry in 1896 as an anti-Parnellite.

The Parnellite organ, The Irish Daily Independent, highlighted the story during the latter days of the 1896 campaign. Roches solicitor issued a statement emphasising that his client emphatically declared to me that he was never served with any divorce proceedings. Although Roche won the seat comfortably, less than half the 5,600 eligible voters cast their ballots. Moreover, the 680 votes for his opponent Captain John McGillycuddy was more than double the 253 votes he had received in 1992. The formal announcement of the election result was received with absolute silence, according to the Kerry Sentinel.

Edmund Maurice Burke Roche, Baron Fermoy (1885 - 1955) and his wife Lady Fermoy after attending a society wedding.

Despite his win, Roche appeared very agitated. He was left severely alone by the members of the Party, the Kerry Sentinel noted. These gentlemen appeared to be ashamed to be seen in the company of Mr Roche in public. Indeed, the reporter concluded that it seemed they would have preferred to hear of his defeat rather than his success. During his one term as an MP, Burke Roche was hardly seen in the House of Commons. He never made any speech and was not even mentioned in the house records during his final two years. He just faded into obscurity.

When the Irish Parliamentary Party reunited in 1900, there was obviously no room for him. At a big unity rally in Killarney on April 8, 1900, the mere mention of his name provoked groans from the gathering.

If you show you can purge the representation of Ireland of men of the stamp of your own misrepresentative, Mr Burke Roche, William OBrien told the crowd, it would be an easy preliminary step to the abolition of the accursed foreign rule. Roche did not stand for re-election.

Twenty years later when his older brother the 2nd Baron Fermoy died without a son, James Burke Roche became the 3rd Lord Fermoy, but he died the following month. He was succeeded by the eldest of his twin sons, Edmund Maurice Roche, who returned from the United States.

Edmund stood for parliament as a Conservative in an English constituency and duly won a seat in the 1924 general election, and was re-elected at each subsequent general election, until he stood down in 1935. In 1931 he married Ruth Gill, and they had three children.

Their daughter Frances married Edward Spencer at Westminster Abbey on June 1, 1954. The Queen and other members of the Royal Family were among the 1,800 guests at what was one of the society weddings of the decade. The fourth of their five children, was Diana Spencer, who married Charles, Prince of Wales, in 1981, and became the mother of both Princes William and Harry.

If Prince William becomes King, it will mean that an ancestor on his mothers side was the MP representing Killarney, at the same time one of his fathers ancestors was Queen Victoria, who had played a major role in putting Killarney on the international tourist map.

Irish Examiner Ltd. All rights reserved

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What Freedom (Actually) Means… – HuffPost

Posted: at 12:09 am

When I threw out all of my belongings and started living in AirBnBs (I dont own or rent), people say, Ohh! That must be so freeing!.

I know when I see something I want to buy, I feel relief. I have an easy answer: I cant buy it. It wont fit into my 15 possessions. Whenever I buy one thing, I throw another thing out.

Is that freeing or imprisoning? I dont know

Someone asked me, Do you miss anything?

Yes, every day. All the time. I had a drawing next to my desk of the superhero character from the 60s, Underdog. I loved it.

I had a Dr. McCoy doll from Star Trek. I had a photo album of photos from when I was a little kid. It had photos of me, my sisters, my parents. I had a collection of comic books built up over decades.

I miss them. I miss many things that I have lost in my life.

I practice missing.

The less I expect, the happier I am.

When I wake up in the morning, I look out the window. I see a 3 dimensional city of vertical buildings reaching into the clouds. I see the sunlight. I feel like I want to sleep more but I know I have to get up because I want to write.

Im going to write. Im going to do some business. Im going to disappoint some people. Im going to make other people happy.

Then Im going to play ping pong. Im going to prepare for some work I have to do tomorrow. And Im going to play backgammon.

I miss many things every day. This is freedom.

To live a life filled with things that I miss. To give myself permission to be both happy and sad at the same time. Melancholy is freedom. Happiness all the time is prison.

I used to lock myself in that prison. Surrounded first by my possessions. Then surrounded by my goals. And the opinions people had of me. And the opinions people had of me. And my anxieties about tomorrow, which always drained me of energy for today.

I wrapped myself in so many expectations they kept me in prison.

Today Im going to play. Im going to miss. Im going to laugh. Im going to forget things. I have permission.

James Altucher is the author of the bestselling book Choose Yourself, editor at The Altucher Report and host of the popular podcast, The James Altucher Show, which takes you beyond business and entrepreneurship by exploring what it means to be human and achieve well-being in a world that is increasingly complicated. Join the 136,000 readers getting a dose of my best and controversial content. Join here.

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Melaleuca Freedom Celebration named one of the top must-see fireworks displays in America – East Idaho News

Posted: at 12:09 am

Idaho Falls 0Updated at 10:21 am, June 29th, 2017 By: Nate Eaton, EastIdahoNews.com We Matched

The American Pyrotechnics Association named the Melaleuca Freedom Celebration as one of the top five must-see fireworks displays in the country. | File photo

IDAHO FALLS The American Pyrotechnics Association (APA) has named the Melaleuca Freedom Celebration as one of the top five must-see Independence Day fireworks displays in America.

The list, released Wednesday, includes recommendations for the most avid of fireworks fans to consider this 4th of July. The Melaleuca Freedom Celebration is the only display in the western United States to make the list.

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE LIST OF THE APA MUST-SEE INDEPENDENCE DAY FIREWORKS DISPLAYS

Every year were looking for something new and different that is spectacular and draws a large crowd of spectators, said Julie Heckman, executive director of the American Pyrotechnics Association. The size of the Melaleuca Freedom Celebration and the location really jumped out to us. Its one of those shows thats worth making the jaunt to see.

The APA estimates more than 16,000 fireworks displays will commemorate Americas 241st birthday nationwide next Tuesday. The Melaleuca Freedom Celebration, being held at Snake River Landing for the first time, is expected to draw more than 100,000 spectators from all over the world.

The fact that the show is going to be enhanced this year makes it extra special, Heckman said.

RELATED | MELALEUCA PROMISES BIGGEST FIREWORKS SHOW EVER: YOU HAVENT SEEN ANYTHING LIKE THIS

Twenty thousand firework shells totaling 17,000 pounds of explosives will be shot into the air during the Melaleuca Freedom Celebration, according to Melaleuca CEO Frank VanderSloot.

This year were more than doubling the size of the show, VanderSloot said. The fireworks used to be brought in on one 40-foot trailer. This year two 53-foot trucks are needed to bring them all in. Its an enormous amount of firepower.

WATCH: MELALEUCA CEO FRANK VANDERSLOOT DESCRIBES THE MASSIVE FIREWORKS DISPLAY

The 31 minute production is being produced by Western Display Fireworks. The same firing system used during the Winter Olympics will shoot off the explosives synchronized to 1/100th of a second to match patriotic music.

Were bringing in a special pyrotechnician from Frankfurt, Germany to shoot this off, VanderSloot said. He does fireworks competitions all over the world and is the best and the biggest.

The fireworks will be placed on a launchpad 40 times larger than previous years. The platform is one and a half times the length of a football field and the space will be utilized to accommodate the massive number of shells.

Its like going from a 10 inch screen to a 100 inch screen in your living room, VanderSloot said. Were going to paint the entire sky the lower section, the middle section and, for the first time, the higher section. Youre not going to want to miss this show.

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Melaleuca Freedom Celebration named one of the top must-see fireworks displays in America - East Idaho News

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