Monthly Archives: April 2022

Rod Jackson: Why New Zealand’s response to the covid pandemic was proportionate? – Asia Pacific Report

Posted: April 22, 2022 at 4:48 am

COMMENTARY: By Professor Rod Jackson

In a recent article (Weekend Herald, April 16) John Roughan wrote that the covid-19 pandemic has been an anticlimax in Aotearoa New Zealand.

Surprisingly, he acknowledges covid-19 has killed about 25 million people worldwide, so hopefully he was referring to New Zealands 600 deaths. He goes on to ask how many lives we in New Zealand have saved and states that its not the 80,000 based on modelling from the Imperial College London that panicked governments everywhere in March 2020.

I beg to differ. It is because governments panicked everywhere that the number of deaths so far is only about 25 million.

A recent comprehensive assessment of the covid-19 infection fatality proportion the proportion of people infected with covid-19 who die from the infection found that in April 2020, before most governments had panicked, the infection fatality proportion was 1.5 percent or more in numerous high-income countries. Included were Japan, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland and the UK.

Without stringent public health measures, covid-19 is likely to have spread through the entire population, and an infection fatality proportion of 1.5 percent multiplied by 5 million (New Zealanders) equals 75,000.

Thats close to the estimated 80,000 New Zealand lives likely to have been saved because our panicking government, like many others, introduced restrictive public health measures.

Public health successes are invisibleWhat Roughan fails to appreciate is that public health successes are invisible. Unlike deaths, you cannot see people not dying.

Without the initial public health measures and then the rapid development and deployment of highly effective vaccines (unconscionably largely to high-income countries) there would have been far more deaths.

Roughan asks is this a pandemic? He states that 25 million covid deaths are only 0.3 percent of the worlds population (only 16,000 New Zealand deaths).

How many deaths make a pandemic? In 2020, covid-19 was the number one killer in the UK, responsible for causing about one in 10 deaths in every age group, with each person who died losing on average about 10 years of life expectancy.

In the US, more than 150,000 children have lost a primary or secondary caregiver to covid-19.

So, has our pandemic response been proportionate?

Stringent public health measures were highly effective pre-omicron, but are unsustainable long term.

New Zealand is incredibly fortunateWe are incredibly fortunate that highly effective vaccines were developed so rapidly.

Even the less severe omicron variant is a major killer of unvaccinated people, as demonstrated in Hong Kong, where the equivalent of 6000 New Zealanders have been killed by omicron in the past couple of months, due to low vaccination rates.

Unfortunately, despite our high vaccination rates, we are unlikely to be out of the woods, and it is likely a new covid-19 variant will be back to bite us. The only certainty is that the next variant will need to be even more contagious to overtake omicron.

As long as covid-19 passes to a new host before killing you, there is no selection advantage to a less fatal variant. We are just lucky that omicron was less virulent than delta.

Pandemics over the centuries have often taken several generations to change from being mass killers to causing the equivalent of a common cold.

What response will we accept as proportionate to shorten this process with covid-19 without millions of additional deaths?

As immunity from vaccination or infection wanes, we will need updated vaccines to prevent regular major disruptions to society.

A sustainable proportionate responseUnlike the flu, which has a natural R-value of less than two (one person on average infects fewer than two others), omicron appears to have an R-value of at least 10. That means in the time it takes flu to go from infecting one person to two, to four, to eight people, omicron (without a proportionate response) could go from infecting one to 10 to 100 to 1000 people.

There is no way that endemic covid will be as manageable as endemic flu.

The only sustainable proportionate response to covid-19 is for New Zealanders to embrace universal vaccination.

It is likely that vaccine passes will be required again if we want to live more normally and for society to thrive. It cannot be difficult to make the use of vaccine passes more seamless.

Almost every financial transaction today is electronic and it must be possible to link transactions to valid vaccine passes when required.

Almost 1 million eligible New Zealanders havent had their third vaccine dose, yet few are anti-vaccination.

Rather, thanks to vaccination and other public health measures, the pandemic has been an anticlimax for many New Zealanders and the third dose has not been a priority.

As already demonstrated, for the vast majority of New Zealanders, a vaccine pass is sufficient to make vaccination a priority.

Professor Rod Jackson is an epidemiologist with the University of Auckland. This article was originally published by The New Zealand Herald. Republished with the authors permission.

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Wayne Smith to coach New Zealand women following damning review – The News International

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WELLINGTON: Former All Blacks coach Wayne Smith was appointed Thursday to head a new set-up for the New Zealand women's team following a damning review into the way the side had been handled.

The review into the team culture found members of the Black Ferns had been subjected to culturally insensitive comments, alleged favouritism and body-shaming from coaches.

It led to the resignation last week of head coach Glenn Moore, less than six months from the Women's World Cup, which will be hosted by defending champions New Zealand.

Smith, known in rugby circles as "the professor" because of his deep knowledge of the game, moves into the role of director of rugby for the women's side.

The 65-year-old will head a new coaching structure through to the World Cup in October-November, New Zealand Rugby chief executive Mark Robinson said.

"There is no questioning Wayne's calibre as a coach and what he will bring to this team. We know he is excited to be involved in the Black Ferns and about what they can build this year," Robinson said.

Smith will be assisted by Whitney Hansen, who has had an intern coaching role with the team for the past two years, and Wesley Clarke.

Men's World Cup-winning coach Graham Henry will join in a support role while specialists including former All Blacks forwards coach Mike Cron will also prepare the side.

"Wes has been a long-standing member of the Black Ferns coaching team, his insight and experience is invaluable," said Robinson.

"Whitney is a coach with a big future, she has impressed in her two years within the team so this is a great recognition of her ability and potential."

Moore, who steered the team to the 2017 world crown, was under intense pressure to quit after the review found that Black Ferns players had been badly served by both team management and New Zealand Rugby.

The review was launched after hooker Te Kura Ngata-Aerengamate went public with her complaints that she suffered a mental breakdown because of critical comments made by Moore.

She alleged Moore had told her she did not deserve to be on the team and was "picked only to play the guitar".

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iDenfy Automates Onboarding Process for New Zealand Financial Institution – Mobile ID World

Posted: at 4:48 am

iDenfy has picked up a new client in New Zealand. RBFC Global is a financial institution that specializes in online payments, remittances, and currency exchanges, and it is now using iDenfys identity verification technology to improve the onboarding experience for its users.

According to RBFC Global, iDenfys offering was more cost-effective than the other alternatives it examined, primarily because it can automate many parts of the onboarding process. With it, users are asked to take a photo of an official ID, and iDenfy uses document recognition to make sure that the document is authentic. iDenfy also supplements its automated scans with human review to help improve its verification rate. As a result, RBFC Global does not need to dedicate its own staff to verification operations.

Perhaps more importantly, the arrangement will allow RBFC Global to comply with international Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) regulations. iDenfy noted that a significant number (41 percent) of financial institutions are currently not living up to their AML obligations, and those that dont are more vulnerable to various forms of fraud. RBFC Global, on the other hand, noted that strong identity verification is crucial for any financial institution that engages with its customers remotely instead of face-to-face.

Today, its no longer enough to use simple fraud prevention methods, said RBFC Global CCO Daniel Ramirez. Thats why were proud to partner with iDenfy. They were able to offer us multi-layer security that is also simple to implement and use.

Our mission at iDenfy is to provide safer, faster customer onboarding without compromising the security aspect, added iDenfy CEO Domantas Ciulde. Were glad to partner with RBFC Global and help their customers safely access financial services.

iDenfy is already providing onboarding services for a slew of other financial institutions. CyberstarPay, Nikulipe, and Paynovate are some of the most recent additions to the companys client roster.

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The boy from Bunnythorpe, the best New Zealand Olympian you’ve never heard of – Stuff

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Ernest ''Buz'' Sutherland was one of the best all-round athletes New Zealand has ever produced.

A farmer's son from Bunnythorpe born in Palmerston North in 1894, as a child he tried to pole vault 8 feet (2.4 metres) with a homemade pole and broke his arm.

He became the most versatile athlete in the British Empire and won 13 national championships in six events.

And yet he never got to represent New Zealand at the Empire Games because the first Games weren't held until 1930.

READ MORE:* Farewell to Stu McGrail, the witty gentleman of the racing game* Success for athletes at combined champs

World War I also got in his way where he survived being shot, gassed and buried alive.

Word first got around about his talent in 1909 when he won the Palmerston North High School under-16 high jump with a leap of ''5 feet'' (1.5 metres), at that time unheard of in Australasia.

He employed the scissors technique where the jumper stayed upright, taking off and landing on rock hard ground, no sawdust pit to land in.

Sutherland also played for the cricket 1st XI.

At the 1915 national championships in Wellington, he became the triple-jump champion and was clearly a decathlete. But not until 1948 was the decathlon contested at New Zealand championships.

He enlisted in the New Zealand Rifle Brigade and his first war injury came when he injured a shoulder in a Divisional rugby match.

Unknown/Stuff

Bunnythorpe's Buz Sutherland, in white, with the New Zealand team at an Australasian championships meeting.

On Christmas Day 1915, Sutherland's battalion saw action in Egypt against the Senussi, a Muslim clan from North Africa allied to the Turks, when six New Zealanders died.

A month later the brigade again attacked the Senussi and this time Rifleman Sutherland was shot in the thigh.

After recovering, he spent the next two-and-a-half years in and out of the hellscape trenches in France and Belgium where gas attacks took their toll. When a German shell exploded nearby and he was buried under a mound of dirt, he was hospitalised again.

At home, his father William died in 1917 after falling from his horse into the Mangaone Stream.

While Sutherland survived the battles at the Somme, Messines and Passchendaele, more than 3150 men of the NZ Rifle Brigade didn't.

As if that wasn't enough for the army, Sutherland was sent to Germany in the Army of Occupation and didn't get home until 1919 when he resumed his athletics.

At the 1920 national championships he won the triple jump, long jump and high jump and was second in the pole vault before more national titles came in 1921, the year he competed for New Zealand in Adelaide.

There he befriended South African middle-distance runner, Dave Leathern, and having struggled to find work in New Zealand, Sutherland agreed to try South Africa in 1922.

En route he stopped off in Sydney where he set an Australasian javelin record of 53 metres.

After settling on the Leathern family farm at Ladysmith in Natal, he wasn't impressed with the arid conditions so he went to work for Natal Railway before joining the police in Durban.

Sutherland had a habit of entering half of the events at athletics meets and broke the South African high-jump record with a 1.88 metres leap.

Unknown/Stuff

Olympian Buz Sutherland displays his hurdling technique which he used to good effect in the decathlon. Photo: PNBHS

Despite having represented New Zealand, he was selected to compete for South Africa in the decathlon at the 1924 Paris Olympics having lived in South Africa for only two years. Nothing came of the anomaly.

Aged 30, the boy from Bunnythorpe was the second oldest of 36 decathletes heading into the final event in Paris, the 1500 metres. He was sitting fourth, but after a 1500m of pure torture, he settled for fifth place, the best result by an Empire athlete.

Sutherland returned to South Africa where he was engaged to marry the sister of another Olympian, but he never felt settled there and they never married. In 1925, he left to be a coach in Britain, in Liverpool and Glasgow.

After a year there, he settled back in New Zealand, joined the police in Wellington in 1927 and when he resumed his athletics career he won his last title, the pole vault, 14 years after his first before retiring from athletics in 1930 at the age of 36.

By 1935, Constable Sutherland was back in Manawatu where he was regularly seen on the beat, only for tragedy to strike a year later when cycling to the Palmerston North Police Station.

Feeling ill, he decided to ride home, but at the intersection of Pirie and Featherston Streets, he careered head-first over the handlebars of his bike and ''dislocated'' his neck. A shoulder strap of his bag became entangled between his knee and handlebars.

To quote Feilding researcher Nick Rutherford, ''the mild-mannered Olympian, war veteran and constable was dead at the tragically young age of 42, leaving wife Marjorie and three children''.

Sutherland was recognised with a funeral procession through Palmerston North.

Peter Lampp is a sports commentator and former sports editor in Palmerston North.

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Reinstated Trump Water Rule Could Help Economy Grow – Heritage.org

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The Supreme Court recentlyreinstateda Clean Water Actregulationby the Trump administration that helps to prevent states from using reasons other than water quality, such as climate change, to block critical infrastructure and energy projects.

The rule, which specifically addresses states abuse ofSection 401of the Clean Water Act, will remain in place pending litigation.

First, some background on the rule. Congress made it clear in the Clean Water Act that states are expected to take a leading role in addressing water pollution. Section 401 of the statute is a great example of how the law reflects this respect for federalism.

Asexplainedby the Environmental Protection Agency:

Section 401 of the CWA requires that, for any federally licensed or permitted project that may result in a discharge into waters of the United States, a water quality certification be issued [by states and authorized tribes] to ensure that the discharge complies with applicable water quality requirements.

Therefore, states may use the Section 401certification processto ensure that federally permitted activities dont harm states water quality.

But in recent years, some states haveabusedthis process to address issues that have nothing to do with water quality, which in turn has delayed or blocked critical projects.

For example, in 2017, the state of Washington used Section 401 to block the proposed Millennium Bulk terminal project, a large coal export facility along the Columbia River that would help export coal to Asia.

In denying the Section 401 certification, the state heavilyreliedupon factors that have nothing to do with water, such as vehicle traffic, train noise, and rail safety.

The Trump administrations Section 401rulerequires states to focus on water quality requirements only, and not use the process to achieve other state objectives such as addressing climate change.

Why is the rule important? If left in place, it will help to address many inappropriate, state-imposed obstacles to critical projects. And the need for these projects, especially in energy, is more important than ever.

When introducinglegislationthat would codify the Trump rule, Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala.,remarked: Now more than ever, hardworking Americans are facing rising prices in energy commodities [and] this legislation would support the checkbooks of American households and properly safeguard infrastructure projects in our energy and development sectors.

Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., echoed similar concerns,noting:

For far too long, Section 401 of the Clean Water Act has been used by liberal, activist states to hijack energy infrastructure and sabotage energy producing states, like North Dakota, without legitimate cause. With energy prices skyrocketing, its high time we provide much needed regulatory certainty and guardrails to prevent future abuses.

The senators were both right, and prices have gotten only worse since they made their statements.

Just-released inflationnumbersare staggering.The year-over-yearinflation ratein March was 8.5%, the highest increase in over 40 years.

Then theres the prices Americans pay at thegas pump.

Retailpricesfor regulargasolinealready hadrisenby 48% from the week ending Jan. 25, 2021 (when President Joe Biden took office), to the week ending Feb. 21, 2022 (three days before Russias invasion of Ukraine). Currently, gas prices are over $4 per gallon, and in some areas of the country, theyexceed$5 per gallon.

The Trump administrations Section 401 rule can help unleash American energy and promote economic growth. Project developers will not have to deal with Section 401 abuses, and in light ofsoaringprices, these projects can offer a vital reprieve for American families.

Unfortunately, last year, the Biden administration already hadbeguntheprocessof coming up with its own Section 401 rule, almost certainly to undo key provisions of the Trump rule. The public should let its voice be heard through the regulatory process, submitting comments telling administration officials not to take this action.

The Biden administrations message of revising the Trump rule minimizes the benefits of the rule having just been reinstated. It signals that Section 401 abuses might come back and creates greater unpredictability beyond the pending litigation hanging over the rule.

Rather than overhauling the rule, the Biden administrations EPA should make it clear that the Trump rule will remain in place. This would send an important signal that economic growth, infrastructure, and energy abundance are not going to be hampered through abuse of the Clean Water Act.

But such an action admittedly might be a pipe dream, given the Biden administrations war on energy and its environmental extremism.This is why Congress needs to address this issue.

By codifying the Trump administrations Section 401 rule into law, such as through theSection 401 Certification Act, Congress would create much-needed predictability and get rid of Section 401 abuses.

This would be just one important action of many that policymakers need to take to eliminate harmful regulatory barriers and implementpoliciesthat would promote energy abundance and economic flourishing.

This piece originally appeared in The Daily Signal

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Technical support to teachers: Mentoring as an intervention – The Himalayan Times

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One of the rationales of federalism in Nepal is providing quality public services nearer to the people.

As such, the new constitution is the outcome of the people's aspiration to get basic services promptly through autonomous and self-ruled local institutions.

Throughout the ages, delivery of school education has always been at the core of governance. School education has thus been treated as a merit good and service.

Therefore, in line with the spirit of the constitution, the power and function of school education have been devolved to the local governments (LGs). In line with this, the government has taken three important decisions: abolished the concept and practice of Resource Centres and Resources Persons; reduced the 29 Education Training Centres to seven Provincial Education Centres; and done away with all the 75 District Education Offices.

A school is a unit that is located near to a community and the one and only institution directly responsible for the delivery of quality education to its pupils.

Among the many factors responsible for quality, one important and overriding one is the teacher.

Teachers make up a dynamic factor, whose professional commitment backed by action has a direct bearing on quality school education. Therefore, the professional development and technical expertise of the teachers are of paramount importance.

However, teachers and head-teachers equivocally opine that with the introduction of federalism, they have been made state orphans, with none to provide them technical support. Local governments, responsible for steering school education, have few education officers, who are primarily engaged in administrative work and find little time to visit schools. Although some LGs have hired resource persons on their own, this is not considered a sustainable solution.

The absence of resource centres and resource persons has created a vacuum where technical support is not available to the school teachers. Additionally, the provision of just seven provincial training centres, instead of 29, has also added another layer of hurdle in the professional development of the teachers.

All these provide few opportunities for school teachers' professional development and the much-needed technical support, impacting the quality of education.

One notable point is that the constitution has made education the right of every child as against the welfare approach of the former constitutions. This means it is the state's obligation to provide education services to the pupils, but the three decisions mentioned above have taken services away from the people.

It is also evident that the percentage of fully trained teachers in the community schools has reached over 98.2 per cent at the primary level and over 95 per cent at the secondary level. However, research backed by experience reveals that these training efforts have not helped meet the desired objective, as teachers continue to employ the rote method and teacher-centric classroom activities.

Amid these challenges, there is a ray of hope. For instance, the School Sector Development Plan (SSDP) and the draft of the School Education Sector Plan (SESP) have specifically mentioned the provision of teacher mentoring as an intervention in schools. This will be a school-based initiative where a more experienced person, or with specific expertise, will help and guide a less experienced one. This should be a more efficient, effective and sustainable mechanism in line with the mandate of the LGs along with strong international evidence on improving teachers' effectiveness.

School-based management has always been at the core of every strategic plan of education, be it the School Sector Reform Plan (SSRP) or the SSDP and the forth-coming 10-year SESP.

Keeping all these in perspective, the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology has initiated teacher mentoring in subjects like Mathematics, Science and English from Grades six to eight. Two rural and two urban municipalities of Lumbini and Bagmati Provinces have been selected, targeting 20 schools from each of the municipalities for the initial phase. The final goal is to expand the system to all the LGs.

The foremost challenge in sustaining the system is helping novice teachers gain the required teaching skills and knowledge, at both the content and process level. Mentoring, simply, is meant to help attract, motivate and develop novice teachers to perform higher in schools and transform them into learning and performing institutions.

Mentoring for novice teachers will also act as an induction activity so that they can acclimatise to the new environment.

The responsibility, therefore, lies with the LGs once it is successfully piloted. A desirable step to this end could be to inspire the LGs to adopt the system and incentivise and capacitate the mentors with some pecuniary arrangement and orientation workshop, respectively.

The orientation of mentors is of great importance in developing a shared understanding about the nature, process and methods of mentoring aimed at developing a cordial relationship between the mentor and mentee(s).

The mentor also needs to be supported financially so that they can provide regular support to the mentees through in-person or virtual meetings. Since prospective mentors will also represent practising teachers, extra precaution is needed in selecting teachers of repute so that the mentees feel professionally comfortable with them.

The mentoring system allows the mentors to experience the inner satisfaction of having shared their skills and also be recognised as one to develop personally and professionally.

The mentoring system should help experienced teachers to emerge as education leaders and novice teachers as successors, with the resultant effect of increased pupils' learning achievement.

Thapa is former Secretary of Education

A version of this article appears in the print on April 22, 2022, of The Himalayan Times.

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Rafael Nuez, the man who has been president of Colombia the most times – AL DIA News

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Rafael Nuez is one of the most important characters in the history of Cartagena. So much so that the International Airport of the city is named after him, as well as one of the private universities and a neighborhood within the urban area.

Nez was born in Cartagena de Indias on September 28th, 1825, in the bosom of a wealthy family of the city, being the eldest of 3 children.

At the age of 15 he was accepted by General Francisco Carmona in the rebel troops to fight in the war of the Supremes. At the age of 18 he traveled with his father to Tumaco, where he remained for some months working. He studied at the University of Cartagena, where he graduated with a bachelor's degree in 1843 and then started in journalism and founded the newspaper 'La Democracia'.

During his political career he held minor positions until he became Governor of the department of Bolivar in 1854. In 1858 he was in charge of the governorship of the Sovereign State of Panama for two months and then became Minister of Finance under the presidencies of Manuel Mara Mallarino, Toms Cipriano de Mosquera and Julin Trujillo Largacha.

Rafael Nez was president of the Republic in four different periods: 1880-1882, 1884-1886, 1886-1888 and 1892-1894, being his second presidential period the most outstanding, since as a result of a civil war unleashed by radicalism Nez pronounced his famous phrase: "The Constitution of 1863 has ceased to exist" and sought to create the constitution of 1886 that eliminated federalism creating the Republic of Colombia, in addition to naming God as "supreme source of all authority" and restricting the vote to a system of "electors", one per thousand inhabitants.

During his last term, he symbolically took office in Cartagena on September 21st, 1892, but decided to stay away from power, leaving his vice-president Miguel Antonio Caro in charge.

Nez died on September 18th, 1894, victim of a stroke at his home in El Cabrero in Cartagena. Upon hearing the news, tributes were paid to him throughout the country.

In addition to being a poet, journalist, writer and politician, Nez was also the author of the lyrics of Colombia's national anthem, officially adopted in October 1920.

Currently, the house where Rafael Nez lived with his second wife Soledad Romn and where the Constitution of 1886 was signed, has been transformed into a museum open to the public. The house maintains its Caribbean style wood construction and exhibits furniture and objects that belonged to Nez. In front of the house there is a statue in honor of this personage.

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‘Grasping things at the root:’ Abolition activism grows at West End Garden – Daily Northwestern

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Max Lubbers/Daily Senior Staffer

Master Gardener Tiffany Christian presses on a soil bed during a clean up of West End Garden on April 3. Youth learned how to weed and plant seeds at the event.

In a corner of Perry Park, Evanston residents gather to pull out weeds and plant new seeds at West End Garden. But beyond the soil, something else is growing: a community grounded in abolition.

Master Gardener Tiffany Christian said abolition involves tearing down prisons and getting rid of policing, but it also extends to making land and food accessible.

We want to make sure that people live happy, healthy and safe lives, she said. Sometimes people think of these issues as very separate, but they address the whole person.

Organizers of the abolitionist collective Evanston Fight for Black Lives and edible garden group Evanston Grows said they formed West End Garden last May. As the garden approaches its one-year anniversary this spring, organizers said theyre continuing to reimagine gardening as an act of liberation. They said they focus on centering Black residents and their experiences with the environment.

During the winter, organizers created a book club to read about agricultural resistance and Black freedom. Christian said she hopes the garden itself can also serve as a place of healing for Black residents.

Land was the site of Black peoples oppression through enslavement, but it also was a site where they could take refuge because gardening is a part of living, she said. The ability to grow your own food, be outside and get to know the place you live is very liberatory.

Since the gardens opening, organizers said theyve harvested 300 pounds of produce a number theyre hoping to beat this year. On April 23, the garden will host a Build Day where community members can help construct new soil beds, adding to the current four.

EFBL Organizer and Co-founder of West End Garden Nia Williams said its incredible to see a community spring up around the space.

The main reason why I do this work is being able to form connections, Williams said. We say grounded in abolition, but you cant always be shouting theory to people. You got to actually do what youre preaching.

Providing food is an act of care thats especially important for food-insecure people, Williams said. Located at 1741 Hovland Court in Evanstons 5th ward, the garden is in a census tract where 2041 people about 44% of the tracts population are low-income and must travel at least a half-mile to access a supermarket, according to 2019 data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Of that 44%, nearly two-thirds are Black.

Everything grown in the garden is donated to residents, Williams said. Organizers partner with C&W Foundation, which provides free grocery pick-up for older adults. They also stock EFBL community fridges, providing free fresh produce in four locations across Evanston.

But once weekly harvests begin again, nearby neighbors will get the first pick of food. EFBL came together with Hovland Court residents to establish the garden in the aftermath of neighborhood discussions following a shooting on the street last March. They hoped the park could become a safe zone for neighborhood children.

As organizers resumed in-person gardening early April after their winter hiatus, kids played games in the grass beside them. Neighbors also joined in to help clean up the garden. Fifteen-year-old Nevaeh Ransom said she walked down the street from her Hovland Court home to contribute.

I hope I get to learn more about gardening, she said. I always had the need to just help out and do something.

The garden also attracts youth from Evanston Township High School, which is less than a 10-minute walk away. For ETHS sophomore Gabi Evans, West End Garden is a place for her to practice her dream career: farming. But its also a place where she can care for her community.

Between pulling out weeds, she reflected on what the word abolition means to her.

We need to grasp things at the root, she said, referencing a quote from famous abolitionist Angela Davis. Its our best hope. We need a fresh start.

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If Labor wins the election, he is set to become the next federal treasurer. So who is Jim Chalmers? – The Conversation

Posted: at 4:45 am

This is the second in a two-part series on the major parties Treasury spokespeople. You can read Michelle Grattans profile of Josh Frydenberg here.

Shadow Treasurer Jim Chalmers decided it would be premature to stand for the Labor leadership after Bill Shortens 2019 election defeat. However, he is likely to be a serious candidate if Anthony Albanese loses the 2022 election. At the least, Chalmers has positioned himself to be a very capable senior minister in an Albanese government.

So who is Jim Chalmers?

He grew up in southern Brisbane and Logan City, in his current electorate of Rankin. He feels

part of all I have met there: the local parents and pensioners, cleaners and kitchen hands, businesses and battlers, tradies and truckies.

His mother Carol was a nurse and his father Graham a courier. A favourite school teacher remembers Chalmers as always going to go into politics.

Chalmers subsequent education suggests he was indeed aiming for a political career. He gained a Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Communication from Griffith University, and a PhD in political science from the Australian National University.

Chalmers PhD on Paul Keating studied the sources and constraints of prime ministerial power. He argued Keatings flaws included failing to build a good relationship with the media, and not engaging sufficiently with the concerns and aspirations of voters.

Chalmers had already begun working for the ALP before he completed his PhD. He went on to hold a variety of state and federal government advisory roles, including being former Labor Treasurer Wayne Swans chief of staff.

Chalmers experiences in the Rudd and Gillard governments led to a book, Glory Daze, which defended Labors economic management of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) against critics, particularly the Murdoch press. After the Rudd governments defeat, Chalmers co-authored a book with Mike Quigley on the economic and social policy implications of technological disruption, Changing Jobs: The Fair Go in the New Machine Age.

He is married to Laura Anderson, and they have three children.

Read more: Politics with Michelle Grattan: Jim Chalmers on the budget Labor can't oppose

Chalmers is therefore a somewhat unusual politician, more reflective and intellectual than most. However, he has also established himself as a very capable media performer with excellent communication skills. He is more personable, engaging and better at cutting through than his former boss, Wayne Swan.

But what does he stand for? Chalmers is a member of Labors right faction. In Glory Daze, he defined Labor as standing for intergenerational mobility, aspiration and the Fair Go, while emphasising the importance of sound economic management.

In many respects, those are still Chalmers values. However, there is one key difference. Acceptance of large deficits as a legitimate tool of economic management has grown since COVID-related stimulus spending. Labor increased government debt to fund stimulus packages during the GFC by significantly less than the Coalition has during COVID.

Nonetheless, Rudd and Swan still emphasised the importance of getting back in the black, blaming massively falling government revenues for their failure to do so.

Chalmers now argues it is the quality not quantity of the government spend that is most important. Labors alternative budget should be assessed not on whether its a little bit bigger or a little bit smaller than our opponents but on value for money. He criticises the Morrison government for a history of incompetent expenditure, claiming it wasted billions on French submarines, consultants, unnecessary job keeper payments and electoral pork-barrelling.

He argues the budget deficit is best addressed by ending the Coalitions wasteful spending and rorts, while using government expenditure to increase productivity and grow the economy. Investing in education and training, innovation and developing local business supply chains are central to this agenda. Meanwhile increased funding for childcare and health would have both social and economic benefits.

Chalmers emphasises the need for a future Labor government to work with business. He shares Anthony Albaneses view that Bill Shortens targeting of the big end of town in the last election was a mistake.

Similarly, in line with his previous arguments, Chalmers prioritises encouraging aspiration. Shortens focus on combating increasing class inequality has been replaced by a focus on addressing the cost of living pressures suffered by working families who have experienced increasing prices and declining real wages.

Here, as elsewhere, Chalmers often draws on pre-Shorten Labor strategies. The term working families was widely used by Kevin Rudd in the 2007 election campaign. It can evoke class but is less alienating to business and conservative voters than emphasising economic inequality.

Clearly Chalmers sees the focus on cost of living pressures and aspiration as connecting with voters concerns in a way that he has long argued Labor needs to do.

Meanwhile, the emphasis on working with business is intended to shore up Labors reputation as good economic managers. It reflects a traditional Labor view, strongly reaffirmed by Anthony Albanese, that business and labour have common interests in a healthy, productive economy that generates employment.

Chalmers has repeatedly stressed that Labor is committed to securing an economy and a society stronger after COVID than before. He is attempting to sell a positive message of hope for the 2022 election campaign, while avoiding controversial policies that could unleash Coalition scare campaigns.

However, there are after-effects of the pandemic that may pose major challenges for Labors agenda, especially when combined with the economic fallout of international security issues.

There are good reasons for Labor to tackle wage stagnation and low-paid, precarious work. Nonetheless, Chalmers skates over a potential contradiction in Labors plans to both work closely with business and increase real wages.

Labor argues that it will pursue a Bob Hawke-style consensus with business. However, it conveniently overlooks that Hawkes consensus was reinforced by an Accord process that substituted better government services and benefits for wage rises, eventually leading to real wage cuts.

Read more: Australian politics explainer: the Prices and Incomes Accord

Hawke later admitted that a rationale for the Accord was that employers didnt have to pay as much. Furthermore, even former Labor prime ministers Chifley and Whitlam attempted to restrain real wage increases in times of inflation.

An Albanese Labor government would fund wage rises in aged care. However, many rises would cost the private sector, including in other sectors of predominantly female employment where Chalmers supports substantial real wage increases.

Some far-sighted business people, in highly profitable industries, might accept that wage stagnation has damaged the economy by reducing consumption levels. Nonetheless, pandemic losses, combined with rising supply costs exacerbated by the war in Ukraine, have contributed to many sections of business being even more hesitant to raise their own workers wages now than would usually be the case.

Multiple business leaders and organisations have recently opposed wage rises, or argued for a substantial delay. These range from Restaurant and Catering Australia to the Master Grocers Australia and Timber Merchants Australia.

Meanwhile, the Masters Building Association is mounting a campaign against Labors proposed abolition of the Australian Building and Construction Commission, arguing that it would unleash rogue building unions and risk the economic recovery.

Read more: The story of 'us': there's a great tale Labor could tell about how it would govern - it just needs to start telling it

Widespread business opposition can indeed give rise to perceptions Labor cant manage the economy, with particular implications for voters employed in the private sector. Furthermore, Chalmers praises the opportunities technology provides, including for working from home.

However, increased working from home during the pandemic has also demonstrated that many tasks can be done remotely, thereby exacerbating existing trends towards electronic offshoring to lower wage countries.

Similarly, Labors and Chalmers much vaunted emphasis on education and training, including free TAFE, may no longer be the simple panacea it once was for improving standards of living. As machines become smarter, they replace not just unskilled jobs but many skilled ones as well.

In short, there can be downsides to the benefits technology can bring that Chalmers has arguably underestimated both in recent statements and in his co-authored book on jobs in the Machine Age.

There are also other potential problems with Labors heavy reliance on education and training. Albaneses recent statement that Labors historic task is to move more people into the middle-class gels with Chalmers long-term focus on intergenerational mobility and aspiration.

While it is excellent to provide greater access to skills, training and equal opportunities, what about the traditional working class?

COVID provides lessons here too. There is some truth in the aphorism that during the pandemic the educated middle class often stayed safely working from home while members of the working class brought them things and kept essential services running.

Yet Labor rhetoric about aspiration all too often suggests a major solution to inequality lies in people leaving the working class. Consequently, what attracts aspirationals, risks leaving some traditional supporters feeling alienated and unappreciated.

Labor will also face a host of other economic and social challenges. Ruling out increasing taxes other than on multinationals will still leave major government revenue losses resulting from Howard and Morrison government tax cuts. Increasing revenues from commodities trade with China has temporarily helped the budget bottom line.

However, security concerns and declining trust have resulted in a decoupling of the Australian and Chinese economies. This is likely to worsen as China searches for other markets, with negative implications for the Australian economy.

Admittedly, Chalmers would find it difficult to acknowledge such complex challenges during a small-target election campaign that focuses on promising a positive future. And he may be willing to address at least some future challenges in interesting ways if Labor wins office.

His book Changing Jobs includes a long list of new policy proposals for dealing with the Machine Age. For example, Chalmers and Quigley argue a robot tax is worthy of careful consideration. An opinion piece co-authored with Andrew Charlton (an architect of Kevin Rudds stimulus policies since parachuted in as Labor candidate for Paramatta) argues for the possibility of linking the tax and transfer system to ensure a minimum basic income for those who need it.

A robot tax would encounter major business opposition and is ruled out in the near term by Chalmers rejection of new taxes. But Chalmers recently reaffirmed that a minimum basic income for those who need it would be among the sorts of issues that a Labor government would look at given medium and longer term agendas.

In short, Chalmers may turn out to be a far more innovative politician than his current cautious election rhetoric suggests. Meanwhile, he continues to affirm that Labor governments have historically been better economic managers than the Coalition.

Nonetheless, whoever wins government will face major economic and social challenges.

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If Labor wins the election, he is set to become the next federal treasurer. So who is Jim Chalmers? - The Conversation

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JT reflects on time in prison – REVOLT

Posted: at 4:45 am

JT is reflecting on one of the darkest times of her life. During her appearance on the Abolition X podcast, the rapper talked to Richie Resheda, Indigo Mateo and Vic Mensa about her time in prison and the ways shes grown since being in the pen.

I feel like I got better. Going to prison and coming out gave me more edge in my music when I rap and in my voice. It did put a lot of fear in me too. It put a lot of anxiety in me. It changed me completely, JT explained. My whole life, I have always been painted as a rebellious person and to the point where I started to believe it. If you always tell me that Im the problem, Im going to believe that Im the problem, so now that Im the problem, Im going to be the problem.

JT spent over a year in a Florida prison on credit card fraud charges before being released in 2019. While in jail, she said she felt disconnected from the outside world but received some encouragement from a fellow inmate. Nowadays, shes back at work at City Girls partner, Yung Miami, putting on for the women in rap.

With experiences in jail and on the Coachella stage, JT believes that Black people arent celebrated or allowed to be proud of their highest points. People are more in-tuned with people who are down and out, than people who are up, she said on the podcast. They dont know how to celebrate Black people when they are up.

They are only relatable to Black people when they are down, in fucked up situations, she went on. As soon as you get your first sense of confidence, they like, Who the fuck you think you are?

Listen to JTs full interview below.

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JT reflects on time in prison - REVOLT

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