ReportWire

Tag: advocacy

  • Tarrant residents form their own court to deal with commissioners’ reduced schedule

    [ad_1]

    Alex Montalvo began the inaugural People’s Commissioners Court meeting on Oct. 21, 2025 with an overview of the evening agenda before opening up the floor for public comment.

    Alex Montalvo began the inaugural People’s Commissioners Court meeting on Oct. 21, 2025 with an overview of the evening agenda before opening up the floor for public comment.

    rroyster@star-telegram.com

    In response to the Tarrant County Commissioners Court deciding to only meet once a month, local residents decided to start their own version of commissioners court “where the voices of the people will be privileged,” according to an Instagram post.

    The inaugural People’s Commissioners Court was hosted on Tuesday evening at Blanc Co-Work & Studios by Tarrant4Change, an advocacy organization, and co-founder Alex Montalvo. About 30 people came to take part. Many of those were familiar faces from the county commissioners meetings, but there were new faces as well.

    Much of the meeting was used as a listening session through public comment and small groups to find out how it can best serve the participants. Attendees were given 3 minutes to speak, same as in the commissioners court, and primarily spoke about jail deaths and the freedom of speech being eroded.

    Montalvo said the meeting will be recurring on the third Tuesday of each month — a week after the county commissioners have their meeting — and always at 6 p.m., with a potluck. This week’s offerings included a fan-favorite frito pie, tortilla soup, Hawaiian roll sandwiches and an array of desserts.

    People’s Commissioners Court attendee Nydia Cardenas notified the public commenters how much time was left for them to speak in their allotted three minutes.
    People’s Commissioners Court attendee Nydia Cardenas notified the public commenters how much time was left for them to speak in their allotted three minutes. Rachel Royster rroyster@star-telegram.com

    Among the crowd was Commissioner Alisa Simmons, a Democrat from Arlington, and two of her staff members. Jamal Williams, the chief of Commissioner Roderick Miles’s staff, was also present.

    Williams said People’s Commissioners Court gives the citizens a place to formalize their ideas and solutions to county issues that they can then present to the commissioners for action.

    “My linear mind wants to put this in a box and structure it, but I thought Dr. (Harriet) Harral made a really good point earlier today: It’s about the people, and allowing the people to lead the effort, and seeing what this looked like and seeing where it goes,” Williams said.

    Commissioner Alisa Simmons sat alongside the other People’s Commissioners Court attendees to hear what residents wanted to see the group’s monthly meetings to serve as.
    Commissioner Alisa Simmons sat alongside the other People’s Commissioners Court attendees to hear what residents wanted to see the group’s monthly meetings to serve as. Rachel Royster rroyster@star-telegram.com

    After the meeting, Simmons said the fact that the citizens feel the need to create their own version of the commissioners court tells her that they are not being properly served by the people in charge.

    “We’ve disrespected them so much that they’ve had to pivot and come up with new strategy for getting their concerns heard and addressed,” Simmons said. “And I think the People’s Commissioners Court is their effort to strategize differently and become more cohesive, so that when they do show up at commissioners once a month, their presentations are titled, their messages are communicated.”

    Simmons said she will be receptive to the ideas the People’s Commissioners Court brings her, whether it be putting something on the agenda for more information or a possible solution to an issue at the county.

    Through small group brainstorming, the People’s Commissioners Court heard from attendees who said they would like to see the meetings be a place for delving deeper into county issues, breaking down what all is on the agendas and coordinating what they will speak out about in the county’s public comment section.

    The People's Commissioners Court attendees broke up into small groups to discuss what they would like the monthly meetings to serve as.
    The People’s Commissioners Court attendees broke up into small groups to discuss what they would like the monthly meetings to serve as. Rachel Royster rroyster@star-telegram.com

    Zoe Wilkerson, who uses they/them pronouns, said their full-time jobs means attending the 10 a.m. commissioners court meeting isn’t possible without taking time off. Getting to the 6 p.m. People’s Commissioners Court meeting on the third Tuesday of each month is much more doable for them.

    “This is an opportunity for me to be involved and figure out those times that it is important for me to take that time off without necessarily having to be constantly on top of what’s happening in the Commissioners Court,” Wilkerson said. “What’s happening is important, but it also can be exhausting for those of us that are doing a million other things.”

    Joe Palmer, who is a regular at the county commissioners meetings, said he wasn’t surprised to be the only Republican in the group, but he hopes more people from the right or middle will join him next month. He said it would bring more attention to the issues that really do affect everyone in the county, indiscriminate of their party affiliation.

    “If I can bring in people from the right or people from the middle, it would add legitimacy to anything that comes out of this group,” Palmer said, “because, you know, it’s going to be bashed as ‘Oh, it’s just another leftist activist group, and shocker, they’re complaining about stuff we’re doing.’ But if somebody goes to the meeting and says, ‘I’m a Republican voter, I went to that meeting, and here’s a new idea or a new understanding that I have on this agenda item,’ that’s powerful.”

    Related Stories from Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Rachel Royster

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Rachel Royster is a news and government reporter for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, specifically focused on Tarrant County. She joined the newsroom after interning at the Austin American-Statesman, the Waco Tribune-Herald and Capital Community News in DC. A Houston native and Baylor grad, Rachel enjoys traveling, reading and being outside. She welcomes any and all news tips to her email.

    [ad_2]

    Rachel Royster

    Source link

  • Advocate and cancer survivor Lainie Jones dies at 41 in Fort Lauderdale

    [ad_1]

    Early cancer detection advocate Lainie Jones dies at 41.

    Early cancer detection advocate Lainie Jones dies at 41.

    Courtesy of Lainie Jones’ family

    Lainie Jones believed in the power of being early.

    She credited early detection as the reason she survived six different types of cancer—and it became the driving force behind her lifelong advocacy for early detection research and support for others facing cancer. Jones, who suffered from Li-Fraumeni syndrome — a rare genetic condition that made her prone to multiple cancers — shared her journey with her Instagram followers around the world, encouraging them to do self-checks and stay current with doctor visits.

    Her first battle with cancer was when she was only 18 months old. Jones died Oct. 14 at her Fort Lauderdale home with her husband, Joseph “JJ” Jones, by her side at 41.

    Jones’ father, Jeff Schultz, 74, said it was her advocacy that kept her going. “She really enjoyed being a mentor to people who had cancer,” he said, recalling one young woman who called herself one of Jones’ “mutant buddies” at her Thursday funeral in reference to their shared Li-Fraumeni diagnosis.

    Her optimism and candor reached far beyond her social media. Jones thrived in her work with the American Cancer Society, where she worked for the Hope Lodge in New York City, and later joined the organization’s events department and helped lead its gala. “She was infectious,” friend and former colleague at the American Cancer Society, Lorraine Katt, 52, said. “People just wanted to be around her.”

    Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz first met Jones in 2009 at a Sharsheret Walk in Boca Raton and was immediately “enveloped by her light and energy and her ferocity.” The two went on to work together over the years to raise awareness, funds and legislation for cancer research and early detection.

    Lainie Jones and Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz.
    Lainie Jones and Congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz. Courtesy of Lainie Jones’ family.

    “She was all gas, no quit,” Wasserman Schultz said. “She had every reason to really only think about herself, but instead thought about everybody else but herself.”

    Even after enduring brutal treatments for brain cancer, Jones insisted on speaking at Wasserman Schultz’s annual Cancer Survivorship Summit last month. “She was so determined to be able to be at that summit and deliver her message,” the congresswoman said.

    Her last message to her Instagram followers showed her commitment to funding research for cancer treatment.

    “I’ve faced seven primary cancers, gone through multiple treatments, and I’m still thriving,” she wrote in one of her final Instagram posts. “Research doesn’t just matter — it saves lives.”

    ‘Live every day like it’s your first’

    Schultz remembers his daughter as “the center of attention” from the moment she was born. Jones was the middle child in the family, which moved to South Florida when she was around 6.

    After her first battle with cancer when she was a toddler, she was eventually declared cancer-free.

    But by age 24, she was diagnosed again—this time with breast cancer. By then, Jones had been dating JJ Jones, who she met at the Abercrombie & Fitch store in Boca Raton Town Center in 2004, for a few years.

    Doctors told her she’d need a full-time caregiver and might have to move back in with her parents. Unsure what to do, she called JJ Jones. He knew exactly what to do—he packed up his place in Boynton Beach and moved in to care for her.

    Lainie Jones and her husband, Joseph “JJ” Jones.
    Lainie Jones and her husband, Joseph “JJ” Jones. Courtesy of Lainie Jones’ family

    “Most young men would have bolted,” Schultz said of his son-in-law. “He has been with her through anything and everything that she’s gone through.”

    JJ Jones proposed to Jones on April Fool’s Day at her favorite place—Disney World—because she loved how magical and happy it felt. They were married on March 3, 2012.

    Over the years, she would face breast cancer, thyroid cancer, melanoma, sarcoma, adrenal carcinoma, non-smoker’s lung cancer and finally glioblastoma.

    But JJ Jones said that his wife never lived her life in fear and instead chose to “live everyday like it’s your first.”

    Optimism never dimmed

    Jones was also a devoted fashionista, always ahead of the latest trends, her husband said.

    Her sense of style is what Katt, her friend and colleague, first noticed when Jones came in for an interview at the American Cancer Society’s Hope Lodge in New York City in 2015.

    “I remember seeing her walk out of the elevator in a bright pink blazer and thinking, oh boy, who’s this? She’s definitely Florida,” Katt said from New York City.

    Katt, now the lodge’s general manager, said she immediately told her boss, “If we don’t grab her, this will be such a big mistake.” The two quickly became close friends.

    Lainie Jones and Lorraine Katt
    Lainie Jones and Lorraine Katt Courtesy of Lorraine Katt

    Jones thrived at the American Cancer Society, and she later would thrive as an advocate on social media through her Instagram account, @theearlydetective. She encouraged followers to do self-checks and stay up to date with doctor visits. Her husband said she would light up whenever someone messaged to say her posts helped them catch cancer early.

    Katt last spoke to Jones on Sept. 30, to tell her she was dedicating a 180-mile fundraising hike in Spain to her. “You guys are wonderful, and I love you,” Katt said Jones told her during their final conversation.

    Even after multiple diagnoses, her optimism never dimmed. “She would always say, ‘What’s the alternative—be negative? That’s not me,” Katt said.

    Lainie Jones
    Lainie Jones Courtesy of Lainie Jones’ family

    Those who knew and loved Jones knew she would want to be remembered as a warrior, with her husband also describing her as a rainbow—always colorful and bright. Lainie Jones is survived by her husband JJ, her father Jeff and mother Kathy Schultz, and her brothers Brian and Joey Schultz.

    [ad_2]

    Milena Malaver

    Source link

  • Still no new negotiation sessions planned in trash strike

    [ad_1]

    There are still no new negotiation sessions planned as the Teamsters Local 25 strike moves into its 25th day.

    Officials in Peabody, Gloucester, Danvers, Beverly, Canton and Malden also still awaited a decision in their lawsuit against Republic on Thursday afternoon, after filing a joint request for a preliminary injunction last week that would force Republic to carry out all contracted services, if accepted. They appeared in court over the matter Tuesday afternoon.


    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAmx? 2 A@DE E@ :ED @77:4:2= u2463@@< 244@F?E %9FCD52J 27E6C?@@?[ E96 F?:@? 4@?7:C>65 E92E ?@ 4@?EC24E ?68@E:2E:@? D6DD:@?D 92G6 366? D4965F=65 D:?46 #6AF3=:4 $6CG:46D 2?5 E96 %62>DE6CD =2DE >6E H:E9 2 7656C2= >65:2E@C yF=J `g]k^Am

    kAm{@42= @77:4:2=D 7C@> 27764E65 4@>>F?:E:6D 92G6 42==65 @? E96 EH@ A2CE:6D E@ C6EFC? E@ E96 E23=6 E9:D H66<[ 3FE E@ ?@ 2G2:=]k^Am

    kAm#6AF3=:4 =2DE @776C65 E96 %62>DE6CD 2 cbT H286 :?4C62D6 @G6C 7:G6 J62CD E92E H@F=5 :?4=F56 2 `hT C2:D6 😕 E96 7:CDE J62C @7 E96 4@?EC24E]k^Am

    kAmqFE H:E9@FE 2==@H:?8 H@C<6CD E@ E2<6 E96 F?:@?’D 962=E9 :?DFC2?46 @G6C H92E #6AF3=:4 AC@G:56D[ 2D E96 4@>A2?J 92D E2<6? 2 92C5 DE2?5 @? ?@E 28C66:?8 E@ E9:D 492?86 56>2?565 3J E96 F?:@? 5FC:?8 E96 DEC:<6[ :ED @G6C2== A24<286 😀 =24<:?8[ %62>DE6CD {@42= ad !C6D:56?E %@> |2C: D2:5]k^Am

    kAm“s6DA:E6 E96 AC@A@D65 H286 :?4C62D6 #6AF3=:4 4=2:>D :E’D @776C:?8[ E96 @776C DE:== C6>2:?D >@C6 E92? Sc 36=@H E96 E@E2= 64@?@>:4 A24<286 A2:5 E@ 6>A=@J66D 2E r2A:E@= 2?5 $E2C H9@ 5@ E96 D2>6 H@C<[” |2C: D2:5 😕 E96 u2463@@< A@DE]k^Am

    kAm“p?@E96C 72=D6 DE2E6>6?E 😀 #6AF3=:4’D 4=2:> E92E E96 4@>A2?J’D 962=E9 :?DFC2?46 😀 2D 8@@5 2D E96 %62>DE6C A=2?] %@E2==J[ F?ECF6]”k^Am

    kAm%96 %62>DE6CD 962=E9 :?DFC2?46 A=2? AC@G:56D 2 4@>AC696?D:G6 56?E2= A=2?[ =:76 :?DFC2?46[ D9@CE E6C> 5:D23:=:EJ :?DFC2?46[ 962C:?8 2:5D 2?5 C6E:C66 962=E9 :?DFC2?46[ 2== 2E ?@ 4@DE E@ 6>A=@J66D[ |2C: D2:5]k^Am

    kAm#6AF3=:4 92D D2:5 :ED @H? 962=E942C6 A=2? 92D ?@ 565F4E:3=6D @C AC6>:F>D] xE >2:?E2:?D E92E E96 4@>A2?J 92D :?5FDECJ =625:?8 H286D 2?5 C6E:C6>6?E 4@?EC:3FE:@?D[ 4=2:>D E96 F?:@? 4@?E:?F6D E@ 5:DAFE6]k^Am

    kAm“p== H6 H2?E[ 2?5 H:== ?@E DE@A F?E:= H6 86E :E[ 😀 E@ 92G6 E96 #6AF3=:4 6>A=@J66D C6AC6D6?E65 3J {@42= ad 6?;@J E96 D2>6 H286D 2?5 36?67:ED 2D E96 6>A=@J66D C6AC6D6?E65 3J {@42= ad 2E r2A:E@= 2?5 $E2C 4FCC6?E=J 92G6[” |2C: D2:5]k^Am

    kAm“}@ >2EE6C H92E 72=D6 DE2E6>6?ED #6AF3=:4 4@?E:?F6D E@ DA6H[ :E’D C62==J ?@E E92E 4@>A=:42E65] #6AF3=:4 C67FD6D E@ EC62E :ED 6>A=@J66D H:E9 5:8?:EJ 2?5 C6DA64E] %92E’D H92E E9:D DEC:<6 😀 2== 23@FE]”k^Am

    kAmk6>mr@?E24E r2C@=:?6 t?@D 2Ek^6>m k6>mk2 9C67lQ>2:=E@irt?@Do?@CE9@73@DE@?]4@>Qmrt?@Do?@CE9@73@DE@?]4@>k^2mk^6>mk6>m]k^6>mk^Am

    [ad_2]

    By Caroline Enos | Staff Writer

    Source link

  • ‘No Kings’ protests to be held across region Saturday

    [ad_1]

    Numerous North Shore and Cape Ann communities will take part in mass protests planned to be held across the country this Saturday in opposition to President Donald Trump and his administration — the same day the president will host a military parade to celebrate the U.S. Army’s 250th anniversary that also falls on Trump’s birthday.

    For one, Cape Ann Indivisible plans to stage a protest at Stage Fort Park on Hough Avenue this Saturday from noon to 2 p.m. for a “No Kings” rally in Gloucester.


    This page requires Javascript.

    Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

    kAm%9@D6 82E96C65 7@C E96 G@=F?E66C@C82?:K65 C2==J 2C6 D4965F=65 E@ >2C49 7C@> E96 32?5DE2?5 5@H? E@ E96 v=@F46DE6C u:D96C>6?’D (:G6D |6>@C:2= =@42E65 @? $E24J q@F=6G2C5]k^Am

    kAm%96 56D4C:AE:@? @? E96 H63D:E6 @7 E96 v=@F46DE6C C2==J DE2E6D E92E “2 4@C6 AC:?4:A2= 369:?5 2== }@ z:?8D 6G6?ED 😀 2 4@>>:E>6?E E@ ?@?G:@=6?E 24E:@?] (6 6IA64E 2== A2CE:4:A2?ED E@ D66< E@ 566D42=2E6 2?J A@E6?E:2= 4@?7C@?E2E:@? H:E9 E9@D6 H9@ 5:D28C66 H:E9 @FC G2=F6D]”k^Am

    kAm!C@E6DE6CD 24C@DD E96 ?2E:@? A=2? E@ 42== @FE %CF>A’D 5C2DE:4 4FED E@ E96 7656C2= 8@G6C?>6?E[ 2EE24>F?:EJ 2?5[ >@DE ?@E23=J[ 9:D :?4C62D65 ?F>36C @7 xrt C2:5D 😕 {@D p?86=6D 2?5 9:D DF3D6BF6?E 56A=@J>6?E @7 |2C:?6D 2?5 E96 }2E:@?2= vF2C5 E@ {p E@ 492==6?86 2?E:xrt AC@E6DED E92E 92G6 3C@<6? @FE E9:D H66<]k^Am

    kAm}@CE9 $9@C6 x?5:G:D:3=6 H:== 9@=5 C2==:6D E9:D H66< 2D A2CE @7 E96 ?2E:@?H:56 “}@ z:?8D” AC@E6DED[ H9:49 92G6 366? 96=5 😕 5:776C6?E DA@ED 2C@F?5 E96 DE2E6 2?5 }@CE9 $9@C6 @7E6? H66<=J D:?46 %CF>A E@@< @77:46 😕 y2?F2CJ]k^Am

    kAm%9:D H66<6?5[ >@C6 E92? `[g__ AC@E6DED H:== 36 96=5 24C@DD E96 4@F?ECJ 😕 2 96:89E6?65 2EE6>AE E@ 42== @FE E96 24E:@?D @7 %CF>A 2?5 9:D 25>:?:DEC2E:@?]k^Am

    kAm“}@ z:?8D 😀 2 ?2E:@?2= 52J @7 24E:@? 2?5 >2DD >@3:=:K2E:@? 😕 C6DA@?D6 E@ :?4C62D:?8 2FE9@C:E2C:2? 6I46DD6D 2?5 4@CCFAE:@? 7C@> %CF>A 2?5 9:D 2==:6D[” @C82?:K6CD D2:5] “(6’G6 H2E4965 2D E96J’G6 4C24<65 5@H? @? 7C66 DA6649[ 56E2:?65 A6@A=6 7@C E96:C A@=:E:42= G:6HD[ E9C62E6?65 E@ 56A@CE p>6C:42? 4:E:K6?D 2?5 567:65 E96 4@FCED]”k^Am

    kAm%96 7@==@H:?8 =@42= AC@E6DED H:== 36 96=5 $2EFC52J[ yF?6 `cik^Am

    kAm }@ z:?8D[ E96 u=28 q6=@?8D E@ E96 !6@A=6[ v=@F46DE6C[ ?@@?a A]>][ p>6C:42? 7=28 AC@46DD:@? 7C@> $E286 u@CE !2C< E@ E96 u:D96C>6?’D (:G6D |6>@C:2=k^Am

    kAm }@ z:?8D |:55=6E@?[ `_“ 2]>][ u=:?E !F3=:4 {:3C2CJk^Am

    [ad_2]

    By Times Staff

    Source link

  • Ricci Law Firm Attorneys Travel to Washington, D.C. in April to Advocate for Trucking Safety

    [ad_1]

    Recently, attorneys Bonnie Pierce and Meredith Hinton of Ricci Law Firm Injury Lawyers traveled to Washington, D.C. to advocate for safer trucking policies on behalf of clients and families affected by devastating truck crashes. They met with Congressman Greg Murphy, MD, Congressman Don Davis, Congressman Richard Hudson, and Office of US Senator Thom Tillis.

    Bonnie and Meredith are part of the Women’s Caucus of the Academy of Truck Accident Attorneys. The Women’s Caucus partnered with the Institute for Safer Trucking for a day of Advocacy in Washington, DC. Along with attorneys, clients and victims’ families joined in the efforts to advocate at Congress for safer trucking.

    Bonnie has been advocating for safer trucking for over 30 years. Her passion for justice began from personal tragedy. In 1993, her son Terry was killed in a collision with a tractor-trailer just two miles from his coach’s home. That moment changed everything.

    “Terry’s death is the reason I do what I do today,” said Bonnie. “If I can help another family get answers – if I can stop even one more preventable death – then Terry’s life continues to matter in a profound way.”

    Following years of digging, learning the law, and fighting for accountability, Bonnie became an attorney and has since devoted her legal career to representing victims of truck crashes. She brings lived experience to her advocacy – not just legal expertise, but a mother’s resolve to ensure no one else suffers a tragedy like she has.

    Bonnie and Meredith joined forces with victims to have individual meetings with Congressman Greg Murphy, Congressman Richard Hudson, Congressman Don Davis, and Lauren Medlin of Senator Thom Tillis’s office. The meetings were a great opportunity for the victims to share their stories. Also, Bonnie and Meredith were able to discuss potential policy changes, laws, and other ways that Congress can help make America’s roads and highways safer continuing Ricci Law Firm’s commitment to championing change beyond the courtroom.

    “North Carolina alone has seen a 50% increase in fatal truck crashes in the last 10 years,” said Meredith. “We see the heartbreaking results with each family we represent and are advocating for safer trucking to prevent these tragedies from continuing to happen.”

    Ricci Law Firm Injury Lawyers remains a powerful advocate for victims of catastrophic injury across North Carolina, with a particular focus on trucking, motorcycle, and workplace accidents. Their involvement in community safety and national reform efforts is part of their mission to serve both clients and the greater good.

    For more information about Bonnie, Meredith, or Ricci Law Firm’s legal services and community initiatives, visit riccilaw.com.

    Source: Ricci Law Firm

    Related Media

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Coalition for Patient Rights (CPR) Urges Immediate Medical Cannabis Law Reform in Nevada with Broad Support from Integrative Healthcare

    Coalition for Patient Rights (CPR) Urges Immediate Medical Cannabis Law Reform in Nevada with Broad Support from Integrative Healthcare

    [ad_1]

    Compassion Center celebrates and champions the Coalition for Patient Rights (CPR) in leading the charge for urgent reforms in Nevada’s medical cannabis laws, advocating for reduced fees, patient cultivation rights, and an overhaul of outdated DUID laws. Join CPR in protecting patient access, promoting fair legislation, and ensuring the safe use of natural, organic cannabis for qualifying patients across the state. Get involved by attending monthly meetings or supporting CPR’s Washington D.C. delegation.

    The Compassion Center celebrates and champions the Coalition for Patient Rights (CPR) in urgently calling for reform of Nevada’s medical cannabis laws to protect patient access to safe and affordable medicine, and supports CPR’s Washington D.C. delegation in speaking up on behalf of patient rights. In light of growing concerns surrounding the current regulatory framework, the upcoming DEA rescheduling hearing, and the ongoing lack of understanding about medical cannabis, CPR is advocating for legislation that reduces fees and eliminates barriers to access. Our goal is to ensure that patients’ safety and rights are always protected, while providing law enforcement and regulators with clear, actionable guidelines.

    As medical cannabis continues to be recognized as a vital tool in managing a range of chronic conditions, qualifying patients in Nevada face unnecessary financial and procedural hurdles. CPR is urging lawmakers to take swift action to reduce registration fees, and even eliminate the fees altogether for disabled veterans and patients with permanent disabilities, while eliminating the current pre-application qualifications, streamlining patient access, and further eliminating the obstacles that disproportionately affect low-income and vulnerable populations.

    Central to this reform is the protection of a patient’s right to grow their own cannabis at home, free from exposure to harmful chemicals and pesticides, plant growth regulators (additives) and irradiation. CPR supports legislation that allows patients to cultivate natural, organic cannabis without the burden of taxation, ensuring they can safely manage their own treatment without any unnecessary interference, undue burdens on their privacy and liberty, without an excessive cost.

    Additionally, CPR advocates for a complete overhaul of Nevada’s pro se DUID laws, which are currently preventing medical cannabis patients from legally operating vehicles, boats, or aircraft while using cannabis to alleviate their conditions, making pharmaceuticals the only option for a professional or those supporting a family, which we all know can lead to harmful damage from side-effects. The current law is overly broad and does not account for varying levels of patient tolerance or experience, unfairly penalizing patients who rely on cannabis for chronic relief. CPR supports replacing these outdated laws with proven techniques to identify actual impairment, backed by police officer-worn body camera footage to ensure fairness and transparency.

    “With the DEA’s move to hold a hearing on rescheduling cannabis to a CSA schedule III, CPR believes the time has come for Nevada to modernize its approach to medical cannabis and the Driving Under the Influence of Drugs (DUID) laws regarding medical cannabis patients,” said Jeff Krajnak, CPR President and President of Pardon Me, Please. “Our laws should protect the patients who rely on this medicine, not punish them for seeking natural relief. Reforming access, protecting home cultivation, and replacing outdated DUI laws with science-backed measures will ensure that patients can live healthier, safer lives without fear of legal repercussions”, said Mr. Jason Greninger, CPR Director of Legislative Advocacy.”

    CPR is dedicated to collaborating with legislators, healthcare providers, and patient advocates to ensure that Nevada’s medical cannabis laws align with the needs and rights of its patients. We invite you to attend one of our monthly meetings, held on the last Wednesday of each month, or to consider donating to support a delegation that will testify at the upcoming DEA hearing in Washington D.C. on December 2nd, 2024.

    “While we acknowledge the consideration to reschedule cannabis to a Schedule III substance under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) will open up many doors for insurance billing and inpatient integration, we hope to see the plant restored to its original status in the updated U.S. Pharmacopeia as a plant-based medicine under the Generally Recognized As Safe (GRAS) designation” Said Nurse Julie Monteiro, RN, BSK, Senior Vice President of Patient Education. “Additionally, it is critical to prioritize patients, their rights, and the accessibility and affordability of cannabis as the DEA moves forward with rescheduling.” Said James B. Creel, PgM, Board Secretary-Treasurer of Compassion Center, and Patient Advocate representing Coalition For Patient Rights (CPR) as a Research Fellow of Compassion Center’s Center for Incubation & Findings Research (CIFR).

    For more information or to get involved by volunteering or donating to send our delegation to Washington, D.C., please visit CPR at: https://coalitionforpatientrights.org/donate/

    To attend a Monthly CPR Town Hall Meeting, speak on a particular subject or just vent about the high cost of healthcare, please visit: https://coalitionforpatientrights.org/nevada-rsvp/ and a link/ ticket will be sent directly to you so you can attend. It is vital for you to let your voice be heard. We hold both in-person and online meetings regularly to ensure the voice of the people is heard.

    To be part of the next meeting, please email Vicki Higgins, Executive Vice President of Legislative Action at: Vicki.Higgins@MyCPR.us to obtain a personal invitation and directions or a link to the meeting. While some meetings are held in person at any one or more NV libraries, community centers and offices, CPR often conducts online-only meetings to ensure that the entire community has unfiltered access and the ability to get involved in the conversation.

    Contact Information

    James Garvey
    CIFR Director of Collaborative Programs
    james.garvey@compassion-center.org
    844-842-COMPASSION Ext 1

    Vicki Higgins
    Executive Vice President: Legislative Action
    vicki.higgins@mycpr.us
    844-842-8687 Ext 1

    Related Files

    CPR Flyer VOX Populi

    Related Video

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZLqqFFqolQY

    SOURCE: Coalition for Patient Rights

    Source: Compassion Center

    Related Media

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Newsom closes ceremonial roll call at DNC, kick-starts his advocacy for Harris

    Newsom closes ceremonial roll call at DNC, kick-starts his advocacy for Harris

    [ad_1]

    Gov. Gavin Newsom delivered California’s delegate votes for Vice President Kamala Harris as her Democratic presidential nomination was celebrated during a symbolic roll call Tuesday night at the party’s national convention in Chicago.

    Surrounded by a sea of camera crews, reporters, delegates and politicians on the convention floor, the governor described Harris as a “star” that he had the privilege of watching for more than 20 years as she fought for criminal, racial, economic and social justice.

    “I saw that star get even brighter as attorney general of California, as United States senator and as vice president of the United States of America,” Newsom said.

    “Kamala Harris has always done the right thing, a champion for voting rights, civil rights, LGBTQ rights, the rights for women and girls. So Democrats and independents, it’s time for us to do the right thing, and that is to elect Kamala Harris as the next president of the United States of America.”

    Newsom and Harris are longtime friends, political allies and sometimes rivals, and the Harris campaign chose the Democratic governor to deliver California’s 482 delegate votes at the conclusion of the ceremonial roll call. Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, held a campaign rally in Milwaukee and were not present at the convention.

    The brief, but high-energy moment marked Newsom’s only official speaking role at the four-day political event, where Democrats gathered to praise President Biden as the party’s past and lionize Harris as its future.

    Newsom has been a top surrogate for Biden, and his praise of the vice president at the event kick-started his role as an advocate for Harris. Before and after the roll call, the governor spoke with television stations at the request of the Harris campaign.

    Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove (D-Los Angeles) said it made sense for both politicians.

    “It shows that they understand that the Democratic Party is bigger than one person,” Kamlager-Dove said. “It’s about this idea. It’s about this energy. It’s about the values of the party. He was an incredible surrogate for Biden, so it only would make sense for that to translate to him passing the torch, the delegates, the number that puts her over the top, to Kamala Harris.”

    The governor, who struggles with formal speeches because of dyslexia, did not join former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former President Obama, former First Lady Michelle Obama, Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr and dozens of other luminaries who gave or are expected to deliver formal speeches in Chicago.

    Newsom’s aides said the governor was invited to speak on the first day of the convention, but decided to take his children to a school orientation in California on Monday morning before flying to Chicago. Newsom arrived at the convention just before Biden spoke late Monday evening.

    As he exited the floor Monday night after Biden’s speech, Newsom reflected on the address.

    “It’s an emotional speech because it’s the last big speech arguably that he will give at this stage,” Newsom said. “So, it’s sort of a weighty night: optimistic about the future, but it’s also a reflection about a remarkable career and a remarkable person.”

    As he walked from interviews to the floor Tuesday, Newsom said Harris has an opportunity in her convention speech this week “to paint a compelling picture” about an inclusive future, building off Biden’s testament to their past record.

    Newsom’s aides said the governor would continue to be “very active throughout the week at the convention making the case for” Harris and Walz.

    [ad_2]

    Taryn Luna

    Source link

  • Strategos Group Launches National Advocacy Management Practice, Empowers Education Companies to Navigate Dynamic Policy Landscape

    Strategos Group Launches National Advocacy Management Practice, Empowers Education Companies to Navigate Dynamic Policy Landscape

    [ad_1]

    Strategos Group, a leading education management consultancy, announced that Strategos partner and former Florida State Representative Vance Aloupis will spearhead its groundbreaking National Advocacy Management (NAM) practice, which launches today. Because the education landscape is rapidly evolving, NAM offers a tailored, data-driven advocacy campaign to navigate the evolving state policies to ensure companies thrive.  

    “In today’s dynamic policy environment, education companies face unique challenges in managing the state-specific policies that impact the students they serve,” said Adam Giery, Managing Partner at Strategos Group. “The launch of our National Advocacy Management practice embodies our commitment to providing innovative solutions and unmistakable client value that empowers companies to achieve their goals, which benefits students.” 

    Aloupis brings decades of experience and insight from his tenure as a lawyer, a former Florida State Representative, and CEO of the Children’s Movement of Florida.  

    “Our National Advocacy Management practice represents a paradigm shift in education policy advocacy,” Aloupis said. “This is not a referral network. This is a comprehensive, personal approach that empowers our clients to cut through the noise and achieve meaningful results in an increasingly competitive market.” 

    Unlike traditional advocacy approaches that rely on referral networks and plug-and-play lobbyists, NAM prioritizes a dedicated team of professionals who understand each client’s unique needs and the nuances of education policy in every state. By leveraging data-driven insights, NAM matches state and company interests to identify the most suitable advocates for each client’s issues, ensuring alignment with broader national campaigns. 

    In an ever-evolving market, NAM provides the foresight and strategic guidance necessary for education solutions to navigate new market niches and adapt to changing landscapes. With its unparalleled expertise and commitment to client success, NAM sets a new standard for education policy advocacy, maximizing visibility and access for clients seeking superior solutions. 

    For more information about Strategos Group’s National Advocacy Management practice, visit this page to download a free resource

    About Strategos Group

    Founded in 2011, Strategos Group is a national education management consultancy comprised of former state education commissioners, legislators, White House appointees, school district superintendents, and recognized business leaders advising Fortune 500 companies, nonprofits, startups, philanthropy, and private equity. Strategos operates at the national, state, and local levels with offices in Arkansas, Florida, Idaho, Maryland, Tennessee, Texas, and Washington, D.C. For more information, visit www.strategosgroup.com.  

    Source: Strategos Group

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • How Eva met Francesco: The golden couple at the heart of Europe’s Qatargate scandal

    How Eva met Francesco: The golden couple at the heart of Europe’s Qatargate scandal

    [ad_1]

    Press play to listen to this article

    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    BRUSSELS — Eva Kaili and Francesco Giorgi had left nothing to chance.

    The duo that would later become the most famous — many would say infamous — couple in the European Union capital had been gearing up for this moment for years.

    As Qatar prepared to host the 2022 FIFA World Cup, they were among the Gulf state’s fiercest advocates in Brussels, defending its record on human rights and fending off criticism of its treatment of migrant workers.

    And now, less than a week before the high-profile soccer tournament was to kick off, it was all coming to a head. At a crucial hearing in the European Parliament, Qatar’s Labor Minister Ali bin Samikh Al Marri — aka “the Doctor” — would come in person to plead his case before the chamber’s human rights committee.

    In the preceding days, Kaili, a Greek lawmaker who was then a vice president of the European Parliament, had ramped up her efforts. According to public records, interviews and a cache of investigative files seen by POLITICO, she had flown back and forth to Doha and spent hours pleading and cajoling fellow lawmakers to give Qatar a clean bill of health on human rights.

    At several points, she turned to her partner, Giorgi, for advice. “Who else should I talk to?” she texted him on November 14, according to transcriptions of her WhatsApp messages included in the police investigation files.

    While Kaili worked the phones, Giorgi, an Italian parliamentary assistant, had been putting the finishing touches to the Qatari minister’s speech. In police surveillance photographs taken three days before the hearing, he can be seen poring over the text with his longtime boss, Pier Antonio Panzeri — a former EU lawmaker who Belgian prosecutors would later describe as the mastermind of a sweeping cash-for-influence operation known as “Qatargate.”

    Per their usual working method, the Italian-speaking Panzeri wrote the speech in his native language and then passed it on to Giorgi for translation. With one day to go, Giorgi and Kaili huddled with Al Marri in his suite at the 5-star Steigenberger Wiltcher’s hotel, according to hotel video recordings obtained by the police.

    Finally, it was the big day. As the minister took to the stage on November 14, 2022, Kaili nervously texted her partner again to ask if she should show up in person.

    “Don’t come,” Giorgi replied via WhatsApp. “I’m afraid you will be exposed. To enter with the baby, everyone will notice u.”

    She replied: “I don’t want to be exposed.”

    So she stayed with the couple’s child, while the rest of the key suspects in what would become the Qatargate scandal crowded into the auditorium where Al Marri — the man police would later describe as the leader in his country’s efforts to corrupt the European Parliament — was taking to the stage.

    At a hearing, Ali bin Samikh Al Marri laid out the case for Qatar’s labor reforms and why his country deserved the world’s respect despite reports alleging abuse of migrant laborers | Pierre Albouy/EFE via EPA

    If everything went well and Al Marri came out satisfied with their efforts over many months of lobbying, the Italian former lawmaker stood to make good on a long-standing business relationship he and Giorgi would later tell police was worth more than €4 million.

    And if it failed? Nobody wanted to know.

    As Al Marri spoke, laying out the case for Qatar’s labor reforms and why his country deserved the world’s respect despite reports alleging abuse of migrant laborers, Kaili and her partner of five years WhatsApped back and forth, as one might do while watching a major sporting event from two different locations.

    “So Arabic and speaks without reading,” Giorgi texted.

    A few minutes later, Kaili commented: “He’s losing it a bit.”

    As other lawmakers took to the floor following Al Marri’s speech, she bristled at criticism of Qatar. 

    “Who is this fat,” she texted her partner, referring to one lawmaker, adding an adjective which to her was an insult: “Communist.”

    As Al Marri wrapped up, the Greek lawmaker asked: “Why he didn’t follow the speech.”

    Finally, it was over. 

    Giorgi texted Kaili: “Ela, we did everything we could.”

    For the watch party, a major milestone had been crossed. A senior Qatari representative had been given a chance to address criticism in what could have been a fiercely critical environment. 

    So far, so good. Except what they didn’t know was that Giorgi and Panzeri had been under surveillance by Belgian secret services for months, suspected of taking part in a sweeping cash-for-influence scheme under which Qatar paid to obtain specific legislative outcomes. Their communications, including with Kaili and other suspects, would be scooped up as part of the wiretaps and the subsequent investigations. 

    Eva Kaili maintains her defense of Qatar was part of her job as a representative of the European Union | Julien Warnand/EFE via EPA

    Kaili denies any wrongdoing in a scheme in which police say Panzeri and others accepted money from Qatar, Morocco and Mauritania in exchange for pushing their interests in the European Parliament. Kaili maintains her defense of Qatar was part of her job as a representative of the European Union and that the investigation into her actions breached the parliamentary immunity enjoyed by sitting MEPs. 

    There is no other evidence in the hundreds of pages of wiretapping by the secret services that indicates Kaili directly received money from Qatar or other countries. Giorgi has provided details of the operation to police, but his lawyer has argued his statements were extracted under duress. 

    And yet, as the pro-Qatar operation turned to its next challenges, Belgian investigators who had taken over the probe from the secret service were closing in.

    On the morning of December 9, the trap slammed shut. Kaili, Giorgi, Panzeri and a couple of other suspects were arrested and thrown into jail on charges of corruption, money laundering and participating in a “criminal conspiracy.” Two other members of the European Parliament, Marc Tarabella and Andrea Cozzolino, would also be arrested and charged.

    Police published photographs of bags stuffed full of hundreds of thousands of euros which they had recovered in Panzeri’s flat, at Kaili and Giorgi’s home and in a suitcase wheeled by Kaili’s father — instantly turning their probe into a page one news story for outlets around the Continent.

    * * *

    The shock arrests of one of the highest-ranking members of the European Parliament, her boyfriend and their alleged accomplices smashed open a window onto a murky world of lobbying for foreign governments in the heart of EU democracy.

    The Brussels bubble, as the EU’s policymaking apparatus is known, likes to think of itself as a global paragon of democracy, transparency and respect for human rights. There’s another side of the EU capital, however — an ecosystem of hidden connections and low-grade corruption, of back-scratching politicians and the filter feeders that gravitate toward centers of political power and public largesse. 

    While the Qatargate case has yet to go to court and several of the key players, including Kaili, insist they are innocent of the charges, the scandal has already led to reforms. The European Parliament has introduced changes bolstering transparency, and the creation of an ethics body establishing common standards for EU civil servants is being negotiated.

    The story of Qatargate is also still being written. And nobody better captures the human element of this complex affair — and the cozy, transactional world in which it took place — than Kaili and Giorgi. 

    Start with Kaili: A political celebrity in her native Greece, where she’d gained fame as a TV presenter, at the time of her arrest she was one of Brussels’ most prominent politicians, widely believed to be bound for higher office either within the EU system or back home. She’d recently had her first child with Giorgi, an ambitious parliamentary assistant nine years her junior whose wavy blond hair and dimpled smile were well known in the European Parliament.

    Together, they formed a formidable power couple on the Brussels circuit — as well as a shining example of what Europeans hailing from their respective Mediterranean homelands can achieve in the EU system if they play their cards right.

    And yet, in an instant, it was all over. Both of them were in jail, their reputations in tatters, their infant child outside and in the care of family members. In the space of a single morning, the EU capital’s golden couple had become the most notorious duo in town.

    Pier Antonio Panzeri hired Francesco Giorgi as an intern in 2009 | European Union

    To understand what propelled this sudden plunge, it helps to dial back the clock to the earliest days of their relationship, five years before anyone heard of the so-called Qatargate scandal.

    It was a Monday in early 2017. Giorgi was at work doing a familiar task — interpreting for his language-challenged boss, Pier Antonio Panzeri, at a conference in Parliament.

    The two men went back a long way. Panzeri had been Giorgi’s boss for nearly a decade already, having hired him first as an intern in 2009 and then as a full-blown accredited assistant. The elder Italian was a well-known politician in Parliament — a shrewd operator on the left wing of Italy’s Partito Democratico, a trade union veteran from Milan who turned to international affairs late in his 15-year parliamentary career.

    But he was a man of his generation — only really comfortable speaking in Italian and, according to Giorgi, unable to switch on a computer.

    For all of those things, there was Giorgi. Then aged around 30, he was in a good place professionally and socially. Like thousands of Italians who flock to Brussels every year, he looked to the EU system as a land of opportunity. And the system had served him well. Paid handsomely, he had a front-row seat on his boss’s dealings, which included travel to places like Rabat, Morocco and Doha, Qatar, as well as more mundane tasks.

    But nearly 10 years in, Giorgi was ready for change. And little did he know, the embodiment of that change was about to walk in the door.

    While Kaili and Giorgi had seen each other in the halls of the European Parliament a few times since her election in 2014, according to her interviews with Belgian police, that Monday meeting in Brussels would stick out for them as their first proper encounter.

    The mutual interest must have been powerful because it’s hard to overstate the disparity, in terms of age and political and financial power, that separated Giorgi from Kaili as she walked in, heading a NATO delegation.

    To put it bluntly, Giorgi was a cog in the machine with no political weight. By contrast, Kaili was already a well-established politician in Brussels and very well plugged-in with Greece’s political and business elite. She had barreled her way up through the ranks of the Greek socialist party, PASOK, while still in her twenties, before making the jump to the European Parliament in 2014. In her office, Kaili employed no fewer than three Giorgis.

    And yet the young Italian, who’d grown up sailing in the Mediterranean and skiing in the French Alps, decided to try his luck. According to Kaili’s testimony to police, after this initial encounter, the two of them dined “two or three times.” Giorgi spent the better part of a year trying to woo the Greek lawmaker, but it was tough going as she claimed to be far too busy with her work to carve out time for a serious relationship.

    It was only after about a year, she said, that things became “serious.” Marking the transition from casual dating to partnership, they made a shared commitment: co-investing in an apartment located just behind their shared place of work, the European Parliament. It was Christmas Eve, 2019, according to Giorgi’s statements to police. 

    After Kaili returned to Greece in 2019 to campaign for reelection, Giorgi joined her a few months later. In February 2021, they were joined by a baby girl.

    Eva Kaili returned to Greece in 2019 to campaign for reelection | Menelaos Myrillas/SOOC/AFP via Getty Images

    But that’s where their story departs from the norm. Most wage-earning couples don’t live surrounded by stacks of cash. Most EU bubble couples don’t possess a “go bag” brimming with bank notes, or end up as suspects in sprawling corruption probes.

    Part of the explanation can be found in their link to Panzeri, the Svengali-like third wheel in their relationship, whom Giorgi described initially as a “father figure” and whom Kaili later called a manipulator taking advantage of her boyfriend’s “idealistic” personality.

    Indeed, in his interviews with Belgian investigators, Giorgi traces back the “original sin” of his involvement in Qatargate to a deal he agreed to with Panzeri shortly after becoming his employee in 2009. Under that arrangement, Giorgi allegedly agreed to pay Panzeri back €1,500 per month of his wages in exchange for the privilege of working for him, a relatively common scheme in the Parliament. (As a point of comparison, when the scandal broke, Giorgi was earning some €6,600 per month as an assistant to a different MEP).

    The deal was to prove an introduction to a transactional world in which Panzeri — as a lawmaker and later, as the head of Fight Impunity, a nongovernmental organization he launched after leaving Parliament — had no trouble accepting large sums of cash from foreign governments in exchange for services rendered.

    From 2018, Giorgi and Panzeri dove headlong into a partnership allegedly based on lobbying for Qatar in exchange for big cash payments. According to Giorgi’s statements to police, they agreed on a long-term lobbying agreement worth an estimated €4.5 million and to be split 60/40, with the larger share going to Panzeri.

    Once arrested, Giorgi and Panzeri would butt heads about the precise role of each in the lobbying arrangement. But one of the younger Italian’s key tasks was to pick up cash payments at various places around Brussels, often from total strangers. Once he picked up €300,000 in cash near the Royal Palace from a person driving a black Audi with Dutch license plates. Another time, the drop-off happened in a parking lot near the canal. 

    In total, there were around ten such drop-offs, two or three per year, with the smallest amount around €50,000.

    The alleged quid pro quo was that Giorgi and Panzeri would deliver specific parliamentary and public relations outcomes to their clients, which in addition to Qatar included Morocco and Mauritania. The ever-meticulous Giorgi kept a spreadsheet on his computer on which he documented hundreds of influence activities that the network allegedly carried out between 2018 and 2022.

    It records more than 300 pieces of work, using a network of aides inside parliament whom they called their “soldiers,” according to the files.

    Even as they pressed their clients’ interests, they were also trying to exploit their lack of familiarity with the workings of the bubble, reporting certain actions that, according to Giorgi, they actually had no influence over.

    The scheme, Giorgi later told police, “relied on the ignorance of how parliament works” — on the part of the duo’s clients.

    Panzeri, through his lawyer, declined to comment for this article.

    * * *

    As Giorgi dug deeper into his partnership with Panzeri, his romance with Kaili was expanding into a business partnership.

    While each already had other properties — including Kaili’s two apartments in Athens (which she said were worth a combined €400,000) and one in Brussels (estimated by Kaili at €160,000) and one belonging to Giorgi purchased for €145,000 in Brussels — they were soon eyeing other purchases.

    Eva Kaili and Francesco Giorgi purchased a flat near the European Parliament for €375,000 in 2019 | Leon Neal/Getty Images

    After the Christmas Eve purchase of their flat near the Parliament for €375,000 in 2019, they purchased a plot of land on the Greek island of Paros for €300,000 in 2021 which they planned to develop into four holiday villas and at least one swimming pool, according to files recovered from Giorgi’s computer in a folder called “Business”. Then, in 2022, came the purchase of their second apartment, a penthouse right next to the Parliament, worth €650,000, according to Giorgi’s statements to police. 

    All told, the couple’s joint real estate purchases amounted to more than €1.3 million over a period of two years.

    In between these purchases, there were other expenses: sailing holidays, a Land Rover bought for €56,000 and a fully refurbished kitchen. On several occasions, the couple sought to minimize their outlay by exploiting their insiders’ knowledge of the system.

    According to documents seized at Giorgi’s home, a Qatari diplomat helped him get a discount on the Land Rover by taking advantage of special conditions for diplomatic staff, reducing the sticker price by about €10,000.

    By any normal standards, Kaili and Giorgi were already wealthy based on their income.

    In addition to taking home €6,600 per month as a parliamentary assistant, Giorgi received €1,000 in social benefits for their daughter, €1,800 per month from the rental to the Mauritanian ambassador and — since the envoy never occupied the flat — €1,200 in cash from two women to whom he sublet the flat for a few months. 

    As for Kaili, she earned about €10,000 before taxes plus about €900 in monthly rent from a flat she owned in Brussels.

    All told, the couple was pulling in well over €20,000 per month, an eye-watering amount in a country where the median monthly wage is €3,507 before taxes.

    Yet even these substantial monthly earnings seem not to have covered the mounting costs related to their real estate investments or make the couple feel fully secure. Despite the fact her partner was pulling in more than three times the Belgian median wage, Kaili would tell police during the first interview after her arrest: “I know that Francesco doesn’t have a lot of money because he isn’t able to partake in all of our expenses.”

    What motivated this drive for accumulation? According to a person who knew Kaili professionally and asked not to be named due to fear of retaliation, the answer lies partly in her background growing up without much money in Thessaloniki, Greece. “It feels like she grew up with a lot of deprivations,” the person said. “She wanted to feel that even if she quits politics, she will have a comfortable life.”

    According to a person who knew Kaili professionally, the answer to her drive for accumulation lies partly in her background growing up without much money in Thessaloniki | Sakis Mitrolidis/AFP via Getty Images

    As a result, Kaili tended to be very focused on financial opportunities. “She loved people with power and money. She was always, ‘You know this event is going to have businessmen,’” the person added. “And she always liked to have houses and property stuff, but she was never into luxury stuff.”

    As for Giorgi, the son of a school director and import-export entrepreneur, he grew up in more comfortable circumstances in a town near Milan.

    But as the junior partner in his relationship with Kaili, he may have struggled to keep up financially with a partner who earned more than he did and kept company with wealthy entrepreneurs and crypto bros. 

    “I have never loved luxury. I don’t know why I lost my way,” he told police during his first interview shortly after his arrest. 

    * * *

    In interviews with police, Giorgi admitted to being part of a scheme, with Panzeri, to take hundreds of thousands of euros in cash from foreign governments — admissions his lawyer now says he made under pressure from police who he says threatened to take away his daughter.

    But Kaili always maintained that she had nothing to do with the setup. Not only does she claim ignorance about the ultimate source of much of the money found in her apartment, and on her father; she also told police that she had nothing to do with Panzeri and Giorgi’s deals with foreign governments — an argument that her partner has always backed up, telling police early on that she had nothing to do with the scheme.

    Panzeri, however, says the opposite. He alleges that in the spring of 2019, Kaili was part of a pact struck with Qatar to fund several MEPs’ election campaigns to the tune of €250,000 each. Giorgi and Panzeri both attest that a deal like this took place — but disagree on whether Kaili was involved. 

    In any case, having forged a reputation as a tech policymaker, Kaili’s work as a lawmaker veered suddenly toward the Middle East and the world of human rights, particularly in the Gulf, from 2017 onwards the year she met Giorgi. She traveled to Qatar for the first time later that year, at the invitation of another lawmaker, and made trips — some with Giorgi, some without — in 2020 and 2022.

    In early 2022, just after she became a Parliament vice president, she asked the chamber’s president, Roberta Metsola, to give her files related to the Middle East and human rights. “I hope I didn’t make it difficult for you,” Kaili WhatsApped Metsola. “You gave me everything I love the most!” She was later designated as the vice president who would replace Metsola in her absence on issues related to the Middle East.

    In the days and weeks leading up to the kickoff of the World Cup, Kaili and Giorgi’s work increasingly overlapped on two main files: opposition to a resolution critical of Qatar and a deal Doha was seeking with the EU that would allow its citizens to travel to the bloc without a visa.

    On November 12, two days before Qatar’s labor minister would appear before the European Parliament, she reached out to Metsola, offering her tickets to the tournament in Doha.

    “My dear President!” she wrote to Metsola. “Hope you are well. I have to pass you an invitation for the World Cup, you [sic] or your husband and boys might be interested,” she wrote on WhatsApp. 

    Eva Kaili reached out to European Parliament President Roberta Metsola, offering her tickets to the World Cup in Doha | Sean Gallup/Getty Images

    It’s not clear what, if anything, Kaili asked from Metsola in exchange for the tickets. Throughout her dealings with lawmakers over Qatar, the Greek lawmaker would occasionally delete the messages she had sent. This includes her side of the rest of the conversation with Metsola — except for one text: “The rest I disagree too but I believe they will digest if we get the visa,” she wrote.

    (A spokesperson for the Parliament president said Metsola never accepted any tickets to the World Cup and did not read Kaili’s messages before they were deleted.)

    With the World Cup having started, the next big challenge awaiting Kaili, Giorgi and Panzeri was a plenary session in Strasbourg where rival politicians aimed to criticize Qatar’s human rights record weeks before the World Cup by putting a resolution on the agenda. Once again, they ramped up their lobbying.

    So noticeable was the pro-Qatari line being pushed by Kaili and others affiliated with Panzeri that it started raising eyebrows among their colleagues.

    “There were some very strange opinions being voiced on how we should not criticize Qatar, and we should rather recognize the reforms they were making and so on,” remembered Niels Fuglsang, a Danish MEP from the same S&D group. “I thought it was obvious that our group should criticize this, we are social democrats, we care about workers’ rights and migrants’ rights.”

    For example, on November 21, Kaili pressed José Ramón Bauzá Díaz, a Spanish centrist MEP who ran the Qatari-EU friendship group, over his political faction’s stance on the resolution, poised to slam Qatar’s human rights track record. 

    “So, your group wants to vote in favor of a resolution Against Qatar World Cup,” she WhatsApped to him. He said: “It is crazy.” She went on to press him to take a pro-Qatari stance and reject the resolution. 

    Later that day, in a now-infamous video, Kaili took to the stage during Parliament’s plenary session and sung the praises of Qatar. “I alone said that Qatar is a front-runner in labor rights,” she said. “Still, some here are calling to discriminate them. They bully them and they accuse everyone that talks to them, or engages, of corruption. But still, they take their gas.”

    With a crunch vote on the resolution’s final wording still to take place on November 24, Kaili was still going strong, texting with Abdulaziz bin Ahmed Al Malki, the Gulf country’s envoy to the European Union and NATO.

    During this exchange, the Qatari gave Kaili direct instructions to take action on legislation of interest to Qatar.

    “Hi Iva,” wrote the Qatari in a WhatsApp message on November 24. “My dear my ministry doesn’t want paragraph A about FIFA & Qatar. Please do your best to remove it via voting before 12 noon or during the voting please.”

    Kaili deleted her responses.

    Eva Kaili has challenged the lifting of her immunity in an EPPO investigation at the European Court of Justice | Nicolas Bouvy/EPA via EFE

    But the recipient appeared to be pleased with what she texted, writing back a few hours later: “Thanks excellency” with a hands-clasped-in-prayer emoji.

    The Qatar Embassy in Brussels and the spokesperson’s office in Doha did not respond to requests for comment.

    * * *

    Plainclothes Belgian police arrested Giorgi at 10:42 a.m. on December 9 at his home in Brussels. Earlier, they had picked up Panzeri. According to her statements to police, Kaili did not immediately know what had happened and originally thought Giorgi was involved in a car accident. She was told by police that her partner had been arrested. 

    Having tried and failed to get through by phone to Panzeri and his friends, Kaili set about trying to get rid of the stacks of cash in her apartment.

    She headed to the safe that Giorgi had installed in their apartment and started to shovel stacks of bills into a travel bag. On top of them, she placed baby bottles for her child as well as a mobile phone and a laptop computer. Then she told her father, a civil engineer and sometime political operator who was visiting the family in Brussels, to take the bag and go to a hotel, where her father’s partner and Kaili’s baby were waiting. “I didn’t leave him the choice,” she later told police. “I just said, ‘Take this and go.’” 

    A few hours later, police followed Kaili’s father as he walked to the Sofitel, a short distance from their flat. According to a person familiar with the details of the investigation, bank notes were fluttering out of the bag as he went. Cops stopped Kaili’s father inside the hotel, seized the suitcase and detained him. Then it was Kaili’s turn. In the early afternoon, police detained her and took her to the Prison de Saint-Gilles. 

    The next day, the European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO) announced it was investigating Kaili and another Greek member of Parliament in a probe looking at whether she took kickbacks from her assistant’s salaries as well as cuts of their reimbursements for “fake” work trips. Kaili has challenged the lifting of her immunity in this case at the European Court of Justice.

    As the one-year anniversary of her spectacular downfall has approached, Kaili and her lawyers have done their best to turn the tables on the prosecutors, casting doubt on the evidence gathered against her and the way the investigation was carried out. Since her arrest, and through a four-month incarceration, Kaili has never wavered from her story. Her advocacy for Qatar, she has argued, was just part of her job as a European politician trying to foster ties with a petroleum-rich country in a region of critical importance to the EU.

    Kaili’s lawyers have argued that the testimony provided by Panzeri, who has struck a deal with investigators and confessed in detail, cannot be trusted. Giorgi’s lawyer, Pierre Monville, has maintained his client’s statements were made under duress. “Whatever Giorgi has declared or written during his detention was under extreme pressure and preoccupation regarding the fact that his daughter was left without her parents,” he said.

    Kaili’s lawyers have also noted that police kept Panzeri and Giorgi in the same cell in the days after their detention, giving them a chance to coordinate their stories. Kaili’s lawyers argue she was subjected to illegal surveillance, arbitrary detention and what amounts to “torture” while in jail.

    The Qatargate suspects won a major victory last summer when the lead investigator, Michel Claise, stepped down over conflict-of-interest concerns after it was revealed that his son was in business with the son of an MEP who was close to Panzeri but hasn’t been arrested or charged. 

    Then, in September, Kaili played the ace up her sleeve, throwing the entire investigation in doubt with a legal challenge arguing that the evidence against her should be ruled inadmissible because it was gathered before the European Parliament voted to lift the immunity she enjoyed as a lawmaker. 

    The Qatargate suspects won a major victory last summer when the lead investigator, Michel Claise, stepped down over conflict-of-interest concerns | BELPRESS

    Prosecutors retort that such a step wasn’t needed because Kaili had been caught red-handed by her decision to send her father out with a suitcase full of cash, but the case has been delayed pending a decision on her challenge by an appeals court expected in the middle of next year.  

    “We’re exploring uncharted legal territory here,” said a person familiar with the case, who requested anonymity as they were not allowed to speak on the record. In the meantime, Kaili is back in Parliament, giving interviews to international media and losing few opportunities to make the case for her innocence to her fellow lawmakers.

    Giorgi and Kaili are, by all accounts, living together again. One of her lawyers says they’ve been given dispensation to do so, despite the fact that they are suspects in the same case. 

    Kaili and Giorgi declined to comment for this article, but they clearly haven’t given up the fight. Giorgi’s WhatsApp status is “FORTITUDINE VINCIMUS” — through endurance, we conquer. 

    Kaili’s profile pic on the app features the famous quote often wrongly attributed to Mahatma Gandhi:

    “First they ignore you.

    Then they laugh at you.

    Then they fight you.

    Then you win.”

    [ad_2]

    Nicholas Vinocur, Elisa Braun, Eddy Wax and Gian Volpicelli

    Source link

  • Relay Resources Announces the Appointment of Dr. Lakshmi Balasubramanian to the Board of Directors

    Relay Resources Announces the Appointment of Dr. Lakshmi Balasubramanian to the Board of Directors

    [ad_1]

    Balasubramanian will bring her expertise in disability inclusion and universal design to one of the largest disability employers in the Pacific Northwest

    Dr. Lakshmi Balasubramanian, a lecturer and senior researcher in the field of special education at Stanford, joins the Board of Directors at Relay Resources. Balasubramanian, who describes herself as partially blind, will use her expertise in universal design learning (UDL) and her personal lived experiences in being disabled to support Relay Resources’ mission and growth objectives.

    Balasubramanian completed her Ph.D. in Special Education at the joint program with the University of California, Berkeley, and San Francisco State University in May 2021. Her research examined facilitators and barriers to inclusion related to access, meaningful participation, and creation and provision of support for students with diverse disabilities. By scrutinizing the ableist and disablist confines of existing system-level processes and programmatic structures, her dissertation affirms that inclusion and receiving education in the least restrictive environment is a civil right for students with disabilities. 

    Dr. Jennifer Camota Luebke, President and CEO of Relay Resources, welcomed Balasubramanian by saying, “I am so grateful that Lakshmi has joined our Board. Her depth of experience in evidence-based universal design practices will help us renovate our systems and practices to broaden our support for people with disabilities. Her insights will help us enhance the quality of support we provide all our employees with and without disabilities.”

    Balasubramanian is a 2023 Walter J. Gores Award recipient, Stanford University’s highest award for excellence in teaching, for her work in inclusive education with the Stanford Teacher Education Program, her support for students, and helping to change perceptions of students with disabilities. She is a member of the core team at Stanford conceptualizing a postsecondary education program and designing career pathways as part of vocational training for students with intellectual and developmental disabilities.

    Prior to Stanford, Balasubramanian worked as a public school special education teacher and inclusion specialist for 14 years, spearheading the design and implementation of inclusive education programs for grades K-12. She worked as an international facilitator on topics related to inclusive education and Universal Design for Learning. Balasubramanian is an associated faculty of the Stanford Down Syndrome Research Center, on the educational advisory group of REEL2e, and on the University of Southern California Public Health Consortium Down Syndrome Task Force. 

    “The entire team at Relay has already demonstrated how this organization has been able to achieve so much in the last 70 years,” said Balasubramanian. “Their mission to help people with disabilities find meaningful work is the continuation of the educational work I’ve done throughout my career. It will be exciting to marry education and work to create truly inclusive lives that help both the disability community and Relay’s customers.”

    Relay Resources creates meaningful work for people with disabilities through janitorial, landscaping, document and supply chain solutions. Get involved by visiting relayresources.org or contact us directly at info@relayresources.org.

    Source: Relay Resources

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Relay Resources Appoints Dr. Jennifer Camota Luebke as President and Chief Executive Officer

    Relay Resources Appoints Dr. Jennifer Camota Luebke as President and Chief Executive Officer

    [ad_1]

    Award-Winning Leader in Disability Justice Joins One of the Largest Disability Employers in the Pacific Northwest

    Relay Resources is thrilled to welcome Dr. Jennifer Camota Luebke as its President and Chief Executive Officer.

    Margaret Van Vliet, Relay’s board chair, said, “The board selected Jennifer from an impressive slate of candidates based on her extraordinary background, credentials, and clear commitment to disability justice.

    “During this time of social change and program modernization, we have every confidence that Jennifer will build on Relay’s strengths and carry our mission forward with renewed energy and a fresh perspective.”

    Camota Luebke brings more than 25 years of experience in senior leadership positions leading large accounting operations teams at Fortune 1000 companies such as Gap, Electronic Arts, and Genentech, and in higher education serving as associate dean of external relations and director of the executive MBA program at the University of San Francisco. For the last 10 years, she has simultaneously served on volunteer boards and committees of disability and higher education organizations such as Best Buddies California, All Belong Center for Inclusive Education, and the State of the Art Conference on Postsecondary Education and Individuals with Intellectual Disability.

    Most recently, Camota Luebke was the Senior Vice President and Chief Workforce Inclusion Officer for PRIDE Industries, where she led the company’s workforce inclusion programming strategy and operations to develop competitive, integrated, community-based employment pathways for people with disabilities. She also influenced employment policies that impact people with disabilities by working with federal, state, and local legislative offices, and community advocacy organizations.

    “I am honored by the board’s confidence in me to lead Relay Resources as we advance the mission of cultivating meaningful work for people with disabilities,” Camota Luebke stated. “I look forward to leading a team of dedicated professionals who share a common vision of disability inclusion, justice, and pride in the workplace.

    “I am excited to expand employment opportunities for people with disabilities by growing our business services and workforce training programs and collaborating with organizations to renovate workplace cultures to become disability-inclusive.”

    Camota Luebke is a member of the Board of Trustees for the national United Cerebral Palsy (UCP) organization where she serves on the policy and research committees. She co-founded Ability Revolution, which produces film and media projects that influence the way society views people with disabilities and advocates for students with disabilities and their families. Camota Luebke produced the 2018 award-winning documentary You Can Be BRAVE: Breaking Barriers to Inclusion about her journey as a parent advocating for her son, who has an intellectual disability, to be included in all areas of society.

    Conducting academic research on leadership beliefs and practices that inform disability-inclusive learning communities, Camota Luebke earned a Doctor of Education (Ed.D) with a concentration in organization and leadership from the University of San Francisco, where she also completed her MBA. She received a bachelor’s degree in business administration with a concentration in accounting from California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo.

    In 2022, Camota Luebke was recognized as one of the Most Influential Filipina Women in the World™ (Global FWN 100™) by the Filipina Women’s Network (FWN) and a Top 25 Asian American Pacific Islander (AAPI) Change Maker by the Sacramento Bee. She was also a 2017 Jefferson Award Winner for Public Service (now known as Multiplying Good) for her portfolio of disability research and advocacy work.

    For Camota Luebke, disability inclusion is all in the family. She is married to Christopher Luebke, an intermediate and secondary public school special education teacher and inclusion specialist. Their adult son, a 2023 graduate of the Georgia Institute of Technology from the EXCEL program for students with intellectual disabilities, is employed full time and lives independently.

    Source: Relay Resources

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Why dengue in Europe could spell disaster for the rest of the world 

    Why dengue in Europe could spell disaster for the rest of the world 

    [ad_1]

    Press play to listen to this article

    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    In the early morning of the last day of August, Parisians experienced for the first time a practice normally confined to tropical regions — authorities fumigating the city against the tiger mosquito. The event was a tangible confirmation of what public health stats already showed: Dengue, the deadly mosquito-borne disease, had well and truly arrived in Europe. 

    In 2022, Europe saw more cases of locally acquired dengue than in the whole of the previous decade. The rise marks both a public health threat and a corresponding market opportunity for dengue vaccines and treatments; news that should spur the pharma industry to boost investment into the neglected disease. 

    On the face of it, this shift would appear to benefit not only countries like France but also nations like Bangladesh and the Philippines that have long battled dengue.

    But that assumption could be fatally flawed, experts told POLITICO. 

    People working in the field say the rise of dengue in the West could, in fact, make it harder to get lifesaving drugs to those who need them most, because pharma companies develop tools that are less effective in countries where the dengue burden is the highest or because wealthy nations end up hoarding these medicines and vaccines. 

    “It might look like a good thing — and it is a good thing — that we’re getting more products developed, but does it then create a two-tier system where high-income populations get access to it and then we still have the access gap for low- and middle- income countries?” asked Lindsay Keir, director of the science and policy advisory team at think tank Policy Cures Research.

    Killer invading mosquitoes

    Climate change and migration mean the mosquitoes that transmit dengue, as well as other diseases such as chikungunya and Zika, are setting up shop in Europe. The most recent annual data from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control shows that, in 2022, Europe saw 71 cases of locally acquired dengue: 65 in France and six in Spain.

    While dengue usually results in mild or no symptoms, it can also lead to high fever, severe headache and vomiting. Severe dengue can cause bleeding from the gums, abdominal pain and, in some cases, death.

    So far, the mosquito has mostly been confined to Southern Europe but it’s a worry across the Continent. In Belgium, the national public health research institute Sciensano has even launched an app where members of the public can submit photos of any Asian tiger mosquitos they spot.

    The diseases spread by these mosquitoes have traditionally fallen under the umbrella of neglected tropical diseases, a group of infections that affect mainly low-income countries and struggle to attract research and development investment. But this is changing.

    Policy Cures Research, which publishes an annual report on R&D investment into neglected diseases, removed dengue vaccines from their assessment in 2013. Dengue was no longer seen as an area where there was market failure, due to the emergence of a market that the private sector could tap into. 

    The organization is still tracking dengue drugs and biologics and their 2022 analysis showed a 33 percent increase in funding for research into non-vaccine products compared to the previous year, with industry investment reaching a record high of $28 million. 

    Climate change and migration mean the mosquitoes that transmit dengue, as well as other diseases such as chikungunya and Zika, are setting up shop in Europe | Lukas Schulze/Getty Images

    Sibilia Quilici, executive director of the vaccine maker lobby group Vaccines Europe, said the most recent pipeline review of members found that roughly 10 percent were targeting neglected diseases. There is more R&D happening in this area, said Quilici.

    Across the major drugmakers, J&J is working on a dengue antiviral treatment and MSD has a dengue vaccine in their pipeline, while Sanofi has a second yellow fever jab in development. Two dengue vaccines are already approved in the EU — one from Sanofi and another from Takeda. Moderna recently told POLITICO that it is looking closely at a dengue vaccine candidate and it already has a Zika candidate in the works. 

    For the few, not the many

    But just because there might soon be larger markets for Big Pharma doesn’t mean the products will be suitable for the populations that have been waiting years for these tools. 

    Rachael Crockett, senior policy advocacy manager at the non-profit Drugs for Neglected Diseases initiative (DNDi), said increased pharma investment in a particular disease won’t necessarily lead to products developed that are globally relevant. “Industry will — and governments are also more likely to — focus on prevention,” she said.

    That means tools such as vaccines will be prioritized; but in countries where dengue is endemic, the rainy season completely overburdens their health systems and what they desperately need are treatments, said Crockett.  

    She also said a massive increase in investment without a structure to ensure access to resulting products means “we have absolutely no guarantee that there isn’t going to be hoarding, [that] there isn’t going to be high prices.” Case in point: The U.S. national stockpile of Ebola vaccines, which exists despite there never having been an Ebola outbreak in the country.

    But just because there might soon be larger markets for Big Pharma doesn’t mean the products will be suitable for the populations that have been waiting years for these tools | Noel Celis/AFP via Getty Images

    Underlying many of these fears are the mistakes of the COVID-19 pandemic, which saw countries with less cash and political heft at the back of the queue when it came to vaccines.

    Lisa Goerlitz, head of German charity Deutsche Stiftung Weltbevölkerung (DSW)’s Brussels office, warned if drug development picks up because of a growing market in high-income countries, then accessibility, affordability and other criteria that make it suitable for low resource settings might not be prioritized.

    Vaccines Europe’s Quilici sought to allay these concerns, pointing to the pharma industry’s Berlin Declaration, a proposal to reserve an allocation of real-time production of vaccines in a health crisis. Quilici said this was a “really strong commitment …which comes right from the lessons learnt from COVID-19 and which could definitely overcome the challenges we had during the pandemic, if it is taken seriously.”

    CORRECTION: This article has been updated to correct the spelling of Lisa Goerlitz.

    [ad_2]

    Ashleigh Furlong

    Source link

  • America’s LGBTQIA+ Community Deeply Concerned About Losing Rights, But Optimistic About the Long-Term Future, New Harris Survey Shows

    America’s LGBTQIA+ Community Deeply Concerned About Losing Rights, But Optimistic About the Long-Term Future, New Harris Survey Shows

    [ad_1]

    Study from The Harris Poll Thought Leadership and Futures Practice finds LGBTQIA+ community, especially younger generations, is committed to pushing back against attacks on rights

    With new laws, court verdicts, and political rhetoric on marriage equality, trans athletes, gender-neutral bathrooms, drag queen shows, and other issues, new research from The Harris Poll Thought Leadership and Futures Practice finds a near-unanimous belief in the LGBTQIA+ community that their rights are in jeopardy. But the research also reveals the extraordinary levels of that community’s political activism – and an unexpected optimism about the long-term future of LGBTQIA+ rights in America.

    The study, “Inclusive Insights: LGBTQIA+ & Advocacy,” is based on a custom survey by The Harris Poll conducted online within the United States from May 26 to June 1 among 1,110 LGBTQIA+ adults aged 18 and over. (LGBTQIA+ is an acronym for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer or questioning, intersex, asexual, and other identities.)

    “You might expect that some people within the LGBTQIA+ community are concerned about their rights, given societal trends and recent events,” said Tim Osiecki, Senior Research Manager at The Harris Poll Thought Leadership and Futures Practice. “And indeed, our research shows that the concern is almost universally shared. It also shows that the community – especially younger members from the Gen Z and Millennial generations – is responding with a broad and significant commitment to efforts to preserve those rights and that they ultimately believe the tide will turn.”  

    A chief finding of the study is that the LGBTQIA+ community is deeply concerned about legislation passed or advancing at the state and federal levels. Respondents were almost unanimous (98%) in their concern that one or more existing rights could be taken away from LGBTQIA+ people. 

    Four out of five (81%) agreed with the statement “With hundreds of anti-LGBTQIA+ bills pending legislation in the U.S., I feel very nervous about my rights as an LGBTQIA+ individual.” Even more (85%) agreed that “There are many groups within the LGBTQIA+ community that often get overlooked or picked on by politicians and lawmakers.”

    Respondents’ top concerns: 

    • Protection against discrimination in schools (87%) 
    • Discrimination protection in the workplace (85%) 
    • Right to access housing (84%) 
    • Right to get married (83%)
    • LGBTQIA+ inclusive education (83%)

    However, the community is far from despairing – LGBTQIA+ people are putting time, energy, creativity, money, and votes into defending their rights. More than nine out of 10 (93%) LGBTQIA+ people reported taking some sort of political action other than voting to defend their rights. 

    The study found that the vast majority (84%) of LGBTQIA+ people vote regularly, with 71% voting in federal elections and 67% in local elections – well above typical nationwide marks of about 52% and 12 to 25%, respectively.  

    Over half (58%) donate money, about a third march or protest (39%), attend political events (32%), or write letters (30%) advocating for their rights. More than one in three (37%) said they have considered running for political office – and that percentage jumps to 60% among transgender respondents.

    The study also found that members of younger generations (Gen Z, Millennials) are more likely to engage in activism than older members of the LGBTQIA+ community – in some areas, twice as likely. For example, 34% of younger LGBTQIA+ people have volunteered or worked on a campaign, compared to 19% of their older counterparts; 29% of younger generations belong to organized groups that engage in political efforts, compared to 13% of older generations.

    The study also closely examined specific issues such as the drag queen bans that have received prominent media coverage. Eight out of 10 respondents said they were concerned about those bans (81%) and feared they could “snowball into lawmakers taking away more and more rights” (80%).

    In addition, the study focused on issues faced by subsets of the LGBTQIA+ community, people who identify as BIPOC or transgender.  

    Almost three-quarters (72%) of queer BIPOC (Black, indigenous, people of color) members said they had trouble finding communities and resources that understand them, and about two-thirds (64%) have to “code switch” or change how they communicate to fit in with the two communities. Almost half (48%) said they have had to relocate to avoid hostile laws or political environments (compared to 40% of queer non-BIPOC members).  

    Possibly reflecting the current political climate, nearly nine out of 10 (87%) trans people agreed with the statement “Our society values humanity in AI and robots more than in trans people.” More than six out of 10 (62%) said they have relocated due to hostile laws or political environments. 

    And yet, even as they hold deep concerns about rhetoric and legislation and devote themselves to political activism to defend their rights, people in the LGBTQIA+ community still hold optimism about the future. A strong majority (84%) agreed with the statement “I am hopeful that things are going to improve on the LGBTQIA+ rights” and about two out of three said that the improvement might be soon, agreeing that “I think it’s likely that things will improve for LGBTQIA+ rights within the next five years.” 

    “It’s clear from this study and our previous work that the country’s LGBTQIA+ community believes that though our society has made progress on these issues, we still need to work to preserve and expand the community’s rights, and that people believe that progress is not only possible but probable,” Osiecki said.

    For more information, please visit The Harris Poll Thought Leadership Practice or subscribe to their newsletter, The Next Big Think, for the latest research.

    About Harris Poll Thought Leadership Practice

    Building on 50+ years of experience pulsing societal opinion, we design research that is credible, creative, and culturally relevant. Our practice drives thought leadership and unearthed trends for today’s biggest brands. We are focused on helping our clients get ahead of what is next.

    About Harris Poll  

    The Harris Poll is one of the longest-running surveys in the U.S., tracking public opinion, motivations, and social sentiment since 1963, and is now part of Harris Insights & Analytics, a global consulting and market research firm that delivers social intelligence for transformational times. We work with clients in three primary areas: building 21st-century corporate reputation, crafting brand strategy and performance tracking, and earning organic media through public relations research. Our mission is to provide insights and guidance to help leaders make the best decisions possible. To learn more, please visit www.theharrispoll.com.

    Source: Harris Poll

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Zelenskyy sends strong signals with choice for Ukraine’s new defense chief

    Zelenskyy sends strong signals with choice for Ukraine’s new defense chief

    [ad_1]

    KYIV ­— Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s choice for the country’s new defense minister sends two clear signals to Ukraine’s allies and adversaries: Kyiv is serious about cleaning up corruption, and steadfast about regaining Crimea from Russian control.

    Rustem Umerov, whom Zelenskyy has put forward to replace Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov, is a Crimean Tatar with deep business and political experience, including chairing Ukraine’s commission monitoring international financial and military aid to the country’s war effort. As head of the State Property Fund since last year, he has revitalized the country’s privatization efforts.

    The defense ministry “needs new approaches,” Zelenskyy said in dismissing Reznikov, whose ministry has been plagued by corruption allegations. Reznikov himself hasn’t been implicated, but the controversy has tainted the ministry.

    Umerov, 41, will become the first Muslim and Crimean Tatar to gain such a high post in the Ukrainian government. In addition to his financial acumen, Umerov’s appointment will mean a deeper integration of the Crimean Tatar community into decision-making in Kyiv. It also clearly indicates Ukraine’s adamant determination to take Crimea back.

    The planned change is the highest-level shake-up in Zelenskyy’s administration since Russia launched its all-out invasion in February 2022. Zelenskyy called on the Ukrainian legislature to approve the decision as soon as possible.

    “The ministry needs new approaches and other formats of interaction with both the military and society at large,” Zelenskyy said late Sunday. “Autumn is a time for strengthening,” he added.

    Umerov, founder of investment company ASTEM and a Ukrainian MP, has been one of the most prominent advocates of Ukraine’s re-occupation of Crimea, illegally annexed by Russia in 2014. In addition to working as a head of the State Property Fund since 2022, he has been actively taking part in international negotiations, including with Russia.

    “He is a strong manager with a strategic vision, who has well-established international connections in the U.S., the European Union, the Arab world, Turkey, and the countries of Central Asia,” said Refat Chubarov, chairman of the Mejlis, the political representative body of the Crimean Tatars in exile.

    “Such a high appointment is a good signal for Crimean Tatars’ integration into Ukrainian government structures, and also a great responsibility for the native community,” Chubarov told POLITICO.

    Umerov’s prospective appointment was praised by anti-corruption advocates, who have been critical of Reznikov for a string of army procurement corruption scandals at the defense ministry.

    “I was pleasantly surprised by Rustem’s role in non-public advocacy of weapons for Ukraine. He often very quietly did the things that had failed in the Defense Ministry during the last year and a half,” Daria Kaleniuk, acting director of the Anti-Corruption Action Center, a Kyiv-based watchdog, said in a statement.

    Kaleniuk also praised Umerov’s performance as the head of the State Property Fund. Kyiv raised record proceeds from selling small state assets in the first quarter of 2023 despite Moscow’s invasion, Umerov said in May. So far this year, “more than 2,000 entrepreneurs got the opportunity for business development,” Umerov said in a report in late August.

    “We saw only positive results in one of the country’s once most corrupt sewers,” Kaleniuk added.

    [ad_2]

    Veronika Melkozerova

    Source link

  • The EU wants to cure your teen’s smartphone addiction 

    The EU wants to cure your teen’s smartphone addiction 

    [ad_1]

    Glazed eyes. One syllable responses. The steady tinkle of beeps and buzzes coming out of a smartphone’s speakers. 

    It’s a familiar scene for parents around the world as they battle with their kids’ internet use. Just ask Věra Jourová: When her 10-year old grandson is in front of a screen “nothing around him exists any longer, not even the granny,” the transparency commissioner told a European Parliament event in June.

    Countries are now taking the first steps to rein in excessive — and potentially harmful — use of big social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok.

    China wants to limit screen time to 40 minutes for children aged under eight, while the U.S. state of Utah has imposed a digital curfew for minors and parental consent to use social media. France has targeted manufacturers, requiring them to install a parental control system that can be activated when their device is turned on.

    The EU has its own sweeping plans. It’s taking bold steps with its Digital Services Act (DSA) that, from the end of this month, will force the biggest online platforms — TikTok, Facebook, Youtube — to open up their systems to scrutiny by the European Commission and prove that they’re doing their best to make sure their products aren’t harming kids.

    The penalty for non-compliance? A hefty fine of up to six percent of companies’ global annual revenue.

    Screen-sick 

    The exact link between social media use and teen mental health is debated. 

    These digital giants make their money from catching your attention and holding on to it as long as possible, raking in advertisers’ dollars in the process. And they’re pros at it: endless scrolling combined with the periodic, but unpredictable, feedback from likes or notifications, dole out hits of stimulation that mimic the effect of slot machines on our brains’ wiring.  

    It’s a craving that’s hard enough for adults to manage (just ask a journalist). The worry is that for vulnerable young people, that pull comes with very real, and negative, consequences: anxiety, depression, body image issues, and poor concentration. 

    Large mental health surveys in the U.S. — where the data is most abundant — have found a noticeable increase over the last 15 years in adolescent unhappiness, a tendency that continued through the pandemic.

    These increases cut across a number of measures: suicidal thoughts, depression, but also more mundanely, difficulties sleeping. This trend is most pronounced among teenage girls. 

    Smartphone use has exploded, with more people getting one at a younger age | Sean Gallup/Getty Images

    At the same time smartphone use has exploded, with more people getting one at a younger age. Social media use, measured as the number of times a given platform is accessed per day, is also way up. 

    There are some big caveats. The trend is most visible in the Anglophone world, although it’s also observable elsewhere in Europe. And there’s a whole range of confounding factors. Waning stigma around mental health might mean that young people are more comfortable describing what they’re going through in surveys. Changing political and socio-economic factors, as well as worries about climate change, almost certainly play a role. 

    Researchers on all sides of the debate agree that technology factors into it, but also that it doesn’t fully explain the trend. They diverge on where to put the emphasis. 

    Luca Braghieri, an assistant professor of economics at Bocconi university in Italy, said he originally thought concerns over Facebook were overblown, but he’s changed his mind after starting to research the topic (and has since deleted his Facebook account). 

    Braghieri and his colleagues combed through U.S. college mental health surveys from 2004-2006, the period when Facebook was first rolled-out in U.S. colleges, and before it was available to the general public. He found that in colleges where Facebook was introduced, students’ mental health dipped in a way not seen in universities where it hadn’t yet launched.

    Braghieri said the comparison with colleges where Facebook hadn’t yet arrived allowed the researchers to rule out unidentified other variables that might have been simultaneous. 

    Faced with mounting pressure in the last years, platforms like Instagram, YouTube and TikTok have introduced various tools to assuage concerns, including parental control | Staff/AFP via Getty Images

    Elia Abi-Jaoude, a psychiatrist and academic at the University of Toronto, said he observed the effect first-hand when working at a child and adolescent psychiatric in-patient unit starting in 2015.

    “I was basically on the front lines, witnessing the dramatic rise in struggles among adolescents,” said Abi-Jaoude, who has also published research on the topic. He noticed “all sorts of affective complaints, depression, anxiety — but for them to make it to the inpatient setting — we’re talking suicidality. And it was very striking to see.”  

    His biggest concern? Sleep deprivation — and the mood swings and worse school performance that accompany it. “I think a lot of our population is chronically sleep deprived,” said Abi-Jaoude, pointing the finger at smartphones and social media use.

    The flipside    

    New technologies have gotten caught up in panics before. Looking back, they now seem quaint, even funny.   

    “In the 1940s, there were concerns about radio addiction and children. In the 1960s it was television addiction. Now we have phone addiction. So I think the question is: Is now different? And if so, how?” asks Amy Orben, from the U.K. Medical Research Council’s Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit at the University of Cambridge.  

    She doesn’t dismiss the possible harms of social media, but she argues for a nuanced approach. That means honing in on the specific people who are most vulnerable, and the specific platforms and features that might be most risky. 

    Another major ask: more data.  

    There’s a “real disconnect” between the general belief and the actual evidence that social media use is harmful, said Orben, who went on to praise the new EU’s rules. Among its various provisions, the new EU rules will allow researchers for the first time to get their hands on data usually buried deep inside company servers.   

    Orben said that while much attention has gone into the negative effects of digital media use at the expense of positive examples, research she conducted into adolescent well-being during pandemic lockdowns, for example, showed that teens with access to laptops were happier than those without. 

    But when it comes to risk of harm to kids, Europe has taken a precautionary approach.

    “Not all kids will experience harm due to these risks from smartphones and social media use,” Patti Valkenburg, head of the Center for Research on Children, Adolescents and the Media at the University of Amsterdam, told a Commission event in June. “But for minors, we need to adopt the precautionary principle. The fact that harm can be caused should be enough to justify measures to prevent or mitigate potential risk.”

    Parental controls  

    Faced with mounting pressure in the past years, platforms like Instagram, YouTube and TikTok have introduced various tools to assuage concerns, including parental control. Since 2021, YouTube and Instagram send teenagers using their platform reminders to take breaks. TikTok in March announced minors have to enter a passcode after an hour on the app to continue watching videos. 

    Very large online platforms will also be banned from tracking kids’ online activity to show them personalized advertisements | Lionel Bonaventure/AFP via Getty Images

    But the social media companies will soon have to go further.  

    By the end of August, very large online platforms with over 45 million users in the European Union — including companies like Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, Pinterest and YouTube — will have to comply with the longest list of rules. 

    They will have to hand in to the Digital Services Act watchdog — the European Commission — their first yearly assessment of the major impact of their design, algorithms, advertising and terms of services on a range of societal issues such as the protection of minors and mental wellbeing. They will then have to propose and implement concrete measures under the scrutiny of an audit company, the Commission and vetted researchers.

    Measures could include ensuring that algorithms don’t recommend videos about dieting to teenage girls or turning off autoplay by default so that minors don’t stay hooked watching content.

    Platforms will also be banned from tracking kids’ online activity to show them personalized advertisements. Manipulative designs such as never-ending timelines to glue users to platforms have been connected to addictive behavior, and will be off limits for tech companies. 

    Brussels is also working with tech companies, industry associations and children’s groups on rules for how to design platforms in a way that protects minors. The Code of Conduct on Age Appropriate Design planned for 2024 would then provide an explicit list of measures that the European Commission wants to see large social media companies carry out to comply with the new law.

    Yet, the EU’s new content law won’t be the magic wand parents might be looking for. The content rulebook doesn’t apply to popular entertainment like online games, messaging apps nor the digital devices themselves. 

    It remains unclear how the European Commission will potentially investigate and go after social media companies if they consider that they have failed to limit their platforms’ negative consequences for mental well-being. External auditors and researchers could also face obstacles to wade through troves of data and lines of code to find smoking guns and challenge tech companies’ claims. 

    How much companies are willing to run up against their business model in the service of their users’ mental health is also an open question, said John Albert, a policy expert at the tech-focused advocacy group AlgorithmWatch. Tech giants have made a serious effort at fighting the most egregious abuses, like cyber-bullying, or eating disorders, Albert said. And the level of transparency made possible by the new rules was unprecedented.

    “But when it comes to much broader questions about mental health and how these algorithmic recommender systems interact with users and affect them over time… I don’t know what we should expect them to change,” he explained. The back-and-forth vetting process is likely going to be drawn out as the Commission comes to grips with the complex platforms.

    “In the short term, at least, I would expect some kind of business as usual.”

    [ad_2]

    Carlo Martuscelli and Clothilde Goujard

    Source link

  • Shock, anger, betrayal: Inside the Qatargate-hit Socialist group

    Shock, anger, betrayal: Inside the Qatargate-hit Socialist group

    [ad_1]

    Press play to listen to this article

    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    BRUSSELS — The European Parliament’s Socialists are warily eyeing their colleagues and assistants, wondering which putative ally might turn out to be a liar as new details emerge in a growing cash-for-favors scandal.

    Long-simmering geographic divisions within the group, Parliament’s second largest, are fueling mistrust and discord. Members are at odds over how forcefully to defend their implicated colleagues. Others are nursing grievances over how the group’s leadership handled months of concerns about their lawmaker, Eva Kaili, who’s now detained pending trial.

    Publicly, the group has shown remarkable solidarity during the so-called Qatargate scandal, which involves allegations that foreign countries bribed EU lawmakers. Socialists and Democrats (S&D) chief Iratxe García has mustered a unified response, producing an ambitious ethics reform proposal and launching an internal investigation without drawing an open challenge to her leadership. Yet as the Parliament’s center left ponders how to win back the public’s trust ahead of next year’s EU election, the trust among the members themselves is fraying.

    “I feel betrayed by these people that are colleagues of our political group,” said Mohammed Chahim, a Dutch S&D MEP. “As far as I am concerned, we are all political victims, and I hope we can get the truth out in the open.”

    S&D MEPs are grappling not only with a sense of personal betrayal but also a fear that the links to corruption could squash otherwise promising electoral prospects. 

    Social democrats were looking forward to running in 2024 on the bread-and-butter issues at the top of minds around the bloc amid persistent inflation, buoyed by Olaf Scholz’s rise in Germany and the Continent-wide popularity of Finland’s Sanna Marin. Now, the group’s appeal to voters’ pocketbooks could be overshadowed by suitcases filled with cash.

    “We were completely unaware of what was going on,” said García, vowing that the group’s internal inquiry will figure out what went wrong. “We have to let the people responsible [for the investigation] work.”

    The ‘darkest plenary’

    Shock, anger and betrayal reverberated through the 145-strong caucus in early December last year when Belgian police began arresting senior S&D figures, chief among them a former Italian MEP Pier Antonio Panzeri and Eva Kaili, a rising star from Greece who had barely completed a year as one of Parliament’s 14 vice presidents.

    “The Qatargate revelations came as a terrible shock to S&D staff and MEPs,” an S&D spokesperson said. “Many felt betrayed, their trust abused and broken. Anyone who has ever become a victim of criminals will understand it takes time to heal from such an experience.”

    When the S&D gathered for a Parliament session in Strasbourg days after the first arrests, few members took it harder than the group’s president, García, who at one point broke down in tears, according to three people present.

    “We are all not just political machines, but also human beings,” said German MEP Gabriele Bischoff, an S&D vice chair in her first term. “To adapt to such a crisis, and to deal with it, it’s not easy.”

    “I mean, also, you trusted some of these people,” she said.

    An Italian court ruled that the daughter of former MEP Pier Antonio Panzeri can be extradited to Belgium | European Union

    In Strasbourg the group showed zero appetite to watch the judicial process play out, backing a move to remove Kaili from her vice presidency role. (She has, through a lawyer, consistently maintained her innocence.) 

    The group’s leadership also pressured MEPs who in any way were connected to the issues or people in the scandal to step back from legislative work, even if they faced no charges.

    “It was of course the darkest plenary we’ve had,” said Andreas Schieder, an Austrian S&D MEP who holds a top role on the committee charged with battling foreign interference post Qatargate. “But we took the right decisions quickly.”

    The S&D hierarchy swiftly suspended Kaili from the group in December and meted out the same treatment to two other MEPs who would later be drawn into the probe.

    But now many S&D MEPs are asking themselves how it was possible that a cluster of people exerted such influence across the Socialist group, how Kaili rose so quickly to the vice presidency and how so much allegedly corrupt behavior went apparently unnoticed for years.

    Like family

    The deep interpersonal connections between those accused and the rest of the group were part of what made it all so searing for the S&D tribe. 

    Belgian authorities’ initial sweep nabbed not only Panzeri and Kaili but also Kaili’s partner, a longtime parliamentary assistant named Francesco Giorgi, who had spent years working for Panzeri. Suddenly every former Panzeri assistant still in Parliament was under suspicion. Panzeri later struck a plea deal, offering to dish on whom he claims to have bribed in exchange for a reduced sentence.

    Maria Arena, who succeeded Panzeri as head of the Parliament’s human rights panel in 2019, also found herself under heavy scrutiny: Her friendship with her predecessor was so close that she’d been spotted as his plus-one at his assistant’s wedding. Alessandra Moretti, another S&D MEP, has also been linked to the probe, according to legal documents seen by POLITICO.

    The appearance of Laura Ballarin, García’s Cabinet chief, raising a glass with Giorgi and vacationing on a Mediterranean sailboat with Kaili, offered a tabloid-friendly illustration of just how enmeshed the accused were with the group’s top brass.

    “I was the first one to feel shocked, hurt and deeply betrayed when the news came out,” Ballarin told POLITICO. “Yet, evidently, my personal relations did never interfere with my professional role.”

    Making matters worse, some three months later, the scandal has largely remained limited to the S&D. Two more of its members have been swallowed up since the initial round of arrests: Italy’s Andrea Cozzolino and Belgium’s Marc Tarabella — a well-liked figure known for handing out Christmas gifts to Parliament staff as part of a St. Nicholas act. Both were excluded, like Kaili, from the S&D group. They maintain their innocence.

    Whiter than white

    That’s putting pressure on García, who is seen in Brussels as an extension of the power of her close ally, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez. 

    Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez is one of S&D chief Iratxe García most important allies | Ludovic Marin/AFP via Getty Images

    However, she has not always been able to leverage that alliance in Brussels. A prime example is the backroom deal the political groups made to appoint the Parliament’s new secretary-general, Alessandro Chiocchetti, who hails from the center-right European People’s Party. García emerged mostly empty-handed from the negotiations, with the EPP maneuvering around her and The Left group securing an entirely new directorate general.

    Kaili, from a tiny two-person Greek Socialist delegation, would also have never gotten the nod to become vice president in 2022 without García and the Spanish Socialists’ backing.

    Yet when it comes to trying to clean house and reclaim the moral high ground, the Socialist chief has brought people together. “She deserves to be trusted to do this correctly,” said René Repasi, a German S&D lawmaker.

    In the new year, the S&D successfully pushed through the affable, progressive Luxembourgish Marc Angel to replace Kaili, fending off efforts by other left-leaning and far-right groups to take one of the S&D’s seats in the Parliament’s rule-making bureau. In another move designed to steady the ship, the Socialists in February drafted Udo Bullmann, an experienced German MEP who previously led the S&D group, as a safe pair of hands to replace Arena on the human rights subcommittee.

    And in a bid to go on the offensive, the Socialists published a 15-point ethics plan (one-upping the center-right Parliament president’s secret 14-point plan). It requires all S&D MEPs — and their assistants — to disclose their meetings online and pushes for whistleblower protections in the Parliament. Where legally possible, the group pledges to hold its own members to these standards — for example by banning MEPs from paid-for foreign trips — even if the rest of the body doesn’t go as far.

    Those results were hard won, group officials recounted. With members from 26 EU countries, the group had to navigate cultural and geographic divisions on how to handle corruption, exposing north-south fault lines.

    “To do an internal inquiry was not supported in the beginning by all, but we debated it,” said Bischoff, describing daily meetings that stretched all the way to Christmas Eve. 

    The idea of recruiting outside players to conduct an internal investigation was also controversial, she added. Yet in the end, the group announced in mid-January that former MEP Richard Corbett and Silvina Bacigalupo, a law professor and board member of Transparency International Spain, would lead a group-backed inquiry, which has now begun.

    The moves appear to have staved off a challenge to García’s leadership, and so far, attacks from the Socialists’ main rival, the EPP, have been limited. But S&D MEPs say there’s still an air of unease, with some concerned the cleanup hasn’t gone deep enough — while others itch to defend the accused.

    Some party activists quietly question if the response was too fast and furious.

    Arena’s political future is in doubt, for example, even though she’s faced no criminal charges. Following mounting pressure about her ties to Panzeri, culminating with a POLITICO report on her undeclared travel to Qatar, Arena formally resigned from the human rights subcommittee. The group is not defending her, even as some activists mourn the downfall of someone they see as a sincere champion for human rights causes.

    Vocal advocacy for Kaili has also fueled controversy: Italian S&D MEPs drew groans from colleagues when they hawked around a letter about the treatment of Kaili and her daughter, which only garnered 10 signatures.

    “I do not believe it was necessary,” García said of the letter. “[If] I worry about the situation in jails, it has to be for everyone, not for a specific MEP.”

    The letter also did nothing to warm relations between the S&D’s Spanish and Italian delegations, which have been frosty since before the scandal. The S&D spokesperson in a statement rejected the notion that there are tensions along geographical lines: “There’s no divide between North and South, nor East and West, and there’s no tension between the Italian and Spanish delegations.”

    In another camp are MEPs who are looking somewhat suspiciously at their colleagues.

    Repasi, the German S&D member, said he is weary of “colleagues that are seemingly lying into your face” — a specific reference to Tarabella, who vocally denied wrongdoing for weeks, only to have allegations surface that he took around €140,000 in bribes from Panzeri, the detained ex-lawmaker.

    Repasi added: “It makes you more and more wonder if there is anyone else betting on the fact that he or she might not be caught.”

    Jakob Hanke Vela, Karl Mathiesen and Aitor Hernández-Morales contributed reporting.

    [ad_2]

    Eddy Wax and Sarah Wheaton

    Source link

  • Victoria Dennis Releases New Single ‘Booty Pop’

    Victoria Dennis Releases New Single ‘Booty Pop’

    [ad_1]

    Press Release


    Jul 29, 2022

    Reigning out of the city that never sleeps, New York City is the lyrically inclined and talented Victoria Dennis. Singing and dancing her way into hearts, dance floors, and stages with songs like “Miles Away”  “Rooms” and “Out of Your Mind ” she released her new single titled “Booty Pop”. The nineteen-year-old singer, songwriter, drummer, and dancer has always had her eyes and heart set on one thing,  performing and connecting with people on social media platforms liik Tik Tok. When writing “Booty Pop”, Victoria stated she wanted to “push the envelope and create something FUN.”. When this record comes on it gives you this feeling that makes you just want to dance wherever you’re standing. Whether you are at the grocery store, subway station, at work, or driving. 

    Victoria aims to not only entertain her fans but also is big on girl power, confidence, and sexiness while still remaining poise, which are values Victoria gets from her modeling career she started at age 5. When writing this song with her co-writer Shatic Mitchell, the beat gave Victoria this old-school vibe which helped curate these melodies and chorus breakdowns that embodies a classic “Brittney Spears” like aura. Victoria states, “We talk about women, and how sexy it is for a female to be dominant! Women are beautiful, and using our charm and power can lead to desirable things.”.

    Victoria, an advocate for anti-bullying, has always gone by the motto “Take your negative and make it positive” using her music as an escape where she can express herself and her feelings with unlimited creativity. Her writing style oozes vulnerability and gives her listeners something to relate to in all of her songs throughout many phases of their lives; this is what made “Booty Pop” special for the young star. Dennis wants to leave a legacy behind that will always encourage her fans to walk in their destiny and always have fun.
    “Hours and hours of work went into this record across the board with everyone who had hands on it, and I feel so relieved that it’s finally out because it was something out of my comfort zone, but I tried it and believe I might’ve just created one of my favorite songs to date!” Victoria says. Be sure to check out “Booty Pop” on all streaming platforms, and catch this fun, energetic music video. To stay updated on Victoria, you can follow her on Instagram @VictoriaDennisMusic

    For all media/press related inquiries contact: 

    Kameran Bryant

    kameranbryantpr@gmail.com

    Source: Victoria Dennis

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • International Association of Women Recognizes Cherelle Jackson as a 2020-2021 Influencer

    International Association of Women Recognizes Cherelle Jackson as a 2020-2021 Influencer

    [ad_1]

    Cherelle Jackson, Madam President of Black Voices and Allies Leadership Committee, joins networking organization

    Press Release



    updated: Dec 15, 2020

    The International Association of Women (IAW) recognizes Cherelle Jackson as a 2020-2021 Influencer. She is acknowledged as a leader in entrepreneurship. The International Association of Women (IAW) is a global in-person and online networking platform with more than 100 local chapters, International Chapters and 1,000+ in-person and virtual events.

    A long-time social activist, including working with organizations such as SEIU 1021 as Second Secretary of Committee on Political Education, AFRAM African American Solidarity Committee, Women’s Caucus, Black Caucus, CDPAA CAUCUS, Social Economic Justice Committee, Excelsior Action Group, and the Economic Improvement District Association, Cherelle Jackson founded Black Voices and Allies Leadership Committee an organization that provides a platform for black voices, community activists, leaders and allies to come together to discuss social and economic injustices that occur.

    “I created a safe space for individuals to find new solutions to issues that occur and to raise awareness,” Ms. Jackson said. “We took a cohort of members from San Francisco to Washington D.C. to the National Action Networks March on Washington D.C. on Aug. 28, 2020, in response to raising awareness of the victims of police brutality.”

    “I am currently working closely with the DSA, AFRO Socialist as well for public safety reform initiatives and am a member of the Innocence Project to release inmates from prison,” she added.

    As Madame President of the organization, Ms. Jackson works tirelessly to provide a platform for black voices, community activists, leaders and allies. Together, they advocate for policy, law and legislation, provide education and other resources to those who face hardships and injustices. She uses her skills and experience in advocacy, civic planning and leadership, fundraising, event planning, public speaking, community liaison work, membership development and financial management to develop, nurture and grow the organization.

    Also experienced in film production, Ms. Jackson recently edited and produced the production By Whatever Means Necessary through Amazon Prime for the August 28 March on Washington D.C.

    “The most rewarding part of what I do is meeting and interacting with the people I encounter and help every day,” she said. “There are so many people that were hurt in 2020 by the pandemic, and it just feels like it is a time where it’s our civic duty to reach out and help our fellow families, friends and neighbors.”

    In addition to her role at Black Voices and Allies Leadership Committee, Ms. Jackson is also the CEO and Founder of Platinum Rose. “I take great pride in my work – from start to finish –  providing innovative facial products that work for the everyday women. I have developed marketing techniques, funding solutions and unique product designs.” She manages all the day-to-day operations, including budget and inventory, managing community events, social media marketing, pr, and much more.

    Ms. Jackson was recently admitted to the California State Assembly District 17 African American Advisory Committee. Her next goal is to win ADEM 17. “I am currently running for ADEM 17 here in California,” she said. “It is absolutely imperative that black women continue to step up and stand up and make a difference.”

    Education & Accomplishments: Master’s in Political Science Public Policy Public Administration; Bachelor of Arts in Psychology, Concentration in Sociology; recently spoke on the Network Univision at the National Action Networks March on Washington D.C; member of the Innocence Project

    Source: International Association of Professional Women

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • RespectAbility Launches Disability Inclusion Advocacy Training Series in New York City

    RespectAbility Launches Disability Inclusion Advocacy Training Series in New York City

    [ad_1]

    Empowerment project for women and girls with disabilities and their allies features distinguished author Donna Walton, Ed.D.

    Press Release



    updated: Jan 16, 2019

    A new training program aimed at empowering women with disabilities begins this month, bringing the lens of inclusion and equality to New York City’s civic life. RespectAbility, a national disability advocacy organization, will launch the Inclusion Advocacy Training Series in New York City on January 26, 2019, with the first of this monthly, six-part series. The series is made possible by funding from the New York Women’s Foundation and the Coca-Cola Foundation.

    Intersectionality Among Women and Girls with Disabilities and Their Allies showcases author and inclusion expert Dr. Donna Walton, who will address critical issues impacting women and girls with disabilities in New York City. Dr. Walton has made an unprecedented impact in the disability and women of color communities through her leadership and her writing. She has a clear message for her fellow self-advocates and allies.

    “I am more than just one leg. I am a woman. And I am a woman with a disability. Standing forthright in power unapologetically. So, when I show up, I show up authentically. In that space, consistently,” expressed Dr. Walton.

    RespectAbility is dedicated to raising the voices, lives and experiences of New York City’s almost 500,000 women and girls with disabilities. Amidst one of the greatest cities in the world, a stunning 44 percent of New York women with disabilities live below the poverty line. Furthermore, in the city itself, only 29 percent of African American women with disabilities are employed, while only 24 percent of Latina women with disabilities have jobs.

    “To change these outcomes,” Dr. Walton said, “New York women and girls with disabilities need new opportunities to make their voices heard, impact their communities and change the city for the better.”

    Dr. Walton will be addressing a convening that brings together key organizations from across New York City. Collaborating organizations include: CUNY’s Guttman Community College, INCLUDEnyc, Girls for Gender Equity, L.O.V.E. Mentoring, Marlene Meyerson JCC Manhattan, Wheeling Forward, Youth Action Youth Build of East Harlem and the Self-Advocacy Association in NY State (SANYS).

    The six-part series, running January through May, is designed for self-advocates and their allies, nonprofit professionals and community leaders. Five of the series’ trainings focus on various subgroups within the women’s disability community. One training (March 13) is tailored for New York City’s service providers working with women and girls who see the benefit of upskilling to better serve the 20 percent of women and girls with disabilities.

    Critical topics covered in these trainings include disability disclosure, self-advocacy tools and opportunities for civic engagement, as well as professional advice for making organizations and events accessible.

    “We are passionate about bringing intersectionality into our work, and into the nonprofit sector at-large,” said RespectAbility President Jennifer Laszlo Mizrahi. “That is why we are recruiting and training individuals with disabilities to share their knowledge, skills and contacts with funders, providers and organizations throughout New York City.”

    All sessions in RespectAbility’s Inclusion Advocacy Training Series include:

    • Sat, Jan. 26, 2019, 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.: Training for Intersectionality Among Women and Girls with Disabilities and Their Allies
      Location: Guttman Community College, Room 401, 50 West 40th St.
    • Feb. 24, 2019, 1:00 p.m – 5:00 p.m.: Training for Jewish Women with Disabilities and Their Allies
      Location: Marlene Meyerson JCC Manhattan, 334 Amsterdam Ave.
    • March 9, 2019:  1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.: Training for Mothers of Students with Disabilities
      Location: Guttman Community College, Room 401, 50 West 40th St.
    • Wed., March 13, 2019: 10:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.: Train-the-Trainers and Roundtable Lunch for Service Providers Working with Women and Girls
      Location: Guttman Community College, Room 401, 50 West 40th St.
    • April 6, 2019, 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.: Training for Female College Students with Disabilities and their Allies
      Location: Guttman Community College, Room 401, 50 West 40th St.
    • May 18, 2019:  1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.: Training for Latina Women and Girls with Disabilities and their Allies
      Location: Guttman Community College, Room 401, 50 West 40th St.

    For more information about RespectAbility’s ongoing New York City efforts, view: https://www.respectability.org/ra-nywf/. Participants must register in order to attend.

    The NYC training series aims to upskill and empower women and girls with disabilities, and their allies, to engage in New York City’s vibrant civic life as volunteers, board members and employees. Through these trainings, participants will be better prepared to bring the lens of inclusion and equality to this vital civic engagement work. Hence, they will help close the representational gap in participation and civic leadership for this generation and future generations.

    Media Contact:
    Debbie Fink
    Email: DebbieF@RespectAbility.org

    Source: RespectAbility

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Pulse CPSEA Adds Two More Prominent Patient Safety Figures to Its Board

    Pulse CPSEA Adds Two More Prominent Patient Safety Figures to Its Board

    [ad_1]

    Press Release



    updated: Oct 9, 2018

    Pulse Center for Patient Safety Education & Advocacy is delighted to announce that two important experts in patient safety have joined its board.

    “Pulse’s Board goes from strength to strength,” says the group’s president, Ilene Corina. “It is further enhanced and supported by the addition of these two superbly qualified champions of patient safety education.”

    Pulse . . . serves as a lifeline when it is needed the most.

    Catherine Besthoff, Director of Risk Management and Patient Safety, Mount Sinai West, NY

    Catherine M. Besthoff, DrPH, RN, CPHQ

    Catherine Besthoff is the Director of Risk Management and Patient Safety at Mount Sinai West in New York City. Her expertise in health systems delivery has contributed to multiple patient safety campaigns and clinical quality improvement initiatives statewide and nationally.

    Catherine holds a public health doctorate in health policy and management from the CUNY School of Public Health and Health Policy. Her doctoral research focused on the patient and family engaged care in addressing hospital safety concerns. She served as an Expert Panel Member to the Nursing Alliance of Quality Care on Fostering Successful Patient and Family Engagement: Nursing’s Critical Role, and to the American Academy of Ambulatory Care Nursing Ambulatory Nurse Sensitive Indicator Task Force.

    “I am delighted to join Pulse Center for Patient Safety Education and Advocacy and extend patient- and family-engaged care into the community,” says Besthoff. “Patient safety knowledge is needed at home before you, a family member or friend visits a doctor’s office or becomes a patient. Pulse proactively provides this support and serves as a lifeline when it is needed the most.”

    Mary A. Horton, MSN/ED, RN

    Mary Horton is an Assistant Professor and Faculty Educator in the Department of Nursing at San Antonio College, San Antonio Texas. She is an avid and passionate champion for health care quality; committed to ensuring a safe practice environment that promotes the best, evidence-based patient care outcomes.

    Mrs. Horton’s clinical experience of over 45 years as a registered nurse has prepared her as a nursing mentor and role model to experienced and new to practice graduate nurses. Her master’s in nursing specialty is nursing education. She is currently completing final requirements for her Doctor of Nursing Practice degree in Educational Leadership. Mrs. Horton serves as vice president of the Theta Eta, Inc. Chapter of Chi Eta Phi Sorority, Inc., (a professional nursing sorority) and is involved in numerous community efforts to educate individuals, especially the at-risk and disadvantaged population, about health promotion and disease prevention practices. Although she has always been an advocate for quality and safe care, a personal experience of the loss of her only sibling during an elective procedure prompted even more dedication and personal service to help improve healthcare delivery.

    Pulse Center for Patient Safety Education & Advocacy (formerly PULSE of New York) is a grassroots, nonprofit, 501(c)(3) organization working to improve patient safety through advocacy education and support services. Our advocacy services are always provided free. Pulse also offers expert professional speakers to medical organizations and community/civic groups, and we seek sponsoring venues to host our training programs.

    Source: Pulse Center for Patient Safety Education & Advocacy

    [ad_2]

    Source link