ReportWire

Tag: families

  • Zero Lead Is an Impossible Ask for American Parents

    Zero Lead Is an Impossible Ask for American Parents

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    Over the past eight months, I’ve spent a mind-boggling amount of time and money trying to keep an invisible poison at bay. It started at my daughter’s 12-month checkup, when her pediatrician told me she had a concerning amount of lead in her blood. The pediatrician explained that, at high levels, lead can irreversibly damage children’s nervous system, brain, and other organs, and that, at lower levels, it’s associated with learning disabilities, behavior problems, and other developmental delays. On the drive home, I looked at my baby in her car seat and cried.

    The pediatrician told me that we needed to get my daughter’s lead level down. But when I began to try to find out where it was coming from, I learned that lead can be found in any number of places: baby food, house paint, breast milk, toys, cumin powder. And it’s potent. A small amount of lead dust—equal to one sweetener packet—would make an entire football field “hazardous” by the EPA’s standards.

    My husband and I spent nearly $12,000 removing highly contaminated soil from our backyard, replacing old windows, and sealing an old claw-foot bathtub. We mopped the floors at night, obsessively washed our daughter’s hands, and made sure to feed her plenty of iron, calcium, and vitamin C, which are thought to help limit the body’s absorption of lead. Four months later, when we went back to the pediatrician, her lead levels had sunk from 3.9 micrograms per deciliter of blood to 2.2 mcg/dL. That was better, but still far from zero. And according to the CDC, the World Health Organization, and the Mayo Clinic, zero is the only safe amount of lead.

    We’re one of thousands of families who have gone through that ordeal this year. At least 300,000 American children have blood lead levels above 3.5 mcg/dL, the CDC’s so-called reference value. But parents are largely left on their own to get lead out of their kids’ lives. Families who can afford an abundance of caution can sink tens of thousands of dollars into the project. And they still might never hit zero.

    When Suz Garrett learned that her 1-year-old son, Orrin, had four micrograms of lead in every deciliter of his blood, she and her husband waited for guidance from their doctor or the county health department, but none came. So they sent Orrin to stay with family while they repainted their 19th-century Richmond, Virginia, house and covered the open soil with mulch. Band-Aids like these are cost-effective, but every time you pry open an old window, or your dog tracks in dirt from the neighbors’ yard, invisible specks of lead dust can build up again.

    For nearly a year, the Garretts cleaned religiously. Orrin’s blood levels are still detectable—currently, he’s at 2.1 mcg/dL. Garrett and her husband are fed up. In a few months they’re moving to a new house, one they took out a $200,000 construction loan to renovate. “We ended up gutting it so we would know there’s no lead paint,” Garrett said.

    A few years ago, children like Orrin Garrett and my daughter wouldn’t have been a cause for concern. Until 2012, children were identified as having a blood lead “level of concern” at 10 mcg/dL or more. But for the past decade, the CDC has used a reference value to identify children who have more lead in their blood than most others. The reference number is based on statistics, not health outcomes. When most children tested below 5 mcg/dL, the reference level was five. Today, it is 3.5.

    The reference level has trended down along with lead exposure, which has dropped by 95 percent since the 1970s thanks to policies that removed lead from gasoline, paint, plumbing, and food. But confusion and concern about what classifies as lead poisoning has risen.

    Scientists and public-health officials still can’t say exactly how low lead exposure needs to be to prevent damage for any individual child. When Kim Dietrich, an epidemiologist and a developmental neuropsychologist, started his career in the ’70s, the general consensus was that levels above 40 to 60 micrograms took a significant toll on the developing brain. But work by Dietrich and others showed that harm can be caused at much lower levels. In the early 2000s, pooled data from seven large studies from around the world, including one Dietrich conducted in Cincinnati, showed that an increase in children’s blood-lead concentration from 2.4 to just 10 mcg/dL corresponded with a four-point drop in their IQ. That’s a scary prospect. But, Dietrich told me, “it’s very important not to confuse findings from these large population-level studies with individual impacts.”

    Discerning the effect of low lead levels—below about 10 mcg/dL—on cognitive health is an extremely complicated issue. “If you’ve got a blood alcohol content of 0.2, you’re likely to be horribly dangerous behind the wheel no matter who you are. Lead is a little bit different. Your child’s two might be worse than my child’s 10,” Gabriel Filippelli, a biogeochemist who studies lead exposure in urban environments, told me. Part of the variation in outcomes could be the result of factors we still don’t understand, like a child’s genetic makeup.

    Policing low levels of lead exposure in children costs parents both financially and emotionally. Mary Jean Brown, the former chief of the CDC’s Healthy Homes and Lead Poisoning Prevention Program, told me that concerned parents should be careful not to create a self-fulfilling prophecy. “Most children will not exhibit any symptoms when they have blood levels of 5 or 10 micrograms per deciliter,” she told me. But “if the mother or someone else says, ‘Johnny’s not like everybody else,’ pretty soon, Johnny isn’t like everybody else.”

    This type of anxiety is familiar to Tanisha Bowman, a health-care worker in Pittsburgh who has spent nearly three years trying to lower her daughter’s blood lead levels. They initially peaked at 20 mcg/dL, and have ranged from two to six over the past year. “There was never anything wrong with her. She was always measuring four to six months ahead,” Bowman said. But it was impossible not to read scary headlines about lead and assume they applied to her daughter. When she had tantrums around the age of 2, Bowman started wondering if she had ADHD, which is sometimes associated with lead exposure. “I will never know what impact, if any, this had on her. And nobody will ever be able to tell me,” she said. (Bowman’s daughter has had no diagnosis related to lead.)

    In the absence of a specific, outcome-based number to help parents decide when to worry, a mantra has emerged among doctors, reporters, and health institutions: There is no safe level of lead. Filippelli said that he’s used the catchphrase, but it’s a bit misleading. “There is no valid research source to support the ‘No amount of lead exposure is safe’ idea, beyond that fact that to avoid the potential of harm, you should avoid exposure,” he explained in an email.

    As well intentioned as the guidance might be, avoiding all exposure is an impossible quest. Tricia Gasek, a mother of three who lives in New Jersey, tried desperately to locate the source of lead in her children’s blood. She spent $1,000 hiring a “lead detective” to test her home with an XRF device and getting consultations with experts, plus another $600 replacing leaded lights on the front door. Ultimately, she learned that she also had elevated levels and concluded that the lead in her son’s blood was coming from her breast milk—possibly, her doctors thought, from exposure she had as a child. The process was exhausting. “It’s just crazy. Why am I the one figuring all this out?” she says.

    Parents simply can’t get to zero without help. Lead is invisible and pervasive. Although the Flint, Michigan, water crisis and recent product recalls have raised awareness about lead leaching from corroding pipes and hiding inside baby food, the biggest sources of exposure for children are the spaces where they live and play: inside houses and apartments with old, degrading paint and yards with contaminated soil. For many, there is no easy escape. Lead contamination is most common in low-income neighborhoods, which means Black and Hispanic kids are disproportionately affected.

    Many local health departments, including the one where I live, offer home visits to help identify sources of lead, but in many cases only when levels are above 10 mcg/dL. So the majority of children with elevated lead levels receive little or no assistance at all, and families have to play detective, social worker, and home remodeler all at once.

    This is paradoxical, because the problem of low-level lead exposure cannot be solved by focusing on one child or one home at a time. My family’s efforts helped lower our daughter’s lead levels slightly, but they did nothing to address the more widespread problem of lead in our neighborhood, to which she and all the other children nearby are still exposed. Instead of having every lead-exposed family play whack-a-mole in their own home, Filippelli says that if he were appointed czar of lead, he would do a national analysis of high-risk neighborhoods and households, perform targeted testing to confirm hazards, and remediate at scale. There would have to be coordination between the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Environmental Protection Agency, and such programs could cost up to $1 trillion and take a decade. But, he says, we could significantly reduce lead exposure across the board. The trickle-down effects of half a million children becoming smarter, healthier adults would reach everyone, even if we can’t say exactly how much smarter or healthier they’d be.

    For now, my family is still navigating this maze on our own. I’m trying to think of low-level lead exposure as a risk factor—like air pollution and forever chemicals—instead of a diagnosis. Meanwhile, my daughter is doing just fine. As a family, we’ll continue to avoid what lead we can; we’ve decided to spend a whopping $25,000 to repaint the chipping exterior of our house. But we’re still going to let our kid play at the park and climb the walls. After all, there’s no stopping her.

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    Lauren Silverman

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  • Leaked Chinese police data is giving Uyghurs answers about missing family members

    Leaked Chinese police data is giving Uyghurs answers about missing family members

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    A smaller subset of this data — known as the Xinjiang Police Files — was published last May. Further examination of the files then revealed their full extent, uncovering approximately 830,000 individuals across 11,477 documents and thousands of photographs.

    The police files were hacked and leaked by an anonymous individual, then obtained by Adrian Zenz, a director of China Studies at the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, a US-based non-profit. Zenz and his team spent months developing the search tool, which they hope will empower the Uyghur diaspora with concrete information about their relatives, after years of separation and silence.

    Using the new online search tool, CNN tracked down the records for 22 individuals after trialing it among the Uyghur diaspora across three continents.

    For the first time, exiled Uyghurs were able to see official Chinese documents about the fate of their relatives, including why they were detained — and in some cases how they died. On seeing the files, some described a sense of empowerment; others felt guilt that their worst fears had been confirmed.

    The Chinese government has never denied the legitimacy of the files, but state-run news outlet The Global Times recently described Zenz as a “rumor monger,” and called his analysis of the files “disinformation.”

    ‘Tens of thousands’ detained

    The new website represents the largest data set ever made publicly available on Xinjiang. It allows people to search for hundreds of thousands of individuals in the raw files, using their Chinese ID card numbers.


    Most of the information is from two locations — Shufu county in Kashgar and Tekes county in Ili — where the researchers believe they have almost complete population data.

    The Uyghur population of Xinjiang is around 11 million, along with around four million people from other Turkic ethnic minorities. As such, the data likely represents only the tip of the iceberg.

    Zenz said “tens of thousands” of people were listed as “detained” in the documents. The youngest was aged just 15.

    “(This is) an inside scoop on the workings of a paranoid police state, and that’s absolutely frightening. The nature of this atrocity is becoming more and more clear.”
    Adrian Zenz

    CNN has sent a detailed request for comment to the Chinese government about the files, and the families highlighted in this article, but has not received a response.


    The leaked police records mostly cover the period between 2016 and 2018, which was the peak of Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s “Strike Hard” campaign against terrorism in Xinjiang.

    The US government and UN estimated that up to two million Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities were detained in a giant network of internment camps, described by the Chinese government as “vocational training centers” designed to combat extremism.

    These files provide a snapshot of that timeframe, but do not reflect the current situation.

    After the first set of data was published in May, the Chinese government did not respond to specific questions about the files, but the Chinese embassy in Washington DC did issue a statement claiming Xinjiang residents lived a “safe, happy and fulfilling life,” which it said provided a “powerful response to all sorts of lies and disinformation on Xinjiang.”

    At a press conference in late December, Xinjiang officials also claimed that “most” of the people identified in the leaked photographs were “living a normal life,” without specifying the fate of the rest. A woman who appeared in the files also claimed that she had “never been detained,” but had graduated from “a vocational college in June 2022,” just weeks after the documents were published.

    ‘It haunts you every day’

    Over the past four years, CNN has gathered testimonies from dozens of overseas Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities, which included allegations of torture and rape inside the camp system. CNN also spoke to those abroad desperately seeking information about their loved ones.

    Such information is usually incredibly hard for relatives to find. A sophisticated system of collective punishment threatens those in Xinjiang with detention if their families abroad even try to make a phone call.

    “The black hole is the most terrifying thing,” Zenz said. “And that’s part of why the Chinese state creates this black hole. It’s the most terrifying thing that can be done. That you don’t even know the fate of a loved one, are they alive or dead.”

    From different corners of the globe, the search tool enabled three Uyghur families to find detailed official data on their relatives for the first time.

    Mamatjan Juma

    Lives in Virginia, USA

    Age 49

    Abduweli Ayup

    Lives in Bergen, Norway

    Age 49

    Marhaba Yakub Salay

    Lives in Adelaide, Australia

    Age 34

    Mamatjan Juma (49), pictured with his three brothers in 2003. They were all jailed, according to the police files. “I wish I could go back to this moment,” Juma said.

    For Mamatjan Juma, who lives just south of Washington DC in Virginia, the files provided “immense” information about his family, but also confirmed his worst fears — that they were found “guilty by association” with him.

    As the deputy director for the Uyghur service of US-funded news organization Radio Free Asia, Juma has been highlighting the situation in Xinjiang for 16 years. He left China for the US in 2003, after being selected for an academic fellowship with the Ford Foundation.

    “They called me a wanted terrorist, to be deported back to China,” Juma said. “My relatives (are) also demonized because of me, and then (they’re) not described as human beings.”

    The files show that 29 members of Juma’s immediate and extended family had been detained — and in some cases sentenced to long jail terms — due to their connections to him.

    Nephew Nephew Sister Niece, adopted sister Sister Sister Niece Nephew Father Brother Brother Sister-in-law Brother Sister Mother Mohammat Merdan Mewlut Merdan Nurimangul Juma Mehray Juma Nuranem Juma Nuramina Juma Ayshe Eysajan Iltebir Eysajan Juma Kadir Abdukadir Juma Ahmatjan Juma Aymihri Abdukerim Eysajan Juma Nurnisagul Juma Ayshem Abdulla Mamatjan Juma

    Uncle, father’s side Aunt-in-law Uncle, father’s side Cousin Cousin once removed Cousin once removed Cousin Aunt-in-law Cousin once removed Zulpiyem’s husband Uncle, father’s side Aunt-in-law Cousin Aunt-in-law, mother’s side Abduriyim Kadir Ayshem Jume Bawudun Kadir Obulkasim Bawudun Muhter Obulkasim Ekber Obulkasim Rozihaji Bawudun Ayhan Kasim Zulpiyem Omer Emetjan Abdukerim Abla Kadir Hawahan Ismayil Ilyar Mamut Horigul Sabir

    Juma learned that all three of his brothers were imprisoned, one of whom was even pictured in a police mugshot.

    Eysajan Juma, brother

    “He looked (like) he lost his soul. It broke my heart. It broke… my heart sank.”
    Mamatjan Juma, looking at his brother Eysajan’s mugshot

    He described his younger brother, Eysajan Juma, as “jubilant, very gregarious,” a sociable and likable person who was loved deeply, despite making “a lot of mistakes.” But Juma could no longer see those familiar traits in his brother’s eyes.

    “I saw a defeated person,” Juma said. “He lost any of his emotions.”

    In the files, Juma also discovered the details of his father’s death, which was described as the result of “various kinds of complications.”

    “It was a very heartbreaking situation,” Juma said, through tears. “He was so proud of us, (but) we weren’t able to be with him at the time… it was very painful.”

    Despite the disturbing revelations, Juma said he felt a sense of “relief” from seeing the files, which was “empowering” after years of not knowing.

    “The bitterness of desperation dissipates,” he said. “The darkness of not knowing also disappears.”

    But Juma is still coming to terms with the enormity of the impact his departure from his homeland had on his family.

    “Survivor’s guilt is very painful,” Juma said. “They are tied to you and they are persecuted; it’s not an easy feeling to digest.”

    “It haunts you every day.”

    Targeting geography teachers

    Abduweli Ayup, a Uyghur scholar living in exile in Norway, doesn’t feel any relief from searching through the police files — only grief.

    In fact, he wishes he had never seen them.

    “Of course if I have this option, I choose to be ignorant, not to know. How can I dare to face this reality?”
    Abduweli Ayup, on finding family members’ records

    Ayup, who ran a Uyghur language school in Kashgar, fled Xinjiang in August 2015 after spending time in jail as a political prisoner, where he told CNN he faced torture and gang rape.

    He had already heard that his brother and sister — along with several others — had been targeted because of him, but the search database gave him the first official confirmation.

    Sister Niece Brother Abduweli Ayup Mihray Erkin Sajida Ayup Erkin Ayup

    “This time the government document told me that yes, it is related to you, and it is your fault,” Ayup said, adding that he now feels “guilty and responsible.”

    His sister, who taught geography at a high school for 15 years, was listed in the police files as one of 15,563 “blacklisted” people.

    I have learned that my younger sister, she got arrested,” Ayup said. “The reason is, she (is) accused of (being a) ‘double-faced government official,’ and she (was) blacklisted because of me.”

    After using the new search tool, Abduweli Ayup (49) learned that his sister Sajida, a geography teacher, was jailed due to her association to him.

    Uyghurs working in government jobs in Xinjiang while continuing to practice their cultural beliefs were often accused of being “two-faced,” Ayup said, categorized as “traitors, not 100% loyal to the government.”

    ‘I will live in fear’

    When she first used the new search tool, Marhaba Yakub Salay, a Uyghur living in Adelaide, Australia, found police records for two relatives she did not expect: her young niece and nephew, who were aged just 15 and 12 when the files were made in 2017.

    The nephew was labeled as a “Category 2” person on the blacklist, described as a “highly suspicious accomplice” in “public security and terrorism cases.”

    Marhaba Yakub Salay (34) found files for her young niece and nephew using the online search tool.

    The files on Salay’s niece and nephew suggested they had traveled to at least one of 26 “suspicious” countries which included Syria and Afghanistan. Salay said that was not true — they had only ever traveled outside China to go on holiday to Malaysia.

    “This is insane… this is terrible,” Salay said as she read through her nephew’s file. “He’s turning 18 in a couple of months’ time. Are they going to arrest him?”

    Marhaba Yakub Salay found that her nephew has been categorized as a threat in the police files, despite being aged 12 at the time the record was created.

    Salay’s sister Mayila Yakufu — the mother of the children — was sentenced to 6.5 years in jail at the end of 2020, after she had spent several years in other camps.

    Yakufu is accused of financing terrorism after she wired money to Salay and their parents in 2013, so they could buy a house in Australia — which the family has proved with banking records. Mayila and Marhaba’s brother left Xinjiang in 1998, and later died in an accident in Australia in 2007 — but his ID card was still cited as a suspicious connection to the children.

    “I think the suspicion level (Category 2) is about my late brother, but they tried to connect my 12-year-(old) nephew with my brother, who passed away 15 years ago,” Salay said. “These two people, they have never met each other.”

    “My heart is bleeding. I will live in fear, in the worry about when they’re going to take my niece and nephew.”
    Marhaba Yakub Salay, on finding family members’ records

    ‘Like a virus of the mind’

    The extension of “guilt by association” to children reflects the paranoia which the Chinese state holds toward the Uyghur population, according to Zenz.

    “The state considers the entire family to be tainted,” Zenz said. “And I think that’s consistent with how Xi Jinping and other officials (in) internal speeches have described Islam like a virus of the mind that infects people.”

    As the families look through these files, their instinct is to search for logic and reasons for what happened to their loved ones. But they find only confusion.

    “Guilt by association can work quite extensively, and the logic behind it is quite fuzzy and the reach is pervasive,” Zenz said.

    This “fuzzy” logic was explained by a former Xinjiang police officer turned whistleblower, who told CNN in 2021 the idea had been to detain Uyghurs en masse first, and find reasons for the arrests later.

    The ex-detective — who went by the name Jiang — said that 900,000 Uyghurs were rounded up in one year in Xinjiang, even though “none” of them had committed any crimes. He admitted torturing inmates during interrogations, adding that some of his colleagues acted like “psychopaths” to extract confessions to various crimes.

    “Door by door, village by village, township by township, people got arrested. This is the evidence of crimes against humanity, this is the evidence of genocide, because (they) targeted an ethnicity.”
    Abduweli Ayup

    The US government has accused China of committing genocide in Xinjiang — and a report by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights concluded that China may have carried out crimes against humanity. China has vigorously denied those allegations.

    With this new deluge of leaked data, the researchers hope to add to the growing body of evidence on the policies inside Xinjiang — and they hope that providing widespread access to the files will drive renewed efforts by governments and human rights organizations to hold China accountable.

    “I sincerely hope that this is going to inspire some hope among the Uyghurs,” Zenz said.

    For Uyghur families around the world, desperate to be reunited, each one of the 830,000 names represents a loved one.

    “Beautiful souls are being destroyed behind those numbers,” Mamatjan Juma said. “There is suffering without any reason.”

    Correction: This story was updated to replace and correct a photo of Abduweli Ayup’s niece.

    Have you managed to track down your loved ones using the new search tool? Please contact UyghurFamilies@CNN.com if you’d like to share your stories.

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  • Local Non-Profit Hoping to Make a Difference During the Holiday Season

    Local Non-Profit Hoping to Make a Difference During the Holiday Season

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    JL Cares is taking nominations for families in need this holiday season.

    Press Release



    updated: Dec 2, 2022 17:32 PST

    JL Cares, a non-profit in Lynnwood, WA is hoping to make the holidays a bit brighter for a few families this year. Partnering with local appliance store Judd & Black, the non-profit plans to donate and install a new range for one family and will provide groceries for ten additional families in the area. JL Cares regularly provides emergent remodels to families that are unable to repair their homes and relies on the community to nominate families to support in the area. The JL Cares Leadership team also seeks out partnerships with other local businesses to make a greater impact than they could by themselves. With the rising prices in the cost of goods, the team hopes it can make a difference in the lives of a few.

    “It’s an honor and our privilege to bless our community because we’ve been blessed this year, and Judd & Black is an amazing partner to us. We’re grateful that our visions are so well aligned, and we will be doing some amazing things together in 2023!” Paul Willis, Executive Director JL Cares

    JL Cares is seeking your help in finding families that could use a little help this year. To nominate a family, visit jlcares.org and tell the team how JL Cares can make a difference in the lives of a family. 

    JL Cares is the non-profit arm of JL Remodeling of Lynnwood, WA, which has donated over $250,000 this year towards making a positive impact in the community. JL Remodeling’s owner, Jeff Laurence has a passion towards helping people, and launched the JL Cares non-profit in 2021.

    Source: JL Cares Inc.

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  • Global On-Ramp to Media Literacy,  the Center for Media Literacy’s New Free Online Media Literacy Training Launches Feb. 2

    Global On-Ramp to Media Literacy, the Center for Media Literacy’s New Free Online Media Literacy Training Launches Feb. 2

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    Evaluating today’s media messages can be complex, and the information landscape is rapidly changing. CML’s 90-minute course makes evidence-based media literacy education available to everyone with internet access, everywhere in the world

    The Center for Media Literacy (CML), a leader in media literacy research, program design and evidence-based frameworks since 1989, has launched Global On-ramp to Media Literacy, a 90-minute, self-guided course that can introduce the concepts of media literacy education to anyone with access to the internet, anywhere in the world. The interactive course uses texts, videos, quizzes and infographics to cover topics that range from CML’s long-proven Five Key Questions and Core Concepts and Empowerment Spiral, to information about copyright, to CML’s MediaLit Kit – a collection of core ideas and tools that are fundamental to media literacy’s inquiry-based pedagogy. The course was developed by Linda M. Wiley, an experienced instructional designer, along with CML President Tessa Jolls and Monika Hanley, a CML associate, to guide users through the articulation of media literacy theory, practice and implementation.

    “Now is the time for media literacy to take a more prominent seat at the education table, as well as around family dinner tables,” said Jolls. “Media literacy educators and practitioners have long known that there are countless applications of media literacy, but the current epidemic of harmful disinformation has shone a spotlight on what makes CML’s work more important now than ever before. We are proud to offer Global On-ramp to Media Literacy as a public service to anyone around the globe who is interested in learning more about becoming a wiser and more informed media consumer and producer. Our nations’ security, our local communities, our families and our health depend upon it.”

    The initial launch of Global On-ramp to Media Literacy is supported by the US State Department Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs’ Citizen Diplomacy Action Fund (CDAF). The CDAF grant, which is provided to alumni of the Fulbright Scholars Program, enables CML to make global citizens and educators aware of the course in North America, Europe, Asia and Latin America. CML’s affiliates in Singapore; Lima, Peru (Medios Claros); Los Angeles, CA (Ignite Global Good, LLC) and Kaunas, Lithuania (Vytautus Magnus University) will undertake communications campaigns through social media, email, media relations and other outreach activities. The course is now available in English. Versions in Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Latvian, Lithuanian, Estonian, Russian and Chinese will launch very soon.

    Like a map for a journey, the Center for Media Literacy provides a vision and a guide for navigating today’s complex, global media culture. For more information about CML’s Global On-ramp to Media Literacyplease visit www.medialit.org, or follow CML on Facebook.

    Contact: Michele Johnsen-(818) 618-1314 michele@igniteglobalgood.com

    Source: Center for Media Literacy

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  • Austin Pets Alive! | Austin Pets Are in Crisis. Supporting Families…

    Austin Pets Alive! | Austin Pets Are in Crisis. Supporting Families…

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    Oct 01, 2021

    Austin Pets Are in Crisis. Supporting Families Through Partnership Is the Answer.
    We must work together to keep pets with people and out of the shelter.

    Here in Austin, 38,000 pets could be displaced by evictions in the coming months. Nationally, that number could be as high as eight million.

    After speaking with American Pets Alive! and Human Animal Support Services project director Kristen Hassen, NBC shared this story about how the looming eviction crisis could impact overcrowded shelters by displacing the pets of families who lose their homes.

    Austin Pets Alive!, the parent organization to AmPA! and AmPA!’s HASS project, is already seeing the effects of the financial strain so many families have faced during the pandemic. Our APA! Positive Alternatives to Shelter Surrender Facebook page is currently receiving around 1,000 requests for help each month, with countless owners faced with the possibility of having to give up their pets.

    We help as many of these families as we can. But the situation for our community’s pet owners is growing increasingly dire. It will get much worse as more families are evicted.

    APA! is currently working with the City of Austin to renegotiate our partnership agreement so we can focus even more of our efforts on innovation and progress to support families and shelters in crisis. We want to ensure Austin Pets Alive! and Austin Animal Center can, with our complementary roles, develop our partnership to protect our city’s animals and families.

    We come to this partnership with deep experience. AmPA!’s Human Animal Support Services program leads nationwide efforts to develop and implement community-centered animal services programs to keep pets with people, and out of shelters.

    What we have learned while bringing this model to hundreds of communities across the country, is this is never a solo effort. Success requires government shelters to partner with other organizations.

    That means we and Austin Animal Center must work together, and be based together here in Austin, to ensure that the eviction crisis does not overwhelm AAC and lead to pets needlessly losing their homes, and even their lives.

    For a decade now, Austin has been looked to as a model for how to save animals. We are the country’s largest no kill city, and this is largely thanks to the longstanding partnership between Austin Animal Center and Austin Pets Alive!

    Other communities look to us for guidance, and inspiration. This is, as it should be, a source of pride for our residents.

    Now we need that partnership to sustain and evolve, to meet the tremendous challenges we face together, today, as animal welfare organizations and as a city.

    Thirty-eight thousand Austin pets are in danger of losing their homes to eviction, in the coming months. Working together, in our shared city, we can face this.

    We are proud to be the leader in animal welfare innovation and now we need a true partnership with our city, so together we can keep Austin pets with their families.

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  • San Diego Regional Center Partners With TOOTRiS to Offer Comprehensive Child Care Solutions to Employees

    San Diego Regional Center Partners With TOOTRiS to Offer Comprehensive Child Care Solutions to Employees

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    New Alliance Will Enable Nonprofit to Better Support Key Staff Across Eight Locations

    Press Release



    updated: Jun 15, 2021

    The San Diego Regional Center (SDRC), a leader in the community for persons with developmental disabilities, has partnered with TOOTRiS to provide real-time Child Care services to its employees. With this partnership, SDRC’s staff of more than 600 will have access to thousands of local Child Care providers through the TOOTRiS’ platform, removing barriers that prevent working parents from remaining in the workforce and advancing their family-friendly work environment.

    As a first-of-its-kind SaaS platform, TOOTRiS connects parents, Child Care providers, employers, and subsidy programs all in real time. One of TOOTRiS’ goals is to create sustainable, systematic change for greater equality. Child Care challenges cause one in four women to leave the workforce and costs employers millions of dollars each year in turnover, lost productivity, and absenteeism. Over the last year, nearly 3 million women dropped out of the workforce across America, many due to the lack of Child Care. With a staff of more than 65% women, SDRC recognizes that Child Care support is key for long-term success, and its partnership with TOOTRiS is a win-win solution for the organization and the community.

    “Through this partnership with TOOTRiS, our employees now have access to the only real-time Child Care benefits solutions available, ensuring our employees have access to quality Child Care so they can thrive at our organization,” said Carlos Flores, San Diego Regional Center Executive Director. “By providing an affordable Child Care service and increasing Child Care availability and visibility for families, TOOTRiS creates a level playing field so that all working parents, regardless of economic status, location, or schedule, have a chance to pursue professional growth.”

    “When employees are provided access to Child Care benefits, they are not forced to choose between a paycheck and their child,” said Alessandra Lezama, CEO of TOOTRiS. “Families in San Diego with two working parents spend up to 40% of their income on Child Care. That is excessively high. The San Diego Regional Center has always been a forward-thinking nonprofit, dedicated to providing the best services for our community. By offering Child Care as part of its existing employee wellness program, the organization will significantly improve productivity, career advancements, and employee retention, allowing SDRC to continue its amazing work.”

    About the San Diego Regional Center
    The San Diego Regional Center is a service of San Diego-Imperial Counties Developmental Services, Inc. and a private nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization that contracts with the State of California to provide the services outlined in the Lanterman Developmental Disabilities Services Act. The San Diego Regional Center is a focal point in Imperial and San Diego counties for 33,000 persons with developmental disabilities such as intellectual disability, cerebral palsy, epilepsy, autism, and other disabling conditions, encouraging them to live productive, satisfying, and meaningful lives as valued members of our community.

    About TOOTRiS
    TOOTRiS is reinventing Child Care, making it convenient, affordable and on-demand. As the world shifts to digitalized services, TOOTRiS helps parents and providers connect and transact in real time, empowering working parents – especially women – to secure quality Child Care, while allowing providers to unlock their potential and fully monetize their program. TOOTRiS is creating a new digital economy that promotes entrepreneurial opportunities for individuals with passion and talent to become Child Care providers, improving their quality of life while increasing the much-needed supply of Child Care across the state. TOOTRiS’ unique technology enables employers to provide fully managed Child Care Benefits, giving their workforce the flexibility and family support paramount to regaining employee productivity and increasing their ROI.

    Press/Media
    press@tootris.com
    (858) 529-1123 

    Source: TOOTRiS

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  • Kid Ventures and Rady Children’s Hospital Kick Off the Solomon Family Kid Ventures Fund at Special Back-to-School Event September 27

    Kid Ventures and Rady Children’s Hospital Kick Off the Solomon Family Kid Ventures Fund at Special Back-to-School Event September 27

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    The Fund, fueled by donor investments entirely, will serve to create a not-for-profit Kid Ventures play space inside Rady Children’s Hospital

    Press Release



    updated: Sep 25, 2019

    ​​Kid Ventures will host their Back-to-School Party on Friday, Sept. 27 to inaugurate their Preschool Academy as well as officially kick off their new Fund, the Solomon Family Ventures Fund, a partnership with Rady Children’s Hospital to create a Kid Ventures-type play center inside the hospital.

    Kid Ventures was founded by a local mom and dad, Debbie and Darren Solomon in 2008 with the intention to provide a space for children to build social and cognitive skills and stretch their imaginations and muscles in a clean and physically active environment. Debbie and Darren have also brought a ‘mobile Kid Ventures’ to Rady Children’s Hospital in past years which really brought about this vision.

    “We are excited to partner with Kid Ventures to offer our patients an interactive play space to bring laughter, joy and much-needed diversion from daily Hospital routines,” said Nicholas Holmes, MD, senior vice president and chief operating officer at Rady Children’s. “The Solomon family has helped to serve countless children across San Diego for more than a decade. It seems only natural that Rady Children’s join their community dedicated to thoughtful, intentional play spaces.”

    Kid Ventures has served many families across San Diego County fortunate enough to have healthy kids, and they feel the responsibility to use their skillset, resources and success to create a meaningful legacy. Thus, the Solomon Family Kid Ventures Fund was formed.

    Through the creation of this fund, Kid Ventures wishes to bring play, learning and discovery to the kids at Rady Children’s Hospital. The Fund will be used to create an interactive play space for children and their caregivers to enjoy within the hospital campus. Rady Children’s Hospital provides care to 91 percent of the region’s children and more than 247,000 children rely on this hospital every year. Kid Ventures is committed to ensuring that these patients have an opportunity to just be kids during their hospital stay. Studies show that medical facilities yield better health outcomes for their patients when social and emotional elements are incorporated in the hospital environment. The indoor play space is projected to feature amenities like those in Kid Ventures, such as a market, fire station, and more.

    “It gives us great satisfaction to know that we are playing a vital role in advancing Rady Children’s mission to restore, sustain and enhance the health and development potential of children through excellence in care, education, research and advocacy,” said Darren Solomon. “We hope to be a leading example of innovative and fun hospital care and inspire other hospitals across the country to do the same.”

    Donor investments will fuel this project entirely, and Kid Ventures as well as Rady Children’s Hospital hope to receive help from members and businesses in the community to fund this special project.

    To kick off fundraising, Kid Ventures is striving towards an initial goal of $10,000 to be raised at their event this September. The Back-to-School Party will take place on Friday, September 27 from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. and will feature a Hullabaloo Concert, tasty bites, activities/free play, and tours of the facilities.

    Kid Ventures Preschool Academy, formerly Kid Ventures Liberty Station, is located at 2865 Sims Road.

    For more information on Kid Ventures Preschool academy, visit www.indoorplaysandiego.com/preschool.

    ###

    Rady Children’s Hospital

    Rady Children’s Hospital-San Diego is the region’s pediatric medical center serving San Diego, Imperial and southern Riverside counties. Rady Children’s Hospital treats children from birth to 18 years old as well as a small number of adults with certain conditions for which we have specialized services.

    Kid Ventures

    Since 2008, Kid Ventures has provided the next generation in boutique-style indoor family enrichment, education and entertainment centers. Their facilities offer the perfect setting for children to explore and expand their imaginations and talents as parents delight in the experience. Kids play & learn in a fun and stimulating indoor play village, designed to stretch their creative muscles in a healthy and safe way.

    Source: Kid Ventures

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  • T-Shirt Fundraiser August 7 for ‘New Hope Now: Have a Heart’

    T-Shirt Fundraiser August 7 for ‘New Hope Now: Have a Heart’

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    Purchase a T-shirt and feed a homeless person. New Hope Now will use 100% of all proceeds to feed the homeless. Gift cards are purchased from local restaurants and given to the homeless so they can enjoy a meal.

    Press Release



    updated: Aug 7, 2019

    ​August 7th through August 30th, “New Hope Now” will hold a T-shirt fundraising event called “Have a Heart” through Custom Ink. T-shirts will ship directly after the fundraiser is completed.

    The T-shirt fundraiser will help gather funds for this much-needed charity.  100% of all proceeds raised by “New Hope Now” will be used to feed the homeless and help families and individuals within the northern California area. The organization will purchase gift cards from local restaurants that will be handed out to the homeless so they may enjoy a meal.

    Tricia Devaux, Founder of “New Hope Now,” started the non-profit organization in 2012 working with local Christian churches and donations from individuals. The organization has continuously provided food for the homeless with gift cards for free meals, clothing and financial assistance to help with rent and utility bills.  These are just a few examples of support that “New Hope Now” provides for families in need.

    With so many people struggling to survive or turn their lives around, generous donations from the community allow this heart and Christ-centered organization to continue its good work. What “New Hope Now” seeks to do is sponsor families and singles starting over, one family at a time.

    “New Hope Now wants to offer services to give people hope for a better life,” says Tricia.  “Through  generous giving to New Hope Now, 90% of all donations are used for charity.”

    Invest in the lives of the people in the northern California community, visit https://www.customink.com/fundraising/new-hope-now-t-shirt-fundraiser. For more information or to make a tax-deductible donation, visit http://www.newhopenowforhumanity.org/. For additional questions, please contact Tricia Devaux at (707) 761-2067 or newhopenowtd@hotmail.com.

     Share on Facebook. Share on Twitter.  

    Source: New Hope Now

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  • Sheilah A. Doyle Foundation Offers Scholarships to Chicago Families Affected by Homicide

    Sheilah A. Doyle Foundation Offers Scholarships to Chicago Families Affected by Homicide

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    Press Release



    updated: Feb 19, 2019

    When tragedy strikes, positive action can relieve grief. The Doyle family launched the Sheilah A. Doyle Foundation (SAD) in honor of their mother, a victim of homicide. This year marks the 25th anniversary of her death. To date, 150 children have attended Camp Sheilah, the foundation’s free, annual bereavement camp, and over 50 scholarships have been given to college students who have lost a parent or sibling to homicide. The organization raises $50,000 each year.

    “We teach kids how to turn tragedy to triumph by giving them coping skills, camps and scholarships,” said Executive Director Kevin Doyle.

    The Cheers for Change Dinner marks the 10th anniversary of the 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. The event honors donors and volunteers with Sheilah A. Doyle Foundation Humanitarian Awards and the Camp Sheilah Award Scholarships. The event will be held on Saturday, March 9, 2019, at Odyssey Country Club, 19110 S. Ridgeland Ave., Tinley Park, Illinois. The event starts at 6:30 p.m. and includes dinner, open bar, live entertainment and silent and live auctions.

    Kevin Doyle is available for interviews and appearances from now until the event day. Contact him at 708-829-7444 or kevin@sadfund.org to book him for interviews. For information, visit www.sadfund.org

    Media Contact: Kevin Doyle
    Phone: 708-829-7444
    Email: kevin@sadfund.org

    Source: Sheilah Doyle Foundation

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  • NCJFCJ Announces a Record $12.9 Million in Awards in 2018 to  Improve Outcomes for Children and Families

    NCJFCJ Announces a Record $12.9 Million in Awards in 2018 to Improve Outcomes for Children and Families

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    Key focuses on firearms, domestic violence, abuse and neglect, animal cruelty, juvenile justice, diversity and research

    Press Release



    updated: Jan 28, 2019

    The National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges (NCJFCJ) announced today that it has received a record 34 new and supplemental awards providing more than $12.9 million in additional funding – the highest amount in the organization’s 81-year history. The NCJFCJ is devoted to ensuring justice and improving outcomes for families and children in courts nationwide.

    The NCJFCJ is the nation’s oldest judicial membership organization, providing judges with ongoing education, training and technical assistance to make the best possible decisions for children and families in our courts.

    The $12.9 million in funding will support NCJFCJ projects focused on a multitude of areas that include: domestic violence; child protection and custody; child welfare and foster care; teen dating violence; tribal and state courts collaboration; juvenile justice; trauma-informed justice; research and data; and more.

    Highlighting the upcoming year, the NCJFCJ received funding from the U.S. Department of Justice, Office on Violence Against Women for a multi-year project to assist up to 10 diverse communities to improve their implementation of domestic violence firearms laws to prevent abusers’ access to firearms and allow for better protection of victims, children and their communities. The NCJFCJ also received funding to analyze its home state of Nevada’s juvenile justice system and develop recommendations for change in partnership with the Division of Child and Family Services. The Nevada Center for Juvenile Justice Innovation connects professionals and stakeholders to information about effective programs and practices to reduce recidivism and improve outcomes for juvenile justice involved youth.

    “The variety and diverse projects and initiatives funded this year reflect the expansive work the NCJFCJ does for juvenile and family courts nationwide,” said Judge John J. Romero Jr., NCJFCJ president. “The NCJFCJ continues to be at the forefront and remains proactive in addressing the multitude of issues that affect the lives of children, families and those affected by violence.”

    Two new focus areas that the NCJFCJ received funding for this year include addressing animal cruelty and promoting diversity. With partner organization Animal Legal Defense Fund, the NCJFCJ will work with judicial officers to better understand this critical issue, including the link between the acts of violence towards humans and animal cruelty. In line with the organization’s commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion, the NCJFCJ received funding from the Jessie Ball DuPont Fund to host a summit comprised of organizations in the legal profession and court system to better reflect and to improve representation in the communities they serve.

    The NCJFCJ received continuing funds for its Resource Center on Domestic Violence: Child Protection and Custody program. The resource center plans to expand the capacity of the domestic violence field including family violence prevention services grantees and survivors to effectively address the implications of domestic violence in child protection, child support and custody systems. In addition, the NCJFCJ will continue its collaboration between state and tribal courts on the implementation of the Indian Child Welfare Act.

    “There has never been a more critical time for an independent and educated judiciary,” said Joey Orduna Hastings, NCJFCJ chief executive officer. “This year’s record-setting $12.9 million in awards reflects the hard work and dedication of the NCJFCJ’s staff, board directors and its membership to continuing our mission to provide judges, courts and related agencies involved with juvenile, family and domestic violence cases with the knowledge and skills to improve the lives of the families and children who seek justice.”

    Contact:
    Chrisie Yabu
    KPS3
    chrisie@kps3.com

    Source: NCJFCJ

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  • Day Translations Inc. the Language Services Provider Offers Priority Assistance for Separated Families

    Day Translations Inc. the Language Services Provider Offers Priority Assistance for Separated Families

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    Day Translations Has Reached Out to The ACLU, KIND, the Young Center For Immigrant Children’s Rights, and RAICES

    Day Translations, a New York-based Language Services Provider with more than a decade of experience helping immigrants and asylum seekers enter the U.S. legally, has reached out to human rights organizations concerned with providing legal assistance to children and immigrants, to offer priority services.

    In these difficult times, Day Translations aims to help separated families join and transit their path to legality with the comprehensive assistance they need.

    The organizations in question are The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), Kids in need of Defense (KIND), The Young Center For Immigrant Children’s Rights, and RAICES: Refugee and Immigrant Center for Educational and Legal Services.

    This decision is part of Day Translation’s social program, under which the company has recently collaborated with The Amanaah Foundation and the Pies Descalzos Foundation, among many other local and international organizations.

    Learn more about Day Translations’ charitable work, values, and social compromise

    Learn more about Day Translations’ immigration services

    Source: Day Translations Inc.

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  • Legacy Touch Announces the Launch of Their New Website

    Legacy Touch Announces the Launch of Their New Website

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    Press Release



    updated: May 4, 2017

    Legacy Touch, the premiere fingerprint jewelry and keepsake provider, announces the launch of its improved consumer e-commerce website LTkeepsakes.com on May 4th.

    The new site was designed to create a seamless user experience for mobile devices and will be a key component of the company’s upcoming email initiative to generate further outreach to families.

    “We make it easy for families to find the products that provide them the warmth, connection, and touch of peace they need.”

    Mark Cordes, VP Marketing

    Mark Cordes, VP of Marketing, says, “We understand that the majority of people today hop online through their smartphones and tablets. We want to be where our partners’ families need us, when they need us, and we want to make it easy for families to find the products that provide them the warmth, connection, and touch of peace they need.”

    The updated site also features new lifestyle and product photography, improved navigation and a simplified ordering process. Funeral home partners will find the overall structure of the site familiar and, Mark added, “These enhancements will deliver even more opportunities to comfort families and strengthen our partners’ businesses.”

    Company overview

    Legacy Touch creates superior custom fingerprint jewelry and keepsakes, bringing comfort to families and residual revenue to partnering funeral homes. Many of these keepsakes can be shipped within 24 hours, in time for funeral services, creating a memorable and touching moment for families as they pay tribute to their Loved One. Legacy Touch’s shareable Decedent PIN allows families to place orders anytime via LTkeepsakes.com , while delivering a proven residual revenue stream for Funeral Homes.

    Legacy Touch offices, studio, and production facilities are located in Lee’s Summit, Missouri, a suburb of Kansas City. With over 50 associates and 17,000 square feet of space, all product personalization is performed in-house under careful control. All Legacy Touch premium keepsakes are individually engraved by skilled artisans to achieve precise replication of prints, each as unique as the life it represents.

    Legacy Touch is a trusted industry partner to over 2,500 Funeral Homes, and a proud member of the Selected Independents Preferred Partner Program. For additional info and inquires on becoming a Legacy Touch partner, please contact Legacy Touch or your Messenger rep.

    Media Contact:  Mark Cordes, VP Marketing, Legacy Touch, Phone: 816-802-6832, Email: mcordes@legacytouch.com

    Source: Legacy Touch

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  • The ANDRUS Gala is Friday, November 4th!

    The ANDRUS Gala is Friday, November 4th!

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    Press Release


    Oct 21, 2016

    ​​The annual ANDRUS Gala is being hosted Friday, November 4 at the Ritz-Carlton in White Plains NY. Cocktails begin at 6pm with a benefit dinner to follow. This year the gala honors Yonkers Mayor Mike Spano and ANDRUS alum Henry Dobell.

    Mayor Mike Spano, a lifelong Yonkers resident, husband, father of three, and former State Assembly Member, has dedicated his life to standing up for Yonkers families. Since taking office as Yonkers’ chief executive in 2012, Mayor Spano has lead Yonkers’ revitalization with innovative new projects that are transforming Yonkers’ growing waterfront, attracting new businesses, tech companies and the arts, and creating hundreds of new jobs across the city. Mayor Spano is committed to securing a strong financial future for Yonkers by building upon its greatest strengths – its location, its history, its pride and its people.

    With Henry Dobell, what you see is not what you get. Though obviously a passionate adventurist, musician and lay scientist, hidden is his capacity for empathy and deep concern that the weakest among us be treated equally. Henry’s life long struggle with mental illness has lead him to advocate for how the “Flow State” can keep people healthy and positive. Henry attended the Orchard School from 2003-8. ANDRUS taught him the life skills that have allowed him to thrive.

    Sponsors include but are not limited to: Jenny & Dave Dobell, Titan Advisors, Blackstone Heating & Air Conditioning, Michael Pellegrini Construction Management, Carmelo Apollonio, Brooke & Ed Garden, BDO USA, LLP, Sterling National Bank, ChemRX, and Goosetown Communications.

    About ANDRUS

    ANDRUS nurtures the social and emotional well-being in children and their families by delivering a broad range of vital services and by providing research, training and innovative program models that promote standards of excellence for professional performance in and beyond our service community.

    With programs on campus, in schools and within community-based settings throughout Westchester County, the nonprofit reaches almost 4,500 children and families each year from the New York Metropolitan area. ANDRUS also operates the Andrus Center for Learning and Innovation (ACLI) and the ANDRUS Sanctuary Institute, which has provided training and consultation to over 350 organizations worldwide in the use of a trauma-sensitive model for treatment and organizational change. Visit www.Andrus1928.org to learn more.

    FOR MORE INFORMATION

    Peter Sobel
    ​(914) 965-3700 ext. 1319; PSobel@jdam.org

    Source: ANDRUS

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