Review: Authors take readers through the history of drag
The Canadian Press March 6, 2020
“Legendary Children: The First Decade of RuPaul’s Drag Race and the Last Century of Queer Life,” Penguin Books, by Tom Fitzgerald & Lorenzo Marquez
In “Legendary Children: The First Decade of RuPaul’s Drag Race and the Last Century of Queer Life,” authors Tom Fitzgerald and Lorenzo Marquez take readers on an exciting adventure through the history of drag.
Using the TV show “RuPaul’s Drag Race” as an anchor, the book seeks to give drag queens - as well as transgender and gender nonconforming activists - their due for the role they played and continue to play in the LGBTQ rights movement.
While the book covers several serious and important issues, it focuses mostly on the fun - on the glamour, art and beauty of drag performance. (The book opens by telling readers to be ready to search on YouTube for the performances and scenes the book references.) It’s a delightful and important look at the way past queens and other queer folk have shaped not only drag but also queer life as we know it.
Fitzgerald and Marquez have crafted a world in which drag queens are heroes - fighting for equality and looking fierce and fabulous while doing it. It’s a history well told, one that is approachable and enjoyable for all to digest. The prose is upbeat and makes a reader as excited about the history as the authors so clearly are.
Molly Sprayregen, The Associated Press
It’s possible that I shall make an ass of myself. But in that case one can always get out of it with a little dialectic. I have, of course, so worded my proposition as to be right either way (K.Marx, Letter to F.Engels on the Indian Mutiny)
Sunday, March 08, 2020
Chinese expat draws from experience in comics about Quebec life
CBC March 7, 2020
Since moving from China to Montreal five months ago, Zoe Qiu has been documenting her immigrant experience the best way she knows how — by making comics.
The comics, which Qiu has been posting on Instagram as "La vie au Québec," touches on everything from "bonjour-hi" at the pharmacy to debating whether Canada is a French-speaking country.
"Comics are my language, that's how I communicate with people," Qiu told CBC Montreal's Daybreak.
"When I draw cartoons, I feel relaxed. I also try to find something positive and funny in my art, and it helps me go through the difficulties and challenges here."
View photos
Annie Deir/CBCMore
These challenges include trying to learn French. Several of her comics touch on some of the so-called land mines of the language.
"It is already driving me crazy," she laughed. "French makes the words into male and female — everything has its gender!"
Qiu, who draws herself with rabbit ears, said she understands that French is important in Montreal and is making the effort — something other immigrants can empathize with.
zoe.qiu0630/Instagram
Members of Montreal's Chinese community have told her the work is "exactly like their daily life" in Quebec, including the uncertainties that come with being so far from home.
In one comic, Qiu described what it was like celebrating the Chinese New Year abroad, worrying about her parents in the midst of the COVID-19 outbreak back home.
zoe.qiu0630/Instagram
But Qiu said she hopes her comics resonate, not only with other immigrants, but also with Montrealers who are curious about people moving to their city.
CBC March 7, 2020
Since moving from China to Montreal five months ago, Zoe Qiu has been documenting her immigrant experience the best way she knows how — by making comics.
The comics, which Qiu has been posting on Instagram as "La vie au Québec," touches on everything from "bonjour-hi" at the pharmacy to debating whether Canada is a French-speaking country.
"Comics are my language, that's how I communicate with people," Qiu told CBC Montreal's Daybreak.
"When I draw cartoons, I feel relaxed. I also try to find something positive and funny in my art, and it helps me go through the difficulties and challenges here."
View photos
Annie Deir/CBCMore
These challenges include trying to learn French. Several of her comics touch on some of the so-called land mines of the language.
"It is already driving me crazy," she laughed. "French makes the words into male and female — everything has its gender!"
Qiu, who draws herself with rabbit ears, said she understands that French is important in Montreal and is making the effort — something other immigrants can empathize with.
zoe.qiu0630/Instagram
Members of Montreal's Chinese community have told her the work is "exactly like their daily life" in Quebec, including the uncertainties that come with being so far from home.
In one comic, Qiu described what it was like celebrating the Chinese New Year abroad, worrying about her parents in the midst of the COVID-19 outbreak back home.
zoe.qiu0630/Instagram
But Qiu said she hopes her comics resonate, not only with other immigrants, but also with Montrealers who are curious about people moving to their city.
Enmax's bid to buy Maine electrical utility hits setback
WHY ALBERTA DEREGULATED ELECTRICITY SO THIS COULD HAPPEN
CBC March 5, 2020
A bid by the Calgary-owned Enmax to purchase an electrical utility in the United States hit a roadblock Thursday when a state regulator rejected its proposal.
In March 2019, Emera Inc. signed a deal to sell its operations in Maine to Enmax in a deal valued at $1.8 billion in Canadian dollars, including debt.
But a 2-1 decision issued Thursday by Maine's Public Utilities Commission rejected that deal, with members of that commission voicing concerns about Enmax's decision to take on debt to pay for the takeover.
The commission is also worried about Emera's ability to pay for system upgrades if Enmax doesn't have the cash to help out in that regard.
Philip Bartlett, one of the members of the commission, raised concerns about Standard and Poor dropping Enmax's rating by one level last fall, from triple B+ to triple B due to concerns about the utility's debt.
"Due to the proposed transaction, Standard & Poor's has downgraded ENMAX's credit rating and added a negative outlook," Bartlett said. "The likely result is that ENMAX will have difficulty accessing capital markets for additional debt for the next several years to provide any capital infusion to Emera Maine.
"Emera Maine will largely be on its own and able to invest only what it can to finance itself."
Helen Wesley, CFO of Enmax, said today's deliberation was just another step in the regulatory approval process, of which there have been many.
"The reaction, or the outcome from today, was very much within the range of expected outcomes for Enmax," Wesley said. "We are working very collaboratively and quickly with the commission to respond to their requests for some changes to the stipulations."
Wesley called the process "fairly typical" and said Enmax was very comfortable they would be able to address the commission's concerns in a matter of "weeks, and not months."
"After the deliberation this morning we quickly regrouped with commission staff and we're working on revising the stipulation so that we can get it back in their hands in very short order," Wesley said. "I suspect we'll be in good shape within a few days to resubmit something."
Emera Maine, a regulated electric transmission and distribution company, is headquartered in Bangor, Maine, serving 159,000 customers in the northern and eastern part of the state.
WHY ALBERTA DEREGULATED ELECTRICITY SO THIS COULD HAPPEN
CBC March 5, 2020
A bid by the Calgary-owned Enmax to purchase an electrical utility in the United States hit a roadblock Thursday when a state regulator rejected its proposal.
In March 2019, Emera Inc. signed a deal to sell its operations in Maine to Enmax in a deal valued at $1.8 billion in Canadian dollars, including debt.
But a 2-1 decision issued Thursday by Maine's Public Utilities Commission rejected that deal, with members of that commission voicing concerns about Enmax's decision to take on debt to pay for the takeover.
The commission is also worried about Emera's ability to pay for system upgrades if Enmax doesn't have the cash to help out in that regard.
Philip Bartlett, one of the members of the commission, raised concerns about Standard and Poor dropping Enmax's rating by one level last fall, from triple B+ to triple B due to concerns about the utility's debt.
"Due to the proposed transaction, Standard & Poor's has downgraded ENMAX's credit rating and added a negative outlook," Bartlett said. "The likely result is that ENMAX will have difficulty accessing capital markets for additional debt for the next several years to provide any capital infusion to Emera Maine.
"Emera Maine will largely be on its own and able to invest only what it can to finance itself."
Helen Wesley, CFO of Enmax, said today's deliberation was just another step in the regulatory approval process, of which there have been many.
"The reaction, or the outcome from today, was very much within the range of expected outcomes for Enmax," Wesley said. "We are working very collaboratively and quickly with the commission to respond to their requests for some changes to the stipulations."
Wesley called the process "fairly typical" and said Enmax was very comfortable they would be able to address the commission's concerns in a matter of "weeks, and not months."
"After the deliberation this morning we quickly regrouped with commission staff and we're working on revising the stipulation so that we can get it back in their hands in very short order," Wesley said. "I suspect we'll be in good shape within a few days to resubmit something."
Emera Maine, a regulated electric transmission and distribution company, is headquartered in Bangor, Maine, serving 159,000 customers in the northern and eastern part of the state.
HEARTLAND INSTITUTE
Pro-Trump Climate Denial Group Lays Off Staff Amid Financial Woes, Ex-Employees Say
Alexander C. Kaufman March 7, 2020
View photos
Heartland Institute's finances appear to have gone up in smoke. (Photo: J.D. Pooley via Getty Images)More
An influential climate-denial think tank bankrolled by President Donald Trump’s far-right billionaire donors has laid off nearly a dozen staffers amid financial troubles, according to three former employees.
The Illinois-based Heartland Institute ― which captured headlines last month for promoting a German teenager with ties to neo-Nazis as the climate denier’s alternative to acclaimed youth activist Greta Thunberg ― pink-slipped at least 10 staffers Friday, shedding what one former employee described as “more than half” the organization’s staff.
“Heartland is broke,” Nikki Comerford, the nonprofit’s events coordinator on staff for nearly 21 years, told a former colleague in a text message, a screenshot of which HuffPost reviewed.
Comerford blamed Frank Lasée, the former Wisconsin Republican state lawmaker who took over as Heartland’s president last July, for squandering the organization’s budget during his nascent tenure and leaving the group in dire financial straits. Another former employee accused Lasée of mismanaging the budget, and private Facebook posts from other current staffers expressed dismay over the state of the organization, but HuffPost could not independently verify the state of Heartland’s finances because the nonprofit’s tax filings for 2019 are not yet due.
“Frank Lasee spent all of our money in six months including the savings,” she wrote in a text. “They had to lay off more than half the staff today and more coming. What an asshole.”
Lasée did not respond to an email requesting comment on Friday night, but HuffPost confirmed the details with two former employees who left Heartland between 2016 and 2017 but maintained ties to the organization.
The nonprofit long suffered from “a lack of long-term financial planning,” another former staffer told HuffPost.
“When I was employed at Heartland, that organization was always barely making payroll,” the ex-staffer, who requested anonymity for fear of alienating former co-workers, said by phone Friday evening.
The Heartland Institute once towered as one of the most active nodes in the climate misinformation network that oil, gas and coal interests built to obscure the threat greenhouse gas emissions posed to life on Earth.
By the late 2000s, pressure grew on companies such as Exxon Mobil Corp., Heartland’s benefactor since 1998, to cut ties. In 2006, the oil behemoth did so as it sought to distance itself from outright denialism in the face of mounting evidence that climate change was not only real but occurring faster than scientists initially predicted.
Heartland President Frank Lasée is a former Republican member of the Wisconsin state Senate. (Photo: Douglas Graham via Getty Images)More
Billionaire ideologues stepped in to fill the void. In 2008, hedge funder Robert Mercer and his daughter, Rebekah Mercer, started donating to Heartland through their family foundation, which has also funded the right-wing website Breitbart News and other fringe organizations.
In 2016, as the Mercers pumped money into Trump’s presidential campaign, the secretive conservative megadonors increased grants to the Heartland Institute, giving $800,000, up from $100,000 the previous year. In 2017, the most recent year for which the Mercer Family Foundation’s tax filings are available, the family gave Heartland another $800,000.
Heartland received $5.8 million in 2018, according to its latest tax filing, and at least $3 million of that came from the Donors Trust, the nonprofit once described as “the dark-money ATM of the conservative movement.” Between two-thirds and three-quarters of Heartland’s budget is now directed at climate misinformation programs, James Taylor, the head of Heartland’s climate efforts, said to undercover reporters from the German news site Collectiv last December.
But 2017 marked what appeared to be a zenith for Heartland. Fundraising that year nearly hit $6 million. After more than a decade on the fringes of power, cultivating influence with Republican lawmakers and aggressively promoting its contrarian and easily debunked takes on climate science, the group saw its influence in Washington blossom as Trump appointed pro-fossil fuel hardliners to his administration.
When, in late 2017, then-Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt began planning a sort of mock trial on climate science, pitting credible researchers against industry-backed rogues, Heartland submitted a list of 145 names of contrarian scientists to consider.
A HuffPost investigation found that the list included a child sex offender: Oliver Manuel, a nuclear chemist whose crank theories about the sun alienated even the most ardent climate deniers, and who was convicted of attempted sodomy of an 11-year-old girl. In a response to the exposé, EPA distanced itself from Heartland. Five days after the story was published, Heartland, which is known to attempt to publicly discredit journalists and critics, disputed the nature of the list in a statement calling HuffPost “shameful and even disgusting.”
Naomi Seibt, a 19-year-old climate change skeptic and self-proclaimed climate realist, speaks during a workshop last week at the Conservative Political Action Conference 2020. (Photo: Samuel Corum via Getty Images) LIKE HER PARENTS SHE IS AN ACTIVIST IN THE RIGHT WING GERMAN NATIONALIST PARTY AfD
Pro-Trump Climate Denial Group Lays Off Staff Amid Financial Woes, Ex-Employees Say
Alexander C. Kaufman March 7, 2020
View photos
Heartland Institute's finances appear to have gone up in smoke. (Photo: J.D. Pooley via Getty Images)More
An influential climate-denial think tank bankrolled by President Donald Trump’s far-right billionaire donors has laid off nearly a dozen staffers amid financial troubles, according to three former employees.
The Illinois-based Heartland Institute ― which captured headlines last month for promoting a German teenager with ties to neo-Nazis as the climate denier’s alternative to acclaimed youth activist Greta Thunberg ― pink-slipped at least 10 staffers Friday, shedding what one former employee described as “more than half” the organization’s staff.
“Heartland is broke,” Nikki Comerford, the nonprofit’s events coordinator on staff for nearly 21 years, told a former colleague in a text message, a screenshot of which HuffPost reviewed.
Comerford blamed Frank Lasée, the former Wisconsin Republican state lawmaker who took over as Heartland’s president last July, for squandering the organization’s budget during his nascent tenure and leaving the group in dire financial straits. Another former employee accused Lasée of mismanaging the budget, and private Facebook posts from other current staffers expressed dismay over the state of the organization, but HuffPost could not independently verify the state of Heartland’s finances because the nonprofit’s tax filings for 2019 are not yet due.
“Frank Lasee spent all of our money in six months including the savings,” she wrote in a text. “They had to lay off more than half the staff today and more coming. What an asshole.”
Lasée did not respond to an email requesting comment on Friday night, but HuffPost confirmed the details with two former employees who left Heartland between 2016 and 2017 but maintained ties to the organization.
The nonprofit long suffered from “a lack of long-term financial planning,” another former staffer told HuffPost.
“When I was employed at Heartland, that organization was always barely making payroll,” the ex-staffer, who requested anonymity for fear of alienating former co-workers, said by phone Friday evening.
The Heartland Institute once towered as one of the most active nodes in the climate misinformation network that oil, gas and coal interests built to obscure the threat greenhouse gas emissions posed to life on Earth.
By the late 2000s, pressure grew on companies such as Exxon Mobil Corp., Heartland’s benefactor since 1998, to cut ties. In 2006, the oil behemoth did so as it sought to distance itself from outright denialism in the face of mounting evidence that climate change was not only real but occurring faster than scientists initially predicted.
Heartland President Frank Lasée is a former Republican member of the Wisconsin state Senate. (Photo: Douglas Graham via Getty Images)More
Billionaire ideologues stepped in to fill the void. In 2008, hedge funder Robert Mercer and his daughter, Rebekah Mercer, started donating to Heartland through their family foundation, which has also funded the right-wing website Breitbart News and other fringe organizations.
In 2016, as the Mercers pumped money into Trump’s presidential campaign, the secretive conservative megadonors increased grants to the Heartland Institute, giving $800,000, up from $100,000 the previous year. In 2017, the most recent year for which the Mercer Family Foundation’s tax filings are available, the family gave Heartland another $800,000.
Heartland received $5.8 million in 2018, according to its latest tax filing, and at least $3 million of that came from the Donors Trust, the nonprofit once described as “the dark-money ATM of the conservative movement.” Between two-thirds and three-quarters of Heartland’s budget is now directed at climate misinformation programs, James Taylor, the head of Heartland’s climate efforts, said to undercover reporters from the German news site Collectiv last December.
But 2017 marked what appeared to be a zenith for Heartland. Fundraising that year nearly hit $6 million. After more than a decade on the fringes of power, cultivating influence with Republican lawmakers and aggressively promoting its contrarian and easily debunked takes on climate science, the group saw its influence in Washington blossom as Trump appointed pro-fossil fuel hardliners to his administration.
When, in late 2017, then-Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt began planning a sort of mock trial on climate science, pitting credible researchers against industry-backed rogues, Heartland submitted a list of 145 names of contrarian scientists to consider.
A HuffPost investigation found that the list included a child sex offender: Oliver Manuel, a nuclear chemist whose crank theories about the sun alienated even the most ardent climate deniers, and who was convicted of attempted sodomy of an 11-year-old girl. In a response to the exposé, EPA distanced itself from Heartland. Five days after the story was published, Heartland, which is known to attempt to publicly discredit journalists and critics, disputed the nature of the list in a statement calling HuffPost “shameful and even disgusting.”
Naomi Seibt, a 19-year-old climate change skeptic and self-proclaimed climate realist, speaks during a workshop last week at the Conservative Political Action Conference 2020. (Photo: Samuel Corum via Getty Images) LIKE HER PARENTS SHE IS AN ACTIVIST IN THE RIGHT WING GERMAN NATIONALIST PARTY AfD
Heartland’s woes continued to mount. Months later, HuffPost published another investigation detailing how a top fundraiser in the group’s leadership circle stepped in to defend the organization’s former marketing director, Eugene Koprowski, against criminal charges stemming from his alleged stalking and harassment of a female underling half his age. Heartland again responded by accusing HuffPost of attempting to “smear” the organization. Legal proceedings appear to still be ongoing, and Koprowski split with his lawyer, Heartland fundraiser Joseph Morris, earlier this year, according to a court document HuffPost obtained.
Since then, Heartland saw its influence wane, particularly after Pruitt resigned from the EPA over a mountain of corruption accusations and his replacement, Andrew Wheeler, attempted a less provocative approach to the administration’s deregulatory agenda.
Last month, Heartland made a bid for a comeback. The group announced that it hired Naomi Seibt, a 19-year-old German who makes YouTube videos railing against what she calls the “alarmism” of millions of youth climate activists. Heartland cast Seibt as the climate-skeptic right’s answer to Greta Thunberg, the Swedish 17-year-old whose demands for radical action to halt planet-heating emissions captured the world’s attention and won her the title of 2019’s Time Person of the Year.
“The events surrounding Koprowski put a real damper on Heartland’s momentum in 2017,” a second former employee said by phone. “Naomi Seibt was meant to be a way for Heartland to reappear on the map.”
But Seibt, too, became a lightning rod for controversy. Her mother, Karoline Seibt, is an attorney who works with Alternative für Deutschland, Germany’s far-right nationalist party with ties to neo-Nazis. In 2018, the mother was pictured partying with Milo Yiannopoulos, the far-right former star columnist at Breitbart who, according to BuzzFeed News, pushed white nationalist ideology into mainstream U.S. politics.
Following a terrorist attack on a synagogue in Germany last year, Naomi Seibt said in a YouTube discussion that Jews were considered “at the top” of groups perceived as oppressed, while “ordinary Germans” were “at the bottom,” The Guardian reported. Muslims, she said, landed somewhere in between. Making her American debut at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland last week, Seibt declared herself “a fan, absolutely” of white nationalist YouTuber Stefan Molyneux and defended his past remarks pining for an all-white country.
That Heartland has struggled to raise money is a “predictable dilemma” at a time when the Trump administration continues gutting environmental safeguards, said Kert Davies, director of the Climate Investigations Center, a nonprofit watchdog group that tracks denialist organizations.
“It’s not surprising that they’ve had a hard time raising money and anxiously trying to find relevance in this era when their side is already winning more out of Trump,” Davies said. “The world can do without the Heartland Institute, for sure.”
Related...
Climate Denial Group Protected Former Executive Charged With Stalking Colleague, Ex-Staffers Say
The Mercers, Trump’s Billionaire Megadonors, Ramp Up Climate Change Denial Funding
'Anti-Greta' Activist Naomi Seibt Praises White Nationalist At CPAC
Since then, Heartland saw its influence wane, particularly after Pruitt resigned from the EPA over a mountain of corruption accusations and his replacement, Andrew Wheeler, attempted a less provocative approach to the administration’s deregulatory agenda.
Last month, Heartland made a bid for a comeback. The group announced that it hired Naomi Seibt, a 19-year-old German who makes YouTube videos railing against what she calls the “alarmism” of millions of youth climate activists. Heartland cast Seibt as the climate-skeptic right’s answer to Greta Thunberg, the Swedish 17-year-old whose demands for radical action to halt planet-heating emissions captured the world’s attention and won her the title of 2019’s Time Person of the Year.
“The events surrounding Koprowski put a real damper on Heartland’s momentum in 2017,” a second former employee said by phone. “Naomi Seibt was meant to be a way for Heartland to reappear on the map.”
But Seibt, too, became a lightning rod for controversy. Her mother, Karoline Seibt, is an attorney who works with Alternative für Deutschland, Germany’s far-right nationalist party with ties to neo-Nazis. In 2018, the mother was pictured partying with Milo Yiannopoulos, the far-right former star columnist at Breitbart who, according to BuzzFeed News, pushed white nationalist ideology into mainstream U.S. politics.
Following a terrorist attack on a synagogue in Germany last year, Naomi Seibt said in a YouTube discussion that Jews were considered “at the top” of groups perceived as oppressed, while “ordinary Germans” were “at the bottom,” The Guardian reported. Muslims, she said, landed somewhere in between. Making her American debut at the Conservative Political Action Conference in Maryland last week, Seibt declared herself “a fan, absolutely” of white nationalist YouTuber Stefan Molyneux and defended his past remarks pining for an all-white country.
That Heartland has struggled to raise money is a “predictable dilemma” at a time when the Trump administration continues gutting environmental safeguards, said Kert Davies, director of the Climate Investigations Center, a nonprofit watchdog group that tracks denialist organizations.
“It’s not surprising that they’ve had a hard time raising money and anxiously trying to find relevance in this era when their side is already winning more out of Trump,” Davies said. “The world can do without the Heartland Institute, for sure.”
Related...
Climate Denial Group Protected Former Executive Charged With Stalking Colleague, Ex-Staffers Say
The Mercers, Trump’s Billionaire Megadonors, Ramp Up Climate Change Denial Funding
'Anti-Greta' Activist Naomi Seibt Praises White Nationalist At CPAC
3939 N WILKE RD, ARLINGTON HTS, IL 60004-1275 | TAX-EXEMPT SINCE DEC. 1984
EIN: 36-3309812
Classification (NTEE)
Government and Public Administration (Public, Society Benefit — Multipurpose and Other)
Nonprofit Tax Code Designation: 501(c)(3)
Defined as: Organizations for any of the following purposes: religious, educational, charitable, scientific, literary, testing for public safety, fostering national or international amateur sports competition (as long as it doesn’t provide athletic facilities or equipment), or the prevention of cruelty to children or animals.
Donations to this organization are tax deductible.
More Resources: GuideStar
Get notifications: Sign up for updates about our data.
Tax Filings by Year
The IRS Form 990 is an annual information return that most organizations claiming federal tax-exempt status must file yearly. Read the IRS instructions for 990 forms.
If this organization has filed an amended return, it may not be reflected in the data below. Duplicated download links may be due to resubmissions or amendments to an organization's original return.
If you would like to download Form 990 document PDFs in bulk, the Internet Archive operates a mirror of the original bulk data.
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2018
PDF990
Form 990 documents available
Extracted filing data is not available for this tax period, but Form 990 documents are available for download.
Help Keep Nonprofit Explorer Free!
If you have used our data or site in your research or reporting, add credit and a link to Nonprofit Explorer in your story or publication and let us know.
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2017
PDF 990
Total Revenue
$5,994,969
Total Functional Expenses$5,471,048
Net income$523,921Notable sources of revenue Percent of total revenue
Contributions $5,901,021 98.4%
Program services $93,163 1.6%
Investment income $461 0.0%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising $324 0.0%
Sales of assets $0
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $0
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $2,079,397 38.0%
Other
Total Assets $2,295,434
Total Liabilities $754,156
Net Assets $1,541,278
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2016
Total Revenue
$5,480,656
Total Functional Expenses$5,524,414
Net income-$43,758
EIN: 36-3309812
Classification (NTEE)
Government and Public Administration (Public, Society Benefit — Multipurpose and Other)
Nonprofit Tax Code Designation: 501(c)(3)
Defined as: Organizations for any of the following purposes: religious, educational, charitable, scientific, literary, testing for public safety, fostering national or international amateur sports competition (as long as it doesn’t provide athletic facilities or equipment), or the prevention of cruelty to children or animals.
Donations to this organization are tax deductible.
More Resources: GuideStar
Get notifications: Sign up for updates about our data.
Tax Filings by Year
The IRS Form 990 is an annual information return that most organizations claiming federal tax-exempt status must file yearly. Read the IRS instructions for 990 forms.
If this organization has filed an amended return, it may not be reflected in the data below. Duplicated download links may be due to resubmissions or amendments to an organization's original return.
If you would like to download Form 990 document PDFs in bulk, the Internet Archive operates a mirror of the original bulk data.
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2018
PDF990
Form 990 documents available
Extracted filing data is not available for this tax period, but Form 990 documents are available for download.
Help Keep Nonprofit Explorer Free!
If you have used our data or site in your research or reporting, add credit and a link to Nonprofit Explorer in your story or publication and let us know.
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2017
PDF 990
Total Revenue
$5,994,969
Total Functional Expenses$5,471,048
Net income$523,921Notable sources of revenue Percent of total revenue
Contributions $5,901,021 98.4%
Program services $93,163 1.6%
Investment income $461 0.0%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising $324 0.0%
Sales of assets $0
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $0
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $2,079,397 38.0%
Other
Total Assets $2,295,434
Total Liabilities $754,156
Net Assets $1,541,278
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2016
Total Revenue
$5,480,656
Total Functional Expenses$5,524,414
Net income-$43,758
Notable sources of revenue Percent of total revenue
Contributions $5,350,800 97.6%
Program services $47,978 0.9%
Investment income $1,288 0.0%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising $74,151 1.4%
Sales of assets $0
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $6,439 0.1%
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $1,988,505 36.0%
Other
Total Assets $1,762,166
Total Liabilities $744,809
Net Assets $1,017,357
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2015
PDF990990-T
Total Revenue
$4,398,175
Total Functional Expenses$5,770,366
Net income-$1,372,191
Contributions $5,350,800 97.6%
Program services $47,978 0.9%
Investment income $1,288 0.0%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising $74,151 1.4%
Sales of assets $0
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $6,439 0.1%
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $1,988,505 36.0%
Other
Total Assets $1,762,166
Total Liabilities $744,809
Net Assets $1,017,357
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2015
PDF990990-T
Total Revenue
$4,398,175
Total Functional Expenses$5,770,366
Net income-$1,372,191
Notable sources of revenue Percent of total revenue
Contributions $4,570,630 Over 100%
Program services $54,561 1.2%
Investment income $2,360 0.1%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising -$224,173
Sales of assets -$14,340
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $9,137 0.2%
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $1,637,912 28.4%
Other
Total Assets $1,799,732
Total Liabilities $738,617
Net Assets $1,061,115
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2014
PDF990
Total Revenue
$6,738,428
Total Functional Expenses$4,393,358
Net income$2,345,070Notable sources of revenue Percent of total revenue
Contributions $6,890,995 Over 100%
Program services $68,467 1.0%
Investment income $947 0.0%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising -$221,981
Sales of assets $0
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $0
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $1,297,070 29.5%
Other
Total Assets $2,985,124
Total Liabilities $551,818
Net Assets $2,433,306
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2013
PDF990990-T
Total Revenue
$4,783,310
Total Functional Expenses$4,422,355
Net income$360,955Notable sources of revenue Percent of total revenue
Contributions $4,805,449 Over 100%
Program services $41,367 0.9%
Investment income $2,932 0.1%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising -$69,088
Sales of assets $0
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $2,650 0.1%
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $1,406,420 31.8%
Other
Total Assets $697,671
Total Liabilities $609,435
Net Assets $88,236
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2012
PDF990990-T
Total Revenue
$5,329,115
Total Functional Expenses$5,444,312
Net income-$115,197Notable sources of revenue Percent of total revenue
Contributions $5,202,679 97.6%
Program services $70,245 1.3%
Investment income $6,997 0.1%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising $46,694 0.9%
Sales of assets $0
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $2,500 0.0%
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $1,870,038 34.3%
Other
Total Assets $482,571
Total Liabilities $755,290
Net Assets -$272,719
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2011
PDF990990-T
Total Revenue
$4,573,631
Total Functional Expenses$5,204,877
Net income-$631,246Notable sources of revenue Percent of total revenue
Contributions $4,524,164 98.9%
Program services $90,822 2.0%
Investment income $1,681 0.0%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising -$39,597
Sales of assets -$11,555
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $8,116 0.2%
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $1,766,976 33.9%
Other
Total Assets $330,493
Total Liabilities $488,015
Net Assets -$157,522
Contributions $4,570,630 Over 100%
Program services $54,561 1.2%
Investment income $2,360 0.1%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising -$224,173
Sales of assets -$14,340
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $9,137 0.2%
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $1,637,912 28.4%
Other
Total Assets $1,799,732
Total Liabilities $738,617
Net Assets $1,061,115
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2014
PDF990
Total Revenue
$6,738,428
Total Functional Expenses$4,393,358
Net income$2,345,070Notable sources of revenue Percent of total revenue
Contributions $6,890,995 Over 100%
Program services $68,467 1.0%
Investment income $947 0.0%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising -$221,981
Sales of assets $0
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $0
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $1,297,070 29.5%
Other
Total Assets $2,985,124
Total Liabilities $551,818
Net Assets $2,433,306
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2013
PDF990990-T
Total Revenue
$4,783,310
Total Functional Expenses$4,422,355
Net income$360,955Notable sources of revenue Percent of total revenue
Contributions $4,805,449 Over 100%
Program services $41,367 0.9%
Investment income $2,932 0.1%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising -$69,088
Sales of assets $0
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $2,650 0.1%
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $1,406,420 31.8%
Other
Total Assets $697,671
Total Liabilities $609,435
Net Assets $88,236
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2012
PDF990990-T
Total Revenue
$5,329,115
Total Functional Expenses$5,444,312
Net income-$115,197Notable sources of revenue Percent of total revenue
Contributions $5,202,679 97.6%
Program services $70,245 1.3%
Investment income $6,997 0.1%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising $46,694 0.9%
Sales of assets $0
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $2,500 0.0%
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $1,870,038 34.3%
Other
Total Assets $482,571
Total Liabilities $755,290
Net Assets -$272,719
FISCAL YEAR ENDING DEC.
2011
PDF990990-T
Total Revenue
$4,573,631
Total Functional Expenses$5,204,877
Net income-$631,246Notable sources of revenue Percent of total revenue
Contributions $4,524,164 98.9%
Program services $90,822 2.0%
Investment income $1,681 0.0%
Bond proceeds $0
Royalties $0
Rental property income $0
Net fundraising -$39,597
Sales of assets -$11,555
Net inventory sales $0
Other revenue $8,116 0.2%
Notable expenses Percent of total expenses
Executive compensation $0
Professional fundraising fees $0
Other salaries and wages $1,766,976 33.9%
Other
Total Assets $330,493
Total Liabilities $488,015
Net Assets -$157,522
Saturday, March 07, 2020
New approach to FASD in N.W.T. focuses on accommodation, not behaviour
CBC March 6, 2020
A new wave of thinking on how to work with those who live with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) has arrived in the Northwest Territories.
It aims to recognize FASD as a brain-based physical disability, with symptoms or effects expressed through undesired behaviour. But instead of a focus on correcting the behaviour, this "brain-based" approach is focused on accommodating the disability before the bad behaviour happens.
A three-day workshop in Yellowknife this week presented the approach to more than 150 parents, and front-line social, mental health, and justice workers in the N.W.T.
"Until recently … FASD has been understood as a condition," said Nathalie Brassard, the FASD consultant and facilitator with FASCETS Canada West who led the workshop.
"We knew what caused it, but we didn't really know quite what to do for the individuals…. We focused on … behaviours, not realizing that behaviours are only a sign for the root cause, which is a brain that functions differently."
It's estimated by the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) that one out of every 13 women who consume alcohol during pregnancy will deliver a child with FASD — a disorder with a range of mental, physical and behavioural effects that result from neurochemical and structural brain damage in the mother's womb. It can interfere with a person's ability to successfully function in daily life.
In Canada, the CAMH estimates that eight out of every 1,000 children have FASD, although rates are generally acknowledged to be higher in special populations, such as the child welfare system or the justice system. According to the Northwest Territories Health and Social Services Authority, there are no statistics on the prevalence of FASD in the territory, but between one and four per cent of the Canadian population is affected by the disorder.
A paradigm shift
Brassard described the change in focus — from behaviour correction to disability accommodation — as a paradigm shift.
Kate Kyle/CBC
"The importance is to realize who we have in front of us — to ask ourselves, who is this person? What do they need? How do they function or function differently? What's hard for them?" Brassard said.
"By providing accommodation and support, those behaviours that we've been focusing on reduce on their own, and diminish and disappear."
But accommodation will vary from person to person, said Shawna Pound, the territory's adult FASD program co-ordinator with the Northwest Territories Health and Social Services Authority. The trick is to identify what a person needs in order to overcome undesired behaviour, and then to put mechanisms in place to account for those needs.
As an example, she describes a person with FASD who is chronically late for work. That person may, through disability, lack the capacity to understand what is going wrong every day. For the rest of us, it might be obvious that the person needs to set alarms as reminders to get to work on time. What may be unique about the person with FASD is the inability to make that judgment call, to recognize there is a problem, and to set an alarm.
"They need someone to set the reminders up in their phone, or maybe they need a phone call," Pound said. "It'll look different for everybody."
Pound said that the three-day workshop this week qualified participants for formal facilitator training in the method. She said a few people have shown interest in the year-long training process, and her department would like to see the approach expand in the North.
SEE
CBC March 6, 2020
A new wave of thinking on how to work with those who live with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) has arrived in the Northwest Territories.
It aims to recognize FASD as a brain-based physical disability, with symptoms or effects expressed through undesired behaviour. But instead of a focus on correcting the behaviour, this "brain-based" approach is focused on accommodating the disability before the bad behaviour happens.
A three-day workshop in Yellowknife this week presented the approach to more than 150 parents, and front-line social, mental health, and justice workers in the N.W.T.
"Until recently … FASD has been understood as a condition," said Nathalie Brassard, the FASD consultant and facilitator with FASCETS Canada West who led the workshop.
"We knew what caused it, but we didn't really know quite what to do for the individuals…. We focused on … behaviours, not realizing that behaviours are only a sign for the root cause, which is a brain that functions differently."
It's estimated by the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) that one out of every 13 women who consume alcohol during pregnancy will deliver a child with FASD — a disorder with a range of mental, physical and behavioural effects that result from neurochemical and structural brain damage in the mother's womb. It can interfere with a person's ability to successfully function in daily life.
In Canada, the CAMH estimates that eight out of every 1,000 children have FASD, although rates are generally acknowledged to be higher in special populations, such as the child welfare system or the justice system. According to the Northwest Territories Health and Social Services Authority, there are no statistics on the prevalence of FASD in the territory, but between one and four per cent of the Canadian population is affected by the disorder.
A paradigm shift
Brassard described the change in focus — from behaviour correction to disability accommodation — as a paradigm shift.
Kate Kyle/CBC
"The importance is to realize who we have in front of us — to ask ourselves, who is this person? What do they need? How do they function or function differently? What's hard for them?" Brassard said.
"By providing accommodation and support, those behaviours that we've been focusing on reduce on their own, and diminish and disappear."
But accommodation will vary from person to person, said Shawna Pound, the territory's adult FASD program co-ordinator with the Northwest Territories Health and Social Services Authority. The trick is to identify what a person needs in order to overcome undesired behaviour, and then to put mechanisms in place to account for those needs.
As an example, she describes a person with FASD who is chronically late for work. That person may, through disability, lack the capacity to understand what is going wrong every day. For the rest of us, it might be obvious that the person needs to set alarms as reminders to get to work on time. What may be unique about the person with FASD is the inability to make that judgment call, to recognize there is a problem, and to set an alarm.
"They need someone to set the reminders up in their phone, or maybe they need a phone call," Pound said. "It'll look different for everybody."
Pound said that the three-day workshop this week qualified participants for formal facilitator training in the method. She said a few people have shown interest in the year-long training process, and her department would like to see the approach expand in the North.
SEE
HERSTORY
Hundreds attend service for NASA pioneer Katherine Johnson
yesterday
1 of 7
A portrait of NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson faces guests prior to a memorial service in her honor on Saturday, March 7, 2020, at Hampton University Convocation Center in Hampton, Va. Johnson, a mathematician who calculated rocket trajectories and earth orbits for NASA’s early space missions and was later portrayed in the 2016 hit film “Hidden Figures,” about pioneering black female aerospace workers died on Monday, Feb. 24, 2020. She was 101. (Kaitlin McKeown /The Virginian-Pilot via AP)
HAMPTON, Va. (AP) — Three black astronauts joined hundreds of other mourners Saturday at a memorial service for pioneering African American mathematician and NASA researcher Katherine Johnson.
Johnson, who calculated rocket trajectories and Earth orbits for NASA’s early space missions and was later portrayed in the 2016 film “Hidden Figures,” about pioneering black female aerospace workers, died Feb. 24 at the age of 101.
More than 700 people turned out for Saturday’s memorial service at the Hampton University Convocation Center.
“I think about the journey that she’s going on now,” astronaut Leland Melvin said. “We can’t calculate the speed that she’s traveling to get to heaven.”
Melvin was joined by fellow astronauts Yvonne Cagle and Mae Jemison, the first black woman in space.
Johnson was remembered not just as a pioneering researcher, but as a faithful church leader and family matriarch.
“Grandma, because of you, our world will forever be unlimited,” grandson Michael Moore said. “And because of you, I have no bounds.”
Her family received an outpouring of tributes, some of which were read during the service.
Former President Barack Obama, who awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015, called her a “hero to millions” in a letter to her family. First Lady Melania Trump said she “took our nation to remarkable heights.”
Clayton Turner, director of NASA’s Langley Research Center, spoke at the service and presented Johnson’s family with the flag that was flying over the center when she died.
U.S. Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va., said during the ceremony that he knew Johnson and her second husband, James Johnson, for years before he ever read Margot Lee Shetterly’s book “Hidden Figures” about Johnson and her colleagues’ work as “human computers.”
“There are few people who fought as good a fight, finished as difficult a course and all along kept the faith as Katherine Johnson,” Scott said.
yesterday
1 of 7
A portrait of NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson faces guests prior to a memorial service in her honor on Saturday, March 7, 2020, at Hampton University Convocation Center in Hampton, Va. Johnson, a mathematician who calculated rocket trajectories and earth orbits for NASA’s early space missions and was later portrayed in the 2016 hit film “Hidden Figures,” about pioneering black female aerospace workers died on Monday, Feb. 24, 2020. She was 101. (Kaitlin McKeown /The Virginian-Pilot via AP)
HAMPTON, Va. (AP) — Three black astronauts joined hundreds of other mourners Saturday at a memorial service for pioneering African American mathematician and NASA researcher Katherine Johnson.
Johnson, who calculated rocket trajectories and Earth orbits for NASA’s early space missions and was later portrayed in the 2016 film “Hidden Figures,” about pioneering black female aerospace workers, died Feb. 24 at the age of 101.
More than 700 people turned out for Saturday’s memorial service at the Hampton University Convocation Center.
“I think about the journey that she’s going on now,” astronaut Leland Melvin said. “We can’t calculate the speed that she’s traveling to get to heaven.”
Melvin was joined by fellow astronauts Yvonne Cagle and Mae Jemison, the first black woman in space.
Johnson was remembered not just as a pioneering researcher, but as a faithful church leader and family matriarch.
“Grandma, because of you, our world will forever be unlimited,” grandson Michael Moore said. “And because of you, I have no bounds.”
Her family received an outpouring of tributes, some of which were read during the service.
Former President Barack Obama, who awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015, called her a “hero to millions” in a letter to her family. First Lady Melania Trump said she “took our nation to remarkable heights.”
Clayton Turner, director of NASA’s Langley Research Center, spoke at the service and presented Johnson’s family with the flag that was flying over the center when she died.
U.S. Rep. Bobby Scott, D-Va., said during the ceremony that he knew Johnson and her second husband, James Johnson, for years before he ever read Margot Lee Shetterly’s book “Hidden Figures” about Johnson and her colleagues’ work as “human computers.”
“There are few people who fought as good a fight, finished as difficult a course and all along kept the faith as Katherine Johnson,” Scott said.
NASA astronaut Dr. Yvonne Cagle speaks at a memorial service for Katherine Johnson on Saturday, March 7, 2020, at Hampton University Convocation Center in Hampton, Va. Johnson, a mathematician who calculated rocket trajectories and earth orbits for NASA’s early space missions and was later portrayed in the 2016 hit film “Hidden Figures,” about pioneering black female aerospace workers died on Monday, Feb. 24, 2020. She was 101. (Kaitlin McKeown /The Virginian-Pilot via AP)
A guest holds a program during a memorial service to honor NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson on Saturday, March 7, 2020, at Hampton University Convocation Center in Hampton, Va. Johnson, a mathematician who calculated rocket trajectories and earth orbits for NASA’s early space missions and was later portrayed in the 2016 hit film “Hidden Figures,” about pioneering black female aerospace workers died on Monday, Feb. 24, 2020. She was 101. (Kaitlin McKeown /The Virginian-Pilot via AP)
McCoy Tyner, iconic and influential jazz pianist, dies
By The Associated Press
1 of 3
FILE - In this July 14, 2009 file photo, jazz pianist McCoy Tyner performs during the 43rd Montreux Jazz Festival in Montreux, Switzerland. The groundbreaking and influential jazz pianist and the last surviving member of the John Coltrane Quartet, has died, his family said on Friday, March 6, 2020. He was 81. (AP Photo/Keystone, Dominic Favre, File)
NEW YORK (AP) — McCoy Tyner, the groundbreaking and influential jazz pianist and the last surviving member of the John Coltrane Quartet, has died. He was 81.
Tyner’s family confirmed the death in a statement released on social media Friday. No more details were provided.
“It is with heavy hearts that we announce the passing of jazz legend, Alfred “McCoy” Tyner. McCoy was an inspired musician who devoted his life to his art, his family and his spirituality,” the statement read. “McCoy Tyner’s music and legacy will continue to inspire fans and future talent for generations to come.”
Tyner was born in Philadelphia on Dec. 11, 1938. He eventually met Coltrane and joined him for the 1961 album “My Favorite Things,” a major commercial success that highlighted the remarkable chemistry of the John Coltrane Quartet. The album was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1998.
The quartet would go on to release more revered projects, becoming an international renowned group and one of the seminal acts in jazz history.
Tyner eventually found success apart from the John Coltrane Quartet, releasing more than 70 albums. He also won five Grammy Awards.
In 2002, he was named a Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the Arts.
MY FIRST MCCOY TYNER ALBUM
By The Associated Press
1 of 3
FILE - In this July 14, 2009 file photo, jazz pianist McCoy Tyner performs during the 43rd Montreux Jazz Festival in Montreux, Switzerland. The groundbreaking and influential jazz pianist and the last surviving member of the John Coltrane Quartet, has died, his family said on Friday, March 6, 2020. He was 81. (AP Photo/Keystone, Dominic Favre, File)
NEW YORK (AP) — McCoy Tyner, the groundbreaking and influential jazz pianist and the last surviving member of the John Coltrane Quartet, has died. He was 81.
Tyner’s family confirmed the death in a statement released on social media Friday. No more details were provided.
“It is with heavy hearts that we announce the passing of jazz legend, Alfred “McCoy” Tyner. McCoy was an inspired musician who devoted his life to his art, his family and his spirituality,” the statement read. “McCoy Tyner’s music and legacy will continue to inspire fans and future talent for generations to come.”
Tyner was born in Philadelphia on Dec. 11, 1938. He eventually met Coltrane and joined him for the 1961 album “My Favorite Things,” a major commercial success that highlighted the remarkable chemistry of the John Coltrane Quartet. The album was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1998.
The quartet would go on to release more revered projects, becoming an international renowned group and one of the seminal acts in jazz history.
Tyner eventually found success apart from the John Coltrane Quartet, releasing more than 70 albums. He also won five Grammy Awards.
In 2002, he was named a Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the Arts.
FILE - In this Thursday, July 6, 2017 file photo, jazz pianist McCoy Tyner performs at the botanical Garden Citta' Studi, in Milan, Italy. The groundbreaking and influential jazz pianist and the last surviving member of the John Coltrane Quartet, has died, his family said on Friday, March 6, 2020. He was 81. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)
MY FIRST MCCOY TYNER ALBUM
After 2 weeks of pounding, Leaning Tower of Dallas is down
March 2, 2020
Lloyd D. Nabors Demolition, LLC chips away at the top levels of the former Affiliated Computer Services building with a wrecking ball on Feb. 24, 2020 in Dallas. (Juan Figueroa/The Dallas Morning News via AP)
DALLAS (AP) — The Leaning Tower of Dallas, the nearly iconic remnant of a high-rise building implosion gone awry, finally collapsed in a cloud of dust Monday after two weeks of being whacked with a headache ball.
The tower collapsed about 3:15 p.m. after a few last whacks with a wrecking ball swung by a high-rise crane. No injuries were reported.
The tower was the core of an 11-story building that was imploded with explosives on Feb. 16. The 11 floors surrounding the core duly collapsed, but the solid concrete core containing the stairway and elevator shafts remained standing at an angle. The demolition contractor has been whacking away at it ever since with a 5,600-pound wrecking ball.
A spokeswoman for De La Vega Development, which is redeveloping the site, had said immediately after the implosion that the tower’s demolition could take up to four days. It ended up taking almost four times that amount of time before it was taken down.
In the meantime, the tower drew hundreds of people who took often-whimsical photographs of themselves with the tower in the background.
‘Leaning Tower of Dallas’ endures blows from wrecking ball
February 24, 2020
Megan Dority poses for a photo with the so called "Leaning Tower of Dallas" as a crew works to topple the structure north of downtown Dallas, Monday, Feb. 24, 2020. The still standing structure is part of an 11-story building that found a second life online after surviving a first demolition attempt. The former Affiliated Computer Services building inspired jokes and comparisons to Italy's Leaning Tower of Pisa when a Feb. 16 implosion failed to bring down its core. The company that engineered the blast said some explosives did not go off. (AP Photo/LM Otero)
DALLAS (AP) — The “Leaning Tower of Dallas,” a social media sensation born when a part of a building survived implosion, endured hundreds of blows from a wrecking ball Monday.
Dozens of people gathered northeast of the Texas city’s downtown to watch as a crane was used to batter the former Affiliated Computer Services building.But the developer now says the demolition may take days.
The 11-story building found a second life online after surviving a first demolition attempt. It inspired jokes and comparisons to Italy’s Leaning Tower of Pisa when a Feb. 16 implosion failed to bring down its core.
The company that engineered the blast said some explosives did not go off. In the following week, people flocked to the site to post photos of themselves pretending to prop up the lopsided tower.
The remainder of the building proved resilient Monday, and some onlookers were nonplussed by the ball that began swinging around 9 a.m.
“They’re taking the wrecking ball and hitting the side of it over and over again, and it’s still just ineffective,” Shawn Graybill, a 24-year-old who lives nearby and came out in his pajamas to watch the demolition, said Monday morning. “It’s not knocking the tower down.”
Lloyd Nabors, whose company is handling the demolition, previously said the tower was leaning in the direction it was intended to fall, and there aren’t any safety concerns. The building is being demolished to make way for a $2.5 billion mixed-use project
A Friday statement from De La Vega Development suggested the demolition would be done by noon. But the the core of the tower, including the elevator shafts, was still standing in the late afternoon Monday, and a spokeswoman said the process is expected to take up to four days.
The wrecking crew is using a 5,600-pound ball and following “standard procedure” in starting at the top of the structure and working down, said Missy Wyszynski.
As demolition work took place, an online petition to “save this landmark from destruction” continued to draw signatures. Graybill said he hasn’t signed but plans to if the tower doesn’t tumble soon.
And as the effort to topple the structure stretched into the late afternoon, people began to take another genre of photo — pretending to push the tower over rather than prop it up.
loisa Alvarado poses for a photo as she and friends watch the demolition of the so called "Leaning Tower of Dallas" as a wrecking ball works to topple the structure north of downtown Dallas, Monday, Feb. 24, 2020. The still standing structure is part of an 11-story building that found a second life online after surviving a first demolition attempt. The former Affiliated Computer Services building inspired jokes and comparisons to Italy's Leaning Tower of Pisa when a Feb. 16 implosion failed to bring down its core. The company that engineered the blast said some explosives did not go off. (AP Photo/LM Otero)
March 2, 2020
Lloyd D. Nabors Demolition, LLC chips away at the top levels of the former Affiliated Computer Services building with a wrecking ball on Feb. 24, 2020 in Dallas. (Juan Figueroa/The Dallas Morning News via AP)
DALLAS (AP) — The Leaning Tower of Dallas, the nearly iconic remnant of a high-rise building implosion gone awry, finally collapsed in a cloud of dust Monday after two weeks of being whacked with a headache ball.
The tower collapsed about 3:15 p.m. after a few last whacks with a wrecking ball swung by a high-rise crane. No injuries were reported.
The tower was the core of an 11-story building that was imploded with explosives on Feb. 16. The 11 floors surrounding the core duly collapsed, but the solid concrete core containing the stairway and elevator shafts remained standing at an angle. The demolition contractor has been whacking away at it ever since with a 5,600-pound wrecking ball.
A spokeswoman for De La Vega Development, which is redeveloping the site, had said immediately after the implosion that the tower’s demolition could take up to four days. It ended up taking almost four times that amount of time before it was taken down.
In the meantime, the tower drew hundreds of people who took often-whimsical photographs of themselves with the tower in the background.
A wrecking ball smashes against the "Leaning Tower of Dallas" north of downtown Dallas, Monday, Feb. 24, 2020. The still-standing structure is part of the 11-story former Affiliated Computer Services building that found a second life online after a Feb. 16 implosion attempt. The company that engineered the blast said some explosives did not go off. (AP Photo/LM Otero)
The former Affiliated Computer Services tower core shaft remains standing on Monday, Feb. 17, 2020 in Dallas. A demolition on Sunday morning left the single tower behind. (Juan Figueroa/The Dallas Morning News via AP)
This Monday, March 2, 2020 photo shows the remains of the Affiliated Computer Services building or the Leaning to Tower of Dallas. The Leaning Tower of Dallas, the nearly iconic remnant of a high-rise building implosion gone awry, finally collapsed in a cloud of dust Monday after two weeks of being whacked with a headache ball. (Juan Figueroa/The Dallas Morning News via AP)
The remains of the Affiliated Computer Services building or the Leaning to Tower of Dallas at 2828 N. Haskell Avenue after finally falling over on Monday, March 2, 2020 in Dallas. The Leaning Tower of Dallas, the nearly iconic remnant of a high-rise building implosion gone awry, finally collapsed in a cloud of dust Monday after two weeks of being whacked with a headache ball. (Juan Figueroa/The Dallas Morning News via AP)
‘Leaning Tower of Dallas’ endures blows from wrecking ball
February 24, 2020
Megan Dority poses for a photo with the so called "Leaning Tower of Dallas" as a crew works to topple the structure north of downtown Dallas, Monday, Feb. 24, 2020. The still standing structure is part of an 11-story building that found a second life online after surviving a first demolition attempt. The former Affiliated Computer Services building inspired jokes and comparisons to Italy's Leaning Tower of Pisa when a Feb. 16 implosion failed to bring down its core. The company that engineered the blast said some explosives did not go off. (AP Photo/LM Otero)
DALLAS (AP) — The “Leaning Tower of Dallas,” a social media sensation born when a part of a building survived implosion, endured hundreds of blows from a wrecking ball Monday.
Dozens of people gathered northeast of the Texas city’s downtown to watch as a crane was used to batter the former Affiliated Computer Services building.But the developer now says the demolition may take days.
The 11-story building found a second life online after surviving a first demolition attempt. It inspired jokes and comparisons to Italy’s Leaning Tower of Pisa when a Feb. 16 implosion failed to bring down its core.
The company that engineered the blast said some explosives did not go off. In the following week, people flocked to the site to post photos of themselves pretending to prop up the lopsided tower.
The remainder of the building proved resilient Monday, and some onlookers were nonplussed by the ball that began swinging around 9 a.m.
“They’re taking the wrecking ball and hitting the side of it over and over again, and it’s still just ineffective,” Shawn Graybill, a 24-year-old who lives nearby and came out in his pajamas to watch the demolition, said Monday morning. “It’s not knocking the tower down.”
Lloyd Nabors, whose company is handling the demolition, previously said the tower was leaning in the direction it was intended to fall, and there aren’t any safety concerns. The building is being demolished to make way for a $2.5 billion mixed-use project
A Friday statement from De La Vega Development suggested the demolition would be done by noon. But the the core of the tower, including the elevator shafts, was still standing in the late afternoon Monday, and a spokeswoman said the process is expected to take up to four days.
The wrecking crew is using a 5,600-pound ball and following “standard procedure” in starting at the top of the structure and working down, said Missy Wyszynski.
As demolition work took place, an online petition to “save this landmark from destruction” continued to draw signatures. Graybill said he hasn’t signed but plans to if the tower doesn’t tumble soon.
And as the effort to topple the structure stretched into the late afternoon, people began to take another genre of photo — pretending to push the tower over rather than prop it up.
loisa Alvarado poses for a photo as she and friends watch the demolition of the so called "Leaning Tower of Dallas" as a wrecking ball works to topple the structure north of downtown Dallas, Monday, Feb. 24, 2020. The still standing structure is part of an 11-story building that found a second life online after surviving a first demolition attempt. The former Affiliated Computer Services building inspired jokes and comparisons to Italy's Leaning Tower of Pisa when a Feb. 16 implosion failed to bring down its core. The company that engineered the blast said some explosives did not go off. (AP Photo/LM Otero)
‘Leaning Tower of Dallas’ is online star after implosion
February 19, 2020
DALLAS (AP) — A social media sensation dubbed the “Leaning Tower of Dallas” was born when a portion of a building survived an implosion in Dallas.
After the implosion Sunday failed to bring down the core of the 11-story former Affiliated Computer Services building, the online jokes and photos began. Many, inspired by Italy’s Leaning Tower of Pisa, posted photos showing themselves pretending to prop up the lopsided tower.
One Twitter user quipped , “Oops, an implosion masterpiece!!” Another asked “Who needs Pisa? We have the Leaning Tower of Dallas.”
An online petition even popped up to “save this landmark from destruction,” noting, “if anything, do it for the memes.”
Lloyd Nabors, whose company is handling the demolition, said crews will use a wrecking ball to take down the remaining tower, which included the elevator shafts.
Steve Pettigrew, president of the company that created the blast plan and handled the explosives, said all of the explosives did go off.
“That type of construction with the central core and the outer columns — they’re tough, obviously,” he said.
Nabors said the tower is leaning in the direction it was intended to fall, and there aren’t any safety concerns.
The building is being demolished to make way for a $2.5 billion mixed-use project.
New medical school to train doctors to work in poor areas
ST. LOUIS (AP) — A new four-year medical school in St. Louis will focus on training doctors who will work in poor urban and rural areas.
Puerto Rico-based Ponce Health Sciences University is making an $80 million commitment to develop the new campus in north St. Louis, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported Friday. Construction will begin later this year with a freshman class of 150 in the fall of 2022.
Ponce President David Lenihan told the newspaper that the goal is to provide opportunities for minority and low-income students who fail to get a spot in a traditional medical school but show promise to succeed. He said those students tend to work in communities where they grew up and have a strong understanding of their patients.
“St. Louis is positioned right in the heart of America,” Lenihan said. “The reason why St. Louis is so good, is that if our mission is trying to increase the cultural diversification and the socio-economic diversification, why don’t we build it in the Midwest, where we need it? We don’t need it in New York. You don’t need it in Miami or California. You need it in Missouri, Kansas and rural Illinois.”
The school will be part of developer Paul McKee’s NorthSide Regeneration Plan to develop the site of the former Pruitt-Igoe housing project across from the future site of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency’s western headquarters.
A 2018 report by the Missouri Hospital Association said the U.S. faces a shortage of up to 49,000 primary care doctors over the next decade. Rural areas and poorer parts of urban areas are especially at risk.
Herb Kuhn, hospital association president, said several Missouri counties have no primary care physicians and eight acute hospitals in rural Missouri have closed in the past five years. All told, 44 Missouri counties lack a hospital.
“If you really want to solve the problem in Missouri, and elsewhere in the U.S., you have to train more providers,” Lenihan said. “This is how we show the rest of the U.S. and the world, this is how you do this.”
The Princeton Review found that 21,622 applicants were accepted into medical schools for the 2018–2019 school year, out of the 52,777 who applied, for an overall acceptance rate of 41%.
All of the 600 students at Ponce’s medical school in Puerto Rico are either minorities or come from a low-income background, Lenihan said. The school supplies 12% of all the Hispanic medical school graduates in the U.S., he said. Annual tuition is $35,000.
Puerto Rico-based Ponce Health Sciences University is making an $80 million commitment to develop the new campus in north St. Louis, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported Friday. Construction will begin later this year with a freshman class of 150 in the fall of 2022.
Ponce President David Lenihan told the newspaper that the goal is to provide opportunities for minority and low-income students who fail to get a spot in a traditional medical school but show promise to succeed. He said those students tend to work in communities where they grew up and have a strong understanding of their patients.
“St. Louis is positioned right in the heart of America,” Lenihan said. “The reason why St. Louis is so good, is that if our mission is trying to increase the cultural diversification and the socio-economic diversification, why don’t we build it in the Midwest, where we need it? We don’t need it in New York. You don’t need it in Miami or California. You need it in Missouri, Kansas and rural Illinois.”
The school will be part of developer Paul McKee’s NorthSide Regeneration Plan to develop the site of the former Pruitt-Igoe housing project across from the future site of the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency’s western headquarters.
A 2018 report by the Missouri Hospital Association said the U.S. faces a shortage of up to 49,000 primary care doctors over the next decade. Rural areas and poorer parts of urban areas are especially at risk.
Herb Kuhn, hospital association president, said several Missouri counties have no primary care physicians and eight acute hospitals in rural Missouri have closed in the past five years. All told, 44 Missouri counties lack a hospital.
“If you really want to solve the problem in Missouri, and elsewhere in the U.S., you have to train more providers,” Lenihan said. “This is how we show the rest of the U.S. and the world, this is how you do this.”
The Princeton Review found that 21,622 applicants were accepted into medical schools for the 2018–2019 school year, out of the 52,777 who applied, for an overall acceptance rate of 41%.
All of the 600 students at Ponce’s medical school in Puerto Rico are either minorities or come from a low-income background, Lenihan said. The school supplies 12% of all the Hispanic medical school graduates in the U.S., he said. Annual tuition is $35,000.
Meet Perseverance: Mars rover gets name ahead of July launch
March 5, 2020
In this image released by NASA, Alex Mather, the student whose submission, Perseverance, was chosen as the official name of the Mars 2020 rover, reads his essay entry, Thursday, March 5, 2020, at Lake Braddock Secondary School in Burke, Va. (Aubrey Gemignani/NASA via AP)
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — NASA’s next Mars rover finally has a name. Perseverance, a six-wheeled robotic explorer, will blast off this summer to collect Martian samples for eventual return to Earth.
The name was suggested by Alex Mather, a Virginia seventh-grader, as part of a naming contest for U.S. schoolchildren. The U.S. space agency announced it Thursday at Alex’s school in Burke, Virginia, and he got to read his winning essay live on NASA TV.
NASA’s associate administrator for science missions, Thomas Zurbuchen, noted that the space agency’s Curiosity rover has been roaming around Mars since 2012, when Alex and his classmates were babies or little kids.
March 5, 2020
In this image released by NASA, Alex Mather, the student whose submission, Perseverance, was chosen as the official name of the Mars 2020 rover, reads his essay entry, Thursday, March 5, 2020, at Lake Braddock Secondary School in Burke, Va. (Aubrey Gemignani/NASA via AP)
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — NASA’s next Mars rover finally has a name. Perseverance, a six-wheeled robotic explorer, will blast off this summer to collect Martian samples for eventual return to Earth.
The name was suggested by Alex Mather, a Virginia seventh-grader, as part of a naming contest for U.S. schoolchildren. The U.S. space agency announced it Thursday at Alex’s school in Burke, Virginia, and he got to read his winning essay live on NASA TV.
“We are a species of explorers and we will meet many setbacks on the way to Mars. However, we can persevere,” Alex wrote. “We, not as a nation, but as humans, will not give up. The human race will always persevere into the future.”
NASA’s associate administrator for science missions, Thomas Zurbuchen, noted that the space agency’s Curiosity rover has been roaming around Mars since 2012, when Alex and his classmates were babies or little kids.
In this Dec. 17, 2019 photo made available by NASA, engineers watch the first driving test for the Mars 2020 rover in a clean room at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. On Thursday, March 5, 2020, NASA announced the explorer's name will be "Perseverance." (J. Krohn/NASA via AP)
“Perseverance and curiosity together are what exploration is all about,” he said.
Nearly 4,700 volunteer judges had narrowed a pool of 28,000 contest entries down to 155 semifinalists. Once it was down to nine finalists, the public was invited to vote online.
Mather and his family won a trip to Cape Canaveral, Florida, to watch Perseverance get launched into space in July. The boy became enamored with space at age 11 while attending Space Camp in Huntsville, Alabama. That’s when video games took a back seat. He said he wants to become an engineer and work for NASA.
The rover is undergoing final preparations at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. The nameplate will be on the rover’s robot arm and serve as a protective rock guard.
In this Dec. 17, 2019 photo made available by NASA, engineers watch the first driving test for the Mars 2020 rover in a clean room at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. On Thursday, March 5, 2020, NASA announced the explorer's name will be "Perseverance." (J. Krohn/NASA via AP)
“Perseverance and curiosity together are what exploration is all about,” he said.
Nearly 4,700 volunteer judges had narrowed a pool of 28,000 contest entries down to 155 semifinalists. Once it was down to nine finalists, the public was invited to vote online.
Mather and his family won a trip to Cape Canaveral, Florida, to watch Perseverance get launched into space in July. The boy became enamored with space at age 11 while attending Space Camp in Huntsville, Alabama. That’s when video games took a back seat. He said he wants to become an engineer and work for NASA.
The rover is undergoing final preparations at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. The nameplate will be on the rover’s robot arm and serve as a protective rock guard.
In this Dec. 17, 2019 photo made available by NASA, engineers watch the first driving test for the Mars 2020 rover in a clean room at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. On Thursday, March 5, 2020, NASA announced the explorer's name will be "Perseverance." (J. Krohn/NASA via AP)
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