Wednesday, June 23, 2021

South African opera star furious over Paris airport grilling  STRIP SEARCH


Issued on: 22/06/2021
Pretty Yende's opera career has soared over the past decade 
STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN AFP/File

Paris (AFP)

South African opera star Pretty Yende on Tuesday accused French customs agents of treating her with "outrageous racial discrimination" at Paris' Charles de Gaulle airport, a claim strongly contested by police and airport sources.

"Police brutality is real for someone who looks like me," the soprano, who is black, wrote on her Instagram account a day after arriving for a string of performances in Paris.

Yende, 36, said she was "traumatized" after being "stripped and searched like a criminal offender" at the airport.

"I am one of the very very lucky ones to be alive to see the day today even with ill-treatment and outrageous racial discrimination and psychological torture and very offensive racial comments in a country that I've given so much of my heart and virtue to," she wrote.

Yende did not say why she was pulled aside for questioning, but a French police source said the singer had arrived from Milan on a South African passport without a visa.

"At no moment were there any incidents," the source said, adding that Yende had not been asked to remove her clothes.

She was released an hour and a half later with a visa allowing her to enter French territory, an airport source said, adding that Yende was held for "verification" purposes that had nothing to do with the colour of her skin.

Yende, who was born in the small South African town of Piet Retief, has enjoyed a meteoric rise over the past decade, starring in operas from Vienna and Berlin to Barcelona and Los Angeles.
Landmark trial in France over avalanche of threats against teen critic of Islam
FREE THINKER ATHEIST WOMAN HARRASSED BY TROLLS GOES TO TRIAL


Issued on: 22/06/2021 
Eighteen-year-old Mila walks back to the courtroom after a break during the opening hearing of the so-called "Mila case" trial where thirteen people face charges of online harassment and in some cases death threats against the then teenager who strongly criticised Islam in social media posts. © Bertrand Guay, AFP


A landmark cyberbullying trial in Paris – over thousands of threats against a teenager who strongly criticised Islam in online posts – is blazing a trail in efforts to punish and prevent online abuse.

Thirteen young people of various backgrounds and religions from around France face potential prison time for charges including online harassment, online death threats and online rape threats in the two-day trial wrapping up Tuesday.


It is the first such trial since France created a new court in January to prosecute online crimes, including harassment and discrimination.


One of the defendants wants to become a police officer. Another says he just wanted to rack up more followers by making people laugh. Some denied wrongdoing, others apologised. Most said they tweeted or posted without thinking.

The teen at the centre of the trial, who has been identified publicly only by her first name, Mila, told the court she feels as if she’s been “condemned to death".

"I do not see my future,” she said.

Mila, who describes herself as atheist, was 16 when she started posting videos on Instagram and later TikTok strongly criticising Islam and the Quran. Now 18, she testified that “I don’t like any religion, not just Islam.”


Her lawyer Richard Malka said Mila has received some 100,000 threatening messages, including death threats, rape threats, misogynist messages and hateful messages about her homosexuality.


Mila had to quit her secondary school, then another. She is now monitored daily by the police for her safety.

“It’s been a cataclysm, it feels like the sky is falling on our heads [...] a confrontation with pure hatred,” her mother told the court.

Mila’s online enemies don’t fit a single profile. Among the thousands of threats, authorities tracked down 13 suspects who are on trial this week. All are being identified publicly only by their first names, according to French practice.

'Digital lynching'

The trial focused on comments in response to a TikTok video by Mila in November criticising Islam. A defendant named Manfred threatened to turn her into another Samuel Paty, a teacher who was beheaded outside Paris in October after showing caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed in class.

Manfred told the court he was “pretending to be a stalker to make people laugh”.

“I knew she was controversial because she criticised Islam. I wanted to have fun and get new subscribers,” he testified.

Defendant Enzo, 22, apologised in court for tweeting “you deserve to have your throat slit”, followed by a misogynistic epithet.

Others argued their posts did not constitute a crime.

“At the time, I was not aware that it was harassment. When I posted the tweet, I wasn’t thinking,” testified Lauren, a 21-year-old university student who tweeted about Mila: “Have her skull crushed, please.”

Alyssa, 20, one of the few Muslim defendants, says she reacted “like everyone else on Twitter” and stood by her criticism of Mila’s posts.

While the defence lawyer argued that it’s not the same thing to insult a god or a religion and a human being, Alyssa disagreed.

“For me, it is of the same nature. Mila used freedom of expression, I thought that (tweeting an angry response) was also freedom of expression,” she said.

Freedom of expression is considered a fundamental right and blasphemy is not a crime in France. Many French people see the right to blaspheme as a pillar of the country’s liberal, Enlightenment values, hard-won in the French Revolution’s fight against the power of the Catholic Church.

After Mila’s initial video in January 2020, a legal complaint was filed against her for incitement to racial hatred. That investigation was dropped for lack of evidence.

Nawfel, 19, said he did not see the harm when he tweeted that Mila deserved the death penalty and insulted her sexuality. He has passed tests to become a gendarme and hopes not to be sentenced, to keep a clean record. The trial has given him new perspective on online activity.

“Without social media, everyone would have a normal life,” he said. “Now there are many people who will think before they write.”

The defendants face up to two years in prison and €30,000 in fines if convicted of online harassment. Some are also accused of online death threats, an offence that carries a maximum prison sentence of three years and a fine of up to €45,000.

The prosecutor however only requested suspended sentences. A verdict is expected at a later date.

“You have the power to stop this digital lynching,” defence lawyer Malka told the judges. “Fear of the law is the only thing that remains.”

Mila remains active on social networks.

“I have this need to show that I will not change who I am and what I think,” she said. “I see it as like a woman who has been raped in the street and who is asked not to go out, so that it doesn’t happen again.”

(FRANCE 24 with AP)

Bitcoin is worth zero and there is no evidence that blockchain is a useful technology, Black Swan author Nassim Taleb says
ilee@insider.com (Isabelle Lee) 

REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

He also said there is no evidence that blockchain is a useful technology.

In a new paper, Taleb laid out four key arguments against the cryptocurrency.

"Black Swan" author Nassim Taleb doubled down on his criticism against bitcoin - this time, saying the cryptocurrency is worth exactly zero, and that there is no evidence that blockchain is a useful technology.


In a recent six-page draft paper titled "Bitcoin, Currencies, and Bubbles," Taleb laid out four key arguments against the cryptocurrency, which he promoted to his 743,000 Twitter followers.

First, the author said that in spite of the hype, bitcoin failed to satisfy the notion of "currency without government." In fact, he said, bitcoin proved to not even be a currency at all.

"The total failure of bitcoin in becoming a currency has been masked by the inflation of the currency value, generating (paper) profits for large enough a number of people to enter the discourse well ahead of its utility," he said.

Taleb's second criticism said bitcoin can neither be a short nor long-term store of value. He used the famous juxtaposition of gold versus bitcoin - which he said was poor comparison - to illustrate his point.

"Gold and other precious metals are largely maintenance-free, do not degrade over a historical horizon, and do not require maintenance to refresh their physical properties over time," he said. "Cryptocurrencies require a sustained amount of interest in them."

His final two points argued that bitcoin is not a reliable inflation hedge, contrary to some analysts' views, and is not a safe haven for investments - whether meant to protect against government tyranny or other catastrophes.

"Not even remotely," he said, citing the March 2020 market panic when bitcoin sank lower than the stock market, as well as the recent ransom payments following the Colonial Pipeline cyberattack, which authorities were able to track.

"Government structures and computational power will remain stronger than those of distributed operators who, while distrusting one another, can fall prey to simple hoaxes," he added.

Taleb has been a vocal critic of bitcoin, but the paper also slammed the underlying technology bitcoin relies on. The author pointed to what he sees as a lack of utility of blockchain technology.

"There is no evidence that we are getting a great technology -unless 'great technology' doesn't mean 'useful.'"

He continued: "And we have done -at the time of writing -in spite of all the fanfare, still close to nothing with the blockchain."

In April, Taleb told CNBC that bitcoin is an open Ponzi scheme and a failed currency.

He hasn't always been a bitcoin bear, though. In 2017, Taleb wrote the foreword to "The Bitcoin Standard," a book by economist Saifedean Ammous.

Back then, Taleb wrote that bitcoin is "an excellent idea" as it "fulfills the needs of the complex system … because it has no owner, no authority that can decide on its fate."

Bitcoin on Tuesday continued to tumble, falling as much as 10% to $29,333. It has now slid more than 50% from its all-time high of nearly $65,000 in April.

Analysts have said if the world's largest cryptocurrency prints consecutive daily closes decisively below the support level, it could see further downside to $20,000 - back to its level in December 2020.


Read the original article on Business Insider
El Salvador is banking on bitcoin, but will it work?

Issued on: 22/06/2021 

Bitcoin is accepted at a store in El Zonte, El Salvador, which will begin using the cryptocurrency as legal tender Stanley ESTRADA AFP


Montevideo (AFP)

El Salvador will soon become the only country in the world accepting bitcoin as legal tender, a cutting-edge but potentially risky new avenue for its large expat community to send money back home.

Experts and regulators have highlighted concerns about the cryptocurrency's notorious volatility and the lack of any protections for its users, and some predict its widespread adoption may still be a ways off.

Early this month, El Salvador's parliament approved a law to allow the crypto money to be accepted as tender for all goods and services in the small Central American nation, along with the US dollar, its national currency.

The bill, an initiative of President Nayib Bukele who is under fire domestically and abroad for moves to tighten his grip on power, was presented to lawmakers on a Tuesday and approved within 24 hours.

Bukele touted the move, which will take effect in September, as a way to prevent losses amounting to "millions of dollars" in transaction fees for remittances from abroad, traditionally sent in dollars via agencies such as Western Union.

The country of 6.4 million people is heavily dependent on remittances from its estimated 1.5 million expats -- the transfers represent almost a quarter of its GDP.

According to World Bank data, El Salvador received more than $5.9 billion in 2020 from nationals living abroad, mainly in the United States.

This makes it the Latin American country receiving the most money from its diaspora as a percentage of its economy.

- 'Ongoing experiment' -

Now El Salvador is betting on a rise in remittances -- which were down 4.8 percent last year -- to boost its struggling economy which contracted 7.9 percent in 2020 largely due to the coronavirus epidemic.

"El Salvador's decision to make bitcoin legal tender is an ongoing experiment that could be successful if bitcoin volatility continues to ease, with the overall direction remaining higher," Edward Moya, a market analyst at the Oanda brokerage told AFP.

"In May, transfers of bitcoin to El Salvador quadrupled and that could grow if prices continue to rise."

On Tuesday, however, the cryptocurrency fell beneath $30,000 for the first time in five months. At its highest, bitcoin was worth more than $63,000 in April.#photo1

Manuel Orozco, director of the Center for Migration and Economic Stabilization in Washington, highlighted that bitcoin, like other cryptocurrencies, "lacks strong security controls".

It is also "totally wrong to assume there will be no transaction cost," he said.

Last week, the World Bank rejected a request from El Salvador for assistance in its bid to adopt bitcoin as a currency, citing "environmental and transparency shortcomings".

Bitcoin and other cyber currencies are "mined" by solving complicated puzzles using powerful computers that consume enormous amounts of electricity -- much of which is produced by coal plants.

Bitcoin is also criticized by regulators for its potential for illegal use -- notably in laundering money from criminal activities and financing terrorism.

- Dollar or bitcoin? -

The IMF has also flagged concerns, with spokesman Gerry Rice telling reporters El Salvador's move "raises a number of macroeconomic, financial and legal issues that require careful analysis."

The Central American Bank for Economic Integration (CABEI) has said it will provide technical assistance for El Salvador to regulate the use of bitcoin.

But it is the currency's price instability that will likely most worry would-be users.

"For a currency to fulfil the function of a value reserve... it should not be so volatile", said Oscar Cabrera, former president of the Central Reserve Bank of El Salvador.

A survey by the country's Chamber of Commerce and Industry, published last week, found that 96.4 percent of the business community would prefer for bitcoin to remain optional, 93.2 percent of employees would rather get their wages in dollars, and 82.5 percent would continue using the greenback for remittances.

"El Salvador... will likely still use traditional methods (for remittances) until bitcoin can become a stable asset class," said Moya.

For Orozco, there are potential pluses, including the generation of "significant liquidity that would generate a surplus for credit and investment", as well as modernizing the banking system, to which many in El Salvador do not have access.

"In the short term, strategically, this is an opportunity for the Salvadoran financial system," he said.

Already, bitcoin has brought a revolution to one town in El Salvador -- El Zonte on the Pacific coast -- where hundreds of businesses and individuals now use the currency for everything from paying utilities bills to buying a can of soda.

El Zonte has no banks and only one cash machine -- in a hotel to which only guests have access.

Started as a project by an anonymous bitcoin donor, the town now boasts El Salvador's only bitcoin teller machine where people deposit US dollars in cash into a personal bitcoin "wallet," then use a smartphone app to spend it.

© 2021 AFP
Racist Colonial Military Police
Class action alleging RCMP abuse of Indigenous people in Northern Canada certified


TORONTO — A lawsuit alleging RCMP systematically brutalized Indigenous people in Northern Canada can proceed as a class action despite objections from the government, Federal Court ruled on Wednesday
.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

In her decision, Judge Glennys McVeigh rejected the government's arguments that the proposed suit failed to meet the legal grounds for certification although individuals could sue on their own, and that the claim had no prospect of success.

"I disagree with Canada's characterization of these claims as individual," McVeigh wrote. "The claims do not ask if an RCMP officer illegally assaulted a class member, but rather whether the operations of the RCMP create a system where illegal assaults happen."

The untested claim, initially filed in 2018, seeks $600 million in various damages. Among other things, it alleges the federal government negligently failed to stop what it characterizes as routine police assaults on Aboriginal people who comprise the majority in the Northwest Territories, Nunavut and Yukon.

The claim asserts systemic negligence, breach of fiduciary duty and constitutional violations. The government, it says, has known about the issues for years but has failed to substantively address the problem.

"Aboriginal persons are frequently arrested, detained or held in custody by RCMP officers in the territories on the basis of their race, ethnic and/or national origin," the claim states.

"RCMP officers and other agents of the RCMP regularly discriminate against Aboriginal persons by employing excessive and unnecessary force, by arresting or detaining Aboriginal persons for no reason, and by using hateful speech and language in the course of policing in the territories."

The claim, which names the attorney general as defendant on behalf of the RCMP, alleges common incidents involve officers beating, pepper-spraying, shooting and verbally abusing Indigenous people.

The representative plaintiff is a high school student, Joe David Nasogaluak, now 19, of Tuktoyaktuk, N.W.T., who claims RCMP arrested and assaulted him without cause or provocation in November 2017. Among other things, he alleges officers punched and choked him, used a stun gun on him, and used derogatory slurs. He was released to his mother shortly after.

"As a result of this assault, Mr. Nasogaluak sustained physical and psychological harm," the claim asserts. "Incidents like the above take place ordinarily in the territories."

In affidavits, other potential class members similarly described experiences of racism and RCMP violence when being detained and arrested.

A year ago, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the RCMP had a problem with systemic racism after Commissioner Brenda Lucki denied racism was entrenched within the organization. Those comments came after video emerged showing Mounties wrestling the chief of an Alberta First Nation to the ground in a parking lot.

In certifying the action, McVeigh noted the plaintiff's assertion that class members had a reasonable expectation Canada would run its RCMP detachment in the North in the same way it runs policing of non-Indigenous people.

Members of the class, McVeigh decided, comprise all Indigenous people who allege being assaulted at any time while in RCMP custody or detention in the territories, and were alive as of December 18, 2016.

"I do not agree that Canada’s claim that a public inquiry or internal complaint process would be preferable procedure," McVeigh said.

Nevertheless, the judge said, the plaintiffs still have to prove their claims at trial which is "far from an easy hurdle."

Because the plaintiff was a minor when he sued, his mother acted as a litigation guardian. McVeigh said Nasogaluak, now a legal adult, must get court permission to substitute his name for his mother's on the claim but appeared perfectly capable of acting as representative plaintiff.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 23, 2021.

Colin Perkel, The Canadian Press

The fund that staged a board revolt at Exxon last month is launching a retail ETF designed to spar with corporate management

ewu@insider.com (Ethan Wu)
© Francis Scialabba 


The activist group that won two board seats at Exxon last month is launching an ETF.

The fund is explicitly aimed at retail investors, and will vote on corporate matters related to ESG goal.

The new ETF comes as the SEC is evaluating its role in regulating the growing universe of ESG investments.

Engine No. 1, the activist group that fomented a coup against Exxon and won two seats on the board of the oil giant last month, announced an ETF designed to exert ESG pressure on corporate management of the 500 biggest American companies.

Engine No. 1 said the ETF, trading under the ticker VOTE, will seek to passively replicate a Morningstar large-cap index while offering a near-zero expense ratio, much like other low-cost index funds. The twist is that VOTE will actively wage shareholder campaigns against corporate management on ESG issues.


"There shouldn't be a trade-off between positive impact and financial performance," said Yasmin Dahya Bilger, Engine No. 1's head of ETFs, in a statement. "VOTE will be a unique solution to this long-time concern, enabling index investors the ability to generate long-term value while bringing action to the most critical environmental, social, and governance issues facing these companies."


The fund is explicitly aimed at retail investors, both with its 0.05% expense ratio and its crusading pitch for ESG goals. The ETF has a $100 million initial investment and backing from robo-advisory firm Betterment.

In May, Engine No. 1 won a milestone victory against Exxon, rallying shareholders to secure two of four director seats against the oil giant's wishes. The activists owned a minuscule fraction of Exxon stock, but won over big shareholders like Blackrock with a climate-focused push.

The new ETF comes as the SEC is evaluating its role in regulating the ever-expanding universe of ESG investment products. In a speech on Tuesday, Commissioner Elad Roisman said calls for the SEC to standardize ESG disclosures may be premature.

"I worry that by stepping in to promulgate a static list of ESG disclosure requirements, the SEC would displace a good amount of this private sector engagement and freeze disclosures in place prematurely," he said.

"The proliferation of ESG disclosure frameworks suggests that the standards have not yet settled."

Read the original article on Business Insider
TAYLORISM 2.0
6 Amazon employees reveal what's driving people to quit, as the company reportedly worries it's burning through workers so fast that it could run out of people to employ

insider@insider.com (Ben Gilbert) 

© Ben Gilbert/Business Insider An Amazon fulfillment center employee in Staten Island, NY. Ben Gilbert/Business Insider

Amazon burns through hourly employees so quickly that execs worry about running out of people, the NYT reports.

Insider spoke to 6 current and former Amazon employees who explained why they think turnover is high.

They all cited similar issues, including surveillance, the monotonous nature of the work, and burnout.

Amazon has been hiring hundreds of thousands of workers for roles in its warehouses, which it calls fulfillment centers, but those employees have been quitting almost as fast as they can be hired, according to a recent report from The New York Times.

Many of the over 350,000 workers Amazon hired from July to October stayed with the company "just days or weeks," the report said.

An Amazon warehouse employee in Michigan told Insider that "almost everybody I know [at Amazon] is looking for another job."

Insider spoke with half a dozen current and former Amazon employees across the country who work in a variety of fulfillment center roles about why they think the company has such high attrition rates. They all cited similar issues: The monotonous nature of the work, the surveillance of their productivity, and rapid burnout. Though they requested to remain anonymous, Insider confirmed their identities and verified their employment records.

"I lasted longer than anybody else in my group that had started" at the same time, a former seasonal employee in Washington, who worked at a fulfillment center from September to October 2020, told Insider. "The entire group of people that I was hired with did not make it two weeks. I was literally the only one [of 23 people]."

Specifically, the current and former employees pointed to entry-level warehouse jobs as most ripe for turnover, including "pickers" - the people who pick items for orders, pack those orders into boxes, and get those boxes loaded into trucks.

"It's super tedious, and no one wants to do it," the employee in Michigan said.
© Ben Gilbert/Business Insider An Amazon fulfillment center employee in Staten Island, NY. Ben Gilbert/Business Insider

"As a picker, they want you to pick 4,000 items a shift ... and you're stuck at one station for 10 hours with two 30-minute breaks," they said. "You're sore at first, and you think it's okay. Imagine working here four days a week, you're doing that same thing over and over again: Picking 4,000 items. It wears out."


Amazon employees also cited the company's notoriously dogged approach to efficiency, in which the company uses technology to track workers' productivity and timeliness. Being just five minutes late to clocking in results in a write-up from management, several employees said.


"You're constantly trying to defend your employment," a former Amazon employee in California told Insider.

Prior to the pandemic, hourly employees had a turnover rate of about 3% weekly, or roughly 150% annually, data reviewed by The Times indicated. That reportedly led some Amazon executives to worry about running out of hirable employees in the US.

An Amazon representative told the Times, "Attrition is only one data point, which when used alone lacks important context." The company did not respond to Insider's request for comment.

Amazon went on an extended hiring spree in 2020 as it attempted to keep up with a massive spike in demand during coronavirus lockdowns. As Americans increasingly turned to Amazon for things like toiletries and groceries, the company repeatedly touted major hiring pushes.

In May 2021, Amazon started offering $1,000 signing bonuses to new employees.

The Army Might Really Build Walking War Machines
Kyle Mizokami 
POP MECH
JUNE 23,2021

L
© AFP Contributor - Getty Images A new paper from U.S. Army Research lab scientists suggests walking military vehicles could someday become real.

A new paper from U.S. Army Research lab scientists suggests walking military vehicles could someday become real.

Research shows legged vehicles would expend about as much energy as wheeled and tracked vehicles.

The study says there isn’t a power disadvantage to legged combat vehicles.


A new study from U.S. Army Research Lab (ARL) scientists reveals there’s nothing stopping the military from producing walking combat vehicles—at least from a power perspective, anyway. The research shows legs use essentially the same amount of power as wheels or tracks, so there’s no disadvantage to using them.


In the PLoS ONE study, scientists say both artificial and biological locomotion systems—literally from 1 gram to 35-ton vehicles—have approximately the same power requirements to move a unit of mass over land. Animals or machines using legs, wheels, or tracks use the same amount of energy.© Sunset Boulevard - Getty Images The ED-209 autonomous law enforcement robot from the 1987 movie Robocop.

The study uses something called the Heglund Formula, which estimates the energy required for animal locomotion, as a basis. This formula shows a remarkable consistency among terrestrial animals large and small, but doesn’t cover manmade terrestrial vehicles. The study expounds on the original formula to include human-designed and -built vehicles using different types of locomotion.

So, from a power perspective, engineers now have a green light to design walking war machines up to 35 tons. (For anything above 35 tons, they’ll need a different formula.) A combat robot walking on four legs, like ED-209 from Robocop or a robot from the Gundam universe, will use about the same amount of energy to get around as an M1A2 Abrams tank.

Combat vehicles with legs have some advantages over vehicles with tracks and wheels. A legged vehicle can travel down steep hills easier, for example, or pick their way across fields of boulders or other very rough terrain. Walkers also sit higher than conventional combat vehicles, giving the operator a better field of view.
Sergei Bobylev - Getty Images Research suggests Russia’s Uran-9 combat robot would use about the same amount of energy if it had legs than the tracks shown here. Whether or not it would be practical, however, is another story.

But a combat vehicle won’t actually encounter a steep downhill or boulder-strewn path very often. A higher-sitting vehicle may offer a lofty view of the battlefield, but enemies would also spot it from farther away than a low-slung battle tank. Plus, legs concentrate the vehicle’s weight into a relatively small area, as opposed to tank tracks, making them vulnerable to getting stuck.

The principal author of the study himself discourages the idea of large combat walkers like Star Wars’s AT-AT. “I doubt practicality of large legged machines, except in highly specialized contexts,” the ARL’s Alexander Kott told Forbes.

That’s totally fine—as long as we all agree the AT-AT is a small legged machine.


ALBERTA CONSERVATIVE GOVERNANCE

UNESCO says industry, poor governance 'likely' endanger Canadian World Heritage site

Canada's largest national park is now so threatened by upstream development and divided governance that it likely meets the criteria to be placed on the list of World Heritage sites in danger
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]© Provided by The Canadian Press

UNESCO released the draft finding on Alberta's Wood Buffalo National Park this week. The agency has been concerned about the park — the world's second-largest freshwater delta — since 2017, when it found 15 of 17 of the park's ecological benchmarks were deteriorating.

Despite welcoming federal moves that include $60 million for water management and monitoring, the latest report says the park's main challenges remain unaddressed.

"The World Heritage Centre ... considers it likely that the property now meets the criteria for inscription on the list of world heritage in danger," the finding says.

UNESCO applauded Canada's efforts to improve water levels in the park, which have been in long-term decline through climate change and developments such as British Columbia's Site C dam, upstream of the park. But it said no governments have taken long-term measures to ensure enough water reaches the delta, despite concerns expressed in a previous report.

"It is of serious concern that mechanisms to determine and agree on environmental flow regulation ... are still not in place five years after the mission."

The report also notes the oilsands tailings ponds upstream from the park continue to grow. It points out other studies have concluded those ponds are already leaching into the Athabasca River through groundwater and that governments are now studying how water could be released into it.

Meanwhile, Alberta has made no progress on a promised risk assessment of the ponds, says the report.

"It is of high concern that the risk assessment of the tailings ponds ... has not started."


UNESCO says the park's real problem is that the threats it faces come from outside its borders and that B.C., Alberta and Ottawa haven't worked together on an overall plan for the watershed.

"Overarching governance challenges remain," it says.

A spokeswoman for the Mikisew Cree, who live near the park and depend on it to practise their treaty rights, welcomed UNESCO's conclusion that Wood Buffalo's problems can't be solved by a three-year Parks Canada action plan.

"To get to the root of the problem is to solve the governance issue," said Melody Lepine. "Work as a nation to come to some sort of agreement.

"They can throw some money at Parks Canada, but the big issue is water governance."

Lepine said the Mikisew doesn't want any treated tailings pond water in the Athabasca.

"It's almost like you give your head a shake — What? Are they actually considering that?

"We do not support any releases into the river."

In a statement, Parks Canada said more than $87 million has been earmarked for the park and that enhanced research, monitoring and management has already begun.

"Since the action plan was finalized in 2019, notable progress has been made, with more than half of the identified actions completed or underway."

The B.C. Ministry of Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation said the province has worked with the federal government, Alberta, Northwest Territories and Indigenous partners on the development of the Wood Buffalo National Park Action Plan.

The ministry said in an email that the work includes implementing the environmental flows and hydrology aspects of the plan.

It noted that the Peace Athabasca Delta is more than 1,100 km downstream of the Site C project and is fed mostly by the Athabasca River.

The ministry said during the environmental assessment of Site C, BC Hydro commissioned studies from leading experts to evaluate the potential downstream effects of the project and in all cases, it was concluded that the project would have no notable effect on the delta.

The Alberta government did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the UNESCO report.

UNESCO has asked Canada to invite an investigation team to visit and assess the park. That team would confirm whether Wood Buffalo should join the 51 other sites on the list of endangered World Heritage Sites and recommend measures to address the threats it faces.

Created in 1922, Wood Buffalo contains nearly 45,000 square kilometres of boreal forest, wetlands, lakes, rivers and plains.

Millions of birds that migrate all over North America make it their breeding ground. It is home to one of the largest remaining and most genetically diverse herds of wood bison. It boasts the world's last remaining natural breeding colony of whooping cranes.

It is also essential to the life and culture of the Mikisew Cree, said Lepine.


"This is important for us."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 22, 2021.

— Follow Bob Weber on Twitter at @row1960

Bob Weber, The Canadian Press
DICTATORSHIP OF THE BOURGEOISE Supreme Court rules California must pay private businesses to allow union access

By Ariane de Vogue and Veronica Stracqualursi, CNN

 Wed June 23, 2021

(CNN)The US Supreme Court said Wednesday that California cannot allow unions to enter the private property of agricultural businesses to address workers unless the businesses are compensated for the visit, in a case that could have broad property rights implications.

The ruling will imperil not only union organizers in California seeking to reach workers but could make it more difficult for the government to allow temporary access in other areas.

Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the 6-3 decision. Justice Stephen Breyer, joined by his liberal colleagues Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan, dissented, emphasizing the power of the strong conservative majority.

"Perhaps for the first time since Justice Amy Coney Barrett joined the court in October, here we see the full force of the new 6-3 conservative majority embracing a broad view of property rights both in general and at the specific expense of organized labor," said Steve Vladeck, CNN Supreme Court analyst and professor at the University of Texas School of Law.




READ: Supreme Court opinion in California unions and property rights case

"Indeed, it's just the third time all term that the court split right down party lines in a signed opinion and the first in a non-criminal case," Vladeck said. "In that respect, it is, almost certainly, a harbinger of things to come."

The case involved a challenge to a California state law that allows union organizers to enter the property of a business three times a day for 120 days a year. Organizers are permitted a one-hour visit to speak to workers during break time.

While unions don't need to obtain an employer's consent before entering the property, they have to file written notice of their intent with the state's Agricultural Labor Relations Board.

Two agricultural businesses, Cedar Point Nursery, a strawberry grower, and Fowler Packing Corporation, a shipper of grapes and citrus, challenged the law as applied to them.

The dispute pitted agricultural businesses and property rights advocates against big labor unions and raised questions concerning when the government can allow access to private property without compensation.

"The access regulation amounts to simple appropriation of private property," Roberts wrote in the majority opinion. He added that the "access regulation grants labor organizations a right to invade the growers' property. It therefore constitutes a per se physical taking. "

Roberts suggested that the ruling would not impact the ability of the government to come on to property for health and safety inspections because such access is beneficial to the agricultural employers and the public.

The lawyer for the two businesses, Joshua Thompson of the Pacific Legal Foundation, had argued that the regulation violated the Fifth Amendment, which reads that private property cannot be taken by the government for public use "without just compensation."

He told the justices that the law allows the union members onto the property against the wishes of the businesses and amounts to a "taking" of the property without compensation. He equated the visits to a permanent physical invasion of the property and said it didn't matter that entry was only allowed during a limited time frame because the right to access was permanent.

In general, the courts have allowed the government to place "use restrictions" on private property without compensation, such as those related to zoning laws. But when the government allows a structure or a person to be on the property permanently, it must compensate the property owner.

California's Solicitor General Michael Mongan, who was appointed by the state's Democratic leadership, defended the law, saying that it authorized only a limited number of organizers to enter the farms for the sole purpose of speaking with employees under strict time limits.

The California Agricultural Labor Relations Act was enacted in 1975 because of union organizers' typical inaccessibility to farmworkers, who are sometimes migratory, following one harvest to the next, live in temporary housing and lack modern technology and English language skills.

The Biden administration supported California's position in the case, a change from the previous Trump administration, which had backed the employers.
Lower courts had ruled against the businesses, holding that the right of access to the property does not qualify as a "taking" under the law because the access is not permanent.

The 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals noted that the regulation did not "allow random members of the public to unpredictably traverse their property 24 hours a day, 365 days a year."

Writing for his liberal colleagues, Breyer said that the access at issue in the case was "temporary," not "permanent," and therefore it does not constitute a government "taking" under the law. He said that the agricultural employers are not "forever denied" any power to control the use of their property.

The regulation, Breyer said, is "not functionally equivalent to the classic taking in which government directly appropriates private property or ousts the owner from his domain."

He also questioned the reach of the opinion, expressing fear, for instance, that a landowner might reject a law authorizing temporary access "to verify proper preservation of wetlands or the habitat enjoyed by an endangered species, or for that matter, the safety of inspected meat."