Tuesday, April 25, 2023

'People are suffering': Food stamp woes worsen Alaska hunger


Story by The Associated Press • Yesterday   
Indian Country Today

A backlog of requests for food stamps is delaying benefits for months


EAGLE RIVER, Alaska — Thousands of Alaskans who depend on government assistance have waited months for food stamp benefits, exacerbating a long-standing hunger crisis worsened by the pandemic, inflation and the remnants of a typhoon that wiped out stockpiles of fish and fishing equipment.

The backlog, which began last August, is especially concerning in a state where communities in far-flung areas, including Alaska Native villages, are often not connected by roads. They must have food shipped in by barge or airplane, making the cost of even basic goods exorbitant. Around 13 percent of the state's roughly 735,000 residents received Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits — or SNAP — in July, before the troubles began.

"People are struggling and having to make choices of getting food or getting heating fuel," said Daisy Lockwood Katcheak, city administrator in Stebbins, an Alaska Native village of 634 people, more than 400 miles northwest of Anchorage.

Faced with food shortages and rampant inflation, the city recently used $38,000 in funds raised for a children's spring carnival to buy residents basic supplies. The community on Alaska's western coast is also reeling from the remnants of a typhoon that destroyed a critical stockpile of fish and fishing boats at the same time problems with the food stamp program were emerging.

"My people are suffering first hand," said Katcheak.

Alaska lawmakers have responded to the state's sluggish response, as lawsuits have alleged failures in the state's administration of the food stamps and a program that provides aid to low-income Alaskans who are blind, elderly or have disabilities.

Republican Gov. Mike Dunleavy authorized $1.7 million to provide relief to communities in a state that is almost 2 1/2 times the size of Texas. Lawmakers approved emergency funding to hire staff to handle the crush of cases as food banks have reported the highest level of demand they have seen.

"We know a lot of people that are not eating multiple meals a day; they've drawn down to maybe a single meal," said Anthony Reinert, director of programs at the Food Bank of Alaska. There has always "been a baseline of hunger in Alaska. But it's spread and expanded pretty significantly in the last six months."

The hunger crisis in Alaska stems from a perfect storm of cascading events, compounded by staffing and technology issues within the state health department.

During the pandemic, the regular renewal process for SNAP benefits — a federal program administered by states — was suspended. Problems emerged after the state ended its public health emergency last July and recertification requirements for SNAP were reinstituted, resulting in a flood of applications.

A cyberattack that targeted the state health department in 2021 complicated Alaska's ability to process the applications, said Heidi Hedberg, who was appointed health commissioner late last year. Employees who were supposed to upgrade key department computer systems were pulled away to address the attack, leaving the upgrade work undone. But 100 positions that were set to be eliminated due to anticipated efficiencies with the upgrade nonetheless were still cut, Hedberg said.

Related video: Washington debates food stamp funding as families struggle (KERO 23 Bakersfield, CA)  Duration 4:25   View on Watch



In January, the backlog of applicants seeking to renew food assistance benefits had reached a high of 9,104. Officials hope to clear the recertification backlog this month and turn their attention to thousands of new applications, according to the department.

"This is not how SNAP systems are supposed to work, period," said Nick Feronti, an attorney representing Alaskans who are suing over delays and other concerns with the food stamp program.

Stephanie Duboc is still waiting for assistance after submitting her application in December. She volunteers at the Chugiak-Eagle River Food Pantry in suburban Anchorage, and said the food she receives from the pantry is essential.

"It would be a huge impact on my family financially," without that help, she said.

Among those suing is Rose Carney, 68, who receives $172 a month in assistance.

Carney said she received a letter in September saying her benefits had been renewed — but a month later, got another letter saying her application was due the next day. She filled it out but didn't start receiving benefits until last month after contacting a lawyer, she said. Meanwhile, she added water to stretch bean soup and visited a church food pantry to get by.

"I was really upset because that was like income that I was depending on, even though it was just food stamps," said Carney.

Feronti, her attorney, has 10 clients seeking class-action status, but the case has been on hold as the parties work toward a possible resolution that could compel long-term changes.

The National Center for Law and Economic Justice, also involved in the case, has filed a similar lawsuit in Missouri, but Alaska's situation is "in the extreme," said Saima Akhtar, an attorney with the center.

The $1.7 million allocated by Dunleavy in February was for the food banks to address urgent needs, including the bulk purchases of goods and distribution of cash cards so people in rural communities can buy groceries on their own and support local stores.

Reinert, with the food bank, said about $800,000 was used to buy staples like oatmeal, pasta, beans, canned fruit and shelf-stable cheese at cheaper prices in Washington state. The goods were then shipped to Alaska for distribution.

Those supplies are beginning to reach the most needy communities, where the cost of groceries in the store are astronomically high due to the logistics of getting them there.

In Bethel, a hub community in southwest Alaska, the Bethel Community Services Foundation provides food to about 350 households a month — nearly six times as many as before the pandemic. Milk at the store costs about $12.50 a gallon, while a 20-pound bag of rice is $62.49 and a 40-pound bag of a discount brand of dog food is $82.49, said Carey Atchak, the foundation's food security coordinator.

That's cheap compared to the Yup'ik village of Kwethluk, a 12-mile (19-kilometer) flight from Bethel, where an 18-pack of eggs can cost almost $17 and a double pack of peanut butter goes for $25.69.

"When the lower 48 experiences these problems, they have workarounds, they have neighbors, they have connections, they have the ability to grow their own food. That's not even an option up here," Reinert said, using a term common in Alaska for the contiguous U.S. states.

"And so, we're very, very dependent and reliant on these systems working to keep the lights on and the traffic moving up here."

Bohrer reported from Juneau, Alaska.

Why Justin Trudeau’s viral response to an anti-abortionist missed the mark

Story by Lesley Ann Foster, Ph.D Candidate in Cultural Studies, Teaching Fellow, Queen's University, Ontario •   The Conversation


A  viral clip of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau from his recent visit to the University of Manitoba circulated rapidly on social media. National and international news outlets celebrated his response to a young, self-acclaimed People’s Party of Canada voter and anti-abortionist.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau engages in an argument with an anti-abortionist at the University of Manitoba that garnered international attention. But was it the right response?© (Screen shot of viral video)



Trudeau’s defence of a woman’s right to choose involved him appealing to the anti-abortionist’s humanity by using an extreme example of rape.

The prime minister was widely praised for his pro-choice response, which is understandable in a post-Roe v. Wade North America. There are continuous attacks on reproductive rights in the United States and fears the trend could migrate to Canada.

However, complex issues require complex analysis.

The two-minute viral clip showed Trudeau and the young man speaking on other political topics during the prime minister’s visit. After briefly discussing the federal government’s new dental care plan, the man expressed his opinion on a woman’s right to abortion:

“I think that if they sleep around, they should not be allowed to abort…”

Trudeau responds with a “wow,” shaking his head, taken aback by the misogynist and sexist remarks, and then raises the scenario of pregnant rape victims. This confuses the man, seemingly encouraging him to “do a little more thinking” on the issue at Trudeau’s behest.

Abortion is a human right


While Trudeau’s support for reproductive rights is encouraging, using the example of rape to justify abortion care neglects abortion as a human right and vital health care required for many diverse reasons by diverse people, including and excluding rape.

Raising the notion that there are acceptable and unacceptable reasons to terminate a pregnancy denies people’s agency and bodily autonomy, and oversimplifies complex issues around reproductive justice.

There are many reasons someone may choose to abort, including medical, economic and emotional issues. All are valid and all necessitate access to free, safe and legal abortion.


People in Montréal take part in a protest to denounce the United States Supreme Court’s June 2022 decision to overturn the law that provided the constitutional right to abortion for almost 50 years.© THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes

The Trudeau clip emerges as pro-life advocates in North America are threatening to cut off access to vital services based on issues of morality and religion, including here in Canada.

While Trudeau’s pro-choice advocacy is important on a national and international scale, advancing public discussions on abortion access and reproductive justice can help raise social awareness on these important issues — which disproportionately affect women who are racially marginalized and low-income.

Abortion and reproductive justice debates need to be based on the tenets of intersectionality and examine how race, class and gender inequalities combine to affect access to reproductive care. As it stands now, the politics of abortion in North America distort real people’s experiences.

The scene in Canada

Following last year’s reversal by the United States Supreme Court of Roe v. Wade, which upheld the constitutional right to abortion, anti-choice advocates in Canada were emboldened.

Unfortunately, the example used by Trudeau in his recent confrontation with the anti-abortionist reinforces the worst-case scenario for abortion access. It unwittingly encourages people to view abortion through a conservative lens.

Maxime Bernier, leader of the ultra-right People’s Party of Canada, has expressed anti-abortion sentiments, including calls to reopen the abortion debate in Canada.

The current leader for the Conservative Party, Pierre Poilievre, has claimed a newfound “pro-choice” stance. The Abortion Rights Coalition Of Canada (ARCC), however, lists anti-choice MPs based on voting history, including aligning with “pro-life” statements, events and campaigns. On this basis, the ARCC continues to list Poilievre as anti-abortion.

Abortion supporters are calling the Tory leader’s newfound stance on abortion a political manoeuvre with dangerous implications for reproductive rights if the Conservatives were ever to form government.

While Trudeau’s support for reproductive rights is appreciated and needed, we must ensure all people have access to vital health care — and not leave the impression that abortion is primarily most necessary for rape victims.

The On Canada Project, a community digital media platform focused on the experiences of marginalized Canadians, called Trudeau’s response “not great” on its Instagram page.

Samanta Krishnapillai, On Canada’s founder, said: “If you want an abortion, you should be able to get an abortion. That’s it.”

She added:
“When we focus these conversations around specific situations that can happen and result in a pregnancy that someone doesn’t want, we run the risk that that’s what the conversation becomes about, rather than just upholding people’s human rights.”

Krishnapillai received some criticism from commenters for her remarks, with some calling her “nitpicky,” “divisive” and even “angry.” She argued that her comments were not meant to attack the prime minister, but to deepen the discussion based on an intersectional understanding of the issue.

The fact is, Trudeau’s intentions were good. But the public’s understanding of difficult and complex issues must be improved to push back against harmful, dehumanizing rhetoric — and ensure human rights are upheld in our democracy.

As Krishnapillai put it: “There’s a lot of work to be done in Canada.”

This article is republished from The Conversation, a nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts.

Read more:
The Supreme Court rules mifepristone can remain available – here’s how 2 conflicting federal court decisions led to this point

Mexico’s help to American women who need abortions should inspire Canada

Lesley Ann Foster receives funding from the GROWW program.


Judge grants another eviction delay to Montreal homeless camp under highway

Story by The Canadian Press • Yesterday 

MONTREAL — A Quebec judge on Monday extended an injunction to protect a downtown Montreal homeless encampment located under a busy highway, and once again delayed major repair work needed on the aging infrastructure.



Quebec Superior Court Justice Suzanne Courchesne signed off on a deal struck by lawyers for the Transport Department and the 15 to 20 people camping under the highway, allowing some limited work to begin that doesn't affect the encampment.

Monday's ruling represents the third time the campers have been saved from being evicted and displaced by the Transport Department, which has been trying since September to evict them and start repair work on the Ville-Marie Expressway.

Donald Tremblay, with the legal clinic helping the homeless people, called the latest ruling a victory, one that buys more time for both sides to reach a humane solution.

"We have to house them, these are not stray dogs or stray cats, these are people with very serious health issues who need help," Tremblay told reporters. "We have to ask ourselves, as a society, how we help the most vulnerable people?"

Tremblay said he's hopeful the case will be decided out of court, adding that he's counting on the good faith of the government to come up with a plan to find housing for the people living in tents.

The tent community received a first eviction notice in November, but the Transport Department postponed its plans so it could reach a compromise with the campers. When none emerged, it rescheduled its eviction to the end of March.

Related video: Addressing your questions about removing homeless encampments in Vancouver (cbc.ca)   Duration 2:18  View on Watch

Before Monday's ruling, Tremblay's legal clinic obtained two other injunctions delaying the eviction. The latest injunction protects campers until mid-June. The case is scheduled to return to court at the end of May, at which time lawyers could seek a reprieve until mid-July, barring an agreement with the province.

David Chapman, executive director of Resilience Montreal, a non-profit day shelter that has been helping the campers, said he's hopeful Monday's injunction will encourage the government to reflect on what can be done to help these people.

"It's good to see another small victory for human rights, certainly from the perspective of Resilience Montreal we're happy to negotiate a housing solution with the government of Quebec; unfortunately, to date there has been little real effort on their part to engage in such a negotiation," Chapman said.

Michel Chabot, who has been living in a tent under the highway for 10 months, said he would like to be offered a rent-subsidized apartment.

"They can't put us in the street, we're already in the street," Chabot said.

Lawyer Éric Préfontaine, who represented the campers in court, said a political intervention from a minister would certainly help.

"I believe the government doesn't seem to want to create a precedent by finding a solution specifically for these 15 to 20 people," Préfontaine said.

"On the one hand, they don't want to create the precedent, but on the other hand, it would be much less expensive to find a solution rather than adding delays."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 24, 2023.

Sidhartha Banerjee, The Canadian Press
ONE PRESS CONFERENCE NOT ENOUGH
Canada's push for small nuclear reactors will be costly, ineffective, some MPs warn

Story by The Canadian Press • 

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has asserted that Canada is "very serious" about developing nuclear technology across the country to meet growing power needs, but some members of Parliament are warning the technology could be costly and ineffective.



A Liberal MP is among the critics who say Ottawa is looking at an expensive investment into an unproven and potentially dangerous technology.

The federal government started actively exploring small modular reactor technology in 2018, and released an action plan in 2020 that dubbed them a strategic Canadian asset that could leverage significant economic, geopolitical, social and environmental benefits.

Related video: Nuclear Fusion Reactor For Cleaner Energy (Live Science)
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But Green Party Leader Elizabeth May says other renewable energy sources are getting cheaper, so there's not much of a case for Canada to expand its capacity on that technology, which she said is being pushed by powerful lobbyists.

Liberal MP Jenica Atwin, who was first elected under the Green banner, said she is used to being an outlier in her caucus, but the party has allowed her to express her concerns about the unknowns of emerging nuclear technologies.

Four nuclear energy stations are generating about 15 per cent of Canada's electrical grid today, mostly in Ontario and New Brunswick, and as the facilities age more attention is being paid to the potential of smaller, more-portable reactors.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 25, 2023.

The Canadian Press
Coinbase files legal challenge to push SEC to write rules on crypto

Story by By Hannah Lang • Yesterday 


(Reuters) - Coinbase Global Inc filed a petition on Monday in an effort to compel the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to create new rules for digital assets, the company said in a blog post, in the latest escalation of the cryptocurrency exchange’s tensions with the securities regulator.

Coinbase filed a petition for rulemaking with the SEC last year in which it urged the regulator to provide clarity on the circumstances under which a digital asset is a security and create a new market structure framework that is compatible with cryptocurrencies.

The SEC has not responded publicly to that petition, which led to Coinbase filing the legal challenge, said Coinbase Chief Legal Officer Paul Grewal in the blog post.

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"Coinbase and other crypto companies are facing potential regulatory enforcement actions from the SEC, even though we have not been told how the SEC believes the law applies to our business," said Grewal.

The petition will be filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.

The crypto industry largely believes it operates in a regulatory gray area not governed by existing U.S. securities laws, and that new legislation is needed to regulate the sector.

SEC Chair Gary Gensler has said cryptocurrency firms should comply with existing laws and that new crypto-specific regulations are not necessary.

Coinbase disclosed in March the firm had been told that SEC staff intended to recommend enforcement action against the company. The company said in a blog post at the time that it was willing to fight any forthcoming enforcement action in court.

In July, when Coinbase also submitted its petition for rulemaking, the firm disclosed an SEC probe into its asset listing processes, staking programs and yield-generating products.

(Reporting by Hannah Lang in Washington; Editing by Chris Reese)
Hyundai Motors finalises $5 billion battery JV in US, doubles Q1 profit

Story by Reuters • Yesterday 

SEOUL (Reuters) -South Korea's Hyundai Motor Co said on Tuesday it had finalised a $5 billion electric vehicle (EV) battery joint venture in North America, as it reported first-quarter net profit had more than doubled, exceeding expectations.


2022 World Car Awards at the New York International Auto Show, in New York City© Thomson Reuters

Hyundai and partner SK On, a battery unit of SK Innovation Co Ltd, will set up a new battery manufacturing plant in the state of Georgia, the companies said, formalising an earlier provisional agreement.

Hyundai reported a net profit of 3.3 trillion won ($2.47 billion) for the January-March period versus a profit of 1.6 trillion won a year earlier, thanks to a rise in vehicle output as a global chip shortage eased and demand for its high-margin sport-utility vehicles remained strong.

That compared with a Refinitiv SmartEstimate for first-quarter profit of 2.3 trillion won from 16 analysts.
Samsung SDI, GM to build $3 billion joint EV battery plant in US


SEOUL (Reuters) - Samsung SDI Co Ltd said on Tuesday it will invest $3 billion or more to build a joint venture electric vehicle (EV) plant with General Motors Co in the United States.


FILE PHOTO: Logo of GM atop the company headquarters© Thomson Reuters

Targeted to start in 2026, the plan aims to have an annual production capacity of 30 gigawatt hours (GWh), Samsung SDI said in a regulatory filing. The company said the location of the planned JV plant is not yet decided.


Reuters reported on Monday that the two companies were set to announce their plan to build a joint venture battery manufacturing plant in the United States.

(Reporting by Heekyong Yang and Joyce Lee; Editing by Louise Heavens)
Mexico's treatment of migrants raises concern ahead of U.S. policy shift

Story by By Daina Beth Solomon • 6h ago

Migrants camp near the immigration detention center in Ciudad Juarez© Thomson Reuters

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - An impending change in U.S. border policy could put increased pressure on Mexico's migrant detention system and lead to more reports of rights violations, migrant advocates have warned, in the wake of a fire that killed 40 people.

On May 11 the U.S. is slated to lift a COVID health order known as 'Title 42' that has allowed it to rapidly return migrants from the southern border back to Mexico.


Migrants camp outside the immigration detention center in Ciudad Juarez© Thomson Reuters

That is expected to lead to a large increase in the number of migrants attempting to cross the border and the U.S. will likely then lean on Mexico for tighter migration controls such as detentions and deportations, said five policy experts consulted by Reuters.


Migrants camp outside the immigration detention center in Ciudad Juarez© Thomson Reuters

President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's government began ramping up detentions in 2019 under pressure from former President Donald Trump.

The Biden administration has continued that push, the experts said, as the U.S. made a record 2.2 million apprehensions at the U.S.-Mexico border last year, including growing numbers from countries to which the U.S. struggles to deport people, such as Venezuela and Cuba.



Migrants camp outside the immigration detention center in Ciudad Juarez© Thomson Reuters

In 2022, Mexico detained more than 444,000 migrants, 44% more migrants than in the year before. As of last year, the National Migration Institute (INM) operated 57 detention centers with a capacity for more than 6,800 people.



Migrants camp near the immigration detention center in Ciudad Juarez© Thomson Reuters

"The (Biden) administration recognizes that at this point, they really need Mexico as a partner on its enforcement efforts," said Maureen Meyer, a migration expert at the Washington Office on Latin America.

Now, the anticipated end of Title 42 is sparking concern from migrant advocates, who say they have already seen Mexico's drive to keep back migrants lead to ad-hoc inconsistent practices that have fueled rights violations.

They point to the deadly fire on March 27 in a migrant detention center in the northern border city of Ciudad Juarez as a warning sign.

"Last year INM's actions were brutal. We saw human rights abuses quickly increase," said July Rodriguez, a member of the INM Citizen Council, which tracks Mexico's migration policies and gives proposals on how to protect migrant rights.

Related video: Mexico Migrant | Thousands Of Migrants Head For Mexico City, Seeking US Asylum | English News (News18)    Duration 4:31   View on Watch

Large migrant caravan heading to Mexico City
0:23


Reuters Thousands of migrants head to Mexico City seeking U.S. asylum
0:37


The Associated Press 3,000 migrants begin walk north from south Mexico
1:16



"We think this year they will multiply, on top of what happened in Juarez."

More than 2,000 complaints against INM were filed last year with Mexico's rights watchdog, the National Human Rights Commission (CNDH), nearly double that of the year before.

Alleged violations included inadequate healthcare, wrongful detention, cruel treatment and intimidation. Most were filed in the southern state of Chiapas, where Mexico has concentrated enforcement efforts. The complaints do not establish that INM was necessarily at fault.

In response to points raised in this article, INM said it is committed to safeguarding migrant rights, aims to promote legal migration, and operates within the law. It added that its detention facilities are equipped to serve migrants, and defended its record in managing the increase of migrants in Mexico.

"No government in the world has shown as much attention to irregular migration as Mexico, yet the exponential increase in these migratory flows has overwhelmed most governments that receive migrants," said Hector Martinez, who coordinates INM's offices nationwide, in a statement.

In recent years INM has closed some migration detention centers for poor hygiene and safety conditions. It has offered humanitarian visas to the victims who survived the Ciudad Juarez fire.

The administration of U.S. President Joe Biden did not immediately respond to a request for comment about the fears that increased Mexican enforcement could lead to rights abuses.

Activists have urged the end of Title 42, criticizing the measure for blocking asylum access.

TOUGHER STRATEGY

Although Lopez Obrador pledged a more humanitarian approach towards migration upon taking office in late 2018, he quickly deployed the National Guard to work with INM on enforcement, under pressure from the Trump administration.

Lopez Obrador put a long-time ally, Francisco Garduno, in charge of INM, who early in his tenure said he would deport migrants "even if they're from Mars." Garduno now is being criminally investigated for failing to protect the migrants who died in the fire. Several other INM officials are facing homicide charges.

INM has not commented on the accusations, and Garduno could not be directly reached.

The jump in detentions has overwhelmed a system ill-equipped to handle more people, said Alberto Xicotencatl, who runs a migrant shelter in the northern city of Saltillo.

"We have thousands of migrants detained at the borders, throughout the country, without proper shelters, without food, without healthcare, without jobs, without anything," he said.

Reuters could not verify how many migrants currently are in Mexico.

Mexico's Human Rights Commission also increased its own rebukes against INM, urging remedies in 30 abuse cases in 2022, up from four it logged the year before. INM told Reuters it is working to correct the violations.

In two instances, the commission faulted INM agents for employing excessive force to detain migrants, including using a taser and hitting a migrant. It also accused agents of quelling protests through violence and poor treatment, including leaving migrants out under heavy rain, and in another instance, physically harming migrants in detention center bathrooms.

INM said it does not equip agents with gear that can harm migrants and that possible excessive force cases are being investigated.

The commission also denounced several INM facilities for poor conditions, citing overcrowding, overflowing toilets and extreme heat. INM said the centers have "all the services" needed to take in migrants.

After the fire, and with more migrants expected to trek through Mexico once Title 42 is lifted, rights groups will be monitoring for any evidence of abuses, Rodriguez said.

"We have to see how to help these people, how they can be in this country without their rights being violated."

(Reporting by Daina Beth Solomon, Editing by Stephen Eisenhammer and Rosalba O'Brien)
SPACE RACE 2.0
Japanese ispace moon landing attempt falls short at 'very end,' CEO says

Story by Michael Sheetz • 

Japanese lunar exploration company ispace attempted to land its first cargo mission on the moon on Tuesday, but lost communication with the spacecraft and has deemed the attempt unsuccessful.

"We are very proud of the fact that we have achieved many things during this Mission 1," CEO Takeshi Hakamada said, speaking from Tokyo, Japan.

The company's mission carried scientific research and other payloads, with no people on board.



The Earth rises above the surface of the moon, as seen from the company's lander in lunar orbit in April 2023.© Provided by CNBC

Japanese lunar exploration company ispace attempted to land its first cargo mission on the moon on Tuesday, but lost communication with the spacecraft and has deemed the attempt unsuccessful, CEO Takeshi Hakamada said.

"We have not been able to confirm a successful landing on the lunar surface," Hakamada said, speaking from Tokyo, Japan.

"We are very proud of the fact that we have achieved many things during this Mission 1," Hakamada added. "We will keep going — never quit the lunar quest."

The Tokyo-based company's Mission 1 lunar lander was aiming to softly touch down around 12:40 p.m. ET in the Atlas Crater, which is in the northeastern sector of the moon. The company's uncrewed mission carried scientific research and other payloads. There were no people on board.

The landing would have made ispace the first private entity to complete the feat. But the company lost communication with the lander at "the very end" of the landing attempt, Hakamada noted, and was not able to re-establish connection. The company's team is investigating the situation.

"We have to assume that we could not complete the landing on the lunar surface," Hakamada said.

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Founded more than a decade ago, ispace originated as a team competing for the Google Lunar Xprize under the name Hakuto – after a mythological Japanese white rabbit. After the Xprize competition was canceled, ispace pivoted and expanded its goals, with Hakamada aiming to create "an economically viable ecosystem" around the moon, he said in a recent interview.

The company has grown steadily as it worked toward this first mission, with over 200 employees around the world – including about 50 at its U.S. subsidiary in Denver. Additionally, ispace has steadily raised funds from a wide variety of investors, bringing in $237 million to date through a mixture of equity and debt. The investors of ispace include the Development Bank of Japan, Suzuki Motor, Japan Airlines and Airbus Ventures.



Technicians complete final preparations for launch on the company's Mission 1 lander.© Provided by CNBC


The ispace Mission 1 lander was carrying small rovers and payloads for a number of government agencies and companies – including from the U.S., Canada, Japan and the United Arab Emirates.

Before the launch, ispace outlined 10 milestones for the mission. The company had completed eight milestones prior to Tuesday, with the ninth representing a successful soft-landing on the surface and the 10th representing the establishment of stable communications with the Earth, as well steady power supply, after the landing.

The milestones demonstrate the complexity and difficulty of ispace's mission, as it aims to complete a feat previously accomplished only by global superpowers. A previous private lunar mission, flown by Israeli nonprofit SpaceIL and also born out of the Google Lunar Xprize, crashed into the surface during an attempted landing in April 2019.

The company hoped for this to be the first of multiple missions to the moon. Last year ispace won a $73 million NASA contract as part of a team led by Massachusetts-based Draper to fly cargo to the moon's surface in 2025 under the Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program.

Follow and listen to CNBC's "Manifest Space" podcast, hosted by Morgan Brennan, focusing on the billionaires and brains behind the ever-expanding opportunities beyond our atmosphere. Brennan holds conversations with the mega moguls, industry leaders and startups in today's satellite, space and defense industries. In "Manifest Space," sit back, relax and prepare for liftoff. Listen wherever you get your podcasts.

Correction: This story has been updated to correct that ispace had completed eight goals associated with its lunar mission prior to an attempt to land cargo on the surface of the moon Tuesday. An earlier version of this story misstated the goals and the company's progress.
COACHING IS ABUSE
Former sport minister calls for national inquiry citing abuse, misconduct in sport

Story by The Canadian Press • Yesterday 

Canada's former sport minister is calling for “real leaders to step up” over fears the country may repeat history if the federal government doesn’t launch a national inquiry into sports culture.


Kirsty Duncan, Liberal MP who served as Minister of Science and Sport 

Kirsty Duncan, a Liberal MP who served as Minister of Science and Sport from 2015 to 2019, said more work needs to be done to make sports safer for children across the country.

“My fear is if we don't have an inquiry, we’re going to be having these same conversations in five years, 10 years. These are children, they get one childhood,” she told The Canadian Press on Monday.

Duncan said an inquiry would need to be broad and far-reaching, allowing athletes a safe place to give testimony about alleged abuse or misconduct.

"This is the time for people to come to the table and put athletes and young children first,” she said. “Real leaders step up.”

Duncan’s comments come as four former and current Canadian athletes reiterated calls for a national inquiry into sports culture in Canada at a parliamentary committee meeting on Monday.

Soccer players Ciara McCormack and Andrea Neil, along with Olympic boxer Myriam Da Silva Rondeau and fencer Emily Mason echoed each other in pushing for an inquiry into the handling of abuse and mismanagement at their respective sporting organizations and across the country.

The women spoke to the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage about the institutional roadblocks they faced when reporting misconduct and the need for better protection for athletes who raise concerns, including legislation protecting athletes who speak out.

McCormack, who wrote about the abuses committed by former Vancouver Whitecaps and Canadian women’s soccer head coach Bob Birarda, said she’s worried about her safety given her past comments about abuse in Canada Soccer. Birarda was sentenced to nearly 16 months in jail in 2022 for sex offences that “immeasurably harmed” four female teenage athletes.

“Is the Minister of Sport watching? Is the Prime Minister watching? Is whoever making these decisions, are they watching? It’s very much impacted our lives far past our sporting careers and it’s just so disappointing. I just feel ashamed, honestly, to be a Canadian that this is the reality of what it means and the response to being a Canadian athlete and this is the response to so many of us coming forward for so many months now,” she said.

Related video: St-Onge looking into process to investigate abuse in elite sports (cbc.ca)
Duration 1:05  View on Watch

Minister of Sport Pascale St-Onge told reporters that she is committed to a response but added that she wants to determine how such an investigation would be organized.

“My goal is to have an environment that sport participants can testify and share their experiences and their recommendations,” the minister told reporters.

But athletes said urgent action is needed.


“With every passing day, there are more children who are placed into these environments. More children who are experiencing the same things that we have and continue to every single day that a national inquiry is not called and we’re not taking action. That is not acceptable,” said Mason, who is now part of Fencing for Change Canada, a group that represents current and past Olympic and national fencers.

Rondeau has won both a gold and silver medal at the Pan-American games and placed ninth at the 2020 Olympic Games but said due to mental trauma, she cannot remember those achievements.

Rondeau told a parliamentary committee in 2022that she is facing a lawsuit from the director of high performance at the Canadian Boxing Federation for comments she posted on social media about alleged misconduct.

“We need help and we need people to stop people inside the federation using our complaints against us (in the judicial system),” Rondeau said through tears.

Rachael Denhollander, an attorney and former gymnast who was a whistleblower against Larry Nassar with USA Gymnastics, also spoke about the need to address systemic abuse at a federation level and ensure that there are checks and balances in place to ensure that if a coach is sanctioned in a country, like the U.S., that they are not allowed to coach in a similar capacity in Canada.

Nassar, a former Michigan State University sports doctor, was sentenced in 2018 to 40 to 175 years in prison after admitting to molesting top U.S. gymnasts for years under the guise of medical treatment.

Duncan said she will continue to push for a national inquiry to help children and athletes.

“If you can't expose the rot, how can you make things better?” she said. “I will not be complicit.”

With files from The Associated Press.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 24, 2023.

Nick Wells, The Canadian Press
Vancity CEO Christine Bergeron moving to top job at Concert Properties

Story by The Canadian Press •

VANCOUVER — Vancity says Christine Bergeron is stepping down as president and chief executive of the credit union to take the top job at real estate company Concert Properties.

Vancity CEO Christine Bergeron moving to top job at Concert Properties© Provided by The Canadian Press

The credit union says Bergeron will continue with Vancity until mid-July.

Bergeron joined Vancity in 2011 and has been chief executive since 2020.

Concert Properties, which is owned by 19 union and management pension plans, says she will join the company as president and chief executive on Sept. 5.

Bergeron will take over the CEO job from co-founder David Podmore, who will remain as chair of the board.

Vancity says its board of directors will name an interim president and CEO in the coming weeks.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 25, 2023.

The Canadian Press