Saturday, July 10, 2021

 

The 'hijab effect': Feminist backlash to Muslim immigrants in Germany

Research from political scientists Nicholas Sambanis, Danny Choi, and Mathias Poertner finds discrimination against Muslim women is eliminated when they show progressive gender attitudes

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

Research News

Why do some Europeans discriminate against Muslim immigrants, and how can these instances of prejudice be reduced? Political scientist Nicholas Sambanis has spent the last few years looking into this question by conducting innovative studies at train stations across Germany involving willing participants, unknowing bystanders and, most recently, bags of lemons.

His newest study, co-authored with Donghyun Danny Choi at the University of Pittsburgh and Mathias Poertner at Texas A&M University, was published July 8 in the American Journal of Political Science and finds evidence of significant discrimination against Muslim women during everyday interactions with native Germans. That evidence comes from experimental interventions set up on train platforms across dozens of German cities and reveals that discrimination by German women is due to their beliefs that Muslims are regressive with respect to women's rights. In effect, their experiment finds a feminist opposition to Muslims, and shows that discrimination is eliminated when Muslim women signaled that they shared progressive gender attitudes, says Sambanis, who directs the Penn Identity and Conflict Lab (PIC Lab), which he founded when he came to Penn in 2016.

Many studies in psychology have shown bias and discrimination are rooted in a sense that ethnic, racial, or religious differences create distance between citizens, he says. "Faced with waves of immigration from culturally different populations, many Europeans are increasingly supporting policies of coercive assimilation that eliminate those sources of difference by suppressing ethnic or religious marker, for example, by banning the hijab in public places or forcing immigrants to attend language classes," Sambanis says. "Our research shows that bias and discrimination can be reduced via far less coercive measures--as long as immigration does not threaten core values that define the social identities of native populations."

"The Hijab Effect: Feminist Backlash to Muslim Immigrants" is the fourth study in a multiyear project on the topic of how to reduce prejudice against immigrants conducted by Sambanis and the team. The study's co-authors, Choi and Poertner, started working on this project as postdoctoral fellows at the PIC Lab.

The new paper builds on the first leg of the project which was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in 2019 and which explored whether discrimination against immigrants is reduced when immigrants show that they share civic norms that are valued by native citizens. That study found evidence that shared norms reduce but do not eliminate discrimination. The new study explores the impact of norms and ideas that are important to particular subgroups of the native population, and finds stronger effects when such norms are shared by immigrants.

The findings have implications for how to think about reducing conflict between native and immigrant communities in an era of increased cross-border migration, Sambanis says.

He and his co-authors conducted the large-scale field experiment in 25 cities across Germany involving more than 3,700 unknowing bystanders.

"Germany was a good case study because it has received the largest number of asylum applications in Europe since 2015, a result of the refugee crisis created by wars in Syria and other countries in the Middle East and Central Asia," Sambanis says. "Germany has had a long history of immigration from Muslim countries since the early post-war period, and anti-immigrant sentiments have been high as a result of cultural differences. These differences are manipulated politically and become more salient."

The intervention went like this: A woman involved in the study approached a bench at a train station where bystanders waited and drew their attention by asking them if they knew if she could buy tickets on the train.

She then received a phone call and audibly conversed with the caller in German regarding her sister, who was considering whether to take a job or stay at home and take care of her husband and her kids. The scripted conversation revealed the woman's position on whether her sister has the right to work or a duty to stay at home to care for the family.

At the end of the phone call, a bag she was holding seemingly tears, making her drop a bunch of lemons, which scatter on the platform and she appeared to need help gathering them.

In the final step, team members who were not a part of the intervention observed and recorded whether each bystander who was within earshot of the phone call helped the women collect the lemons.

They experimentally varied the identity of the woman, who was sometimes a native German or an immigrant from the Middle East; and the immigrant sometimes wore a hijab to signal her Muslim identity and sometimes not.

They found that men were not very receptive to different messages regarding the woman's attitude toward gender equality, but German women were. Among German women, anti-Muslim discrimination was eliminated when the immigrant woman signaled that she held progressive views vis-à-vis women's rights. Men continued to discriminate in both the regressive and progressive conditions of the experiment.

It was a surprise that the experimental treatment did not seem to make a big difference in the behavior of men towards Muslim women.

"Women were very receptive to this message that we had about Muslims sharing progressive beliefs about women's rights, but men were indifferent to it," says Sambanis. "We expected that there would be a difference, and that the effect of the treatment would be larger among women, but we did not expect that it would be basically zero for men."

The experiment makes gender identity more salient and establishes a common identity between native German women--most of whom share progressive views on gender--and the immigrant women in the progressive condition. This is the basis of the reduction of discrimination, Sambanis says, and it does not require coercive measures like forcing Muslims to take off the hijab. "You can overcome discrimination in other ways, but it is important to signal that that the two groups share a common set of norms and ideas that define appropriate civic behaviors."

The results are surprising from the perspective of the prior literature, which assumed that it is very hard for people to overcome barriers created by race, religion, and ethnicity. At the same time, this experiment speaks to the limits of multiculturalism, says Sambanis. "Our work shows that differences in ethnic, racial, or linguistic traits can be overcome, but citizens will resist abandoning longstanding norms and ideas that define their identities in favor of a liberal accommodation of the values of others," he says.

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Nicholas Sambanis is a Presidential Distinguished Professor in the School of Arts & Sciences, chair of the Department of Political Science, and director of the Penn Identity and Conflict Lab at the University of Pennsylvania.

For media inquiries, please contact Kristen de Groot, krisde@upenn.edu, 215-756-5563

 

Study model explores impact of police action on population health

UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON

Research News

IMAGE

IMAGE: CONCEPTUAL MODEL DEPICTING THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN POLICING AND POPULATION HEALTH. view more 

CREDIT: UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON

A specific police action, an arrest or a shooting, has an immediate and direct effect on the individuals involved, but how far and wide do the reverberations of that action spread through the community? What are the health consequences for a specific, though not necessarily geographically defined, population?

The authors of a new UW-led study looking into these questions write that because law enforcement directly interacts with a large number of people, "policing may be a conspicuous yet not-well understood driver of population health."

Understanding how law enforcement impacts the mental, physical, social and structural health and wellbeing of a community is a complex challenge, involving many academic and research disciplines such as criminology, sociology, psychology, public health and research into social justice, the environment, economics and history.

"We needed a map for how to think about the complex issues at the intersection of policing and health," said lead author Maayan Simckes, a recent doctoral graduate from UW's Department of Epidemiology who worked on this study as part of her dissertation.

So, Simckes said, she set out to create a conceptual model depicting the complex relationship between policing and population health and assembled an interdisciplinary team of researchers to collaborate.

"This model shows how different types of encounters with policing can affect population health at multiple levels, through different pathways, and that factors like community characteristics and state and local policy can play a role," said Simckes, who currently works for the Washington State Department of Health.

The study, published in early June in the journal Social Science & Medicine, walks through the various factors that may help explain the health impacts of policing by synthesizing the published research across several disciplines.

"This study provides a useful tool to researchers studying policing and population health across many different disciplines. It has the potential to help guide research on the critical topic of policing and health for many years to come," said senior author Anjum Hajat, an associate professor in the UW Department of Epidemiology

For example, the study points out when considering individual-level effects that "after physical injury and death, mental health may be the issue most frequently discussed in the context of police-community interaction ... One U.S. study found that among men, anxiety symptoms were significantly associated with frequency of police stops and perception of the intrusiveness of the encounter."

Among the many other research examples explored in the new model, the researchers also examine the cyclic nature of policing and population health. They point out that police stops tend to cluster in disadvantaged communities and "saturating these communities with invasive tactics may lead to more concentrated crime." Consequently, it may be "impossible" to determine whether police practices caused a neighborhood to experience more crime or if those practices were in response to crime. However, the model's aim is to capture these complex "bidirectional" relationships.

"Our model underscores the importance of reforming policing practices and policies to ensure they effectively promote population wellbeing at all levels," said Simckes. "I hope this study ignites more dialogue and action around the roles and responsibilities of those in higher education and in clinical and public-health professions for advancing and promoting social justice and equity in our communities."

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Co-authors include Dale Willits, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, WSU; Michael McFarland, Department of Sociology, Florida State University; Cheryl McFarland, Central Jersey Family Health Consortium, New Jersey; Ali Rowhani-Rahbar, Department of Epidemiology and Harborview Injury Prevention and Research Center, UW.


Trust in science - but not trust in politicians or the media - significantly raises support across US racial groups for COVID-19 social distancing.

Article Title: The role of race and scientific trust on support for COVID-19 social distancing measures in the United States

Funding: The authors received no specific funding for this work.

Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Article URL: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0254127


CAPTION

Measuring latent scientific trust in the mass public. A: Latent scientific trust as measured by factor analysis. B: Distribution of latent scientific trust by race.

CREDIT

Kazemian et al, 2021, PLOS ONE (CC-BY 4.0)

USAGE RESTRICTIONS

 

COVID-19 pandemic linked to reduced access to gender-affirming care in 76 countries

Reduced access was associated with poorer mental health for transgender and nonbinary people

PLOS

Research News

A survey offered to transgender and nonbinary people across six continents and in thirteen languages shows that during the first months of the COVID-19 pandemic, many faced reduced access to gender-affirming resources, and this reduction was linked to poorer mental health. Brooke Jarrett of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, and colleagues present the findings in the open-access journal PLOS ONE on July 9.

Gender-affirming resources, which can include health care such as surgery and/or hormone therapy as well as gender affirming services and products --are well-known to significantly boost mental health and quality of life for transgender and nonbinary people. However, factors such as transphobia, lack of proper clinician training, and individual economic insecurity can hamper access to such resources.

Meanwhile, mounting evidence suggests that measures to reduce the spread of COVID-19 exacerbated these challenges. For instance, people may have had to cancel gender-affirming surgeries that were perceived to be elective. Or they may have had to move in with unsupportive relatives and spend more time living according to their sex assigned at birth instead of their actual gender.

To better understand the worldwide impact of the COVID-19 crisis on transgender and nonbinary people, Jarrett and colleagues surveyed 964 adults residing in 76 countries via the social networking apps Hornet and Her. The survey, conducted between April and August 2020, asked participants questions about how the pandemic had affected their access to gender-affirming resources, mental health, and financial stability.

Statistical analyses of the survey responses showed that about half of the participants faced reduced access to gender-affirming resources during the study period. Nearly 40 percent said that the pandemic reduced their ability to live according to their gender. Many also reported anticipating financial hardships, such as possible reduced income and possible loss of health insurance. Those who reported reduced access to gender-affirming resources also had increased prevalence of depressive symptoms, anxiety, and suicidal ideation.

The researchers say that their findings highlight a need to increase and secure access to gender-affirming resources in order to improve the health of transgender and nonbinary people, during and beyond the COVID-19 pandemic.

The authors add: "Transgender communities, who already face a myriad of health inequities, experienced even further health burdens due to restrictions imposed during COVID, like reduced access to gender-affirming treatments and mental health resources. To move forward, we need to support trans communities with policies that make gender-affirming healthcare affordable, accessible, and recognized as essential."

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Citation: Jarrett BA, Peitzmeier SM, Restar A, Adamson T, Howell S, Baral S, et al. (2021) Gender-affirming care, mental health, and economic stability in the time of COVID-19: A multi-national, cross-sectional study of transgender and nonbinary people. PLoS ONE 16(7): e0254215. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254215

Funding: BAJ, SWB, and SDB were supported by the National Institute of Mental Health (F31MH121128, K01MH114715, R01MH110358 respectively). SWB also receives funding from Viiv Healthcare. AJR was supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (grant T32AI102623). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

In your coverage please use this URL to provide access to the freely available article in PLOS ONE: https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0254215

 

How otters' muscles enable their cold, aquatic life

Texas A&M researchers found that the small mammals are internally warmed by thermogenic leak from their skeletal muscle, which elevates their metabolic rate

TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY

Research News

IMAGE

IMAGE: OTTER FLOATING ON WATER'S SURFACE view more 

CREDIT: TRAY WRIGHT/TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY (IMAGE OBTAINED UNDER USFWS MARINE MAMMAL PERMIT NO. MA-043219 TO R. DAVIS)

Sea otters are the smallest marine mammal. As cold-water dwellers, staying warm is a top priority, but their dense fur only goes so far. We have long known that high metabolism generates the heat they need to survive, but we didn't know how they were producing the heat -- until now.

Researchers recently discovered that sea otters' muscles use enough energy through leak respiration, energy not used to perform tasks, that it accounts for their high metabolic rate. The finding explains how sea otters survive in cold water.

Physiologist Tray Wright, research assistant professor in Texas A&M University's College of Education & Human Development, conducted the study along with colleagues Melinda Sheffield-Moore, an expert on human skeletal muscle metabolism, Randall Davis and Heidi Pearson, marine mammal ecology experts, and Michael Murray, veterinarian at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Their findings were published in the journal Science.

The team collected skeletal muscle samples from both northern and southern sea otters of varying ages and body masses. They measured respiratory capacity, the rate at which the muscle can use oxygen, finding that the energy produced by muscle is good for more than just movement.

"You mostly think of muscle as doing work to move the body," Wright said. "When muscles are active, the energy they use for movement also generates heat."

Wright said that because muscle makes up a large portion of body mass, often 40-50% in mammals, it can warm the body up quickly when it is active.

"Muscles can also generate heat without doing work to move by using a metabolic short circuit known as leak respiration," Wright said.

A form of muscle-generated heat we are more familiar with is shivering. Wright said this involuntary movement allows the body to activate muscle by contracting to generate heat, while leak respiration can do the same without the tremors.

Wright said one of the most surprising findings was that the muscle of even newborn sea otters had a metabolic rate that was just as high as the adults.

"This really highlights how heat production seems to be the driving factor in determining the metabolic ability of muscle in these animals," Wright said.

Sea otters require a lot of energy to live in cold water. They eat up to 25% of their body mass per day to keep up with their daily activities and fuel their high metabolism.

"They eat a lot of seafood, including crabs and clams that are popular with humans, which can cause conflict with fisheries in some areas," Wright said.

Wright said we know how critical muscle is to animals for activities like hunting, avoiding predators and finding mates, but this research highlights how other functions of muscle are also critical to animal survival and ecology.

"Regulating tissue metabolism is also an active area of research in the battle to prevent obesity," Wright said. "These animals may give us clues into how metabolism can be manipulated in healthy humans and those with diseases where muscle metabolism is affected."

As for future research, Wright said there is still a lot we don't know about otters, including how they regulate their muscle metabolism to turn up the heat on demand.

"This is really just the first look into the muscle of these animals, and we don't know if all the various muscle types are the same, or if other organs might also have an elevated ability to generate heat," Wright said.

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Canadian company hopes to capitalize on psychedelics craze with new drink

Special to Financial Post 
© Provided by Financial Post Psychedelic Water says its namesake beverage is “the world’s first legal psychedelic blend of kava root, damiana leaf and green tea leaf extract for a mild mood-boosting experience.”

A Canadian beverage company is looking to cash in on the popularity of psychedelics with a kava-based drink it is billing as the first of its kind.

Psychedelic Water says its namesake beverage is “the world’s first legal psychedelic blend of kava root, damiana leaf and green tea leaf extract for a mild mood-boosting experience.” The drink is not hallucinogenic, but the company says it produces a calming sensation that gives people positive vibes.

The drink is being backed by a pair of entrepreneurs, Pankaj Gogia and Keith Stein, a lawyer at Dentons in Toronto, who met through a mutual friend and began talking about the potential for a psychedelic-based drink.

Stein said his previous involvement in the cannabis industry and his entrepreneurial instincts — he helped found Simmons Records along with Gene Simmons, Belinda Stronach and Universal Music Canada and was also a founder of the Toronto Phantoms arena football team — motivated him to look into the psychedelic space. At first, he says he thought it was all about magic mushrooms and bad trips, but he was amazed at what he learned.

“I recognized that there was a real void, it was undeveloped, and it was untapped,” he said. “I also became aware of all of the benefits, like cannabis, that could be derived from this space in the shadows.”

He saw other companies were working on psychedelic products, but wasn’t sure if their business models, selling mushroom- or psilocybin-based products in international markets, would be profitable. So he brought a food science professor at New York University and a California company together to create a formula for a psychoactive but non-hallucinogenic drink. They tested the formula on hundreds of people, and they say they received positive feedback.

“We’re creating a new category here,” said Stein. “We have a real opportunity to be a pioneer from here in Canada.”

Gogia, who serves as chief executive, said all of the ingredients are sourced from American vendors.

That includes kava, an herb whose extract is popular in the South Pacific (it is Fiji’s national drink) for its soothing effect but that has also raised health concerns.

While the company says it is safe to consume, there can be side effects due to the active ingredients and it is not recommended for pregnant women and breastfeeding mothers. All of Psychedelic Water’s products say 18+ on them.

Currently the product is only available to purchase online in the U.S., but they will be seeking approval from Health Canada for the beverage here at home and are looking to expand into Europe and Australia in the next little while as well.

Gogia said Psychedelic Water, which launched in February, has done $1 million in sales over the last few months. He is projecting $4 to $5 million in sales for the year, a number that could rise as more channels are brought on.

First pot, now magic mushrooms? Mainstream attention is growing

The company already has a following on TikTok, the social media site popular with millennials and Gen Zers, where its page has racked up about 24,000 followers. Gogia said the company has engaged with some influencers on the platform, but that much of its success has come from random viewers.

Gogia hopes the drink provides an alternative to alcohol-based beverages.

“This is something that people can try and have a healthier lifestyle without it affecting what they do or creating the harmful effects from alcohol,” Gogia said. “I think it’s something people should be open to trying and hopefully something that becomes part of their lifestyle.”

Financial Post
Before Zaila Avant-garde, there was MacNolia Cox, the first Black top-5 finalist at the National Spelling Bee

By Leah Asmelash, CNN 

On Thursday, Zaila Avant-garde became the first Black American to win the Scripps National Spelling Bee. But 85 years ago, there was another little Black girl from Ohio who came close

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© John Raoux/AP

In 1936, MacNolia Cox was a 13-year-old eighth-grader at the Colonial School in Akron, Ohio. She was the first Black top-5 finalist at the National Spelling Bee that year, in which Elizabeth Kenny, another young Black student about whom little is known, also participated.

Cox's journey to the national contest began at the Akron Armory, where the district spelling bee was held, on April 22, 1936. Over 2.5 hours, Cox spelled out words like "apoplexy" and "abstemious," and finally sealed the deal when she spelled "voluble" to win the competition, according to an article in the Akron Beacon Journal from May 21, 2000.

Pocketing the $25 prize, Cox became the first Black student to win the Akron spelling bee. But her accomplishments didn't end there. Cox got to travel to Washington D.C. to compete in the National Spelling Bee.

"I'm glad I won, and I hope I win in Washington," Cox told the Akron Beacon Journal in 1936.

Her victory launched her into fame. Locally, churches worked together to raise money for a "wardrobe fund," with one church collecting more than $9 for Cox, according to a May 5, 1936, article in the Beacon Journal. Today, that amount of money would be worth about $176.

Even nationally, Cox became a known name, with F.D. Patterson, then-president of the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute of Tuskegee, Alabama, sending his well wishes, the Beacon-Journal said.

"We wish her every success in the world in the national contest," he wrote.

The national competition was scheduled for May 26, 1936, and eventually the time came for Cox to make the journey to the nation's capital. Accompanied by her mother, her teacher and a local reporter, Cox boarded the train to Washington, D.C. Thousands of people, including a military band, gathered outside the train station to cheer her on.

"This is the most fun I've ever had in my life," she said at the time, according to the Beacon Journal.

But it was the time of segregation, and the young teenager faced hostility.

It started before Cox had even gotten off the train. Once the crew arrived at the Maryland state line, Cox and her mother had to move to the Blacks-only car, according to the Beacon Journal.

Cox didn't even get to stay with the other spellers in a hotel. Instead, she and her mother stayed with a local doctor, the paper reported. At a banquet for the spellers, they also weren't allowed on the main elevator. They had to enter via a back stairwell, and sit at a designated table away from the others.

On the day of the competition, there may have been some foul play.

Cox was performing well, becoming one of the remaining five contestants. That's when the judges -- all White and Southern, according to the Beacon Journal -- hit her with a word not on the official list: Nemesis.

The word was immediately protested by the local reporter in attendance, who argued the word was against the rules. Nemesis, the name of the goddess of revenge, was capitalized in Cox's dictionary, and capitalized words weren't allowed in the contest, the Beacon Journal reported in 2000.

The judges discussed, ruling that the word was usable because of its colloquial usage, the paper reported. Cox misspelled, saying "N-e-m-a-s-i-s" instead, according to the paper. At fifth place, Cox was out.

But fifth place was still a victory, complete with a $75 reward. Upon her return to Akron, Cox was met with a parade of hundreds of cars and speeches by local figures, the paper reported.

"This is just the beginning for her," said Arlena Bauford, then-president of the Akron chapter of the National Council of Negro Women, to the paper. "She has demonstrated what she can do, and what we as a race, can do. She stands as a symbol before us, and is up to us to see that she is given further opportunity to go ahead."

Cox didn't end up going to college, though, and instead found work as a domestic employee for a local doctor, the paper reported.

"My grandmother, though she would've loved to have sent my Aunt Mac to college, unfortunately was unable to do so," her niece Georgia Gay told the Beacon Journal in 2000. "And back during those times, they were not too willing to give out grants and scholarships to those of us of color."

Cox died of cancer on September 12, 1976, according to the paper, nearly forty years after her history-making endeavor.

Though she may not have won the national competition, her journey paved the way for eventual champions like Zaila and Jodey-Anne Maxwell, who won representing Jamaica in 1998
© From The Akron Beacon Journal A newspaper clipping shows MacNolia Cox greeting former Akron Mayor William Sawyer while being honored at her school.
Did Surfside building official mishandle engineer’s report on doomed condo? Experts think so

Jay Weaver, Aaron Leibowitz, and Sarah Blaskey, Miami Herald 

MIAMI — When Surfside’s top building official received an engineer’s report three years ago pointing out “major structural damage” to a concrete slab and “abundant” deterioration of garage columns supporting a condo tower, Miami-Dade County’s building code spelled out a course of action.

© David Santiago/Miami Herald/TNS From left, Maria Fernanda Martinez and Mariana Cordeiro comfort each other while they look at the rubble at the Champlain Towers South condo in Surfside, Florida, on June 25, 2021.

It’s one that apparently wasn’t pursued.

Under that law, Rosendo Prieto had a duty to contact the engineering consultant and inspect problems to see if the Champlain Towers South condo was at risk of endangering residents, according to construction experts interviewed by the Miami Herald. They believe the report noted enough significant structural concerns — severe concrete cracking in the pool deck and garage areas and waterproofing failures — to meet the code’s “presumed to be unsafe” standard and trigger a follow-up examination.
© David Santiago/Miami Herald/TNS Rubble is seen at the Champlain Towers South Condo in Surfside, Florida, on June 25, 2021.

Instead, after he was sent a Morabito Consultants’ engineering report by a Champlain condo association member, Prieto met with the board after reviewing the document and assured members that “it appears the building is in very good shape,” according to minutes of a Nov. 15, 2018, board meeting.

If that’s all that happened, experts say Prieto’s actions fell far short of the steps called for in county codes.

Gregg Schlesinger, a Fort Lauderdale contractor and attorney who specializes in construction cases, said building officials are obligated to take action when informed of serious structural problems — not just talk to a condo board.

“I think when you see something like this, you should report it,” Schlesinger said. “It should be looked at.

“When is something unsafe? It’s unsafe when someone knew or should have known of the potential of it collapsing, or deteriorating in such a state where there is a chance of it collapsing,” he said.

About half of the 12-story Champlain Towers South building collapsed June 24 in what is feared to be the worst building failure in U.S. history, leaving at least 78 people dead and dozens more still missing. Several structural engineers, after evaluating public records, condo plans and video footage of the collapse, have told the Herald that they suspect the 136-unit tower on Collins Avenue began to fall after the pool deck caved into the parking garage, which in turn undermined the foundation and triggered the collapse of the middle and oceanfront sections of the building.

John Pistorino, who has worked as an engineer in Miami for 50 years and sits on the state’s engineering board, said that he could not comment specifically on Prieto’s actions because his case was likely to come under scrutiny.

But, speaking generally, Pistorino said that when a building official learns about severe structural problems such as those outlined in Morabito’s report — which are fairly common in an oceanfront property — further inspection would be required for both legal and professional reasons under the Miami-Dade building code, which is among the toughest in the state of Florida.

“In my experience, when we come across a report that is problematic like this one, the building official can get another opinion,” Pistorino said.

It is possible that Surfside’s building official may have taken other actions, such as meeting with Morabito or inspecting the condo tower’s structural problems, that are not reflected in the town’s list of public records posted on its website or in the condo association’s records made public to date. The Herald has asked for all records pertaining to Prieto’s correspondence and actions involving Champlain Towers South, but has not yet received them from the town.

Prieto, a veteran building official who left Surfside last year, also did not respond to a request for comment Thursday and his attorney could not be reached. But three days after the condo’s collapse, he told the Herald that if there had ever been any major concerns with the condition of Champlain Towers South, “they would have been addressed right away.”

If issues were brought to his attention, Prieto said, he would have required an engineer to examine them further. Prieto is a licensed building code administrator, inspector and plans examiner, according to state records, but he is not an engineer himself.

At the time, Prieto told the Herald he wasn’t aware of the 2018 report by engineer Frank Morabito that warned of major structural damage at Champlain Towers South. That appears to conflict with the meeting of the condo board that November, where minutes show he made the “good shape” comment.

Public records also show that Prieto later commented in an email about attending the board’s meeting and praising its efforts to address the structural issues before the start of an official 40-year recertification process.

The condo building, completed in 1981, was facing a formal structural, mechanical and electrical review, as required under Miami-Dade’s building code. Morabito’s nine-page report was an initial summary of his structural findings for the board. The estimated initial cost of repairs was heavy — $9 million — a price tag that caused dissension among board members and delayed the repairs almost three years.

Although the Morabito report did not raise an obvious red flag that the building was “unsafe” or at risk of falling down, the firm urged Champlain’s condo board to replace and repair the deteriorating structural areas in a “timely fashion” because the concrete problems could “expand exponentially.”

Under Miami-Dade County’s building code, “a building, or part thereof, shall be presumed to be unsafe if ... there is a deterioration of the structure or structural parts.” The ordinance further states that “the Building Official, on his own initiative or as a result of reports by others, shall examine or cause to be examined every building or structure appearing or reported to be unsafe.”

A half-dozen engineers and legal experts contacted by the Herald said that given the conditions cited in the Morabito report, Surfside’s building official should have taken several additional steps to address the fundamental safety issue.

He could have spoken with Morabito about the findings in his report to gain a better understanding of the depth of the structural problems at the Champlain Towers South condo. Or, he could have inspected the building, especially the areas of grave concern, such as the pool deck area, where a “major error” was found because it lacked proper sloping and waterproofing, generating persistent leaks into the concrete slab beneath it. Or, he could have examined the “abundant cracking and spalling” found in the concrete garage columns because of deteriorating reinforced steel rods known as rebar that were expanding and causing the concrete to crumble. Records released to date don’t reflect any of that was done.

On the extreme end, the building official has the authority to deem the building an unsafe structure and order an evacuation. Then, if the official finds the building is indeed unsafe, he can order repairs to be made and refer the case to the county’s Unsafe Structures Board, which can take further action, including ordering demolition.

Pistorino, the Miami engineer and author of the county’s 40-year recertification policy, said it is often the case that a town or city’s building official doesn’t have the expertise to determine whether a building is facing imminent danger of falling down, so it’s imperative to retain a structural engineer.

“A building official would normally hire an independent consultant to look at the structure,” Pistorino said. “That seems to be a good practice or good procedure.”

When Morabito noted that 8% of the garage and plaza “slabs have experienced concrete deterioration,” he was indicating damage to a “major structural element” of the building, said Abieyuwa Aghayere, professor of engineering at Drexel University and an expert in concrete structures. Still, Aghayere said from an engineering perspective, whether that deterioration would have made the building unsafe depends on the extent of the damage.

“It would depend on how widespread the deterioration is,” Aghayere said. “If you have spalling at one spot, the structure is strong enough to redistribute load.”

Aghayere said Morabito would not have necessarily been able to see the extent of damage to the slab because the pool deck was covered in tiles. He also said that sometimes concrete can look fine while deteriorating at a chemical level — in other words, it would be weaker than it should be.

“It would have been helpful if he (Morabito) took core samples and tested them,” Aghayere said.

In 2020, Morabito’s team took core samples of the pool deck, noting the depth of the slab but not the strength of the concrete or its chloride levels — tests that Aghayere said would be necessary to be sure about the strength of the slab.

Schlesinger, the Fort Lauderdale contractor and attorney, said the building industry’s laws are replete with gray areas and “overlapping powers” among inspectors, engineers, contractors and architects, which allows them all to “point to other people” when things go wrong. But ultimately, Schlesinger said, “they’re all responsible.”

Schlesinger said Morabito, the engineer, also arguably had a legal and ethical duty to notify Prieto about the firm’s 2018 structural assessment of the property, although he acknowledged there would likely be an “even split” among experts on that question.

“Does this report say there was something structurally unsafe? I believe it does,” Schlesinger said.

Generally, engineers have little incentive to flag problems for government authorities, he said — especially before 40-year recertifications are due.

Morabito’s firm was first hired in 2018 to inspect Champlain Towers South, then again in 2020 to usher the building through its 40-year inspection process after repair costs had ballooned from $9 million to $15 million. Morabito, with offices in Maryland and Florida, did not respond to a request for comment.

In a statement following the Surfside building’s collapse, the Morabito firm defended its actions but also conceded the condo tower had serious structural problems, saying that “our report detailed significant cracks and breaks in the concrete, which required repairs to ensure the safety of the residents and the public.”

Then, it issued another statement: “Morabito Consultants did their job, just as they have done for nearly four decades — providing expert structural engineering counsel and services. And they will continue to work with the investigating authorities to understand why this structure failed, so that such a catastrophic event can never happen again.”

So far, more than a dozen individual and class-action lawsuits have been filed against Champlain Towers South’s condo association, Morabito’s engineering firm and others in Miami-Dade Circuit Court; the condo board itself has a total of $48 million in insurance coverage for property and personal injury claims.

Lawyers representing the condo association, Ken Direktor and Donna Berger, did not respond to a request for comment. But soon after the tower’s collapse, they provided the town of Surfside with the minutes of the mid-November 2018 condo board meeting in which Prieto said the building appeared in good shape and asked officials to post the document on their government website. Other records show that as time passed, some condo board members grew frustrated over not only the lack of progress on the structural fixes but also the escalating costs. Despite its early start, the condo board’s formal plans for the 40-year recertification under Morabito’s direction were only getting underway just as the building collapsed, records show.

From a legal standpoint, holding governments and building officials accountable for construction failures is a challenge. Building officials have sovereign immunity, making it more difficult to hold them liable. And Florida law caps government agencies’ liability in lawsuits at $200,000, requiring approval from the state Legislature and the governor to go above that amount.

But the families of victims of the Champlain Towers South condo collapse are already preparing to pin some responsibility on the town. Last week, lawyers for the estate of Antonio and Gladys Lozano — who were married for 59 years before they were killed in the collapse — put Surfside officials on notice of a potential lawsuit, as required by state law.

The two-page letter points explicitly to Prieto’s failure to act on the 2018 engineer’s report, and notes that Prieto brushed off another email from a Champlain Towers South board member in January 2019 raising concerns about construction at the condo tower next door in Miami Beach.

“The Town of Surfside had actual knowledge of the deplorable conditions and failed to take action,” the letter says. “Employees and officials were negligent for failing to protect the residents, tenants, and owners of the building.”
While poor countries struggle to find vaccines, places that bought too many are scrambling to get rid of doses about to expire

mguenot@businessinsider.com (Marianne Guenot) 
Pfizer BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine on Dec 17, 2020 in Victorville, California. Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Countries including Israel, Bulgaria, and parts of the US have more vaccines than they can use.

They are trying to sell on hundreds of thousands of doses before their expiry dates arrive.

It is a stark illustration of global vaccine inequality: other nations are desperate for shots.

Last week, Israel was on the cusp of throwing out close to one million doses of unused Pfizer coronavirus vaccine. Domestic demand for the shots was too low, and the shots were due to expire at the end of July.

Talks with the Palestinian authority and other countries to take the shots fell through one after the other.

But in the nick of time, Israel found a taker. On Tuesday, it announced that South Korea would take 700,000 doses.


As part of this last-minute deal, South Korea agreed to send back an identical number of doses when it gets its next batch of vaccines from Pfizer in September and October, Reuters reported.

Excess vaccine supply is a new problem for the rich countries that monopolized global supplies.

It coexists uncomfortably with the desperation elsewhere from poorer nations where campaigns have barely begun.

According to Our World in Data fewer than 1% of people in low-income countries have been given even a single dose. Papua New Guinea and Chad have both administered doses to fewer than 0.1% of their populations, per figures compiled by The New York Times.

US at a vaccine 'saturation point'

Some US states are facing much the same problem as Israel.

"If you look at the US, we're clearly approaching saturation in terms of people's willingness to be vaccinated," Hani Mahmassani, Director of the Transportation Center at Northwestern University, told Insider.

Vaccines are sitting unused in states where uptake is low. Oklahoma, Alabama, Utah, Delaware, and New Hampshire have stopped asking the government for new doses of vaccine as they work through their stockpiles, the Associated Press reported.

In June, Tennessee and North Carolina gave millions of doses back to the federal government due to low demand, the AP said. Mississippi returned more than 870,000 doses, and donated 32,400 to both Maine and Rhode Island.

"In Mississippi, if people don't understand how important it is to keep alive, we want to protect other Americans," said Mississippi State Health Officer Thomas Dobbs.

 A sign encouraging vaccination in Birmingham, Alabama, on June 30, 2021 Elijah Nouvelage/AFP; Getty Images

Even countries with low vaccination rates have stockpile problems


Romania, too, has stockpile issues. Even though its rate of vaccination is low, with 23% fully vaccinated, 43,000 of its AstraZeneca shots expired last month.

To get rid of its stockpile, the country announced it would sell about 1.2 million doses of vaccine to Denmark and another million doses to Ireland.

Bulgaria is also looking to donate its excess doses of vaccines. The country received 4.6 million doses but has used only 1.8 million. That is in spite of only about 12% of its population being vaccinated.

Uptake in both countries has been low, in part because of logistical issues but also because of high levels of vaccine hesitancy, according to local news reports.

The same has been seen in some African countries. About 1.25 million AstraZeneca doses, spread between 18 African nations, will expire unless they are used by the end of August, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).
A violinist performs during Romania's "vaccination marathon" at the National Library in Bucharest, Romania, May 9. Cristian Cristel/Xinhua; Getty Images

One solution: extend the expiry date

According to a blog post from GAVI, a public-private organization that helps distribute vaccines to poorer countries, vaccine manufacturers were "extremely cautious" when they set the expiry dates for the vaccines.

Most vaccines expire around 3 years after they are produced, but the shelf life for COVID-19 vaccines is a lot shorter: six months for the Pfizer, Moderna, and AstraZeneca's vaccines, three months for the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

Last month, Johnson & Johnson added an extra six weeks to the shelf life of millions of unused doses in the US that were set to expire on June 10.

Canada also approved extending the shelf life of two lots of AstraZeneca vaccine by 30 days in May.

Pfizer, however, told Israel that it could not ensure that its doses would be safe beyond the current expiry date, according to the Times of Israel.
Mexico to try former negotiator of USMCA trade pact


MEXICO CITY (AP) — A judge in Mexico ordered the country's former economy secretary, who served as one of the lead negotiators of the U.S.-Mexico-Canada free trade agreement, to stand trial on illicit enrichment charges.

The judge ruled Friday that Ildefonso Guajardo could remain free while the trial was underway, but he was prohibited from leaving the country. Prosecutors say Guajardo had an “unjustifiable increase in his wealth” while in office from 2014 to 2018.

Guajardo was elected to a seat in the lower house of Congress in the June 7 elections. He denied the charges and said he would work to clear his name.

Guajardo served under former president Enrique Peña Nieto’s 2012-2018 administration. Several ex-officials from that administration have been accused of corruption.

Guajardo told the Milenio television station that the charges “are better for me, because I will have the opportunity to defend myself in front of an impartial authority.”

The trade pact, which replaced the old NAFTA accord, went into effect in July 2020.

The Associated Press