Thursday, September 28, 2023

UK

Record number of trials adjourned over failure to bring suspects from prison to court

Andy Gregory
Wed, September 27, 2023 



A record number of trials have been adjourned at the last-minute because of failures to bring defendants from prison to court, The Independent can reveal.

These failures – linked to severe overcrowding in prisons – can delay proceedings for months at “untold” costs to the taxpayer, while “keeping juries waiting and increasing the anxiety of all concerned”, warned the Criminal Bar Association.

Their analysis of Ministry of Justice figures dating back to 2010 showed 58 trials were postponed because of no-shows or late deliveries of prisoners in the crown courts alone during the first three months of this year – 23 of which involved alleged violent and sexual offences, including rape.

This is the highest quarterly figure in records stretching back to 2010, having quadrupled since the same period in 2022. Further analysis by The Independent shows it is three times higher than the average in the decade to 2021, excluding 2020 when the pandemic halted in-person trials.

There were also 202 last-minute adjournments in magistrates’ courts, making it the worst quarter for five years. Both sets of figures do not include the number of additional failures to deliver defendants to pre-trial hearings, which are not publicly available.

Despite record court backlogs, “victims will bravely try to hold on for the two to three years it can take to get to court and live their lives in the permanent shadow of reliving what happened to them,” said former victims’ commissioner Dame Vera Baird.

“Then the chaos that this government had made of the criminal justice system deals them a final blow by getting them to court only for the prison system [to be unable to produce] the defendant.”

Warning that victims of sexual assault or serious violence “lose sleep for weeks before they are due to testify” and are quite likely to feel unable to go through such stress again, potentially waiting months for the case to be re-listed, Dame Vera added: “How is a victim to believe that the criminal justice system cares twopence for their wellbeing with this mess?”

The adjournments are ‘a complete indictment of everything that is wrong in the criminal justice system’, the Prison Officers Association warned (Ian Waldie/Getty Images)

The “damning” delays are symptomatic of chronic overcrowding and staffing problems within prisons, and “demonstrate a criminal justice system in crisis”, prison guards warned.

With the remand population soaring to an effective record high in the first quarter of 2023, with a fifth of the 10,000 people awaiting trial in prison trapped there for over a year, as reported last week by The Independent, defendants are being moved from bursting jails to others situated hours away from court.

A “national shortage” of prison escort staff and van drivers is also being exacerbated by the fact that police custody is being used as “an emergency alternative” to overcrowded jails, adding to the number of journeys required each day, warned Charlie Taylor, HM chief inspector of prisons.

“This challenge with getting prisoners to court on time is causing significant delays in courts across the country, and was our single biggest concern in a report on court custody facilities in Surrey, Sussex and Kent published earlier this month,” Mr Taylor said.

“To add to this, we are hearing of men refusing to go to court at all because they do not want to end up in a different prison at the end of the day because the original prison is now full up – they would rather face the wrath of the judge than the strain of settling into a new jail.”

The rise in delays comes as the number of completed trials fell by nearly a third in 2022, when 15,000 trials were successfully heard – compared with 21,546 the previous year, as the crown court backlog continues to hit new record highs of nearly 65,000 cases.

As a result, further delays due to the non-delivery of defendants are “the last thing” victims, defendants and witnesses need”, warned Law Society president Lubna Shuja.

Thirty-six of the 58 adjourned trials from January to March were in London – a failing the capital’s victims’ commissioner Claire Waxman lambasted as “simply unacceptable”.

Ms Waxman called for “swift action” to address the delays, by ensuring clear listing, good communication between courts and prisons, and better use of technology such as videolinks from prison, “whilst keeping victims of crime at the heart of these decisions”.

The official data does not show whether the private firms responsible for these custody escort services reported that the defendant had refused to attend, or whether they had simply failed to deliver them – which decides whether the firms are paid, or instead fined up to £500 for every 15 minutes of delay.

The Law Society calculated in 2018 that an average day in court cost the state just shy of £2,700 for staff, judges and building-related costs.

But the Criminal Bar Association warned this was “a tiny fraction of the actual hidden cost to the entire justice system”, with “untold” costs including the cost of police time attending court, further time spent in remand, and costly lawyer fees – with barristers not paid until trials conclude.

Failures to bring defendants to court have impacted cases involving murder and rape (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

“Justice is becoming a victim of worsening prison escort services at a time when the criminal justice system is being held together by dedicated and highly trained criminal barristers and judges,” said the group’s chair Tana Adkin KC. “We are working hard to ensure that all the cases affecting witnesses, victims, defendants and their families reach a just conclusion as quickly as possible.

“Defendants not produced from custody or produced late from custody result in huge delays to court proceedings, keeping juries waiting and increasing the anxiety of all concerned in the process.”

The delays are “wholly inappropriate and a complete indictment of everything that is wrong in the criminal justice system”, said Steve Gillan, general secretary of the Prison Officers Association.

“There isn’t any single reason for this occurring and could actually be a number of things including prisoners refusing to go to court [and] overcrowding of prisons, with prisoners being displaced from courts in their area.

“Shortage of staff from private escorts and prisons also could be a contributory factor but it isn’t acceptable at all and government should be held accountable.”

‘Chronic’ staffing shortages are impacting justice, warned the Magistrates Association (Danny Lawson/PA Wire)

Tom Franklin, chief executive of the Magistrates Association, warned of a “concerning” surge in adjournments in magistrates’ courts, with late deliveries among several challenges Justices of the Peace are “continually experiencing” at present.

The “chronic” staffing shortage across the system – “from lack of probation officers, which can delay the delivery of pre-sentence reports, to legal adviser shortages without which a court cannot sit at all” – “impact the efficiency and quality of justice”, said Mr Franklin.

Griff Ferris of charity Fair Trials warned that the “broken criminal legal system is denying justice to both victims and defendants”, with huge waits for trials involving those trapped on remand in overcrowded prisons fuelling “a mental health crisis, with record levels of self-harm and suicide”.

“People are being made to suffer these conditions because of the government’s shredding of court infrastructure and legal aid over the last decade, and its insistence on putting more and more people in prison,” he said.

A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: “Over 99 per cent of the approximately 250,000 prisoners brought to court each year arrive on time and contractors face tough penalties if a defendant arrives late.”

“At the same time, we’re creating an additional 20,000 new prison places and pushing forward with measures to recruit up to 5,000 extra prison officers so that we can continue to lock up dangerous criminals and keep the public safe.”


Young inexperienced prison officers at risk of ‘grooming’ from most dangerous criminals


Matt Mathers
Wed, September 27, 2023 



Nearly a third of officers at high-security prisons have fewer than three years of experience, official figures show, fuelling concerns about safety and “grooming” of staff by the most dangerous criminals in the country.

As of June 2023, a total of 2,993 (31 per cent) prison officers had not been in their jobs longer than 36 months – up from just 236 (6 per cent) in June 2015, according to Ministry of Justice data.

Experts warned that newer recruits who require more support, training and mentoring were at “very real risk” of being groomed by “experienced” inmates, presenting new dangers in already “overstretched” prisons.

A union representing prison officers said the figures were reflective of the staffing “crisis” across the sector, with Her Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS) losing staff “hand over fist”.


Labour said the government needed to “urgently address” the challenges facing prison staff.

The figures come following suspected terrorist Daniel Khalfe’s escape from Wandsworth prison.

Mr Khalife, a 21-year-old former soldier, pleaded not guilty to escaping from the category B jail in south London. He appeared in court last Thursday via video link from the category A Belmarsh prison, also in London.

It sparked a national debate about security across the UK prison estate as well as staffing and morale issues more broadly among the officers working in them. Overcrowding and drug abuse are also significant problems.

Daniel Khalife pleaded not guilty to escaping from HMP Wandsworth (Metropolitan Police/AP)

Category A prisons have the highest level of security, and house male prisoners who pose the greatest threat to the public, the police, or national security – such as terrorists, murderers and rapists. Category D prisons have the lowest security and house criminals who are not deemed a risk to society.

At HMP Belmarsh, where Mr Khalife is held, 116 prison officers (27 per cent) had fewer than three years of experience as of June 2023 – up from 19 (5 per cent) in 2015.

Of all the category A jails in England, HMP Woodhill in Milton Keynes and HMP Wakefield in West Yorkshire had the highest percentage of these officers – 38 per cent. HMP Lartin in Worcestershire had the lowest on 24 per cent, according to the figures, published by prisons minister Damian Hinds, in response to a parliamentary question tabled by the Labour Party.

Charlie Taylor, the chief inspector of prisons, said that some recruits go on to do an “outstanding” job but that those new to the service needed more support and mentoring from experienced staff.

“Whereas in the past recruits to the Prison Service were often older and more experienced, we now have officers starting who are only just out of school,” he told The Independent.

Mr Taylor said that when mentoring was lacking “it can actually be the prisoners who end up imparting key knowledge to new recruits and I have heard many tales of this taking place”.

He added: “Positive relationships between staff and prisoners are, of course, to be encouraged. But there is a very real risk that inexperienced new recruits can be groomed by experienced prisoners, introducing new areas of risk to an already stretched service.”

Earlier this month The Independent revealed that across the prison estate, only 30 per cent of officers had more than 10 years of experience – down from 60 per cent in 2017. More than 1,000 of those staff left in the past year.

“The sharp rise in the proportion of inexperienced staff in prisons reflects the staffing crisis in the Prison Service, with one in seven uniformed officers leaving their job during 2021-22,” Mick Pimblett, assistant general secretary of the Professional Trades Union for Prison, Correctional and Secure Psychiatric Workers, said.

“I am sure that HMPPS will make the same old statements regarding staffing retention toolkits, the intention to recruit extra staff and so on, but the simple fact is that HMPPS are losing staff hand over fist.”

He added: “The recent pay announcement, which stated that experienced staff on old terms and conditions would not receive a pay award this year or in the future, along with unsafe or unachievable regimes, and increased violence will only lead to further staff leaving the service.

“These prisons in the high secure estate hold some of the most dangerous people in society, including terrorists and murderers. Recent His Majesty's Inspectorate of Prison reports regarding prisons such as HMP Woodhill, HMP Whitemoor and HMP Long Lartin make for very grim reading. New members of staff are being mentored by other new members of staff, and it is a recipe for disaster which is of HMPPS’s own making”.

Sir Bob Neil, chair of the Commons justice committee and the Conservative MP for Bromley and Chislehurst, said of the high-security prison figures: “This is a stark and worrying statistic. Retaining experienced and knowledgeable prison staff is vital to safety on the estate and rehabilitation work with prisoners.

“The government risks failing in its duty of care to prison staff and prisoners alike by allowing this situation to perpetuate.”

Shabana Mahmood, the shadow justice secretary, said: “Our prisons are in crisis after 13 years of Conservative chaos, but these figures paint a stark picture of the reality of a mass exodus of staff.

“The high staff turnover means a lack of experience on prison wings and new recruits struggle to find people to learn from. The Prison Officers’ Association estimates that almost 100,000 years of cumulative experience have been lost since 2010.

“The government needs to urgently address the challenges that prison staff are facing to ensure we see an improvement in engagement and retention. Labour will get a grip of the prison system and ensure public safety.”

A Prison Service spokesperson said: “We are doing more than ever to attract and retain the best staff, including starting salaries for officers which have risen from £22,000 to £30,000 since 2019.

“Our hardworking officers are also being equipped with the tools they need such as Pava [incapacitant] spray and body-worn cameras, and X-ray body scanners prevent the smuggling of illicit contraband that fuels disorder.

“These measures are working and in addition to increasing the number of officers by 4,000 since 2017, retention rates for prison staff are now improving.”

REPEAT OFTEN

US jail practices are racist and an 'affront to human dignity', UN experts say

Emma Farge
Thu, September 28, 2023 

GENEVA (Reuters) - U.N. human rights experts have called for major reforms of the U.S. criminal justice system to combat systemic racism, saying jailed Black women had been shackled during childbirth while male inmates were forced to work in "plantation-style" conditions.

In a report published on Thursday, three U.N.-appointed experts said they had found practices in U.S. prisons that amounted to "an affront to human dignity" in visits in April and May.

The U.S. diplomatic mission in Geneva did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

One such practice is restraining and shackling women prisoners during childbirth, the report said.

The experts "heard, first hand, unbearable direct testimonies of pregnant women shackled during labour, who due to the chaining, lost their babies", it said. Asked to give details, a U.N. rights spokesperson referred to "several" cases and confirmed they all involved Black women.

The experts also collected direct testimonies of conditions at a Louisiana prison where it said thousands of mostly Black male prisoners were "forced to labour in the fields (even picking cotton) under the watch of white 'freemen'on horseback, in conditions very similar to those of 150 years ago".

It described the stories from the so-called 'Angola' facility as "shocking" and said they amounted to "contemporary forms of slavery". It also voiced alarm at the widespread use of solitary confinement, which it said appeared to be applied disproportionately to inmates of African descent.

One Black man told the experts he had been kept in isolation for 11 years without interruption, the report said.

"Our findings point to the critical need for comprehensive reform," said one of the experts, Juan Mendez.

The commission was set up by the U.N. Human Rights Council in 2021 after the killing of George Floyd, a Black man who died after his neck was pinned to the ground by a police officer.

The report was based on testimonies from 133 individuals in five U.S. cities as well as testimonies collected from five detention centres. It contained a list of 30 recommendations for U.S. authorities, including a call for a new commission on reparations for people of African descent.

(Reporting by Emma Farge; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

EL BANCO DE COSTCO

Costco says its one-ounce gold bars are selling out fast


Iman Palm
Wed, September 27, 2023 




(KTLA) – One of Costco’s newest merchandise items has been selling out within a matter of hours, CFO Richard Galanti said on an earnings call Tuesday.

“I’ve gotten a couple of calls that people have seen online that we’ve been selling one-ounce gold bars,” Galanti told investors during the retailer’s fourth-quarter earnings call. “Yes, but when we load them on the site, they’re typically gone within a few hours and we limit two per member.”

Costco’s website shows that members can purchase one-ounce bars of 24-karat gold from Rand Refinery for $1,949.99 or a one-ounce bar from PAMP Suisse for $1,979.99. Both items have a 4.9-star rating and can’t be refunded or returned.

Some Reddit users have expressed their frustrations with trying to get the high-ticket item.

Costco customers who are fortunate enough to find the item (and be able to afford it) can also earn 2% cash back on the purchase if they have an executive membership card, which grants 2% back on all purchases.

As of Wednesday morning, one ounce of gold is priced at $1,919, according to Nasdaq.

You’ll also need a Costco membership to buy a gold bar from the retailer. A standard membership costs $60 per year and an executive membership costs $120.

California's unhoused population struggles with sky-high rent: 'Once you get behind, you just can't get up'

ZOHREEN SHAH, TENZIN SHAKYA, BRIANA STEWART and ALLIE WEINTRAUB
Thu, September 28, 2023

Homelessness continues to grow in San Francisco

In parts of San Francisco, unhoused Americans like Anthony, a former restaurant worker, regularly move street to street as city officials come in to clean up their encampments.

Anthony, who asked not to use his last name due to privacy concerns, says he has been living in a tent on the street for three years. Before the pandemic, he says he did mostly chef work, but he began to struggle to afford housing once restaurants temporarily closed.

“Once you get behind, you just can’t get up,” Anthony told ABC News.

Anthony is one of over 170,000 unhoused Californians struggling to find a permanent home, according to the California Budget and Policy Center. That’s nearly a third of the nation’s rising homeless population of 582,462 people, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.


For people like Nelly Sorto, a mom of two young children who works full time cleaning homes, it’s all but impossible to break into the city’s rental market.

The city’s minimum wage is $18.07 an hour, but the average rent for a one-bedroom apartment is roughly $3,000 a month, according to the city of San Francisco and online rental platform Zumper.com.

Sorto told San Francisco-based affiliate KGO-TV that she lived in an RV with her children for over a year before recently obtaining rental assistance from the city and moving into an apartment.

Experts point to several reasons for the rising homeless population in San Francisco, including the high cost of living related to the tech boom, the economic downturn during the pandemic and mental health issues experienced by many individuals.

“California has systemic issues in terms of its housing affordability, where it is a very popular place to live that has driven up rents and the rents are a direct cause of homelessness,” Jennifer Friedenbach, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessness, told ABC News. “So, what we need to do in California is really have a massive investment to offset that difference between incomes and rent.”

MORE: Homeless populations vulnerable amid poor air quality and smoke: Advocates

Friedenbach calls the homelessness crisis a “manufactured issue” created by a “lack of investment.”

Meanwhile, many across the state say they’re frustrated with the growing encampments in their cities.

Jeanne Vasquez, a Hollywood resident, spoke to ABC Los Angeles in July about the encampment in her area, saying, “There’s needles on the ground, also there’s a lot of broken glass. You’re getting catcalled…You're getting people that have mental illness. You're seeing profanity. Sometimes you see people naked."

President Joe Biden announced over the summer an extra $3 billion in investment focusing on veterans and including rental assistance, legal help and job search support.

On the campaign trail, GOP presidential hopefuls, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former President Donald Trump, have pointed to the homeless crisis in blue states to slam Democratic leadership.

In one campaign ad, Trump promises to “ban urban camping" if elected.


“Violators of these bans will be arrested but they will be given option to accept treatment and services if they’re willing to be rehabilitated. Many of them don’t want them,” Trump says in the ad.

Friedenbach says such a policy would essentially criminalize the homeless and she believes the federal government needs to spend more time listening.

“Very rarely are candidates centering unhoused people's needs in when they develop platforms before they're making statements,” Friedenbach said.

To address the crisis, Friedenbach said the federal government should invest in housing vouchers like Section 8, along with short, medium and long-term housing subsidies so people can stay in their homes if they were to face a catastrophic health issue or job loss. Friedenbach also calls for investment in behavioral health and reforming substance use and mental health treatment systems to work better for people.

MORE: As incidents of violent crime by the homeless grab headlines, activists urge caution and solutions

In a statement, a spokesperson for the San Francisco Department of Emergency Management told ABC News, “San Francisco outreach teams do an exceptional job of placing people who are interested in going inside into shelter or housing. Unfortunately, most people either decline to engage, decline offers of shelter, or have shelter already and we cannot compel to come inside.”

Anthony has been offered a place to stay that would get him off the streets, but there are still thousands of people on the streets looking for a place to call home.

There are at least 350 unhoused individuals who are still on the waitlist for housing as of Sept. 27, according to San Francisco's Department of Homeless and Supporting Housing waitlist.

This story is part of the ABC News politics series, “Ground Game,” examining issues that matter most to American voters ahead of the 2024 presidential election.

California gave Sacramento $25M for homeless at American River Parkway. Why hasn’t it spent it?

Theresa Clift
Wed, September 27, 2023


Renée C. Byer/rbyer@sacbee.comMore

Sacramento County for six months has been sitting on a $25 million check from the state of California to shelter unhoused people living on the American River Parkway.

Assemblyman Kevin McCarty, D-Sacramento, who co-sponsored the bill to get the county the money, sent a letter to Board of Supervisors Chairman Rich Desmond July 5 to nudge them to spend it.

“We fought diligently for these funds in the state budget, and I hope to see them utilized or a new plan for how they’ll be spent in the near future,” McCarty wrote in the letter. “I would appreciate any information you could share regarding this project.”

The funds were supposed to cover the start up costs to shelter roughly a whopping 620 people per year in tiny homes, the letter states.

“This, combined with designated camping areas, would allow the county to serve more individuals and transform the county’s ability to get people connected to shelter and services while restoring and protecting the parkway,” the letter states.

The county received the $25 million in April. It’s been working since then to find a site, Desmond said Tuesday.

“We are working hard to find a site that is close to the parkway but doesn’t overly concentrate homeless shelter and housing in a single neighborhood,” Desmond said in a message to The Sacramento Bee. “In the meantime, we continue expanding our shelter and (affordable) housing as well as residential and outpatient resources for unsheltered with behavioral health needs. I am confident we will find a location that will provide a safe and supportive alternative for people camping on the Parkway.”

Desmond said he hopes the county can identify a site by the end of the year.

“I continue to push staff to do so,” he said.
Search for Safe Ground land

The county found a piece of land that was available and spent months negotiating to buy it to build and operate a Safe Ground. But earlier this month the owner of the land entered into a contract to sell it to another bidder, county spokeswoman Janna Haynes said. The county declined to disclose the address. The county next plans to publish a Request for Qualifications, asking for private entities who want to help the county find sites.

Appropriate sites would be near the Parkway, including downtown, because people are more likely to accept shelter in places near where they are camping, Haynes said. That’s a strategy McCarty agrees with, he said.

For that reason he understands the delay.

“Yes it’s taking too long, but it always takes too long,” said McCarty, a former councilman who’s running for mayor of Sacramento next year. “I think policy makers at all levels want swifter action. This is one I want to get right. I’d rather find an appropriate location. Pointing fingers at local governments isn’t the answer. We are all in this together and need to work cooperatively ... this is not easy. It took a long time to get to this problem and it’s gonna take a lot of work to get out of it.”

Ultimately wherever the county finds to open a shelter will require Board of Supervisors approval, Haynes said.

Although the money is unspent the county has 10 outreach navigators who work daily to try to get people into services, and when available, into shelter, Haynes said. The county recently opened 100 tiny homes in south Sacramento, and is opening another 75 there later this year. It’s also working to open a large shelter and parking lot for 250 people in North Highlands.

In addition, Sacramento is set to get 350 tiny homes from the state this fall, announced in March at Cal Expo fairgrounds with much fanfare, but it has not yet received them.

Even after those efforts, there will still be thousands unhoused in Sacramento. There are an estimated 9,300 homeless people living in the county, including hundreds along the parkway. The city and county have about 2,300 shelter beds.

At US Antarctic base hit by harassment claims, workers are banned from buying alcohol at bars

NICK PERRY
Wed, September 27, 2023 






 Britt Barquist poses for a photograph in Christchurch, New Zealand, Feb. 24, 2023. From Sunday, Oct. 1, 2023, workers at the main United States base in Antarctica will no longer be able to walk into a bar and order a beer, after the federal agency which oversees the research program on the ice decided to stop serving alcohol
. (AP Photo/Peter Meecham, File)

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — From Sunday, workers at the main United States base in Antarctica will no longer be able to walk into a bar and order a beer, after the federal agency that oversees the research program decided to stop serving alcohol.

McMurdo Station will not be going entirely dry, the National Science Foundation confirmed. Researchers and support staff will still be able to buy a weekly ration of alcohol from the station store. But the policy shift could prove significant because the bars have been central to social life in the isolated environment.

The changes come as concerns grow that sexual misconduct has been allowed to flourish at McMurdo. An investigation by The Associated Press last month uncovered a pattern of women who said their claims of harassment or assault were minimized by their employers, often leading to them or others being put in further danger.

In some of the cases outlined by the AP, alcohol played a role. But the NSF told the AP the changes involving alcohol were related to morale and welfare at the base, and were not aimed at preventing sexual harassment or assault.

Under the new rules taking effect Sunday, workers will be able to order only alcohol-free drinks at McMurdo's two main bars, Southern Exposure and Gallagher’s. They will still be able to bring their own alcohol to drink at the bars. A third venue which also served alcohol, the Coffee House, will become entirely alcohol-free but will now stay open for workers to visit any time of the day or night.

The current alcohol ration allows Antarctic workers to buy up to the equivalent of 18 beers each week, or three bottles of wine, or a 750 milliliter (25 ounce) bottle of spirits.

The NSF said it's also instituting several new measures during the current southern hemisphere spring and upcoming summer that are aimed at preventing sexual harassment and assault at the base, where typically around 70% of workers are men. These include enhanced training, a new survey to collect data and monitor trends, and visits to the ice from experts.

Karen Marrongelle, the NSF's chief operating officer, said it was committed to ensuring a safe environment wherever science or education was conducted.

“We will not rest until we are confident that every member of the Antarctic community feels safe and supported,” she said in a statement.

The NSF published a report in 2022 in which 59% of women said they’d experienced harassment or assault while on the ice, and 72% of women said such behavior was a problem in Antarctica. Last year, the NSF created an office to deal with such complaints, provided a confidential victim’s advocate, and established a 24-hour helpline.

The AP investigation found a pattern of problems at McMurdo. One woman who reported a colleague had groped her was made to work alongside him again. Another woman who told her employer she was sexually assaulted was fired two months later. Another woman said bosses at the base downgraded her allegations from rape to harassment.

After the AP published its investigation, the NSF sent a message to U.S. Antarctic Program workers.

“We know that it can be difficult to hear these accounts. It is for us,” the NSF wrote in the email, which was obtained by the AP. “These are not experiences we want anyone to have within the USAP (or anywhere else in the world).”

The email outlined the new anti-harassment measures the NSF planned to implement and offered resources for support.

Jennifer Sorensen, who told the AP she was raped at McMurdo in 2015, said the NSF had tried unsuccessfully before to blame alcohol for the high rates of sexual misconduct at the base.

“They know full well that all the rationing or denial of alcohol sales being forced on us isn't going to do a damn thing,” she said.

If the NSF and lead contractor Leidos were serious about stopping sexual misconduct, they should start believing survivors and ensure they aren't retaliated against, she said. They should also stop rehiring perpetrators, she added.

“Alcohol can obviously blur the lines of consent, there's that issue at play, but overwhelmingly, sexual assault has occurred even when neither party has been consuming alcohol, as was the case with me,” Sorensen said. “So it's definitely not going to eliminate the problem."

Sorensen said that if the NSF wants to reduce drinking, it should provide alternative diversions, such as the bowling alley, ceramic studio and greenhouse which used to be features at McMurdo but have disappeared due to budget cutbacks.

Britt Barquist, who said she was groped at McMurdo in 2017, said in an email it was positive that the NSF was making an effort to improve the culture at the base. But she remained concerned that incidents were still being swept under the rug when it put a contracting company's primary objectives at risk.

“For example, my incident took place during work hours, at a job site, no alcohol involved, and was corroborated and reported through official channels,” Barquist wrote. “I was later told by my company’s HR that I would have to work with the perpetrator again because his job was mission-critical and there was no one else to fill his role. None of these new policies implemented by the NSF would prevent that from happening again.”

The NSF and Leidos have declined to answer questions about Barquist's case, or others highlighted in the AP's report.

Under another new initiative to improve morale, the NSF said it will be expanding internet access through the satellite network Starlink, allowing workers to stay better connected to people back home. Starlink is run by SpaceX, the company founded by Elon Musk.

The NSF first foreshadowed impending changes to its alcohol policies in a blog post early last month, and said it first told workers about the new anti-harassment measures in mid-August.

The AP sent the NSF a detailed list of questions about its investigation in early June and has continued to correspond since, including asking for any planned changes to address sexual harassment and assault. The NSF never listed any planned changes to alcohol policies.

“Because these changes are related to morale and welfare and not sexual assault/harassment prevention, we did not mention this program initiative in our previous response,” the NSF said in a statement.

ASPIRATIONAL
American Climate Corps: Biden's new green jobs initiative delivers more promises than details

Christopher Staysniak, Lecturer of History, College of the Holy Cross
Thu, September 28, 2023 at 6:25 AM MDT·6 min read
THE CONVERSATION

This AmeriCorps National Civilian Community Corps team did trail maintenance and construction work in Pennsylvania in 2017. 
Tim Leedy/MediaNews Group's Reading Eagle via Getty Images


When President Joe Biden created the American Climate Corps by executive order on Sept. 20, 2023, it marked a step toward keeping a pledge he made nearly three years earlier: to create a new workforce training and service program to deal with global warming.

The White House promises that the corps “will ensure more young people have access to the skills-based training necessary for good-paying careers in the clean energy and climate resilience economy.” By helping Americans get entry-level green jobs, such as solar panel installation and home insulation, it will equip thousands more young Americans to tackle the complex challenges posed by climate change.

As a scholar who researches and teaches about the history of U.S. volunteer service programs, I believe that the American Climate Corps will not provide anything radically new. Rather, it will largely offer the same experiences and work opportunities as an array of programs that already exist. But the Biden administration’s promise of connecting national service experience to long-term careers offers one important change to this model that I believe will make a difference to those who participate.

New Deal echoes

The inspiration for the American Climate Corps comes from President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Civilian Conservation Corps. That New Deal program put unemployed – and mainly white – young men to work on public lands across the country to counter the devastating unemployment of the Great Depression.

Known as the CCC, it was a massive undertaking. Approximately 3 million men passed through its ranks over nine years. Those who served built much of the infrastructure of the country’s state and national parks, planted over 2 billion trees, fought forest fires and responded to natural disasters like floods.

The Biden administration aims to make its new corps far more inclusive in terms of gender, race and ethnic diversity. Rather than alleviating a short-term employment crisis, like its Depression-era predecessor, the American Climate Corps will emphasize launching careers.

So far it’s unclear how big this program will be. The White House has declined to specify a budget after repeatedly failing to persuade Congress to designate any funding for similar multibillion-dollar green jobs efforts because of Republican opposition.

Reportedly, the scaled-down American Climate Corps that Biden has bypassed Congress to establish could be funded through money appropriated to other parts of the government, such as the U.S. Agriculture Department, AmeriCorps and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The American Climate Corps, according to the details available, will mobilize far fewer participants than the CCC. The White House plans call for 20,000 people once it’s up and running, only 4% of the Civilian Conservation Corps’ peak enrollment of 500,000 men in 1935

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Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez celebrates with Sen. Ed Markey following the announced formation of the American Climate Corps. 

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Network of similar programs already in place

This new service program is hardly the first to draw on the CCC’s example.

There are about 150 similar conservation service programs in the U.S., all connected through the National Association of Service and Conservation Corps. Known as the Corps Network, this patchwork includes 150 programs that give young adults and veterans opportunities to engage in service work on public lands and in rural and urban communities.

One of the oldest programs in what’s known as the Corps Network is the Student Conservation Association, founded in 1957. It puts thousands of high school and college-aged students to work on hiking trail improvement, tree planting and the restoration of natural acreage and waterways. Smaller programs like MobilizeGreen and New York City’s Green City Force focus on building a more inclusive green economy and training people for leadership skills or in tasks like building resilient urban food systems.

Many of these programs already get government funding through AmeriCorps, the federal agency for national service and volunteerism.

AmeriCorps also runs its own similar programs. The National Civilian Community Corpsestablished in 1993, deploys teams of young adults to projects that encompass energy conservation, infrastructure improvement, disaster recovery and response, and urban and rural development. Its website promises that “if you are 18-26, you can gain experience while supporting climate change mitigation.”

Operating since 1985, this amalgam of service programs already engages 20,000 young adults and veterans every year – the same number the Biden administration aims to mobilize. It’s unclear how the American Climate Corps might augment, replace or complement these programs. For instance, the corps’ focus on job training tied to solar, wind and other forms of renewable energy is relatively new – although some states have their own climate corps. Its emphasis on conserving land and water overlaps with the work existing state programs already do.

Scant objective evidence

There are different ways to assess whether service programs make a difference.

Many of them survey their participants, who regularly say they enjoyed the experience. Participants also cite a sense of personal growth, greater familiarity with environmental concerns and stronger leadership skills. One of the few studies conducted also found that people who took part in the conservation corps were more likely to pursue related careers.

These programs try to measure the impact of their work every year using metrics like hours served, miles of trails restored and acres of wetlands or forestry rehabilitated. But the data is largely self-reported and has never been rigorously or objectively collected and explored.

That means it’s hard to say whether funding these programs amount to an effective policy.

Better pay? Great opportunities?

Participants in the conservation corps programs that preceded Biden’s executive order get what amounts to small stipends and perhaps room and board. The low pay, which ranges from about US$16,000-$30,000 a year, can mean that they’re not an option for many recent college grads who might otherwise be interested.

Full-time AmeriCorps volunteers are also eligible to apply for grants to pay for their education or to make student loan payments on top of their earnings. These awards provide $6,895 in the 2023 fiscal year.

American Climate Corps backers argue it should pay a living wage as a form of “climate justice.”

It’s unclear whether the American Climate Corps will do that.

That’s why it’s important that the Biden administration is promising pathways to a high-paid career. It has outlined future cooperation between Americorps, the National Oceanic and Atmosphere Administration and the departments of Labor, Interior, Agriculture and Energy to help build links between American Climate Corps service and federal employment.

Answers to operational questions TBD

On top of the lack of clarity about its cost and funding and what participants will earn, it’s not clear to what extent the American Climate Corps will operate independently, or if it will support similar programs in the Corps Network.

For example, CaliforniaMichiganMaineWashington and Colorado already have their own climate corps. Five more states – Arizona, Utah, Minnesota, North Carolina and Maryland – unveiled their own when Biden signed the executive order for a national one.

Perhaps most importantly, it’s yet to be determined whether the American Climate Corps’ service work will differ from those state initiatives and similar programs. If not, this could simply be the rebranding of conservation programs as climate action.

This article is republished from The Conversation, an independent nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts. The Conversation is trustworthy news from experts, from an independent nonprofit. Try our free newsletters.

It was written by: Christopher StaysniakCollege of the Holy Cross.

Read more:

‘Absolutely false’: Justin Trudeau denies flying to G20 in plane full of cocaine
THAT WAS BOLSONARO OF BRAZIL

Namita Singh
Thu, 28 September 2023

Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau’s office strongly denied the claim that his plane was “full of cocaine” when he came to India for the G20 meet this month.

“This (is) absolutely false and a troubling example of how disinformation can make its way into media reporting,” his office said in a statement on Wednesday as it dismissed the unsubstantiated claim floated by a retired Indian diplomat during a TV discussion, according to the Toronto Star.

The bizarre claim, which has been widely reported in the Indian media, comes amid a fierce diplomatic spat between the two countries. Canada and India have both ejected one of each other’s senior diplomats after Mr Trudeau said there were “credible allegations” of Indian state involvement in the death of a Sikh leader in Canada.

Former Indian ambassador to Sudan Deepak Vohra said on Monday there were “credible rumours” that “sniffer dogs found cocaine on his plane” and that Mr Trudeau “didn’t come out of his room for two days”.

“He didn’t go to the president’s dinner. People say he was in a drug-induced stupor,” Mr Vohra claimed while appearing on Zee News as a panelist on a show hosted by anchor Deepak Chaurasia.

The show began as the anchor attempted to unpack “how the brain of the Canadian prime minister worked”.

“Does he have a brain? He is a tiny infant,” responded Mr Vohra, adding that when his wife spotted Mr Trudeau at Delhi airport, he looked “troubled”.

“...Can’t say what’s going on in his head but I understand his behaviour shows he was freaked out,” he said. His claims were not questioned by the anchor.

"He has become lonely. He is now trying to show that he is a Canadian Rambo and nothing can go wrong in his presence. India has done the right thing by suspending visa services in Canada," he said.

The comments came during one of the worst spells for diplomatic relations between India and Canada in decades following the killing of Sikh separatist leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar.

The crisis between New Delhi and Ottawa unfolded last week after prime minister Justin Trudeau accused the Indian state of involvement in the killing of the Canadian national.

Nijjar was murdered in Vancouver on 18 June by two masked men, who fired an estimated 30 to 50 shots at him.

Canadian officials say they have human and signals intelligence backing up their claims regarding the killing, including communications involving Indian officials in Canada, CBC reported.

"I can assure you that the decision to share these allegations on the floor of the House of Commons … was not done lightly," Mr Trudeau told parliament last week. "It was done with the utmost seriousness."

The allegations have sparked a bitter row between the two countries.

Ottawa expelled a senior diplomat working for Indian intelligence, while India – which labelled Nijjar a “terrorist” in 2020 – angrily rejected the allegation as "absurd", expelled the chief of Canadian intelligence in India, issued travel warnings, stopped issuing visas for Canadians and ordered Canada to downsize its diplomatic presence in India.

Nytimes.com

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/26/world/americas/bolsonaro-staff-cocaine-bust.html

Jun 26, 2019 ... Authorities in Spain detained an airman supporting a Brazilian presidential trip after finding 37 bundles of cocaine in his bag.

Independent.co.uk

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/jair-bolsonaro-cocaine-g20-plane-drugs-entourage-brazil-silva-rodrigues-a8977141.html

Jun 27, 2019 ... Nearly 40kg of cocaine found in Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro's G20 plane entourage · Military official arrested on route to G20 summit in ...

Cnn.com

https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/26/americas/brazil-officer-cocaine-g20-intl/index.html

Jun 26, 2019 ... A Brazilian Air Force officer traveling with President Jair Bolsonaro's G20 contingent was arrested late Tuesday, after he was caught with ...

English.elpais.com

https://english.elpais.com/elpais/2019/07/03/inenglish/1562144851_009025.html

Jul 3, 2019 ... EL PAÍS has had access to a photograph of the drug-filled suitcase that was intercepted in Spain as Jair Bolsonaro's support aircraft traveled ...