Friday, March 19, 2021

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Rare 30,000-year-old BLUE mammoth tusk found in Alaska up for auction
Stacy Liberatore For Dailymail.com 
3/19/2021

© Provided by Daily Mail 

Although woolly mammoths have not roamed the Earth for thousands of years, their remains are still being uncovered around the world – and a recent find may be one-of-a-kind.

A miner in Alaska stumbled upon a tusk that belonged to a beast some 30,000 years ago, but the elongated tooth's natural brownish coloring was intertwined with stunning shades of blue.

The 82-inch curved tusk features a greenish-blue coloration due to the replacement of the mineral vivianite during the fossilization process.

'One of the interesting thing about this tusk is that the consignor named it 'The OCEAN,' Craig Kissick, director, nature and science at the Heritage Auction, told Daily Mail.

'It is extremely rare and very exciting to be able to offer a tusk of such a superlative nature.'

The Ocean, which is estimated to sell for up to $70,000, is set for auction Friday, along with a number of other ancient fossils including an 18-foot long mosasaurs and pristine Ichthyosaur, along with the 'most beautiful Martian meteorite.'

© Provided by Daily Mail Although woolly mammoths have not roamed the Earth for thousands of years, their remains are still be uncovered around the world – and a recent find may be one-of-a-kind. A miner in Alaska stumbled upon a tusk that belonged to a beast some 30,000 years ago, but the elongated tooth's natural brownish coloring was intertwined with stunning shades of blue

The woolly mammoth tusk was discovered in 2017 and although valuable, the rare blue coloring makes it an exquisite piece.

The coloration is a result of vivianite growing on the tusk, which starts as a clear mineral, but progressively darkens to shades of blue when exposed to air.

The mineral contains iron, which goes through a chemical reaction when oxygen interacts with it.

It occurs where organic remains of animals, low in iron but high in phosphates, are buried in damp sediment that is relatively rich with iron but phosphate poor.

© Provided by Daily Mail Remains of an 80 million-year-old mosasaur will also be showcased at the auction with an estimated selling price of $100,000 to $150,000. The fossil weighs more than 300 pounds and features bites from another predatory creature, along with preserved tissue on the neural spine of several of the bones along its tail

© Provided by Daily Mail Another massive fossil on display is an 11-foot fossilized ichthyosaur that was also an aquatic creature when it roamed the Earth some 250 million years ago. This fossil was found with 100 percent of its natural skill, as well as a preserved 'manus' paddle and tail

The Ocean is a near complete tusk, with minimal restoration, and was polished to give it the stunning shine as if it wasn't trapped in the ice for some 30,000 years.

'It is one of my favorite pieces in the sale. It checks all the boxes,' said Kissick.

'I have been handling remnants like this for 25 years and this is one of the best I have dealt with.'

The blue tusk may be the rarest item set for auction Friday, but it is not the largest or the oldest.

Remains of an 80 million-year-old mosasaur will also be showcased at the auction with an estimated price selling price of $100,000 to $150,000.

'The giant predatory marine creature was a 'sea monster' during the Late Cretaceous and was characterized by a unique skull structure with a short skull with fewer teeth than other mosasaurs and an elongate down-turned tail,' Heritage Auction explains.

'The marine creature also boasted prominent 'steering' flippers and conical, pointed teeth.'
© Provided by Daily Mail When it was first discovered, experts determined it had a black mass of contents still in the stomach and is still visible in the current fossil


INVADER FROM MARS
© Provided by Daily Mail Many of the pieces up for auction are fossils of creatures that once roamed our planet, but there are others that came here from another world. Found in 2001, meteorite NWA 1950 was discovered in Morocco and determined to have originated from Mars

'A variety of mosasaur is the State Marine Fossil of Kansas, so it is no surprise this spectacular skeletal specimen originated from the iconic Smoky Hill Chalk Member of the renowned Niobrara Formation in the western section of the Sunflower State.'
© Provided by Daily Mail Pictured is an 11ft-tall cave bear that roamed lived some 24,000 years ago. It will also go up for auction Friday

The fossil weighs more than 300 pounds and features bites from another predatory creature, along with preserved tissue on the neural spine of several of the bones along its tail.

Another massive fossil on display is an 11-foot fossilized ichthyosaur that was also an aquatic creature when it roamed the Earth some 250 million years ago.

This fossil was found with 100 percent of its natural skull, as well as a preserved 'manus' paddle and tail.

When it was first discovered, experts determined it had a black mass of contents still in the stomach and is still visible in the current fossil.

The background rock contains numerous ribbed, golden hue and highly detailed round Ammonite fossil impressions, evidencing the marine environment, and the Jurassic age, of this sedimentary association.

Many of the pieces up for auction are fossils of creatures that once roamed our planet, but there are others that came here from another world.

Found in 2001, meteorite NWA 1950 was discovered in Morocco and determined to have originated from Mars.

The space rock's face is speckled with yellowish-green and black coloration, and weighs just a little over one-pound.

NWA 1950, nicknamed Jules Verne in honor of the author's work, has an estimated selling price of $300,000 to $500,000.

© Provided by Daily Mail The curated auction is focused on ancient and exciting pieces of Earth's history, which also includes a number of crystals like the 'Home Sweet Home Mine.' The stunning specimen was mined in Colorado and features one massive singular rhombohedral crystal of the 'gemmy' watermelon-red mineral

© Provided by Daily Mail Heritage Auction is also featuring skeletal remains of 24,000-year-old cave bear, a 10-foot long ancient crocodile (pictured) and other interesting pieces - there are a total of 50 specimens in the auction

The curated auction is focused on ancient and exciting pieces of Earth's history, which also includes a number of crystals like the 'Home Sweet Home Mine.'

The stunning specimen was mined in Colorado and features one massive singular rhombohedral crystal of the 'gemmy' watermelon-red mineral perched almost in the middle of an intricate matrix featuring the associated minerals of Fluorite, Tetrahedrite, and Sphalerite.

Heritage Auction is also featuring skeletal remains of 24,000-year-old cave bear, a 10-foot long ancient crocodile and other interesting pieces - there are a total of 50 specimens in the auction.

Environmental group, community activists petition EPA to block Georgia wood pellet plant

Zack Budryk
3/19/2021

An environmental advocacy group has joined with local activists to petition the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to block the construction of a wood pellet plant in south Georgia, arguing its permit was secured without community input and threatens public health
.
© BORIS HORVAT/AFP via Getty Images Environmental group, 
community activists petition EPA to block Georgia wood pellet plant

The Environmental Integrity Project (EIP) and Concerned Citizens of Cook County, along with six other groups, said in the petition that Georgia's Clean Air Act program allows public comment on draft permits for new sources of air pollutants proposed in their communities. However, the Environmental Protection Division of the state Department of Natural Resources in January denied a request to comment on a draft permit authorizing the Renewable Biomass Group facility in Adel.

In 2017, amid an increase in construction of wood pellet plants in the southern U.S., EIP began looking at their air pollution permits, Keri Powell, an attorney for the group and the author of the petition, told The Hill.

"In pretty short order we realized they had been drastically underestimating their emissions and they had been coming in under the Clean Air Act as minor sources" of pollution, Powell said. For example, Mississippi fined Drax Amite $2.5 million in November after watchdog groups reported it was emitting air pollutants far above its permit limits.

While the Adel facility has proposed air pollution controls, Powell added, "the concern here is the community wanted to have the opportunity to critique their actual draft permits."

"All Georgia was willing to do was let the public see the facility's application ... the community in Adel, they really don't want this facility located there," Powell added. "The very nearby community that is predominantly African-American banded together" in an effort to halt its production.

Treva Gear, a founding member of Concerned Citizens of Cook County, told The Hill the construction of the facility could turn Adel into "the Flint, Michigan of the South."

"It's going to worsen our health conditions," she told The Hill. "We really are trying to save our town from bringing in these types of industries ... it's going to hurt the people more than it's going to benefit them. We want jobs, but we don't want dirty industries."

The proposed site, she added, is only about a mile from the nearest residential area.

"Our city has a sordid affair with the wood industry period," she said. "We have an old abandoned site for which there are still toxins in the ground that affect groundwater, a whole lot of people who have gotten cancer."

Also affected, Gear said, would be a local nature preserve and wildlife sanctuary maintained by the organization EdenArk. The proposed site of the plant is about 1.3 miles from this area, she said.

"The coming of this wood pellet plant sounds a death knell for our community," she added.

The Hill has reached out to the EPA and Renewable Biomass Group for comment.
Gallery: Farmers fight back: making animal feed from a locust plague (Reuters)




A man engulfed by a swarm of desert locusts stands on top of a hill near Nanyuki, Kenya, January 30, 2021. Scientists say warmer seas are creating more rain, waking dormant eggs, and cyclones that disperse the swarms are getting stronger and more frequent.
REUTERS/Baz Ratner





Once called crazy, Indonesian eco-warrior turns arid hills green
By Heru Asprihanto 3/19/2021
© Reuters/STRINGER Sadiman, a 69-year-old ecowarrior, stands near a hill which is the first area he replanted with trees 20 years ago, in Wonogiri

WONOGIRI, Indonesia (Reuters) - Once considered crazy by fellow villagers, Indonesian eco-warrior Sadiman has turned barren hills green after 24 years of effort, making water resources available in the drought-prone mountainous region where he lives.

© Reuters/STRINGER Sadiman, a 69-year-old ecowarrior, prepares to visit the forest at his house in Wonogiri, Central Java province, Indonesia

Affectionately addressed as 'mbah' or 'grandpa', the 69-year-old has worked relentlessly to plant trees in the hills of central Java after fires to clear the land for cultivation nearly dried up its rivers and lakes.

"I thought to myself, if I don't plant banyan trees, this area would become dry," said Sadiman, wearing his trademark ranger hat and safari shirt, who goes by one name, like many Indonesians.

"In my experience, banyan trees and ficus trees can store a lo
t of water."

The long and wide-spreading roots of at least 11,000 banyans and ficus trees Sadiman has planted over 250 hectares (617 acres) help to retain groundwater and prevent land erosion.



Thanks to his effort, springs have formed where once there was barren and arid land, their water piped to homes and used to irrigate farms.

Yet, at the beginning, few village residents appreciated his work.

"People ridiculed me for bringing banyan tree seeds to the village, because they felt uneasy as they believed there are spirits in these trees," Sadiman added.

Some even thought he was a madman because he bartered saplings for the goats he reared, said one villager, Warto.

"In the past people thought he was crazy, but look at the result now," Warto added. "He is able to provide clean water to meet the needs of the people in several villages."

Sadiman also funds his work through a nursery of plants such as cloves and jackfruit that he can sell or barter.

Lack of rain in the area where he planted trees had once limited farmers to a single harvest a year, but now, the abundant water sources ensure two or three, he said.

"I hope the people here can have prosperous lives and live happily. And don't burn the forest over and over again," Sadiman added, with a twinkle in his eye.

(Reporting by Heru Asprihanto and Angie Teo; Editing by Karishma Singh and Clarence Fernandez)


Biden picks former senator who flew in space to lead NASA

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — President Joe Biden has chosen a former senator from Florida who flew on the space shuttle right before the Challenger accident to lead NASA.\\
© Provided by The Canadian Press

Biden on Friday announced his intent to nominate Bill Nelson as the space agency's administrator.

If confirmed by the Senate, Nelson will become NASA’s 14th administrator, succeeding another former member of Congress, Jim Bridenstine, a Republican from Oklahoma. Nelson currently serves on the NASA Advisory Council.

Nelson promised, if confirmed, to “help lead NASA into an exciting future of possibilities.” The space agency is working to send astronauts back to the moon this decade and counting more than ever on private U.S. companies and even other countries to get that job — and others — done.

“Its workforce radiates optimism, ingenuity and a can-do spirit,” Nelson said in a statement. “The NASA team continues to achieve the seemingly impossible as we venture into the cosmos.”

Nelson, 78, grew up near Cape Canaveral and was serving as a Democratic congressman when he launched aboard space shuttle Columbia on Jan. 12, 1986. His commander was Charles Bolden Jr., who later served as NASA administrator under President Barack Obama — at Nelson's urging.

Just 10 days after their flight ended, Challenger was destroyed shortly after liftoff and all seven astronauts were killed.

Nelson, who has a law degree and is a former captain in the U.S. Army Reserve, served six terms in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1979 to 1991. He was elected in 2000 to the Senate, where he served until his defeat in 2018 by former Florida Gov. Rick Scott.

In 2017, Nelson criticized Bridenstine’s nomination by President Donald Trump, saying the leader of NASA shouldn't be political but rather nonpartisan.

Bridenstine instead offered kind praise Friday and urged Nelson's confirmation “without delay.”
In a statement, Bridenstine said Nelson has the political clout to deal with both the White House and Congress, and the diplomatic skills to lead an international effort to send astronauts back to the moon and on to Mars. He also has "the influence to deliver strong budgets for NASA."

Members of Congress already are voicing support for Nelson.

“There has been no greater champion, not just for Florida’s space industry, but for the space program as a whole than Bill,” Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Florida, said in a statement. “His nomination gives me confidence that the Biden administration finally understands the importance of the Artemis (moon landing) program, and the necessity of winning the 21st century space race.”

This is a critical time for NASA as momentum accelerates in the commercial space program.

SpaceX is about to launch its third flight of astronauts to the International Space Station for NASA; Boeing is expected to begin making crew deliveries later this year. Space station supply runs, meanwhile, have been handled by private companies under contract to NASA for nearly a decade.

At the same time, NASA is teaming up with private companies to launch experiments and equipment to the moon, and also lunar landers that would deliver astronauts to the surface. Just Thursday, NASA conducted a successful test firing of the core stage of its SLS moon rocket — the Space Launch System.

The new moonshot program is named Artemis after the twin sister of Apollo, and intends to include a woman on its first moon landing.

Some space observers had hoped to see the first woman at NASA's helm.

“It’s time for a female administrator. Plenty of qualified candidates,” retired space shuttle director and program manager Wayne Hale tweeted earlier this month. He is also a member of the NASA Advisory Council.

One of the few women to have served as NASA's deputy administrator, Lori Garver, noted in a tweet Thursday: “The good-ole-boy network is strong.” She's rooting for former space shuttle commander Pam Melroy for the No. 2 spot.

___

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.


Bill Nelson's Red Noise - Sound On Sound (1979) (Canadian Harvest) (FULL LP)

CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M

India antitrust body says Reuters story corroborates evidence in probe of Amazon


By Aditya Kalra 
REUTERS 3/19/2021
© Reuters/AMIT DAVE A worker sorts delivery packages in
 a van outside an Amazon facility in Ahmedabad

NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's antitrust body on Friday told a court that a Reuters report showing Amazon.com Inc gave preferential treatment to a small group of sellers on its India platform corroborated evidence it had received and which had triggered an investigation of the U.S. e-commerce giant.

The Competition Commission of India (CCI) announced in January 2020 that it was investigating Amazon and Walmart Inc's Flipkart following a complaint from a trader group that they were promoting preferred sellers. But the probe into alleged violations of competition law was put on hold as the two firms mounted a court challenge.

While arguing on Friday for restarting the probe, Madhavi Goradia Divan, an Additional Solicitor General of India representing the CCI, read parts of the Reuters report to the judge in the Karnataka High Court, saying it "corroborates what was said" in the original complaint.

The Reuters story, which was published last month, was based on internal Amazon documents dated between 2012 and 2019. It revealed that Amazon for years helped a small number of sellers prosper on its platform, giving them discounted fees and helping one cut special deals with big tech manufacturers.

To read the special report click http://reut.rs/2OCOT2W

Amazon did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Divan's statements in court.

Amazon has said it "does not give preferential treatment to any seller on its marketplace," and that it "treats all sellers in a fair, transparent, and non-discriminatory manner".

The CCI's arguments in the case come after the watchdog this week submitted media clippings, including the Reuters story, as part of its exhibits to the court.

Referring to the Amazon documents cited in the Reuters story, Divan said the CCI's director general of investigations might call for the documents from the company and examine them.

Indian retailers, who are a crucial part of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's support base, have long alleged that Amazon's platform largely benefits a few big sellers and that the e-commerce company engages in predatory pricing that harms their businesses. The company says it complies with all Indian laws.

Divan read to the court from the Reuters story for roughly 15 minutes. This included a finding that some 35 of Amazon's more than 400,000 sellers in India in early 2019 accounted for around two-thirds of its online sales.

She also referred to documents cited in the story that showed Amazon was deeply involved in expanding a big seller on its platform named Cloudtail - in which it has an indirect equity stake - even though it said publicly that Cloudtail gets the same privileges as other vendors.

"Do you do it for all the sellers," Divan said, referring to Amazon. "These are questions that have to be asked."

Following publication of the Reuters story, India's financial-crime fighting agency, the Enforcement Directorate, asked Amazon for information and documents related to its operations in the country, Reuters reported last week.

(Reporting by Aditya Kalra in New Delhi; Editing by Peter Hirschberg and Nick Tattersall)

Amazon driver quits, saying the final straw was the company's new AI-powered truck cameras that can sense when workers yawn or don't use a seatbelt

awilliams@insider.com (Annabelle Williams) 
3/29/2021

© Provided by Business Insider Sean Gallup/Getty Images

The Thomson Reuters Foundation spoke to a former Amazon driver who quit the company.

He said he left after Amazon installed AI-powered cameras in delivery vehicles.

The decision to surveil employees has raised privacy questions about workers' privacy at the tech giant.

The Thomson Reuters Foundation published a report Friday about an Amazon driver in Denver, Colorado, for whom the company's constant AI-driven surveillance proved to be too much.

Vic, who asked the Thomson Reuters Foundation to use only his first name "for fear of retaliation," this month quit his job delivering packages for the tech giant.

He started work in 2019 and saw Amazon's policies change to include more active means of surveillance. First there was an app tracking his route, and then the company wanted pictures of him at the beginning of each shift on another app, he told the foundation.

But the breaking point came, he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, when Amazon announced that it would be installing AI cameras in their fleet of vehicles.

Insider reported in February that Amazon was equipping all delivery vehicles with AI camera systems called Driveri, manufactured by a company called Netradyne. The cameras are always on and scan drivers' body language, the speed of the vehicle, and even drowsiness. The system then uses "automated verbal alerts" to tell drivers if a violation has been detected.

When Amazon announced the policy change and gave its drivers a deadline to agree to the surveillance protocols, Vic told Thomson Reuters Foundation that he decided to put in his notice.

"It was both a privacy violation, and a breach of trust," he told the foundation. He also said that the company requiring drivers to agree to constant surveillance in order to do their jobs seemed like "a sort of coercion."

Amazon told Insider in February that driver footage is not automatically available to Amazon, and that the "live feed" is only triggered after a safety or policy violation is detected. Amazon did not immediately respond to a request for comment on this story.

Amazon responded to Insider's request for comment about the foundation's story with a statement saying: "We are investing in safety across our operations and recently started rolling out industry leading camera-based safety technology across our delivery fleet. This technology will provide drivers real-time alerts to help them stay safe when they are on the road."

The company also included positive driver testimonials.

surveillance in warehouses as a contentious union election in the company's Bessemer, Alabama warehouse draws national attention to Amazon's working conditions.

Read the original article on Business Insider


Biden's White House reportedly pushed out and sidelined staffers who disclosed past marijuana use even in states where 
the drug is legal


gpanetta@businessinsider.com (Grace Panetta) 
3/19/2021

The White House reportedly pushed out some staffers for past marijuana use.
The Daily Beast reported that the moves blindsided some Biden aides.
While 14 states and D.C. have legalized recreational use, it's illegal at the federal level.

The White House under President Joe Biden has pushed out and sidelined some staffers for disclosing their past recreational use of marijuana, including in states that have legalized recreational use of the drug, the Daily Beast reported Thursday.

Three sources told the outlet that several staffers have had their employment status affected - including unexpectedly being asked to resign, pushed aside, or relegated to remote-work positions - after voluntarily disclosing recreational-marijuana use.

While 14 states and the District of Columbia have now legalized recreational use of the drug, marijuana possession is still a federal crime and is classified as a Schedule 1 controlled substance by the Drug Enforcement Administration.

"It's exclusively targeting younger staff and staff who came from states where it was legal," one person told the outlet.

Some staffers felt the White House pulled a bait and switch after the Biden administration indicated it, unlike past administrations, would waive the requirement for some high-level White House staffers who had used marijuana in a "limited capacity" to receive a top-secret security clearance.

In order to qualify for a top-secret security clearance, staffers must fill out the SF-86, a detailed form that asks about past drug use, among other things. Making false statements on the form is a felony.

The White House press secretary Jen Psaki tweeted on Friday morning that "as a result" of the White House changing its posture on marijuana use for top staffers, "more people will serve who would not have in the past with the same level of recent drug use."

She added: "The bottom line is this: of the hundreds of people hired, only five people who had started working at the White House are no longer employed as a result of this policy."

It is unclear how many were asked to resign or pushed aside for other factors or discrepancies on their background check in addition to their marijuana use.

Biden himself changed his tune on marijuana legalization after previously taking a hard-line stance on drugs during his time in the US Senate. Biden was one of the key shepherds of a controversial 1994 crime bill and said in a 2001 Senate hearing that he believed local officials should criminalize rave parties and "lock up" promoters in an effort to crack down on ecstasy.

A White House spokesperson told the Daily Beast that the administration is "committed to bringing the best people into government-especially the young people whose commitment to public service can deepen in these positions."

"The White House's policy will maintain the absolute highest standards for service in government that the president expects from his administration, while acknowledging the reality that state and local marijuana laws have changed significantly across the country in recent years," the spokesperson said. "This decision was made following intensive consultation with career security officials and will effectively protect our national security while modernizing policies to ensure that talented and otherwise well-qualified applicants with limited marijuana use will not be barred from serving the American people."

The White House did not immediately respond to an inquiry from Insider.
French artist JR unveils new 28-meter-high optical illusion in Italy

Leah Dolan, CNN 3/19/2021

Street artist JR, known for the larger-than-life photographic installations that took over Rio de Janerio during the 2016 Olympics, has now unveiled a towering optical illusion in Florence, Italy.

© Courtesy JR La Ferita

The major installation revealed today is located at the Palazzo Strozzi, a historic cultural arts center in the heart of Florence.

The 91-foot spectacle, titled "La Ferita," or "The Wound," scales the Palazzo's Renaissance façade and simulates a giant gaping hole in the front of the building. Inside the architectural tear is an imagined vision of the Palazzo's interior, made real by a black and white photographic collage.

JR began his career at age 13 as a graffiti artist in France. His work, which has been exhibited on staircases, train carriages and even atop the Louvre, is a fusion of street art and photography. In his 2015 book "Can art change the world?" JR writes, "Images are not special. It is what you do with them." JR's readiness to place context above content has brought him international acclaim.
© Courtesy JR "28 Millimètres" is part of JR's Women Are Heroes series in Rio de Janeiro, 2008

His latest installation explores how access to art and culture has been jeopardized by the coronavirus pandemic.

"Walking through Florence feels strange these days -- without the visitors that make up such a normal part of the life of Florence, it feels quiet and less vibrant," JR said in a statement to CNN Style. "Without being able to enter a museum, to attend a concert or spend time at an exhibition, we realise that it is culture that gives life its colour and that the beauty of our city is activated by the people that pass through it, soak up the history and culture of Florence, and leave enriched by it."

The illusory gash across Palazzo Strozzi symbolizes the wound all cultural sites have sustained due to ongoing pandemic restrictions. The art industry has been devastated by the ongoing shutdown of museums, galleries, libraries, theaters and cinemas -- with even the most revered institutions struggling to get back on their feet. Last May, the historic Shakespeare's Globe theater in London revealed it faced insolvency and permanent closure as a result of lockdown
 measures.
© ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP/Getty Images French artist JR poses during the unveiling of his visual installation "La Ferita."

"("La Ferita") makes visible the deep impact of Covid-19 on culture," says JR.

The installation also launches the Palazzo Strozzi's new Future Art Programme, which hopes to support the creation and promotion of contemporary art in Italy with an annual public art commission to be revealed in Florence every spring.

In a press statement, Palazzo Strozzi Director Dr. Arturo Galansino said the center has a "unique" determination to "forge a dialogue between the classic and the contemporary through the involvement of artists capable of interpreting the present."

"So it is apt that we launch the Programme with JR's new work 'La Ferita,'" he added, "(which is) a powerful reflection on the difficult conditions surrounding access to culture in the age of Covid-19, but also a symbol of freedom, creative imagination and participation and an opportunity to involve the audience, the public at large, in a totally new way."


NO MENTION OF UBI*
Ottawa should review employment insurance, benefit triggers as economy recovers: IMF
3/18/2021

TORONTO — Canada's economic response to the COVID-19 pandemic has earned praise from the International Monetary Fund, but the global lender also has recommendations for future government spending. 
© Provided by The Canadian Press

The Canadian government and Bank of Canada's response to the pandemic was "timely, decisive and well-co-ordinated," the IMF said in a new report released on Thursday. In particular, the organization said Canada's economy would have had a "harmful," "even larger collapse" without emergency benefit spending from the government, and that the Bank of Canada helped avoid major disruptions in financial markets and is striking the right balance on interest rates.

But Canada's response at both the federal and provincial levels also contributed to a "historically large fiscal deficit," although the report said Canada's net public debt is expected to remain low relative to other G7 countries.

"Economic and social restrictions put in place since March 2020 have helped to mitigate the first and the second wave of the virus, but they came at significant cost," the report said, noting that the economic rebound slowed during the second wave of COVID-19 infections and "Canada still needs to boost its productivity."

The IMF report suggests Canada should do a broader review of its employment insurance system to address gaps in eligibility after the Canada Emergency Response Benefit ended. CERB and the wage subsidy program had flaws during the initial rollout, the report said, with workers fearing the loss of full CERB payments after earning $1 more than $1,000 per month cap, and the initial thresholds for the wage subsidies became a hurdle for businesses.

"The crisis exposed gaps in Canada’s social safety net that should be addressed," the report said. "The lessons from the crisis represent an excellent opportunity to review the EI system."

The report's authors suggest that Canadian officials could reduce uncertainty for consumers and businesses by tying the expiration of emergency benefits to an automatic trigger like the unemployment rate, instead of arbitrarily announcing the end of such measures.

"Benefits that abruptly expire complicate planning decisions and could increase precautionary saving. This could delay the recovery and ultimately increase fiscal costs. Clear and credible communication of the exit strategy will be key," the report said.

The report also calls on Canadian banks to help prepare mortgage borrowers for higher interest rates down the road.

"Even well-intended measures — like direct subsidies and tax deductions — can have perverse effects on housing affordability by favouring those that can already afford to buy a house at the long-term disadvantage of those that cannot, thus worsening existing inequalities," the report's authors wrote.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau discussed the report's findings with the IMF on Thursday, as well as the need international support for Caribbean nations, according to a government summary of a conversation between Trudeau and Kristalina Georgieva, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 18, 2021.

Anita Balakrishnan, The Canadian Press

*UNIVERSAL BASIC INCOME
 Canadian cannabis companies are cheering the reintroduction of the SAFE Banking Act to the U.S. House of Representatives today.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

The act proposes offering safe harbour to financial institutions like banks and insurance companies, who provide services to cannabis businesses and has long been seen as helpful for Canadian pot companies looking to expand to the U.S.

The National Cannabis Industry Association says the bill was previously approved by the house in a 321-103 vote in September 2019 and then headed to the senate, but didn't move forward and had to be tabled again because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Aurora Cannabis Inc. says in a statement that it sees the reintroduction as a step in the right direction and it is optimistic more cannabis-friendly legislation will soon follow.

The Edmonton-based company says it will keep assessing opportunities to participate in the U.S. cannabis market while it awaits the bill's reintroduction to the senate and its potential adoption.


Canopy Growth Corp. vice-president of international government relations David Culver says in an email that he sees the bill as integral to the success of the cannabis industry and essential for positively impacting social equity.

NATIONALIZE BIG OIL
Chevron Canada to stop funding further feasibility work Kitimat LNG project


CALGARY — Chevron Canada Ltd. says it will stop funding further feasibility work on its proposed Kitimat LNG project on B.C.'s north coast.

© Provided by The Canadian Press

The company holds a 50 per cent stake in the project in a joint venture with Australia's Woodside Petroleum Ltd.

Chevron, which is the project operator, put its interest up for sale in December 2019, but has failed to find a buyer.

When the company put its stake up for sale, Chevron said it would continue to work with Woodside on agreed project activities that brought value or were required for regulatory and operational compliance.

But in a statement on its website this week, Chevron says that it now plans to stop Chevron-funded further feasibility work.

The project includes upstream resource assets in the Liard and Horn River Basins in northeast B.C., the proposed 471-km Pacific Trail Pipeline and plans for a natural gas liquefaction facility at Bish Cove near Kitimat, B.C.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 19, 2021