se The Finish Line: A Case Study: What is Causing This? By www.wconline.com Published On :: Thu, 24 Apr 2008 10:23:00 -0400 For a change of pace, I’ve decided to periodically write about contracting and field issues, including case studies of interesting projects. The idea is to offer insights that will help readers deal with aspects of EIFS in their work. Full Article
se The Finish Line: Sealants By www.wconline.com Published On :: Thu, 17 Mar 2011 09:31:00 -0400 Because EIFS are a jointless type of wall cladding that can be installed over a huge wall area without joints at all, it’s clear that the only way for water to get behind the EIFS is somewhere at the edge of the EIFS. This penetration is most often at windows, openings and flashings. Full Article
se Meeting Codes with Wall Assemblies By www.wconline.com Published On :: Mon, 02 Jun 2014 00:00:00 -0400 Designing exterior wall assemblies that satisfy both energy and building code requirements is a challenge. Full Article
se Green Advocacy vs. Informed Consent By www.wconline.com Published On :: Mon, 01 Sep 2014 00:00:00 -0400 “Green advocacy” is the very opposite of informed consent. Full Article
se Passive Houses Gain Momentum By www.wconline.com Published On :: Thu, 01 Oct 2015 00:00:00 -0400 Will passive houses gain more momentum in the U.S.? Full Article
se Exoskeleton in the Job Site Closet By www.wconline.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 06:22:14 -0500 Level up productivity with tools that enhance well-being and your body. Full Article
se Only 12 per cent of leading charities publicly recognise a trade union, analysis suggests By www.thirdsector.co.uk Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 05:41:00 Z The findings come from Third Sector’s inaugural Charity Employer Index Full Article Management
se SIA Releases New Version of OSDP Standard By www.sdmmag.com Published On :: Fri, 01 Nov 2024 17:00:00 -0400 SIA OSDP version 2.2.2 resolves errors that had appeared in the short-lived 2.2.1 update and introduces proper supervised input states, addressing previous issues. Full Article
se World Wide Security Goes Green! By www.sdmmag.com Published On :: Fri, 22 Apr 2011 09:02:00 -0400 World Wide Security, Garden City, N.Y., launched its “Go Green!” program promoting energy conservation to its customers. As energy prices rise throughout the United States, the Long Island region is often impacted more dramatically because it is an island with logistics and energy challenges. Full Article
se Panasonic's Security Solutions Start With Energy-Efficient Products By www.sdmmag.com Published On :: Thu, 26 Apr 2012 00:00:00 -0400 Sensitive to environmental considerations in the security and video surveillance industry, Panasonic System Networks Company of America, Secaucus, N.J., is taking leadership by offering products manufactured in energy-efficient facilities, using fewer hazardous materials and emitting less CO2, and which also consume less power than previous Panasonic comparable models. Full Article
se Manufacturer Rises to Green Challenge By www.sdmmag.com Published On :: Thu, 18 Apr 2013 11:52:54 -0400 For Metis Secure Solutions, Oakmont, Pa., and many other security-related companies, green trends provide opportunity. Full Article
se Vivint Expands Energy Services with Solar By www.sdmmag.com Published On :: Thu, 25 Apr 2013 13:20:33 -0400 A leading provider of home automation and technology, Vivint is always on the lookout for opportunities to bring additional value to their customers with new offerings to provide more comprehensive home integration solutions. Full Article
se Securitas Technology Partners with K9s United in Support of Law Enforcement Canines By www.sdmmag.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 14:30:00 -0500 K9s United is a dedicated non-profit organization that focuses on providing essential training, equipment and resources to support law enforcement canines. Full Article
se Incident involving highwall collapse spurs MSHA safety alert By www.safetyandhealthmagazine.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 00:00:00 -0500 Arlington, VA — Mine operators should train miners on recognizing highwall hazards and following procedures for their safe control, the Mine Safety and Health Administration advises in a recent safety alert. Full Article
se Tuftex, Anderson partner for Color Coordinates selling system By www.floortrendsmag.com Published On :: Thu, 17 Feb 2011 17:14:00 -0500 Shaw Floors’ divisions Tuftex Carpets of California and Anderson Hardwood have launched the Color Coordinates display system exclusively for Shaw Design Center retailers. Full Article
se The First Sealer to Give a Beautiful, Luxurious Appearance By www.floortrendsmag.com Published On :: Thu, 08 Sep 2011 16:07:00 -0400 The Designer Series from Royal Sealers is the industry's first sealer with Micro Crystals. This premium impregnating sealer is embedded with eye-catching, multi-faceted light reflecting Micro Crystals that enhance the appearance of any surface, adding dimension and character. Full Article
se Mediterranea introduces the Boardwalk Series By www.floortrendsmag.com Published On :: Mon, 02 Apr 2012 12:20:00 -0400 Painstakingly designed to emulate the weathered hardwood planks found in some of America’s most unique architectural destinations, Boardwalk features fully rectified tiles in a full 48” length. Full Article
se New Emser offering solid as a Rock By www.floortrendsmag.com Published On :: Thu, 16 Aug 2012 00:00:00 -0400 Rock, a colorful new quartzite recreation in glazed porcelain, uses HD Technology for a natural effect. Full Article
se Propex to Showcase Isis Modular Tile Backing at FloorTek Expo By www.floortrendsmag.com Published On :: Thu, 15 Aug 2013 00:00:00 -0400 Propex will promote Isis, the company’s innovative platform of backings made with woven PCR PET, at FloorTek Expo. Full Article
se The Carpet and Rug Institute Presents the 2024 Joseph J.Smrekar Memorial Award By www.floortrendsmag.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 12:00:00 -0500 For the first time, CRI awarded the Joseph J.Smrekar Memorial Award to three recipients: John Bradshaw of Shaw Industries Group, Inc., Ashley Young of Mohawk Industries, Inc., and Shawn McGill of Engineered Floors. Full Article
se TISE 2025 Opens Entries for Best of Awards By www.floortrendsmag.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 16:07:12 -0500 For the first time, manufacturers submitting their latest innovations for the must-see product showcase will simultaneously be considered for the Best of Awards, effectively doubling their products' exposure opportunities. Full Article
se As Traffic Crash Fatalities Rise, Portland Auditor’s Office Recommends Changes to Vision Zero Program By www.portlandmercury.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 08:00:00 -0800 PBOT leaders say they’ve already addressed many of the auditor’s recommendations. They also say the scale of Portland’s traffic violence crisis is too big for just one bureau to address. by Taylor Griggs The Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) adopted its Vision Zero Action Plan in December 2016, with the goal of eliminating traffic crash deaths and injuries in the city. But in recent years, Portland has seen its highest numbers of traffic injuries and fatalities in decades. Pedestrians have faced a heightened risk of traffic violence in recent years, and parts of Portland with higher low-income populations and communities of color are also disproportionately impacted. The daylight between PBOT’s stated Vision Zero goals and the increase in recent traffic crash deaths prompted scrutiny from the Portland Auditor’s Office. A new report from the Auditor’s Office, released Wednesday, says PBOT “partially completed” safety projects identified in its Vision Zero plan, but notes the bureau doesn’t adequately evaluate the outcomes of the safety projects it completes. The Auditor’s Office recommends PBOT create a plan to evaluate its projects “to determine which get the desired outcomes and where Vision Zero efforts are most needed.” The office also asks the bureau to install promised speed cameras to help with traffic safety enforcement and recommends PBOT “revisit its equity methodology to ensure it accounts for smaller scale improvements that could have positive equity impacts.” “These efforts to collect data, analyze, evaluate, and carefully track which safety projects have the most desired outcomes could help move toward Vision Zero’s goal of zero fatal and serious injury traffic crashes,” the audit report states. The audit report highlights concerns about the Vision Zero program that many transportation and safe streets activists have raised for years—though the Auditor’s Office didn’t issue as harsh an indictment of PBOT as some critics may want. Earlier this year, when PBOT leaders presented their 2023 Vision Zero report to City Council, some Portland advocates didn’t mince words about their thoughts on the city’s implementation of the program. “There is no question that Portland's Vision Zero Program has been an abject failure,” Sarah Risser, a local transportation safety activist, wrote in public testimony to City Council in April. “Given its abysmal track record, it is reasonable to conclude that it will continue to be a failure.” The Portland Auditor’s Office didn’t mark PBOT’s Vision Zero plan as a failure in its report, and PBOT leaders ultimately agreed with its recommendations, some of which the bureau says it has already implemented on its own. PBOT, too, acknowledges that larger structural changes are needed to save lives on the streets. Bureau leaders say they will continue working on their Vision Zero plans, but they hope the city government transition will break down silos and encourage more involvement in solving the problem of traffic violence on Portland’s streets. Auditor’s Office Suggests More Evaluation, Qualitative Data Collection Methods The year PBOT adopted the Vision Zero plan, 42 people died in traffic crashes on Portland’s streets. In 2019, when the bureau updated the plan to emphasize transportation system safety and focus more on actions within PBOT’s control, 48 people were the victims of traffic violence. In the last three years, more than 60 people have died in traffic crashes in Portland each year, with 69 fatalities in 2023. When PBOT leaders presented the 2023 Vision Zero report to City Council earlier this year, they acknowledged the rise in traffic fatalities since the program was adopted. But they said the program is successful in areas PBOT has been able to invest in, and said the bureau’s budget woes have curtailed its progress. The audit report suggests PBOT could get more out of the projects it does complete by improving its evaluation processes, which have historically been lacking. “Without systemic evaluation of safety outcomes, the Bureau is missing the opportunity to create more alignment between the work they do on safety projects and the overall goal of Vision Zero,” the report states. “A more systematic approach would allow trends to be identified and analyzed to better understand the outcomes of completed projects, and which may need to be altered or dropped. As traffic deaths continue to increase it is vital that the Bureau consistently evaluate completed safety projects so they can see which are working best at shifting the trend towards the intended goal of zero traffic deaths and serious injuries.” The second major recommendation the audit report suggests is that PBOT “do more to enforce speed limits” by following through on its promise to install more speed cameras throughout the city. Despite research showing the effectiveness of enforcement cameras as a way to reduce speeds and increase traffic safety—without involving the police—PBOT has been slow to install them. The bureau has blamed its camera vendor for the lag in speed camera implementation, but says it now has 37 cameras in operation or construction, and current contracted cameras will be online early next year. (By March 2023, PBOT had only installed nine cameras in the prior eight years.) The report also states despite PBOT’s attempt to prioritize and fund safety projects equitably—based on both crash data and neighborhood demographics—it may be missing “smaller safety projects with possible equitable outcomes” if they aren’t located on high-crash corridors. The Auditor’s Office recommends PBOT use more qualitative data to determine the projects it carries out. In response to the auditor’s recommendations, Public Works Service Area Deputy City Administrator Priya Dhanapal and PBOT Director Millicent Williams said while they “largely agree with the recommendations in the audit,” it’s a bit outdated. Last year, PBOT issued a Vision Zero Action Plan update for 2024 and 2025, which addresses many of the issues outlined in the audit report. “Our current Vision Zero Action Plan includes priorities directly tied to evaluation, delivery of the camera program and speed management as well as equity objectives,” Dhanapal and Williams wrote. “The audit was conducted on work and commitments outlined 3-5 years ago and work that took place during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic.” Dhanapal and Williams also said PBOT needs help from other city bureaus to solve the crisis of traffic violence. “Eliminating traffic deaths and serious injuries in Portland is possible [and] PBOT can lead the way,” Dhanapal and Williams wrote in a letter responding to the auditor’s report. “However, Portland will not reach Vision Zero with street design alone…. A societal commitment to meet basic human needs and implement strategies to change current conditions are necessary to reach many of our shared goals, including Vision Zero. These changes require leadership, investment, and commitment from partners beyond PBOT.” PBOT leaders say they hope that collaboration and commitment will be easier due to the upcoming changes in Portland’s government. “Eliminating traffic deaths and serious injuries is a City commitment and goal, but as a City we have focused the discussion on what PBOT does to change streets,” Dhanapal and Williams wrote. “We believe the City transition provides an opportunity to reengage City bureaus in Portland’s Vision Zero commitment and integrate the Safe System approach to traffic safety as a comprehensive prevention strategy to save lives.” Full Article News Transportation
se Season’s Reelings: Your 2024 Holiday Movie Guide By www.portlandmercury.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 03:18:00 -0800 Spend time NOT talking to family with our preview of the holidays’ most-hyped new releases. by Dom Sinacola Holidays are usually meant for time with family, which is obviously why so many people elect to go to the movies on Thanksgiving and Christmas. Thanks to theaters being open, you now have a ready-made excuse to avoid talking to loved ones for a solid two hours. From St. Johns Twin Cinemas to Regal Division Street, every corner of Portland is thriving with film love, be it a first-run chain or local rep theater. So, to gird thy loins for the upcoming high holy days, I’ve assembled a preview of the movies you can see in theaters on Thanksgiving and/or Christmas day when conversation runs as dry as an overcooked bird. Thanksgiving (November 28) Red One Following the box office shrug that was 2022’s Black Adam, The Rock optimistically reported from the set of Red One that his new blockbuster, co-starring Chris Evans and JK Simmons (as muscle daddy Santa Claus), is a “big, fun, action packed [sic] and fresh new take on Christmas Lore [sic].” After The Rock’s supposed chronic lateness and “unprofessional” on-set behavior helped push Red One to late 2024, this “new take” on the late-December holiday will finally see the overcast light of mid-November. Apparently, when Santa Claus is kidnapped, the head of North Pole security, Callum Drift (Rock), must join forces with world-class bounty hunter (come on now) Jack O’Malley (Evans, seemingly running on fumes), to save Kris Kringle. Whatever. I have no doubt this movie will be excrement, struck with surprisingly upsetting violence splayed against the most conservative values you can carve from a $250 million budget. This comes out on November 15; will it still be in theaters on Thanksgiving? Let’s hope not. Gladiator II If you’ve seen Ridley Scott’s Napoleon, you know that the octogenarian director cannot be bothered by such woke trappings of cinematic culture as “historical accuracy” or “consistent accents.” Instead, Scott trades obsession for the spectacle of history; he’s in thrall more to the bloom of organs erupting from cannonball wounds than allegiance to facts most audiences wouldn’t know anyway. That energy will carry into Gladiator II, Scott’s sequel to his 2000 original, which will surely be a stupendously gory feast for IMAX screens. Arms all veined up, Paul Mescal is New Gladiator, the fate of Rome on his shoulders for some reason, with Denzel Washington clearly having a blast playing an ancient weapons dealer. Finally able to put a career’s worth of ideas onto the screen, Scott’s never been more prolific, and never less beholden to anyone than himself. Respect. Wicked Part One The first half of an adaptation of the musical—as well as of the 1995 novel on which the musical’s based and the Wizard of Oz writings of Frank L. Baum—Wicked has a runtime of two hours and 40 minutes. More like Wicked Long Movie [pats self on back]. Growing to the width of the Garfield balloon at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade, Ariana Grande’s dinner plate eyes will ultimately occlude all other light. Suddenly, lifetimes will pass in the dark of that theater. You will wake in another epoch, another land, and you will discover there is still a second movie to sit through. Moana 2 The November of The Rock continues with the last IP he hasn’t stripmined of all goodwill. That’s right, Rockheads, Maui, the beefy demigod from Moana, is back for the sequel. Originally developed as an animated series, Moana 2 went theatrical eight months ago when Bob Iger announced the series had been reconfigured following a revamping of the producing and directing teams—for solely artistic reasons, I’m sure. Rarely are reports like this a good sign, usually accompanied by accounts of animators enduring hellish work conditions or presaging a movie that feels functionally incomplete. Still, I can’t imagine families not defaulting to this Thanksgiving weekend. Will our thumb-headed megastar once again drop a People’s Elbow on the box office? I sincerely do not care. Christmas (December 25) The Brutalist Brady Corbet’s gushed-over saga about architect László Toth (Adrien Brody) has the accolades (garnering Corbet the Silver Lion at the Venice Film Festival), distribution deal (A24), and runtime (215 minutes) to make it the year’s biggest small release. Couple this with Corbet and cinematographer Lol Crawley shooting in Vistavision—a process that can make 35mm film look as huge as 70mm in the theater just by running the stock through the camera sideways—and expect to see this engorged on the swollest screens in town. It’s so intentionally and obviously epic, you’d be forgiven for assuming architect László Toth is a real person. The magic of cinema! Babygirl I was going to make a joke about Halina Reijn’s Babygirl being the perfect choice for families wanting to watch a horny movie together on Christmas, but looking into the film’s reception at the Toronto International Film Festival, I find critics saying that Nicole Kidman’s performance as a repressed CEO who forms a sub-dom bond with an intern (Harris Dickinson) is a brave and reflexive exploration of her career and aging physicality. So I will be similarly brave and refrain from making that joke. Nosferatu A young foil to Ridley Scott and his disregard for the exigencies of time, Robert Eggers is a horror filmmaker who makes macabre period pieces—The Witch, The Lighthouse, The Northman—that are so thoroughly researched they feel like stolen visions, like sights from the past that we have no right to witness. With Nosferatu, he seems to be pulling from F.W. Murnau’s 1922 silent film as much as from Werner Herzog’s 1979 remake and Bram Stoker’s 1897 Dracula novel, filtering his hyper-literate taste through a century of German expressionism. A Complete Unknown James Mangold responds to Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story—a satire responding to the pestilence of Oscar-bait biopics birthed by Mangold’s Walk the Line—by making an even more by-the-numbers take on an iconic musician. This time it’s Bob Dylan, given approximate life by Timothée Chalamet. A Complete Unknown will almost certainly hinge on Dylan going electric at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, giving him the opportunity to reminisce about what led up to this all-culminating cultural moment. Its financial returns will be optimistic, its award season obligatory. So it is foretold. Better Man While we’re on the subject of biopics: Better Man is about the life of UK pop idol Robbie Williams… only he’s a CGI chimpanzee and no one else in the movie acknowledges he’s a CGI chimpanzee. I hesitate to call this conceit so stupid it may be genius, but I won’t hesitate to recommend it, because we both know it will be [my eyes glaze over and soul noticeably disappears from my body] bananas. Full Article Holiday Guide 2024 Movies & TV
se New Marie Equi Day Center Offers Unhoused LGBTQ+ Portlanders Resources and Hope By www.portlandmercury.com Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 03:34:00 -0800 With new digs and funding, a local nonprofit is helping queer and trans residents find safety, and a path off the streets. by Anna Del Savio In October, Portland’s first day center for unhoused queer and trans people opened in Southeast. The Marie Equi Center’s new Brooklyn neighborhood day shelter is intended to welcome visitors “just coming in to regulate their nervous systems in the space and hang out, or to get connected to our peer services,” center director Katie Cox said. “We say that we’re a really LGBTQ-affirming city and space, but the services and the infrastructure have needed more support,” Cox said. The new funding, which comes from Metro’s Supportive Housing Services tax revenue via Multnomah County, “feels like folks putting their money where their mouth is,” Cox added. Peer support and community health workers are on-site to offer basic wound care, emotional support, recovery mentoring, health education, referrals, and assistance navigating social service systems. But the 13,000-square-foot Trans & Queer Service Center also has space for visitors to come in off the street to simply sit and decompress. For many unhoused people, “you don’t have a safe place to be during the day where you actually feel welcome and your whole nervous system has a chance to relax and just be,” Equi program director Madeline Adams said. “So much of what we do as humans to heal or to overcome what we’ve been through requires, as a baseline, an environment… where we can come back to a semblance of having all of our faculties.” A large room at the front of the building hosts community events that run the gamut from karaoke nights to crash courses on budgeting and cleaning for newly housed folks. Smaller rooms are used for one-on-one meetings with community health workers who provide emotional assistance, harm reduction, basic first aid, recovery support, health education, help navigating over services and systems, and gender-affirming referrals. “That can look a lot of different ways, but the goal of it is to walk alongside folks, to help them address barriers as they come up and access the resources and supports that they need,” Cox said. Before the move—which also came with a name change from Institute to Center—the Marie Equi Institute primarily offered services out of an office in the Q Center on North Mississippi Avenue. Scarlet Meadows first came to the Q Center two years ago for the free food pantry, but found her way into the Equi Institute’s office. The institute’s peer support workers “helped me out a lot emotionally with the stress of being a new mom as well as being part of the queer community,” Meadows said. “There were days where I went there just to be, because it was a safe space.” Meadows ended up in Portland when their housing plans fell apart en route from Kentucky. From the Equi Center mentors, Meadows found spiritual and emotional support, and help navigating bureaucracy like Medicaid enrollment. “Sometimes I would go there specifically to make a phone call, just to have that support and someone who knows what questions to ask,” Meadows said. Meadows hadn’t sought out peer services before coming to the Equi Center. “I was still dealing with a lot of trauma and kind of stuck in my own head about certain things,” Meadows said. Peer health workers at Equi “move at the speed of trust,” Adams said. Rather than jumping right into tasks, workers have to build relationships with their houseless clients before those clients will open up about their needs. The bigger space allows staff to connect with visitors who need more time before opening up to a peer worker. When Adams was houseless, one of the hardest parts was that “people just couldn’t comprehend what I was dealing with or why I wasn’t housed,” she said. “It was always just so awkward and you could tell that people didn’t want to hear. The last thing you want to do in that situation is to ask for what you need, because by the time you reach someone that’s going to say yes, you’ve already learned that it’s not really safe to be asking.” A decade of Marie Equi The Marie Equi Institute was founded a decade ago, named for “Doc” Marie Equi, a lesbian doctor and activist working in Oregon in the early 1900s (and the namesake of the local lesbian bar Doc Marie’s). The institute was created to provide queer and trans-specific primary care, right after Oregon Medicaid started covering gender-affirming care. Many of the Equi Institute’s clients came to the organization after fleeing other areas of the country where there wasn’t access to gender-affirming care, Cox said. Center director Katie Cox Anna Del Savio The center has seen a growing number of visitors who came to Portland to escape anti-LGBTQ legislation and violence in other states. When the pandemic hit, the institute had just hit pause and started to reassess operations after their clinical director took medical leave. The institute joined the C(3)PO coalition, which created three outdoor tent camps for homeless Portlanders early in the pandemic. Starting in sheds in the C(3)PO villages, the Equi Institute built up a community health program working “at the intersection of homelessness and public health,” Cox said. Last fall, the Multnomah County Board of Commissioners approved $3 million in funding for day shelters, including $830,000 to the Equi Institute, in preparation for Portland’s public camping ordinance taking effect. But the institute didn’t get the contract from the Joint Office of Homeless Services until March. The funds had to be spent by the end of June, leaving just a few months for the center to find a new location and use up the money. The institute signed a lease in June and got to work on renovations with Gensler, an architecture firm that also led the renovation of the Rose Haven day center. The building has showers, laundry services, a gymnasium, food pantry, kitchenette, computer lab, reading nook, and art space. Cox said staff are working on plans to use the gym as an overnight shelter during severe weather. “We know this is going to be a big learning curve for us, having our own building,” Cox said. Thanks in-part to the SHS funding, the Marie Equi Center has doubled in size to 15 staff, including a new peer services coordinator and a center operations coordinator. The center ended up spending $752,000 from JOHS last fiscal year and was awarded $857,000 for the current fiscal year. A Homelessness Response Action Plan finalized by the city and county earlier this year specifically calls for more culturally-specific services, including the creation of a shelter for LGBTQIA2S+ adults. Existing culturally-specific providers like the Marie Equi Center “know what their communities need, are doing what their communities need, and just need that funding piece and support from their partners in government to be able to make that happen or do more of it,” JOHS equity manager Emily Nelson said. Part of a continuum Cox wanted to add a housing navigator to the center’s expanded team, but the Joint Office didn’t award enough funding to cover that position in the current fiscal year. “As we expand day services and expand shelter, we have to make sure that we have ways to connect folks to permanent housing through day services and shelter,” Nelson said. Cox said the center’s peer workers struggle to connect clients with housing services that are safe and affirming for queer and trans people. One of the hardest parts of the work “is the heartbreak of knowing exactly what people need and deserve and not being able to get that to those people in a real way,” Adams said. Transgender houseless people are less likely to find shelter. Nearly 54 percent of transgender houseless people are unsheltered, compared to 39 percent of cisgender houseless people, according to the National Alliance to End Homelessness. The new day center won’t only serve people while they’re living on the streets or in a shelter. Trans and queer people face disproportionate discrimination in housing, both in affordable housing and market-rate rentals, so support is needed for newly housed people. “If it’s not the rental company discriminating against you, it could be other people in the building, and then your new home is starting to feel very unsafe,” Cox said. Having a queer or trans peer who can offer support in navigating those challenges “increases the likelihood that folks are going to be able to stay housed,” they said. “As people navigate the transition from being unhoused to being housed, they often feel like they lose their community of folks that they were living with unsheltered,” Cox said. “The more we can start to bridge those gaps early on and create that community building, the more successful we’ll be at keeping people housed.” For more information, visit www.marieequi.center. Full Article Holiday Guide 2024
se Congressional leadership under a second Trump administration takes shape By www.npr.org Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 04:09:14 -0500 Republicans made their picks for party leaders in the U.S. Senate and House, as President-elect Trump announced new nominees, including Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz for attorney general. Full Article
se Republican strategist Scott Jennings discusses congressional leadership By www.npr.org Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 04:09:32 -0500 NPR's Steve Inskeep talks with Republican strategist Scott Jennings about Republican leadership in in the U.S. Senate and House. Full Article
se What types of measures would Robert F. Kennedy Jr. take to fight chronic disease? By www.npr.org Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 04:13:05 -0500 Robert F. Kennedy Jr. says President-elect Trump wants "measurable impacts" toward ending chronic disease within two years. About 60% of Americans suffer from at least one chronic disease. Full Article
se House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries discusses "The ABCs of Democracy" By www.npr.org Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 04:13:44 -0500 House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries speaks with NPR's Michel Martin about his new book "The ABCs of Democracy," and Democrats' outlook following the 2024 election. Full Article
se Basic Black: An <em>urban agenda</em> for Massachusetts By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Sat, 10 Jan 2015 00:00:00 EST January 9, 2015 This week Charlie Baker was sworn in as the 72nd governor of Massachusetts, with promises of bipartisanship and a renewed economic growth agenda for the Commonwealth’s urban communities. Later in the show we remember Senator Edward Brooke who died last week at the age of 95. Panelists: - Callie Crossley, Host, Under The Radar with Callie Crossley, WGBH News - Phillip Martin, Senior Reporter, WGBH News - Darnell Williams, President and CEO, Urban League of Eastern Massachusetts - Judge Joyce London Alexander Ford, formerly US District Court, Massachusetts - Robert Fortes, Founder and President, The Fortes Group Massachusetts Republican Gov. Charlie Baker, center, acknowledges applause after taking the oath of office, Thursday, Jan. 8, 2015, in the House Chamber of the Statehouse, in Boston. Mass. (AP Photo/Steven Senne) Full Article
se Basic Black: Selma and <em>the fierce urgency of now...</em> By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Sat, 17 Jan 2015 00:00:00 EST January 16, 2015 Demonstrators shutdown 1-93 near Boston this week crippling traffic for hours, putting the black lives matter and I can't breathe protests back on the front page. The latest actions occurred days after the opening of the critically acclaimed movie Selma.Selma's social justice campaign is on the big screen just as current protests push the conversation about race and civil rights beyond the teachable moment to a more forceful, uncomfortable demand for change. We look at the artistry and history portrayed in Selma against a backdrop of contemporary social justice movements. Panelists: - Callie Crossley, host, Under the Radar with Callie Crossley, WGBH News - Kim McLarin, Assistant Professor of Writing, Literature, and Publishing, Emerson College - Brandon Terry, Prize Fellow in Economics, History, and Politics at Harvard University - Sarah Jackson, Assistant Professor in Communication Studies, Northeastern University - Brenna Greer, Assistant Professor of Social Sciences and History, Wellesley College (Italics: from Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King’s speech at the March on Washington 1963. Photo credit: Atsushi Nishijimi) Full Article
se Basic Black: <em>Portraits of Purpose</em> By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Sat, 31 Jan 2015 00:00:00 EST January 30, 2015 The pictures and stories of Bostonians whose stories have been sidelined are now highlighted in a book more than 20 years in the making. Now in 107 portraits coupled with narrative profiles, the contributions of some notable Bostonians of color are preserved for all time. The book is Portraits of Purpose: A Tribute to Leadership and we’re joined by photographer Don West and writer, Kenneth Cooper. Panelists: - Callie Crossley, host, Under the Radar with Callie Crossley, WGBH News - Phillip Martin, senior reporter, WGBH News - Don West, photographer and photojournalist, Portraits of Purpose: A Tribute to Leadership - Kenneth J. Cooper, journalist and writer, Portraits of Purpose: A Tribute to Leadership Full Article
se Basic Black: Politics and Prose By www.wgbh.org Published On :: Sat, 28 Feb 2015 00:00:00 EST February 27, 2015 February 27, 2015 This year’s Oscar© ceremony has been described as one of the most political in recent memory, as winners acceptance speeches included history lessons and calls to action on women’s issues and immigration. We’ll take a closer look at comments on equal pay for women, feminism, and the civil rights movement coming out of the Oscars© winners circle. Later in the show, as Black History Month comes to a close, we pause to remember the artistry of writer James Baldwin, whose provocative essays on race and identity in America still resonate. Panel: ?- Latoyia Edwards, anchor, NECN ?- Phillip Martin, senior reporter, WGBH News ?- Kim McLarin, Associate Professor of Writing, Literature and Publishing, Emerson College ?- Peniel Joseph, Professor of History, Tufts University? - Rev. Irene Monroe, Syndicated columnist for The Huffington Post and Bay Windows? (Image source: CNN, Patricia Arquette, Common, and John Legend, @Academy Awards, February 22, 2015) Full Article
se Why we now think the myopia epidemic can be slowed – or even reversed By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 16:05:00 +0000 Rates of near-sightedness are rising all over the world. But solutions to the epidemic are coming into focus and could be simpler than you think Full Article
se We must use genetic technologies now to avert the coming food crisis By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 18:00:00 +0000 Food production is responsible for more than a third of greenhouse gas emissions. To get everyone the food they need in a warming world, governments worldwide must invest in securing our food systems Full Article
se Mounting evidence points to air pollution as a cause of eczema By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 19:00:43 +0000 Air pollution has been linked to eczema before, and now a study of more than 280,000 people has strengthened the association Full Article
se Canadian gov't accused of banning chaplain prayers during military events By www.christianpost.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 12:59:00 -0500 Conservatives in Canada have accused the government of banning military chaplains from reciting prayers in accordance with their faith during Remembrance Day ceremonies across Canada, an accusation liberals have denied. Full Article
se WEA's plan to hold General Assembly 2025 in Seoul sparks debate By www.christianpost.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 14:26:22 -0500 Christian groups in South Korea are calling on the World Evangelical Alliance to put on hold plans for its next General Assembly in Seoul next year. Full Article
se Shark fisherman accused of embezzling over $194K from Kentucky church By www.christianpost.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 13:07:28 -0500 A shark fisherman and professional roofer has been arrested after being accused of stealing over $194,000 from a church in Kentucky. Full Article
se Zelensky addresses Western allies after Russia strikes Kyiv By english.pravda.ru Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 16:09:00 +0300 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky appealed to Western allies asking them for help after Russia's most recent attack on Kyiv. "It is crucial that our forces have the necessary means to defend the country from Russian terror. I am grateful to each of our partners who help us. Timely delivery of interceptor missiles for our air defense, fulfilling agreements on defense systems, and electronic warfare production and supply are, without exaggeration, lifesaving efforts," Zelensky wrote on X. In the morning, Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko reported explosions in the Ukrainian capital. A threat of a missile attack was declared in the city. It was later reported that explosions took place in Kyiv's suburbs. Full Article World
se Road bridge collapses on railway tracks in Crimea By english.pravda.ru Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 12:34:00 +0300 A road bridge collapsed between the villages of Izumrudnoye and Maslovo in Crimea, two people were hurt. According to the Russian Emergencies Ministry, the bridge collapse occurred over railway tracks, all services are working on the scene. At the time of the accident, a car and an eighteen-wheeler were traveling across the bridge. It is believed that the bridge could not withstand the weight of the truck and collapsed. Full Article Incidents
se US missile base opens in Poland a few kilometres away from Russia By english.pravda.ru Published On :: Thu, 14 Nov 2024 13:02:00 +0300 On November 13, a US missile base was officially opened in Poland. The base is located in the town of Redzikowo, just 230 kilometers from the border with Russia's Kaliningrad enclave. During the ceremony, Polish Defense Minister Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz said that the event was of "historic significance for the security of Poland, the United States and NATO." "Current conflicts, for example in Ukraine or the Middle East, show us how important air and missile defense is,” Kosiniak-Kamysz said. Full Article World
se Un avance hacia rayos X mas seguros gracias a la nueva tecnologia de detectores By www.newswise.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 13:10:56 EST Los rayos X son un componente habitual de las pruebas diagnosticas y el monitoreo industrial, y se utilizan para todo, desde el control de los dientes hasta el escaneo de maletas en el aeropuerto. Sin embargo, los rayos de elevada energia tambien producen radiacion ionizante, que puede ser peligrosa tras exposiciones prolongadas o excesivas. Ahora, investigadores que publican en ACS Central Science han avanzado hacia rayos X mas seguros con la creacion de un detector altamente sensible y plegable que genera imagenes de buena calidad con dosis mas pequenas de estos rayos. Full Article
se Sylvester Cancer Researchers Share Findings in Oral Presentations at the ASH 2024 Annual Meeting & Exposition - Tip Sheet By www.newswise.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 13:25:18 EST Research findings from Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Miller School of Medicine at the University of Miami will be presented at the Annual Meeting & Exposition of the American Society of Hematology in San Diego, Dec. 7-10. Full Article
se New Award Advances Sanders-Brown Director's Research on Inflammation's Role in Alzheimer's By www.newswise.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 14:40:55 EST The University of Kentucky Sanders-Brown Center on Aging Director Linda Van Eldik, Ph.D., hopes to shed light on how specific brain cells may contribute to the progression of Alzheimer's disease, paving the way for potential new therapeutic approaches.Van Eldik recently received a three-year, $300,000 award from the BrightFocus Foundation to support her research project, "Relationship between astrocyte p38 MAPK, neuroinflammation, and Alzheimer pathology. Full Article
se Sylvester Cancer Tip Sheet: Researchers Present Posters at the 66th ASH Annual Meeting & Exposition By www.newswise.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 15:10:03 EST Hematology researchers from Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Miller School of Medicine at the University of Miami are authors or co-authors on more than 70 posters to be presented at the Annual Meeting & Exposition of the American Society of Hematology in San Diego, Dec. 7-10. Links to each abstract are included in this tip sheet. Full Article
se Nurses' Extraordinary Experiences During the COVID-19 Pandemic By www.newswise.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 16:00:18 EST A new book, Nurses' Extraordinary Experiences During the COVID-19 Pandemic: There was Something in the Air, offers a poignant and firsthand account of the challenges and triumphs faced by nurses during the most devastating pandemic of our generation. Full Article
se Exposure to Marijuana in the Womb May Increase Risk of Addiction to Opioids Later in Life, Study Finds By www.newswise.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 17:00:56 EST University of Maryland School of Medicine Researchers Identify Neurobiological Changes Leading to Increase Release of the Brain Chemical Dopamine and Its Target Neurons Linked to Addiction-Like Behavior With the increased legalization of recreational cannabis, as many as 1 in 5 pregnant women in the U.S. are now using the drug to help with morning sickness, lower back pain or anxiety. Full Article
se New Study Links Air Pollution with Increased Risk of Spontaneous Preterm Births By www.newswise.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 18:15:20 EST Vulnerable populations without access to green space and exposed to higher temps were most affected Full Article
se Researchers Reveal Why a Key Tuberculosis Drug Works Against Resistant Strains By www.newswise.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 18:35:09 EST Rutgers Health study uncovers vulnerabilities in drug-resistant TB, offering hope for improved treatments. Full Article
se Chewing Xylitol Gum Linked to Decrease in Preterm Birth By www.newswise.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 19:55:04 EST Results from a study in Malawi showed that chewing gum containing xylitol, a naturally occurring alcohol sugar, was associated with a 24% reduction in preterm birth. The findings were published today in Med (a Cell Press journal). Researchers found that the group of pregnant individuals randomized to receive chewing gum also saw a 30% drop in low-birthweight babies, when compared with the control group which did not receive xylitol gum, noted lead author Dr. Greg Valentine, associate professor of pediatrics at the University of Washington School of Medicine. Full Article