From Brain Games to the philosophy of the future: Jason Silva – Daily Sabah

Information is now easily and rapidly accessible. It is possible to say that being indifferent to new information is actually a success. However, knowing how we can actually use the information, well, that is the challenging part. Jason Silva, who gained millions of followers with his "Shots of Awe" video series seven years ago, when there was no "influencer" concept on social media, has managed to do this very well today, especially as a familiar "face of screens and internet influencer" widely known by young people.

As the world transforms with technology, Silva is turning everyone's heads with his unique, characteristic and literary expression style. Describing the relationship between technology and philosophy, Silva transforms himself in the meantime. As the star of National Geographic's Brain Games series, Silva takes his curiosity, which is his greatest motivation, everywhere he travels, adding depth to his "journey" that he started in 2012 as a storyteller on social media. Silva is now a futurist speaker answering the question "how?"

We talked to Silva in Qatar at the 2019 World Innovation Summit for Education (WISE), which was held in November under the theme "Unlearn, Relearn: What it means to be human." Silva focuses on "futurism and disruptive innovation, the physical and psychological effects of awe on the human body, and leaving the mind to the flow." What Silva wants to arrive at is to discover ways to maintain mental and physical health and to find out how the issues he contemplates stimulate creativity to tell people "how."

Silva has been invested in consciousness and staying in the flow lately. When asked if there was a particular reason, he said one of things he is passionate about is people's capacity to overcome limitations.

Silva said sometimes these limitations can come down to technical or practical reasons, but they can sometimes also just be our own minds. Pointing out that the number of suicide-related deaths nowadays is higher than the number of deaths due to natural disasters or conflict, he said the issue of mental health is a pressing matter.

Staying in the flow

When asked how he protects his sanity and looks after his mental health, Silva said: "I take care of myself. I rest and sleep very well. Sleep and exercise have a great place in my life."

"Besides that, I am actively meditating. Staying in the flow is an active type of meditation. So is going for a walk, swimming, traveling, making art, reading and watching movies," he added.

"If you have watched my videos, I describe them as a 'free flow of consciousness without written text.' I get into a flow while making videos. When you are in the flow, your brain tries to guess what you are going to say, while being completely insecure on the other hand," he said, adding that the beauty of this state of mind is that it silences your inner critic.

He said brain scans of free-flowing rappers and jazz musicians have revealed that parts of their brains shut down when they are really "in the flow."

He stressed that people often have the misconception that to get into a flow is to let it go, but it actually has a lot to do with planning and discipline.

"You have to surrender after you have worked on it," he added.

Advising everyone to find their own flow path, he said: "Flow brings focus. You need to find out what hinders your focus, what distracts you and what draws you in. This may be sports or music for some. For me, it is making videos and being on stage."

Are we living in a simulated universe?

The idea that the world around us is not real and that we are trapped inside some video game or computer like The Sims or The Matrix has become the subject of serious academic debate. SpaceX chief Elon Musk has been one of the many high-profile proponents of the "simulation hypothesis" a theory that proposes the Earth and the universe, and all reality is actually an artificial simulation and he recently explained his thoughts on the subject in a podcast.

Silva said he agreed with Musk to a degree, but in a different way.

"I think we live in an environment where everything is virtual. It is like you are in a perception field. What you think and your identity stand in virtual reality. None of this is physical or unchangeable. If you look at our planet from space, you do not see lines separating countries. These lines are our virtual reality," he said.

"(Yuval Noah) Harari, in his book Sapiens, says that society cannot exist without useful stories. A dream that only one person has is a dream, but a dream that everyone has becomes a reality. So, in a simulation where everyone moves together, these dreams are practically real," he added.

On the topic of transhumanism, Silva called it "an extension of natural life."

"We can extend and expand our capacity in natural life, just like tools. We came from Africa hundreds of thousands of years ago, and we used the tools to reach something physically. If we could not reach fruit, we got sticks, for example. Thanks to sticks, we were able to extend our arm. This process of extension was the extension of our intentions and our brains. From this point of view, I believe that being human is trans-human."

With the rapid development of technology, a lot of people fear the new and unknown. Silva said he believed people weren't exactly afraid of technology but rather afraid of change and resistant to it.

"It's because change brings uncertainty, which in turn spurs this biological effect of the uncertainty (our ancestors felt) thousands of years ago when we thought a lion would come out and eat us," he said.

He said this feeling of uncertainty should be embraced as it "allows us to dream and build the life we want."

According to Silva, this is very much in line with Wise's theme, which suggests that we are in an era, a process of "unlearning what we already know and relearning it."

What we want to do in the future and what we want to reveal is to inspire people to think bigger than ever.

Tips to overcome anxiety

Silva said he likes to think of himself as a software program with "bad coding." "Sometimes I have a lot of anxiety. I know what triggers this situation and I find where my bad programming is," he said.

"Sometimes I stop while reacting to something, I watch my reaction and try to figure out how I feel. Then, I decide how I want to move forward. When I react to something, there is always an element I take into account."

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From Brain Games to the philosophy of the future: Jason Silva - Daily Sabah

Sound Transit to receive $790 million federal grant, $629 million loan for light rail extension – Kent Reporter

Members of Washingtons congressional delegation announced Monday actions by the U.S. Department of Transportation to award a $790 million grant and $629 million low-interest loan to enable Sound Transit to start building light rail from SeaTac through Kent to Federal Way early next year.

The Federal Transit Administration on Dec. 13 transmitted to Congress a $790 million Full Funding Grant Agreement (FFGA) for Sound Transits Federal Way Link Extension, starting a 30-day notification period. The action highlights that the administration intends to execute the grant once the period is complete.

Also last week, the U.S. Department of Transportation formally notified Congress of its intent to close a $629.5 million Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (TIFIA) loan for the project. This represents the fourth and final loan under a $1.99 billion TIFIA Master Credit Agreement which Sound Transit signed with USDOTs Build America Bureau at the end of 2016. The agreement will save regional taxpayers between $200 and $300 million in borrowing costs over the life of the bonds.

Securing this federal funding enables us to fulfill our promise of delivering regional light rail to the residents of South King County, said John Marchione, Sound Transit Board chair and Redmond mayor, in a news release . The tireless advocacy of our congressional delegation was instrumental in completing this vital step to transform peoples commutes and build a more prosperous future for the region.

The total cost of the project is an estimated $3.1 billion with federal grants covering about 25 percent of the cost. About $1.5 billion will come from Sound Transit dedicated sales, rental car, motor vehicle excise and property tax revenues. Another $629 million is through a loan to be repaid by Sound Transit tax revenues and about $145 million is covered by Sound Transit bond proceeds repaid by tax revenues.

This is exciting news for South Sound commuters looking to get relief from ever-increasing congestion, said Sound Transit Board member and King County Executive Dow Constantine. With major construction on Federal Way Link starting in the new year, this announcement means South King County will soon join a vast regional light rail network connecting all of the Central Puget Sound.

It takes forever to travel to and from South King County because of worsening traffic jams, said Sound Transit and King County Councilmember Dave Upthegrove. Thanks to this federal funding for the light rail project, an option to escape traffic gridlock in South King County is on the way.

A year ago, Sound Transit secured a $1.2 billion FFGA grant for Lynnwood Link. Now, we have secured a commitment from the administration to also fund Federal Way Link thanks to the persistent efforts of our congressional delegation, said Sound Transit CEO Peter Rogoff.

With two new stations in Kent, the Federal Way Link Extension will provide additional transportation options for the region, said Kent Mayor Dana Ralph. The project will also help implement the revitalization for Kents West Hill as envisioned by Kents Midway Subarea Plan.

In advance of the FFGA approval, Congress approved $100 million in FY 2019 Capital Investment Grant funding that will represent the first installment of the grant.

Trains on the 7.8-mile light rail extension from Angle Lake in SeaTac to Federal Way will serve three stations along the route in Kent/Des Moines, at South 272nd Street and at the Federal Way Transit Center. Demolition and utility relocation work began this fall, and construction is set to begin in early 2020. The light rail extension is expected to open in late 2024.

By 2021, Sound Transit will expand light rail to the U District, Roosevelt and Northgate. In 2022, Tacoma Link will expand to the Hilltop neighborhood. In 2023 trains will reach Mercer Island, Bellevue and the Overlake area. In addition to the Federal Way Link Extension, 2024 will bring the opening of extensions to Shoreline, Mountlake Terrace, Lynnwood and Downtown Redmond. From there, continuing expansions will focus on Tacoma, West Seattle, Ballard, Everett, South Kirkland, Issaquah and Tacoma Community College, forming a 116-mile regional system by 2041.

More information on the Federal Way Link Extension is available at soundtransit.org/fwlink.

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Sound Transit to receive $790 million federal grant, $629 million loan for light rail extension - Kent Reporter

Total to Gain Blocks, Extend Production Licenses Offshore Angola – Journal of Petroleum Technology

Totals CLOV floating production, storage, and offloading vessel on Block 17 offshore Angola. Source: KBR.

Total has agreed to acquire interests in two blocks in the offshore Kwanza Basin from Angolas state-owned Sonangol and has received an extension on its offshore Block 17 production licenses.

In the acquisition from Sonangol, the French major will add a 50% interest in Block 20/11, located in 3001,700 m of water in the central Kwanza Basin. Partners Sonangol and BP hold 20% and 30% of the block, respectively.

Total will also add an 80% interest in Block 21/09, located in 1,6001,800 m of water in the south-central Kwanza Basin. Sonangol holds the remaining interest.

Four discoveries have been made on the blocks, where Total envisions a new development hub and has committed to explore for additional resources. As part of the agreement, Total will become development operator before establishing an operating company with Sonangol 3 years after the start of production.

Total will pay $400 million at closing, adding $100 million at final investment decision and further payments along the life of the project depending on production and crude oil prices.

In a separate agreement, Total has received an extension from Sonangol and Angolas National Agency of Petroleum, Gas and Biofuels (ANPG) on its operated Block 17 production licenses.

As part of the deal, Sonangol will acquire a 5% interest in the block on the effective date and another 5% interest in 2036. The consortium also will pay some production bonuses to Angola along the life of the license and spend $20 million for social programs.

Located 150 km off the Angolan coast in 6001,400 m of water, Block 17 has produced almost 3 billion bbl of oil since 2001 through four floating production, storage, and offloading (FPSO) vessels: Girassol (2001), Dalia (2006), Pazflor (2011), and CLOV (2014).The block is currently producing around 440,000 BOE/D, with an estimated 1 billion bbl yet to be extracted, Total said.

Three short-cycle brownfield projectsZinia Phase 2, CLOV Phase 2, and Dalia Phase 3are currently under development on Block 17 in an effort to add 150 million bbl of resources, and other brownfield projects for extending the production of Pazflor, Rosa, Girassol, and Dalia are under study. Two exploration wells are also planned for 2020.

With the entry of Sonangol, Block 17 interest owners consist of Total, 38%; Equinor, 22.16%; ExxonMobil, 19%; BP, 15.84%; and Sonangol, 5%.

Total has been present in Angola since 1953. Its equity production averaged 211,000 BOE/D in 2018 from its operated Blocks 17 and 32 and from nonoperated assets 0, 14, 14K, and Angola LNG. Total accounts for close to 45% of Angolas operated oil production.

Total is also operator of Block 17/06 in the Lower Congo Basin, Block 16 where the Chissonga discovery has been made, and Block 48 in an emerging ultra-deep offshore play still being explored.

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Total to Gain Blocks, Extend Production Licenses Offshore Angola - Journal of Petroleum Technology

No extension on deadline to set up STPs to protect three lakes – The Hindu

The National Green Tribunal (NGT) has refused to extend the deadline for setting up sewage treatment plants (STPs) beyond September 2020 for the protection of Bellandur, Varthur and Agara lakes.

A bench headed by NGT Chairperson Justice Adarsh Kumar Goel said, If the work remains incomplete even till September 30, compensation will be liable to be paid at the rate of 10 lakh per STP per month, which may be liable to be recovered from the erring officers, apart from adverse entries in their service records and other adverse action.

The green panel further observed that the fact that approximately 256 million litres of untreated sewage was entering the Bellandur lake on a daily basis was a criminal offence, which needs to be tackled on a war footing.

While observing that the lake, which is said to be 130 years old, is a habitat to several species of birds and aquatic life, the bench said, This (pollution) has also affected groundwater recharge. Waste dumping has resulted in foul stench around the lake. Major cause for foam formation is considered to be the discharge of untreated sewage through open drains.

Noting that authorities have failed to take appropriate action, the bench said, De-silting of the lake has not been done from time to time nor have steps been taken to stop the flow of untreated sewage into the water bodies. There is also failure to prevent dumping of municipal solid waste.

The tribunal further directed the Bangalore Water Supply and Sewage Board (BWSSB) to ensure that no effluent is discharged into the lakes till the STPs are installed and specified that a compensation of 5 lakh per month per inlet into the lakes will be levied in case of non-compliance.

Sources of discharge be controlled or regulated, and electricity and water supplies to the defaulting establishments be stopped for enforcement of law till remedial steps are taken for compliance. Encroachment, which are still continuing, be removed by using force wherever necessary, the bench said.

Additionally, the Karnataka State Pollution Control Board was directed to develop a robust water quality monitoring programme to keep a check on the water quality in drains leading to the lakes.

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No extension on deadline to set up STPs to protect three lakes - The Hindu

Frosty is back to life on the streets of downtown Vernon – Global News

By Darrian Matassa-FungGlobal News

Posted December 18, 2019 12:26 pm

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After a short hiatus, Frosty the inflatable snowman is back on a sidewalk in downtown Vernon.

A permit has been issued by the City of Vernon for the lovable, inflatable Christmas character after he was forced to take a break by bylaw officers.

Related News

We are delighted to have Frosty back outside our store again; weve loved all the community support weve had, Lynella Henke, the owner of Vernon Teach and Learn, told Global News on Tuesday.

An extension cord was deemed a tripping hazard. Frosty has been around for eight Christmas seasons, but this is the first year the city hollered stop!

Thanks to the city for working with us and letting him get put up right in the same spot as he was before, said Henke.

Story continues below advertisement

The extension cord is now covered up by trip guards and the $150 permit fee is due Jan. 1. Vernon Teach and Learn says dont worry, hell be back again next year.

2019 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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Frosty is back to life on the streets of downtown Vernon - Global News

Why AI Will Be the Best Tool for Extending Our Longevity – Singularity Hub

Dmitry Kaminskiy speaks as though he were trying to unload everything he knows about the science and economics of longevityfrom senolytics research that seeks to stop aging cells from spewing inflammatory proteins and other molecules to the trillion-dollar life extension industry that he and his colleagues are trying to fosterin one sitting.

At the heart of the discussion with Singularity Hub is the idea that artificial intelligence will be the engine that drives breakthroughs in how we approach healthcare and healthy aginga concept with little traction even just five years ago.

At that time, it was considered too futuristic that artificial intelligence and data science might be more accurate compared to any hypothesis of human doctors, said Kaminskiy, co-founder and managing partner at Deep Knowledge Ventures, an investment firm that is betting big on AI and longevity.

How times have changed. Artificial intelligence in healthcare is attracting more investments and deals than just about any sector of the economy, according to data research firm CB Insights. In the most recent third quarter, AI healthcare startups raised nearly $1.6 billion, buoyed by a $550 million mega-round from London-based Babylon Health, which uses AI to collect data from patients, analyze the information, find comparable matches, then make recommendations.

Even without the big bump from Babylon Health, AI healthcare startups raised more than $1 billion last quarter, including two companies focused on longevity therapeutics: Juvenescence and Insilico Medicine.

The latter has risen to prominence for its novel use of reinforcement learning and general adversarial networks (GANs) to accelerate the drug discovery process. Insilico Medicine recently published a seminal paper that demonstrated how such an AI system could generate a drug candidate in just 46 days. Co-founder and CEO Alex Zhavoronkov said he believes there is no greater goal in healthcare todayor, really, any venturethan extending the healthy years of the human lifespan.

I dont think that there is anything more important than that, he told Singularity Hub, explaining that an unhealthy society is detrimental to a healthy economy. I think that its very, very important to extend healthy, productive lifespan just to fix the economy.

The surge of interest in longevity is coming at a time when life expectancy in the US is actually dropping, despite the fact that we spend more money on healthcare than any other nation.

A new paper in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that after six decades of gains, life expectancy for Americans has decreased since 2014, particularly among young and middle-aged adults. While some of the causes are societal, such as drug overdoses and suicide, others are health-related.

While average life expectancy in the US is 78, Kaminskiy noted that healthy life expectancy is about ten years less.

To Zhavoronkovs point about the economy (a topic of great interest to Kaminskiy as well), the US spent $1.1 trillion on chronic diseases in 2016, according to a report from the Milken Institute, with diabetes, cardiovascular conditions, and Alzheimers among the most costly expenses to the healthcare system. When the indirect costs of lost economic productivity are included, the total price tag of chronic diseases in the US is $3.7 trillion, nearly 20 percent of GDP.

So this is the major negative feedback on the national economy and creating a lot of negative social [and] financial issues, Kaminskiy said.

That has convinced Kaminskiy that an economy focused on extending healthy human lifespansincluding the financial instruments and institutions required to support a long-lived populationis the best way forward.

He has co-authored a book on the topic with Margaretta Colangelo, another managing partner at Deep Knowledge Ventures, which has launched a specialized investment fund, Longevity.Capital, focused on the longevity industry. Kaminskiy estimates that there are now about 20 such investment funds dedicated to funding life extension companies.

In November at the inaugural AI for Longevity Summit in London, he and his collaborators also introduced the Longevity AI Consortium, an academic-industry initiative at Kings College London. Eventually, the research center will include an AI Longevity Accelerator program to serve as a bridge between startups and UK investors.

Deep Knowledge Ventures has committed about 7 million ($9 million) over the next three years to the accelerator program, as well as establishing similar consortiums in other regions of the world, according to Franco Cortese, a partner at Longevity.Capital and director of the Aging Analytics Agency, which has produced a series of reports on longevity.

One of the most recent is an overview of Biomarkers for Longevity. A biomarker, in the case of longevity, is a measurable component of health that can indicate a disease state or a more general decline in health associated with aging. Examples range from something as simple as BMI as an indicator of obesity, which is associated with a number of chronic diseases, to sophisticated measurements of telomeres, the protective ends of chromosomes that shorten as we age.

While some researchers are working on moonshot therapies to reverse or slow agingwith a few even arguing we could expand human life on the order of centuriesKaminskiy said he believes understanding biomarkers of aging could make more radical interventions unnecessary.

In this vision of healthcare, people would be able to monitor their health 24-7, with sensors attuned to various biomarkers that could indicate the onset of everything from the flu to diabetes. AI would be instrumental in not just ingesting the billions of data points required to develop such a system, but also what therapies, treatments, or micro-doses of a drug or supplement would be required to maintain homeostasis.

Consider it like Tesla with many, many detectors, analyzing the behavior of the car in real time, and a cloud computing system monitoring those signals in real time with high frequency, Kaminskiy explained. So the same shall be applied for humans.

And only sophisticated algorithms, Kaminskiy argued, can make longevity healthcare work on a mass scale but at the individual level. Precision medicine becomes preventive medicine. Healthcare truly becomes a system to support health rather than a way to fight disease.

Image Credit: Photo byh heyerleinonUnsplash

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Why AI Will Be the Best Tool for Extending Our Longevity - Singularity Hub

Robots Will Refuel Satellites in Space, Extend Operations – Asgardia Space News

Thousands of satellites are orbiting Earth right now and projects such as Starlink are launching even more satellite constellations to the already crowded orbit. With important functions such as GPS navigation, weather monitoring and communications, refueling might just be the difference between a functional satellite and a piece of yet another free-floating space junk

'When a satellite runs out of fuel, and you don't have a way to refuel it, that satellite stops working,' says John Wen of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, according to Phys.org. 'When that happens, a new satellite is launched to replace the existing satellite.'

Wenheads up a group of researchers at Rensselaerwho are working withNASA to solve the space debris problem: a robot that could capture a satellite, pull it into dock and refuel it.

'Our part of the research is to specifically look at transporting a massive satellite, which is way beyond the capacity of this robot arm on Earth under gravity,' Wen says.

Maxar Technologies, a Colorado-based space technology company, is developing the thin, two-meter-long robotic arm. It has gears and joints, which give it flexibility, and is able to handle large satellites. The arms movements are controlled by complex algorithms to ensure that it accurately transports and docks satellites for refueling.

Whats it like to capture a satellite in space? Not unlike dragging a large bus along the ice in an ice rink, Wen says. It is easier to move a heavy object on ice and in microgravity but the movements must nonetheless be precise.

'There will be no human in space to intervene,' Wen says. 'It's all relying on the ground operator. So, we have to do extensive simulation both in software, as well as in hardware, to make sure this operation is safe.'

The team is currently running simulations at Rensselaers Center for Automation Technologies and Systems Lab. For physical simulations of zero gravity, researchers use what is essentially an air hockey table where a small satellite can float near the surface and a smaller robotic arm makes the necessary movements. The team is also running computational simulations.

The robotic arm is just one of the projects NASA has in the works: its Satellite Servicing Projects Division is developing various technologies to enable the servicing of satellites, as well as satellite disposal. One such project is Restore-L, slated to launch in 2022, a robotic spacecraft that can grasp, repair and refuel satellites to extend their lives.

In October, Northrop Grummanlaunched its Mission Extension Vehicle (MEV-1) with the purpose of refueling Intelsat 901, a commercial satellite that has been in orbit since 2001, and performing some orbit maintenance. MEV-1 is supposed to extend the operational life of Intelsat 901 by five years and then go on to potentially fix other satellites. It still remains to be seen whether the mission will be successful.

The work researchers and NASAare doing on satellites will lay the groundwork for deep-space missions as well. 'It's getting increasingly difficult to fly heavy payloads into orbit, so when we talk about a lunar mission, Mars mission, et cetera, increasingly the assembly will have to be done in space,' Wen told Phys.org. 'The robotic technology we're working on now will be the foundation of such work in the future.'

Photo credit: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

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Robots Will Refuel Satellites in Space, Extend Operations - Asgardia Space News

RockRose ramping up oil production at North Sea Brae complex – Offshore Oil and Gas Magazine

The Brae Alpha platform lies approximately 220 km northeast of Aberdeen

Courtesy Rockrose Energy

Offshore staff

LONDON The jackup Noble Houston Colbert gas spud the first of two planed infill development wells on the West Brae field in the central UK North Sea.

Rockrose Energy recently acquired Marathon Oils 40% operated interest in the Brae Area.

The new WPGZ and WPOZ wells are designed to access reserves of over 8 MMbbl, sustaining output through the Brae platform complex by up to 6,000 b/d.

WPGZ is due to come onstream before the end of Q1 2020, with WPOZ delivering first oil during Q2.

Between now and the end of next year RockRose expects to participate in at least seven UK offshore development wells.

A four-well drilling campaign is set to get under way early next year on the Shell-operated Arran gas/condensate field development in the central sector, with production starting early in 2021 via a tieback to the Shearwater complex. RockRose has a 30.4% working interest in Arran.

In the Moray Firth area, Repsol Sinopec expects to drill the first of two infill wells for the Blake life extension project (RockRose 30.8%) during the second half of 2020.

12/11/2019

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RockRose ramping up oil production at North Sea Brae complex - Offshore Oil and Gas Magazine

Judge Extends TRO to Keep Baby Tinslee Lewis Alive, Will Rule Injunction on or before Jan 2nd, 2020 – WBAP News/Talk

Provided: Texas Right to Life

FORT WORTH (WBAP/KLIF)-

UPDATE 12/12 8:00PM:Judge Justice Sandee Marion has extended a temporary restraining order to keep Baby Tinslee Lewis alive until January 2nd, 2020. Marion said she will rule on the filed injunction on or before that date. Tinslee has congenital heart disease, chronic lung disease and pulmonary hypertension, making it extremely difficult for her to breathe. Cook Childrens says without life support, her condition is fatal. Tinslees mother Trinity Lewis is pleased with the extension and said she disagrees with doctors claims that shes suffering. I know shes not sufferingI wouldnt be here fighting for her life if I thought that, said Lewis. The Familys Attorney Joe Nixon said he is ready to keep fighting for Tinslees right to life and called the Texas 10 day rule unconstitutional. Tinslee is alive and we are going to keep her alive and do everything we can to help her and give her the life her mother wants her to have, said Nixon. Cook Childrens released a statement following the decision, Cook Childrens has been dedicated to providingthe very best care for Tinslee since her arrival to our hospital 10 months ago. For the entirety of her life, our staff has diligently provided compassionate, round-the-clock, intensive care and attention. We will continue to provide this precious baby the same level of care as we have for her entire life. We all share the same sense of concern for Tinslee and her family as they face a very difficult situation. Our doctors and nurses have done everything humanely possible to save Tinslees life. Currently, any care we provide, including feeding, bathing and providing treatments and medication, can cause her little body to experience a medical crisis, which causes even more intervention and pain for her. We have reached out to more than 20, well-respected healthcare facilities and pediatric cardiac specialists who have the specialized training to continue Tinslees care, and upon their review, each medical team declined to accept her as a patient. Sadly, she shows no signs of improvement and there are no treatment options available to help her get better. We would ask that outside groups, even those who disagree with Cook Childrens approach, consider what is best for Tinslee now and give the family space to consider what truly is best for this baby, and allow our medical professionals space to care for her.

ORIGINAL STORY: Cook Childrens Medical Center agreed to extend a Temporary Restraining Order (TRO) that keeps a 10-month-old baby alive until after a hearing on Thursday, December 12th. The TRO that keeps Cooks Children from ending life support was set to expire Tuesday.

This hearing will determine whether Baby Tinslee can have more time through a temporary injunction pending a full trial, or if the hospital can end treatment.

Tinslee has congenital heart disease, chronic lung disease and pulmonary hypertension, making it extremely difficult for her to breathe. Despite our best efforts, her condition is irreversible, meaning it will never be cured or eliminated. Without life-sustaining treatment, her condition is fatal, said Cooks Children in a statement.

The Texas 10-Day Rule allows a hospital committee to end life support against her familys wishes.

Tinslee has been in the hospital since birth and Cook Childrens believes shes suffering.

The presiding judge will be Justice Sandee Marion, Chief Justice of the 4th Court of Appeals in San Antonio. The first judge was recused after the hospital questioned his impartiality. Cook Childrens claims Tarrant County District Judge Alex Kim, who signed the first TRO, associates with groups that publicly campaigned against the hospital in Tinslees case.

I think that any fair and reasonable judge can see the injustices of Tinslees case and the entire 10 day rule. We are hopeful that the court will recognize Baby Tinslees right to due process and her Right to Life, said Kim Schwartz with Texas Right to Life, representing the family.

Originally, Tinslee received a temporary restraining order on November 10. The hospital and the family then mutually agreed to extend the order to December 10. Thursdays hearing will consider whether to upgrade the order to a temporary injunction, which would last longer than a temporary restraining order, with the duration being decided by a judge.

Im grateful that Ive had an extra month with my baby because a judge protected her from this 10-Day Rule. Tinslee is a fighter and I know shes not done yet. I hope the judge wont let the hospital kill my baby, said Trinity Lewis, Tinslees mother.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton issued an amicus brief in defense of Tinslee and asserted that the 10-Day Rule is unconstitutional.

Unless Governor Greg Abbott calls a special session to repeal the 10-Day Rule, Tinslee Lewis will not be the last patient victimized by this law. Texans who want to protect patients like Tinslee should contact their state legislators at (512) 463-4630, said Schwartz.

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Judge Extends TRO to Keep Baby Tinslee Lewis Alive, Will Rule Injunction on or before Jan 2nd, 2020 - WBAP News/Talk

Local priest visits the US-Mexico border with Catholic Extension – Rhode Island Newspaper

McALLEN, Texas Father Brendan Rowley, who was ordained this year and who serves at Sts. John and Paul Church in Coventry, recently joined priests from other dioceses on a Catholic Extension mission trip to the Diocese of Brownsville to learn about the Churchs ministries to migrants at the US-Mexico border.At La Posada Providencia, a long-term shelter founded by the Sisters of Divine Providence in San Benito, Texas, the group met residents from countries in Africa, Central America, and the Caribbean. One woman from Zimbabwe described fleeing terrible violence that claimed the lives of many of her friends and family. Shalom, as she is called, was denied entry into Ireland but eventually allowed to apply for asylum in the United States. She described how grateful she was to La Posada, the only place that answered her frantic requests for shelter while she awaits an asylum hearing.Father Rowley also met Sister Norma Pimentel, MJ, whose Humanitarian Respite Center has provided tens of thousands of people temporary relief after being released from detention. During the visit to the Center, host Michelle Nuez described how its numbers are down because of recent policy changes that deter asylum-seekers from entering the United States. In response, the Center has begun bringing supplies to the families who live in tents across the border in Matamoros, lined up waiting for permission to enter the United States.God is at work in the shelters that are taking care of these immigrants, Father Rowley said. God is working through the compassionate and loving hearts of the sisters and the laity who provide shelter, food, hygiene products, and education to the immigrants who come to them.The group also crossed the border to visit a clinic and a migrant shelter in nearby Reynosa, Mexico. The clinic, supported by a Catholic parish, has served over 10,000 poor people, many of them migrants. The shelter is operated by the Sisters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul, and has seen tens of thousands of people pass through its doors, either hoping to enter the United States or having been recently deported.Father Rowley met a 35-year-old man who had lived in the United States since he was 8, but who had recently been arrested after a minor traffic violation and deported. The man was weeping as he described his wife and two children still living in the US.During the course of this trip we encountered many people, Father Rowley said. But the most powerful encounters were with the immigrants themselves who shared their powerful stories. I was particularly moved by one man and 16 year old son who had escaped being kidnapped just 12 hours earlier. Stories like this brought to life the reality of the dangers immigrants are facing as they seek a better life in this country.The group celebrated Mass at the historic La Lomita chapel with Father Roy Snipes, OMI, a finalist for Catholic Extensions annual Lumen Christi Award. Father Roy and the Diocese of Brownsville are currently in the midst of a dispute over land adjacent to La Lomita, which the current administration has identified as a site where a new border wall would be built. Father Roy and the diocese have described the suit as a religious freedom issue, since the Church had a missionary presence there for some two centuries.I found that a lot of good work is being done at the border, Father Rowley said.While not everyone is or can be immediately welcomed into the country when they arrive at the border, there are many shelters and clinics available to take care of these people and meet their needs while they wait. Those running these shelters and clinics have a cooperative and cordial relationship with border patrol and ICE agents.The groups final visit was to a ministry of the ICM Sisters in Peitas, Texas, called Proyecto Desarollo Humano. The Sisters, 2014 recipients of the Lumen Christi Award, established the Proyecto initially to minister to the women of the colonia, the rudimentary village that had sprung up in the region.This trip highlighted the good work that is being done on behalf of the Catholic Church at the border, Father Rowley said. It was reassuring and refreshing to witness the outreach and ministry of many Catholic Sisters and laity via shelters and clinics.Founded in 1905, Catholic Extension is a papal society dedicated to financial support of mission dioceses throughout the United States and its territories. The trip was part of Catholic Extensions mission immersion program for pastors, funded by a grant from Lilly Endowment Inc., to offer priests opportunities to deepen their understanding of the Church in the United States.Father Rowley said that it is important for the Church to be present in poor areas and have the positive impact that it does.It is important for the Church to be present in these poor areas and to minister to these immigrants to be a source of strength and hope for them as they endure these very difficult conditions, he said.For an immigrant to encounter the Catholic Church at the border is a reminder to them that the Lord, like with the Israelites, sees their plight and knows their pain, and is reaching out to take of them in their time of need.

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Local priest visits the US-Mexico border with Catholic Extension - Rhode Island Newspaper

21 Heathrow Airport jobs that are currently on offer – MyLondon

Heathrow Airport is a massive employer in London.

Not only do you have four terminals each requiring their own teams of security, cleaning and ground crew staff, but you've also got the many shops, bars and restaurants.

It's always busy at the West London airport, meaning it's all hands on deck.

Have you ever fancied a behind the scenes look at Heathrow? Well, now might be your chance.

Heathrow Airport is currently hiring a total of 21 positiions.

Here is everything you need to know.

Closing date: December 19, 2019

The role involves being responsible for implementing a quality assurance function at the airport.

Basically - you need to make sure everything runs smoothly and well. From reviewing activities in the supply chain and dealing with members of the public, you will be first on hand.

For more information, click here.

Closing date: January 5, 2020

The control room operative works in the engineering maintenance department.

You will be monitoring the system and ensuring trains and planes are running smoothly and making sure any delays are dealt with appropriately.

It's also important to work safely at all times and follow procedures as well as spot any hazards.

Click here for more information.

Closing date: December 19, 2019

In this role, you will act as Data Steward for the Property Team under the General Data Protection Regulations and ensure the airport complies with all Heathrow standards associated with GDPR and Data Protection.

To apply, click here.

Closing date: December 13, 2019

You'll be participating in all movements of trolleys across Heathrow, clearing all areas of trolleys, pushing them back into the areas where our passengers need them and making sure passengers do not use any broken trolleys.

What's more, the job would pay you more than 21,000 a year.

Click here for more information.

Closing date: December 24, 2019

One responsibility for this role is acting as the airport contact with the statutory authorities, Highways Agency and Local borough councils for engineering works associated with airport-based utilities.

Click here to apply.

Closing date: December 24, 2019

You will be managing the development and upkeep of asset plans and asset standards that reflect asset systems strategies.

To apply, click here.

Closing date: December 24, 2019

For this role, you will be providing technical knowledge and support to operational teams within the function and wider organisation to ensure a robust asset management strategy.

For more information, click here.

Closing date: December 18, 2019

This role is all about developing asset plans and asset standards that reflect the asset system strategies, with detailed maintenance strategies, renewal plans, refurbishment and life extension plans.

You can apply here.

Closing date: December 13, 2019

This is the role for you if you are able to drive revenue and merchandise and trading for our key service products including Car parking, VIP lounges, Meet and Assist, Fast track and porters.

Click here for more information.

Closing date: December 24, 2019

You'll be responsible for content managing product information for non-automated retailers as well as managing key retail partner online relationships in conjunction with existing offline account management team.

You can apply for the role here.

Closing date: January 5, 2020

You'll undertake planned and reactive maintenance tasks on assets in accordance with allocated target dates to maximise availability and service levels.

As well as this, you'll complete working orders and accurately capturing maintenance history.

For more information, click here.

Closing date: January 5, 2020

As a rail systems engineer you'll be designing and delivering solutions to system and component obsolescence for HAL Rail assets and designing and delivering system upgrades to improve system safety and reliability.

Click here for more information.

Closing date: January 5, 2020

Developing performance improvement plans for rail assets, to deliver continuous improvements and meet stakeholders requirements is what you'll be doing in this role.

More information can be found here.

Closing date: December 19, 2019

For this role, you'll be part of the Heathrow expansion team ensuring the successful delivery and implementation of the services.

Click here to apply.

Closing date: December 20, 2019

In this role, you'll be making sure everyone sticks to the health and safety procedures, as well as updating them.

You can apply for the role here.

Closing date: December 13, 2019

You'll be leading and driving a data driven strategy on omnichannel personalisation across the customer journey and driving optimisation ROI within digital estates across Heathrow.

Click here for more information.

Closing date: January 5, 2020

The job involves ensuring systems, assets and components perform at optimum levels against design standards, making sure any changes are effectively communicated.

Apply here.

Closing date: January 21, 2020

You will provide support to the IT Supplier Relationship Manager in managing the relationship and governance across all IT suppliers.

Click here for more information.

Closing date: January 21, 2020

Your role will be to champion GDPR compliance within IT on behalf of CIO, providing assurance to ITLT, Deputy General Counsel and Data Protection Officer.

If you'd like to apply for this role, click here.

Closing date: December 24, 2019

You'll be providing technical steering to asset systems strategies including the asset management plan.

Another responsibility is developing asset intervention plans including method statements to support the achievement of the long-term business plans.

Click here to apply.

To keep up to date with all the latest breaking news, stories and events happening across West London, give the My West London Facebook page a like.

We will provide you with the latest traffic and travel updates, including updates on train and London Underground services, in areas including Brent, Ealing, Hammersmith, Fulham, Harrow, Hillingdon, Hounslow, Uxbridge and Richmond upon Thames.

The latest breaking news will be brought straight to your news feed including updates from the police, ambulance and fire brigade. We will also bring you updates from our courts and councils, as well as more lighthearted long reads.

We also publish your pictures and videos, so do message us with your stories.

Like the My West London Facebook page here.

You can also follow us on Twitter here.

Closing date: December 11, 2019

Your role will be to provide leadership and line management to a team of technicians, ensuring they are offering great quality and reliable service for Heathrow whilst also adhering to company policies.

Click here for more information.

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21 Heathrow Airport jobs that are currently on offer - MyLondon

Catholics from across the country unite to build a new church in Texas – Catholic Extension

San Juan Diego is a mission of the poorest parish in the poorest diocese in the country. While the community lacks resources, it is rich in faith and community.

In a place where half of the populationlives in poverty, its construction was only made possible through Catholic solidarity and generosity. Together with help from Catholics as far away as Chicago and Boston, the growing immigrant community in the Diocese of Brownsville now has a new place to gather.

The Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary have been shepherding the growing Catholic population in Southern Texas for over15 years. As more Latino immigrants settled inthe area, the spiritual needs of this primarily Catholic group also grew.

We have real mission territory here in the traditional sense, with people living way below the poverty line, struggling in their everyday lives and speaking no English, said Sister Carolyn Kosub.This is where we belong as missionaries, to do the best we can, work with the people and learn from them.

I see the face of God very strongly in them this is living Christianity.

"Wesisters are privileged to be sharing life's journey with [immigrant families] as we help them to develop their great potential.

Compassion flows in from across the country

The growing community needed a new place to gather. When Father Tom Hurley,pastor of Old St. Pats in Chicago, heard of the sisters efforts, he brought the story home to his parish. They contributed nearly $30,000 to help with construction of San Juan Diego mission.

The parish has been a friend of Catholic Extension for years. It was one of the first to join our expandingParish Partnerships program, enabling the parishioners to connect with, support, and get updates about exciting Catholic Extension projects across the country. Now, they can see the amazing impact they have had on this community, thousands of miles away.

But the generous parish was not alone. Through the generosity of our donors, people from all across the country, Catholic Extension committed another $60,000 to help with San Juan Diegos construction.

In one more act of ingenuity,Cardinal Sean OMalleystepped in to help when the news of the growing mission parish reached Boston. The diocese donated stained-glass windows from Saints Peter and Paul Church in South Boston, which was closing.

When the churchwas dedicated last summer, it was packed with joyful parishioners and filled with gratitude. The white sanctuary was airy and pristine, filled with light through the colorful windows.

At the dedication, Bishop Daniel E. Flores of the Diocese of Brownsville spoke of the transformative power our donors:

This day is a day of rejoicing. The dreams of so many for a very long time are in some ways reaching fulfillment.We can't sit back to rejoice on this beautiful gift which so many generous donors have made possible. Rather, we must begin the work of the Church anew."

The work of the sisters in Texas continues, as does the tireless ministry of many Catholic leaders like them across the country. There are many ways to support our work!

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Catholics from across the country unite to build a new church in Texas - Catholic Extension

3 Stocks That Will Pay You More Dividends Than RBC (TSX:RY) – The Motley Fool Canada

Investors gravitate towards Canadian banks, and with good reason. As few of the most stable banks in the world and generous dividend providers, they make for excellent long-term stocks stocks you can bank on. And, of course, the first stock that draws the eyes of the investors is the king itself: Royal Bank of Canada a bank that possesses every significant attribute that makes the countrys banking sector stand out.

But if you want to explore more investment options, there are other stable and attractive ones in the market Dividend Aristocrats with juicier yields than Royal Banks 3.86%. TC Energy, Emera (TSX:EMA), and Exchange Incomeare three stocks to consider for higher yields.

TC Energy owns and operates one of the largest natural gas pipeline networks in North America, spanning 92,600 kilometres. The company has a 4,900-kilometre liquid pipelines and electricity production capacity of 6,000 MW. TC Energy has steady cash flows, and its banking on its ongoing projects for better future profitability projects like Keystone XL, NGTL, and Bruce Power Life extension.

The company is stable, relative to the market, with a beta of 1.04. TC Energys operating margin of 45% is better compared to the overall sector. This year has been especially fruitful for the companys growth, with the market value up by 38%. Currently, the company is trading at $67.2 per share. The yield of 4.43% is also an attractive attribute to consider TC Energy as a potential investment.

Emera is an energy company with a focus on clean electricity production. It focuses on zero-emission renewables like wind, hydro, and solar, as well as low-emission sources like natural gas. With its eye on a cleaner and sustainable future, the companys growth potential seems high. Emera operates in Canada, the U.S., and four Caribbean countries.

The company has well earned its title of a Dividend Aristocrat by increasing dividends for 12 consecutive years. The current yield of 4.45% is also a significant scale up from Royal Bank. But the dividend yield isnt the only factor that makes Emera an attractive investment. Its impressive history of growth is also worth considering. In the past five years, the company has grown its market value by 40%, including this years sizeable increase of 22%.

But even at a conservative estimate, the company stands at a chance 8% growth a year, all the while handing out increasingly generous payouts.

If you are thinking about diversifying your portfolio, the adequately diversified company, Exchange Income, might prove to be a fantastic stock. Exchange income focuses on acquiring aerospace and aviation-based businesses, and it has created a well-balanced portfolio of many such companies. This acquisition policy has played out very well for the company and investors.

The companys five-year growth is a whopping 92%. Even if the company underperforms a bit, it stands at a chance of doubling its investors money in the next seven years. And the cherry on top is the yield of 5.15%, with a prestigious payout history of increasing dividends for nine consecutive years.

Stability, growth, and dividends payouts three common attributes that almost every long investor should consider before choosing stocks. The stocks mentioned above provide the right mix of all three traits, maybe even an edge better than the Royal Bank.

Fool contributor Adam Othman has no position in any of the stocks mentioned.

Originally posted here:

3 Stocks That Will Pay You More Dividends Than RBC (TSX:RY) - The Motley Fool Canada

WMU president awarded $25K raise and 5-year contract extension – mlive.com

KALAMAZOO, MI -- The president of Western Michigan University received a nearly $25,000 raise and a five-year contract extension after his performance was reviewed.

The WMU Board of Trustees approved an approximately 5.4% raise and a five-year contract extension effective July 1, 2020, for President Edward Montgomery, 64, at a meeting Thursday, Dec. 12.

The presidents new base salary will be $486,000 per year. This is a $24,750 increase from 2018. The presidents employment contract was also extended to June 30, 2025.

The Board of Trustees is unified in their acknowledgement of President Edward Montgomerys exemplary leadership of WMU, stated the board recommendation approved by trustees Thursday.

Montgomery began as president at WMU in August 2017 and was initially granted a three-year contract with the university with a $450,000 annual salary. After his first year as president, the board approved a 2.5% increase to his base salary.

The presidents percentage increase in salary is less than the average percentage increase in salary for faculty over the same time period, the university said in a press release. Montgomerys total compensation will now be sixth among those of presidents for the 12 universities in the Mid-American Conference, the university said.

The board also approved a new eligibility for annual, goal-based merit bonuses of up to 10% of his total annual salary, or $48,600. His salary will be reviewed by the board annually and adjusted at the discretion of the board. The board and the president will meet annually to establish goals for the merit bonus.

The bonuses were established to create a merit system that explicitly ties presidential compensation to the success of the university, the release said. The president and Mrs. Montgomery have committed to giving back at least half of any bonus he may receive.

During his time as president, the board said, Montgomery has demonstrated connectivity and collaboration with the campus community, stabilized financial ratings for the university, unified stakeholders through the Think Big initiative, showed fiscal responsibility and accountability with the implementation of a strategic resource management budgeting model, showed forward development with construction of Arcadia Flats and Hilltop Village and championed grants, awards and distinguished recognition on behalf of the university.

The board will continue to track progress relating to improving student success, diversifying revenue streams, and positioning WMU as the school of choice for the region and beyond, the recommendation states.

The board approved an increase to Montgomerys supplemental retirement plan to $84,000 per year from $50,000. The new contract removed a $10,000 annual reimbursement to the president to cover the cost of life insurance.

The board also voiced support for Montgomerys goals of increasing second-year student retention, six-year graduation rate, alumni giving, externally funded research and bettering the universitys reputation.

The following proposal outlines the results of the presidents evaluation.

At the same time, the university is facing a significant challenge. Western Michigan University has seen years of steady enrollment decline as high school graduation numbers in the state decrease and universities and college compete for students.

In the last 15 years, the university lost nearly one-quarter of its overall student population. Western Michigan now has about 6,359 fewer students than the 27,829 enrolled in 2004, according to university enrollment data.

Montgomery said in a previous interview with MLive that the most recent drop in the student population of about 1,000 students since 2018 translates into the loss of millions of dollars in tuition revenue. Efforts to reduce expenditures included a less than 1% increase in the universitys total budget between last year and the 2019-20 school year.

As the student population shrunk, total budgets for the university have risen. In 2004, the school had 27,829 students and a $273 million budget. In 2019, the budget was about $423 million, and the university enrolled 21,470 students.

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WMU president awarded $25K raise and 5-year contract extension - mlive.com

More problems surface in troubled refit of coast guard vessel – CBC.ca

There are new setbacks, delays and costs in the life-extension refit of the storied Canadian Coast Guard Ship Hudson.

As the refit runs late, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans is searching for a replacement vessel to carry out ocean climate science missions on the East Coast in the first half of 2020.

Asbestos and deficient parts were discovered inside the 56-year-old ocean science vessel, pushing backcompletion of the workfor a second time.

"We're looking at a short delay now for a couple of months," saidGary Ivany, the assistant commissioner of the coast guard'sAtlantic region.

The refit was already six months late before the latest problems surfaced.

Federal procurement documents also show the cost of the job has jumped to $11.4 million, up by $1.3 million.Public Services and Procurement Canada said Tuesday the additional cost covers unscheduled work to dealwithlead paint, asbestos abatement, as well as heating, ventilationand air-conditioning installations.

Hudson, Canada's oldest coast guard ship,was sent to NewDock, a St. John's shipyard in February for a $10-million refit.

It was supposed to be back in service at its base at the Bedford Institute of Oceanography in Dartmouth, N.S., this fall, but that was delayed after lead paint was discovered when the ship was hauled out of the water and opened up.

The refit has been delayed again after the yard encountered moreproblems.

Work stopped temporarily to remove asbestos wrapped around piping in the exhaust stack.

NewDock is also waiting for replacement parts needed in heating, ventilation and air conditioning units, Ivany said.

"We're really hoping that it's going to be back in a couple of months after the planned April 1st timeline," he said.

Some of the parts to be replaced are original to 1963 and are no longer manufactured. Others are more recent and failed unexpectedly.

"It's not the best news," saidAlain Vzina, the Maritimes region science director at DFO.

"We're working very hard with a whole department approach to find solutions to ensure we deliver the high-priority programs in the coming spring and maybe a little bit later in the year as well, because the return date is a bit uncertain at this stage."

The delay over lead paintforced the cancellation of the fall Atlantic zone monitoring missionfor the first time everbecause the department could not find a vessel capable of handling the rough weather.

Hudson is Canada's Atlantic Ocean science workhorse.

For decades,the ship has carried out a wide variety of monitoring missions throughout the year from the Scotian Shelf to the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and north to the Labrador Sea.

The mission includes continuous climate science to measure and prepare for the impact of climate change, helping to manage commercial fish stocks and meeting Canada's international commitments to monitor the North Atlantic.

"We need to recover that instrumentation, download the data, put them back in again. We also do work from vessels in deep water to understand how the deep waters are influenced by climate," saidVzina.

Canada is obliged to collect data from instruments in the water belonging to partner countriesin the United States or European Union.

"So we have to find a platform and go in to recover that instrumentation, so we're committed to doing that. That's an absolute priority," he said.

Hudsonis hardly the only aging vessel in the coast guard fleet, according to information DFO presented to industry earlier this year.

DFO said 16 of 21 coast guard vessels used for science as of 2019 are older than their 25-year "operational lifespan."

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More problems surface in troubled refit of coast guard vessel - CBC.ca

Cool Idea Award: Healthcare Grant From Protolabs Spurs A Pair Of Creative Feeding Tube Inventions – Med Device Online

MedStar Health device improves NICU feeding while Cleveland Clinic Innovations' feeding tube enhances quality of life for patients

Digital manufacturing leader Protolabs has announced MedStar Health and Cleveland Clinic Innovations as joint winners of the Cool Idea Award: Healthcare Grant. These grants provide in-kind manufacturing services to support development of medical products, spurring innovation in the field.

Protolabs is proud to champion innovation in the medical field, said Vicki Holt, President & CEO of Protolabs. These healthcare grants and the manufacturing services that come with them help important health-focused projects improve hundreds of thousands of lives each year.

MedStar Health Concept Improves Feeding Process for both Newborns and NursesMedStar Healths gravity feed syringe holder simplifies the feeding of newborns who spend their early days in special, temperature-controlled incubators while being cared for in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Currently, depending on the number of newborns and how often they feed, a nurse can spend hours each day holding a syringe above an incubator while milk or liquid formula drains into the baby via a stomach tube.

Use of this invention alleviates the need for a nurse to hold the syringe above the baby during the feed and frees the nurse to other duties while still attending to the baby during feeding. The compact device can hold four different sizes of syringes and was designed to be suspended from the top of the incubator or attached to an IV pole expanding its use outside the NICU.

This invention illustrates the premise that simple, well-designed solutions can have a substantial impact on patient care.

Protolabs assistance will help us move our gravity feed syringe holder from concept to a working part of our neonatal practice, said its inventor Tiffany Morris, RN, BSN, who works in the NICU at MedStar Franklin Square Medical Center. Our team hopes this small device can be a major step forward for NICU nursing and potentially for patient care in other settings.

The Protolabs grant was used to improve the devices design. The iterative 3D-printing process helped identify several improvements to the prototype, including: smoothing the corners, adding sturdier syringe clips, and incorporating gaskets to keep infants safe while protecting the incubator. Clamps securely fasten the gravity feeder device to an IV pole.

We are proud that this award recognizes the innovative ideas our MedStar Health associates have to treat people and advance health, said Stephen Kinsey, director of MedStar Inventor Services. The award also demonstrates the power of our partnerships with Cleveland Clinic Innovations and Protolabs, as we work together to transform ideas into clinical practice.

Innovative Feeding Tube Device Could Change Half a Million LivesLife for people with enteral (feeding) tubes can be difficult. Inventor Andy Williams knows this well. He has struggled with an enteral tube for years. I was in the hospital in the emergency room on average once a week, sometimes two times a week, for infections caused from leakage around my feeding tube, said Williams. I was hospitalized once a month for infectionssometimes for up to a week-long period. Then, Id have to take antibiotics at home for three to four weeks.

Williams teamed up with Dr. Eric Blumrosen of Cleveland Clinic in an effort to improve outcomes for these patients. In current practice, a feeding tube is surgically placed directly into the digestive tract, but that interface is prone to significant leakage. The highly acidic fluids can irritate and injure patients such as Williams, requiring emergency room visits and sometimes hospital stays. Leakage can make social lives very difficult, preventing patients from living a normal life.

The device protects the stoma by forming a wide seal around an enclosed hole into which the tube is inserted. This eliminates issues with friction where the tube rubs against the skin. Also, it provides a more focused opening that enhances the seal surrounding the tube, and allows limited motion of the tube. In the end, the device will be more comfortable, reduce irritation, and significantly improve long-term quality-of-life.

The leak stopper will let bedridden patients lead a more active life, said Williams. Right now, for most people who experience leaks, its the number one thing on their mind all day. This invention will let them push it to the back of their minds and go on with normal activities.

Protolabs in-kind manufacturing grant gave Cleveland Clinic Innovations access to manufacturing engineers who helped improve the devices design for commercial use. It also helped fund prototype injection molded parts.

About the Cool Idea Award: Healthcare GrantThe Cool Idea Award: Healthcare Grant is an extension of Protolabs flagship Cool Idea Award program. This extension is open to members of the Cleveland Clinic Healthcare Innovations Alliance, a network of healthcare institutions and corporations focused on innovation. Selected winners are awarded in-kind manufacturing services from Protolabs to support product development, such as building prototypes or supporting initial production runs, with a target for eventual commercialization of products.

About ProtolabsProtolabs is a leading digital manufacturing source for rapid prototyping and on-demand production. The company produces custom parts and assemblies in as fast as one day with automated 3D printing, CNC machining, sheet metal fabrication, and injection molding processes. Its digital approach to manufacturing enables accelerated time to market, reduces development and production costs, and minimizes risk throughout the product life cycle. For more information, visit protolabs.com.

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Cool Idea Award: Healthcare Grant From Protolabs Spurs A Pair Of Creative Feeding Tube Inventions - Med Device Online

Navy Beginning Tech Study to Extend Trident Nuclear Missile Into the 2080s – USNI News

An unarmed Trident II D5 missile launches from the Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine USS Rhode Island (SSBN-740) off the coast of Cape Canaveral, Fla. on May 9, 2019. US Navy Photo

ARLINGTON, Va. The Navys Strategic Systems Program this fiscal year will begin looking at what new technologies it will need to develop to sustain and modernize its nuclear weapons so they can operate on the Columbia-class ballistic missile submarines through the 2080s.

After the Trident D5 missiles underwent an original life extension effort (D5 LE), the office determined they would undergo a D5 LE2 effort that would insert new technologies where possible, find new ways to replace old parts that can no longer be manufactured, and otherwise keep the missiles reliable as a strategic deterrent for more than six more decades.

We are starting this year for the first time in our budget we have a line in [Fiscal Year 2020], and the real crux to that is looking at all of those new technologies that we need to go think about on how were going to take what we have today, how were going to modernize it and how were going to get it to last the entire life of the Columbia, which is we all know about 2084, SSP Director Vice Adm. Johnny Wolfe said last week at the Naval Submarine Leagues annual symposium.

Wolfe said the original life extension effort has gone well, with five flight tests in the last year showing the missiles can still fly the tracks theyre supposed to. In fact, three motors involved in a test that were about three decades old performed like new during the test, he said.

However, this first life extension effort wont get the missiles through the end of the Columbia SSBNs life.

For example, Wolfe said, the Navy decided about six years ago to end production on the post-boost control system, and unique materials are used in that system. With industry knowledge now lost, the Navy needs to develop a new post boost control system with new materials, based on what industry can provide today.

The way we did it then were not going to be able to exactly do it in the future, he said, and SSP needs to build in a learning ramp for industry as they reconstitute this capability.

With this second life extension effort, the plan is, if you look at some of the critical technologies weve got today, and Ill just talk about rocket motors: I would tell you, were the only people right now that use a 1.1 propellant and we have to do that because of volume constraints that weve got. Theres no need to change that, and as we talk about how were going to do this, we are going to continue on producing those rocket motors because, quite frankly, if you look from a reliability perspective, that is the biggest contributor and I would tell you theres nothing better than what weve got in the submarine force today with those motors. So were not going to change that. Were going to continue with that, the vice admiral said.What we are going to start to do is start to look at what are those technologies and I talked about post-boost control, things like nose bearings things we know we wont be able to produce anymore.

The government is currently operating under a continuing resolution that does not allow new programs to start. The current CR expires next week and it remains to be seen what funding mechanism Congress will be able to pass, and therefore how it will affect SSPs ability to get started on this early work on the Trident D5 LE2.

Additionally, Wolfe said SSP has been involved in modernizing the legacy Ohio-class SSBNs and using those modernization and upgrade efforts as risk-reduction measures for the Columbia class.

For example, the Ohio class used an Electrostatically-Supported Gyro Navigator (ESGN) as the inertial navigator for the Trident D5 missile. Wolfe said that, in his modernization portfolio, the biggest program right now is making sure we get the next strategic navigator on the Ohio, which is a risk-mitigator for Columbia because, as we make this change from ESGNs to fiber optics, theres a lot of learning weve got there.

He added that several modernization efforts on shipboard systems such as the fire control system are taking place, and that their installation on the Ohio SSBNs will ease the fleets transition to Columbia as sailors on the new subs will already know how to operate and maintain these systems.

Its not just modernizing the triad; its making sure that we can sustain what we have today until we get to all those modernization programs, he said of the importance of these Ohio upgrade efforts.

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Navy Beginning Tech Study to Extend Trident Nuclear Missile Into the 2080s - USNI News

Future analysis and scope of Soy Isoflavones Market by 2019 to 2025 | leading Companies- NOW Foods, InVite Health, ADM, DHC, GNC and Life Extension -…

A new report entitled Global Soy Isoflavones Markets was recently added to the CMFE Insights database. It has allowed marketers to understand the key attributes that can help investors capitalize effectively on market dynamics, providing a market definition, product description, competitor analysis, and more.

The bulk of the report also includes the market definition, the commercial division, the examples and the difficulties that affect the market, as well as the investigation of the fundamental factors that govern the market. The survey also shows global segmentation by aggregating production, capacity, contact data, costs and revenues of key players. The industry review was conducted using Porters five forces and SWOT analysis. The report consists of a qualitative and quantitative analysis of current trends, product characteristics, end-product applications, end-users and other industry sectors.

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Product Type Coverage (Market Size & Forecast, Major Company of Product Type etc.):

Demand Coverage (Market Size & Forecast, Consumer Distribution):

Company Coverage (Sales data, Main Products & Services etc.):

Major Region Market

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Table of Content:

Global Soy Isoflavones Market Research Report 2019

Chapter 1 Soy Isoflavones Market Overview

Chapter 2 Global Economic Impact on Industry

Chapter 3 Global Market Competition by Manufacturers

Chapter 4 Global Production, Revenue (Value) by Region

Chapter 5 Global Supply (Production), Consumption, Export, Import by Regions

Chapter 6 Global Production, Revenue (Value), Price Trend by Type

Chapter 7 Global Market Analysis by Application

Chapter 8 Manufacturing Cost Analysis

Chapter 9 Industrial Chain, Sourcing Strategy and Downstream Buyers

Chapter 10 Marketing Strategy Analysis, Distributors/Traders

Chapter 11 to be continue.

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Future analysis and scope of Soy Isoflavones Market by 2019 to 2025 | leading Companies- NOW Foods, InVite Health, ADM, DHC, GNC and Life Extension -...

Soup-To-Nuts Podcast: What might the 2020 dietary guidelines for the first 1,000 days include? – FoodNavigator-USA.com

Until now, the Dietary Guidelines for Americans has provided dietary advice for people 2 years and older, prompting caregivers and healthcare practitioners to turn to a disparate set of resources to figure out the best diet for pregnant women, infants and young children. These include famous books, such as What to Expect When Youre Expecting, and guidelines from various organizations, such as the American Heart Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics.

And while these are influential and well-researched recommendations, by bringing this group under the purview of the broader Dietary Guidelines for Americans, the US government will for the first time take ownership of them a move that will provide a consistency that so far has been lacking.

The move also is a double-edged sword for the CPG industry. Some hope that including this group in the broader Dietary Guidelines for Americans will protect them undue corporate influence, while others see potential opportunities for innovative manufacturers creating solutions to help Americans meet the recommendations.

While we wont know for sure what the guidelines will include until the recommendations are released and vetted, this episode of FoodNavigator-USAs Soup-To-Nuts podcast explores some of the themes, suggestions and questions that dietitians and industry players would like to see addressed and how these issues might impact CPG manufacturers.

[Editors Note: Never miss another episode of FoodNavigator-USAs Soup-To-Nuts Podcast subscribe to us on iTunes.]

Even though the Dietary Guidelines for Americans are designed with health care professionals in mind and, therefore, are not very consumer-friendly, Amy Kimerlain, a registered dietitian who specializes in childrens nutrition and a spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, explained at the Food & Nutrition Conference & Expo in Philadelphia last month that the inclusion of recommendations for the first 1,000 days of life is a critical first step to improving the lives of women and children in the US.

The dietary guidelines allow for general recommendations for healthy Americans across the population, and so now with the introduction of looking at the first 1,000 days, were obviously going to pay closer attention to now not only infants and toddlers, but also prenatally as well, Kimerlain said. She added, these guidelines ultimately will allow for people to look and reflect to see what changes they may need to make in order to improve their health over the long run.

With that in mind, Kimerlain said she hopes the recommendations look not only at the nutrients that are critical to a childs development, but also on what and how much pregnant women need to consume to keep themselves healthy. This includes advice around how many extra calories do women actually need when eating for two, guidance on how much weight they should expect to gain and remain healthy and how diet can help manage potential complications.

Drilling deeper into what the guidelines might include for expecting women, Kristi King who is also a spokeswoman for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics and the senior pediatric dietitian at Texas Childrens Hospital in Houston, says she hopes the guidelines will include specific recommendations about choline intake.

She explained that choline is a underrated nutrient, that were just now starting to figure out that within that first 1,000 days is so incredibly important for infants and brain development.

She added that this could be an opportunity for supplement manufacturers as well as select food marketers.

An early mover on this from the supplement side is Life Extension, which is a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., based company that launched at FNCE its Prenatal Advantage multivitamin. Like most other prenatal supplements, Life Extensions Prenatal Advantage includes folic acid and DHA, which have long been recognized as essential for developing infants. But it also is one of the few prenatal supplements that includes choline.

On the food side, one of the best sources of choline are eggs, one of which provides 25% of the recommended daily value.

Mickey Rubin, the executive director of the American Egg Boards Egg Nutrition Center explained the importance of the eggs in providing choline as well as more generally supporting maternal and infant health.

Despite the importance of choline to developing infants, he noted only about 25% of expecting mothers are familiar with it, compared to 90% who know about folic acid. In addition, little more than half of health professionals currently are aware of choline.

Beyond choline, Rubin says the high amount of lutein in eggs also can help support developing infants cognitive development by increasing their macular pigment which has been linked to cognition.

Fiber is another necessary nutrient for expecting mothers, infants and young children that King says she wants the upcoming dietary guidelines to highlight. Not only does she say she wants to see stronger recommendations around how much should be consumed, but also guidance clarifying how best to get it including, of course, fresh fruits and vegetables, but also canned and frozen produce as well.

Related to fiber and gut health, King says she would also like to see in the recommendations advice around probiotics, including if they are appropriate for children and expecting women and if so which ones and how much.

Scientifically-based guidance in the dietary guideline recommendations around breastfeeding versus the use of formula also likely will have a significant impact on the CPG industry, predicts King.

Like many dietitians, King advocates that breastfeeding is best, but also acknowledges it is not always an option. In those cases, she says, she would like to see the dietary guidelines recommend the use of FDA approved formula, which is held to a higher safety and nutrition standard than many others from around of the world.

In addition to addressing infant formula, King predicts, the recommendations will tackle toddler milks, for which there is not the same nutritional standard as infant formula but about which much confusion and controversy swirl.

Beverages more broadly also will likely be a hot button topic in the recommendations, with experts predicting the dietary guidelines will call for significantly reduced consumption of sugary drinks, potentially including juice. It likely also will expand or include recent guidelines to restrict drinks for children under five to breast milk, water and dairy milk with only occasional consumption of 100% fruit juice if whole fruit is not an option.

These likely are only a small sample of the issues that will be addressed in the guidance. While the upcoming guidance likely wont make everyone happy or be perfect, as Kimerlain notes, it is a first step.

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Soup-To-Nuts Podcast: What might the 2020 dietary guidelines for the first 1,000 days include? - FoodNavigator-USA.com

Jobs, cancer-fighting isotopes and nuclear innovation highlight Bruce Power update – Shoreline Beacon

In an update to Saugeen Shores councillors Nov. 11, Christopher Mercanti, Bruce Power's Manager of Community and Indigenous Relations, said when the Major Component Replacement program begins in January there will be an immediate need for 500-plus additional workers.

When Bruce Power begins the $13 billion private investment Major Component Replacement (MCR) program in January, a good 500- plus people will be needed immediately according to Christopher Mercanti, Bruce Powers Manager of Community and Indigenous Relations in a Nov. 11 update to Saugeen Shores councillors.

Bruce Power said the MCR, a $13 billion private investment in the Life Extension program, will create and sustain 22,000 direct and indirect jobs annually, and inject $4 billion into the Ontario economy.

Saugeen Shores Coun. Jami Smith, a Bruce Power Corporate Services employee, said they are looking forward to welcoming the new workers, and asked when the peak demand for labour may be..

Mercanti, counting down 66 days to the MCR, said in January there will be several hundred more workers on site doing prep work, but the real influx doesnt really start until next spring into next summer 2020 he said, adding there would be at least 500 more people on site immediately when they start in January.

Mercanti said continued improvements in operational performance included a record-setting 361 of continuous operation for Unit 1, additional megawatt production, and a historic agreement with Saugeen Ojibway Nation (SON) to collaborate to market medical isotopes.

This medical isotope is used in the treatment of prostrate cancer, and were looking at other isotopes that can be exposed to our neutron fields, and get to market and help treat others cancers such, as breast cancer Mercanti said.

Mercanti said community engagement efforts included awarding 100 Grey-Bruce-Huron students each with $500 scholarships; scholarships to 12 local Indigenous students in partnership with Indspire; the record-setting 6,200 visitors who took the Bruce Power bus tour this past summer; and continued support to Saugeen Memorial Hospital which included $50,000 annually in the past four years; and the Gran Fondo

Saugeen Shores Deputy Mayor Don Matheson thanked Bruce Power for all it does.

The world is an oyster and it is going to open up to us in January with the MCR, so I look forward to all the great wonderful things that will come out of that. he said.

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Jobs, cancer-fighting isotopes and nuclear innovation highlight Bruce Power update - Shoreline Beacon