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Daily Archives: July 2, 2017
Organizer Of Failed Bahamas Musical Festival Arrested, Charged With Fraud – NPR
Posted: July 2, 2017 at 9:39 am
The man who was the main organizer of the failed Fyre Festival in the Bahamas earlier this year has been arrested by authorities and charged with wire fraud for allegedly bilking investors in his company, Fyre Media, which promoted the event.
Billy McFarland was arrested by federal agents at his Manhattan home on Friday.
The New York Times writes:
"A criminal complaint unsealed on Friday detailed the case, which relies heavily on misrepresentations of financial information to people who invested in Fyre Media whose main business was a website that let people book celebrities for special events and a subsidiary, Fyre Festival LLC.
"According to the complaint, sworn to by Brandon Racz, a special agent with the F.B.I., at least two people invested about $1.2 million in the two companies, and in communications with these investors in 2016 and 2017, Mr. McFarland repeatedly overstated Fyre Media's revenue from bookings and his own wealth."
In a statement released by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York, Acting Manhattan U.S. Attorney Joon Kim said: "As alleged, William McFarland promised a 'life changing' music festival but in actuality delivered a disaster. McFarland allegedly presented fake documents to induce investors to put over a million dollars into his company and the fiasco called the Fyre Festival. Thanks to the investigative efforts of the FBI, McFarland will now have to answer for his crimes."
NPR's Laurel Wamsley wrote in April: "In a promo video posted in January full of frolicking models, the Fyre Festival promised (in seemingly random order) 'the best in food, art, music and adventure / once owned by Pablo Escobar / on the boundaries of the impossible / Fyre is an experience and festival / A quest / to push beyond those boundaries.'"
Soon after, the festival co-organizers, McFarland and rapper Ja Rule, were hit with a $100 million suit filed by a disgruntled festival-goer.
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Organizer Of Failed Bahamas Musical Festival Arrested, Charged With Fraud - NPR
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Promoter in failed Bahamas Fyre Festival arrested in NYC – WJAC Johnstown
Posted: at 9:39 am
NEW YORK (AP)
The promoter behind a failed music festival that was in the Bahamas was arrested Friday in New York on a wire fraud charge.
Billy McFarland was charged with scheming to defraud investors in his company, Fyre Media, and Fyre Festival that was supposed to take place on the island of Exuma over two weekends in April and May.
The Fyre Festival was billed as an ultra-luxurious event with headliners including rockers Blink-182 and the hip-hop act Migos. But performers bowed out and organizers were forced to cancel the show.
Acting U.S. Attorney Joon Kim said McFarland presented fake documents to induce investors to put more than $1 million into his company and the failed festival.
Kim said McFarland "promised a 'life changing' music festival but in actuality delivered a disaster."
An attorney who has represented McFarland did not immediately respond to an email requesting comment.
McFarland and his partner, the rapper Ja Rule, already face more than a dozen lawsuits filed by ticket buyers and investors in the festival.
A lawsuit filed in May in Los Angeles said the festival was "nothing more than a get-rich-quick scam" akin to a Ponzi scheme.
Ja Rule, whose real name is Jeffrey Atkins, has not been arrested.
McFarland, 25, is expected to appear before a federal magistrate judge on Saturday.
He faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison if convicted.
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Promoter in failed Bahamas Fyre Festival arrested in NYC - WJAC Johnstown
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Baby Tash rides Loodi rhythm to Bahamas – Jamaica Star Online
Posted: at 9:39 am
Dancehall artiste Baby Tash, is gearing up to make her debut performance in Abaco Islands, Bahamas, where she is booked for a live concert today.
The artiste who has been working with several top Jamaican producers, told THE STAR that her fans can expect her usual energetic performance.
"I'm always excited to touch the stage in a new region. This will not be my first time performing in Bahamas but it's my first time in Abaco. I will definitely be bringing what I am known and loved for, my crazy energy, style, and sexiness. Abaco can expect a wild, fun-filled night with me" she said.
The Big Man Me Want singer also revealed that the successful Loodi rhythm compilation produced by So Unique Records has exposed her brand to new markets.
Baby Tash released a song on the rhythm titled 'Party Time'.
The entire rhythm has been creating an impact and I am riding high on its success. 'Party Time' was released unexpectedly, since I had recorded it a while back. However it is always a feeling of gratitude when as an artiste your music is working for you. The fans dem say party time suh promoters a say Baby Tash and I'm about to bring the heat like Miami," she said.
The entertainer is also working with Kirkledove Records and Hitmaker Muzik Production. She has so far released songs like Love You Mama and 'Gimi' for the respective labels.
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Baby Tash rides Loodi rhythm to Bahamas - Jamaica Star Online
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Keppel Offshore & Marine set to deliver world’s first converted … – The Straits Times
Posted: at 9:38 am
SINGAPORE - A wholly-owned unit of Keppel Offshore & Marine (Keppel O&M) will soon deliver the world's first converted floating liquefaction vessel (FLNGV).
The vessel, named Hilli Episeyo at a ceremony in Keppel Shipyard on Sunday, is owned by Golar Hilli Corporation (Golar), a subsidiary of Golar LNG.
The vessel is undergoing commissioning and testing, and is expected to be delivered in August. Upon completion, it will be put in operation in offshore Kribi, Cameroon, for Socit Nationale des Hydrocarbures and Perenco Cameroon, and will be the first FLNGV project in Africa.
"By combining our expertise from a variety of complex offshore conversion projects and our capabilities in executing LNG-related engineering, procurement, construction projects, we are able to offer innovative and reliable floating liquefaction solutions to meet the growing midstream needs of the LNG industry," said Keppel O&M chief executive Chris Ong.
"Compared to newbuilds, converted FLNGVs are significantly more cost-effective and faster to market, without compromising safety and processing capabilities.
"With the experience gained from this first FLNGV conversion project, we are in a unique position to provide customers with reliable end-to-end solutions for the EPC and commissioning of FLNGV as well as floating storage and regasification unit (FRSU) conversions," he said.
Hilli Episeyo was converted from a 1975 built Moss LNG carrier with a storage capacity of 125,000 cubic metres. It is designed for a liquefaction capacity of about 2.4 million tonnes of LNG a year.
Mr Oscar Spieler, chief executive of Golar LNG, noted the Hilli Episeyo is a game changer in the LNG industry with its "fast track, low cost project execution".
"The development of this FLNGV positions us as forerunners in providing offshore liquefaction solutions to meet the growing demand for liquefied natural gas. We are uniquely positioned to take on projects also in a low commodity price environment and determined to enable unlocking of reserves from remote, marginal and stranded gas fields," Mr Spieler said.
With the global push towards cleaner energy, demand for natural gas is expected to increase significantly, said Keppel.
FLNGV solutions enable operators to overcome the geographic, technical and economic limitations of developing natural gas resources located in marginal fields while FSRUs help reach consumers in remote areas.
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Keppel Offshore & Marine set to deliver world's first converted ... - The Straits Times
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The First Offshore Shellfish Ranch Opens in the US, on the LA County Coastline – L.A. Weekly
Posted: at 9:38 am
Saturday, July 1, 2017 at 8:26 a.m.
As we become more conscientious about the proteins we eat, how they were raised and where they come from, the question of sustainable seafood has come more into focus. Which species and whether wild caught or farmed are regular considerations in mindful seafood consumption.
When it comes to farming finfish, for instance, the feed conversion ratio the poundage of feed per pound of weight gain in the fish is a commonly used indicator of sustainability. Though FCRs vary across the different finfish species, averages range between 1:1 and 3:1. All finfish, with the exception of bluefin tuna (15:1), tend to fare better, in terms of efficiency, than their land animal counterparts, especially cattle.
Even more efficient than finfish are shellfish, which act as natural filters for our lakes, rivers and oceans. Since shellfish feed on phytoplankton, the question of feed is taken out of the equation, making them some of the most sustainable and perhaps delicious seafoods around.
Addressing this demand for not only shellfish, but locally sourced shellfish, is a particular operation stationed in the waters off Long Beach and first permitted (the first of its kind domestically) for construction in 2012. Catalina Sea Ranch is the first offshore shellfish ranch in U.S. federal waters and is a 100-acre aquaculture farm, currently equipped to grow Mediterranean mussels. The ranchs first harvest is scheduled for mid-July and is only available wholesale, which means youll have to find them on menus at restaurants in the Los Angeles and Long Beach areas.
The mussels are grown on suspended ropes, away from predators (typically starfish and snails) and in open, upwelling waters atop the San Pedro shell, which plateaus at 150 feet. This means that the mussels grow plump (2.5-3 inches) from standing up to strong currents created by nearby oil rigs. They feed on microorganisms suspended in clean, turbulent water while avoiding the sludge and bacteria typically brought up from the bottom dredges of the ocean. From feed to market, these mussels achieve full size in 10 months as opposed to the typical 12-14 months.
A solar-powered NOMAD buoy constantly monitors the ranchs wave and current measurement, nearby marine mammals, water quality, weather and more, facilitating research in shellfish farming and environmental studies. Scientists have access to this information through a cloud server so they can analyze the findings.
At 100 acres, the sea ranch has a capacity of a total 2.5 million pounds of mussels with the ability to supply restaurants with over 200,000 pounds of fresh mussels every month. In August, theyre expanding to a full 1,000 acres. Do the math and youll count a lot of California-grown mussels, which positions the ranch as a major player in locally sourced seafood. The ranch also has plans to harvest scallops, oysters and kelp in the future. Since the U.S. imports 80% of the seafood we consume, this is a small but needed step in the right direction for not only conscientiously sourced meals, but the California economy.
The sea ranch is currently providing tours to distributors, chefs and educational groups to view the offshore operation and consider sourcing from Catalina Sea Ranch. Given that were starved for locally sourced, quality seafood, we have a lot to look forward to in the shellfish being harvested at the ranch.
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The First Offshore Shellfish Ranch Opens in the US, on the LA County Coastline - L.A. Weekly
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Interior starts process to expand offshore drilling plan – Washington Examiner
Posted: at 9:38 am
The Interior Department announced Thursday that it is beginning the first step in redoing the Obama administration's five-year offshore energy leasing plan to open up more of the nation's coastline to oil and natural gas drilling as part of President Trump's America First energy plan.
"The new program is going to replace the current 2017-2022 five-year program," said Vincent DeVito, counselor to Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke on a call with reporters, explaining that the Obama administration left out many areas for development and in many cases excluded energy development.
The five-year program is required by law and outlines the areas where oil and natural gas companies can buy leases that allow them to drill. The Obama administration excluded the Atlantic and Arctic from the drilling program after it said it would consider opening those areas.
The Trump administration has said it will seek to open up those areas in line with what states and coastal communities see as beneficial.
"Many of the offshore programs with significant oil and gas resources were left out of the Obama administration's program, and we are going to be examining all of the outer-continental shelf planning areas with a fresh set of eyes to see where we can expand access to oil and gas development," DeVito said.
The Interior Department's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management will be publishing a Request for Information in Monday's Federal Register to begin the process of redoing the five-year plan. The request "seeks public comment and suggestions on what the expanded program should include and how it should operate," DeVito said.
The announcement came as Trump was addressing a Energy Department conference as part of the administration's Energy Week, where the Interior Department said he will announce the restart of the offshore energy leasing program's review process.
The current Obama five-year plan will remain in place as Interior begins the "initial step" in reassessing the five-year energy plan.
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Interior starts process to expand offshore drilling plan - Washington Examiner
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Arbitration panel grants Slovenia access to high seas – Fox News
Posted: at 9:38 am
THE HAGUE, Netherlands An international arbitration panel on Thursday granted Slovenia unhindered access to the high seas for the first time since the breakup of the former Yugoslavia as part of a ruling aimed at settling a long-running territorial dispute between Slovenia and Balkan neighbor Croatia.
It remains to be seen if the ruling can be enforced. Croatia walked out of the arbitration in 2015 and does not recognize the panel's findings.
"We do not consider ourselves obliged by this ruling," Croatian TV quoted Prime Minister Andrej Plenkovic as saying. "And we do not intend to implement its content."
The five-judge tribunal granted Slovenia much of the Bay of Piran, off the Adriatic coasts of the two countries, and gave Slovenia a 2.5-nautical-mile wide, 10-nautical-mile long "junction" or corridor linking its territorial waters and international waters.
The panel's president, Judge Gilbert Guillaume, said the junction allows "uninterrupted and uninterruptable" access for ships and aircraft of all nationalities between international waters and Slovenia's territorial waters.
Slovenia's Prime Minister Miro Cerar described the ruling as "historic" and called for its implementation, but he said it did not meet all of the country's expectations.
"The ruling will be respected." Cerar said. "The ruling is final and obligatory for both states, Slovenia and Croatia."
The panel also established Slovenia and Croatia's land border, but very little of that remained in dispute.
Arbitration was supposed to ease tensions between the Balkan neighbors but instead underscored sensitivities between states that emerged from the breakup of the former Yugoslavia in the early 1990s.
The two countries agreed to arbitration in 2009 in a deal that also led to Slovenia dropping its opposition to Croatia's European Union membership.
Croatia turned its back on the arbitration following revelations that the Slovenian judge on the panel had violated its rules. The court ruled last year that the violations did not entitle Croatia to terminate arbitration or affect the panel's power "to render a final award independently and impartially."
The arbitration panel left open the door to more talks, saying that "the rights and obligations of Croatia and Slovenia established by this award shall subsist until they are modified by agreement between those two states."
____
Associated Press writers Jovana Gec in Belgrade and Ali Zerdin in Ljubljana, Slovenia, contributed.
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Australia’s hidden micronations: It’s not the size of the country but how you rule it – 9news.com.au
Posted: at 9:37 am
Prince Paul created his principality after a stoush with Mosman council in 2004. (principalityofwy.com)
The self-proclaimed leader of a micronation on Sydney's North Shore says he has a plan to ease hostility between the US and North Korea.
Prince Paul Delprat of the Principality of Wy told nine.com.au the tiny kingdom could act as negotiator between Trump and Kim Jong un through the power of art.
"If only humour could govern international relationships and if only art prizes could be the way that people solved their problems. If only Mr Trump and Mr Putin and the leader in North Korea all painted," Prince Paul said.
"And every year the Principality of Wy could hold an exhibition of all the country's leaders and they would all abide by the decision, there would be no more wars."
There was a healthy amount of jest in the "royal's" comments, reflecting his light-hearted outlook on life and the way he governs.
His tiny kingdom unofficially seceded from Mosman in 2004 after a bitter stoush with local council over a driveway.
"When we did create our little principality out of a true sense of injustice, people were prepared to say 'hey, listen to them and give them a go'. We had support from the most extraordinary corners and it's ongoing," he said.
Prince Paul's micronation is one of many that exist in Australia. Micronations claim independence, but are not officially recognised by the state.
The self-appointed royal leads with his wife, Princess Susan, and their children.
He believes it is not the size of the kingdom that counts, but how you rule it.
"There is an old saying, 'an Englishman's house is his castle'. Well, I just took it that extra step," he said.
"Deep in the psyche of Australians is a little bit of Ned Kelly. We all look at Ned in his armour and his defiance of authority and let's face it, there's a little bit of him in all of us."
When the Prince attends events and ceremonies he often wears his formal regalia of a crown, robe and sceptre.
"We do dress up when we go out on occasion and people like us coming in formal regalia to various functions," he said.
"They see it adding a little bit of colour to the occasion and we are very happy to oblige with that."
Prince Paul says despite the number of micronations scattered across the country, he has little contact with his fellow pioneers.
There were thought to be 12 micronations in Australia at the peak of the movement, but over the years those numbers have dwindled.
One of Australia's other notable micronations is the Empire of Atlantium.
It started as a bit of fun between three Sydney cousins as a way to break away from society in 1981.
His Imperial Majesty George II (George Francis Cruickshank) told nine.com.au he may have taken his parent's advice to "change the world" further than anticipated.
"My parents raised me with the idea that in Australia, with the right amount of luck and right amount of application anyone could really achieve anything," he said.
"I think what they meant was that they wanted me to go off and join a political party to change the world, but what I did was paint a black and white border line in the backyard and create Atlantium."
For many years Atlantium was simply an affectation shared amongst family members and a few of George's university friends until the launch of the internet.
"People suddenly discovered us. We were suddenly everywhere from Peru to Azerbaijan and we discovered that there were all these people who thought Atlantium was a great idea and wanted to be a part of it," he said.
"Our population exploded from about 10 to well over 1000 in the space of a few months."
In 2006 Emperor George acquired part ownership of a property 300km south-west of Sydney and he dubbed it the Province of Aurora.
"We now have a territory that is about twice the size of the Vatican and about half the size of Monaco, so one of the world's smaller countries. We have a government house, a post office and a number of monuments."
Emperor George has used his status as leader of a growing empire - which now has more than 3000 citizens - to push for social change including marriage equality, assisted suicide, abortion rights and unrestricted international movements.
The tiny nation has its own anthem, the Auroran Hymn and its own currency with coins and banknotes.
Emperor George said his neighbours seem to enjoy living next door to the town's "local eccentric".
"My neighbours are perhaps bemused and slightly confused by the fact I'm running my own country across the road from their properties and that I have Australia's only pyramid monument in my backyard," he said.
The emperor dispelled a common misconception that micronations were somehow except from paying taxes based on arcane interpretations of the Magna Carta and ancient laws.
"There is no way that one country can secede legally from the Commonwealth of Australia. The way most micronations disguise this is by declaring their tax payments as 'tribute payments,'" he said.
"Australian maintains sovereignty. We dont believe we are independent of Australia, we say that our territory is sort of like the status or an embassy."
Nine Digital Pty Ltd 2017
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Australia's hidden micronations: It's not the size of the country but how you rule it - 9news.com.au
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Founder of disastrous Fyre Festival arrested, charged with fraud – The Denver Post
Posted: at 9:37 am
One of the organizers of the disastrous Fyre Festival has been arrested and charged with wire fraud, according to the U.S. Attorneys Office for the Southern District of New York.
Billy McFarland was arrested Friday in New York and accused of making false representations to investors in his company, Fyre Media LLC, and in a luxury music festival that had been set to take place in the Bahamas over two weekends in April and May.
Acting Manhattan U.S. Attorney Joon Kim said in a statement Friday that McFarland allegedly presented fake documents to induce investors to put over a million dollars into his company.
William McFarland promised a life changing music festival but in actuality delivered a disaster, Kim said. Thanks to the investigative efforts of the FBI, McFarland will now have to answer for his crimes.
McFarland, 25, appeared Saturday before a judge and was released from jail on a $300,000 bond, according to Variety.
McFarland had promoted the Fyre Festival as MORE THAN JUST A MUSIC FESTIVAL, promising not only live music, but luxurious accommodations, gourmet meals and mingling with celebrities on a private island in the Bahamas. In exchange, festivalgoers paid anywhere from $450 to $250,000 to attend.
Expectations were high.
Instead, the festival collapsed in spectacular, public fashion. When attendees arrived in the Exumas, a group of islands belonging to the Bahamas, they discovered that the luxury accommodations were actually disaster-relief tents on the beach, some still not set up. Cheese sandwiches made up the gourmet meals, and festival organizers seemed to be equally in the dark, sometimes literally, about what was supposed to happen. Blink-182, one of the festivals headliners, had pulled out at the last minute.
On social media, the collapse of the elite festival was unfurled live for all to see under #fyrefestival, #dumpsterfyre and other unprintable hashtags.
In April, McFarland and his Fyre Festival co-founder, the rapper Ja Rule, had defended their intentions amid accusations that they had set out to defraud people.
We were a little naive in thinking for the first time we could do this ourselves, McFarland told Rolling Stone then. Next year, we will definitely start earlier. The reality is, we werent experienced enough to keep up.
But the U.S. Attorneys Offices complaint against McFarland alleges that the entrepreneur deliberately orchestrated a scheme to defraud investors, including at least two people who had invested about $1.2 million in Fyre Media.
One way McFarland did so was by artificially inflating his companys revenue and income, telling investors that Fyre Media had earned millions of dollars of revenue from thousands of artist bookings from July 2016 until April 2017, according to the U.S. Attorneys Office.
In reality, during that approximate time period, Fyre Media earned less than $60,000 in revenue from approximately 60 artist bookings, the attorneys office said.
The complaint alleges that, with at least one investor, McFarland backed up his claims to vast sums of money with a doctored brokerage statement that made it appear he owned shares of a stock worth more than $2.5 million.
In reality, the shares he owned in that stock were valued at less than $1,500, the complaint states.
McFarland truly put on a show, misrepresenting the financial status of his businesses in order to rake in lucrative investment deals, William Sweeney, assistant director-in-charge of the FBIs New York field office, said in a statement. In the end, the very public failure of the Fyre Festival signaled that something just wasnt right.
Wire fraud carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.
Representatives for Fyre Media referred questions to an attorney, Stacey Richman, who did not respond to email request for comment Saturday.
The New York Times on Friday described Richman as an attorney for Ja Rule, whose real name is Jeffrey Atkins.
Mr. Atkins is not under arrest and we dont perceive him to be a subject of this investigation, Richman told the newspaper.
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Founder of disastrous Fyre Festival arrested, charged with fraud - The Denver Post
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Lori Peek of the Natural Hazards Center Discusses Effects of Disasters on People – Government Technology
Posted: at 9:36 am
Lori Peek started in January as director of the Natural Hazards Center, Institute of Behavioral Science at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Peek has been at the fore of researching how disasters affect populations, especially children. She co-wrote Children of Katrina, which received the 2016 Best Book Award from the American Sociological Association Section on Children and Youth Distinguished Scholarly Research Award .
We asked Peek about the future of emergency management as it pertains to evolving social issues and about her favorite subject, children.
You just became the director of the Natural Hazards Center; how has that gone so far and what prepared you for this challenge?
Its been a busy few months settling into the position, and really exciting.
There have been five directors in the history of this hazards center. The founding director was the wonderful Gilbert White, the esteemed geographer; followed by Bill Travis and Dennis Mileti, the sociologist; and then Kathleen Tierney. Dennis was actually my adviser and was a student of Gilberts. In some ways, its as if Gilbert was my academic grandfather and Dennis was my academic father; its like coming back home in some ways.
I went to grad school here at the University of Colorado and did my Ph.D. in sociology. I feel really fortunate to have known all four of the previous directors of the center. That, along having had the opportunity to work here as a graduate student, was so instrumental in my understanding of the history, mission and vision of the center. That connection and my enduring respect for all that the center stands for in terms of its mission within the broader hazards and disaster community has really helped facilitate the transition.
What do you see as the biggest challenges for emergency managers in the coming decades?
As a sociologist, a lot of times were thinking about the big social and economic challenges, but we also might see them as opportunities. For example, rising social inequality the increasing number of people who are living insecure lives in this nation of opportunity and affluence. We have more children living in poverty, more people in food-insecure households. As those social and economic challenges increase, the jobs of emergency managers get more difficult because getting someone who doesnt know where their next meal is coming from to focus on putting together their emergency evacuation plan or their hurricane go-kit, for example, those challenges are really amplified.
I also think something that is both a challenge and opportunity is whats happening in this nation with demographic change. As we are becoming not just racially and ethnically diverse, but also religiously more diverse and diverse on a whole range of indicators, thats a challenge for emergency managers. How do you serve what some sociologists say is the most racially and ethnically diverse country in the world?
Its a challenge but also an opportunity when I think about workforce development and bringing new voices and perspectives into emergency management because we know that these diverse people living in the most populous and most vibrant cities in the United States continue to draw immigrants as they did 100 years ago, and those are also the places that are the real disaster hot spots. So how do we get these new generations in Los Angeles and New York City and Miami and San Francisco interested in emergency planning? It is a real challenge, but also a real opportunity.
Can you elaborate on that? How do we reach these diverse populations?
Are you aware of the Bill [William Averette] Anderson Fund that is entirely dedicated to diversifying the emergency management practice and disaster research? He was a sociologist who unfortunately suffered an untimely death, but he was a leading researcher. He had long been this voice in the disaster research community saying we need more women, more people of color, both in research and practice, because those are the communities were studying and serving, but the research and practice arent reflective of those communities. When Bill passed away, his wife started the fund, which is in its third year, where there are Bill Anderson Fund fellows who are masters and doctoral students, and the fund is dedicated to changing the face of emergency management.
We need more programs, scholarships and mentoring space in emergency management and in higher education to really bring into the fold these diverse people and perspectives, but I also think there are other opportunities that open up, like FEMAs Youth Preparedness Council. I look at that and think those teenagers are reflective of the diversity of the United States today. We know youth are more diverse than older cohorts.
I also think emergency managers are out in the community all the time giving lectures, working with community groups trying to get people engaged. If they can be intentional and aware, and think, Im going to X, Y and Z organizations, but what if I went to A, B and C organizations? Im going to extend my reach into new and different communities. So being intentional and talking about it as an opportunity to get new people engaged is really important.
We know that if people do not see themselves reflected in materials, if you go to a website and all you see are people that are of a different race and ethnicity, a different age demographic, different gender, you say, Oh, this isnt for me. But if we can be intentional with our materials and with the ways we are speaking, those things speak volumes.
How do you see emergency managers and their jobs evolving in the coming decades?
Its sort of like how teachers today say, Wow, my job has evolved. I am no longer an educator from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. delivering curriculum through the textbook. Im also caregiver and a social worker. This ties back to what I was saying about rising inequality, rising insecurity within our families. I know this is a sociology-biased answer, but I think that emergency managers can no longer think in that way that you need to get a family reunification plan and your emergency supplies in place. Emergency managers know that when they go in to give those talks, people look at them wide-eyed, saying, I dont know where my next meal is coming from, Im not even in secure housing. I dont know where my family is. Im an immigrant, and weve been separated. The complexity of the job expands, and its going to test emergency management to develop new partnerships.
Emergency managers are going to have to partner with not just the local police department, but also social workers and the schools, because when something unfolds, parents are going to go to the schools. The 21st-century emergency manager has to be aware of the changing social demographics of rising inequality because all of those things are influencing their ability to do their jobs and do it to their capacity.
Its a challenge and a real opportunity to think in more complex and holistic ways. Not only are we facing social and economic changes, but were doing all this in the context of real environmental change, the speeding up of disaster losses. In Louisiana, they are still dealing with three disasters back, where people havent recovered from three disasters ago and then they get hit by another flood or tornado.
Its the intersection of all these forces. The 21st-century emergency manager has to be thinking at the intersection of all the different phenomena that are unfolding in peoples lives.
How do you see the degree programs being offered as addressing the needs of the future?
The emergency management degree programs have exploded over the past two decades. Were living in a time where we have our first emergency management high school at the Urban Assembly School for Emergency Management in New York City, and then we have the growth and professionalization of emergency management, so the programs are quite variable.
But when we consider the lessons that have been learned in terms of how to communicate risk, how to think about vulnerable populations, I absolutely think that social science findings have infused emergency management practice.
I just had a conversation with some very high-ranking Ph.D.s and they said, Lori, isnt population exposure the same as social vulnerability? And I said no, because population exposure might be that the 10 million people in Los Angeles are all exposed to seismic risk at some level, but if we ignore social vulnerability then what we dont have on the table is that of those 10 million, many are likely to suffer far worse consequences because of their economic circumstances, because of the buildings they occupy, because of their family status. I think the new emergency manager thinks of that social vulnerability, and thats exciting to me.
You chronicled the plight of children during and after Katrina. Talk about how devastating disasters can be for children.
Children are coming of age in a world that is more turbulent than ever before. Children on the Gulf Coast, for example, have experienced already an average of 3.4 disasters in their lives. What does that mean for children in some of our most vulnerable areas coming of age in a place that is being struck by disaster? What does that cumulative disaster experience mean in their lives?
Much of my work has focused on two big things. One, what renders children vulnerable to disaster? In what ways may children be psychologically vulnerable and when might they be physically at risk of death or other forms of physical harm? We know that childrens biological mechanisms may put them more at risk in situations like an oil spill where they are literally closer to the ground and inhaling oil particles. That could have more of an effect than on adults. Second are educational vulnerabilities.
One of the things that our research from Katrina revealed is that the disruption caused by that disaster led to more than 300,000 children out of school a year later. If a childs one job is to get an education and a disaster is disrupting that pathway, what does that mean for kids?
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