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Daily Archives: May 27, 2022
At least for now, COVID-19 transmission in Connecticut appears to be slowing – CT Insider
Posted: May 27, 2022 at 2:15 am
COVID-19 transmission in Connecticut appears to be slowing, state numbers show, following several months of steady increase.
As of Thursday, the state averaged 1,137 daily cases over the past week, down from nearly 1,600 at one point earlier this month, though still much higher than immediately before the current wave. The states seven-day positivity rate, meanwhile, has decreased from 14.2 percent last week to 11.8 percent as of Thursday.
Though both case counts and test positivity rate are likely skewed by the popularity of at-home tests, most of which are never reported to authorities, experts say the metrics can still be useful in assessing broad trends.
Additionally, traces of COVID-19 in New Haven wastewater appear to have plateaued or even decreased slightly, data from Yale researchers shows, offering another sign that transmission in Connecticut has reached a peak, at least for now.
As of Thursday, Connecticut had 379 patients hospitalized with COVID-19, down slightly from Wednesday, when hospitalizations hit their highest level since February. Hospitalizations have continued to increase in recent days but not as sharply as earlier this month.
Over the last two weeks, weve seen at least some stabilization in terms of COVID hospitalizations, which we can track, and community transmission, which we can roughly estimate with the current data, said Dr. David Banach, hospital epidemiologist at UConn Health. So Im optimistic, with some caution, for the coming weeks.
Since March, Connecticut has been mired in a COVID-19 spike, which experts have attributed to the BA.2 subvariant. What was initially expected to be a relatively small uptick has instead caused a substantial increase in cases and hospitalizations, lasting more than two months.
Coronavirus-linked deaths have not particularly spiked during the recent wave, which may owe to the fact that deaths lag cases and hospitalizations but may also be a product of vaccine protection, strains of virus that are somewhat less deadly, and improved treatment protocols, including antiviral pills.
Connecticut on Thursday reported 19 COVID-19 deaths over the past week, bringing its total during the pandemic to 10,941.
In terms of severity of the hospitalized patients, we are seeing a smaller number with an intensive-care level of illness, Banach said. I think thats encouraging.
Still, even as Connecticuts case count and positivity rate have dipped slightly in recent days, transmission in Connecticut remains high, with tens of thousands of new infections (both reported and unreported) likely occurring each week.
Dr. Ulysses Wu, chief epidemiologist at Hartford HealthCare, said Thursday that hes not yet ready to celebrate any improvement in the state numbers.
We are at a place where we shouldnt be at all, Wu said. Whether its 383 [hospitalizations] yesterday or 379 today, both numbers are equally bad.
Connecticuts recent COVID-19 uptick, which came almost immediately on the heels of the states devastating omicron-driven winter surge, has led some infectious disease experts to fear the state will see high levels of transmission indefinitely, with new variants emerging one after another.
Already, the state has identified several cases of BA.4 and BA.5, subvariants that caused a dramatic COVID-19 uptick in South Africa.
Wu said recent trends in Connecticuts numbers have not changed his relatively pessimistic outlook about the months to come. As he sees it, Connecticut could return to lower viral levels by the end of June but could also see cases rise again at any time.
With a population that has apathy and doesnt care, whats going to happen is were going to see wave after wave after wave, Wu said. We are going to see a downturn at some point, but it really depends how prolonged that downturn is and then what is the depth of that downturn.
Even as Connecticuts cases decrease, Wu said, they are unlikely to return to the lows recorded last summer.
Its like coming down from Everest to the Tibetan pleateau, he said. Youre still pretty frickin high up in the Tibetan plateau.
Banach offered a slightly more optimistic view, arguing that summer weather, which facilitates outdoor activity, should help Connecticut keep its numbers lower than they have been.
As he sees it, Connecticuts recent decrease in cases and positivity rate could be the start of a lower-risk period.
We still need to be aware that COVID is around us, but here in Connecticut warmer weather, spending more time outdoors is beneficial in reducing the risk of spread, he said. So I think we can maintain some cautious optimism for the next few weeks.
alex.putterman@hearstmediact.com
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Taiwan’s AcadeMab develops groundbreaking therapy for COVID-19 Omicron variant with potent neutralizing efficacy – PR Newswire
Posted: at 2:15 am
"In a world ravaged by the COVID-19 pandemic with rapidly mutating variants emerging ever so often, it is a race for the scientific community to develop new therapies in a timely manner."
"We are excited to announce that our research and development efforts have paid off at a fast pace with our single B cell technology that's shown neutralizing efficacy against the world's most common and deadly Omicron variant", shared Juz-Hsiang Chiu, M.D., AcadeMab CEO.
Despite high vaccination rates worldwide, vaccines are only part of the system of treatments to deal with the scourge of COVID-19.
The Omicron variant has been proven to show remarkable resistance to most of the earlier immunotherapies developed, such as Bamlanivimab developed by Eli Lilly and antibody cocktail of Casirivimab and Imdevimab developed by Regeneron pharmaceuticals.
As a result, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has revoked or limited the emergency use authorizations (EUAs) for most therapeutic antibodies.
Studies conducted by AcadeMab have found high efficacy of their human monoclonal antibodies against the Omicron variant within 4 months.
In one of their studies, it was found that one human antibody showed the best neutralization ability (IC50 = 11.4 and 4.3 ng/ml) in both Omicron variants BA.1 and BA.2 respectively.
"We've also seen broad-spectrum activity in our treatment against multiple circulating variants of concern (VOCs) announced by the World Health Organisation."
"Aside from its neutralizing efficacy against Omicron, this means it shows great potential to be a therapy of choice for patients infected with other COVID-19 variants aside from Omicron", said Pao-Yin Chiang, Ph.D., the lead scientist of single B cell platform at AcadeMab.
The development of AcadeMab's cutting-edge technology using Single B cell technology will be of immense benefit to a segment of high-risk people who cannot benefit fully from mere vaccination alone.
They include those who are moderately to severely immunocompromised and lack adequate immunity responses despite COVID-19 vaccinations. It is estimated that about 2.7% of adults (or, 7 million) in the U.S population are immunocompromised.
This groundbreaking treatment will also be beneficial to those who have a documented history of severe adverse reactions to existing COVID-19 vaccines or their components, and as such, are unable to be vaccinated.
Parties interested in establishing partnership and learning more about AcadeMab's research may contact:
PR NAME: Miles Yeh, Ph.D., Director of Product DevelopmentCONTACT NUMBER: +886-2789-1212 ext. 810EMAIL: [emailprotected]
SOURCE AcadeMab Biomedical Inc.
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Hair Loss After COVID-19: Why It Happens and How to Treat It – Self
Posted: at 2:15 am
When telogen effluvium occurs, the hair loss is rapid. We all lose about 100 hairs per day on average, but in the case of telogen effluvium, youre suddenly losing way more than that, Dr. Bhanusali says. He adds that people tend to notice it when they see large clumps in their hands after washing their hair, see lots of hair in the shower drain, or notice that their brush or comb is filling up much faster than normal. This isnt a gradual type of hair loss or subtle hair thinningits an acute, intense, sudden shedding that can leave your hair feeling less full overall and often manifests as noticeable thinness and sparseness along the sides of the temples.5
Its unclear if hair loss after COVID-19 correlates with any other specific symptoms of the virus or how sick you get. The American Academy of Dermatology has a COVID-19 registry and we hope over time we will be able to extrapolate some data to find associations, but so far there are no clear relationships, Dr. Kuhn says. I have seen severe shedding following a mild case of COVID, and mild shedding following severe illness.
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How long does hair loss after COVID-19 last?
Telogen effluvium, whether its caused by COVID-19 or another trigger, usually isnt permanent. Shedding can occur, however, for three to six months before it stops, Dr. Kuhn says. With telogen effluvium the hair growth cycle eventually normalizes and, because there is no damage to the scalp or hair follicles, all of the hair should grow back.
According to the American Academy of Dermatology, your hair will likely regain normal fullness after telogen effluvium within six to nine months. Although Dr. Kuhn says, in her experience, it often takes even longeranywhere from one to two yearsfor someones hair to reach its pre-shed status.
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Have any of the COVID-19 vaccines been linked to hair loss?
Theres no research to indicate that the COVID vaccines trigger hair shedding, Dr. Kuhn says, adding that, in her experience, she hasnt seen any people dealing with hair loss postvaccine. Dr. Bhanusali underscores the fact that theres currently no direct data to connect the two.
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How to stop hair loss after COVID-19
Most importantly, be patient. Though losing hair can be scary, I always reassure patients that they wont go bald from COVID-related shedding, Dr. Kuhn says. Typically, the best thing to do is simply wait it out. In the meantime, practicing healthy hair habits is paramount.
You want to make sure that youre doing everything you can to minimize the risk of losing any more hair, Dr. Bhanusali notes. That means avoiding heat styling and/or using the lowest temperature whenever you do, minimizing intense chemical processes such as highlighting and straightening, and avoiding tight hairstyles that put tension on the hair.
You can also consider getting tested for nutrient deficiencies to ensure thats not exacerbating the situation. If you are, in fact, lacking in a certain vitamin or mineral thats associated with hair healthDr. Bhanusali notes that vitamin D and iron deficiencies are commontalk to your doctor about how to incorporate more of it into your diet and/or if youll need to try a supplement (and if so, what the dosage should be).
And while its always easier said than done, lowering your stress levels may also help. Practicing self-care and engaging in things such as meditation and breathing exercises can be helpful as you deal with COVID-related hair loss, Dr. Ziering suggests. Breaking long-term stress can be helpful in helping normal hair function resume more consistently. That said, lowering stress levels may feel nearly impossible given whats going on in the world or in your personal life, so if self-care isnt cutting it, consider talking to a therapist if youre able.
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Monkeypox and COVID-19 are different in a good way – NPR
Posted: at 2:15 am
Spallanzani infectious disease hospital Director Francesco Vaia talks to reporters at the end of a news conference Friday in Rome. Andrew Medichini/AP hide caption
Spallanzani infectious disease hospital Director Francesco Vaia talks to reporters at the end of a news conference Friday in Rome.
The recent headlines about a sudden emergence of an unusual disease, spreading case by case across countries and continents may, for some, evoke memories of early 2020.
But monkeypox is no COVID-19 in a good way.
Health officials worldwide have turned their attention to a new outbreak of monkeypox, a virus normally found in central and west Africa that has appeared across Europe and the U.S. in recent weeks even in people who have not traveled to Africa at all.
But experts say that, while it's important for public health officials to be on the lookout for monkeypox, the virus is extremely unlikely to spin out into an uncontrolled worldwide pandemic in the same way that COVID-19 did.
"Let's just say right off the top that monkeypox and COVID are not the same disease," said Dr. Rosamund Lewis, head of Smallpox Secretariat at the World Health Organization, at a public Q&A session on Monday.
For starters, monkeypox spreads much less easily than COVID-19. Scientists have been studying monkeypox since it was first discovered in humans more than 50 years ago. And its similarities to smallpox mean it can be combated in many of the same ways.
As a result, scientists are already familiar with how monkeypox spreads, how it presents, and how to treat and contain it giving health authorities a much bigger head start on containing it.
Here are some of the other ways the public health approach to monkeypox is different from COVID-19:
Monkeypox typically requires very close contact to spread most often skin-to-skin contact, or prolonged physical contact with clothes or bedding that was used by an infected person.
By contrast, COVID-19 spreads quickly and easily. Coronavirus can spread simply by talking with another person, or sharing a room, or in rare cases, being inside a room that an infected person had previously been in.
"Transmission is really happening from close physical contact, skin-to-skin contact. It's quite different from COVID in that sense," said Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove, an infectious disease epidemiologist with the WHO.
The classic symptom of monkeypox is a rash that often begins on the face, then spreads to a person's limbs or other parts of the body.
"The incubation from time of exposure to appearance of lesions is anywhere between five days to about 21 days, so can be quite long," said Dr. Boghuma Kabisen Titanji, an infectious disease physician and virologist at Emory University in Atlanta.
The current outbreak has seen some different patterns, experts say particularly, that the rash begins in the genital area first, and may not spread across the body.
Either way, experts say, it is typically through physical contact of that rash that the virus spreads.
"It's not a situation where if you're passing someone in the grocery store, they're going to be at risk for monkeypox," said Dr. Jennifer McQuiston of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in a briefing Monday.
The people most likely to be at risk are close personal contacts of an infected person, such as household members or health care workers who may have treated them, she said.
"We've seen over the years that often the best way to deal with cases is to keep those who are sick isolated so that they can't spread the virus to close family members and loved ones, and to follow up proactively with those that a patient has contact with so they can watch for symptoms," McQuiston said.
With this version of virus, people generally recover in two to four weeks, scientists find, and the death rate is less than 1%.
One factor that helped COVID-19 spread rapidly across the globe was the fact that it is very contagious. That's even more true of the variants that have emerged in the past year.
Epidemiologists point to a disease's R0 value the average number of people you'd expect an infected person to pass the disease along to.
For a disease outbreak to grow, the R0 must be higher than 1. For the original version of COVID-19, the number was somewhere between 2 and 3. For the omicron variant, that number is about 8, a recent study found.
Although the recent spread of monkeypox cases is alarming, the virus is far less contagious than COVID-19, according to Jo Walker, an epidemiologist at Yale School of Public Health.
"Most estimates from earlier outbreaks have had an R0 of less than one. With that, you can have clusters of cases, even outbreaks, but they will eventually die out on their own," they said. "It could spread between humans, but not very efficiently in a way that could sustain itself onward without constantly being reintroduced from animal populations."
That's a big reason that public health authorities, including the WHO, are expressing confidence that cases of monkeypox will not suddenly skyrocket. "This is a containable situation," Van Kerkhove said Monday at the public session.
Monkeypox and smallpox are both members of the Orthopox family of viruses. Smallpox, which once killed millions of people every year, was eradicated in 1980 by a successful worldwide campaign of vaccines.
The smallpox vaccine is about 85% effective against monkeypox, the WHO says, although that effectiveness wanes over time.
"These viruses are closely related to each other, and now we have the benefit of all those years of research and diagnostics and treatments and in vaccines that will be brought to bear upon the situation now," said Lewis of the WHO.
Some countries, including the U.S., have held smallpox vaccines in strategic reserve in case the virus ever reemerged. Now, those can be used to contain a monkeypox outbreak.
The FDA has two vaccines already approved for use against smallpox.
One, a two-dose vaccine called Jynneos, is also approved for use against monkeypox. About a thousand doses are available in the Strategic National Stockpile, the CDC says, and the company will provide more in the coming months.
"We have already worked to secure sufficient supply of effective treatments and vaccines to prevent those exposed from contracting monkeypox and treating people who've been affected," said Dr. Raj Panjabi of the White House pandemic office, in an interview with NPR.
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Global excess deaths associated with COVID-19, January 2020 – December 2021 – World Health Organization
Posted: at 2:15 am
The global excess mortality associated with COVID-19 was 14.91 million in the 24 months between 1 January 2020 and 31 December 2021, representing 9.49 million more deaths than those globally reported as directly attributable to COVID-19.
The impact of the pandemic has been over several waves with each characterized by unique regional distributions, mortality levels and drivers. Twenty countries, representing approximately 50% of the global population, account for over 80% of the estimatedglobal excess mortality for the January 2020 to December 2021 period. These countries are Brazil, Colombia, Egypt, Germany, India, Indonesia, the Islamic Republic of Iran, Italy, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Peru, the Philippines, Poland, the Russian Federation, South Africa, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Turkey, Ukraine, and the United States of America (USA). We are able to observe the evolution of the pandemic over these 24 months as different regions and countries were impactedby and responded to the threat of COVID-19.
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What powers do states have to regulate guns and abortions? – The Hill
Posted: at 2:15 am
Two of the major cases awaiting Supreme Court decisions involve opposite sides of the same coin. A New York case involves the power of the states to regulate guns; a Mississippi case involves the power of the states to regulate abortions.Many of those who support the power of the state in one situation oppose it in the other because the politics point in opposite directions.
There are constitutional differences between the cases, but there also are similarities. Both should be considered in a nonpartisan manner.
New Yorks gun caseinvolves a construction of theSecond Amendment, which guarantees that the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed. But it guarantees that right in the context of a well-regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state. The juxtaposition of the right to bear arms with a well-regulated militia strongly suggests that the Constitutions framers intended the bearing of arms to be well regulated, as a militia would be.The Framers could simply have articulated the right as absolute (in the way theFirst Amendmentdoes) without preceding it by a limiting reason.
Accordingly, there is a strong constitutional argument that the states which in colonial times had the power to regulate their militias maintain the power to regulate gun ownership and use. This view is strengthened by theTenth Amendment, which relegates to the states or to the people all the powers not specifically delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it.
Thus, the issue of state power to regulate guns under the Second Amendment is squarely before the court. So, too, is the issue of state power to regulate abortions.
Unlike arms, abortion is not specifically mentioned in the Constitution.But theFourth Amendmentdoes guarantee the right of the people to be secure in their persons.This surely has some implication for the right of women to decide whether or not to bear a child. The state may well have the power to regulate abortion to some degree but, as with guns, the issue before the Supreme Court is howmuchpower does the state have?
Here theNinth Amendmentcomes into play.It says that the enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.The people include pregnant women, and the question is whether the Ninth Amendment, taken together with the Fourth Amendment, accords pregnant women some degree of control over their persons.Although the Fourth Amendment does not mention the word privacy, it uses a word that commonly included what we now regard as the right of privacy namely, security.
Most Americans believethat a woman should have control over her pregnant body during the early months of her pregnancy but not during the late months.They recognize that a fetus is not like an appendix, which can be removed simply at the will of the person and their doctor. The fetus is asomething; even at its earliest stage, it is a potential life.
When exactly it becomes an actual life, subject to legal protection against abortion, is a complex matter of science, morality and religion.For most Americans, it is a matter of degree but for some, on both sides of the political spectrum, it is not. For deeply religious Catholics and evangelicals, life begins at conception, and there is no matter of degree involved; they regard the earliest fetus as no different than a child. For some advocates of a womans right to choose, that choice extends even to the end of pregnancy; they regard the fetus as constitutionally indistinguishable from an appendix which a woman can simply chose to remove at any stage.
In the abortion case before the Supreme Court, the issue presented is whethera Mississippi statutewhich prohibits abortion after 15 weeks is constitutional if a state decides on that cutoff.The issue before the court, therefore, isnotwhether Roe v. Wade should be overruled but whether it should be limited to the first 15 weeks of pregnancy.
If theleaked draft opinionby Justice Samuel Alito turns out to be the final majority decision, the court would have reached out to decide an issue not properly before it. Such a decision would constitute judicial activism and would violate the constitutional limitations on the courts to decide only cases and controversies that are properly before them. Courts, including the Supreme Court, have no constitutional authority to render advisory opinions on issues that are not necessary to decide in order to resolve the specific case.
In these two controversial cases, the current court is likely to decide in favor of more state power to regulate abortions than guns.This may reflect the political leanings of the justices as much as neutral constitutional principles regarding the allocation of power and rights among the states, federal government, courts and people.
Alan Dershowitz, professor emeritus for Harvard Law School, is the author of numerous books, including The Case Against the New Censorship, and The Case for Color-Blind Equality in an Age of Identity Politics. Follow him on Twitter@AlanDersh.
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Council meetings will open in-person to public in June, keep hybrid option – Winters Express
Posted: at 2:15 am
Council chambers are expected to be open to public attendance in June with the Zoom hybrid option remaining available.
The Winters City Council held its regularly scheduled meeting on May 17. The hybrid meeting was held in council chambers for council members and city staff while the public was able to attend via Zoom.
The city has been working with a citizen volunteer to connect council chambers with the necessary technology to conduct hybrid meetings. Over the past few meetings, the bugs have been getting worked out and for the first time since the pandemic, council members met in person.
The Winters City Council meets at 6:30 p.m. on the first and third Tuesday of the month. Public will be able to attend in person on Tuesday, June 7 or view via Zoom. Information on how to attend is available on the City of Winters website on the City Council page.
Consent Calendar highlightsBlue Oak Park: Resolution 2022-41 was approved appropriating $27,165 from the Park and Recreation Capital Fund to the Per Capita Grant Fund, increasing the fiscal year 2021-22 operating budget to complete the Blue Oak Rehabilitation Project. The project experienced cost changes not anticipated when the project was approved.
Pathway lighting was installed in the park, but, to energize them an unanticipated agreement between the City and PG&E was necessaryand added $14,770 to the cost of the project. Additionally, the amount from Ample Electrics bid to carry out the work rose $12,395.
CPA Auditing Services: Resolution 2022-42 approved a three-year, $125,500 professional services auditing agreement with the Sacramento CPA firm of Mann, Urrutia & Nelson.
The firm responded to a request for proposals and was chosen over Van Lant & Frankhanel, which has provided the city auditing services over the past eight years.
Assistant City Attorney: Resolution 2022-44 approved the fourth amendment to the contract with Best, Best & Krieger, LLP, designating Martin de los Angeles as assistant city attorney.
De los Angeles was introduced at the meeting and works in the firms Walnut Creek office as part of the firms municipal law practice group.
Illegal Fireworks & Social Host Liability: Ordinance 2022-04 was adopted adding a social host liability ordinance in an effort to curtail the use of illegal fireworks.
Each year Safe and Sane fireworks are legal in Winters from noon on June 28 through noon July 6. The ordinance grants law enforcement, fire and code enforcement personnel the ability to issue administrative citations holding the owner, possessor or host of a gathering on public or private property responsible for the discharge of illegal fireworks. Persons cited under the proposed ordinance are subject to a $1,000 fine.
Road Rehabilitation Project List: Resolution No. 2022-43 was approved for the 2022-23 Street Rehab Project to rehabilitate stretches of roadway on Caselli Court, Lauren Court, Moody Slough Road, Neimann Street and Hemenway Street.
The city foresees receiving $144,500 in fiscal year 2022-23 from the SB1 Fund obtained from a state gas tax, transportation improvement tax and vehicle registration taxes. Once approved by the California Transportation Commission, these funds are to be combined with Gas Tax and Transportation Development Act funds to finance the project.
Facility lighting upgrades: Resolution 2022-40 was presented and approved for two professional services agreements with Ecogreen Solutions to convert to LED lighting and add new fixtures at the public safety facility ($267,900) and other sites ($172,330).
The upgrades are to improve energy efficiency and will be financed through a PG&E program. Once the loans are repaid over an approximate eight-year period the city anticipates an annual savings of $33,000.
PresentationsCouncil received two presentations: one from Yolo Animal Services and the second from the newly-commissioned Winters Natural Resources Commission.
Management Analyst Joanne Van Hoosear presented on behalf of the Yolo Animal Services Joint Powers Agreement (JPA). She discussed the JPA and outlined baseline services, development, expense, jurisdiction and costs incurred from the $3 million 2021-22 budget.
Natural Resources Commission Chair Kurt Balasek reviewed the recent NRC formation and its evolution from the Putah Creek Commission. Balasek said the NRC serves the City of Winters as a source of scientific and technological expertise.
The NRCs initial workplan proposal to council includes continued monitoring of Putah Creek, updating the citys master tree plan, seeking funding for air quality monitors, work with fire safe councils, water quality and reuse and reducing light pollution.
UpcomingIn her May 20 update, City Manager Katheleen Salguero Trepa informed the community that Tuesdays Planning Commission meeting included the Citys first Capital Improvement Program.
According to Trepa, the CIP must be reviewed by the Planning Commission for General Plan consistency. The complete CIP budget and operating budget will be presented to City Council at the June 7.
Trepa asked residents not to enter active construction sites.
These sites are potentially dangerous for those not authorized to enter, and trespassers may be cited, Trepa said.
Three Oaks Park remains closed while the developers contractor continues to work on bringing the landscaping up to standards.
Trepa gave kudos to the Project Playground coordinators and to the volunteers who braved the heat last Wednesday morning to spread the new chips around.
It takes a village and we at City Hall certainly appreciate the partnership to help this treasured community asset stay in pristine condition, Trepa said.
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What Was the Wiretap? – The Nation
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A man placing a tap in a phone, 1968. (Photo by MPI / Getty Images)
In 1965, a private investigator named Harold Lipset appeared before a Senate subcommittee and took a sip from a martini. That part was a little unusual, but it was what the glass contained that shocked lawmakers. The pimento in the facsimile of an olive concealed a miniature recording device; the toothpick was an antenna. Near the end of his testimony, Lipset played back his own opening statement. He had been recording the whole time. BOOKS IN REVIEW
Lipset, who was known for such stunts (hed once recorded a naked man in a bathhouse by bugging a bar of soapthough, for the record, his pry martini did not actually contain gin or vermouth), was there at the invitation of Missouri Senator Edward V. Long, who was pushing for an end to the congressional gridlock over privacy legislation. Three years later, a watershed law was passedbut instead of securing the privacy of Americans, it gave police at the state and federal level the legal right to wiretap them. That provision reshaped the relationship between law enforcement and private citizens and laid the foundations, both legally and socially, for our current surveillance state.
According to Brian Hochmans The Listeners: A History of Wiretapping in the United States, Americans have held many attitudes toward surveillance over the years. The latest, which has calcified since police wiretapping was enshrined into law in 1968, is indifference. Wiretapping was once seen as extraordinary: Americans in the early 20th century considered it a dirty business. Then some attitudes shifted, and by the postwar era, many private citizens were already using freelance tappers in divorce disputes. (Hochman drops the astonishing tidbit that in the 1950s in New York, Private ears tapped more lines to monitor cheating spouses than their counterparts in law enforcement did to gather criminal evidence.) By the 1960s, Americans were divided, with law-and-order conservatives arguing that police needed the right to surveil and progressives pushing to protect privacy.
The fraught relationship between privacy and security is at the crux of The Listeners, which covers the history of eavesdropping from the Civil War to 9/11. Throughout that long history, the threatreal or imaginedof crime almost invariably took priority over civil liberties. Racist dog whistles shaped surveillance laws in 1968, and people of color historically bore the brunt (and still do) of police surveillance.
Hochman does not address our current world of digital surveillance beyond a handful of brief passages that bookend his study. Though he discusses certain laws, especially those from the 1990s, that laid the groundwork for phone surveillance, he declines to explore explicit parallels; rather, he focuses on the analog past. As he writes in his introduction, I leave it to the reader to decide whether that past can help us find a way out of our current predicament. His thoughts on the matter would have been welcome, too.
Instead, Hochman bases much of his analysis on the changes in public opinion in the 20th century. But who exactly this public opinion represents is not always clear. Our historical amnesia, Hochman argues, prevents us from seeing that digital surveillance didnt always seem so pervasive and routine. Pervasive and routine for whom? Who comprises us?
Its worth asking because Hochman concerns himself with the type of surveillance that stretches its tendrils into ordinary peoples liveswhat he calls the prosaic dimensions of eavesdropping. Although a few hardboiled detectives and operatives appear in these pages, for the most part the book is a history of people intersecting with wiretaps and the law. Hochman has a strong eye for amusing, illustrative characters (such as Lipset), which provides welcome color to his explanations of thorny legal cases. Current Issue
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Throughout the 20th century, new ways to talk on the phone meant new ways to bug. Lawmakers were generally not as agile as motivated criminals in catching on to technological developments (especially when physical wiretaps gave way to stand-alone bugging devices and wireless phones). New devices led to legal questions both procedural and profound: Do police need a warrant to tap a suspected Soviet spy? Are clandestinely gathered communications admissible in a court of law? Does a recording of your voice count as property under the Fourth Amendment? Can a man bug his spouse if shes using his phone for deleterious ends?
Before 1968 especially, wiretapping laws were a morass. Even when such laws were on the books, their confusing wording caused interpretative chaos. In a particularly infamous example, a single word wreaked havoc for decades: and.
In 1934, Congress passed the Federal Communications Act. Section 605 of the law, which addressed wiretapping, contained the line: No person not being authorized by the sender shall intercept any communication and divulge or publish. Yet that and could be read two ways. In the first interpretation, the line was tantamount to a blanket ban on wiretapping; in the second, it meant that it was only illegal to wiretap if you also shared the recording. In 1937, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the first interpretation. But despite that ruling, Hochman writes, the section continued to prove nothing short of catastrophic when it came to preventing wiretapping. The whole thing was so muddled as to be rendered meaningless. In the absence of federal regulations, jurisdictions developed their own laws in response to local preferences and influences.
Cities and states had their own patchwork regulations, although these too were only inconsistently followed. Police often had a gentlemans agreement with local phone companies that enabled them to tap lines without producing a paper trail.
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In 1959, a lawyer named Samuel Dash made a splash in Washington with his bombshell report The Eavesdroppers, which was funded by a grant from the Ford Foundationaffiliated Fund for the Republic, on the state of surveillance in America. Dash broke with previous analyses, which tended to blame individual wiretapping agents or the vulnerability of phone systems, to point a finger at the incoherent laws around surveillance in the United States. Hochman explains that, in Dashs view, wiretapping law was a legal no-mans land, and the contradictions in wiretapping policy were exacerbating the nations looming privacy crisis. Such revelations were not merely a policy concernthey raised real questions about American values. What kind of a society allowed police to wiretap in open defiance of state and federal laws?
With his report, Dashwho later served as chief counsel to the Watergate Commissionhelped provoke a momentous swing in popular perception during the late 1950s and early 1960s, Hochman writes.
The Eavesdroppers proved to be divisive. A vocal contingent saw the report as an attack on police and their law enforcement tools. One Brooklyn district attorney fretted that wiretapping bans would give criminals carte blanche in their operations. He suggested that what wiretapping really needed was a rebrand. Rather than calling it eavesdropping, which sounded nefarious, he suggested that a new name be adopted to indicate that it was actually the use of scientific devices to fight crime.
It was against this backdrop that Senator Long, who had invited Lipset to perform his martini stunt, attempted to push legislation that would ban police wiretapping. He had reason to be optimistic that his Right to Privacy Act of 1967 would pass: President Lyndon Johnson had expressed an interest in curbing wiretapping in his State of the Union address that year, in which he called for an end to all wiretapping except when the security of the nation itself is at stake.
Then came the long, hot summer of 1967. Unrest in American cities over the next year provided an opening for law-and-order politicians to make dog-whistle calls about wiretapping as a riot prevention tool. Conservatives in Congress, led by the hardline segregationist John L. McClellan, added police wiretapping authorization to the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968. Few lawmakers saw the wisdom in impeding the most sweeping public safety measure to come out of Washington in decades, Hochman observes, especially after Robert F. Kennedys assassination. Johnson, although he had already announced that he would not run for reelection against the Republican challenger, Richard Nixon, nonetheless caved. For elected officials, an aversion to wiretapping proved less powerful than racist rhetoric in a fraught moment. The omnibus bill passed, and Long found himself politically radioactive.
Title III, the part of the act that concerned wiretapping, was monumental (and continues to loom large in privacy law today). In an interesting compromise, it both criminalized private-sector tapping and legalized police tapping. The bill included some guardrails, including that police needed to attempt other means of gathering evidence before starting a tap and, notably, that they needed a warrant in most cases (though McClellan squeezed in an exception for 48 hours of unwarranted surveillance in emergencies). Privacy advocates cheered the private-sector restrictions, but the allowances for the police exceeded even Longs worst fears. Yet soon, Hochman argues, No one seemed to care. Again: No one?
Police wiretapping exploded in the following years. Warrants for tap and bug installations increased fivefold at both the state and federal level. Hochman cites compelling evidence of shifts in public opinion here: According to a 1974 Chicago Tribune report, nearly 70 percent of Americans condoned the use of electronic surveillance by the police when done with a proper warrant (up from the 46 percent who had felt that way in the late 1960s, according to a Gallup poll). Almost overnight, Hochman concludes, what was embattled became mundane.
Wiretapping was not an investigative panacea, however, and it was enormously resource-intensive. After an attempt to surveil Teamsters president Roy L. Williams in the late 1970s cost more than $1 million and ensnared the calls of more than 2,000 people in its dragnet, some questioned whether wiretapping was really the most efficient use of government funds.
Then the War on Drugs provided the perfect justification. Law enforcement around the country claimed that sophisticated drug-trafficking syndicates required intensive surveillance. The wiretap had a comeback in the 1980s, and Black communities were harmed the most. Once again, arguments about the costs of electronic surveillance would disappear when African American voices were caught on the line, Hochman notes.
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People of color continued to be the targets of unequal surveillance in the decades to come. In what was a transparent product of the drug wars racial geography, Hochman writes, in 1995 the FBI called for a tiered system of surveillance that would allow one out of every 100 phones to be tapped in certain urban areas. This schema was rescinded after a public backlash. But it illustrates how deeply the surveillance of Black people was embedded in policy at every level of government (even beyond the well-known operations like COINTELPRO, which Hochman mentions briefly). The specter of police wiretapping was a reality of everyday life for many people in Bill Clintons tough on crime America.
Buried in a major 1994 law, the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA), was a provision that would have profound effects as surveillance technology evolved: Phone companies had to comply with court orders to grant the government access to call location data. Cell phones were turned into surveillance beacons. Hochman writes that this would have consequences for the balance between privacy and surveillance that no one, not even the industry at the center of the controversy, could have anticipated.
Though he does not go on to outline those consequences, CALEA (as well as its limitations in the face of encrypted technology) loomed large in cases like the FBIs 2016 attempts to compel Apple to unlock the phone of a gunman involved in a mass shooting in San Bernardino, Calif. It would have been fascinating to read Hochmans analysis of how CALEAs provisions intersected with this case, but as he writes in the opening line of his epilogue, Our story ends in 2001.
Hochman spends only about a page in the epilogue outlining the Patriot Act and surveillance capitalism since 2001. He quickly retrains his attention on his true subject: wiretapping. The good old-fashioned wiretap continues to thrive in American law enforcement today, he writes. The use of wiretaps under Title III is apparently more than three times higher than it was in the 1980s and 90s. Police continue to surveil communities of color extensively and to marshal resources toward surveilling drug operations specifically: As of 2014, nearly 90 percent of the wiretap work in the United States was drug-related. Hochman adds that today, debates about wiretapping happen largely on the margins or in the wake of scandals like the 2013 Edward Snowden leaks.
After decades of controversy, Hochman shows, the use of wiretaps became institutionalized in the 20th century. But he only scratches the surface of how private companies in more recent decades, enjoying a lax regulatory environment, have encoded surveillance tracking into the structure of apps as well as the Internet itself.
We are now living in the world that the wiretap (and the chaotic, inconsistent legal responses to it) built. In recent years, surveillance technology has once again evolved faster than regulations. Congress has yet to pass comprehensive privacy legislation to regulate how apps collect user location data, leaving corporations free to monetize your every move and federal agencies free to track immigrants.
In a passage about phone bugging in the 1950s and 60s, Hochman writes: The ambiguity of the law made state and federal officials much less equipped to keep pace with the developments that ensued. The same can still be said today.
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OC Groups Push Against Spitzer and to Get Out the Vote – Precinct Reporter Group
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By Dianne Anderson
Sexual harassment and discrimination lawsuits shrouding the Orange County District Attorneys office have the local National Action Network chapter pushing harder this last week to get Black and Brown voters to mail in their Primary ballot.
At stake, Darlene Futrel said the numbers with Spitzer at the helm show a pattern of upcharging Black people and undercharging if at all white people.
Futrel, president of the National Action Network Orange County Chapter, demanded Spitzer resign two months ago on the heels of reported racist statements and data showing race bias in sentencing.
NAN OC and other Orange County organizations met at Attorney General Rob Bontas Office with a letter written by the ACLU calling for an investigation. Among several groups that signed in support include The Peace and Justice Law Center, Transforming Justice, Orange County United Communities for Peace, and Muslim Anti-Racism Collaborative.
Futrel said that although Spitzer is downplaying allegations, she feels that voters wont be deceived.
If you dont know the facts, he will convince you otherwise, thats what a litigator does. They convince you to believe the story, whether its the truth or not, said Futrel,
Some of the controversies are around a December 3 memo obtained by ABC Eyewitness News released by former Senior Assistant D.A. Ebrahim Baytieh detailing a discussion Spitzer had with eight prosecutors last October regarding sentencing for Jamon Buggs, a Black man accused of a double homicide. In seeking the death penalty, Baytieh described Spitzers comments about whether Buggs was dating a white woman, and that Black men choose white women to get ahead in life.
After releasing that memo, Baytieh was fired from Spitzers office for allegedly improperly handling evidence on a prior unrelated case.
A statement by Spitzer attempted to address the remarks after they surfaced.
I am not perfect, but an inartful comment during an hours-long debate in a double murder case is not reflective of my core beliefs or the years I have spent fighting to make our society more equitable and our communities safe for everyone, Spitzer had said in a statement as reported by Stacy Brown with the Black Press USA.
Futrel also shed light on the so-called OCDAs SPIT & ACQUIT program, which she describes as an invasive and illegal practice of DNA profiling. She feels that genetic surveillance is a violation of civil and Fourth Amendment rights.
[Its by] collecting DNA from anyone charged with a misdemeanor and in some cases upcharging a simple traffic violation to a misdemeanor for the sole purpose of scaring you into providing them with your DNA in exchange for dismissing trumped-up charges, she said.
Another case in point shows how justice is based on race in the county, Futrel added. Tatiana (Tia) Turner, a Black activist who tried to flee from a mob of white supremacists during a peaceful march in Yorba Linda, is being charged with attempted murder.
She said no charges have been filed against Don Wallace, a white man, who deliberately drove his car into a crowd of peaceful protestors.
At the end of the day, our most reliable tool for holding Todd Spitzer accountable will be our vote. Our vote is still the most powerful tool for change and the freedom to choose goes hand-in-hand. Its like trying to separate the wet from the water you cant have one without the other, Futrel said.
In another past report, the ACLU of Northern California analyzed race bias in practices and policies of the Orange County District Attorneys Office, stating that Blacks are 83.5 percent more likely than whites to be charged with a felony, regardless of age or gender.
There were persistent racial disparities across the OCDAs Offices charging practices, and Black people were more likely to be charged with a crime, more likely to be charged with a felony, and more likely to be negatively impacted by discretionary charging practices related to wobblers, enhancements, and diversion than white people, the ACLU reported.
Eugene Fields, vice chair of the Black Democrats of Orange County, said this election holds a tremendous amount of weight.
Fields, who is also on the California Democratic Party Black Caucus executive board, said people of color must show out in force so Black and Democrat candidates can have a fighting chance.
The top two vote-getters for all elected offices in the Primary will go on to compete in the November election.
Especially minority Democrats dont get out and vote because they dont feel like these elections matter to them they do, he said. Were talking here in Orange County, we can possibly vote in a new District Attorney. We could possibly flip the makeup of the Board of Supervisors in terms of having a Democratic majority.
The Orange County Black Democrats have been meeting on Zoom, and at times at a park pulling about 25-30 participants. But, he said they are asking the community to do a bigger part in the process by filling out the ballot and mailing in their vote.
Were here to help you to decide who you want to vote for, or even candidates to come and speak to us if you choose to reach out to a segment of the population you dont have access to, he said.
June 7 is the last day to vote by mail or at their polling places that open from 7:00 a.m. and close at 8:00 p.m.
Some voters will hand their ballot to the mailman, some will drive it down to the Voter Registrars office, while others like the old-fashioned way of standing in line for the I Voted sticker.
You fill it out and sign it and put it back in the mail. There is no postage that voters have to pay. There is no excuse for people not to vote, he said.
To get involved with the Black Democrats of Orange County, contact blackdemsoc@gmail.comFor more information on NAN-OC, see https://www.nan-oc.com/To see the ACLU report, https://bit.ly/3ChtqS0To see the ACLU letter, https://bit.ly/3wGYFnh
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Auction of mineral blocks stabilized in the country; 186 mines put on sale so far – Devdiscourse
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The government on Wednesday said the auction of mineral blocks has stabilized in the country as 186 mines have been put on sale so far.
Of the 186 mineral blocks, 28 were auctioned in the last two months and 46 were successfully sold in FY22, Mines Joint Secretary Veena Kumari Dermal said.
''...186 to be precise blocks are allocated through auction. I am very happy to say that out of this, 46 (mineral blocks) were (auctioned) last year, and this financial year in the first two months we have completed the auction of 28 blocks. So, the auction is stabilized in the country,'' she said during 'India Sweden Mining Day' here.
The state governments, she said, are getting a very good share of the revenue from the auctions and stressed that those states which were early birds in the whole race were really happy.
The Indian mining sector is vibrant, dynamic, and has very good players, she said, and expressed hope that ''the Swedish companies will also take part.'' Swedish companies, she said, are providing technical and automation support to the Indian mining industry.
''Hope today's meeting will help us to kick-start the cooperation and take it forward,'' she added.
Private participation in exploration is being encouraged and a very good legislative provision is made to encourage private participation in exploration also, the joint secretary said.
Swedish Ambassador to India Klas Molin said, ''India Sweden Mining Day is precisely to look at opportunities for cooperation. We have all major companies who have long experiences of working in mining in Sweden...and India here today. ''And as we speak there's a panel going on collaboration, opportunities, etc. So the day is meant to look at those opportunities and I am sure lots of tie-up and potential collaboration will follow.'' The mines ministry had earlier said that the amendment in mineral auction rules will encourage competition that will ensure more participation in the sale of blocks.
The Ministry of Mines had earlier notified the Minerals (Evidence of Mineral Contents) Second Amendment Rules, 2021, and the Mineral (Auction) Fourth Amendment Rules, 2021 to amend the Minerals (Evidence of Mineral Contents) Rules, 2015 (MEMC Rules) and the Mineral (Auction) Rules, 2015 (Auction Rules), respectively.
The amendment rules have been framed after extensive consultations with the states, industry associations, miners, other stakeholders, and the general public.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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