Good morning! Here is your news briefing for Tuesday July 6, 2021
1.) THE DAILY SIGNAL
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2.) THE EPOCH TIMES
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3.) DAYBREAK
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4.) THE SUNBURN
Sunburn — The morning read of what’s hot in Florida politics — 7.6.21
Happy Tuesday. We’re back!
We hope you had a nice long weekend and were among the many who made up for skipping out on the Fourth of July festivities last year by celebrating doubly hard in 2021. Fives and zeros are what really matter anyway.
Americans rang in the country’s 245th year with celebrations unseen since 2019. The White House hosted the biggest bash of the Joe Biden era, Will Smith brought fireworks back to the Big Easy, and NYC welcomed back some sorely missed traditions — a special congrats to Joey “Jaws” Chestnut, who downed 76 hot dogs to win another Nathan’s Famous July Fourth hot dog eating contest.
Many in South Florida, unfortunately, were not in a celebratory mood on the Fourth of July. It has been 12 days since the Champlain Towers collapse in Surfside, killing at least 27 people. There are 118 still missing, scores more who are now without homes, and countless others mourning a friend, family member, or acquaintance. As one article put it: “everybody in Miami knows somebody from that building.”
The collapse was the biggest story out of Florida last week and the week before, but not due to a lack of other headline-worthy news. The end of June saw Gov. Ron DeSantis work through the last batch of bills passed in the 2021 Legislative Session.
There were some snoozers, sure, but the no-fault repeal wasn’t one of them. Floridians had been waiting to see whether the Governor would sign or veto the bill (SB 54), which — depending on who you believe — could have saved motorists a few bucks or raked them over the coals. The result was a veto, much to the delight of insurers and drivers alike.
The biggest bill to earn the Governor’s approval: the Florida Wildlife Corridor Act.
The bill will pump $400 million into the Department of Environmental Protection for land buys in the Florida Ecological Greenways Network. For those not in the know, the corridor spans from the Panhandle to the Everglades and is home to a bevy of native species, including the Florida panther. It’s something every Floridian can celebrate.
Last week was also Florida’s first-ever “Freedom Week.” It’ll take a bit for state economists to deliver hard data on how much the new sales tax holiday saved Floridians, but the early reviews, if you will, indicate it was a success.
Hopefully, Florida’s teachers saved a lot of cash on concert tickets and camping gear because their highly anticipated bonus checks are in limbo.
According to the U.S. Department of Education, the fine print on the federal COVID-19 relief package could allow for teacher bonuses, but Florida’s plan doesn’t match the intended goal of addressing the learning loss. Hopefully, some Hollywood accounting can make it work, otherwise, teacher’s bank accounts will get a COVID-19 slide all their own.
Four-figure checks are getting the shaft all around, it seems.
On the first of the month, a federal judge sided with the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida in a lawsuit to block a new law to cap contributions to committees backing proposed constitutional amendments. Opponents argued the $3,000 cap would make it virtually impossible to get them on the ballot; lawmakers kinda argued the same thing when they pushed it through the Legislature, albeit with a positive spin.
The DeSantis-backed social media crackdown is also in hot water. A federal judge blocked the law — or the would-be law, since it never went into effect — on the grounds that it would be found unconstitutional. The fight isn’t over, and it likely won’t be for quite a while, but Wednesday’s ruling was a win for Silicon Valley and a gut punch to one of DeSantis’ top priorities last Session.
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Personnel note: Jasmyne Henderson to lead Pittman Law Group Orlando office — Tallahassee-based law and lobbying firm Pittman Law Group is expanding into the Orlando market with a new office headed by Henderson. The attorney and FSU law alumna will be leaving Tallahassee to open and manage the law firm’s new office. Founder and managing partner Sean Pittman said she is “ready and prepared to lead” and has proved “invaluable to the firm” during her tenure as director of the firm’s governmental affairs team in Tallahassee. “I’m honored to lead this next era of expansion to the Pittman Law Group. The I-4 corridor is the heartbeat of Florida, so it is a logical next step for me personally and the Pittman Law Group to establish a strong presence in Orlando,” she said.
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Welcome to the world — Over the break, Abigail Lily Cohn was born to Sachs Media Vice President Ryan Cohn and his wife, Tallahassee attorney Diana Cohn. Abigail weighs in at 6 lbs., 3 oz, and measures 19.5”. Congratulations to the newly grown family!
— SITUATIONAL AWARENESS —
—@JimmyPatronis: There are no words that can express the grief felt in #Surfside. Katie & I send our deepest condolences to the loved ones of those lost in this terrible tragedy. Together, we reach for the love that poured into this community and pray for those working to make miracles happen
—@MayorDaniella: This unthinkable tragedy has shown us how deeply connected we are as one community. Thank you to all the journalists & storytellers for the care & attention you’ve given to sharing these stories — to making sure the world knows about the lives lived & lost.
Tweet, tweet:
Tweet, tweet:
—@BiancaJoanie: An effort that has not gotten enough attention is the dozens of stories my colleagues at @MiamiHerald have collected about the victims & missing people from the Champlain Towers collapse. We are aiming to do every single one. If you can help us, reach out.
Tweet, tweet:
—@BMcNoldy: Just how extraordinary is it to have a hurricane in the eastern Caribbean before mid-July? Well, do 1933 and 2005 mean anything to you? Those are the only two years it happened before. Not cool, 2021, not cool. #Elsa
—@ZachCoveyTV: 113 hours ago, 2500 miles ago, the NHC issued their first cone on #Elsa. They placed the storm right off the coast of Cuba around this time. Elsa is just 46 miles off from where they forecast it to be LAST WEDNESDAY. They’re the best in the biz for a reason.
Tweet, tweet:
—@arin_twit: Dogs: tonight we’re gathering at the fireworks sellers’ house to bark all night long. Don’t tell anyone.
— DAYS UNTIL —
‘Black Widow’ rescheduled premiere — 3; MLB All-Star Game — 7; Jeff Bezos travels into space on Blue Origin’s first passenger flight — 14; new start date for 2021 Olympics — 17; second season of ‘Ted Lasso’ premieres on Apple+ — 17; the NBA Draft — 17; ‘Jungle Cruise’ premieres — 29; ‘The Suicide Squad’ premieres — 35; Florida Behavioral Health Association’s Annual Conference (BHCon) begins — 43; St. Petersburg Primary Election — 49; Disney’s ‘Shang Chi and The Legend of The Ten Rings’ premieres — 58; NFL regular season begins — 65; Broadway’s full-capacity reopening — 70; 2022 Legislative Session interim committee meetings begin — 76; ‘The Many Saints of Newark’ premieres (rescheduled) — 80; ‘Dune’ premieres — 87; Walt Disney World’s 50th anniversary party starts — 87; MLB regular season ends — 89; ‘No Time to Die’ premieres (rescheduled) — 94; World Series Game 1 — 113; St. Petersburg Municipal Elections — 119; Florida’s 20th Congressional District primary — 119; Disney’s ‘Eternals’ premieres — 121; ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ rescheduled premiere — 135; San Diego Comic-Con begins — 143; Steven Spielberg’s ‘West Side Story’ premieres — 157; ‘Spider-Man Far From Home’ sequel premieres — 167; NFL season ends — 187; 2022 Legislative Session starts — 189; Florida’s 20th Congressional District election — 189; NFL playoffs begin — 193; Super Bowl LVI — 222; ‘Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ premieres — 262; ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ premieres — 304; ‘Platinum Jubilee’ for Queen Elizabeth II — 331; “Black Panther 2” premieres — 367; ‘Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse’ sequel premieres — 458; “Captain Marvel 2” premieres — 493.
“Tropical Storm Elsa gets attention in the Keys — with some preparation but no panic” via Gwen Filosa of the Miami Herald — The Lower Keys could(‘ve) started to feel Elsa’s winds as early as Monday night, but more likely early Tuesday morning. The National Weather Service shows Key West could see maximum sustained winds in the low-40s with gusts as high as 57 mph around 7 a.m. Tuesday. Monroe County officials have not issued mandatory evacuation orders. But they recommend people in mobile homes, travel trailers, RVs and boats either leave the Keys by sunset Monday or ride out the storm in safer housing. The forecast also calls for limited coastal flooding, isolated tornadoes, and flooding with rain totals of two to four inches.
Assignment editors — DeSantis will join FDEM Director Kevin Guthrie for a news conference on Tropical Storm Elsa, 8:15 a.m., State Emergency Operations Center, 2555 Shumard Oak Boulevard, Tallahassee. RSVP to Bailey.A.Smith@eog.myflorida.com.
— LATEST ON SURFSIDE —
“Death toll rises to 27 in Surfside collapse as demolition opens new areas to search teams” via Douglas Hanks, Bianca Padró Ocasio and David Ovalle of the Miami Herald — The successful implosion of the Champlain Towers South paved the way for rescue workers early Monday to begin scouring a previously inaccessible portion of the building. The demolition provided hope, however slim, that survivors might be hidden in voids in the massive pile of twisted concrete, metal and debris. But it also signaled that firefighters will likely begin finding more victims at an accelerated pace. Indeed, by Monday afternoon, county officials announced that three more bodies had been discovered in the hours after the implosion, raising the death toll to 27, with 118 still missing in what could become one of the deadliest building failures in U.S. history.
“Beloved parents of seven children killed in the Surfside condo collapse” via C. Isaiah Smalls II of the Miami Herald — In April 2020, Chana Wasserman penned a blog post about her mom, Ingrid “Itty” Ainsworth. Entitled “A Mother Like No Other,” Wasserman described Ainsworth, 66, as someone who was not only extremely neat and passionate about life but also extremely personable. “Every person she encountered, ever in her life, became her friend,” Wasserman wrote. “Everyone was treated as equals.” Ainsworth’s ability to leave every interaction with a friend likely will be missed most as she and her husband, Tzvi, 68, were found Monday among the wreckage where Champlain Towers South once stood, according to Miami-Dade police. The news comes a dozen days after search and rescue efforts began.
“‘Everybody in Miami knows somebody from that building’” via Linda Robertson of the Miami Herald — Inside the “condo of the abuelas,” a walk down any hallway was a feast for the senses. The smells of frying plantains, baking challah bread, and roasting brisket mingled with the sounds of Willy Chirino’s salsa hits and telenovela actors’ operatic dialogue. The remarkable mosaic of people at Champlain South is a reflection of Miami and its demographic evolution. “Everybody in Miami knows somebody from that building or knows somebody who knows somebody,” said Charles Danger, Miami’s retired building chief and member of the Belen Jesuit Preparatory School alumni association. A Belen graduate is among the missing. “It’s like six degrees of separation, or less.”
—”’They were just starting their lives.’ Newlyweds still missing in the Surfside collapse” via Ariana Aspuru
“Where are the pets? Mayor says crews searched Surfside condo units before demolition” via David J. Neal and Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — In defending the efforts to save family pets left behind in Surfside’s Champlain Towers South, Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava says rescue workers went into condos Sunday looking for animals before the building was demolished. “They were, at great risk to themselves, searching inside those units that had been indicated that might have pets and searching very thoroughly,” she said Monday. On Saturday, Levine Cava had said any pet search before the demolition wouldn’t involve going into units because “it is not safe for anyone to go beyond the first floor.”
“Lax enforcement let South Florida towers skirt inspections for years” via Michael LaForgia, Adam Playford and Lazaro Gamio of The New York Times — Florida’s high-rise building regulations have long been among the strictest in the nation. But after parts of Champlain Towers South tumbled down on June 24, evidence has mounted that those rules have been enforced unevenly by local governments, and sometimes not at all. Miami-Dade County officials said last week that they prioritized reviews of 24 multistory buildings that either had failed major structural or electrical inspections required after 40 years or had not submitted the reports in the first place. But the county’s own records show that 17 of those cases had been open for a year or more. Two cases were against properties owned by the county itself. The oldest case had sat unresolved since 2008.
“After Surfside, changes proposed in Miami-Dade building regulations” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — The Surfside condominium collapse could lead to a string of changes in Miami-Dade County’s building code, high-rise regulations and the local approach to guarding against structural damage from sea-level rise. A previously confidential list of pending legislation filed by Miami-Dade commissioners after the June 24 catastrophe shows more than two dozen proposals in the pipeline. These include legislation to speed up the current requirement for building recertifications every 40 years and rules to bolster maintenance funds for condominiums and affordable housing projects. There also are studies on how to prevent the structural damage that comes with flooded garages, an issue that appeared to be a chronic problem at the collapsed Champlain Towers South complex.
“Area lawmakers say Surfside collapse will bring proposals for state-level changes” via David Bauerlein of The Florida Times-Union — Two state lawmakers representing coastal communities of Northeast Florida say they expect the Surfside condo tower collapse will bring proposed changes in regulations, but they want to see what an investigation determines caused the building to come down. “It was devastating,” said state Rep. Cord Byrd. He said he wants to learn more about what led up to the building falling. State Sen. Aaron Bean said, “there will be intense scrutiny,” he said, adding there might be several bills dealing with regulations. Jacksonville Beach resident Jon McGowan, who lives in the seven-story Vanilla Manila condo building, said he thinks the Florida Building Code should take a fresh round of inspections 20 to 25 years after a building gets its original certificate of occupancy, or even sooner for buildings along the ocean where salt air causes corrosion.
“Ron DeSantis can’t let a Surfside inquiry become the usual political cover job” via Bennett Levin of The Washington Post — When disaster strikes in the United States, two responses tend to follow: some kind of commission to unearth the truth of what happened, and new laws to prevent it from happening again. Days after the Champlain Towers South condominium complex collapse in Surfside, we already hear calls for both. Unfortunately, experience has taught me that these investigations are often little more than political charades. Inquests prioritized protecting the powerful over enforcing accountability for those most at fault. The Surfside victims should not be subjected to a similar farce. Any investigation must deliver true accountability by getting to the bottom of who knew what (and when) and refusing to give anyone who abdicated their professional responsibilities a pass.
“New Miami-Dade Mayor, Daniella Levine Cava, in global spotlight after Surfside collapse” via Douglas Hanks of the Miami Herald — It was Levine Cava’s seventh day delivering grim news from the Surfside operation when she took a deep breath at the cluster of microphones where she had already announced 16 deaths. “Since our last briefing, I am very pained to tell you that we found two additional bodies in the rubble,” Levine Cava said at a media briefing aired around the world on June 30. The county’s police department would follow up with a news release including official identification of the collapse’s youngest known victim to date, Emma Guara, 4, and sister Lucia Guara, 11. The early word from Levine Cava reflected her self-assigned role in the ongoing Surfside catastrophe: the public face of a response that hasn’t found a survivor since the early hours of the collapse.
“Lauren Book courts cards for Surfside emergency crews” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Book is collecting cards thanking crew members for their work on search and rescue efforts following the Surfside condo collapse. “As our neighbors in the town of Surfside deal with unthinkable tragedy, many of us are looking for ways to help — including children,” Book wrote in an email to constituents, before noting that she and her children had decided to make support cards for the first responders. Book is asking community members to send cards to her office at 967 Nob Hill Road, Plantation, FL 33324. Those looking to send support can also mail cards to Sen. Jason Pizzo’s office at 5582 NE 4th Court, Suite 7B, Miami, FL 33137. Senate District 38, which Pizzo represents, covers Surfside.
“Is your building in danger of collapse? Look for these warning signs” via Ron Hurtibise of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Around the globe, the rare and tragic collapse of a 40-year-old condo tower in Surfside has motivated residents to scrutinize their buildings with fresh eyes. We’re checking out every crack, chip and rust stain and asking whether they might portend a catastrophe. It’s a challenging task. Unless you have an engineering degree, real-world experience and sophisticated testing equipment, it’s difficult to discern the difference between cracks caused by normal settling and others warning of shifts in the earth below that could result in serious damage if left unrepaired. But the increase in attention — around the world — might be the only good thing to come out of such a grim event, according to construction restoration engineers.
“Surfside tragedy rattles Florida’s condo insurance industry” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald/Tampa Bay Times — Within days of the partial collapse of Champlain Towers South in Surfside, insurance companies sent letters to owners of condominiums 40 years and older in South Florida, asking for proof that their buildings have passed all inspections, or they will lose their coverage. Now, if a building can’t comply with the insurance requests, the insurer can cancel the policy with a 45-day notice or choose not to renew the policy. Miami-Dade and Broward are the only Florida counties that require aging high-rises to go through a reinspection after they reach 40 years of age. But the action letters could have a ripple effect across the state if they result in policies being dropped and a tightening of the insurance market.
— 2022 —
“‘Make America Florida.’ DeSantis goes national with an eye toward the White House” via Skyler Swisher of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — DeSantis stood at a lectern with a sign that proclaimed, “Secure our border. Secure our states.” Then he unleashed as the cameras rolled. While he offered few concrete specifics, DeSantis said he would be dispatching Florida police officers to Arizona and Texas to help fix the problem. The political message beamed out not just to Florida but nationwide: DeSantis, the heir apparent to former President Donald Trump, was doing the job Biden wouldn’t do. It was one of the recent signs that DeSantis is gearing up not just for his reelection campaign next year but for a possible run for the White House in 2024.
“Eric Lynn rakes in $368K in first finance report for CD 13 campaign” via Kelly Hayes of Florida Politics — Lynn raised more than $368,000 in the second quarter finance period, his first finance report since launching his campaign for Florida’s 13th Congressional District in mid-May. This fundraising period gives Lynn north of $500,000 cash on hand, a good starting point for what is expected to be one of the most hotly contested races this upcoming election season. Lynn’s campaign provided the latest finance update. Lynn, who previously worked as a national security adviser in former President Barack Obama’s administration, was the first Democrat to enter the race. He faces state Reps. Ben Diamond and Michele Rayner-Goolsby in the Democratic Primary. Diamond has more than $250,000 for his congressional bid in four weeks, his campaign announced at the start of June.
“Bobby DuBose nabs $225K, picks up congressional endorsement in CD 20” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — DuBose, the Florida House Democratic Leader, has raised $225,000 in the first six weeks of his campaign to succeed the late U.S. Rep. Alcee Hastings. DuBose is a co-leader of the minority party in the House and part of a crowded field of candidates in the race for Florida’s 20th Congressional District. The Special Election is set for Jan. 11. “The support we’ve received in the past six weeks has been incredible,” DuBose said. The end of the fundraising period also coincides with an endorsement from U.S. Rep. Nikema Williams. That makes him the first in the race to announce an endorsement from a sitting member of Congress.
“Adam Anderson raises $84K in HD 65 race” via Renzo Downey of Florida Politics — Anderson has raised $84,000 in his bid to succeed House Speaker Chris Sprowls in House District 65. The Republican, a local businessman from North Pinellas, entered the race last month, taking on Democrat Kelly Lynn Johnson in the red district. Sprowls endorsed Anderson days after he launched his campaign. “It’s been an incredible first month, and the outpouring of support and encouragement from leaders throughout our community, and state, is truly humbling,” Anderson said. Anderson was born in New York but moved to Pinellas County as a child. He attended Admiral Farragut Academy and served on the school’s National Junior ROTC and Naval Science programs. He earned degrees in real estate and finance from Florida State University’s College of Business.
— DATELINE TALLY —
ICYMI — “Jeff Brandes out as chair of Senate Judiciary Committee” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — After finding himself at odds with several GOP priorities during the 2021 Legislative Session, Pinellas state Sen. Brandes was removed Friday as chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Senate President Wilton Simpson reassigned the seat to Republican Sen. Danny Burgess for the upcoming Legislative Session. Brandes will instead lead the Committee on Governmental Oversight and Accountability. “Throughout his time in the Senate, Sen. Brandes has showed a great interest in the operations of state government,” Simpson said in a statement to Florida Politics. The reassignment marks the latest political dust-up between Brandes and his party.
“Magic City Casino owners sue to invalidate Seminole Tribe’s sports betting deal” via Mary Ellen Klas of the Miami Herald — One of Florida’s oldest pari-mutuel companies, owner of Miami’s Magic City Casino and the Bonita Springs Poker Room, has filed a federal lawsuit challenging the Florida gaming compact between the state and the Seminole Tribe of Florida, alleging that the sports betting component is a based on “legal fiction” that violates federal law. The lawsuit, filed Friday in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida by the Havenick family’s West Flagler Associates and Bonita-Fort Myers Corporation, argues that the agreement authorizing sports betting outside of tribal lands in Florida is in violation of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA) and asks the court to enjoin implementation of sports betting.
“Shevrin Jones plans tour of public colleges to talk education, COVID-19 response” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — Jones is planning in-person visits to Florida’s 12 public universities over the next several weeks to address education leaders ahead of the upcoming fall semester. The COVID-19 pandemic upended education administration last year throughout the nation. While Florida was among the first states to push schools to open, many universities continued to enforce some form of social distancing rules. Jones, a former educator before his time in the Legislature, will tour the state’s dozen public colleges starting on July 13. Jones’ first stop will take him to Florida Gulf Coast University on Tuesday, July 13.
New and renewed lobbying registrations:
Jim Boxold, Andrew Ketchel, Capital City Consulting: Advanced Drainage Systems
Whitney Doyle: Florida Alliance for Assistive Services and Technology
George Hagerty, Richard Killion: Beacon College
James McFaddin, The Southern Group: CBC Holdings
Darrick McGhee, Johnson & Blanton: US Meltblown
Ron Pierce, Kaitlyn Bailey, Edward Briggs, Natalie King, RSA Consulting Group: High 5, Livingstone Schools
Joshua Spagnola: AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals
— STATEWIDE —
“Florida’s new Parents’ Bill of Rights brings big changes to medical care for children” via Cindy Krischer Goodman of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — On Tuesday night, DeSantis signed the Parents Bill of Rights, effective July 1. On the face of it, the Parents’ Bill of Rights, a bill sponsored by state Rep. Erin Grall seems self-explanatory: parents, not government or schools or doctors, have the right to direct the upbringing, education, health care, and mental health of their minor child. However, for parents and children, the law greatly affects how medical emergencies at places like youth sporting events, playgrounds, or public pools are handled. Doctors say they can no longer rush in as a volunteer to treat a child with an allergic reaction, a sprained ankle, a broken bone, a concussion, or any type of injury in emergencies without first getting a parent’s written consent, under the new Parents’ Bill of Rights.
“Florida National Guard troops go months without state education benefits” via Jason Delgado of Florida Politics — Soldiers and airmen of the Florida National Guard went months without state education benefits this year despite serving amid the busiest activation period since World War II. The Educational Dollars for Duty program stopped approving the applications of service members in April after funding for the state program ran out. The program, a flagship benefit and recruitment tool covers tuition and fees for eligible troops. In all, roughly 250 guard members were denied the benefit, according to the Florida National Guard. Moreover, the entire force remained without it until Thursday, when the new budget kicked in.
“Getting public records from a Florida government agency just became easier” via Michael Moline of Florida Phoenix — Your government can’t drag you into court anymore if you file a request for a public document. The legislation now signed by DeSantis has put an end to these “declaratory judgment” lawsuits. Essentially, agencies ask a judge to rule on whether the requested information represents a true public record that it is obliged to hand over. But they can seriously run up costs of seeking public records and drag out the process. Patricia Marsh, executive director of the Florida First Amendment Foundation, praised the Governor, who signed the legislation on June 29. “We are thrilled that Gov. DeSantis saw the wisdom and necessity of SB 400 and signed it into law,” she said.
“A wave of foreclosures is coming. Floridians need protection from predatory lenders” via Ricardo M. Corona of the Miami Herald — The moratorium on foreclosures of government-backed mortgage loans ended June 30, and those of us who see the foreclosure system up close are worried. Why? We see day in and day out how easy it is for mortgage lenders and servicers to wrongly toss people from their homes and sometimes illegally. A decade after major banks paid a $25 billion settlement for predatory mortgage practices, many of the same practices are still taking place. We’re talking about neighbors, family members, and friends trying to do the right thing and keep a roof over their heads after running into financial trouble, especially during the pandemic shutdown. An estimated 10 million Americans are behind in their mortgage payments, and 1.8 million are 90 days past due, four times as many as before the pandemic.
“Florida’s freshwater springs are in jeopardy, a new documentary suggests” via Patrick Connolly of the Orlando Sentinel — A two-part documentary series, “The Fellowship of the Springs,” shines a light on the Sunshine State’s unique artesian springs, the threats to their livelihood and the efforts to save them. Both parts of the documentary will air 4-6 p.m. July 8 on WUCF in Central Florida. In the documentary, scenes show families and friends enjoying pristine blue waters at Rock Springs, Wekiwa Springs, Devil’s Den, Weeki Wachee Springs and Blue Spring. These “magic waters” are known as tourism destinations, as well as habitats for manatees, turtles and alligators. In addition, the Floridan Aquifer, the source of the springs, provides drinking water for a wide swath of Florida and parts of Georgia.
— CORONA FLORIDA —
“COVID-19 in June: Caution urged as vaccinations and testing slows, variants rise” via Bailey Gallion of Florida Today — Throughout Florida in June, COVID-19 case counts held steady, vaccination and testing rates dropped, and the more contagious Delta strain of the virus spread in the Sunshine State and elsewhere. U.S. experts now warn that the emergence of the Delta variant and other strains could slow the “return to normal” many Americans hoped to see in 2021. On June 4, the Florida Department of Health, or FDOH, ceased releasing daily reports in favor of a weekly format that contained significantly less information. Jay Wolfson, a professor of public health at the University of South Florida, said that doesn’t mean the agency is no longer tracking the virus. “I am reasonably convinced that the State Department of Health is continuing its internal monitoring and surveillance cases, but we’re testing less,” Wolfson said.
“COVID-19 infections rising again in Central Florida” via Scott Powers of Florida Politics — COVID-19 infections are going in the wrong directions throughout Central Florida, while vaccination rates slow down. The latest reports from the Florida Department of Health show the number of COVID-19 cases for last week was the highest seen for each of greater Orlando’s six counties for the week ending last Thursday since the department switched from daily reports to weekly at the start of June. At the same time, the number of people receiving at least their first vaccination also was down across the region, compared with previous weeks’ tallies. The weekly reports show a steady rise in new cases and positive test rates across Central Florida.
“South Florida COVID-19 cases are rising, but remain among lowest levels of the pandemic” via Ryan Nicol of Florida Politics — COVID-19 cases have been steadily rising in all three major South Florida counties since mid-June. Though cases are trending upward, they remain among the lowest levels seen since testing began in March 2020. Still, those upward trends could cause concern among officials as vaccinations appear to be dropping. The newest weekly report from the Department of Health relays data from June 25 through July 1. That report shows Palm Beach County at a 4.3% case positivity rate, which measures the share of COVID-19 tests that come back positive. That number is 3.9% for Broward and 3.6% for Miami-Dade. Health experts say that number should remain below 5% to ensure the virus’s spread remains under control, and all three counties meet that criteria.
“Hillsborough County lags Tampa Bay region in COVID-19 vaccination rate” via Janelle Irwin Taylor of Florida Politics — Hillsborough County is lagging behind neighboring counties in vaccination efforts. Hillsborough vaccinated 684,860 residents as of July 1. While that’s more than any county in the Tampa Bay region, it’s a smaller portion of the overall population, just 53% of those eligible to receive a vaccine. By comparison, Pinellas County vaccinated 57% of those age 12 and older, and Pasco County vaccinated 54%. A total of 23 counties statewide have a higher vaccination rate than Hillsborough County. The Florida Department of Health now only reports COVID-19 data weekly. The next report will begin to show whether the Fourth of July holiday and associated gatherings and travel had any impact on rising incidences of COVID-19.
“Jacksonville Councilwoman Ju’Coby Pittman in ICU battling COVID-19” via First Coast News — Pittman is reportedly in the hospital struggling with COVID-19. Several sources close to the councilwoman confirmed to First Coast News that she’s in the intensive care unit and hospitalized in the last few days. However, nobody knows where Pittman could have contracted COVID-19. Pittman represents District 8 and has served the Jacksonville community in leadership roles for more than 30 years. At this time, it’s not clear what her current health status is.
“UNF team surveys 3,000 Florida health care workers to learn from the pandemic” via Matt Soergel of The Florida Times-Union — University of North Florida researchers polled about 3,000 Florida health care professionals during the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic about how their work lives were being affected. A big takeaway was that many were not fully equipped to deal with telehealth conferences, which became much more common in 2020. That shows the need for more training in virtual consultations with patients, which was proved during the pandemic to be an effective health care tool, said Kristen Hicks-Roof, a nutrition and dietetics assistant professor who was one of the survey’s authors. “If we can train this next generation of providers, we’ll be OK, and they’ll be more satisfied with telehealth, compared to those who were just thrust into that environment,” she said.
— CORONA NATION —
“At the start of the pandemic, kids made up 2% of new COVID-19 infections. Now, they make up 24%. What happened?” via Adriana Rodriguez of USA Today — Children make up a growing share of new coronavirus cases each week as overall infections decline with the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines, but infection and hospitalization rates among children remain stable. In March 2020, children accounted for only about 2% of new infections. By the end of May, children made up more than 24% of new weekly infections even though they account for only 16% of the population, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics data. Health experts say it’s a sign more adults and adolescents need to get vaccinated to avoid bringing the virus home and spreading it to children who aren’t yet eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine.
“Will the U.S.-Canada border reopen this summer? Tourists, business travelers and families anxiously await news” via The Associated Press — With increasing vaccination rates and dropping infection rates, many are annoyed the two governments haven’t laid out detailed plans to reopen the border fully. Canada is easing its restrictions. Starting Monday, fully vaccinated Canadians or permanent legal residents may return to Canada without quarantining. But among the requirements are a negative test for the virus before returning and another once they get back. The Canadian and U.S. governments aren’t expected to reevaluate the border closure until July 21. Commercial traffic has gone back and forth normally between the two countries since the start of the pandemic. Canadians can fly into the United States with a negative COVID-19 test, and Americans can visit Canada to see relatives or close friends as outlined by a strict set of guidelines.
— CORONA ECONOMICS —
“$99 million in rental assistance for Floridians returned” via Caroline Glenn of the Orlando Sentinel — About $99 million in unspent rental assistance meant to help Floridians living in affordable housing was returned to the state after the agency overseeing the program struggled to disburse the money. The Florida Housing Finance Corporation, which was established by the Florida Legislature to help develop and support affordable housing, received $120 million in federal funding for rental assistance last year as part of the CARES Act. Florida used the money to set up a Coronavirus Relief Fund, intended to help tenants catch up on rent. Taylore Maxey, press secretary for the nonprofit, said it handed out about $13.2 million to help tenants at 373 multifamily developments across the state. In total, FHFC said it received 786 applications for assistance, but only 521 were approved.
“Southwest, American delays hint at hard summer for travelers” via David Koenig of The Associated Press — This summer is already shaping up to be a difficult one for air travelers. Southwest Airlines customers have struggled with thousands of delays and hundreds of canceled flights in the past three weeks because of computer problems, staffing shortages and bad weather. American Airlines is also grappling with a surge in delays, and it has trimmed its schedule through mid-July at least partly because it doesn’t have enough pilots, according to the pilots’ union. At the same time, the number of Americans getting on planes is at a pandemic-era high. Just under 2.2 million travelers were screened at U.S. airports on Friday, the highest number since early March 2020. Travelers are posting photos of long airport lines and describing painful flights.
— MORE CORONA —
“Japan could face vaccine crunch as it nears Olympics start” via Lisa Du and Isabel Reynolds of Bloomberg — Some Japanese municipalities have stopped taking vaccination reservations due to short supplies from the central government, possibly slowing inoculations nationwide just weeks before Tokyo hosts the Olympics. Osaka City will suspend reservations for first-time vaccinations on July 12 because of a lack of clarity on supply from the government, Mayor Ichiro Matsui said Friday in Tokyo after meeting Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga. The city of Chiba, just east of Tokyo, said it would suspend new appointments starting Friday, while a handful of other areas have stopped taking new reservations or pushed back plans to open access to people below 65. Japan’s vaccination drive has picked up speed after getting off to a slow start but will be nowhere reaching the bulk of the population before the country hosts the Olympics.
— PRESIDENTIAL —
“Joe Biden administration formally launches effort to return deported veterans to U.S.” via Maria Sacchetti of The Washington Post — The Biden administration unveiled plans to bring hundreds, possibly thousands, of deported veterans and their immediate family members back to the United States, saying their removal “failed to live up to our highest values.” Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas ordered his department’s immigration agencies to “immediately” take steps to ensure that military families may return to the United States. He said the department would also halt pending deportation proceedings against veterans or their immediate relatives in the United States and clear the way for those eligible to apply for U.S. citizenship. Officials said they would also work with the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Defense Department to ensure that veterans can access their health benefits.
— EPILOGUE TRUMP —
“Five takeaways from Donald Trump’s rally in Sarasota” via Ryan McKinnon of The Sarasota Herald-Tribune — There aren’t many, if any, political leaders who could entice thousands of people to a Florida fairground in July, where they bake in a field for hours before standing in the pouring rain, waiting to hear a defeated politician give a 90-minute speech. But Trump‘s popularity was on full display Saturday, as his supporters stood in an off-and-on downpour for nearly two hours, at times cheering louder as the rain intensified. “You sat and got drenched. Is everybody drenched?” Trump said. “You don’t have to worry about taking a shower tonight; that water is so clean and nice.” Trump gear was ubiquitous at the rally, much of it echoing the former president’s combative persona.
“In ramp-up to 2022 midterms, Republican candidates center pitches on Trump’s false election claims” via Amy Gardner of The Washington Post — Republican candidates for state and federal offices are increasingly focused on the last election, running on the falsehood that the 2020 race was stolen from Trump. While most of these campaigns are in their early stages, the embrace of Trump’s claims is already widespread on the trail and in candidates’ messages to voters. The trend provides fresh evidence of Trump’s continued grip on the GOP, reflecting how a movement inspired by his claims and centered on overturning a democratic election has gained currency in the party. Dozens of candidates promoting the baseless notion that the election was rigged are seeking powerful statewide offices in several of the decisive states where Trump and his allies sought to overturn the outcome and engineer his return to the White House.
— CRISIS —
“6 months after Capitol assault, corporate pledges fall flat” via David Klepper of The Associated Press — As shock waves spread across the country from the Jan. 6 insurrection, corporate America took a stand against the lies that powered the mob. Or so it seemed. Dozens of big companies pledged to avoid donating money to the 147 lawmakers who objected to Congress’ certification of Biden’s victory. It was a striking gesture by some of the most familiar names in business, but, as it turns out, it was largely an empty one. Six months later, many of those companies have resumed funneling cash to political action committees that benefit the election efforts of lawmakers. Companies contend that donating directly to a candidate is not the same as giving to a PAC that supports them. Given America’s porous campaign finance laws, that’s a distinction without a difference to campaign finance experts.
“Stephanie Murphy of Florida to serve on Jan. 6 committee” via The News Service of Florida — Murphy will be one of eight members of Congress who will probe the Jan. 6 storming of the U.S. Capitol by supporters of former Trump. Nancy Pelosi named the Central Florida congresswoman to the Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol. The panel was named Thursday and will be chaired by Rep. Bennie Thompson.
“Why Republicans condemn Marjorie Taylor Greene, but not Paul Gosar” via Ben Jacobs of New York Magazine — First, the far-right Republican from Arizona was the much-touted surprise guest at a counter-CPAC event in February hosted by Nick Fuentes, a White nationalist who marched at the infamous neo-Nazi Charlottesville rally in 2017 where a neo-Nazi murdered a counterprotester. Then last week, Gosar was revealed to be planning a campaign fundraiser with Fuentes, who has engaged in Holocaust denialism, praised segregation, and repeatedly made anti-Semitic comments. Gosar initially appeared to defend the fundraiser in a tweet. Almost as befuddling is that House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy has yet to chastise Gosar for his repeated associations with the extreme fringes.
— D.C. MATTERS —
“Supreme Court sends a serious signal on voting” via Bill Cotterell of the Tallahassee Democrat — That long-feared split between conservatives and liberals on the U.S. Supreme Court finally erupted last week, with ominous implications for Democrats in next year’s elections. A 6-3 vote upheld two provisions of Arizona election law, restricting “ballot harvesting” and disallowing votes cast in the wrong precinct. Aside from what the law does, the case precisely illustrated what Democrats feared so much last year. They didn’t even take up a challenge to the 2020 election results, which Trump wanted them to. But the worst fears of the worriers were realized on Thursday. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Clarence Thomas joined Amy Cohen Barrett and Brett Kavanaugh to uphold the Arizona statute.
“With trillions at stake, Democrats hurtle toward key decisions on Biden’s agenda” via Mike DeBonis of The Washington Post — Democrats have a chance to pass President Biden’s sweeping infrastructure, tax, climate and social policy measures that would transform American life; but doing so requires them pulling off an incredibly difficult legislative high-wire act over the next few weeks. The House and Senate are out of session for a holiday break, but discussions continue among Democrats about the parameters of potentially monumental legislation that represents Biden’s best chance to deliver on many of his campaign promises. This legislation, which is set to be passed without Republican support separately from a parallel, bipartisan infrastructure measure, may not be ultimately passed until fall or later.
“Matt Gaetz invites Britney Spears to testify about her conservatorship before Congress” via Annie Blanks of the Pensacola News Journal — Gaetz is inviting Spears to testify about her controversial conservatorship before Congress. In a news release issued by Gaetz’s office Thursday morning, the congressman said he led a letter sponsored by Reps. Andy Biggs, Marjorie Taylor Greene and Burgess Owens, encouraging Spears to testify before Congress about her “alleged abusive conservatorship, which gives her father full control of her multimillion-dollar assets and life decisions, despite Ms. Spears’ ability to competently control her actions and estate.” Gaetz announced his letter in an interview Wednesday evening on One America News. Overnight Wednesday, a California judge denied Spears’ request to have her father, Jamie, removed as her conservator.
— LOCAL NOTES —
“Evacuated North Miami Beach condo deemed safe in engineer’s report, attorney says” via Devoun Cetoute and David Neal of the Miami Herald — Two days after dozens of North Miami Beach residents were evacuated from their homes in Crestview Towers, an engineer’s inspection has deemed the building safe again, the condo association’s attorney says. On Saturday, the inspection was done by ASD Consulting Engineers and two city inspectors, said Attorney Mariel Tollinchi, who represents Crestview Towers. Online state records show ASD Consulting Engineers first registered to do business in Florida in 2007. First reported by WPLG Local 10, the engineer’s report hasn’t been officially released yet or shown to the North Miami Beach City Commission, but Tollinchi says the condominium is deemed safe for living in it.
“Residents of Kissimmee apartments may be forced to vacate within month, city says” via Katie Rice of the Orlando Sentinel — Residents of the Caribbean Isle apartment complex have faced the threat of a water shut-off, piles of uncollected garbage, electricity cut to the complex’s common areas and eviction warnings. A letter to residents from the City of Kissimmee dated June 29 said if the complex did not fix its malfunctioning fire alarm systems within 30 days, the Fire Department would mark the structures unsafe and require residents to vacate the complex. Though some residents have already made plans to move elsewhere, many more say they do not have the money to leave. Residents say they have tried to raise their concerns with Caribbean Isle’s local management and escalate them to the property’s owners, but their complaints fall on full voicemail boxes and disconnected emails.
“Clock is ticking: Washington Square developer facing code violations, requests more time” via TaMaryn Waters of the Tallahassee Democrat — The city of Tallahassee put Washington Square’s developer on notice for violating its building permit and has outlined critical steps to address the stalled job site’s apparent decline. Located on Calhoun Street behind the county courthouse, construction came to a screeching halt and ended Dec. 31, 2019. But surrounding streets and sidewalks still are partly blocked off for construction despite months of inactivity. Records obtained by the Tallahassee Democrat show Fairmont Tallahassee LLC, the site’s property owner, received a May 1 letter from Growth Management Director Karen Jumonville. The three-page letter spells out serious concerns with the site that promised to host a 19-story, mixed-use office, and commercial tower, anchored by a Lowes Hotel.
“Holland & Knight to merge with Dallas-based practice this summer” via Richard Bilbao of the Orlando Business Journal — Holland & Knight LLP and Thompson & Knight of Dallas have reached an agreement to merge on or about Aug. 1, said a joint statement from the firms. The new firm, which would operate under the Holland & Knight name, will have almost 1,600 attorneys working in 30 offices. The firms said further information would be released at a later date “upon completion of the merger.” When pressed for additional details, a spokeswoman for the company said more information would be made available in August, following the merger. News of a potential merger first broke in April when the two firms issued a joint statement saying they were in talks to combine.
— TOP OPINION —
“Most Florida counties don’t require condo inspections. After Surfside, how sick is that?” via the Miami Herald editorial board — Coastal high-rise condos are a way of life for many Floridians. Who’s making sure their associations and local governments are doing what it takes to keep them safe after the partial collapse of the Champlain Towers South Condo in Surfside? This is where the state Legislature needs to step in. Lawmakers will have a better idea of what reforms are needed once an investigation into the causes of the collapse is done, but that could take months. One thing seems clear so far: Florida’s building inspection requirements need strengthening. Miami-Dade and Broward are the only counties in Florida that require building re-inspections; both mandate buildings go through the process 40 years after construction, then every 10 years after.
— OPINIONS —
“DeSantis panders to right-wing hysteria and flunks Civics 101” via Steve Bousquet of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — Every single Republican and Democrat present in Tallahassee voted for a program of “citizen scholars” to teach high school students how government works and to encourage them to get more involved in their own communities. Sponsoring the bill (SB 146) were Republican Sen. Brandes and Democratic Rep. Diamond. The Governor’s staff assured Diamond that he would sign it and asked the lawmaker for a canned quote to put in a self-congratulatory news release. Diamond said a DeSantis aide, Cory Dowd, texted him to invite him to a bill-signing event in Fort Myers, which never happened. Instead, DeSantis caved to a pressure campaign by conservative pundit Stanley Kurtz who said DeSantis “needs to veto SB 146.”
“A dangerous moment for academic freedom” via Jill Richardson of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel — The state of Florida just passed a law that — to put it mildly — grossly violates academic freedom. Under the new bill, students and faculty will be surveyed about their political views to ensure “intellectual freedom and ideological diversity.” The real intent appears to be the opposite. The bill doesn’t specify what will happen with this data once it’s collected. But DeSantis and the bill’s sponsor, Sen. Ray Rodrigues, have suggested the responses could be used to target schools for budget cuts if politicians find student and faculty views objectionable. This is a gross violation of academic freedom, which is supposed to protect students and faculty and pave the way for producing knowledge.
“Universal broadband access is within Florida’s grasp” via Brewster Bevis for the Tallahassee Democrat — The Florida legislative session was busy for lawmakers, who oversaw the passage of 3,095 bills and a $101.5 billion budget. One of the most promising developments included a new law designed to expand broadband access in the Sunshine State. Signed by DeSantis on May 7, the Broadband Deployment Act, or HB 1239, takes significant strides toward addressing barriers that hinder the expansion of high-speed internet service. HB 1239 establishes a more equitable division of costs for replacing utility pole infrastructure. It also provides a temporary reduction in the annual rate paid by broadband providers to attach their networks to poles owned by municipal electric companies in unserved areas.
— ON TODAY’S SUNRISE —
Florida’s Emergency Operations Center is on alert as Elsa makes a run at the Sunshine State. The Governor says your best advice is NOT to bug out.
Also, on today’s Sunrise:
— Elsa didn’t do much in Miami-Dade, but the threat of high winds and excess water was enough to convince officials to order the demolition of the remains of the Surfside Condo before the storm made things worse.
— They found more bodies after the demolition, but more than 100 people are still missing.
— Another lawsuit has been filed against the state’s new gambling deal with the Seminole Tribe. The company that owns Miami’s Magic City Casino and the Bonita Springs Poker Room claims it violates the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act.
— Part-time Florida Man Trump got an early start on Independence Day when he held a rally in Sarasota Saturday night. It was his first rally in Florida since losing the election — which he still won’t admit.
— Trump spent most of his time spinning the big lie about a rigged election; he also suggested lynching might be appropriate for The Capitol cop who shot and killed a MAGA rioter on Insurrection Day.
— And finally, stories of two Florida Men, with one accused of illegal dumping in a residential neighborhood, including 3,700 pounds of wet concrete.
To listen, click on the image below:
— ALOE —
“Carnival Cruise Line launches first ship from U.S. port since onset of COVID-19 pandemic” via Bailey Schultz of USA Today — Carnival Cruise Line is once again launching ships with paying passengers from U.S. ports. Carnival Vista departed the Port of Galveston in Texas Saturday afternoon, the first ship from the cruise line to sail from a U.S. port in more than 15 months. “Having our guests onboard again is something we’ve been looking forward to for a very long time,” Carnival Vista Captain Andrea Catalani said. Additional Carnival ships will resume service in August. To bypass test cruises and move straight into sailings with paying passengers, 95% of passengers and 95% of the crew must be vaccinated. The rules do not apply in Florida, which has a state law banning businesses from requiring proof of vaccination.
Tweet, tweet:
“Disney World fireworks are back at Magic Kingdom and Epcot after 16-month hiatus” via Britt Kennedy of Florida Today — Forget the damp and drizzle and look skyward for the Disney dazzle. That seemed the fired-up-for-fun mood across a crowd of thousands Thursday night at Magic Kingdom, where fireworks lit up the dark sky over Cinderella Castle for the first time in almost 16 months. The return of “Happily Ever After” at Magic Kingdom and “Epcot Forever” at Epcot drew Disney lovers from points near and far. The last fireworks at Walt Disney World came on March 15, 2020, when the four WDW parks closed for almost four months due to the coronavirus, reopening in mid-July without the heavily attended nightly shows.
— HAPPY BIRTHDAY —
Celebrating today are Sen. Joe Gruters and Rep. MaryLynn Magar, as well as Susanne Dudley. Belated best wishes to Rep. Michelle Salzman.
___
Sunburn is authored and assembled by Peter Schorsch, Phil Ammann, Renzo Downey and Drew Wilson.
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13.) AXIOS
Axios AM
Welcome back! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,469 words … 5½ minutes. Edited by Zachary Basu.
Photo illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios. Photos: Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic, Drew Angerer/Getty Images
When Jeff Bezos and Richard Branson take flight this month aboard the rockets their companies built, the fate of a burgeoning industry will be flying with them, Axios Space author Miriam Kramer writes.
- Why it matters: Accidents or errors on the flights by Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin could derail dreams for commercial space tourism.
Virgin Galactic announced last week that it’ll try to fly Branson on a fully crewed test flight on July 11 — just ahead of Blue Origin’s first flight with Bezos, scheduled for July 20.
- The rivalry spilled out last week after the Branson announcement: Blue Origin CEO Bob Smith said Branson has a more modest goal.
- “We wish him a great and safe flight, but they’re not flying above the Kármán line and it’s a very different experience,” Smith said in a statement. The Kármán line is the unofficial altitude at which space begins, about 62 miles up.
The big picture: Launching and building satellites is a big moneymaker in the space industry. But suborbital space tourism would get more people interested in the industry in the long-term.
- In theory, these flights should be more affordable and available to a large group of people who will only need to train for a day or two before going to the edge of space.
What to watch: A major failure would put pressure on Congress to start pushing for more regulation of private human spaceflight.
Spotted at yesterday’s parade in Millville, Pa. Photo: Paul Weaver/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
At least one-third of the nearly 700 Republicans who have filed to run for House or Senate next year have embraced Donald Trump’s false election claims, the WashPost’s Amy Gardner reports.
- “Across the country, … Republican candidates for state and federal offices are increasingly focused on the last election.”
- “Dozens of candidates promoting the baseless notion that the election was rigged are seeking powerful statewide offices — such as governor, attorney general and secretary of state, which would give them authority over the administration of elections.”
Illustration: Shoshana Gordon/Axios
“Boomerang workers,” who returned to their hometowns to do remote work, are sticking around even as their employers reopen, Kim Hart writes in her new weekly column, “Tech Agenda.”
- Why it matters: Workers used to move to where the jobs were, centralizing top talent in big coastal cities. Now, people can return to their roots, raise kids on familiar turf — or simply escape big city life.
- They can take their jobs with them when they high-tail it home. Some are starting their own businesses, jump-starting tech communities in mid-sized cities.
What’s happening: Tech workers, in particular, are choosing to leave San Francisco, Seattle and New York — and are moving back to previous stops, or to their own hometown or a spouse’s.
- In Tulsa, Okla., a program called Tulsa Remote offers people $10,000 to move to the city to work remotely.
Kaseya CEO Fred Voccola. Screenshot: ABC News
Up to 1,500 firms — in at least 17 countries — were hit with a holiday-weekend ransomware attack by the same Russia-linked gang that extorted meat processor JBS.
- The notorious gang REvil breached a Miami-based IT management firm, Kaseya (pronounced kass-AY-uh), then used a Kaseya product that helps protect against malware to scale the attack globally.
- Fewer than 60 Kaseya customers were hit, a company statement said. But “many of these customers provide IT services to multiple other companies,” so the impact was much greater.
⚡ The latest: REvil said on its dark web site late Sunday that for $70 million in cryptocurrency, it would make available a universal decrypter to unscramble the affected machines, AP reports.
- Some researchers said the criminals apparently have more victims than they can manage.
Go deeper: Read Kaseya’s statement.
Demonstrators in Leesburg, Va., last month protest the teaching of critical race theory. Photo: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images
Efforts to recall school board members are surging around the U.S. — especially in California — amid Republican efforts to quash teaching about institutional racism, Axios’ Russell Contreras reports.
- Why it matters: School board recalls have traditionally stemmed from management disputes, open-meeting violations or allegations of corruption. Now, they’re being fueled by controversies over race, and backlash to COVID closures and mask requirements.
At least 51 recall efforts involving K-12 school boards have been initiated so far this year, targeting 130 members.
- That’s more than twice the annual average, according to Ballotpedia, which tracks election trends.
- Ballotpedia counted a yearly average of 23 recall efforts against 52 school board members between 2006 and 2020.
- California is home to 22 of the current recall efforts. Arizona and Idaho follow with six and four, respectively.
Reality check: Critical race theory — which holds that racism is baked into the formation of the nation and ingrained in legal, financial and education systems — developed in law schools in the 1970s.
- Some teachers have been criticized for merely mentioning systemic racism or Black Lives Matter protests.
In the face of labor shortages, employers are offering more money, Sam Ro writes in Axios Markets.
- Strong gains are reported in lower-wage industries, including leisure, hospitality and retail.
The June jobs report on Friday showed average hourly earnings were up 0.3% month-over-month in June.
- On an annualized basis, the past three months of gains represent a 5.9% pace of growth — substantially higher than the 2.4% average from the last economic cycle (June 2009 to Feb. 2020).
The U.S. left Afghanistan’s Bagram Airfield after 20 years by shutting off the electricity and slipping away in the night without notifying the base’s new Afghan commander, AP’s Kathy Gannon reports from Bagram.
- The commander, Gen. Mir Asadullah Kohistani, said he discovered the Americans’ departure more than two hours after they left.
Kohistani said the U.S. left behind 3.5 million items — all itemized by the departing U.S. military — including tens of thousands of bottles of water, energy drinks and meals ready to eat (MREs).
- Big-ticket items include hundreds of armored vehicles and thousands of civilian vehicles — many without keys to start them.
Ride-hailing app Didi and other Chinese apps on a phone in Beijing. Photo: Ng Han Guan/AP
China launched data-security probes into three technology companies shortly after their U.S. listings, catching global investors off guard, The Wall Street Journal reports (subscription).
- In four days, China’s cybersecurity regulator announced investigations of popular mobile apps operated by Didi, Full Truck Alliance and Kanzhun. The three raised a total of $7 billion from U.S. IPOs in June.
Photo: Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images
Above, private jets landed yesterday beside grazing cows in Sun Valley, Idaho, ahead of the annual Allen & Co. media conference, which brings together the rich and powerful from tech, finance and entertainment.
- Why it matters: After a year’s COVID hiatus, the deal-making gathering will be a barometer for how power brokers are approaching industries drastically changed by the pandemic, Axios Media Trends author Sara Fischer writes.
Increased attention to streaming, gaming, cryptocurrency and e-commerce will put executives from Netflix, Activision Blizzard, Coinbase and Shopify in the spotlight.
- Several new faces will represent their companies as CEOs this year, including Amazon’s Andy Jassy and Disney’s Bob Chapek.
What’s happening: The annual conference, known for exclusivity and casual business attire, gives high-powered executives the chance to meet privately to hash out partnerships and deals.
- Some of the biggest media deals of the past few decades — Verizon’s acquisition of AOL, Comcast’s acquisition of NBCUniversal, Jeff Bezos’ purchase of The Washington Post — came out of the conference.
🍿 Go deeper: See who’s attending
David Rubenstein — billionaire philanthropist, author, interviewer and co-founder of the Carlyle Group investment firm — told me this story ahead of tonight’s launch of his new biweekly show, “Bloomberg Wealth“:
Marc Andreessen, the now famous venture capitalist, visited Carlyle in the early ’90s, seeking funding for something called Netscape.
When Andreessen explained that his idea would help navigate the internet, Rubenstein replied: “What is the internet, and why would I want to navigate it? … We would never invest in something ridiculous like that.”
Netscape sold to AOL in 1998 for $4.2 billion.
Rubenstein told me his half-hour show — premiering at 9 p.m. ET on Bloomberg Television — includes self-deprecating life lessons like that from him and his guests, some of the world’s most successful investors.
- He said his conversations on “Bloomberg Wealth with David Rubenstein” will show how people invested to become a world leader in a certain category, and how you and I can invest in that area.
Starting tonight with Blackstone president and COO Jonathan Gray, Rubenstein will interview the leaders in person, in their offices. He told me the interviews will be collected in a book planned for next year.
- Future guests include JPMorgan Chase Asset & Wealth Management CEO Mary Callahan Erdoes, Columbia Investment Management Co. president and CEO Kim Lew and … Marc Andreessen.
📬 Thank you for starting your (short) week with us! Please invite your friends, family, colleagues to sign up here for Axios AM and Axios PM.
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18.) ASSOCIATED PRESS
TOP STORIES
As Tokyo Olympics approach, virus worries rise in Japan
TOKYO (AP) — The pressure of hosting an Olympics during a still-active pandemic is beginning to show in Japan.
The games begin July 23, with organizers determined they will go on, even with a reduced number of spectators or possibly none at all.
TRENDING NEWS
Columbus Blue Jackets goalie dies after fireworks accident
Southwest, American delays hint at hard summer for travelers
New this week: ‘Black Widow,’ Jakob Dylan and ‘Gossip Girl’
Deadly accident at Iowa amusement ride is 2nd since 2016
Amazon begins new chapter as Bezos hands over CEO role
SURFSIDE BUILDING COLLAPSE
As condo crashed down, they escaped through smoke and ruin
Demolition widens search at condo site, but storms threaten
Counselors work to ease grief over Florida building collapse
Surfside pushes back on report on delayed building repairs
Tale of rescue after falling several floors in Fla. collapse
POLITICS
With McCain in mind, Sinema reaches for bipartisanship
Hunt for Capitol attackers still on 6 months after Jan. 6
Galesburg, an American crossroad, tunes out feuding Congress
New infrastructure deal must focus on climate, activists say
20 years after 9/11, lawsuit against Saudis hits key moment
WORLD NEWS
Pope Francis eats breakfast, takes walk 2 days after surgery
In Myanmar, the military and police declare war on medics
As Tokyo Olympics approach, virus worries rise in Japan
9 arrested over alleged plot to plant bombs around Hong Kong
After troops exit, safety of US Embassy in Kabul top concern
CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC
NYC temporary morgue lingers, a reminder of pandemic’s pain
Indonesia seeks more oxygen for COVID-19 sick amid shortage
Las Vegas is bouncing back, but the virus is on the rise too
Europe in vaccination race against COVID-19’s delta variant
When can masks be ditched? UK leader to revamp virus rules
ENTERTAINMENT
Romania’s monument ‘ambulance’ races to save country’s past
‘Voice’ stars Gwen Stefani, Blake Shelton wed in Oklahoma
‘Superman,’ ‘Lethal Weapon’ director Richard Donner dies
R. Kelly’s lawyer wants trial delayed due to jail quarantine
Cannes reawakens, pins hopes on film festival’s return
SPORTS
Canadiens beat Lightning 3-2 in OT, avoid Stanley Cup sweep
Analysis: Lightning get taste of Canadiens’ pain in Game 5
Finally! Bucks, Suns set for the NBA Finals after long waits
The NBA Finals: 10 things to know about Bucks vs. Suns
England inspired by expectation, Denmark by resilience
EURO 2020
England inspired by expectation, Denmark by resilience
The Latest: Spain and Italy play in Euro 2020 semifinals
Brazil fans not really in mood for Copa America semifinals
Longtime tormentor Italy stands in way of Spain at Euro 2020
Spain, Italy take unbeaten runs into Euro 2020 semifinals
SCIENCE
Wildlife, air quality at risk as Great Salt Lake nears low
Amid drought, Colorado rafters flock to oases while they can
Summer swelter trend: West gets hotter days, East hot nights
New Zealand records warmest-ever June as ski fields struggle
Chinese astronauts make first spacewalk outside new station
LIFE
Wildlife, air quality at risk as Great Salt Lake nears low
Spain restricts nightlife as virus surges among the young
This herbaceous vegan sauce redefines pesto
Bubbly supply halted after Moscow says champagne is Russian
Jimmy, Rosalynn Carter mark 75 years of ‘full partnership’
TECHNOLOGY
Amazon begins new chapter as Bezos hands over CEO role
Encrypted chat data leads to major drug raids in Germany
Supercar maker Bugatti taken over by Croatian company Rimac
Twitter restricts account of expert who mocked China leader
Fallout continues from biggest global ransomware attack
BUSINESS
In crosshairs of ransomware crooks, cyber insurers struggle
Wildlife, air quality at risk as Great Salt Lake nears low
New US rules to protect animal farmers expected this week
EXPLAINER: Why China is investigating tech firms like Didi
Southwest, American delays hint at hard summer for travelers
World’s tallest horse, Big Jake, dies in Wisconsin at age 20
Ukraine criticized for making female cadets parade in heels
Big cats, bears, ferrets get COVID-19 vaccine at Oakland Zoo
Dogs on display: Museum fetes 200 years of cartoon canines
19.) FORT MYERS (FLORIDA) NEWS-PRESS
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20.) CHICAGO TRIBUNE
21.) CHICAGO SUNTIMES
22.) THE HILL MORNING REPORT
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23.) THE HILL 12:30 REPORT
24.) ROLL CALL
25.) POLITICO PLAYBOOK
POLITICO Playbook: The issue Joe Biden doesn’t want to talk about
DRIVING THE DAY
With the House and Senate on break, President JOE BIDEN will be at the center of political coverage this week — and the three big Biden stories are Afghanistan, Covid-19 and infrastructure.
All three issues share something in common: They are monumental policy and political challenges with enormous long-term consequences for America (and the world). Six months into his presidency, there has been major progress on all three issues, but no final resolution. In each case, a reversal of fortunes or outright failure is still possible.
Covid …
Biden’s one scheduled public event today is a speech about progress on getting Americans vaccinated. He failed to meet a self-imposed deadline of getting 70% of adults vaccinated by July Fourth. He faces the twin problems of a large and stubborn anti-Covid vaccine population and the steady rise of the more infectious and more deadly Delta variant. Watch to see if Biden announces a retooled White House strategy to attack this issue today.
Afghanistan …
The White House is not interested in talking much about the fact that America’s pullout from Afghanistan is having dire consequences in the region. A quick review of the headlines tells the tale:
WSJ: “After U.S.’s Bagram Exit, Afghans Face the Taliban Alone: Power went out and water stopped pumping; left behind were armored vehicles, a prison with thousands of inmates, ammunition and tents.”
AP: “U.S. left Afghan airfield at night, didn’t tell new commander”
CNN: “Top U.S. general in Afghanistan says ‘we should be concerned’ about Taliban”
Bloomberg: “Afghanistan Neighbors Raise Alarm With Russia Over Taliban Advance”
The public overwhelmingly supports Biden’s decision to leave Afghanistan, but we’ve been surprised by how little the president has done to prepare Americans for the potential downside risks.
Infrastructure …
The clock is ticking on Biden’s two big legislative priorities: the bipartisan infrastructure bill and a budget resolution, which will set the parameters for the enormous Dems-only reconciliation bill. Expect a lot of work behind the scenes on both tracks in the coming days.
Track 1: The relevant Senate committees are working to translate the bipartisan framework, which was rather light on specifics, into legislative language. As the framework becomes detailed text, the 11 Republican and 10 Democratic senators backing it will have to protect it from an onslaught of K Street meddling and any changes that could blow up the fragile alliance with the White House.
Over in the House, the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus, which presented a plan that’s very similar to the one in the Senate, is working on wrangling its membership to endorse the Senate framework as soon as today.
Track 2: Senate Majority Leader CHUCK SCHUMER has instructed the Senate Budget Committee to draft a “unity budget resolution” that can be presented to the full Democratic Caucus when the Senate returns. Considering the number of priorities competing for inclusion in the budget resolution and the sheer scale of the spending imagined — $2 trillion to $6 trillion — this process could make the bipartisan negotiations look easy.
The Budget Committee includes the full ideological spectrum of the Democratic caucus, from MARK WARNER (Va.) to BERNIE SANDERS (I-Vt.), the chair, so Schumer’s thinking is that anything it produces could attract all 50 Democrats. But the White House is also taking a bigger role. Expect Biden’s three-member legislative negotiating team of STEVE RICCHETTI, LOUISA TERRELL and BRIAN DEESE, who were all on the Hill last week, to continue guiding the unity budget resolution behind the scenes.
There will be a lot of derailments before we know if these two trains arrive safely.
Good Tuesday morning, and thanks for reading Playbook. Drop us a line: Rachael Bade, Eugene Daniels, Ryan Lizza, Tara Palmeri.
BIDEN’S TUESDAY:
— 10:30 a.m.: The president will receive the President’s Daily Brief.
— 1:15 p.m.: Biden will receive a briefing from the White House Covid-19 Response Team.
— 2:45 p.m.: Biden will deliver remarks on Covid-19 and vaccinations in the South Court Auditorium.
Press secretary JEN PSAKI will brief at 12:30 p.m.
KAMALA HARRIS’ TUESDAY:
— 10 a.m. PDT: The VP will depart Los Angeles to return to D.C.
THE HOUSE will meet at 12:30 p.m. in a pro forma session. THE SENATE is out.
PLAYBOOK READS
ON POLITICS
‘PIGS GET FAT. HOGS GET SLAUGHTERED’ — House elections reporter/redistricting guru Ally Mutnick has a must-read this morning on a tough decision facing Republican-controlled legislatures as they redraw congressional maps for the next decade: whether to push their luck on gaining more seats by splicing up Democratic strongholds in red states, i.e., carving up cities like Louisville, Ky., Nashville, Tenn., and Omaha, Neb.
“Local Republicans, eager to grow their numbers in Congress and provide launching pads for ambitious state legislators, might be more inclined to carve up those blue pockets. But others in the GOP are wary of a rapid and unpredictable political realignment that complicates the drawing of new maps — and the threat of the legal behemoth Democrats have assembled to counter them.
“Unabashed partisan gerrymandering that was commonplace after 2010 is now giving some Republicans pause. Top party strategists are urging state mapmakers to play it safe and draw lines that can withstand demographic change throughout the decade and lawsuits.
“‘There’s an old saying: Pigs get fat. Hogs get slaughtered,’ said Rep. PATRICK MCHENRY (R-N.C.). ‘And when it comes to redistricting, that is, in fact, the case.’”
WHAT REELECTION? — “Beyond D.C. partisanship, Warnock makes broad pitch in Ga.,” by AP’s Bill Barrow: “Back home, Georgia’s first Black senator is more subtle, pitching a ‘comprehensive view of infrastructure’ and avoiding talk of his reelection fight already looming just months after he won a January special election runoff with Senate control at stake. …
“Indeed, the preacher-turned-politician spent the Independence Day recess hopscotching from an inland port in the conservative Appalachian foothills to liberal Atlanta’s urban microbreweries and sprawling public hospital, then the suburban defense contractors in between. At each stop, he highlighted the federal money he’s routed — or is trying to route — to his state for health care, national security research, rural broadband and urban walking paths, among other projects.”
PLAYBOOK METRO SECTION — “How and why Loudoun County became the face of the nation’s culture wars,” by WaPo’s Hannah Natanson: “Loudoun is not the only place where furor over critical race theory, or CRT, is taking off. Conservative activists and pundits across the United States have weaponized the theory — a decades-old academic framework that holds that racism is woven into the country’s past and institutions — to claim that equity-conscious school systems are teaching children to hate one another, and White children to hate themselves.
“Politicians throughout the nation are responding: Republican-led legislatures in Idaho, Texas, Tennessee, Arkansas and Oklahoma have passed bills banning the teaching of certain race-related issues in schools. Loudoun school officials have defended the district’s equity work and say it is not teaching critical race theory to students.”
WHITE HOUSE
IMMIGRATION FILES — “Biden allies brace for GOP attacks when southern border reopens,” by Anita Kumar and Sabrina Rodríguez: “The White House is expected to reopen the U.S.-Mexico border in the coming weeks, and even President Joe Biden’s allies are worried he’s not ready for the logistical and political impact … [I]mmigrant advocates say the move is long overdue. But administration officials and immigration experts expect that lifting the order will result in a spike in the number of migrants arriving at the border — at least in the short term.
“Even with the phased-in approach, a sharp increase in migrants poses a major challenge for the administration over how to handle their arrival — hold them in detention centers or release them as they await their court proceedings, which can take years given a long backlog of cases. And Republicans plan to highlight any increase in migrants or delays in processing them in campaign ads, mailers and debates in races all over the country.”
POLICY CORNER
ORGANIZING AMAZON — E. Tammy Kim, a contributing writer for NYT Opinion, examines the forbidding task facing the labor movement over the next few years: organizing Amazon after its failed attempt to unionize the Bessemer, Ala., warehouse this spring.
That loss “has led many major unions to grapple with the role of Amazon in the economy and their members’ lives. In June, members of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, which has organized the logistics industry since the early 20th century, voted to target Amazon’s operations. And a growing segment of the general population now recognizes the threat of ‘Amazon capitalism’: what scholars JAKE ALIMAHOMED-WILSON, JULIANN ALLISON and ELLEN REESE describe as reflecting ‘the larger global trend of the increasing influence of finance capitalism, neoliberal politics and policies, and corporate power.’
“The challenge of organizing Amazon is ‘bigger than anything this country has ever faced,’ PETER OLNEY, the former organizing director of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, told me. He compared Amazon’s close to one million U.S. employees to the several hundred thousand organized by the United Auto Workers at Ford, Chrysler and General Motors in the 1930s and 1940s.”
PUSH FOR CLIMATE INITIATIVES PERSISTS — “New infrastructure deal must focus on climate, activists say,” by AP’s Matthew Daly: “Supporters say a larger, Democratic-only package now being developed in Congress must meet Biden’s promise to move the country toward carbon-free electricity, make America a global leader in electric vehicles and create millions of jobs in solar, wind and other clean- energy industries.
“But passage of a larger, multitrillion-dollar bill faces significant hurdles, even if Democrats use a procedural method that requires only a simple majority. It’s far from certain, in an evenly divided Senate, that moderate Democrats will agree to an expansive measure that could swell to as high as $6 trillion. On the other hand, a less costly bill that does not fully address climate change risks losing support from large numbers of liberal Democrats who have pledged action on an issue that Biden has called ‘the existential crisis of our times.’”
NEW SANCTIONS STRATEGY INCOMING — “Biden to Temper U.S. Use of Sanctions Weapons, Officials Say,” by WSJ’s Ian Talley: “The Biden administration is revamping the way the U.S. uses punitive sanctions, aiming to stem sweeping pressure campaigns, avoid collateral economic damage and act jointly with allies rather than unilaterally, according to people involved in the planning process.
“The administration has nearly completed an extensive review of U.S. sanctions policy, which is expected out near the end of summer, according to one official. While details are still being ironed out, Biden administration officials have foreshadowed elements of the new strategy in a series of actions, including the planned easing of economywide sanctions against Iran. Details of Biden’s approach also were described by current and former administration officials as well as by incoming officials during congressional meetings.”
THE WORLD ACCORDING TO TRUMP
THE ELECTION LIE AS CAMPAIGN STRATEGY — “In ramp-up to 2022 midterms, Republican candidates center pitches on Trump’s false election claims,” by WaPo’s Amy Gardner: “While most of these campaigns are in their early stages, the embrace of Trump’s claims is already widespread on the trail and in candidates’ messages to voters. The trend provides fresh evidence of Trump’s continued grip on the GOP, reflecting how a movement inspired by his claims and centered on overturning a democratic election has gained currency in the party since the Jan. 6 Capitol attack.
“Dozens of candidates promoting the baseless notion that the election was rigged are seeking powerful statewide offices — such as governor, attorney general and secretary of state, which would give them authority over the administration of elections — in several of the decisive states where Trump and his allies sought to overturn the outcome and engineer his return to the White House.”
I TAKE IT BACK — “J.D. Vance says he regrets since-deleted tweets criticizing Trump,” by Maeve Sheehey: “A recent Daily Beast column ran with the headline ‘Hypocrite’s Elegy: J.D. Vance Is an Avatar of GOP Corruption,’ and Democrat TIM RYAN, who is vying for the Ohio Senate seat, tweeted: ‘.@JDVance1 and I have exactly one thing in common — neither of us voted for Donald Trump.“
“Now, as he runs for office, Vance has shifted toward a pro-Trump position, recently visiting the former president in Florida in hopes of earning his endorsement. He told Fox News on Monday that he hoped people wouldn’t judge him for his past remarks, which he then walked back.”
DESSERT/REHAB
— “You Really Need to Quit Twitter.” by The Atlantic’s Caitlin Flanagan. For the record, she tweeted out this story. But Flanagan said the post was dictated (to her son Patrick, we believe, who now has the keys to her account), and it was her first tweet in a month.
PLAYBOOKERS
BOOK CLUB — The paperback edition of Rep. Eric Swalwell’s (D-Calif.) book “Endgame: Inside the Impeachments of Donald J. Trump” comes out today, and he’s added multiple new chapters covering the 2020 election, the Jan. 6 insurrection and his experience as an impeachment manager in February. More details
FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — American Bridge 21st Century is adding Julie McClain Downey as VP of strategic comms and Brad Bainum as Senate comms director. Downey most recently was senior director of advocacy comms for Planned Parenthood Federation of America and Planned Parenthood Action Fund. Bainum most recently led Senate race comms at the Arizona Democratic Party, supporting Mark Kelly’s campaign.
— Bianca Gutierrez is joining Rising Tide Interactive as head of people and culture. She most recently was deputy operations director at Giffords.
— Mica Soellner is now a Capitol Hill reporter at the Washington Times. She most recently was a breaking news reporter at the Washington Examiner.
STAFFING UP — Katy Neas is now deputy assistant secretary of Education for the office of special education and rehabilitative services. She previously was EVP of public affairs at the American Physical Therapy Association.
TRANSITION — Michael Franklin is joining Black Futures Lab as a comms associate for the Black to the Future Action Fund. He most recently was a comms and special projects coordinator at The Collective PAC, and is co-founder of Speechwriters of Color.
ENGAGED — TRUMP ALUMNI: David Planning, staff director for the House Small Business GOP, proposed to Dana Hurtik, director of operations and strategic events for GOPAC, in Old Town Alexandria. They met in D.C. through mutual friends and worked in the White House together for a year and a half, where they were both special assistants to the president. Pic
— TRUMP ALUMNI: James Braid, chief of staff for Rep. Matt Rosendale (R-Mont.) and an OMB alum, proposed to Melissa Brown, comms director for the House Freedom Caucus and a DHS and Interior alum, on a farm in Virginia on Sunday. They met in Rep. Ted Budd’s (R-N.C.) office, but didn’t start dating until later. Pic
WEEKEND WEDDING — Laura Alesci, group creative director for Vice Media Group, and Jon Siani, architect and designer for Gensler, got married Thursday at one of their favorite local restaurants, Colonia Verde in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, with an after-party at Romans in Fort Greene. The two met on Bumble. Pic
WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Remley Flock, former chief of staff to Donald Rumsfeld, and Robert Flock, an MBA candidate at Columbia Business School, welcomed Robert Benjamin Flock III on Friday. He came in at 6 lbs, 10 oz and 20 inches. Pic … Another pic
— Zachary Cikanek, managing director at Plus Communications, and Jolyn Cikanek, government relations and PAC director of Enact MI, welcomed Rosemary Louise Cikanek on Friday. She came in at 7 lbs, 11.5 oz and 19.5 inches long, and is named after their aunts. She joins big sister Tabitha. Pic … Another pic
— Kayla Dunlap, a senior research analyst for Meeting Street Insights, and Brian Dunlap, a Lexington County, S.C., firefighter, welcomed Elliott June Dunlap, their third daughter, on Monday. Pic
HAPPY BIRTHDAY: Former President George W. Bush (75) … Storm Horncastle of the VP’s office … POLITICO’s Anita Kumar and Beth Davidz … CBS’ John Dickerson … WaPo’s Glenn Kessler and Tyler Pager … Apple’s Nick Ammann … Targeted Victory’s Sarah Morgan … Josh Elliott … Christyn Lansing of Narrative Strategies … ACLU’s Gabriela Meléndez Olivera … Kara Gainer … Tate Latinovich of America Rising … CNN’s Athena Jones … Jennifer Duffy … Kimberly Dozier … Chris Paulitz … Danny Sepulveda … James Oaks of Summit Strategy Group … Jill Zuckman … Caleb Orr of Sen. Marco Rubio’s (R-Fla.) office … Zachary Karabell … Mark Tomb … Judah Ginsberg
Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com. Playbook couldn’t happen without our editor Mike Zapler, deputy editor Zack Stanton and producers Allie Bice, Eli Okun and Garrett Ross.
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26.) AMERICAN MINUTE
27.) CAFFEINATED THOUGHTS
28.) CONSERVATIVE DAILY NEWS
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29.) PJ MEDIA
The Morning Briefing: Surprise—Teachers’ Unions Are Showing Their Evil Again
Top O’ the Briefing
Teachers’ Unions Won’t Stop Coming for Your Children
Happy Tuesday, dear Kruiser Morning Briefing friends. Always buy lederhosen a size too big.
It was a quiet day here at the old PJ Media ranch yesterday, as most people were taking full advantage of the long holiday weekend. I was the editor on duty, so I got to read everything that was written, which was nice.
Something I read — which I will get to in a moment — got me reminiscing. When I first started blogging about politics in between stand-up gigs lo those many years ago, I focused mostly on two subjects: liberal bias in the media and school choice. I did write about other things on occasion, but I was particularly passionate about those two. In fact, the very first political conference I ever went to as a blogger was all about school choice.
I remember back in the late Bush and early Obama years that school choice was being talked about by conservatives and Republicans a lot. It was a winning and important issue.
Or so it seemed.
Stacey wrote a post yesterday about the National Education Association going all-in on making Critical Race Theory a permanent nightmare in our public schools. As with everything having to do with the NEA, it’s all unpleasant news for the kids. I’ve written for 20 years that it is the evilest labor organization in America. I believe that now more than ever.
It was something that Stacey wrote in her penultimate paragraph that triggered my trip down Blogger Memory Lane:
It may be time to think deeply about innovation in K-12 education. Instead of pushing bans on certain types of curricula, perhaps it is time to expand choice. The days of limiting the option to low-income students need to end. Petitioning state legislatures to pass legislation on education savings accounts for K-12 education, where every parent can have the dollars allocated to their child follow them to the program of their choice, would be ideal. At a minimum, that would provide parent groups with financial leverage because funding of public schools is often on a per-student basis.
Ladies and gentlemen, we have a winner.
I’ve talked about this with a couple of people this past year on my podcast. I don’t think that the Republicans consciously turned away from school choice, but somewhere along the line, it dropped way down on the party’s list of priorities. As I said earlier, it’s a winning issue that has broad support when you’re not talking to a teachers’ union flack or one of the Democrats the unions have in their pockets. Republicans have been talking about minority outreach for years and school choice is perhaps the best way to do that.
The awful behavior of teachers’ unions during the pandemic, coupled with their lust for critical race theory now that the Democrats have the keys to everything, give the Republicans a phenomenal opportunity to make school choice a priority again and perhaps save public education from itself.
And save American school kids from a forced commie lemming march off a cliff.
Everything Isn’t Awful
PJ Media
Me: Be Nice: AI Could Make Me ‘Digitally Immortal’
VodkaPundit: Court Slaps Down Biden Tax Mandate and Other Items of Much-Needed Sanity
Hunter Biden’s Texts Reveal His ‘Genius’ Plan for Prostitutes
A Review of COVID-19 Deaths in Two California Counties Drops the Total by Nearly 25%
The Truth About White Supremacy Groups
Me again: Manhattan Institute Offers Toolkit for Parents to Fight Back Against Woke Schools
Townhall Mothership
Poll: Americans Reject Defunding the Police
Disney World Continues to Get More Woke
Biden Gets Busted Over False Baseball Boast
Nat Geo Frets About Fireworks While Number of Shootings in Chicago Is Shocking
Lori Lightfoot Gives Perhaps Her Dumbest Response Ever When Asked About Her Critics’ Motivations
Mom Details How Naked Biological Male Got Into Hot Tub With Child at Protested Spa
Defeat Of Nevada Gun Control Bill May Provide Roadmap Forward
Bill To Remove Short Barreled Shotguns From NFA
Congressional hearings on UFOs? They’re probably coming
Are we living in a simulation or is this just what happens when pot is legalized
The ‘most complicated machine humans have built’ keeps US technology a decade ahead of China
VIP
OUR NEW PODCAST! Unwoke With Kevin and Kruiser #1: Welcome to the Occupation
C-SPAN’s ‘Presidential Historians Survey’ Is Trash, and Here’s Proof
VodkaPundit, Part Deux: Clyburn Joins Ranks of Democrat Flip-Floppers on Voter ID
The COVID-19 Pandemic Has Made Me a Fan of Public Hearings and Book Burning
Around the Interwebz
#RIP. Richard Donner Dies: ‘Superman’, ‘Lethal Weapon’ And ‘The Goonies’ Director Was 91
Huxley, Burroughs, and the Church of Scientology
Elon Musk just now realizing that self-driving cars are a ‘hard problem’
A Brief History of the Tamagotchi
Bee Me
The Kruiser Kabana
Kabana Gallery
Kabana Tunes
A love of musicals seems like the kind of thing all psychopaths would have in common.
30.) WHITE HOUSE DOSSIER
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31.) THE DISPATCH
The Morning Dispatch: A Strong June Jobs Report
Plus: The west coast braces for another explosive wildfire season.
The Dispatch Staff | 23 min ago | 4 | 3 |
Happy Tuesday! We hope you had a wonderful Independence Day weekend and ate enough hot dogs and hamburgers to sedate a medium-sized horse.
Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories
- The U.S. economy added a net 850,000 jobs in June, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, with the unemployment rate ticking up to 5.9 percent from 5.8 percent in May. The 850,000 jobs are the most added in one month since last August.
- Johnson & Johnson released data demonstrating that its coronavirus vaccine produced “strong, persistent activity” against the Delta variant and other SARS-CoV-2 variants. The studies also noted that the antibody response lasted at least eight months.
- U.S. forces fully vacated Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, clearing the way for the Afghan army to take control of the premises. Meanwhile, more than 1,000 Afghan troops fled into Tajikistan after a Taliban offensive in northern Afghanistan.
- City officials ordered the demolition of what remained of the Surfside, Florida, condominium Sunday, 10 days after its collapse on June 24. The official death toll had risen to 28 as of Monday evening, and approximately 117 remained unaccounted for as the demolition clears the way for search and rescue teams.
- British Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced plans Monday to lift the country’s COVID-19 lockdown rules over the course of the next two weeks, ending formal mask mandates, work from home guidelines, and social distancing protocols. The loosening restrictions are expected to be the first real world trial of the coronavirus vaccines’ efficacy against the Delta variant.
- Cybercriminal group REvil breached Miami-based IT software company Kaseya Friday, demanding $70 million in what could be the second largest ransomware attack to date.
- Outgoing Texas GOP Chairman Allen West officially threw his hat into the ring for governor Sunday, raising a challenge to incumbent Republican Gov. Greg Abbott’s candidacy.
June Jobs Report: That’s More Like It
The past few times we’ve written to you about the United States’ employment situation, the stories have been a bit of a bummer. Analysts expected about 1 million jobs to be added in April as the country began to vaccinate its way out of the pandemic, but only about 269,000 came through. May was a bit better, but still fell short of expectations, with 583,000 jobs added rather than the anticipated 671,000.
But the consumer confidence index—a measure of how average Americans view their economic outlook—soared to a 16-month high last week, and the country got some data late last week to back up this optimism.
U.S. employers added a net 850,000 jobs in June, according to a Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) report released Friday, outpacing the consensus expectation of 706,000 for the month. The U.S. has now added jobs on net for six straight months, and June’s figure was the largest since employers created slightly more than 1.5 million jobs last August. The unemployment rate actually ticked up a hair—from 5.8 percent to 5.9 percent—but that was largely because about 150,000 people entered (or re-entered) the labor force in June, increasing the denominator in the unemployment rate calculation.
A significant portion of the job gain was concentrated in the leisure and hospitality sector, with employment in restaurants, bars, and entertainment/recreation facilities rising by 343,000 month-over-month. The education, professional and business services, retail, and social assistance industries also experienced boosts, while employment in construction, courier/messenger services, and motor vehicle manufacturing contracted slightly.
But beyond the topline numbers, Friday’s jobs report demonstrated that—with there still being millions of job openings employers nationwide are struggling to fill—we’re in an exceedingly tight labor market. While the length of an average workweek fell slightly from 34.8 hours to 34.7, average hourly earnings increased another $0.10 to $30.40 from May to June, bringing year-over-year wage growth to 3.6 percent. Data from ZipRecruiter, a job/hiring search firm, found that about 20 percent of all job listings in June included some sort of signing bonus, up from just 2 percent in March.
“Instead of workers competing with each other for jobs that are scarce, employers are competing with each other to attract workers,” President Joe Biden said in remarks Friday touting the report. “That kind of competition in the market doesn’t just give workers more ability to earn higher wages; it also gives them the power to demand to be treated with dignity and respect in the workplace.”
A confluence of factors have contributed to this acceleration in hiring. With 58.2 percent of U.S. adults now fully vaccinated, the number of Americans not looking for work due to coronavirus concerns dropped from 2.5 million in May to 1.6 million in June. A recent analysis from Jefferies LLC economists found that unemployed workers are finding jobs more quickly in the 25-or-so states that ended bonus federal unemployment benefits earlier than their September expiration date.
Biden, not surprisingly, attributed the good news to his own policies. “This is historic progress pulling our economy out of the worst crisis in 100 years, driven in part by our dramatic progress in vaccinating our nation and beating back the pandemic, as well as other elements of the American Rescue Plan,” he said in his remarks Friday. “None of this happened by accident. Again, it’s a direct result of the American Rescue Plan. And at the time, people questioned whether or not we should do that, even though we didn’t have bipartisan support. Well, it worked.”
But Friday’s report wasn’t all rainbows and lollipops. We still have a long way to go (approximately 6.7 million jobs) before reaching February 2020 levels of employment once again, and the number of long-term unemployed (out-of-work for at least 27 consecutive weeks) increased by 233,000 in June, now comprising about 42 percent of the total unemployed. Wages may be growing, but rising inflation is going to take a significant bite out of those yields, if not cancel them out entirely. The labor force grew by about 150,000 last month, but the participation rate held steady at 61.6 percent, well below the 63.4 percent in January 2020.
The retiring Rep. Kevin Brady—the top Republican on the House Ways & Means Committee—pointed to some of these concerns in a tweet on Friday. “MORE TROUBLING SIGNS: June jobs report,” it reads. “Long-term unemployment worsened. Unemployment for ALL MINORITIES & LESS EDUCATED worsened. Construction jobs shrank. Labor-force rate: still poor.”
But Tony Fratto—a top Treasury Department and White House official in the George W. Bush administration—argued naysayers were straining a little too hard to criticize the report: “I know it’s fun to find the dark clouds behind every silver lining, but there’s no such thing as a bad jobs report that adds 850k jobs. That’s not a thing.”
West Coast in for a Long Wildfire Season
Longtime TMD readers may remember the name James Sutton; he was one of The Dispatch’s first-ever interns. After months away, he makes his triumphant return to our pages this morning with a piece looking at the west coast’s upcoming wildfire season, which has the potential to be one of the worst on record.
Didn’t we just have a crazy wildfire season last year?
Yes. Last August and September, Americans were treated to images that seemed straight out of a science fiction movie (or the Book of Revelation), as massive wildfires turned skies an unsettling orange across many parts of California and Oregon. It was one of the most destructive wildfire seasons ever for the West, destroying $16.5 billion in property (including about 10,000 buildings) and costing more than $3 billion to suppress.
Why might this year’s season be worse?
Twin accelerants—extreme heat and a lack of water—threaten to make the western United States a veritable tinderbox.
The region has had a hot start to the summer, to say the least. Residents of the Pacific Northwest have dealt with record-setting temperatures: Portland saw its three hottest days ever from June 26-28. Temperatures climbed above 100 degrees Fahrenheit in a city that typically sees highs in the upper 70s in June. It was the result of a “heat dome,” a high-pressure system inhibiting the rise of hot air, pushing it down and making the atmosphere denser and hotter. The “dome” in the Northwest comes after a succession of other heat waves throughout the American West in early and late June, stretching from Wyoming to California.
If temperatures hot enough to shut down public transit and buckle freeways weren’t enough, the West is also facing a historic drought, the worst and most widespread in decades. Utilities in some Northern California communities have already imposed water-use cuts of 30 to 40 percent for commercial and residential consumers. Farmers are forced to choose which crops they wish to irrigate and which to allow to lie fallow. These hard choices aren’t unusual—especially in drought-prone California—but this extreme summer is making them especially difficult.
The heat wave and the drought, big enough problems in themselves, also add to the risk of massive wildfires. In an interview with The Dispatch, Jon Keeley, a research scientist with the U.S. Geological Survey who studies fire ecology, said that “fire season” is not a set of fixed dates, but that it “changes year to year … this year it started much, much, earlier because the rain stopped.”
What have communities done to prepare?
In California, the site of last year’s most destructive fires, Gov. Gavin Newsom has called for $2 billion for fire preparedness in this year’s budget. The proposal includes greater investment in building firebreaks, thinning overgrown forest land, and removing dead vegetation, as well as expanding the state’s fleet of firefighting planes and trucks.
In Oregon, where fires last Labor Day forced 40,000 people to evacuate, the legislature has passed Senate Bill 762, which provided additional funding for firefighting, mandated that utilities create wildfire mitigation plans, and adopted wildfire-resistant land-use and building code regulations regarding buffer zones around homes in high-risk areas and fire-resistant construction materials.
While much media coverage emphasizes the impact of climate change, it’s a welcome sign that policymakers are focusing on small-bore technical fixes for the many other causes of wildfires.
“People always aim at climate change right away…. [but] we were in trouble a long time ago,” said Craig Thomas, the founder of the Fire Restoration Group, which works with governments and communities to integrate fire ecology with fire management. Both he and Keely noted that while climate change certainly exacerbates the problems by increasing drought and heat waves, other issues, ranging from an overemphasis on fire exclusion to the expansion of human settlement into fire-prone areas and an increase in ignitions started by humans, are all also major contributors to the increased frequency of massive blazes.
Worth Your Time
- Writing for American Purpose, Suzanne Garment discusses how trust and faith in America’s core principles are key to preserving the nation as we face an uncertain future. “There isn’t a prognosticator in Washington who knows whether the country’s institutions will sustain our political continuity or collapse into something that’s still unrecognizable,” she writes. “We’ll have to rely on underlying convictions and our sense of how history will treat them. It will be a heavy lift, but not impossible.”
- In a lengthy piece for Reason magazine, Jacob Sullum looks back at how the Constitution survived the COVID-19 pandemic over the past year and a half. “COVID-19 did not kill the Constitution,” he concludes. “But the crisis made it vividly clear that we cannot count on politicians or bureaucrats to worry about limits on their authority, especially when they believe they are doing what is necessary to protect the public from a deadly danger. The task of enforcing those limits falls to judges who are willing to stick their necks out.”
Presented Without Comment
Also Presented Without Comment
Toeing the Company Line
- On Friday’s Dispatch Podcast, Anthony Gonzalez returns to chat with Sarah and Steve about his re-election campaign, the new January 6 select committee, Democrats’ narrow majorities in Congress, and why Republicans need to reject Trump’s election lies in 2022 and beyond.
- In Friday’s Uphill(🔒), Harvest and Ryan dive into the controversy surrounding Arizona Republican Rep. Paul Gosar’s decision to host a joint fundraiser with the alt-right provocateur and Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes, asking: Just who is welcome in today’s GOP? Plus, a look at the House’s new January 6 select committee.
- Jonah’s Friday G-File discusses Joe Biden’s love for ice cream—and how many media outlets treat certain things like news when they’re not exactly newsworthy. “Facts are no longer in the driver’s seat,” he warns. “Narratives are.”
- Just what is the true definition of patriotism for Christians who love their country? That’s the subject of David’s July Fourth French Press, where he discusses how many Christians have let their desire for power trump their pursuit of justice. “How does the Christian patriot love his or her nation well?” he asks. “Through a commitment to biblical justice that quite often means we empower others more than ourselves.”
Let Us Know
Over the weekend, a bunch of Dispatch folks put together a list of the best movies to watch on the Fourth of July, ranging from Independence Day to Casablanca to The Sandlot to National Treasure. Did we miss the one true, correct answer?
Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@charlotteUVA), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), Tripp Grebe (@tripper_grebe), Emma Rogers (@emw_96), Price St. Clair (@PriceStClair1), Jonathan Chew (@JonathanChew19), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).
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32.) LEGAL INSURRECTION
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Tuesday, July 06, 2021
George Foreman Posts Defiant Patriotic Message On Fourth Of July
U.S. Taxpayers May Have To Pay $15 Billion In Damages To Canadian Firm Because Biden Canceled Pipeline
Marvel Actor Dave Bautista Calls Congressman Dan Crenshaw Obscene Name Over Gwen Berry Criticism
Nation’s Largest Teachers Union Says It Will Teach Critical Race Theory In All 50 States, 14,000 School Districts
‘I Give You My Word As A Biden’: Biden, Sinking In Polls, Guarantees ‘Our Brightest Future’
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48.) NBC MORNING RUNDOWN
Tuesday, July 6, 2021
Good morning, NBC News readers.
Search efforts continue in the Florida condo collapse as Tropical Storm Elsa approaches the western part of the state. There are real fears for the future of Afghanistan as the Taliban capture territory and weapons while the U.S. military withdraws. And a really old carved bone may show Neanderthals were more sophisticated than previously thought.
Here’s what we’re watching this Tuesday morning.
Search and rescue efforts for the 117 still unaccounted-for residents of the Miami-area condo tower that collapsed over a week ago resumed Monday after the unstable remainder of the building was demolished Sunday night.
Four more bodies were found as teams continued their search, raising the death toll to 28 by Monday evening.
Officials said they hoped Tropical Storm Elsa would not cause significant search delays — the storm is on a path to affect the western part of the state — but rescuers faced some setbacks because of weather.
“The bad weather unfortunately has caused some temporary pauses of the work,” Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said at a news conference Monday, citing the effects of the outer bands of Elsa.
For many, Levine Cava has become the face of the response to the condo collapse. While the work is “grueling,” she told NBC News she is honored to do what she can to help her small city recuperate.
“Each of these victims is somebody’s mother, brother, sister, best friend,” she said. “The stories are just gut wrenching.”
Track Tropical Storm Elsa’s path here.
Tuesday’s top stories By Richard Engel, Marc Smith and Yuliya Talmazan | Read more The Taliban have showed off containers full of weapons and military hardware seized from the Afghan military as American forces withdraw from the country and the militants continue their march across the country seizing control in district after district.
By April Glaser | Read more Andy Jassy took the reins of the country’s second-largest employer Monday. While business is booming — so is scrutiny as the company faces a slew of regulatory obstacles and unionization efforts that would test the mettle of any CEO. By Kevin Collier | Read more Cybersecurity experts say the scale of the attack is unprecedented for criminal hackers. OPINION By Timothy Caulfield | Read more An admission of uncertainty isn’t a condemnation of science — in fact, that is how science works, writes the head of Health Law and Policy at the University of Alberta. By Tim Stelloh | Read more Members of Patriot Front who were marching outside City Hall “literally ran away from the people of Philadelphia,” a police officer said. BETTER By Maureen Petrosky | Read more From a gingery cocktail, to a spicy watermelon sipper, check out a few suggestions for zero-proof drinks ideal for a hot summer’s day.
Want to receive the Morning Rundown in your inbox? Sign up here.
Also in the news …
Now that summer is officially underway, here are the best over-the-counter products to treat sunburns.
One fun thing A Neanderthal masterpiece?
The toe bone of a prehistoric deer carved with lines by Neanderthals 51,000 years ago is one of the oldest works of art ever found, according to a study released Monday.
The discovery in Germany’s “Unicorn Cave” is further evidence that Neanderthals were able to express symbolism through art — which was once attributed only to our own species, Homo sapiens.
Read the full story here.
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76.) THE DAILY DOT
July 06, 2021 Welcome to the Tuesday edition of Internet Insider, where we dissect tech and politics unfolding online. Today:
BREAK THE INTERNET Cops are getting free electric lassos for handing over body camera footage Police departments provided body camera footage and testimonials to Wrap, the company that makes the controversial BolaWrap, a high-tech lasso, which are then used to sell it to other agencies.
According to emails obtained with public records requests by the Daily Dot between Wrap and law enforcement agencies, departments readily provided the company with body camera footage of officers deploying the BolaWrap, a device that propels a Kevlar lasso with prongs that wraps around the body of an individual to stop them.
Wrap used these edited versions of these videos to market the BolaWrap. Some of the videos have also appeared in media coverage of the device, including on Fox Business News.
In some instances, departments were also offered a free device after submitting footage.
The BolaWrap has been controversial: It’s been lauded by some as a tool to make policing safer but drawn criticism because it’s marketed as a tool to subdue individuals with mental health issues. Many of the Wrap’s videos show real deployments of the BolaWrap being used to immobilize someone in the middle of a mental health crisis.
Wrap requested information about deployments of the BolaWrap in follow-up emails to officers after demonstrations and trainings, based on interviews, email exchanges with departments, and forms reviewed by the Daily Dot. Police departments were more than happy to comply.
“We encourage police departments to share bodycam footage of BolaWrap deployments so the company and other law enforcement agencies can learn from those,” Wrap said in a statement to the Daily Dot. “When we release a bodycam video, the subject’s face is always blurred.” Wrap did not respond to the Daily Dot’s numerous detailed questions, like why it provided police departments with free wraps. Police departments in Glenwood Springs, Colorado; Wyoming; Minnesota; and Beaufort, South Carolina, all provided Wrap with body camera footage, according to correspondence reviewed by the Daily Dot. Editorial Intern
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PRIVACY Calls for Biden to ban facial recognition grow after GAO report’s findings The findings of a recent report by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) regarding the federal government’s use of facial recognition are renewing calls for President Joe Biden to ban the technology.
The GAO’s report found that 20 federal agencies either owned or used facial recognition technology. It also found that six agencies had used it amid Black Lives Matter protests against police brutality and racism in 2020.
The report also noted that there was a lack of oversight from the agencies about how employees were using facial recognition. The GAO said 13 agencies reported to them that they didn’t know what non-federal facial recognition systems were being used by employees.
Facial recognition technology has been found to have a racial bias, and there has long been a push to ban it from being used by the government and police. In the absence of movement at the federal level, cities and states have moved to place restrictions on the technology’s use.
Now, the report’s findings are renewing previous calls that civil rights and tech advocacy groups have made to Biden to ban the federal government from using facial recognition.
“It’s alarming that six federal agencies targeted facial recognition at BLM protesters. In a democracy, police should not be allowed to use surveillance to punish dissent,” Albert Fox Cahn, the executive director of the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project, said in a statement.
“While the GAO’s findings are alarming, their recommendations don’t go far enough. We don’t need facial recognition regulations, we need a full ban. We can’t wait for Congress to act, so we are calling on President Biden to issue a moratorium on federal facial recognition,” Cahn added. Deputy Tech Editor
INTERNET RIGHTS Ohio Republicans attempt to kill municipal broadband ends after public outcry An attempt by Ohio Republicans to insert an amendment into a budget that would have effectively killed municipal broadband in the state has reportedly been nixed.
State legislators removed an amendment that would have affected current networks and drastically limited cities’ and towns’ ability to create new municipal broadband networks from the final version of their state budget proposal.
The Columbus Dispatch originally reported the amendment’s removal. Gov. Mike DeWine signed the budget proposal on Wednesday without the municipal broadband ban.
The municipal broadband-killing amendment caused an uproar among local citizens and officials who called for the Republican-authored amendment to be removed.
On the national level, there has been a recent push to increase broadband access. President Joe Biden’s broadband component of his infrastructure package has highlighted municipal broadband. However, Republicans in Congress have also tried to push against municipal broadband efforts.
—C.C.
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77.) HEADLINE USA
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78.) NATURAL NEWS
79.) POLITICHICKS
80.) BLACKPRESSUSA
81.) THE WESTERN JOURNAL
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82.) CNN
Tuesday 07.06.21 Florida is battening down the hatches today as Tropical Storm Elsa approaches, bringing with it possibly deadly storm surge. Here’s what else you need to know to Get Up to Speed and On With Your Day. A commuter exits Bank Underground Station in London. Coronavirus
US states with below-average vaccination rates have almost triple the rate of new Covid-19 cases compared to states with above-average vaccination rates, new data shows. This huge disparity underscores the “two Americas” that are emerging as life returns to normal in some areas and cases surge again in others. In the UK, Prime Minister Boris Johnson revealed plans to lift most lockdown rules by the middle of the month, despite rising cases. “We must reconcile ourselves sadly to more deaths from Covid,” he said. His perspective is causing concern among health experts. In Thailand, a leaked memo from the country’s health ministry is raising doubts about the efficacy of China’s Sinovac vaccine.
Ransomware attack
Between 800 and 1,500 businesses have been hit by a ransomware attack on software vendor Kaseya, whose products are widely used by IT management companies. An analysis of the malicious software shows it was created by REvil, a ransomware gang believed to operate out of Eastern Europe or Russia. The group is demanding a $70 million payment in Bitcoin for a decryptor tool. The White House is urging companies that believe their systems were compromised to immediately report it to the Internet Crime Complaint Center, but the full impact of the incident may not be felt until today, when many people return to work after the long weekend. Several high-profile cyberattacks have hit the US in recent months, and preventing them has become a White House priority.
Condo collapse
Search and rescue efforts at the Surfside condo collapse site have grown even more urgent as Elsa barrels toward the state. The tropical storm is expected to impact the west coast of Florida but could bring rain and dangerous winds that would complicate the search. Sunday evening’s demolition of the rest of the building has made efforts easier, though residents were not allowed to retrieve their belongings before the building was felled. It’s been almost two weeks since the collapse, but rescue teams are still holding out hope that they may find survivors in the rubble. So far, 117 people remain unaccounted for and 28 people are confirmed to have died.
Gun violence
At least 150 people were killed by gun violence in more than 400 shootings across the US during the Fourth of July weekend. The deadly spate is part of a larger surge in violent crime that has set major cities on edge. So far this year, gun violence incidents in New York have spiked almost 40% over the same period in 2020, with 767 shootings and 885 victims. This weekend, the city saw 26 victims in 21 shootings from Friday to Sunday. In Chicago, Police Superintendent David Brown called July 4 the “most challenging weekend of the year.” According to Chicago Police Department data, 83 people were shot, including 14 killed, in shootings from 6 p.m. Friday to 6 a.m. Monday.
Hong Kong
Hong Kong authorities say they’ve thwarted an alleged plot, organized by advocates for the city’s independence from China, to bomb public places. The suspects allegedly scouted two court buildings and were targeting three tunnels that are part of the city’s most important transport infrastructure. The senior superintendent of the police’s National Security Department said the alleged plan was “shocking because it seems to target a lot of people.” Unrest has simmered in Hong Kong since 2019, when opposition to a bill that would have allowed extradition to mainland China morphed into a larger movement calling for universal suffrage and justice for police misconduct. A new wave of unease came last year after Beijing enacted a controversial national security law in the city without local input.
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Lock in a 1.99% APR Refinance Rate Before The Fed Meets Economists are urging Americans to refinance to take advantage of historically low refinance rates. These low rates are not going to last much longer. People are talking about these. Read up. Join in. Blake Shelton and Gwen Stefani are married
Courteney Cox, Jennifer Aniston and Lisa Kudrow reunite for July 4
A tiny, 50,000-year-old engraved bone is changing how we think about Neanderthals
Matthew McConaughey declares America ‘going through puberty’ in Independence Day message
French beachgoers are about to face the most bitter culture war you’ve never heard of
40.5% That’s how much of India’s wealth was held by the country’s top 1% by the end of 2020, marking a huge jump in wealth inequality exacerbated by the pandemic. Like in other countries, India’s billionaires have only gotten richer, while lower-income people struggle more. We had a complete failure of the state today.
Giorgi Tabagari, director of Tbilisi Pride, after LGBTQ campaigners in the country of Georgia had to scrap plans for a pride march. Activists faced incidents of violence before the march, including the ransacking of their offices. They blamed the Prime Minister for using “irresponsible” language leading up to the event. Brought to you by CNN Underscored The best dehumidifiers of 2021 With summer’s heat and humidity in full swing, we tested seven leading dehumidifiers to help you find the best one to keep your home dry and comfortable all season long. Here are the two we loved the most. Out of the primordial pool 5 THINGS You are receiving this newsletter because you’re subscribed to 5 Things.
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96.) NOT THE BEE
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Not the Bee Daily Newsletter |
Jul 6, 2021 |
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Video: Michigan cop pulls man out of burning vehicle just in timeThis is real American hero stuff right here:
The CDC really shared this GIF on Twitter 💩😭
Watch: Shoppers break out singing the national anthem at Texas Walmart
Legendary dad snags foul ball while holding onto his child and his beerOkay, this has to be one of the top ten dad plays of all time right here:
CNN is calling Tucker Carlson “the new Alex Jones” and now get ready for more watering down of the term “conspiracy theorist”So here we go again with yet another CNN narrative which is bound to send their ratings even more into the tank. This time we’ve got ourselves a narrative that says Tucker Carlson is literally the new Alex Jones.
The July 4th weekend was a bloodbath in Chiraq
This hulk has a message for Americans who disrespect their flagLet this guy known as “MAGA Hulk” school you for a quick minute on why you should respect the Stars and Stripes if you live in the US-of-A:
Girls named Alexa are being bullied at school because they share a name with Amazon’s virtual assistant, and now parents are calling on Amazon to change Alexa’s name
Rapper Zuby posted 21 things he learned about humanity through the ‘Rona and it’s 🔥🔥🔥Here’s some wise insight to start your week:
LAPD attempted to detonate a bunch of illegal fireworks inside a “specialized armored truck designed for controlled detonations” and it did not go well.Okay, so last week LAPD seized—I KID YOU NOT—5,000 pound of illegal fireworks from a single home in Los Angeles. In the process, they also arrested a 27-year-old man.
This is a real video of Mark Zuckerberg waving Old Glory while cruising on a hydrofoilThis is not a deep fake. This is an actual video posted by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg:
Rep. Cori Bush says July 4th is only for white people because black Americans aren’t free. People had some thoughts for the esteemed black congresswoman.You have to be in a cult to believe this nonsense:
Why the 4th of July may make your kid RepublicanEvery Independence Day it seems I am reminded of the now-decade old Harvard University study that found attending Fourth of July celebrations or parades as a child increases the chances that an individual will grow up to be a Republican, or at least someone with conservative politics.
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97.) US NEWS & WORLD REPORT
98.) NEWSMAX
99.) MARK LEVIN
July 5, 2021
On Monday’s Mark Levin Show, We bring you the best of Mark Levin. It’s all hands on deck for the politicians and first responders to help at Surfside, Florida. Yet, for the inhumane leftwing activists at the Washington Post, it’s an opportunity to attack Governor Ron DeSantis with the hope that they can tie this to him somehow. Then, Olympian Gwen Berry was prepared with her “Activist Athlete” t-shirt this weekend to take a stand against the very country she was competing for. President Biden contributes to this destructive ideology with his hateful rhetoric which is echoed by Jen Psaki. Those who hate America will always focus on how to cast America in a negative light. Later, political indoctrination like Lat-Crit or critical Latino theory developed by white liberals suggests that white Protestant colonialists are the illegal aliens, not the indigenous people and Hispanics that originally that have inhabited the land. Moreover, critical gender theory professes that binary sexes have been replaced by 58 different gender types. This ideological oligopoly is supported by the media, academia, and big tech and will destroy history in the process. Then, do propagandists dressed up as tenured professors care about humanity and the crime wave that is sweeping the nation? The democrat party has unleashed an inhumane crime wave. The Marxist left displays a strikingly high degree of inhumanity primarily from cities run by Democrats with largely minority populations suffering at the hands of other minorities from the Democrat Party. Finally, the climate change movement is just another of the Marxist Democrat’s ways of controlling us and taking away our rights. This is an ideology that is dressed up in polar bears and melting ice caps in order to hide the iron fist. It is a grave threat to our existence, and the Biden administration has embraced a vast part of it.
The podcast for this show can be streamed or downloaded from the Audio Rewind page.
Image used with permission of Getty Images / Gina Ferrazi
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112.) RIGHT & FREE
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The revelation comes amid calls to boot her from the team representing America.
If QAnon is a right-wing conspiracy theory, the Democrats’ allegations that Republicans are killing democracy is the left’s conspiracy. They have convinced…
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De Blasio didn’t quite have his facts in order.
The rockets were only able to reach the perimeter.
Best July 4th movie: Lincoln
>>Both he and Keely noted that while climate change certainly exacerbates the problems by increasing drought and heat waves<<
It would be more accurate to say that “he and Keely *presumed* that”, since to my knowledge, the scientific summary from the IPCC itself does not conclude that global warming has exacerbated increasing drought, although one would think it logical that *global warming* (in contrast to *climate change*) would lead to more heat waves…
But that’s just a morning nit to pick, I suppose. Carry on.