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Business

Unemployment Claims Rise as Financial Disaster Grinds On: Reside Updates

Here’s what you need to know:

Credit…Anna Moneymaker for The New York Times

The Treasury secretary, Steven Mnuchin, was rebuked on Thursday at a congressional oversight hearing over his management of the economic relief effort, facing criticism from lawmakers over his decision to pull the plug on five of the Federal Reserve’s emergency lending programs.

Scrutiny of Mr. Mnuchin’s handling of the programs comes as he is negotiating with Congress over another $900 billion economic relief bill that lawmakers hope to pass before the end of the year.

The criticism over Mr. Mnuchin’s decision to end the Fed programs adds to the controversy surrounding one of his final acts as Treasury secretary. Mr. Mnuchin insisted again on Thursday that he was following the intent of the law in ending the lending programs at year-end and in clawing back billions from the Fed. That position is at odds with what many legal experts and Democrats in Congress say was actually required under the law.

“This was a political decision — one intended to hamstring the incoming administration even as Covid deaths are spiking and the economic recovery is slowing,” Bharat Ramamurti, an appointed member of the Congressional Oversight Commission, said at Thursday’s hearing. “Let me put it this way: Does anyone think the Treasury would have ended these programs if Donald Trump were re-elected?”

Mr. Ramamurti, a Democrat, noted that Mr. Mnuchin’s decision was only made public after the election and that Treasury had earlier indicated that the programs could continue depending on market conditions.

On Nov. 19, Mr. Mnuchin declared that the he believed all along that the programs could not continue past year-end and asked the Federal Reserve to give back the unused investments.

Mr. Mnuchin was also grilled over Treasury’s decision to extend a loan to a trucking company that was struggling before the coronavirus.

Republicans on the commission, Senator Patrick J. Toomey of Pennsylvania and Representative French Hill of Arkansas, both raised questions about why the company, YRC Worldwide, was worthy of loan that was justified on the grounds that the company was critical to national security.

“It’s been hanging on by a thread since the global financial crisis,” Mr. Hill said.

Mr. Toomey said that YRC, which had been contracted by the Defense Department to provide meal kits, protective equipment and other supplies to military bases, appeared to be nearly insolvent and asked whether giving it money was a prudent use of taxpayer funds.

Mr. Mnuchin, a former banker, agreed that he would not have underwritten the loan if he was still in private industry but said the law gave Treasury the ability to help prevent financial problems and job losses at companies deemed critical to national security.

There was a tremendous risk to the Deparment of Defense and a tremendous risk to the number of jobs,” Mr. Mnuchin said.

Lawmakers also pressed Mr. Mnuchin about one of YRC’s financial backers, Apollo Global Management, a private equity firm that also has ties to the White House.

Mr. Ramamurti asked Mr. Mnuchin if Jared Kushner, President Trump’s son-in-law and senior adviser, had encouraged him to approve the loan. In 2017, Apollo lent $184 million to Mr. Kushner’s family real estate firm, Kushner Companies, to refinance the mortgage on a Chicago skyscraper.

Mr. Mnuchin said that Mr. Kushner had no input and defended the loan, claiming that it staved off substantial job losses.

“I do think it would have been bankrupt and the company would have fired lots of people,” Mr. Mnuchin said.

Pandemic Unemployment

Assistance claims

Pandemic Unemployment

Assistance claims

Applications for jobless benefits resumed their upward march last week as the worsening pandemic continued to take a toll on the economy.

More than 947,000 workers filed new claims for state unemployment benefits last week, the Labor Department said Thursday. That was up nearly 229,000 from the week before, reversing a one-week dip that many economists attributed to the Thanksgiving holiday. Applications have now risen three times in the last four weeks, and are up nearly a quarter-million since the first week of November.

On a seasonally adjusted basis, the week’s figure was 853,000, an increase of 137,000.

Nearly 428,000 applied for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, a federal program that covers freelancers, self-employed workers and others who don’t qualify for regular state benefits.

Unemployment filings have fallen greatly since last spring, when as many as six million people a week applied for state benefits. But progress had stalled even before the recent increases, and with Covid-19 cases soaring and states reimposing restrictions on consumers and businesses, economists fear that layoffs could surge again.

“It’s very clear the third wave of the pandemic is causing businesses to have to lay people off and consumers to cut back spending,” said Daniel Zhao, senior economist for the career site Glassdoor. “It seems like we’re in for a rough winter economically.”

Jobless claims rose in nearly every state last week. In California, where the state has imposed strict new limits on many businesses, applications jumped by 47,000, more than reversing the state’s Thanksgiving-week decline.

The monthly jobs report released on Friday showed that hiring slowed sharply in early November and that some of the sectors most exposed to the pandemic, like restaurants and retailers, cut jobs for the first time since the spring. More up-to-date data from private sources suggests that the slowdown has continued or deepened since the November survey was conducted.

“Every month, we’re just seeing the pace of the recovery get slower and slower,” said AnnElizabeth Konkel, an economist with the job site Indeed. Now, she said, the question is, “Are we actually going to see it slide backward?”

Many economists say the recovery will continue to slow if the government does not provide more aid to households and businesses. After months of gridlock in Washington, prospects for a new round of federal help have grown in recent days, with congressional leaders from both parties signaling their openness to a compromise and the White House proposing its own $916 billion spending plan on Tuesday. But the two sides remain far apart on key issues.

The stakes are particularly high for jobless workers depending on federal programs that have expanded and extended unemployment benefits during the pandemic. Those programs expire later this month, potentially leaving millions of families with no income during what epidemiologists warn could be some of the pandemic’s worst months.

Dara Khosrowshahi, Uber’s chief executive, said that drivers had served as a “lifeline” during the pandemic by delivering food and transporting health care workers.Credit…Jeenah Moon for The New York Times

Uber drivers and food delivery couriers should get priority access to the coronavirus vaccine, Dara Khosrowshahi, Uber’s chief executive, wrote in a letter to the governors of all 50 states.

Arguing that drivers had served as a “lifeline” during the pandemic by delivering food and transporting health care workers, Mr. Khosrowshahi said that they had earned a spot near the front of the vaccination line alongside other kinds of frontline workers.

“As you finalize your state-level allocation and distribution plans, I encourage you to recognize the essential nature of their work” Mr. Khosrowshahi wrote to the governors. “I want to ensure these individuals can receive immunizations quickly, easily and for free.”

He also offered to use Uber’s app to promote the vaccine and said Uber could be used to help people get to vaccination appointments.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has recommended that health care workers who are at risk of contracting the virus and residents of long-term care facilities should be the first people to receive the vaccine.

Essential workers should be next, the C.D.C. suggested. But individual states have varied definitions of which workers meet the criteria. Uber drivers should be considered in that phase, Mr. Khosrowshahi said.

Volunteers prepare food for families in need in Newton Centre, Mass. Two federal unemployment programs are set to expire, potentially leaving millions vulnerable to eviction and hunger.Credit…Cody O’Loughlin for The New York Times

Millions of Americans will lose their only income in a few weeks if Congress doesn’t act soon to extend unemployment benefits.

Congress created two programs in the spring to expand the unemployment safety net: Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation, which offers 13 weeks of payments to people whose regular state benefits have run out, and Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, which is intended for people left out of the regular unemployment insurance system. But the week ending Dec. 26 is the last for which people can claim benefits under the programs.

Figuring out how many people stand to lose benefits is surprisingly difficult. Data from the Labor Department on Thursday showed that 4.5 million people were enrolled in the program to extend state benefits as of the third week of November. That was down slightly from a week earlier but had been rising quickly as people exhaust their regular benefits, which last six months in most states. If the program ends, some people will qualify for a separate federal extended benefits program, but that extension isn’t available in all states.

Pandemic Unemployment Assistance is even more complicated. The report on Thursday showed that 8.6 million people were enrolled, but that figure is almost certainly an overestimate. A recent report from the Government Accountability Office found that the program had been plagued by fraud and double counting, rendering the data unreliable.

By any accounting, however, millions stand to lose their income if the programs end. Many have already drawn down savings, leaving them with little financial cushion and putting them at risk of eviction or foreclosure.

“They’re going to be very quickly forced to make a lot of bad financial decisions to put food on the table,” said Andrew Stettner, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation, a progressive group. “It can be something you can’t recover from or that takes years to recover from.”

Outside the European Central Bank’s former headquarters, in Frankfurt. Credit…Yann Schreiber/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The European Central Bank administered another dose of stimulus to the eurozone economy on Thursday, as policymakers signaled that they expected the impact of the pandemic to linger into 2022 even as the rollout of vaccines begins.

The bank’s Governing Council, which met on Wednesday and Thursday, extended and enlarged programs intended to keep borrowing costs low for eurozone businesses and consumer.

The bank said it would increase pandemic-related bond buying — essentially a money-printing program — by 500 million euros, to a total of €1.85 trillion euros, or $2.2 trillion. The bank said it expected to continue the purchases at least until March 2022, nine months longer than planned.

The central bank also extended by a year, to June 2022, an initiative that allows commercial banks to borrow money at negative interest rates, provided the banks pass the credit on to their customers.

The decisions indicate that the European Central Bank’s Governing Council believes economic recovery is still months away, and extraordinary measures are needed to blunt the damage caused by the pandemic.

A second wave of coronavirus infections provoked a renewed economic downturn in the last quarter of this year, prompting the bank to take action, Christine Lagarde, the president of the European Central Bank, told reporters during a news conference.

The most recent analysis by central bank economists suggests “a more pronounced near-term impact of the pandemic on the economy and a more protracted weakness in inflation than previously envisaged,” Ms. Lagarde said.

The new burst of stimulus was not a surprise after Ms. Lagarde telegraphed policymakers’ intentions at a news conference in October, and repeated the message several times afterward. The only unknowns were what precise form the stimulus would take, and how big it would be.

The measures announced Thursday were in addition to 1.35 trillion newly created euros that the central bank had allocated to buy government and corporate bonds. The purchases are a way of pushing down market interest rates to keep borrowing costs low.

Since April, the central bank has also been lending to commercial banks at interest rates as low as minus 1 percent, in effect paying lenders to take the money as a way of pumping credit into the economy. The commercial banks must lend the money to their customers and meet other conditions to qualify.

United Airlines agreed to invest in a venture plans to build large plants where carbon will be captured from the air and stored underground.Credit…Jeff Chiu/Associated Press

United Airlines said on Thursday that it planned to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions to zero by 2050, in part by investing in capturing and storing carbon.

The airline said it had agreed to invest in 1PointFive, a joint venture between a subsidiary of Occidental Petroleum and Rusheen Capital Management, a private equity firm. That venture plans to build large plants in the United States where carbon will be captured from the air and permanently stored deep underground. Each plant will be designed to remove a million tons of carbon dioxide a year, or the equivalent of the carbon removed by about 40 million trees, according to the airline.

United is among a growing list of companies to promise to effectively eliminate their contribution to climate change. Airlines face a particularly difficult challenge because the technology to produce a zero-emission jet that can economically ferry hundreds of people over long distances does not yet exist and may not for decades.

Some experts and corporate leaders, including United’s chief executive, Scott Kirby, said the world would not be able to meet its climate goals without capturing carbon dioxide in the air and storing it in perpetuity. The approach is technically feasible, but it is expensive and has yet to be deployed on a large scale.

“Everyone that really wants to get the globe down to zero is going to have to come to grips with direct capture and sequestration because that is going to be the only way to get there by 2050,” Mr. Kirby told reporters on a call on Wednesday.

To meet its goal, United also plans to invest in the development and use of “sustainable fuel” and undertake other measures. American Airlines recently announced a similar pledge to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050, and Delta Air Lines said this year it would invest $1 billion to become the world’s “first” carbon neutral airline.

  • Stocks drifted between gains and losses on Thursday, as new data showed that unemployment claims jumped sharply in the United States last week, and the European Central Bank’s plans to expand stimulus measures fell short of what some traders were expecting.

  • The S&P 500 fell half a percent in early trading before recouping those losses. The Stoxx Europe 600 slipped about 0.8 percent, while the FTSE 100 index in Britain was flat after giving up its early gains.

  • The Labor Department said on Thursday that more than 947,000 workers filed new claims for state unemployment benefits last week, up nearly 229,000 from the week before. Applications have now risen three times in the last four weeks.

  • The report highlights the importance of a new economic stimulus plan to shore up households and businesses as the pandemic grinds on. Prospects for a new round of federal help have grown in recent days, with the White House proposing its own $916 billion spending plan on Tuesday. But lawmakers remain far apart on key issues.

  • The E.C.B., which has bought more than 600 billion euros’ worth of European bonds as part of an effort to keep government borrowing costs low, said on Thursday that it would increase its bond-buying plan by 500 billion euros and keep purchasing the debt until at least March 2022.

  • The pound fell against all other major currencies, losing 0.9 percent against the euro and 0.6 percent against the dollar, after Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain returned from Brussels without a breakthrough on Brexit trade talks with the European Union. The two sides have set a new deadline of Sunday to secure a deal.

  • On Wednesday, Britain signed trade agreements with Singapore and Vietnam. Britain has rushed to sign dozens of free-trade agreements with countries because on Jan. 1 it will be independent of the European Union customs union. The agreements essentially replicate the terms of the E.U. pacts with those countries.

Merck’s chief executive, Kenneth C. Frazier, will lead a workplace diversity effort called OneTen.Credit…Mike Cohen for The New York Times

Jarred by the death of George Floyd and the issues of racial injustice raised in its wake, the chief executives of three dozen companies are starting an initiative to provide a million jobs for Black workers in the next decade.

The effort, called OneTen, is led by Merck’s chief executive, Kenneth C. Frazier, and IBM’s executive chairman, Ginni Rometty. It includes leaders at 37 companies like American Express, AT&T, Bank of America, Cisco, Delta Air Lines, General Motors, Johnson & Johnson, Nike, Stryker, Target and Wal-Mart.

The companies hope to draw in a more diverse community of workers through a recruiting start-up that will identify potential job applicants with the help of community colleges, nonprofit groups, and other organizations known for cultivating Black talent.

Organizers said the jobs would have a wide range, from nurse practitioners to roles relying on specialized technology skills. The hope, they said, is to put more Black employees into better-paying, more secure jobs that will help sustain working families and provide better access to the upper echelons of corporations.

“The primary creator of wealth in the United States is the private sector,” Mr. Frazier said. “We can rebuild our country coming out of this pandemic. And if private companies decide that they’re going to hire, as we rebuild our economy, with an equity lens, then we’ll change the country.”

Mr. Frazier, one of only a few chief executives in the Fortune 500 who is Black, said the OneTen effort began after the killing of Mr. Floyd last May by a Minneapolis police officer. The event set off angry protests over racial inequities and “soul searching” in corporate America as well, Mr. Frazier said.

Talking with other chief executives, business organizations and Ms. Rometty, who has emphasized the importance of a diverse work force at IBM, Mr. Frazier said he came to believe that, as employers, their best tool for combating systemic racism was to attract new Black talent into well-paying jobs at their companies. Given that only about 22 percent of Black people over the age of 25 in the United States have attained a bachelor’s degree — a markedly lower percentage than white and Asian people — Mr. Frazier and Ms. Rometty said that drawing more Black talent would probably require dropping certain college-education requirements.

“As an employer, if I state that every job has to have a college degree, I am predetermining the outcome,” said Ms. Rometty. “The talent is out there; I must find another pathway for it to come to me.”

OneTen — the name refers to hiring one million workers in 10 years — is set to begin its work in January. A chief executive has not yet been named.

Dr. Vivek H. Murthy advised the N.C.A.A. Board of Governors in the early days of the coronavirus pandemic.Credit…Hilary Swift for The New York Times

President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s choice for surgeon general, Dr. Vivek H. Murthy, had a central role in the National Collegiate Athletic Association’s decision in March to cancel this year’s national basketball tournaments — one of the earliest and most culturally significant signs that the virus would upend ordinary life in America.

The work of Dr. Murthy, a member of the association’s powerful Board of Governors who was surgeon general during part of the Obama administration, offers a view into how he approached the pandemic’s initial threat in the United States, and how he might help shape the federal government’s response under Mr. Biden.

A newcomer to the insular world of college athletics, Dr. Murthy proved a cautious, deliberate expert who was wary of making drastic decisions prematurely, interviews with more than a dozen people who participated in the N.C.A.A.’s meetings suggest. But they said that as the tournaments approached and more data and scientific research emerged, Dr. Murthy was a forceful and effective champion of measures that had been unthinkable to most of society only days or weeks earlier.

Indeed, it was Dr. Murthy who urgently told board members that they risked fueling a deadly crisis if they allowed the tournaments to proceed as scheduled.

“He was instrumental in convincing the board that the time to act was now,” said Kenneth I. Chenault, a former chairman of American Express who sits on the N.C.A.A. board.

But board members like Mr. Chenault said that it was plain that Dr. Murthy understood the cultural and financial repercussions of a decision like canceling the basketball tournaments, which generate hundreds of millions of dollars.

  • The Trump administration announced Wednesday that it was filing a challenge to measures that Canada uses to protect its dairy market, the first enforcement action taken under a new trade agreement that the countries agreed to last year. Under the terms of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, which replaced the North American Free Trade Agreement this year, the United States and Canada will now enter consultations, and if the issue isn’t resolved the United States can request a special panel be formed to examine the matter.

  • Starbucks announced on Wednesday that Mellody Hobson will be the next non-executive chair of the company’s board, as the coffee chain moves closer to its goal of increasing diversity among its leadership. One of the most senior Black women in finance, Ms. Hobson has served on the board for 15 years and will step into the new role in March. She will replace Myron Ullman III, who has served as chair since 2018 and is retiring.

Categories
Health

Easy methods to Discuss to Youngsters About Porn

The models are hired for performance, so it is possible that it is contractual rather than consensual.

There is nothing private about it. Data protection is a healthy part of a sexual relationship.

What you see is not realistic on many levels. For example, a 10-minute sex scene can last for hours. Actors often use erectile enhancers to help maintain arousal. If a scene doesn’t come out the way you want it, just re-shoot it. If you edit afterwards, a specific representation is created.

It is relatively common for children under the age of 18 to request, take, send, and receive nudes, but this can have real ramifications. The federal government believes that child trafficking is involved even if you take and post pictures of yourself. Find out about federal laws regarding pornography and your state’s sexting laws for teenagers.

When your child tells you about an act, do your best to remain calm and resist the temptation to interrogate, be ashamed, or blame the victim. You can say, “I’m glad you came to tell me.” Focus on the person who broke trust in your child and who shares or publishes the pictures.

If the nude photos of people are posted online without their consent, the violation may appear as if it happened in person. It can be devastating. Ask what your child would like to share. Remember, abuse is a disempowering experience. We want survivors to feel they have autonomy in directing their process. Use open-ended questions and their convenience to guide the conversation. Empower them to make their own decisions by offering options and resources like therapeutic advice or reporting to law enforcement.

As a parent, you have taught your children values ​​in all aspects of their lives. Talk about how mutual respect looks, sounds, and feels in a sexual context. It is important to emphasize that sexual relationships can include both emotional and physical intimacy. The connection usually involves romantic interest and sexual attraction.

Without guidance from the adults in their lives on what pleasurable sexual experiences should look, sound and feel like, children work from what they see on screens. Make sure you provide age-appropriate, medically correct information about sexuality and instructions on how to apply that information to their intimate relationships. Encourage your children to define the gender for themselves, to avoid stereotypes affecting their actions, and to be sober and courageous in social and sexual situations.

Categories
Politics

Biden picks China critic Katherine Tai for U.S. Commerce Consultant

Katherine Tai speaks during a House Ways and Means Committee meeting on the US-Mexico-Canada Trade Agreement (USMCA) in 2019.

CSPAN

President-elect Joe Biden named Katherine Tai, a trade attorney with a history of taking over China, to be his new administration for the United States’ chief trade agent on Thursday.

If this were approved by the Senate, Tai would inherit a critical position at the cabinet level, tasked with enforcing American import regulations and negotiating terms of trade with China and other nations.

Tai, who is Asian-American, would also be the first black woman to act as a USTR. She is fluent in Mandarin.

With the election of Tai, the senior trade attorney on the House Ways and Means Committee, the Biden team is likely signaling an intention to revert to a multilateral trade approach to advance U.S. trade interests and face growing economic competition from China.

The president-elect announced Tai’s experience in a press release on Thursday as key to key insights as the new administration reviews outgoing President Donald Trump’s Beijing-brokered trade deal.

“Your in-depth experience will enable the Biden-Harris administration to get a foothold in trade and harness the power of our trade relations to help the US emerge from the COVID-induced economic crisis and get the president-elect’s vision from a professional pursue – American Labor Trade Strategy, “wrote the Biden transition team.

Tai would succeed current Trade Tsar Robert Lighthizer, whose achievements during the Trump administration include stepping up negotiations with Beijing and introducing hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs on goods imported from China.

China’s Deputy Prime Minister Liu Er speaks to U.S. Sales Representative Robert Lighthizer during a meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington on February 22, 2019.

Carlos Barria | Reuters

Though Tai prefers multilateral enforcement mechanisms more than Lighthizer, its leadership as a USTR would not necessarily signal a change in tougher stance on China. She said China should be approached vigorously and strategically.

“Both also have long histories of dealing with China’s unfair practices, the most pressing trade problem of our time,” said Clete Willems, former White House top trade negotiator. “Katherine’s approach is most likely different in how she uses the WTO system and alliances to pressure China to change its behavior.”

From 2007 to 2014, Tai successfully negotiated Washington’s disputes against Beijing at the WTO, the global trade organization based in Geneva, Switzerland.

Lighthizer and his team, frustrated with what they saw as slow bureaucracy and China’s influence on the WTO and the World Bank, often chose to bypass the WTO and take a more direct approach through tariffs. The US still has import tariffs on Chinese imports of $ 370 billion.

“As a former head of the USTR China Trade Enforcement, Katherine has experience leading and winning joint WTO disputes against China while working with countries like the EU and Japan and is likely to take a similar approach,” Willems said now Partner at Akin Gump. added in an email.

Willems also noted that Tai’s fluent mandarin would command respect at the negotiating table with China.

US President-elect Joe Biden will announce his health team members on December 8, 2020 at the Queen Theater in Wilmington, Delaware.

Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images

In August, Tai called for a different approach to China than Lighthizer’s year-long tariff war, saying the use of import taxes was actually a defensive maneuver.

Rep Don Beyer, D-Va., Said in a press release on Wednesday night that Tai would be a smart choice for USTR as they work together on the Ways and Means Committee.

“She is smart, knows her way around and is committed to ensuring that trade policy is right for our employees, companies and the environment,” said Beyer.

“Katherine is widely recognized and loved, but she will also be a tough and principled negotiator,” he added. “She’s just the right kind of cooperative leader to bring our trade policies back to a rational level and restore the respect of our allies around the world.”

This should please Biden, who has proposed a return to a multilateral, allied approach and a departure from President Donald Trump’s nationalist “America First” approach.

Still, in a recent interview with the New York Times, Biden said that he will not immediately lift tariffs on China and instead will weigh up a variety of tactics when considering how best to compete with Beijing.

“I’m not going to take any immediate steps, and neither will the tariffs. I will not affect my options,” Biden told columnist Thomas Friedman in an interview earlier this month.

The President-elect has refused to say whether he would support joining certain trade deals. One of President Donald Trump’s first acts of office was the removal of the US from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which the Obama administration had negotiated with eleven other nations.

The TPP excluded China and was a cornerstone of Obama’s efforts to cement US influence in Asia. China has since signed the regional comprehensive economic partnership with 14 other countries, a trade agreement that excludes the US and covers about 30% of the world economy.

Biden has promised to go into more detail about what agreements he would support after his inauguration, but has repeatedly stressed the importance of working with allies to establish the “rules of the road” of world trade.

Categories
Entertainment

5 Issues to Do This Weekend

In normal times, the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater now camped in downtown New York for a month, which aroused awe and brought joy. This year everything is virtual: a mix of archive and newly filmed video, complemented by conversations, available free of charge on the company’s website, YouTube channel and Facebook page.

One or two new programs will be released each week of the season through December 31st and will stay online for a week thereafter. Programs on offer this weekend include one dedicated to star couple Glenn Allen Sims and Linda Celeste Sims, who are retiring this year, and a presentation, Dancing for Social Justice, featuring works by Kyle Abraham and Jawole Willa Jo Zollar.

Then on Monday comes the season’s big premiere, a video piece by company-based choreographer Jamar Roberts. Charlie Parker plays in honor of the 100th birthday of this jazz legend and is called “A Jam Session for Troubling Times”. That sounds exactly as the doctor ordered.
BRIAN SEIBERT

If you haven’t seen Will Arbery’s “Heroes of the Fourth Turning” during its New York premiere, the Wilma Theater in Philadelphia shot a version in a quarantine bubble at the Poconos, and you can’t miss it.

I encountered this production with fresh memories of the production I saw last year and was fascinated by what I hadn’t noticed from my orchestra seat. Arbery’s words grew more urgent; His characters – a group of conservative friends at a house party – were brought to life with urgency. Her need to understand why her pleas were being ignored by liberals became palpable.

They were literally in my living room.

The director Blanka Zizka and the excellent cast (Sarah Gliko is a miracle) took this unthinkable circumstance into account, as did the camerawork (by cameraman Jorge Cousineau) that made the abyss appear within reach. In the darkness of my Brooklyn apartment, I was ready to dive.

“Heroes” can be streamed until Sunday. Tickets are $ 37. After the purchase, the theater sends a link that allows a viewing.
JOSE SOLÍS

children

In Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol” the ghosts materialize mainly from the ether in Scrooge’s residence. On Sunday they will appear in some homes using a 21st century method: zoom.

The occasion is the Winter Family Fair, a free virtual version of the Morgan Library & Museum’s annual homage to Victorian England. First, curator Philip Palmer will take a closer look at the handwritten manuscript of the novel, which the museum exhibits each year. (Ghost stories were once as popular around Christmas trees as they were around the campfire.) Then the Grand Falloons will present an abridged adaptation of this story about holiday salvation with characters like Scrooge, Bob Cratchit and Dickens himself.

The celebration ends with a project inspired by the Morgan exhibition, Betye Saar: Call and Response: Using household materials, participants will assemble a family symbol that will express hopes for the New Year.

Attendees must register for the event, which runs from 2:00 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. – apparently, not all ghosts work at night.
LAUREL GRAEBER

jazz

Members of the opening class of M3 showcased the fruits of their collaboration in free Zoom Sessions – Partial Concert, Part Q. and A. – hosted by journalist Jordannah Elizabeth on jazzmuseuminharlem.org. The second and final session on Saturday at 7pm Eastern Time will feature pieces from three different duos – Eden Girma and Anjna Swaminathan, both singers and multi-talented instrumentalists; Erica Lindsay on saxophone and Serpa on vocals; and the drummer Lesley Mok and the cellist Tomeka Reid – a mixture of electronic and acoustic instrumentation, text recitations and abstract sound. To receive a link to the event, attendees must register on their Eventbrite page.
GIOVANNI RUSSONELLO

comedy

If you miss shows like “@midnight” where funny people traded Zinger for points and your approval, Chase Mitchell and Sean O’Connor’s “The Fun Time Boys Game Night Spectacular” is the online event you attended waiting for.

In “Fun Time Boys,” O’Connor, the former chief writer of “Lights Out With David Spade,” plays host, Mitchell is its staunch sideman, and the name of the game is Quiplash. Players take turns as two of them respond incredibly absurdly to even more absurd prompts such as “What’s the hardest part of fighting a killer doll?” Give. and “The Strangest Celebrity Demand in a Driver Contract: The Green Room MUST have ____.” The other participants and the audience vote for the answer that they like best.

Mitchell and O’Connor will be joined by Kurt Braunohler, Taran Killam, DC Pierson, Blair Socci and Niccole Thurman for their final show in 2020. The action begins Friday at 10 p.m. Eastern Time on the Hold the Phone Comedy channel on Twitch.
SEAN L. McCARTHY

Categories
Business

CVS Well being has 10,000 staffers able to vaccinate seniors at nursing houses

Larry Merlo, chief executive of CVS Health, said the company was ready to deliver “vaccines into the arms of some of our most vulnerable populations” within 24 to 48 hours of receiving its share of Covid-19 vaccines.

“We are ready to go. We are in great shape and as I mentioned, people are excited to be an important part of this solution,” Merlo said in an interview on CNBC’s Squawk Box on Thursday.

Merlo said the company has 10,000 health professionals ready to take the shots in nursing homes and assisted living centers. He said the company has “hired individuals” to help with Covid-19 testing since this pandemic began. And he added it has experience with seasonal flu vaccinations in long-term care facilities.

The government signed a contract with CVS and Walgreens in October to give the coronavirus vaccinations to residents and employees of long-term care facilities across the country. The vaccines are free and are administered in on-site clinics at each location, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.

As part of the massive effort, CVS and Walgreens had to ensure they had enough staff to fan into the centers and expedite the process.

Merlo said the company has reached out to pharmacy schools to help find and recruit pharmacists, pharmacy technicians and pharmacy interns. He said there are also hired health professionals who are retired but still have their licenses and are willing to work part-time.

He said all CVS pharmacies already have refrigerators and freezers that can store five of the six vaccine candidates at the right temperature. He said only one of the six vaccine candidates – Pfizer’s – would require special storage.

The Pfizer vaccine will be distributed in special thermal mailers that can help achieve a 15-day life cycle, Merlo said. It can then be stored for an additional five days in the drugstore’s typical refrigeration facility, which can either freeze or chill, he said.

Categories
Health

Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine paperwork ‘unlawfully accessed’ in EMA hack

A man will receive the first of two Pfizer / BioNTech Covid-19 stitches on December 8, 2020 at Guy’s Hospital in London.

Victoria Jones | AFP | Getty Images

LONDON – Documents related to the development of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine were “illegally accessed” in a cyberattack on the European Medicines Agency.

The EMA said in a brief statement on its website on Wednesday that it was “the subject of a cyberattack” and has opened an investigation “with law enforcement and other relevant authorities”.

The regulator did not disclose details of the nature of the attack, but BioNTech announced on its website that documents contained in the regulator’s filing and stored on an EMA server were accessed. It is unclear exactly which documents were accessed and by whom.

“It is important to note that no BioNTech or Pfizer systems were breached in connection with this incident, and we do not know that study participants were identified through access to the data,” BioNTech said.

The German biotech company said it had decided to release details of the hack “given the critical public health considerations and the importance of transparency”.

The EMA, which approves the use of medicines across the European Union, is currently reviewing two Covid-19 shocks. One is from Pfizer and BioNTech, the other from Moderna. It is not known whether Moderna documents were also accessed.

The regulator is expected to announce a decision in the coming weeks on whether the vaccines are safe across Europe.

“EMA has assured us that the cyberattack will not affect the schedule for its review,” said BioNTech.

Hackers target vaccine

Last week, IBM researchers announced that hackers had also attempted to attack the cold store supply chain that transports vaccines at low temperatures. The researchers warned that a nation-state would likely be behind the effort.

Security officials said in July that hackers linked to Russian intelligence services were attempting to steal information about coronavirus vaccine research in the US, Canada and the UK. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov denied the allegations, according to the state news agency TASS.

The UK’s National Cyber ​​Security Center said: “The NCSC supports the research and manufacture of essential vaccines to defend against cyber threats.”

“We are working with international partners to understand the impact of this incident on the EU Medicines Agency. However, there is currently no evidence that the UK Medicines Agency is affected.”

Categories
World News

It’s Australia’s First Huge Blaze of the Fireplace Season. How Unhealthy Will the Summer time Get?

SYDNEY, Australia – The first big fire of the Australian forest fire season has now blackened roughly half of Fraser Island, an idyllic haven north of Brisbane known for its golden beaches and abundant biodiversity.

With evacuation orders reaching residents on Monday, Australians who had hoped there wasn’t much to burn after last year’s colossal fires are now fighting with a brutal reminder: In a vast country that is at risk of fire and particularly vulnerable to The risk of record-breaking infernos never goes away.

In fact, it continues to increase.

“I’m sure it’s a hit for us and everyone watching,” said Jack Worcester, 34, whose family owns Cathedrals on Fraser, a campground that was recently evacuated. “There is currently no normal for a fire season – any fire season can be pretty serious.”

At this point last year, desiccated forests outside Sydney had been burning for weeks, covering the city’s sky with an orange-gray haze. But while this year (so far) feels less overwhelming, one question hangs on the mind of many Australians, and it’s the same question the Californians asked a few months ago and will be asking again next year: How bad is it going? to get?

Fires are usually measured and recorded using hard statistics – acres burned, homes and lives lost – but before counting there is an impressionistic mapping of the risk, shaped by terrain, climate, human activity and chance.

This year’s Australian seasonal prospect maps show a broad red amoeba for areas of above-average danger that run through the grassy plains of central New South Wales, the southeastern state of which Sydney is the capital. But you have to dig deeper to see that many other areas are also at risk.

For example, Fraser Island is marked as “Normal Fire Potential”. The fire that is now burning, pulling firefighters ashore and on planes to put out the flames and close the island to visitors, is believed to have been caused by an illegal bonfire lit by tourists on October 14th has been.

“By and large, fire is a natural part of the Australian landscape. Even if we say the year has normal or below average risk, it doesn’t mean there is no risk, ”said Naomi Benger, climatologist with the government’s Bureau of Meteorology. “It means the risk is as high as in an average year.”

Due to climate change, she added, the average risk of fire is increasing.

“It only takes a day or two to be disastrous,” she said. “People shouldn’t be complacent.”

La Niña, a large change in tropical Pacific temperatures that affects global weather patterns, is the dominant factor in the 2020-21 Australian fire season. La Niña brings cooler water closer to the ocean surface in the central and eastern tropical Pacific, and this year has provided above-average rainfall for most of the country.

Thunderstorms and long spring weeks have filled the reservoirs, relieving farmers in New South Wales and Queensland after many years of drought. But the soaked rains have also created fields of grass in the plains west of the Great Dividing Range, the mountain range that runs up and down the east coast of Australia.

With just a few hot, dry days, these grasses turn green to brown, making them as easy to light as a dry piece of paper, maybe even easier. This creates a particularly unpredictable and deadly danger.

“The main difference is the intensity; Grass fires are less intense than forest fires in general, but they spread very, very quickly, ”said Richard Thornton, who heads the Cooperative Research Council on Bushfires and Natural Hazards and makes the maps that most countries use to assess each fire base season. “They are certainly moving faster than you can run or walk in front of them, and they are very much dominated by the wind.”

In 1969, a dozen grass fires near the town of Lara killed 23 people, including 17 trapped in their cars on the highway. Some of them tried to escape the fire and failed.

Grass fires also generate enormous amounts of radiant heat. When willow trees caught fire along the surrounding woods in Batlow town in January, the heat from the flames in the grass melted some of the fire trucks and firefighter helmets.

“Because they can move quickly and change direction quickly, people can easily be caught and overrun by a grass fire,” Thornton said. “We’ve seen it before.”

La Niña is just one factor among many. Other weather forces have created drier than normal conditions in places like tropical Queensland.

Fraser Island saw fewer thunderstorms than usual in November, and these dry conditions were exacerbated by the heat. Last month was Australia’s hottest November ever. Projections also suggest that December through February maximum temperatures in parts of southeast and western Australia and along the Queensland coast will likely be above the long-term mean.

That means a higher risk. The onset of a heat wave or two or three this summer could dry out many areas and make fires even more difficult to fight.

Scientists argue that this is climate change in action. As global average temperatures have risen by one degree Celsius since the pre-industrial era, variability in weather patterns is increasing, particularly in Australia, the world’s driest inhabited continent.

What once looked like an anomaly can quickly become the new normal.

“With the Australian fire season last year combined with that in California last year, it can be said that this is what the future will be because of climate change,” said Thornton. “Last year’s fires were unprecedented, but they are no longer like that. Now that we’ve had these fires, they have to be part of the planning. “

A recent report by an independent Royal Commission on fires last year recognized that climate change had already significantly increased the risk of natural disasters in Australia. Numerous changes to fire fighting in the country have been recommended, calling for more aircraft and better coordination of data and communications equipment.

Very little of what the Commission requested has been put into practice or even approved. Prime Minister Scott Morrison goes on to claim that his administration’s efforts to combat climate change – widely viewed as overwhelming and weak by climate researchers in the country – are sufficient.

Emergency managers say the bigger challenge, whether in the US or Australia, is getting the general population in fire-prone areas to understand the changing environment and the risks.

“It’s hard,” said Mr. Thornton. “You don’t want to face the fact that your place of residence is risky.”

Until they can see the fire and the smoke.

Mr. Worcester, the campsite owner on Fraser Island, said that at one point he was exposed to flames close enough for a rock to reach.

“I stood on our property during the ceasefire and watched it be less than 100 meters north of us,” he said. “It was 15 meters tall.”

He said he now intends to buy his own personal fire fighting equipment “just to calm down”. And yet, he already knows that the relief will be short-lived.

The campsite, which was 40 percent full when it had to be evacuated and is now being asked to cancel reservations left and right, is surrounded on three sides by bushland, with the sea in front.

“The vegetation will have grown beyond what it was this year,” Worcester said. “We’ll have two or three years less risk, then another eight years of high risk.”

“At the end of the day,” he added, “when it’s really serious, there is only so much you can do.”

Categories
Business

Gabriela Hearst Unveiled as Chloé’s New Inventive Director

And so a new era begins at Chloé. Less than a week after the departure of Natacha Ramsay-Levi after four years in office, the French fashion house announced Gabriela Hearst as its new artistic director with immediate effect.

Ms. Hearst, a Uruguayan-born designer of ready-to-wear and accessories for women who founded a luxury label of the same name in 2015, has been widely used for this role in recent months. In just five years, her brand has gained industry-wide respect and recognition for its keen focus on casual elegance, sharp tailoring and using textiles from sustainable sources, albeit at sky-high prices.

Last year, she hosted the industry’s first climate-neutral fashion show in New York and was named American women’s clothing designer of the year at the CFDA Fashion Awards. This September she made her debut presentation at Paris Fashion Week – one of around 20 with a live audience. LVMH Luxury Ventures, an investment arm of the multinational luxury goods group LVMH, took a minority stake in the Gabriela Hearst business in January 2019. The brand had sales of around $ 24 million last year.

In a statement released on Monday announcing the appointment, Chloé said Ms. Hearst will continue to serve as the creative director of her own company, in addition to assuming the position of Artistic Director at Chloé. She will follow in the footsteps of a number of star designers including Karl Lagerfeld, Stella McCartney and Phoebe Philo, all of whom previously held roles on Chloé, which was founded by Gaby Aghion in 1952. The house belongs to the Swiss luxury goods group Richemont, which also owns luxury brands such as Azzedine Alaïa and Cartier and is an arch-rival to LVMH.

“Gabriela is a forward-thinking woman and her creative leadership will be a positive force in advancing and expanding our founder’s original vision of meaningful and powerful femininity,” said Riccardo Bellini, CEO of Chloé. “Her powerful vision of more responsible fashion truly embodies the values ​​and commitment of today’s Chloé women.”

Ms. Hearst, who grew up on her family’s ranch in Uruguay and is a vocal advocate for greater transparency in the luxury supply chain, added that she was excited to work with Mr. Bellini and his “commitment to creating a company that is socially conscious and is in balance with the environment. “

“I am also humble to be able to work with the Chloé team to realize this beautiful vision in a creative and responsible way,” she continued.

Ms. Hearst’s first collection for the house will be presented in March for the fall-winter season 2021. Her appointment is the latest in a string of high-profile designers hired on the world’s most iconic luxury homes this year, following those of Matthew Williams in Givenchy in June and Kim Jones in Fendi in September.

Categories
Politics

Biden Picks Katherine Tai as Commerce Consultant

WASHINGTON – President-elect Joseph R. Biden Jr. is expected to select Katherine Tai, chief trade attorney for the House Ways and Means Committee, as the United States trade agent, a key role who will be responsible for enforcing American trade rules in negotiations with China and other countries on new trade terms, according to those familiar with the plans.

Ms. Tai has received strong support from colleagues in Congress, who credit her for helping a recalcitrant gathering of politicians and stakeholders to fight for the adoption of the revised North American Free Trade Agreement. From 2007 to 2014, Ms. Tai worked for the United States Trade Representative’s Office, where she successfully prosecuted several cases of Chinese trade practices at the World Trade Organization.

If this were confirmed, Ms. Tai, an Asian American woman, would become the first black woman to serve as a U.S. trade representative, a cabinet-level official with the rank of ambassador.

Ms. Tai’s selection was previously reported by Politico and the Wall Street Journal.

Although Mr Biden has stated that he has no intention of negotiating any new free trade agreements until he has made “major investments here at home and in our workers”, his sales agent will have a lot to do. These responsibilities likely include ensuring that American trade rules are properly enforced and that they promote, rather than hamper, other parts of Mr Biden’s agenda, including fighting climate change and encouraging domestic investment, for example through the expansion of Buy American Programs.

Congressional Democrats have campaigned for Ms. Tai to be appointed in part because they believe she would play an important role in ensuring that the provisions of the United States-Mexico-Canada accord, which replaced NAFTA this year, are enforced will. This includes initiating new trade proceedings against Mexican factories that violate labor rules and ensuring that Mexico carries out ambitious reforms to its labor system.

As chief counsel for the Ways and Means Committee, Ms. Tai played a key role in drafting the democratic demands for final changes to the USMCA negotiated by the Trump administration. In this role, she balanced the competing demands of trade unions, environmental groups, corporate lobbyists, and the administration, and helped craft a deal that overtook both Houses of Congress by a wide margin.

In a November letter to Mr. Biden, 10 House Democrats wrote that Ms. Tai’s central role in these negotiations “uniquely qualifies her to lead the implementation and enforcement efforts” as the next sales representative.

“Ms. Tai knows every tool available to hold Mexico and Canada accountable,” the legislature wrote.

Although this is sometimes a minor position, the office of commercial agent has grown in importance under President Trump, who has used the office to levy substantial tariffs on overseas and negotiate a number of trade deals, small and large.

Mr Biden’s chief trade negotiator will be responsible for managing much of this legacy, including assisting in deciding whether to continue to impose tariffs on Chinese goods and whether to keep certain companies excluded from those tariffs. Many of these bans will expire on December 31, and it remains unclear whether Mr Trump plans to extend them.

The new commercial agent will also be responsible for adapting the office to democratic priorities, e.g. B. to increase the protection of workers, curb climate change and raise standards for consumer protection. The election of Mr Biden will also be responsible for rebuilding trade ties that have been weighed down by Mr Trump’s aggressive approach, including with Europe, Canada, Japan and Mexico.

Supporters say Ms. Tai is also uniquely positioned to address the economic challenges facing China, which is believed to be America’s greatest source of competition in the trade sector.

During her tenure in the House of Representatives, Ms. Tai dealt not only with trade disputes against China at the World Trade Organization on issues such as subsidies and export restrictions, but also with issues related to China, including strategies to restore American supply chains and legislation to ban imports Forced labor by Uyghurs and other minorities in China.

Ms. Tai has a background in China, where she taught in the late 1990s and was fluent in Mandarin.

In the House of Representatives, she also sought to examine the legacy of racial injustice in US trade policy and how trade profits could be made more inclusive.

Thomas Kaplan and Emily Cochrane contributed to the coverage.

Categories
Health

Social Inequities Clarify Racial Gaps in Pandemic, Research Discover

When Dr. Gbenga Ogedegbe began researching coronavirus infections in black and Hispanic patients, believed he knew what to find. Infected black and Hispanic patients would be hospitalized and dying more often compared to white patients.

But that’s not how it turned out.

Dr. Ogedegbe, the director of the Department of Health and Behavior at New York University’s Grossman School of Medicine, and colleagues reviewed the medical records of 11,547 patients in NYU’s Langone Health system between March 1 and April 8 have been tested for coronavirus infections.

After considering various differences, Dr. Ogedegbe found that infected black and Hispanic patients were no more hospitalized than white patients. Black patients had a slightly lower risk of death in the hospital.

“We were surprised,” said Dr. Ogedegbe.

The study was published in the journal JAMA Network Open. Three other recent large studies have come to similarly surprising results.

The new findings don’t contradict a massive body of research showing that black and Hispanic Americans are more likely to be affected by the pandemic compared to whites. Coronavirus is more prevalent in minority communities, and infections, diseases and deaths have emerged in disproportionate numbers in these groups.

However, the new studies suggest that there is no innate susceptibility to the virus in Black and Hispanic Americans, said Dr. Ogedegbe and other experts. Instead, these groups are more exposed due to social and ecological factors.

“We hear this all the time – ‘Blacks are more susceptible,'” said Dr. Ogedegbe. “It’s all about the exposure. It’s about where people live. It has nothing to do with genes. “

Black and Hispanic communities and households tend to be overcrowded, along with many other security vulnerabilities. Many people work in jobs that require frequent contact with others and rely on public transport. Access to health care is poorer than that of white Americans, and the basic conditions are much higher.

“To me, these results make it clear that the differences in mortality we see are even more appalling,” said Jon Zelner, an epidemiologist at the University of Michigan who led one of the new studies.

The toll on Black and Hispanic Americans “could easily have been alleviated before the pandemic through a less worn and gruesome approach to social welfare and health care in the US,” he added. “Even if it hadn’t worked, so much of it could have been avoided.”

For example, the federal government could have protected citizens from risky work situations by providing income subsidies that allowed them to stay at home, said Dr. Zelner. The government could have provided workers in nursing homes and long-term care facilities with adequate protective equipment.

Dr. From March to June, Zelner and his colleagues examined data on 49,701 coronavirus patients in Michigan who were and were not hospitalized. In this population, the death rate in black and white patients was the same: 11 percent.

(The high rate reflects the fact that Michigan incidence was dominated by the elderly at the beginning of the epidemic, Dr. Zelner said. The data pertains to detected cases rather than all infections during that period, when it was much less Tests gave.)

A study of patients in Veterans Affairs hospitals led by Dr. Christopher Rentsch of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and VA researchers analyzed the health records of more than five million patients in more than 1,200 facilities.

About 16,317 tested positive for the coronavirus. Dr. Rentsch found that among them there was no difference in the death rate between white, black, or Hispanic patients.

The researchers had expected that underlying health conditions would result in higher death rates in Black and Hispanic patients, who are more likely to suffer from obesity and high blood pressure, which increase their risk for severe Covid-19.

However, when analyzing the death rate, these conditions “hardly moved,” said Dr. Rentsch. However, overall health differences between VA patients by race tend to be smaller than that of Americans, he warned.

A New Orleans study led by Dr. Eboni Price-Haywood, director of the Ochsner Center for Outcomes and Health Services Research, included the 3,481 patients who tested positive for the coronavirus between March 1 and April 11.

She and her colleagues found that black and white patients had the same death rate.

“It’s always confusing when people read the paper,” said Dr. Price-Haywood in an interview. But, she added, when someone was sick enough to be hospitalized, race became irrelevant.

“If you were fragile enough to be admitted, you were fragile enough to die,” said Dr. Price-Haywood.

The four studies confirmed large differences in the incidence of coronavirus infections between minority and white patients.

In the study by Dr. Ogedegbe, black and Hispanic patients were 60 to 70 percent more likely than whites to get infected. In research in Michigan, the incidence of infection in blacks was four times higher than that of whites.

“If you were to replace the white incidence rates with the black, it would reduce mortality by 83 percent,” said Dr. Zelner.

In the VA study, nine out of 1,000 white veterans had a positive coronavirus test, compared with 16.4 out of 1,000 for black patients. In New Orleans, black patients made up 76.9 percent of patients hospitalized with Covid-19, even though they made up only 31 percent of the healthcare system population.

These differences are fully explained by socioeconomic factors, researchers said.

“The bigger problem is the role of social determinants of health,” said Dr. Price-Haywood. “Race is a social construct, not a biological one.”