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E-Waste, firm linked to New Jersey deli, broadcasts reverse merger

Hometown Deli, Paulsboro, N.J.

Mike Calia | CNBC

E-Waste, a shell company linked to a nearly $100 million company that owns just one New Jersey deli, announced Tuesday it will enter into a reverse merger with a privately held electric vehicle corporation called EZRAider Global Inc.

E-Waste, which itself has a sky-high market capitalization of $110 million despite having no business operations, had been marketed along with deli company Hometown International for such a reverse merger or similar transaction.

“This demonstrates that there is a credible process in place for [E-Waste] to complete a merger with an appropriate private company,” said a person with knowledge of the situation who declined to be named. “The merger will be an efficient and robust manner for EZRAider to access the U.S. capital markets.”

E-Waste’s mailing address is in a North Carolina office building and is the same address as a company connected to Peter Coker Sr., whose son, Peter Coker Jr., is chairman and CEO of Hometown International. The deli owner until recently held a $150,000 promissory note from E-Waste.

EZRAider described itself in an April news release as a proprietary electric vehicle platform that comes in 2-, 4- and 6-wheel-drive options “when combined with the Ecart trailer.”

“It was originally developed in Israel for military troop mobility in the field and has since become available to governments and consumer markets in numerous countries, including the US,” EZRaider said in its release at the time.

“When paired with accessories, EZRaider vehicles are competitive for a wide variety of uses including urban commuting & errands, agriculture, off-road work and adventure, search and rescue, fire, security, military, enhanced mobility for disabled persons, golf, tourism, hunting, fishing, camping, facilities maintenance, micro-deliveries and more.”

In March, EZRaider Global Inc. said it had obtained a $50 million investment commitment from Luxembourg-based Global Emerging Markets Group to take the company public.

A Securities and Exchange Commission filing by E-Waste on Tuesday noted GEM’s involvement in the reverse merger.

CNBC in April detailed the fact that E-Waste before fall 2020 was registered at the Manhattan office of GEM Group. That article also noted that as of early 2020 four of the five biggest shareholders of E-Waste were, in order of size of shares held: the Valletta, Malta-based GEM Global Yield Fund LLC SCS, and three individuals whose address was that of something called GEM Advisors, located on Madison Avenue in New York.

At the time, E-Waste’s president, treasurer and secretary was a man named Peter de Svastich, who is a managing director at the GEM Group.

GEM, which had been E-Waste’s controlling shareholder, sold 6 million restricted shares of the company’s stock last year for $30,000 to Global Equity Limited — a Macau, China-based entity.

Global Equity Limited is also the biggest single shareholder of record in Hometown International, the deli company.

E-Waste’s filing Tuesday with the SEC detailed the series of transactions that will underlay its reverse merger with EZRaider.

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The company said another company, the privately held EZ Global, will acquire a limited liability company called EZ Raider LLC, which will include the rights to acquire a fourth company, based in Israel, called DS Raider Ltd.

“EZ Global will enter into a reverse merger with E-Waste and a newly-formed acquisition subsidiary of E-Waste,” the SEC filing said.

“All the outstanding shares of capital stock of EZ Global will be transferred to E-Waste in exchange for shares of E-Waste Common Stock.”

The filing said that after the reverse merge, E-Waste will conduct a private placement offering of its securities on the terms described below to complete the acquisition of DS Israel by EZ Global.

The transaction is expected to be completed on or before June 30.

“Following the completion of all necessary business and legal due diligence after the execution of this Term Sheet, EZ Global will offer and sell a minimum of … $2,000,000.00 … and a maximum of …$3,000,000 … principal amount of EZ Global’s senior secured convertible notes,” the filing said. It added that those “will be sold to a limited number of sophisticated investors and/or non-US persons.”

According to the filing, “GEM Global Yield Fund LLC SCS or its affiliate, agent, or assign (‘GEM’) has entered into a purchase agreement with EZ Global to purchase up to $50,000,000 of EZ Global’s issued and outstanding shares of registered and freely tradeable common stock issued pursuant to the Securities Act for a period of thirty-six months.”

Both E-Waste and Hometown International, whose stock trades on the over-the-counter Pink market, disavowed weeks ago their preposterously high market capitalizations in SEC filings, which noted that their share price did not reflect the value of their businesses.

Hometown International in mid-April drew widespread attention when hedge fund manager David Einhorn, in a client letter, noted that it recently had a more than $100 million market capitalization despite owning only the small deli in Paulsboro, New Jersey.

Since then, CNBC has detailed how the tangled history of arrests, lawsuits and regulatory sanctions involving a number of people connected to Hometown and E-Waste, among them Coker Sr., his business partner, a lawyer involved in the creation of the deli company, and others.

E-Waste’s former president, John Rollo, last month resigned from that post, which he had assumed after a career that included winning Grammy Awards as a music sound engineer and working as a patient transporter at a New Jersey hospital.

Rollo was replaced by 31-year-old Elliot Mermel, a California resident whose business background includes founding a company that raised crickets as human food and a partnership in a cannabis-related business with Paul Pierce, the former Boston Celtics superstar basketball player.

Shortly after Rollo quit, Hometown International’s shareholder fired the deli company CEO, Paul Morina, who is the principal and head wrestling coach at Paulsboro High School, and replaced him with Coker Jr.

A person familiar with the situation confirmed to CNBC that the moves to replace the executives were part of ongoing housecleaning effort at both companies. The person insisted on anonymity in order to speak freely about the circumstances of the moves.

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Business

China Broadcasts a Three-Youngster Coverage

China said on Monday that it would allow all married couples to have three children, ending a two-child policy that has failed to boost the country’s declining birthrates and avert a demographic crisis.

The announcement by the ruling Communist Party represents a dramatic shift in the world’s most restrictive family planning policies, one that it had come under increasing pressure to make. The labor pool is shrinking and the population is graying, threatening the industrial strategy that China has used for decades to emerge from poverty to become an economic powerhouse. Already, local officials in some areas had been tacitly allowing couples to have three children.

But it is far from clear that relaxing the policy further will pay off. People in China have responded coolly to the party’s earlier move, in 2016, to allow couples to have two children.

Monday’s announcement still splits the difference between individual reproductive rights and government limits over women’s bodies. Prominent voices within China, including the central bank, have called on the party to scrap its restrictions altogether, but Beijing has resisted giving up full control.

“Opening it up to three children is far from enough,” said Huang Wenzheng, a demography expert with the Center for China and Globalization, a Beijing-based research center. “It should be fully liberalized, and giving birth should be strongly encouraged.”

“This should be regarded as a crisis for the survival of the Chinese nation, even beyond the pandemic and other environmental issues,” Mr. Huang added. “There should never have been a birth restriction policy in the first place. So it’s not a question of whether this is too late.”

The party made the announcement after a meeting by the Politburo, a top decision-making body, though it wasn’t immediately clear when the change would take effect. In an acknowledgment that raising the birth limits might not be enough, the party also pledged to beef up support for families, though it did not provide details.

China’s family planning restrictions date to 1980, when the party first imposed a “one-child” policy to slow population growth and bolster the economic boom that was then just beginning.

In 2013, as Chinese officials began to understand the implications of the country’s aging population, the government allowed parents who were from one-child families to have two children themselves. Two years later, the limit was raised to two children for everyone, effective Jan. 1, 2016.

But more couples now embrace the concept that one child is enough, a cultural shift that has dragged down birthrates. And some say they aren’t interested in children at all, even after the latest announcement.

“No matter how many babies they open it up to, I’m not going to have any because children are too troublesome and expensive,” said Li Shan, a 26-year-old product manager at an internet company in Beijing. “I’m impatient and worried that I won’t be able to educate the child well.”

Births in China have fallen for four consecutive years, including in 2020, when the number of babies born dropped to the lowest since the Mao era. The country’s total fertility rate — an estimate of the number of children born over a woman’s lifetime — now stands at 1.3, well below the replacement rate of 2.1.

The party’s announcement was unlikely to ignite a baby boom, experts said.

“The decision makers have probably realized that the population situation is relatively severe,” said He Yafu, an independent demographer based in the southern Chinese city of Zhanjiang. “But merely opening up the policy to three children and not encouraging births as a whole, I don’t think there will be a significant increase in the fertility rate. Many people don’t want to have a second child, let alone a third child.”

Still, the news was met with relief by some women who already had a third child but had been wary of being punished for flouting the rules.

“My mobile phone almost fell to the ground,” said Yolanda Ouyang, a 39-year-old employee at a state-owned enterprise in the region of Guangxi who had kept her third child hidden for two years because she feared that she would be fired.

“I’m so happy and so shocked,” Ms. Ouyang said. “Finally, my child can come outside and play out in the open.”

The party’s announcement was quickly met with criticism on Weibo, a popular social media platform. “Don’t they know that most young people are already tired enough just trying to feed themselves?” wrote one user, pointing to a common lament about the rising costs of living. Other users complained that raising birth limits would do nothing to curb the discrimination that women faced at work when they had more children.

In a nod to such concerns, the party indicated on Monday it would also work to introduce broader changes that would make it easier for couples to have more children. It also pledged to improve maternity leave and “protect the legitimate rights and interests of women in employment.”

The party also said it would increase funding to expand services for the country’s retirees. In 2020, the number of people age 60 and above in China stood at 264 million, accounting for about 18.7 percent of the population. That figure is set to grow to more than 300 million people, or about one-fifth of the population, by 2025, according to the government.

For decades, China’s family planning restrictions empowered the authorities to impose fines on most couples who had more than one child and compel hundreds of millions of Chinese women to have abortions or undergo sterilization operations. Civil servants were fired for violating birth restrictions.

Gao Bin, a 27-year-old seller of lottery tickets in the eastern city of Qingdao, recalled how his mother was forbidden to give birth to him and had to flee to three different places just to escape family planning officials. He said that his mother still cries when she recounts those days.

“To be honest, when I saw the announcement of this policy, I was pretty angry,” Mr. Gao said. “I think the government lacks a humane attitude when it comes to fertility.”

Claire Fu and Elsie Chen contributed research.

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Business

English Soccer Proclaims Social Media Boycott to Protest On-line Abuse

English football officials said Saturday they would hold a social media blackout this coming weekend to protest “the ongoing and ongoing discriminatory abuse that players and many others have received online related to football”.

The boycott is supported by a coalition of groups including the Premier League, the richest and most famous football league in the world, but also the English Football Association. the two best professional levels in men’s and women’s football; Referee; the country’s players’ union and others.

The action is the most direct effort by a sport to date to pressure social media companies like Twitter, Instagram and Facebook to take action against online abuse. It follows a season in which players, clubs, team leaders, referees, commentators and others are active and was the target of abuse.

The social media boycott also follows a week of anger and street protests against top clubs and their owners who tried – and failed – to create a breakaway European Super League that would have sealed them off from many structures, including the pay system Sustaining football for a century. At each of the protests there were vitriolic demands on the owners of teams to sell.

Cases of harassment have been well documented online. In February, Arsenal striker Eddie Nketiah posted a picture on Twitter entitled “Work with a Smile!”

The tweet was racially abused by a Twitter user who told Nketiah, who is black, to leave the club. Twitter responded by permanently banning the user’s account, Sky Sports reported.

Such harassment was instigated not only by fans but also by the club’s social media accounts. In December, commentator and former soccer player Karen Carney deleted her Twitter account after receiving a wave of online abuse.

After Leeds United beat West Brom 5-0, Carney wondered on Amazon Prime Video Sport whether Leeds would “blow up” at the end of the season. A clip of her comment was shared on the Leeds team’s Twitter account, which dumped a lot of hateful messages for Carney.

Many on Twitter defended her and criticized the team’s social media people, including former Leeds captain Rio Ferdinand, who demanded that the tweet be deleted.

Bethany England, a Chelsea forward, called on the Leeds social media team for “cruel behavior”.

“Cyber ​​bullies an expert and opens her up to mass online abuse for doing her job and speaking out!” England said.

In February, the top executives of the Football Association – the English Football Association – the Premier League and other organizations wrote an open letter to Jack Dorsey, CEO of Twitter and Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook, urging those responsible to do so an end to the “level of malicious, offensive abuse” emanating from users on their platforms.

“The reality is that your platforms continue to be havens for abuse,” the football managers wrote. “Your inaction has made the anonymous perpetrators believe that they are unreachable.”

In the past, Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter have taken steps such as: B. the temporary or permanent ban on users, but the problems of online abuse have continued to arise.

In a press release announcing the social media boycott, which will run from Friday afternoon through Monday, English football urged the UK to “put in place tough laws to keep social media companies out for what is on their platforms happens to make you more accountable “.

In the statement, Richard Masters, the Premier League executive director, said the league would continue to urge social media companies to make changes to prevent online abuse.

“Racist behavior of any kind is unacceptable and the appalling abuse that players receive on social media platforms must not continue,” said Masters. “Football is a diverse sport that brings together communities and cultures from all areas. This diversity strengthens competition.”

It’s not the first time football has tried to shed light on racism.

For example, players and coaches in the Premier League and other top leagues have kneeled the whole season before kick-off to support the Black Lives Matter movement – at the suggestion of the league team captains and with the support of league officials.

But some players and even entire teams who are frustrated because there is no concrete progress on racial issues and who feel that the gesture has become more performative than productive have recently stopped participating.

Crystal Palace striker Wilfried Zaha said he had come to view kneeling as “demeaning” and said he would stop and focus his efforts on other areas. Brentford, a team in England’s second division championship, stopped kneeling before the games in February. While the players said in a statement that they still support the anti-racism effort, they said, “We believe we can use our time and energy to promote racial equality in other ways.”

The social media blackout will take place while a slew of games are played across multiple leagues, including one between Manchester United and Liverpool, the defending champions of the Premier League.

Edleen John, director of international relations at the football association, said English football will not stop pushing for change after next weekend.

“It is simply unacceptable that people throughout English football and society should continue to be exposed to discriminatory abuse online on a daily basis with no real consequences for the perpetrators,” said John. “Social media companies must be held accountable if they continue to fail to fulfill their moral and social responsibilities to solve this endemic problem.”

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Business

European Tremendous League broadcasts 12 soccer golf equipment, 6 from England

Trent Alexander-Arnold of Liverpool controls the ball during the UEFA Champions League quarter-final second leg between Liverpool FC and Real Madrid at Anfield on April 14, 2021 in Liverpool, England.

Shaun Botterill | Getty Images Sports | Getty Images

Twelve of the leading European football clubs have agreed to set up a Super League despite widespread criticism of the plans.

A statement from the new competition states: “AC Milan, Arsenal, Atlético Madrid, Chelsea, Barcelona, ​​Inter Milan, Juventus, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United, Real Madrid and Tottenham Hotspur have joined as founding clubs.

“It is expected that three more clubs will join before the inaugural season, which is due to start as soon as possible.”

Florentino Pérez, President of Real Madrid and first chairman of the Super League, said: “We will help football at all levels and bring it to its rightful place in the world. Football is the only global sport in the world with more than four billion fans and our responsibility as big clubs is to respond to their wishes. “

The project is being launched to keep up with the UEFA Champions League format that currently dominates European football. UEFA was due to sign plans for an expanded and restructured Champions League on Monday.

The new Super League has been criticized by politicians like Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Labor Party leader Sir Keir Starmer, as well as former players like Gary Neville.

Mr Johnson said the new league will “be at the heart of the national game and affect fans across the country”.

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He added: “The clubs involved must respond to their fans and the wider football community before taking any further action.”

Sir Keir said the plans ignored fans, adding, “Football in empty stadiums hasn’t been the same last year. I can’t wait to get back to the games. But this proposal could open the door for fans forever.” shut down.” and reduces them to mere viewers and consumers.

“The clubs involved in this proposal should reconsider immediately. And if not, they should face the consequences of their actions. Because football is nothing without fans.”

Former Manchester United defender Gary Neville told Sky Sports: “I’m not against modernizing football competitions, we have the Premier League, the Champions League, but I think we have proposals for everyone amid COVID and the economic crisis. ” Clubs is an absolute scandal.

“United and the rest of the ‘Big Six’ who signed up against the rest of the Premier League should be ashamed.”

Neville added, “You should subtract six points from all six teams that signed up. Subtract points from everyone. During a season? It’s a joke.”

UEFA, the FA and the Premier League, among others, have expressed their opposition and declared in a joint statement that they “remain united in our efforts to stop this cynical project”, adding: “We thank these clubs in other countries, especially the French and German clubs that have refused to register.

“This persistent self-interest of a few has lasted too long. Enough is enough.”

The English federation said: “We would not give permission for competitions that would harm English football and we will take all legal and / or regulatory action necessary to protect the broader interests of the game.”

20 clubs take part in the Super League competition – 15 founding clubs and another five teams that can qualify annually based on their performance in the past season.

It starts in August with clubs that participate in two groups of ten and sometimes play home and away games during the week. The top three in each group qualify for the quarter-finals.

The teams finishing fourth and fifth will battle it out for the remaining quarter-finals in a two-legged play-off before using a knockout format at the end of May to advance to the final, which will be played as a single game at a neutral location.

Club players can continue to compete in their national leagues, and a women’s league will be launched as soon as possible after the men’s competition begins.

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Politics

Biden publicizes U.S. troops to go away Afghanistan by Sept. 11

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden said Wednesday he would withdraw US combat forces from Afghanistan by September 11, ending America’s longest war.

The removal of approximately 3,000 American service members coincides with the 20th anniversary of September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks that spurred America’s entry into protracted wars in the Middle East and Central Asia.

“It’s time to end America’s longest war. It’s time for American troops to come home,” said Biden in his televised address from the White House treaty room in which former President George W. Bush took military action against Al Qaeda and the US announced the Taliban in October 2001.

“I am now the fourth American president to preside over an American troop presence in Afghanistan. Two Republicans. Two Democrats. I will not pass that responsibility on to a fifth,” said Biden, adding that the US mission is solely about providing aid be dedicated to Afghanistan and support diplomacy.

During his address, Biden cited the military service of his own son – Beau Biden, who was posted to Iraq for a year and later died of cancer in 2015. He is the first president in 40 years to have a child in the U.S. military and serve in a war zone.

The president said the US achieved its goals a decade ago when it killed Osama bin Laden, the leader of al-Qaeda – the terrorist group that started the 9/11 attacks. Since then, the US’s reasons for staying in Afghanistan have become unclear as the terrorist threat has spread around the world, Biden said.

“Given the terrorist threat that now exists in many places, it makes little sense to me and our leaders to deploy and concentrate thousands of troops in just one country, which costs billions each year,” said Biden. “We cannot continue the cycle of expanding or expanding our military presence in Afghanistan in the hope of creating ideal conditions for withdrawal and expecting a different outcome.”

Biden said he coordinated his decision with international partners and allies as well as Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and spoke with former President Bush. The withdrawal of US troops will begin on May 1st. Following his presentation, Biden said he would visit Section 60 at Arlington National Cemetery, the final resting place for Americans killed in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In a statement following Biden’s speech, former President Barack Obama said the United States had “done everything we can militarily and it was time to bring our remaining troops home”.

Ghani said he respected the US decision to withdraw its forces and that the Afghan military was “fully in a position to defend its people and country”.

Biden warned the Taliban that the US would protect itself and its partners from attack if it withdrew its forces in the coming months. The president said the US would reorganize its counter-terrorism capabilities and assets in the region to prevent another terrorist threat from emerging.

“My team is refining our national strategy to monitor and disrupt significant terrorist threats not just in Afghanistan but everywhere they can occur, in Africa, Europe, the Middle East and elsewhere,” said Biden.

However, CIA Director William Burns admitted Wednesday before the Senate Intelligence Committee that Washington’s ability to respond to threats from Afghanistan will be affected by the US withdrawal. Burns said some U.S. capabilities will remain.

“When the time comes for the US military to withdraw, the US government’s ability to gather and respond to threats will diminish. That’s just a fact,” Burns said.

However, it is also a fact that after the withdrawal, whenever the CIA and all of our partners in the US government do so, they will retain a number of capabilities, some of which will remain, others will be generated by us can help us anticipate and contest reconstruction, “said Burns.

Lance Cpl. Patrick Reeder, with Combined Anti-Armor Team 2, patrols Nawa district, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Oct. 28, 2009.

Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. James Purschwitz

In February 2020, the Trump administration brokered a deal with the Taliban that would initiate a permanent ceasefire and further reduce the US military’s footprint from around 13,000 soldiers to 8,600 by mid-July last year.

According to the agreement, all foreign armed forces would have left Afghanistan by May 2021. The majority of the troops in the country come from Europe and partner countries. About 2,500 US soldiers are now in Afghanistan.

Under the deal, the Taliban pledged to prevent terrorist groups from using Afghanistan as a base for attacks against the US or its allies and agreed to hold peace talks with the central government in Kabul. Biden said the US would keep the Taliban by its commitments.

“We will hold the Taliban accountable for their commitment not to allow terrorists to threaten the United States or its allies from Afghan soil. The Afghan government has made that commitment to us, and we will pay our full attention to the US judge.” Threat we face today, “said Biden.

However, the peace process suffered a setback this week when the Taliban said they would not attend a summit on Afghanistan in Turkey scheduled for later this month and will not attend a conference until foreign forces leave the country.

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The announcement to leave Afghanistan follows a Wednesday meeting between NATO allies and Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin. NATO joined the international security effort in Afghanistan in 2003 and currently has more than 7,000 soldiers in the country.

“Our allies and partners have stood shoulder to shoulder in Afghanistan for nearly 20 years, and we are deeply grateful for the contributions they have made to our common mission,” said Biden. “The plan has long been together and out together.”

NATO Secretary Jens Stoltenberg testified on Wednesday from the Alliance’s headquarters in Brussels that “the drawdown will be orderly, coordinated and deliberate”.

“We went to Afghanistan together, we adjusted our stance together and we agreed to go together,” said Stoltenberg, adding that “all Taliban attacks on our troops during this period will be met with a vigorous response.”

The NATO mission in Afghanistan began after the alliance first activated its mutual defense clause known as Article 5 following the 9/11 attacks.

According to a Department of Defense report, the wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria have combined cost US taxpayers more than $ 1.57 trillion since September 11, 2001. More than 2,000 US soldiers have died in Afghanistan.

– CNBC’s Spencer Kimball contributed to this report.

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Politics

Biden Administration Proclaims Advert Marketing campaign to Fight Vaccine Hesitancy

WASHINGTON – The Biden government announced Thursday morning an ambitious publicity campaign to encourage as many Americans as possible to get vaccinated against the coronavirus.

The campaign, with advertisements in English and Spanish that will air on network television and cable channels across the country and online throughout April, comes as the administration rapidly expands access to coronavirus vaccines.

President Biden announced a new goal last week of giving 200 million doses by his 100th day in office, doubling his original goal of 100 million bullets in the arms of Americans when he was in office. And last month, in an address to the nation, he announced a goal of vaccine qualification for all adults in the United States by May 1. Governors and public health officials in more than 40 states have said they will meet or exceed this deadline.

However, deep skepticism about the vaccine remains a problem, especially among blacks, Latinos, Republicans, and white evangelicals. Administration officials believe that if many Americans continue to refuse to be vaccinated, supply will soon exceed demand. And widespread resistance to vaccinations could hinder returns to more normal lifestyles as the virus continues to spread.

Two hundred and seventy-five organizations will participate in the government’s new public awareness boost – including NASCAR, the Catholic Health Association of the United States, and the North American Meat Institute – aimed at communities where vaccine reluctance remains high. Organizations include many Catholic and Evangelical groups that are expected to help address religious concerns about the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which uses abortion-derived fetal cell lines.

The group is collectively known as the Covid-19 Community Corps, administrative officials said, and the participating organizations can reach millions of Americans who trust these individual groups.

A new survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation this week found that the number of black adults ready to be vaccinated has increased significantly since February. Overall, 13 percent of respondents said they would “definitely not” receive a vaccine. Among Republicans and White Evangelical Christians, nearly 30 percent of each group said they would “definitely not” get a shot.

Updated

April 1, 2021, 7:26 a.m. ET

Government officials said their research showed that vaccine news from medical professionals and community leaders, rather than celebrities or the president, was often more convincing.

“We’re not always the best messengers,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said last month when speaking about the hesitation of the vaccine among conservatives.

The full list of participating organizations includes health professionals, scientists, community organizations, religious leaders, corporations, rural interest groups, civil rights organizations, sports leagues, and athletes. The Department of Health and Human Services is also helping to educate people about vaccines by posting “Let’s Get Vacceted” frames for Facebook users to add to their profile photos.

Part of the challenge of convincing skeptical Americans is the personal and varied reasons behind the vaccine’s hesitation.

“I have a couple of bags that cite religious reasons for the Johnson & Johnson vaccine,” said Shirley Bloomfield, executive director of NTCA – The Rural Broadband Association, which told the White House what she heard from members of her group . “There are a lot of pockets that people have already had Covid in and feel like, ‘Well, we’ve all got it, so we’re not really under pressure.'”

The tone of the ads is hopeful and is intended as a call to action. Everyone can help end the pandemic by getting vaccinated.

To further emphasize this point, the Department of Health and Human Services has separately purchased a multimillion-dollar advertisement in black and Spanish language media and outlets reaching Asian-American and tribal communities to reaffirm the message about safety and effectiveness of coronavirus vaccines.

The government announced last week that it is allocating nearly $ 10 billion to improve access to vaccines and confidence in minority communities hardest hit by the pandemic.

Biden officials have worked with many of the groups involved in the Covid-19 Community Corps since the presidential change, but the formal launch of an advertising campaign had to wait until vaccine supplies were at a level where people could be quick to those provided to them Information reacts.

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Entertainment

The Joyce Theater Broadcasts Its First Full Digital Season

Ayodele Casel will present a new work in April as part of the Joyce Theater’s online spring season. The piece follows Ms. Casel’s celebrated collaboration with jazz pianist and composer Arturo O’Farrill at Joyce in 2019.

The spring list also includes new appearances by Brooklyn-based troupe Ballez; Ephrat Asherie Dance; and Dormeshia, Jason Samuels Smith, and Derick K. Grant. Ballez’s performance of “Giselle of Loneliness”, which was originally planned for the Joyce 2020 Pride Festival, will be broadcast live and then made available upon request. The others are filmed on stage and edited slightly before being released.

In October, Dance returned to Joyce with multiple cast members including Sara Mearns and Shamel Pitts and performed Molissa Fenley’s 1988 solo “State of Darkness” on the stage of the theater for a video compilation. Since then, Pam Tanowitz Dance and Ronald K. Brown’s Evidence company have streamed live from the Chelsea theater.

“The livestreams feel like a really big step,” Joyce’s program director Aaron Mattocks said in an interview. “It was important for the field to get some of these companies up and running again and to show that it can be done.”

The staging of works exclusively for the virtual audience is expensive and “the return is very, very low”.

“I don’t think it’s a sustainable model for the future,” he said.

In addition to the performances taped in the theater, the Joyce will stream digital programs throughout the spring from the Paris Opera Ballet, Batsheva Dance Company, Step Afrika !, Trisha Brown Dance Company, and others.

For more information, including the full schedule, please visit joyce.org.

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Health

UK PM Boris Johnson pronounces 100-day goal to develop new vaccines

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks during a press conference on Coronavirus (COVID-19) on Downing Street on January 15, 2021 in London, England.

Dominic Lipinski | Getty Images

LONDON – UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson will call on the leaders of the world’s largest economies to support efforts to accelerate the development of new vaccines.

Johnson, who will chair a virtual meeting with G-7 leaders on Friday, is expected to outline an ambition to cut the time it takes to develop new vaccines by two-thirds to 100 days.

A Downing Street statement said developing a coronavirus vaccine in around 300 days is a “great and unprecedented global achievement”.

“By further reducing the time it takes to develop new vaccines against emerging diseases, we can potentially prevent the disastrous health, economic and social effects of this crisis,” the government said.

The Coalition for Innovations to Prepare for Epidemics first proposed this 100-day goal earlier this year.

“The development of viable coronavirus vaccines offers the tempting prospect of a return to normal, but we must not rest on our laurels,” Johnson said ahead of the meeting.

“As leaders of the G7 today we have to say never again,” he added, calling on the coalition of leaders to use “collective ingenuity” to ensure that “vaccines, treatments and tests are ready to fight future health threats”. “”

Johnson has asked UK Government Chief Scientific Advisor Patrick Vallance to work with international partners including the World Health Organization and CEPI, along with industry and science experts, to help the G-7 accelerate the development of vaccines, treatments and tests to advise.

At Friday’s session, Johnson will also confirm the UK will share the majority of all future excess coronavirus vaccine doses with Covax. This is a global initiative jointly led by WHO and CEPI, among others, and aims to provide low-income countries with fair access to coronavirus vaccines.

On Friday, the EU announced that it would double its contribution to Covax to 1 billion euros (1.2 billion US dollars), while Germany pledged a further 900 million euros for the initiative, according to a statement by the European Commission, the EU’s executive branch.

Unequal guidelines for Covid vaccines

A Lancet paper released late last month highlighted that the 2 billion doses of vaccine allocated to low-income countries under the Covax Accelerator Program in 2021 represented only 20% of the vaccine needs of the countries participating in the program.

The paper followed a warning from the World Health Organization’s top official that the world was on the verge of “catastrophic moral failure” due to unequal Covid vaccine policies.

Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus on Jan. 18 condemned what he called the “first-me” approach from high-income countries, saying it was self-destructive and endangered the world’s poorest and most vulnerable.

Almost all high-income countries have prioritized the distribution of vaccines to their own populations. The international aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres has described what we are seeing today in terms of global access to vaccines as “far from an image of justice”.

The meeting on Friday will be the first in the UK’s “G-7 Presidency” in 2021. It will also be President Joe Biden’s first major multilateral engagement.

Johnson had drawn up a five-point plan to prevent future pandemics at the United Nations General Assembly last year. This will be the focus of the UK G7 Presidency on Friday.

Categories
Health

C.D.C. Publicizes $200 Million ‘Down Cost’ to Observe Virus Variants

When lawmakers asked billions of dollars to fund the country’s efforts to prosecute coronavirus variants, the Biden government on Wednesday announced new efforts to advance that work, pledging nearly $ 200 million to help the emerging ones Better identify threats.

Calling it a “down payment,” the White House said the investment would result in a significant increase in the number of positive virus samples that labs could sequence. Laboratories, universities and public health programs run by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sequenced more than 9,000 genomes last week, according to the GISAID database. The agency hopes to increase its own contribution to 25,000 genomes per week.

“When we reach 25,000 depends on the resources we have and how quickly we can mobilize our partners,” said Dr. Rochelle Walensky, CDC director, at a press conference at the White House on Wednesday. “I don’t think this will be a light switch. I think it will be a dial. “

The program is the administration’s most significant effort to date to address the looming threat of more contagious variants of the virus. An affected variant, first identified in the UK, has infected at least 1,277 people in 42 states, though scientists suspect the actual number is significantly higher.

Variant B.1.1.7 developed in the UK, which doubles roughly every 10 days, threatens to slow down or reverse the rapid decline in new coronavirus cases. In addition, Dr. Walensky that the nation saw their first case of B.1.1.7, which received a particularly worrying mutation that was shown in South Africa to affect vaccine effectiveness.

Other worrisome variants have also surfaced in the US, including one first found in South Africa that weakens vaccines.

The FDA is preparing a possible redesign of vaccines to provide better protection against the new variants. However, this effort will take months. In the short term, experts say, it is important to increase the sequencing effort, which is too small and uncoordinated to adequately track where and how quickly variants are spreading.

Scientists welcomed the Biden administration’s new plans. “It’s a big step in the right direction,” said Bronwyn MacInnis, geneticist at the Broad Institute.

Dr. MacInnis said the “minimum gold standard” would sequence 5 percent of the virus samples. If cases continued to drop, 25,000 genomes per week would bring the country near that threshold, she said, “where we need to be to detect not only known threats but emerging threats as well.”

Trevor Bedford, evolutionary biologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, said the national sequencing effort had made “significant gains” since December. Still, he said the CDC also needs to make improvements in collecting data about the genomes – for example, to tie it to contact tracing information – and then support the large-scale analysis on computers that is needed to quickly understand everything .

“There’s too much focus on the raw count that we’re sequencing rather than the turnaround time,” he said.

White House officials occupied the sequencing attempt as part of a wider effort to test more Americans for the virus. The Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Defense on Wednesday announced significant new investments in testing, including $ 650 million for elementary and middle schools and “underserved community facilities” like homeless shelters. The two divisions are also investing $ 815 million to expedite test supplies production.

The CDC’s $ 200 million sequencing investment is dwarfed by a program proposed by some lawmakers as part of an economic bailout package that Democratic Congress leaders want to pass before mid-March. Senator Tammy Baldwin, Democrat of Wisconsin, passed legislation to improve his sequencing efforts. House lawmakers have allocated $ 1.75 billion to the effort.

In an interview, Ms. Baldwin suggested that the government sequence 15 percent of positive virus samples, a goal that goes well beyond what researchers believe is possible in the short term.

“This is to create the basis for a permanent infrastructure that enables us not only to monitor Covid-19 in order to discover new variants, but also to have this ability for other diseases.” she said of her proposal. “There are significant gaps in knowledge.”

In an interview, Carole Johnson, the new testing coordinator for the Biden administration, said the $ 200 million investment was a “down payment” and just the beginning of what is likely to be a much more aggressive campaign to track the variants.

Updated

Apr. 20, 2021, 9:30 a.m. ET

“Here we can take a look: What resources are currently available to us? What can we find to act quickly? ” She said. “But you know that going forward we need bigger investments and a systematic way to get this job done.”

Since 2014, the CDC Office of Advanced Molecular Detection has been using genome sequencing to track diseases such as influenza, HIV, and food-borne diseases. When the coronavirus pandemic hit the United States, the CDC was slow to adapt these tools to track the coronavirus. For weeks it just struggled to create a test for the virus.

In contrast, the UK launched a highly acclaimed sequencing program last March that leveraged the nationalized health system with a central genomics laboratory. It now sequences up to 10 percent of all positive coronavirus tests and provides a thorough, quick analysis of the results.

The CDC began increased surveillance efforts later in 2020, helping academic laboratories, commercial sequencing companies, and public health departments to collaborate and share knowledge. In November, the company invested in its own program called NS3 to analyze coronavirus genomes. Every two weeks, the agency asks state health departments to send at least 10 samples to their laboratory for sequencing.

In December it became clear that these efforts would not be enough. Researchers in the UK found a new variant called B.1.1.7 that was up to 50 percent more transmissible than other variants. Scientists now suspect that it’s probably more deadly too. In South Africa, another variant called B.1.351 was found not only to be more contagious, but also to be less susceptible to multiple vaccines.

CDC officials began to fear that B.1.1.7 had already spread widely in the United States, according to a senior federal health official. They started new efforts, including contracts with laboratory testing companies to run coronavirus testing.

Dr. Gregory Armstrong, the director of the Advanced Molecular Detection Program, said in an interview that his team concluded in January that sequencing from 5,000 to 10,000 samples per week was a good short-term goal.

“It’s the starting point,” said Dr. Armstrong. “The more we sequence about it, the faster we can identify these variants.”

At a press conference at the White House earlier this month, Jeffrey D. Zients, the White House’s Covid-19 response coordinator, recognized how difficult it would be to achieve that goal.

“We are 43rd worldwide in genome sequencing – totally unacceptable,” he quoted December data from the GISAID database. In a subsequent interview, he corrected himself and said that the US stands behind 31 other nations.

In the early days of administration, Dr. Walensky set an initial goal for the CDC to sequence 7,000 genomes per month. Since then, laboratories have not come close to that number.

The agency’s National Genomic Surveillance Dashboard showed that only 96 genomes were logged for the week of February 6th. The following week the number rose to 1,382 genomes. Dr. Walensky’s new goal of 25,000 genomes per week calls for a significant increase.

Caitlin Rivers, an epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said it was a welcome development to invest $ 200 million quickly in surveillance variants before hoping for longer-term improvements. “Time is of the essence,” she said. “An initial investment in expanding genome monitoring while the complementary funding package comes together is a smart move.”

However, she warned that the plan could not be implemented immediately. It can take a month for the basic improvements to be achieved. By then, B.1.1.7 could already dominate US cases and jeopardize the current decline.

The larger program in the stimulus package will be critical to managing the pandemic in the long term, said Dr. Rivers.

“We may not be able to get very far on B.1.1.7, but what’s the next, in three months or six months or next winter?” She asked. “It’s not always just what’s in front of you. It’s what’s coming around the corner. “

Categories
Entertainment

Little Island Broadcasts Resident Artists

A long-term stay on Little Island offers theater makers Tina Landau, Michael McElroy and PigPen Theater Co. as well as tap dancer and choreographer Ayodele Casel the opportunity to build the performance arts program of the new public park from scratch.

The selected artists, announced on Wednesday, will tinker, curate and perform for three seasons in the outdoor area currently under construction in Hudson River Park near West 13th Street.

“They all share this feeling of joy and adventure and a real passion for embracing the things that could be possible in this public space,” said Trish Santini, the park’s general manager, in an interview.

The residences were planned before the coronavirus pandemic broke out, but the ongoing performing arts shutdown has made them more meaningful: Little Island plans to start performances in late spring – before actors, dancers and musicians are likely to hit the indoor stages City can return.

“There is a sense of urgency at the moment – artists need to be able to get their work done and help shape how that work manifests itself in a new public space,” said Santini.

The scale and extent of artistic involvement set the Little Island Residences apart from some of their counterparts elsewhere. In addition to directing and performing work, the artists will cultivate relationships with the park’s community partners and organize festivals and other events across multiple seasons.

It’s an opportunity that McElroy, actor, music director, and director of the Broadway Inspirational Voices Choir, is enjoying.

“There is an investment in artists and you can tell by the length of the residence,” he said. “It’s not a one-and-do. It allows me to dream big. “

His plans include creating new musical theater works, organizing a community-based initiative focused on the senior experience, and providing opportunities for other musicians and singer-songwriters.

The other three resident artists also tend to work across borders.

Landau, the Tony Award nominated director of “SpongeBob SquarePants: The Broadway Musical,” began her career with site-specific work at En Garde Arts, including “Orestes” at Penn Yards and “Stonewall: Night Variations” at Pier 25 on the Hudson River.

Casel has been combining tap dancing and storytelling since 2005 in order to shed more light on the art form with her series “Diary of a Tap Dancer”. And PigPen, whose musical “The Tale of Despereaux” debuted at the Old Globe Theater in 2019, is known for skillfully combining music, film and theater.

The resident artists have already started to design what the park has to offer. You recently helped review the submission of local artists looking to contribute to Little Island’s inaugural season. The selection will be announced in spring.

When completed, Little Island will contain three open-air venues: a 700-seat amphitheater, a garden area for small productions for 200 visitors, and an open space for educational activities.

This flexibility gives the seven members of Landau, McElroy, Casel and PigPen the opportunity to design and present their work. It should also make it easier to conduct appearances safely during the pandemic.

Little Island has overcome several obstacles since it was announced in 2014.

Legal challenges and rising costs caused Barry Diller, the park’s sponsor, to temporarily cancel the company in 2017. It was revived later that year after Governor Andrew M. Cuomo convinced his opponents to drop their lawsuits by agreeing to complete Hudson River Park and protect the local estuary.