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U.S. Reaches Biden’s 70% Vaccination Objective

Credit…Mario Tama/Getty Images

The United States on Monday finally reached President Biden’s goal of having 70 percent of eligible adults at least partly vaccinated.

The milestone came a month later than the president had hoped as the country faced the rapid spread of the highly contagious Delta variant.

There was no celebration at the White House. The announcement today was made on Twitter by Cyrus Shahpar, the COVID-19 data director for the Biden administration. “Let’s continue working to get more eligible vaccinated!” Mr. Shahpar wrote.

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White House: 70% of U.S. Adults Have At Least One Covid Shot

The White House Covid-19 response team said the United States reached President Biden’s goal of having 70 percent of eligible adults partially vaccinated. The milestone came a month behind schedule, amid a surge in Delta variant infections.

Over the past few weeks, we’ve seen a nearly 70 percent increase in the average number of new people getting vaccinated each and every day. In the last seven days alone, three million Americans have gotten their first shot. That’s the highest seven-day total since July 4th. And just today, we hit 70 percent of adults with at least one shot, including 90 percent of seniors with at least one shot. These are significant milestones in our fight against the virus. And it’s very important to note in the states with the highest case rates, daily vaccination rates have more than doubled … As of July 26, the C.D.C. received 6,587 reports of breakthrough infections that resulted in hospitalization or death, among 163 fully vaccinated million people. That is a percentage of 0.01 percent or less. And when you look at the breakthrough cases, the percent of breakthrough cases in multiple locations, like D.C. and Virginia, the percent ranges from 0.26 to 0.03. So I’m sorry that was left out. The bottom line is they are rare and they rarely result, not rarely, but unusually result in hospitalization or death.

Video player loadingThe White House Covid-19 response team said the United States reached President Biden’s goal of having 70 percent of eligible adults partially vaccinated. The milestone came a month behind schedule, amid a surge in Delta variant infections.

The White House had hoped to announce the 70 percent vaccination benchmark four weeks ago. Mr. Biden initially used Independence Day to declare a victory of sorts over the pandemic and some kind of return to normal life.

But that goal evaporated in recent weeks as the Delta variant spread rapidly, putting pressure on hospitals in regions with low vaccination rates, including many politically conservative areas in the south. Southern Missouri and Northern Arkansas, for instance, have been hard hit, swamping hospitals.

In recent weeks, there has been an uptick in the vaccination rate in some states where cases have crested. Arkansas, Missouri, Louisiana and Florida have seen steady increases.

The Delta variant is much more contagious than other forms of the virus, and may cause more severe disease, according to an internal presentation circulated recently within the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Experts say that infections in vaccinated people are still relatively uncommon, and even in those cases, the vaccines currently authorized in the United States appear to provide protection against severe illness and death.

Last week, federal health authorities issued new guidelines urging fully vaccinated people to wear masks indoors because breakthrough cases of the Delta variant might be able to transmit the virus onward.

After missing the self-imposed July 4 deadline, Mr. Biden initially sought to shift some responsibility to social media platforms like Facebook, saying they were “killing people” by allowing disinformation about the coronavirus vaccine to spread. He later walked back those comments.

Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina at a Senate subcommittee meeting in May.Credit…Al Drago for The New York Times

Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina announced on Monday that he had tested positive for Covid-19 and that his symptoms have been mild, which he attributed to having received the vaccine.

“I am very glad I was vaccinated because without vaccination I am certain I would not feel as well as I do now,” Mr. Graham, a Republican, wrote on Twitter. “My symptoms would be far worse.”

I was just informed by the House physician I have tested positive for #COVID19 even after being vaccinated.

I started having flu-like symptoms Saturday night and went to the doctor this morning.

— Lindsey Graham (@LindseyGrahamSC) August 2, 2021

Mr. Graham said he would go into quarantine for 10 days.

With the Delta variant continuing to spread aggressively across parts of the country, infections in vaccinated people have become more common, though they are still rare among the vaccinated population.

Experts say the vaccines currently in use in the United State provide strong protection from serious illness and death, even in cases of infections with the Delta variant. More than 97 percent of people who have been hospitalized recently for Covid-19 have been unvaccinated.

Breakthrough cases were reported last week both on Capitol Hill and in the White House. At least six Texas Democrats, a White House aide and an aide to Speaker Nancy Pelosi reported testing positive despite having been vaccinated.

A number of Republicans in Congress, particularly in the House, have not received a shot and have resisted wearing masks and other mitigation measures. But Mr. Graham has urged supporters to get vaccinated and has spoken out against disinformation related to the virus.

The announcement from Mr. Graham raised concerns that other colleagues of his in the Senate may have been exposed through recent contact with Mr. Graham.

Mr. Graham’s office confirmed that he attended a gathering of senators on Saturday aboard “Almost Heaven,” a houseboat belonging to Senator Joe Manchin III, Democrat of West Virginia. A photograph circulated over the weekend showed senators socializing on the boat as it navigated the waters around Washington.

“There was no celebration,” Mr. Manchin, who tested negative on Monday, told reporters of the gathering. “We were just trying to keep people together. We do everything in a bipartisan way.”

At least half a dozen other senators confirmed they were on board, including Senator John Thune of South Dakota, the No. 2 Republican in the chamber.

Mr. Thune’s spokesman, Ryan Wrasse, said that his boss was vaccinated and had tested negative on Monday afternoon. Other senators were awaiting results but showed up to cast votes on the Senate floor.

The news of Mr. Graham’s positive test — and the possibility that more of his colleagues may have been exposed — threw a new element of unpredictability into a week that was already expected to be a momentous one on Capitol Hill as the Senate pushes toward voting on a massive bipartisan infrastructure bill.

Mr. Graham has been a supporter of the bill, and if he remains absent long enough, his illness could cost a Republican vote on final passage. But if others become sick or are forced to quarantine, party leaders may have to cancel meetings, delay votes or adjourn the Senate altogether, as they did during similar episodes in 2020.

Already on Monday, Democrats made an in-person leadership meeting virtual instead. But Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York and the majority leader, told reporters he believed the infrastructure debate would move forward as planned.

Grand Central Station in Manhattan on Sunday. All 68,000 Metropolitan Transportation Authority workers will be required to be vaccinated or face weekly testing.Credit…Brittainy Newman for The New York Times

Metropolitan Transportation Authority workers will be required to be vaccinated or face weekly testing, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo of New York announced on Monday, the state’s latest effort to boost lagging vaccination rates amid the rapid spread of the Delta coronavirus variant.

The new requirement applies to 68,000 employees of the M.T.A., which operates New York City’s sprawling subway and bus system, as well as commuter rails that serve the city’s surrounding counties.

It will also apply to workers of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey who work at New York-based facilities. The Port Authority runs La Guardia Airport, John F. Kennedy International Airport and Newark Liberty International Airport, as well as a broad network of bridges, tunnels and seaports.

Mr. Cuomo framed the new policy as a crucial step to not only help curb the spread of the virus — transit workers interact with millions of riders each day — but also to help improve confidence among riders concerned about their health and safety.

The policy goes into effect starting on Labor Day.

“If it spreads aggressively among the unvaccinated, numerically we would have a problem,” said Mr. Cuomo, a third-term Democrat. “Worst case scenario, a large number of unvaccinated get sick and even worse than that, the delta variant mutates into a vaccine resistant virus and now we’re back to where we started.”

Janno Lieber, the acting board chair and chief executive of the M.T.A., said that about 70 percent of the M.T.A. work force has already been vaccinated, but, “we can and have to do better.”

“Transit workers have carried the city and the region on their back,” Mr. Lieber said. “If we’re going to bounce back stronger than ever, we all have to step up.”

The policy shift comes less than a week after Mr. Cuomo announced the same requirement for the state’s 130,000 employees, following the lead of Mayor Bill de Blasio, who rolled out a similar mandate for the city’s 300,000 workers. The requirement has rapidly become a model across the nation: President Biden announced a similar policy for the nation’s millions of federal employees on Thursday, too, as other local governments weigh similar mandates.

New York State, just weeks after lifting most of its coronavirus restrictions on businesses and social gatherings, has seen a steady rise in cases as a result of the new variant, even as 75 percent of adults in the state have received at least one dose of the vaccine.

The state reported a seven-day average of 2,280 cases on Aug. 1, up from an average of just 328 a month ago on July 1. Hospitalizations have also ticked up, while the number of deaths has remained relatively steady, according to The New York Times coronavirus tracker.

At the same time, Mr. Cuomo said it was up to local governments, including New York City, to decide whether to adopt the new federal guidance recommending that vaccinated people wear masks indoors publicly in areas where cases are on the rise.

“It’s up to the local governments,” Mr. Cuomo said. “But local governments, you should adopt that C.D.C. mask guidance.”

The governor also urged private businesses, including bars, restaurants and venues, to require proof of vaccination from their clientele.

Here are details of some more recently announced mandates in the United States:

  • Gov. Phil Murphy of New Jersey said on Monday that all workers in certain state and private health care facilities and high-risk congregate settings, like jails and prisons, will have to be fully inoculated or face regular testing. Employees have until Sept. 7 to comply with the requirement.

  • The more than 10,000 municipal employees of Denver, Colo., have to be fully vaccinated against the coronavirus by Sept. 30 or they cannot work on-site, Mayor Michael B. Hancock said on Monday. Private sector employees at schools and congregate care settings, like homeless shelters and correctional facilities, will also need to be vaccinated.

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De Blasio Urges Vaccinated New Yorkers to Wear Masks Indoors

Mayor Bill de Blasio “strongly” encouraged vaccinated New Yorkers to wear masks indoors again, especially when others around them could be unvaccinated.

Vaccines are the No. 1 most powerful weapon against Covid by far, but we also clearly believe there’s a place for masks. Over the last few days, where you’ve reviewed the data from the C.D.C., some of which came in on Friday — the background research — we’ve reviewed the recommendations, we’re updating our mask guidance based on the latest data and science. We want to strongly recommend that people wear masks in indoor settings, even if you’re vaccinated. Now, this is particularly true, of course, if you might be around anyone unvaccinated. If you don’t know the people you’re around, if you’re not sure if they’re vaccinated or not, or if, you know, some are unvaccinated, absolutely crucial to wear a mask, even if you are vaccinated. The difference, of course, is if you’re around fully vaccinated people, that’s a better situation. So vaccinated people around fully vaccinated people, that’s where it’s an easier situation. But if you’re not sure and that’s going to be many cases, we want to strongly recommend that people wear those masks indoors, even if vaccinated.

Video player loadingMayor Bill de Blasio “strongly” encouraged vaccinated New Yorkers to wear masks indoors again, especially when others around them could be unvaccinated.CreditCredit…David Dee Delgado/Reuters

New York City has seen a rapid rise in coronavirus cases — more than 1,200 cases per day, roughly six times the number in June.

For weeks, city officials have been tracking the increase, and deliberating whether a broad mask mandate — similar to ones instituted in large urban areas like Los Angeles County and Washington — might be called for, to head off a more serious resurgence in New York, once the epicenter of the pandemic.

On Monday, Mayor Bill de Blasio decided against such a mandate, choosing instead to strongly encourage all New Yorkers, even those who have been vaccinated, to wear masks indoors.

Mr. de Blasio said he wanted to focus on increasing vaccination rates, and worried that requiring everyone to wear masks would remove an incentive for those who are considering getting vaccinated now.

With the recent rise in virus cases, New York City now falls under new guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommending masks in areas of high transmission.

The mayor said that he agreed with the C.D.C.’s guidance, but pointed out that he was aligned with leaders in New Jersey and Connecticut who similarly encouraged mask use but did not require it.

“We want to strongly recommend that people wear masks in indoor settings even if you’re vaccinated,” Mr. de Blasio said.

The city’s fragile economic recovery may be a factor in the city’s decision; a broader mask mandate could prompt employers to reconsider their plans to have their workers return to offices after Labor Day, and raise doubts about holding large gatherings like weddings. Mr. de Blasio said a mandate could also be difficult to enforce.

Some elected officials called on Mr. de Blasio to move more aggressively and institute a mask mandate now to curtail a third wave of cases.

“The one lesson of the last year and a half is you have to act fast, or you’re left with much more difficult choices down the road,” said Mark Levine, a city councilman from Manhattan who chairs the health committee. “I think it’s a huge mistake to delay this any further.”

Los Angeles County reinstated its new mask mandate last month, and Washington began to require masks over the weekend. The Democratic mayors of Atlanta and Kansas City, Mo., have reinstated forms of mask mandates, and Chicago’s mayor is considering one.

Mr. de Blasio has said that he wants to focus on vaccination, and he is considering France-style measures to require vaccination or a negative test to visit restaurants or movie theaters.

He believes that New Yorkers will be motivated to get vaccinated if they believe they will have more freedoms once they do so, like the ability to go about their lives without masks.

“We still want to respect the fact that vaccination can give you different opportunities and rights than unvaccinated people,” Mr. de Blasio said on Monday.

Eric Adams, the Democratic nominee for mayor, said he agreed that a mask mandate was not necessary right now.

“I don’t believe we’re there with a mandate yet, unless C.D.C. tells us, whatever the science is we must follow, but then personal responsibility must kick in,” Mr. Adams told reporters on Monday. “Also, vaccination vaccination, vaccination. Let’s get on the ground.”

New Yorkers are already required to wear masks on public transit and in hospitals and schools; Mr. de Blasio has been adamant that classes will be held in-person in September.

Mr. de Blasio also announced last week that city workers must get vaccinated or face weekly testing and offered a $100 incentive for people who get vaccinated at city sites.

On Monday, he said the city had hit an important milestone — 10 million vaccine doses administered — and announced a new policy: a vaccine mandate for new city employees.

“Every single new person hired by the City of New York — before they report to work, they must provide proof of vaccination,” he said.

Many Republican governors have resisted the idea of mask mandates. Last week, Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas issued an executive order barring local governments and state agencies from mandating vaccination and reinforcing an earlier order that prohibited officials from requiring face masks.

Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida last week signed an executive order giving parents the power to decide whether their children should wear masks in schools, after Broward County, the state’s second-largest school district, voted to require masks.

“In Florida, there will be no lockdowns,” Mr. DeSantis said to cheers at a restaurant in Cape Coral, Fla., on Friday. “There will be no school closures. There will be no restrictions and no mandates.”

Federal recommendations call for students, teachers and parents to wear masks, regardless of their vaccination status. Both Florida and Texas are facing surges, according to a New York Times database.

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Biden Administration Pushes States to Prevent Eviction Crisis

White House officials called on state governments to extend local moratoriums on evictions and accelerate the distribution of billions in rental aid, to soften the impact of the federal moratorium’s expiration on Saturday.

Given the rising urgency of the spread of the Delta variant, the president has asked all of us, including the C.D.C., to do everything in our power to look for every potential legal authority we can have to prevent evictions. To date, the C.D.C. director and her team have been unable to find legal authority, even for a more targeted eviction moratorium that would focus just on counties with higher rates of Covid spread. One of the things that he is requesting today is that state and local governments extend or pass eviction moratoriums to cover the next two months. Right now, one out of three renters who are behind in the rent are actually protected beyond the federal eviction moratorium by extended state and local evictions moratoriums. The president is asking that all governors and mayors follow suit. This president is asking that his departments that provide mortgage backed lending extend whatever eviction moratoriums they have the power to extend. So that covers U.S.D.A. and V.A. and H.U.D. He is asking that U.S.D.A, V.A. and H.U.D., and the Treasury Department as well, make clear that those who benefit from government-backed mortgages or even tax relief related to housing should not seek evictions without first seeking emergency rental assistance funding. We are going to do an all agency review to make sure that we understand any potential reason why state and local governments are not getting funds out. The president is clear: If some states and localities can get this out efficiently and effectively, there’s no reason every state and locality can’t. There is simply no excuse, no place to hide for any state or locality that is failing to accelerate the Emergency Rental Assistance Fund.

Video player loadingWhite House officials called on state governments to extend local moratoriums on evictions and accelerate the distribution of billions in rental aid, to soften the impact of the federal moratorium’s expiration on Saturday.CreditCredit…T.J. Kirkpatrick for The New York Times

With the federal moratorium on evictions having expired over the weekend, the White House on Monday sought to limit the impact, demanding that states speed up disbursement of billions in bottled-up rental aid, while pleading with local governments to immediately enact their own extensions.

President Biden — under fire for refusing to extend the freeze and eager to prove he was taking some action — announced a series of limited moves Monday afternoon aimed at slowing evictions, directing federal agencies to consider targeted moratoriums for tenants in federally subsidized housing and asking state judges to slow-walk eviction proceedings.

The moratorium, imposed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last fall, lapsed on Saturday after a frenzied, failed effort on Capitol Hill to extend the freeze through the end of the year, putting hundreds of thousands of tenants at risk of losing shelter.

“There is just a lot of fear out there right now,” said Bob Glaves, executive director of the Chicago Bar Foundation, which has been working with tenants and landlords to tap a $47 billion fund allocated by Congress to pay off back rent accrued during the pandemic.

Legal aid groups and other tenants’ organizations have reported a massive flood of phone calls and emails from renters panicked by the end of the eviction freeze, which occurred at midnight on Saturday.

On Monday, administration officials made it clear they could only do so much, blaming states for the fact that the $47 billion Emergency Rental Assistance program intended to avoid such a crisis has disbursed only $3 billion — or just 7 percent of the total.

“We expect these numbers to grow, but it will not be enough to meet the need, unless every state and locality accelerates funds to tenants,” Gene Sperling, who is overseeing pandemic relief efforts for Mr. Biden, told reporters at the White House.

“There is no place to hide for any state or locality failing to accelerate their emergency rental assistance funds,” he said.

But many Democrats, including Speaker Nancy Pelosi, have called on Mr. Biden to reconsider his decision not to act unilaterally, and have expressed anger at the White House for giving them only two days to ram through legislation to extend the freeze.

“People were promised something — help — and that has not happened,” said Representative Cori Bush, Democrat of Missouri, who has been sleeping on the steps of the Capitol to protest the end of the moratorium. “It is unbelievable. It is shocking. It is unconscionable. It is cruel. We can’t be sitting on our hands when people are suffering.”

On Thursday, Biden administration officials punted the issue to congressional Democrats, claiming that a recent Supreme Court ruling made it nearly impossible to order an extension without jeopardizing the right of the executive branch to implement similar emergency policies during future public health crises.

Since then, Biden administration officials have worked the phones, appealing to the states to stop, or even slow, landlords from evicting renters until the balky funding pipeline — which has been plagued by delays — is functional.

Over the weekend Mr. Biden called Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the C.D.C. director and the official with the authority to extend the freeze, to explore the possibility of limiting an extension to areas hit especially hard by the Delta variant, but was told that was not possible.

“Everybody” in the West Wing wanted to extend the moratorium, Mr. Sperling said in an interview. “But what was clear from the legal analysis was that we had already litigated this issue all the way to the Supreme Court.”

In a related move, the Treasury Department on Monday issued guidance for how states can spend up to $10 billion in financial assistance to people in danger of losing their homes to foreclosure.

The money can be doled out to borrowers who have fallen behind on mortgage payments, according to the guidance, but also to people who have taken out loans to buy mobile homes to live in, or who acquired a home in a contract for deed relationship — a loan financed by the seller of the property.

Migrants expelled from the U.S. under Title 42 walk toward Mexico at the Paso del Norte International border bridge in Ciudad Juarez last week.Credit…Jose Luis Gonzalez/Reuters

With the number of migrants crossing the southern border surging and the pandemic proving to be far from over, the Biden administration has decided to leave in place for now the public health rule that has allowed it to turn away hundreds of thousands of migrants, officials said.

The decision, confirmed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday, amounted to a shift by the administration, which had been working on plans to begin lifting the rule this summer, more than a year after it was imposed by the Trump administration.

The C.D.C. said allowing noncitizens to come over the border from either Mexico or Canada “creates a serious danger” of further spread of the coronavirus.

President Biden has come under intense pressure for months from some Democrats and supporters of more liberal immigration policies to lift the rule, which critics say has been used less to protect public health than as a politically defensible way to limit immigration.

The recent spread of the highly transmissible Delta variant has bolstered the argument that the public health rule, known as Title 42, remains necessary. And the virus’s quickening spread comes as border officials are so overwhelmed with the persistent pace of illegal migration that they say that allowing more migrants into the country by lifting the rule poses the threat of a humanitarian crisis.

On Monday, the American Civil Liberties Union said it would move forward with a lawsuit seeking to force the administration to lift the public health order for migrant families after months of negotiations with the “ultimate goal” of ending the policy.

Two cases of Covid-19 were reported among a group of about 80 people who traveled to the Guantánamo Bay base for a military commissions hearing.Credit…Thomas Watkins/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The U.S. Navy is considering reinstating a quarantine for visitors to Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, after the discovery that two vaccinated journalists who visited the remote base last week returned to the United States infected with the coronavirus.

The journalists were among about 80 people who traveled from the Washington, D.C., area on July 26 for a hearing in a military commissions case. The group returned to the mainland three days later, and two of the reporters discovered over the weekend that they had Covid-19. Other travelers were being tested on Monday.

About 6,000 people live at the base and more than a third of the adults there have declined vaccination, according to base health officials. Guantánamo has yet to receive vaccines for the several hundred residents under the age of 18. Most are the children of sailors who serve on longer-term assignments there.

Guantánamo, which has consistently refused to disclose its Covid infection rate throughout the pandemic, has managed to avoid a widespread outbreak through isolation of new arrivals and testing.

The Navy base lifted the quarantine requirement on vaccinated visitors about two months ago, but continued to require visitors and returning residents who are unvaccinated to spend two weeks in self-isolation, in case they were asymptomatic carriers.

Quarantining those who are vaccinated — for seven days instead of 14 — would allow base health officials to monitor the new arrivals for symptoms.

Vaccinated travelers who arrived starting Tuesday were to be tested upon arrival.

Guantánamo had eased its masking and social distancing requirements for vaccinated individuals in recent weeks. Three weeks ago, spectators at a court hearing for an Iraqi prisoner sat six feet apart.

Then last week, the military permitted spectators to sit three feet apart, wearing no masks, to observe a pre-sentencing hearing of a Pakistani man who has admitted serving as a courier for Al Qaeda.

Inside the courtroom, Army guards providing security wore masks, while the Air Force judge in the case and some lawyers did not.

All the journalists who observed the proceedings were required to be vaccinated and present a negative P.C.R. test within 72 hours of flight time.

Separately Monday, lawyers for Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the prisoner who is accused of plotting the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, asked the chief judge of military commissions to postpone a hearing in the case scheduled to begin on Sept. 6.

Mr. Mohammed’s lawyers cited a resurgence of Covid infections, the vaccination refusal rate and the lack of a full-time trial judge to evaluate the situation as their reasons for delay.

The last hearing in the case against Mr. Mohammed and four other men who are accused of being his accomplices took place at Guantánamo in February 2020, just before the declaration of the pandemic.

President Biden is grappling with an evolving coronavirus and deep ideological divides over the pandemic.Credit…Stefani Reynolds for The New York Times

A week of public health reversals from the White House and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has left Americans with pandemic whiplash, sowing confusion about vaccines and mask wearing.

The crisis President Biden once thought he had under control is changing shape faster than the country can adapt. An evolving virus, new scientific discoveries, deep ideological divides and 18 months of ever-changing pandemic messaging have left Americans skeptical of public health advice.

Monday was another day that underscored the crosscurrents for the nation’s leaders as their efforts at a disciplined public health campaign collided yet again with the chaotic nature of the pandemic.

The virus continued to scramble traditional politics. In left-leaning Chicago, city officials announced that more than 385,000 people had attended the four-day Lollapalooza music festival — and Mayor Lori Lightfoot defended it. In Washington, Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina and a longtime supporter of former President Donald J. Trump, announced that he had tested positive for the coronavirus but said his symptoms have been mild, which he attributed to being vaccinated.

Some experts say the C.D.C. is to blame for some of the confusion. After saying in May that vaccinated people could go maskless indoors and outdoors, the agency did an about-face, once again recommending indoor masking in places where the virus is spreading rapidly.

Only days later did a leaked document deliver the grim reasoning: The Delta variant is as contagious as chickenpox and spreading even among the vaccinated.

A senior administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the administration’s thinking, conceded on Monday that many Americans remained perplexed.

Another administration official said Mr. Biden would address the nation later this week — the second time in less than a week — to reiterate and clarify his main takeaway points: The vaccines are safe and effective; even vaccinated people have to mask up again because so many people are unvaccinated; go get your shots and tell your friends and neighbors to do the same.

A vaccine site in Berlin in July. Germany plans to offer booster shots to older people and people with underlying health conditions beginning in September.Credit…Stefanie Loos/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

As concerns grow over a rise in coronavirus cases driven by the highly contagious Delta variant, Germany announced Monday it will offer vaccine booster shots to older people and people with underlying health conditions starting in September.

Germany’s move came after a top European Union official criticized the bloc as falling far short of its promises to donate vaccine doses to Africa and Latin America. Many health experts say the priority should be inoculating high-risk people around the world, and scientists also still disagree on the need for booster shots.

The issue of booster shots has been hotly debated in richer countries as vaccination rates have slowed. But as the Delta variant has become dominant in much of the United States and Europe, more governments appear to be moving toward endorsing them.

In the United States, Biden administration health officials increasingly think that vulnerable populations may need additional shots. Research continues into how long the vaccines remain effective. Israel, an early leader in administering vaccines, began administering boosters to people 60 and over last week.

France is offering booster shots only to the most elderly and vulnerable residents for now. Health officials in Belgium and Italy said they were ready to start offering boosters in the fall but were still gathering data to decide who should get a third dose, and when.

Under the German initiative, vaccination teams will be sent to care homes and other facilities for vulnerable people to administer Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna shots, according to the draft plan. Doctors and vaccination centers will be called on to provide the extra shots for eligible people outside care homes.

The boosters will also be offered to people who received AstraZeneca or Johnson & Johnson shots initially.

The guidelines cite studies that indicate “a reduced or quickly subsiding immune response after a full Covid-19 vaccination in certain groups of people,” notably those who because of age or pre-existing conditions have weakened immune systems.

Studies have indicated that immunity resulting from the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines is long-lasting, and researchers are still working to interpret recent Israeli data suggesting a decline in efficacy of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine months after inoculation.

Pfizer, which has begun making a case for booster shots in the United States, offered its own study last week showing a marginal decline in efficacy against symptomatic infection months after immunization, although the vaccine remains powerfully effective against severe disease and death.

Britain, which remains ahead of the European Union on vaccinations, has not yet formally announced plans for a booster shot program. But officials there have been planning for them ever since a committee of government advisers in late June outlined recommendations on how the shots could be administered.

Even as wealthier nations prepare to give booster shots, though, health experts say the focus should be on giving first doses to people in countries that remain largely unprotected, especially as the Delta variant spreads.

“Wealthy governments shouldn’t be prioritizing giving third doses when much of the developing world hasn’t even yet had the chance to get their first Covid-19 shots,” Kate Elder, the senior vaccines policy adviser at Doctors Without Borders’ Access Campaign, said in a statement.

Josep Borrell, the European Union’s top foreign policy official, in Brussels in May.Credit…Olivier Hoslet/EPA, via Shutterstock

In an unusually public criticism of the European Union, its foreign policy chief has said that the bloc is falling radically short of its promises to donate Covid-19 vaccine doses to Africa and Latin America, creating a vacuum that China is filling.

Such donations are the responsibility of E.U. member countries. But the official, Josep Borrell Fontelles also singled out his boss, Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, the bloc’s executive branch.

“The president of the Commission said we are going to give not 100, but 200 million doses to Africa,” Mr. Borrell said on Friday at a university summer course in Santander in Spain, his home country. “Yes, but when? The problem isn’t just the commitment, but the effectiveness.”

Mr. Borrell said that European countries had contributed about 10 million doses to Africa — a continent with a population of 1.5 billion. “It’s certainly insufficient,” he said.

In remarks cited by Politico Europe, Mr. Borrell said the issue was not just inequality, but also China’s efforts to expand its influence through vaccine donations.

“In Europe, we vaccinated 60 percent of our population, in Africa, they are at 2 or 3 percent,” he added. “Who’s the big vaccine supplier to Africa? China. Who’s the big vaccine supplier to Latin America? China.”

He said that Europe’s failure has “geopolitical consequences,” adding: “China’s expansion in Africa and Latin America should concern us and should occupy us a great deal.”

He also urged the European Union to move faster to approve association and trade agreements with Mexico and Chile, he said, “while China is landing in all parts of Latin America and occupying a predominant role.”

Mr. Borrell, 74, is a Commission vice president and former Spanish foreign minister. He has a particular interest in Latin America and Africa, and has been trying to persuade E.U. member states to respond more efficiently to crises in Libya, Ethiopia and Morocco, in part because of their impact on migration. He has also spoken often about how to do more for Cuba and Venezuela.

The Commission had no immediate comment. It has also been unwilling to identify how many doses have been donated to which countries.

Most European countries are still in the midst of their own vaccination campaigns, and the European Union has yet to define a bloc-wide strategy on vaccine donations. Italy said on Sunday that it had shipped 1.5 million doses to Tunisia, which has one of the world’s highest coronavirus death rates. Spain has promised to donate 7.5 million doses to Latin American countries. And France and Germany have each pledged to donate 30 million doses.

It is unclear how many of the doses promised have actually been delivered.

That compares with a pledge by the Biden administration to donate 80 million doses.

Starting Monday, the Florida-based chain Publix will require employees to wear masks in all its stores regardless of their vaccination status.Credit…Scott McIntyre for The New York Times

With the coronavirus spreading across the country and hospitalizations rising again, and public health officials warning that the Delta variant carries new risks even for vaccinated people, big businesses are rethinking their plans.

Some are delaying their plans to bring workers back to the office, and others are restoring mask requirements for customers. In the last week, several have also imposed vaccine mandates, after having held off on such a step for months.

The decision to require vaccines was endorsed on Sunday by the director of the National Institutes of Health. Speaking on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Dr. Francis Collins said that asking employees for proof of vaccination or regular testing were steps “in the right direction.”

Here’s how some big businesses changed their plans in late July:

  • Lyft pushed back its return-to-office date to February from September, Google extended its work-from-home policy to mid-October, and Apple said employees would not be expected to return to the office until at least Oct. 1, a month later than before.

  • Uber said that it would not require employees to return until Oct. 25, instead of its initial September date, and that a further delay was possible if cases kept rising.

  • Twitter shut its San Francisco and New York offices, putting a halt to reopening plans without a timeline in place.

  • The New York Times Company also indefinitely postponed its planned return to the office, telling employees that they would be given four weeks notice before being expected to return. The company, which employs about 4,700 people, had planned for workers to start to return for at least three days a week in September. Its offices will remain open for those who want to go in voluntarily, with proof of vaccination.

  • Endeavor, the parent company of the William Morris Endeavor talent agency, closed its recently reopened offices after Los Angeles County reimposed its indoor mask mandate. An Endeavor spokesman said the company had decided that enforcement would be too difficult and would hinder group meetings.

  • Equinox, the luxury fitness company that includes SoulCycle, said on Monday that its members and employees must show one-time proof of vaccination — a physical immunization card, a photo of an immunization card or a digital vaccine card — to enter Equinox clubs, SoulCycle studios or corporate offices, starting in New York in September.

  • Walmart, the nation’s largest private employer, with nearly 1.6 million workers, said vaccines would be mandatory for employees in its headquarters and for managers who traveled in the United States. The mandate does not apply to much of its work force — employees in stores, clubs, and distribution and fulfillment centers.

  • The Walt Disney Company said salaried and nonunion hourly U.S. employees at its sites must be fully vaccinated. Unvaccinated workers who are already on site will have 60 days to get the immunization, and new hires will be required to be fully vaccinated before starting work.

  • Home Depot said all its associates, contractors and vendors will be required to wear a mask in its stores, distribution centers and offices and at the homes and businesses of customers. Customers will also be asked to wear masks. Lowe’s also said it would require masks of its employees, regardless of vaccination status.

  • Walmart said it was reinstating mask requirements for associates in areas of the country with substantial or high transmission rates. The company recommended that customers wear masks in those areas, too. The retailer also doubled its reward to employees who get vaccinated from $75 to $150.

  • Starting Monday, the Florida-based grocery chain Publix will require employees to wear masks in all its stores regardless of their vaccination status.

  • Apple said employees and customers would have to wear masks regardless of their vaccination status in more than half its stores in the United States. Apple said the stores would be determined by the rate of coronavirus cases in the area. Apple also told its employees that they would have to wear masks when inside the company’s main offices in the United States, regardless of whether they were vaccinated.

A climber wore a protective mask while working out at a climbing gym in San Francisco earlier this year. The city said on Monday that it was reinstating a mask mandate.Credit…Jeff Chiu/Associated Press

Health officials in San Francisco and surrounding counties on Monday introduced a universal indoor mask mandate, adopting a federal health suggestion that has stirred up resistance in some parts of the country.

The order, which takes effect on Tuesday, requires people to wear masks in public indoor settings regardless of their vaccination status, though there are exceptions, for instance for children younger than 2. It applies to San Francisco, Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Mateo, Santa Clara and Sonoma counties.

“Indoor masking is a temporary measure that will help us deal with the Delta variant, which is causing a sharp increase in cases, and we know increases in hospitalizations and deaths will follow,” Dr. Naveena Bobba, San Francisco’s acting health officer, said in a statement.

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Bay Area Health Officials Reimpose Mask Mandate

San Francisco and six other Bay Area counties introduced a universal indoor mask mandate, adopting a suggestion from the C.D.C. as coronavirus cases surge.

The counties of Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Sonoma and the city of Berkeley today issued health orders, mandating indooor masking for everyone, regardless of vaccination status. These health orders will take effect at midnight tonight. Across the Bay Area region, we are seeing Covid-19 cases surging and hospitalizations are on a steep rise again, particularly among the unvaccinated. If you are able to choose between an indoor and an outdoor space, we recommend that you choose outdoor activities. There are people who have to work indoors, though. And for that group, we want to make sure that we are protecting them, our frontline workers have been essential during the pandemic and they continue to be essential during this reopening period. So both for the fact that there are people out there that cannot get vaccinated because they aren’t eligible. And we want to protect our workers. Today’s announcement reflects both the California Department of Public Health and the C.D.C.‘s guidance for everyone to wear a mask indoors in public if you’re in an area of substantial or high transmission. Every county represented here today has substantial or high levels of community transmission. We must take this action to end this summer surge.

Video player loadingSan Francisco and six other Bay Area counties introduced a universal indoor mask mandate, adopting a suggestion from the C.D.C. as coronavirus cases surge.

San Francisco, and California as a whole, has seen cases and hospitalizations rise sharply in the past two weeks, according to a New York Times database. Los Angeles reinstituted a mask mandate in mid-July, and last week Gov. Gavin Newsom made California one of the first states to require inoculations or regular testing for state government workers.

Public mask requirements were widespread before the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued new guidance in May, when the coronavirus seemed to be waning in the United States, saying that vaccinated people largely could skip wearing masks. Most states and cities soon relaxed their mask mandates.

But the C.D.C. changed its recommendations again last week, urging vaccinated people to once again wear masks indoors in areas with high rates of transmission, and encouraging universal use of masks in schools.

The change of course was driven by a surge in new coronavirus cases around the country, especially in areas where relatively few people are vaccinated. Experts say the surge is being propelled by the Delta variant, which the C.D.C. estimates now makes up more than 80 percent of new cases in the United States.

Recent research has shown the Delta variant to be even more contagious than previously thought, and has indicated that vaccinated people could carry and potentially spread the variant, according to an internal document at the C.D.C. that noted that “the war has changed.” The vaccines are still extremely effective at preventing serious illness and death, and people with breakthrough infections rarely require hospitalization.

Many municipalities have reinstituted mask mandates or strongly recommended that their residents start wearing masks, as Mayor Bill de Blasio of New York City did on Monday.

Other states, though, like Texas and Florida, have imposed rules that prevent cities and school districts from enacting mandates of their own.

As the local news industry has been hit by declining advertising revenues and cuts, some outlets have sometimes unknowingly run vaccine misinformation because they have fewer employees or less oversight than in the past.Credit…Tamir Kalifa for The New York Times

Facebook and other social platforms have in recent weeks attracted attention for vaccine misinformation as Covid cases surge from the more contagious Delta variant and U.S. vaccination rates slow. But smaller publications have also become powerful conduits for anti-vaccine messaging.

People who spread anti-vaccine content, including those who have been listed by the nonprofit Center for Countering Digital Hate as the “Disinformation Dozen,” have appeared in articles in local publications or as guests on local radio shows and podcasts, according to a review by The New York Times.

Some of their articles are regularly published by small-town newspapers or they are quoted as experts.

Their appearances in local media outlets can have an impact, since Americans are more likely to believe what they read and hear from local news outlets. A 2019 Knight-Gallup study found that 45 percent of Americans trust reporting by local news organizations “a great deal” or “quite a lot,” compared with 31 percent for national news organizations.

Many local media publications and stations have reported responsibly and factually on the pandemic. Gannett, the publisher with 100 daily newspapers and nearly 1,000 weekly publications across 43 states, has dedicated resources to fact-checking and teaching journalists that accuracy matters more than speed.

But as the local news industry has been hit by declining advertising revenues and cuts, some outlets have sometimes unknowingly run vaccine misinformation because they have fewer employees or less oversight than in the past.

As the new school year begins, the C.D.C., the American Academy of Pediatrics and many other experts agree that reopening schools should be a priority.Credit…Jenn Ackerman for The New York Times

Last week, in what was intended to be an internal document, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the highly contagious Delta variant had redrawn the battle lines of the coronavirus pandemic.

The news came just as the first U.S. school districts were preparing to reopen; children in Atlanta and some of its suburbs head back to the classroom this week.

Over the past year, there has been contentious debate over how much schools contribute to the spread of the virus and whether, and when, they should close. For some parents, teachers and officials, keeping schools open when a new, poorly understood virus was circulating seemed like an unacceptable risk.

For others, however, it was school closures that posed the bigger danger — of learning loss, widening educational disparities and worsening mental health, not to mention the hardships for parents.

As the new school year begins, however, the C.D.C., the American Academy of Pediatrics and many other experts agree that reopening schools should be a priority.

Just a few months ago, with vaccinations for those 12 and older proceeding at a steady clip and new cases declining, the stage seemed set for at least a partial return to normal.

Delta has thrown that into question. Much remains unknown about the variant, including whether it affects children more seriously than earlier forms of the virus.

And with vaccination rates highly uneven, and most decision-making left up to local officials, the variant adds new uncertainty to the coming school year — and makes it even more critical for schools to take safety precautions as they reopen, scientists said.

“Delta, because it’s so contagious, has raised the ante,” said Dr. William Schaffner, medical director of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases and a vaccine expert at Vanderbilt University. “It makes all these details all the more important.”

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World News

Richard Branson reaches house on Virgin Galactic flight

After nearly 17 years of development and over a billion dollars invested in Virgin Galactic, Sir Richard Branson achieved his dream and reached space.

From the cabin of the spaceship, Branson spoke of space flight as “the complete experience of a lifetime”.

“This is the moment I dreamed of as a child, and to be honest, nothing can prepare you for a view of Earth from space,” said Branson after landing.

The company’s VSS Unity spacecraft launched over the New Mexico skies on Sunday, with two pilots driving the vehicle with the billionaire founder and three Virgin Galactic employees. VSS Unity – after it was released over 40,000 feet by a carrier aircraft called the VMS Eve – ignited its rocket motor and accelerated to more than three times the speed of sound as it ascended to the edge of space.

Sir Richard Branson stands on the trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in front of the trading of Virgin Galactic (SPCE) in New York, USA, 28 October 2019.

Richard Branson Virgin Galactic IPO NYSE

VSS Unity then performed a slow backflip in weightlessness as the Virgin Galactic crew were weightless and floating around the cabin of the spaceship. The spacecraft reached an altitude of 86.1 kilometers (53.5 miles or approximately 282,000 feet).

The vehicle then glided back through the atmosphere to land on the runway of Spaceport America where it had previously taken off.

VSS Unity will be released from the carrier aircraft VMS Eve during the launch of its third space flight on May 22, 2021.

Virgo galactic

The pilots Dave Mackay and Michael Masucci flew with Unity. Sitting next to Branson in the spacecraft’s cabin are chief ronaut trainer Beth Moses, chief operations engineer Colin Bennett, and vice president for government affairs Sirisha Bandla. Both Mackay and Masucci have previously flown into space, as have Moses and pilots CJ Sturckow and Mark Stucky.

The US officially regards pilots who have flown more than 50 miles (or approximately 262,000 feet) as astronauts.

VSS Unity is designed for up to six passengers together with the two pilots. The company has approximately 600 reservations for tickets for future flights, which sell for prices between $ 200,000 and $ 250,000 each.

“We’re here to make space more accessible to everyone,” said Branson after the flight. “The mission statement that I wrote in my spacesuit was to make the dream of space travel come true for my grandchildren … and for many people living today, for everyone.”

The space goals

This was Virgin Galactic’s fourth spaceflight to date, the second this year, and the first with more than one passenger.

In addition to flying Branson, spaceflight had other goals as Virgin Galactic is still testing its spacecraft system, with the goal of entering commercial service in early 2022.

The four crew members test the spacecraft’s cabin and the training program Virgin Galactic has developed to ensure customers are properly prepared for the experience. In addition, Bandla will test running a research experiment while doing an exercise with plants in test tubes for the University of Florida.

Sunday’s space flight is one of three Virgin Galactic still needs to complete development, and two more are expected this year.

A competition for others

Shortly after the spaceflight landed, Branson announced that Virgin Galactic had partnered with sweepstakes company Omaze to offer a chance for two seats on “one of the first Virgin Galactic commercial spaceflights” early next year.

“You have a chance to go into space,” said Branson.

The competition requires a donation that goes to a nonprofit organization called Space For Humanity. The billionaire added that he will put on his “Willy Wonka hat” to give the winners a tour of Spaceport America.

“It’s a way of just trying to attract a lot of people who otherwise couldn’t afford to go into space,” said Branson.

Branson’s trip

Virgin Galactic’s Richard Branson, front center, gathers with Virgin Galactic employees in front of the new SpaceShip Two VSS Unity following a new aircraft roll-out ceremony at Mojave Air and Space Port on February 19, 2016 in Mojave, California .

Ricky Carioti | The Washington Post | Getty Images

Branson has dreamed of going into space since watching the Apollo moon landing and founded Virgin Galactic in 2004 to fly private passengers into space. He started the company to buy spaceships built by aerospace designer Burt Rutans Scaled Composites.

Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo system emerged from Branson’s contract with Scaled Composites. However, the spacecraft’s development had several setbacks, including a rocket engine explosion on the ground in 2007 that killed three Scaled Composite employees, and the 2014 crash of the first SpaceShipTwo, VSS Enterprise, in which the co-pilot of Virgin Galactic, Michael Alsbury, was killed and injured pilot Peter Siebold.

The company then built VSS Unity, which is equipped with additional safety measures to prevent future accidents. Virgin Galactic began testing Unity in 2016 and first reached space in December 2018. In addition, Virgin Galactic rolled the next spacecraft in its fleet earlier this year, VSS Imagine, which is the first of its next-generation SpaceShip III vehicle class.

Last month, Virgin Galactic received a license extension from the US Federal Aviation Administration that allows the company to fly passengers on future space flights. The company completed a 29-element verification and validation program for the FAA and reached the last two regulatory milestones with its most recent space test in May.

Branson wasn’t previously expected to fly on Sunday’s space flight, as Virgin Galactic leadership said the company planned to fly the founder on his penultimate test flight. But after billionaire Jeff Bezos announced that he would be flying on July 20 on his company’s Blue Origin company’s first passenger flight, Virgin Galactic changed its flight schedule – with the aim of flying Branson nine days before Bezos.

Sunday’s flight, which takes off from Bezos or Elon Musk, means Branson will be the first of the multi-billion dollar space company founders to drive his own spaceship.

Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin compete in suborbital space tourism, with both companies’ spaceships taking passengers to the edge of space for a few minutes to soar in weightlessness. An orbital flight, such as with Musks SpaceX, costs tens of millions of dollars and typically spends several days or weeks in space.

Branson’s company believes there is a market that can accommodate up to 2 million people on suborbital space flights with prices between $ 250,000 and $ 500,000, with the market expanding as costs drop.

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Categories
Business

U.S. air journey reaches pandemic excessive as peak season kicks off

Travelers wait in line at a Transportation Security Administration (TSA) screening checkpoint at Orlando International Airport on the Friday before Memorial Day. As more and more people have received the COVID-19 vaccine, American Automobile Association (AAA) is predicting more than 37 million Americans will travel more than 50 miles this Memorial Day weekend, many for the first time since the pandemic began.

Paul Hennessy | LightRocket | Getty Images

Air traveler volumes hit the highest levels since before the coronavirus pandemic began during Memorial Day weekend, the latest sign of recovery for the sector.

The Transportation Security Administration screened an average of 1.78 million people from Friday through Monday, hitting a peak of 1.96 million on Friday. Those volumes are more than six times higher than a year ago, but still 22% below Memorial Day weekend in 2019.

The surge in travelers is pushing up the price of vacations, including airfare, hotel rates and car rental prices. Domestic leisure fares are near 2019 levels, airline executives have said.

Categories
Politics

Home reaches deal on fee

Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-MS) interviewed witnesses during a hearing on “Global Threats to the Homeland” at the Rayburn House office building on Capitol Hill September 17, 2020 in Washington, DC.

Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images

Key House members announced on Friday an agreement to form an independent commission to investigate the Jan. 6 uprising in the U.S. Capitol as lawmakers attempt to understand the shortcomings that allowed a pro-Trump mob to do the Overrun buildings.

The panel will investigate the circumstances surrounding the attack and the factors that led to it, according to Homeland Security Committee chairman Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., And Senior Member John Katko, RN.Y., of the Negotiated deal.

The commission will consist of 10 members who cannot be current government officials. The majority of Democrats will elect five, including the chairman, and Republicans will elect five, including the vice chairman.

The group has subpoena powers and issues a report when the investigation is complete. The House is expected to vote on a draft law to set up the commission as early as next week.

“Inaction – or just moving on – is just not an option,” Thompson said in a statement. “In creating this commission, we are taking responsibility for protecting the US Capitol.”

In a separate statement, Katko said, “I believe we have a fair, solid bill that provides responses to the federal response and a willingness to ensure that something like this never happens again.”

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Read more about CNBC’s political coverage:

Supporters of former President Donald Trump stormed the Capitol in January while lawmakers counted President Joe Biden’s election victory. Five people, including a Capitol police officer, died in the attack.

The mob entered the legislature after weeks of unsubstantiated claims by the former president that widespread fraud cost them the president’s race against Biden. The House indicted Trump during his final days in the White House for instigating a riot. The Senate acquitted him after he resigned from office.

Democrats and some Republicans have insisted that lawmakers better understand what led to the violent attempt to disrupt the transfer of power. They questioned how insurgents and security breaches allowed rioters to sing “Hang Mike Pence” and visit House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to find the best government officials in a matter of moments.

Many Republicans – some of whom voted not to count the certified state election results after Congress withdrew from the mob – have questioned the need for a commission to investigate the events of the January 6 insurrection or play down the attack.

Supporters of US President Donald Trump climb against a wall during a protest against the confirmation of the results of the 2020 presidential election by Congress at the Capitol in Washington on January 6, 2021.

Jim Urquhart | Reuters

Kevin McCarthy, minority chairman of the House of Representatives, Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., Spoke to reporters Friday morning and called it “very worrying” that the panel is only investigating Capitol security in the context of January 6 and not Good Friday should when a man rammed a car into a checkpoint and killed a Capitol policeman.

McCarthy said he hadn’t read the announced agreement.

In a statement on Friday, Pelosi said: “It is imperative that we seek the truth about what happened on January 6th with an independent, bipartisan 9/11 commission to clarify the facts, causes and security to investigate and report on the terrorist mob attack. ” The California Democrat reiterated that the House expects to come up with a separate bill to provide additional funding for the security of the Capitol.

The commission’s announcement comes days after House Republicans removed MP Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., From her leadership position when she pounded Trump for spreading conspiracy theories about the elections. Cheney, one of ten Republicans in the House of Representatives who voted for the indictment against the former president, joined McCarthy in breaking off support for a commission that was supposed to focus only on the January 6 insurrection.

A hearing earlier this week also underscored the Republicans’ efforts to minimize the attack on the Capitol. Rep. Andrew Clyde, R-Ga., Claimed it was not a riot but a “normal tourist visit”.

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Categories
Entertainment

Metropolitan Opera Reaches Deal With Union Representing Refrain

The Metropolitan Opera, whose efforts to cut its workers’ wages to survive the pandemic had embroiled them in a bitter dispute with their unions and threatened to derail its planned reopening in September, announced Tuesday it was one I reached an agreement with the union representing his choir and other workers.

The union, the American Guild of Musical Artists, which also represents soloists, dancers, actors and stage managers, is the first of the three largest unions to reach such a deal after months of sometimes bitter separation between work and management over such depth and The pandemic wage cut should be permanent. The Met had tried to cut wages for its highest-paid unions by 30 percent, which would cut these takeaway workers by around 20 percent.

The terms of the contract – the culmination of 14 weeks of negotiations – were not disclosed immediately. The company said they would remain confidential until the union voted to ratify the agreement on May 24.

In the past few weeks, New York officials have taken steps to ease restrictions on live performances, and in the past few days several major Broadway shows have announced their intention to resume performances in September and October. Whether the Met can reopen in September after the pandemic forced the opera house to remain closed for more than a year depends on how quickly it can resolve its remaining labor problems.

Peter Gelb, the Met’s general manager, said in a statement that he was grateful to the guild “to recognize the extraordinary economic challenges facing the Met in the coming seasons”.

Leonard Egert, the guild’s executive director, said in a statement that the new contract “would ensure that the Met becomes a fairer and better place to work”.

“We are excited to strike a new deal at the most difficult time in the history of the performing arts,” he said.

The Met’s deal with the guild is just one step towards reopening. The union that represents its stage workers, Local One of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees, has been locked out since December after both sides failed to reach an agreement on wage cuts. Without his union stagehands, it will likely be impossible to start performing. And the union that represents the Met orchestra is still negotiating their contract.

The opera company, the nation’s largest performing arts organization, says it has lost $ 150 million in revenue since the coronavirus pandemic – including ticket sales for the Opera House and its cinema simulcasts, as well as revenue from shops and restaurants forced it to close its doors more than a year ago. When the Met reopens in September, it will have been 18 months without performing live at their opera house.

The Met’s management has argued that such a long period of closure – and the uncertainty about audience return at a time when New York tourism could take years to return to preandemic levels – is financial sacrifices of its own Employees. It is said that half of the proposed wage cuts would be restored once ticket receipts and core donations returned to prepandemic levels. Some major American orchestras and opera companies have already negotiated wage cuts with their workers to help them survive the pandemic.

After the opera house closed, the members of the orchestra and choir went unpaid for almost a year. Then the company brought them to the negotiating table with an offer of up to $ 1,543 per week, less than half what they normally get.

Union members plan to gather outside Lincoln Center on Thursday to show solidarity during the tense negotiations with management. Union leaders have accused the Met’s management of using the pandemic as a reason to force concessions from work.

If approved, the agreement with the guild will take effect on August 1st. Union members will continue to receive partial payments for the time being.

Categories
Entertainment

DJ Khaled Reaches No. 1 With ‘Khaled Khaled’

Two years ago, two hip-hop stars, DJ Khaled and Tyler, the creator, faced each other on the Billboard album list, doing not only music, but also t-shirts, lawn signs and energy drinks.

The competition between them – Tyler won, Khaled finished runner-up – sparked long-simmering frustrations in the industry over the use of retail bundles to increase music sales and improve goose performers’ chart positions. The aftermath of this and other similar card fights led Billboard to tighten its rules late last year.

This week, DJ Khaled took first place with his latest release, “Khaled Khaled,” which equaled 93,000 sales in the US, including 107, as the bundle has largely been relegated to the trash can of industrial sales gimmicks – a very overcrowded trash can, according to MRC Data Millions of streams and 14,000 copies were sold as a complete package. It’s the third time that DJ Khaled has been ranked # 1.

The album, titled after the star’s full name, is a textbook example of DJ Khaled’s style: pumped-up affirmations of fame and humility (“Thankful” is the first track, not to be confused with “Grateful” a few albums ago). Comes with a deep bank of guest stars – this one includes Drake, Megan Thee Stallion, Lil Wayne, Nas, Justin Bieber, Justin Timberlake, Post Malone, Jay-Z and more than a dozen others. In addition to DJ Khaled, recognized executive producers on the album include his two young sons Asahd and Aalam.

Also this week, Memphis rapper Moneybagg Yo’s second week “A Gangsta’s Pain” fell to number 2. Morgan Wallen’s “Dangerous: The Double Album” was number three; Bieber’s “Justice” comes fourth; and Slime Language 2, rapper Young Thug’s project, is # 5.

Categories
Health

MDMA Reaches Subsequent Step Towards Approval for Therapy

However, in the early 1980s, MDMA fled the clinic to the dance floor, where it became known as ecstasy. In 1985 the Drug Enforcement Administration criminalized MDMA as a List I substance, defined as “currently unaccepted medical use and high potential for abuse”.

Some mental health workers continued to administer MDMA-based therapies underground, but most stopped. The number of scientists completing studies with MDMA also decreased. Some people, including Dr. Doblin, who formed his association in 1986 to focus on developing MDMA and other psychedelics into FDA-approved drugs, continued to be heavily involved in MDMA research. It took nearly two decades to overcome alarmist claims about Ecstasy’s dangers, including the fact that it had eaten holes in users’ brains, to finally get approval to start college. Animal and human studies confirm that MDMA does not cause neurotoxic effects at the doses used in clinical studies.

Ecstasy or molly, on the other hand, can be adulterated with other potentially dangerous substances, and users can take doses far higher than is safe. According to a database maintained by the Drug Abuse and Mental Health Administration up to this year, MDMA accounted for 1.8 percent of all visits to the US emergency room in 2011. In Europe, MDMA was responsible for 8 percent of drug-related emergency visits to 16 major hospitals in 10 countries from 2013 to 2014.

Scientists still do not fully understand the source of MDMA’s therapeutic effects. The substance binds to proteins that regulate serotonin, a neurotransmitter that can, among other things, improve mood. Antidepressants like Prozac bind to the same proteins and block their reabsorption of serotonin. However, MDMA continues this process and causes the proteins to pump serotonin into synapses and strengthen their chemical signal.

MDMA also increases levels of oxytocin, dopamine, and other chemical messengers and creates feelings of empathy, trust, and compassion.

The primary therapeutic effect, however, may be due to the apparent ability to reopen what neuroscientists refer to as “critical phase”, the window in childhood when the brain has the superior ability to create and recreate new memories to save. A mouse study published in Nature in 2019 found that MDMA may restore the adult brain to this earlier state of malleability.

An estimated 7 percent of the US population will suffer from PTSD at some point in their life, and up to 13 percent of combat veterans will have the disease. In 2018, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs spent $ 17 billion on disability payments for over one million veterans with PTSD.

Categories
Business

Trevor Lawrence reaches take care of Fanatics over memorabilia rights

Trevor Lawrence is the favorite, ranked # 1 overall on the NFL Draft, and wins a contract valued at nearly $ 37 million.

Ezra Shaw | Getty Images Sports | Getty Images

Add fanatics to the sports companies partnering with quarterback Trevor Lawrence.

The e-commerce giant announced a multi-year deal on the rights to Lawrence’s collectibles on Friday, the day after the 21-year-old Clemson star was selected as number 1 on the National Football League draft. Fanatics will be selling autographed Lawrence items from his time at Clemson and now with the Jacksonville Jaguars for the NFL. Financial terms of the agreement were not specified.

The list of fanatics memorabilia, including NFL quarterback Tom Brady, National Basketball Association striker Zion Williamson, and WNBA star Sabrina Ionescu.

“I’m very excited to be joining the Fanatics team, especially since they are based here in Jacksonville,” said Lawrence in a statement, adding that he “wants to give fans even more access to the game through memorabilia and exclusively signed items.”

Victor Shaffer, Executive Vice President of Fanatics, added, “We look forward to providing fans in Jacksonville, Clemson and beyond with an unparalleled shopping experience and opportunities to celebrate both his college days and the beginning of his NFL career . “

The Fanatics deal is officially Lawrence’s first as an NFL player, but it’s already tied to companies like sports drinks maker Gatorade, Adidas, and a cryptocurrency company, Blockfolio. After Lawrence was drafted, the company presented him with $ 25,000 that was held in a crypto account.

Quarterback Trevor Lawrence prepares for a throw during Jordan Palmer’s QB Summit NFL Draft Prep at a park on January 25, 2021 in Orange County, CA.

Aubrey Lao | Getty Images

The Jaguars turn to Lawrence to revive a franchise that has only made the playoffs twice since 2007. The club fired coach Doug Marrone, who last led the team to the postseason in 2017 and replaced him with long-time college coach Urban Meyer.

Lawrence was the first of five quarterbacks drafted in the first round. The New York Jets, followed by BYU’s Zack Wilson, and the San Francisco 49ers designed North Dakota State’s Trey Lance with the third overall win.

Chicago picked Ohio State’s Justin Fields 11th overall, and the New England Patriots ranked Alabama’s Mac Jones 15th. It’s the sixth year in a row that at least three quarterbacks have been drafted in the first round.

The NFL draft will continue over the weekend, with rounds two and three on Friday and four through seven on Saturday.

Categories
Business

SpaceX’s Crew-2 mission for NASA launches efficiently, reaches orbit

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the astronauts from the Crew 2 mission will launch on April 23, 2021 at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida from Launch Complex 39A.

GREGG NEWTON | AFP | Getty Images

SpaceX launched another group of astronauts for NASA early Friday morning. Elon Musk’s company has now sent 10 astronauts into space in less than a year.

The Crew 2 mission, the company’s second operational mission for NASA and the third to date, successfully reached orbit after being launched at 5:49 a.m. ET from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket brought the four astronauts into space in the company’s Crew Dragon spaceship called “Endeavor”.

The launch marked several new novelties for SpaceX, with the company reusing both a rocket and capsule for the mission, surpassing the total number of astronauts launched into space under the Mercury program, which began in 1958.

“It was just spectacular,” said acting NASA administrator Steve Jurczyk after the start of the Crew 2 mission. “Our partnership with SpaceX has been enormous.”

SpaceX’s Crew Dragon capsule with NASA astronauts Shane Kimbrough and Megan McArthur, Japanese astronaut Akihiko Hoshide and French astronaut Thomas Pesquet is now on its way to the International Space Station. The mission is scheduled to dock with the ISS approximately 24 hours after takeoff around 5:10 a.m. EDT on Saturday. The Crew 2 team will then conduct a full-term mission on the ISS and spend approximately six months on board.

After launch, SpaceX also landed the booster of its Falcon 9 rocket, the large lower part of the rocket. This Falcon 9 rocket booster previously launched the Crew 1 mission in November, and SpaceX plans to continue using it for future missions.

Categories
Business

Amazon Staff’ Union Drive Reaches Far Past Alabama

National Football League players were among the first to express their support. Then came Stacey Abrams, the Democratic star who helped turn Georgia blue in the 2020 election.

Actor Danny Glover traveled to Bessemer, Ala. For a press conference last week, where he spoke about the union-friendly leanings of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. called to urge workers in the Amazon warehouse there to organize. Tina Fey weighed, as did Senator Bernie Sanders.

And on Sunday, President Biden made a resounding declaration of solidarity with the workers who are now voting on whether to form a union in Amazon’s Bessemer camp without naming the company. His video, posted on his official Twitter account, was one of the most haunting statements in recent history in support of union formation by an American president.

“Every worker should have a free and fair choice to join a union,” said Biden.

A union campaign that had purposely stayed under the radar for months has turned into a showdown with stars in recent days to influence workers at Amazon, one of the world’s dominant corporations whose power has grown exponentially during the pandemic. On one side is the retail, wholesale and department store union and its many work-friendly allies in politics, sports and Hollywood. On the flip side, it’s an e-commerce behemoth that has fought off previous union efforts in its U.S. facilities in its more than 25-year history.

This union vote in a referendum not only draws attention to the working conditions in the Bessemer camp, which employs 5,800 people, but also, in particular, to the plight of low-wage and color workers. Many of the workers at the Alabama camp are black, a fact that union organizers highlighted in their campaign to link the vote to the struggle for civil rights in the south.

The Retail Workers Union has a long history of organizing black workers in the poultry and food industries and helping them obtain basic benefits such as paid time off and safety protection, as well as a means of economic security. The union portrays its efforts in Bessemer as part of that legacy.

“This is an organizing campaign on the right to work in the south during the pandemic at one of the largest companies in the world,” said Benjamin Sachs, professor of work and industry at Harvard Law School. “The importance of a union victory there really couldn’t be emphasized enough.”

Warehouse workers began voting by post on February 8, and ballots are due by the end of that month. A union can be formed if a majority of the votes cast is in favor of such a move.

Amazon’s counter-campaign, both inside the warehouse and nationally, has focused on pure economics: the starting wage is $ 15 an hour plus benefits. That’s far more than the competition in Alabama, where the minimum wage is $ 7.25 an hour.

“It is important that employees understand the facts of union membership,” said Heather Knox, an Amazon spokeswoman, in a statement. “We will provide information about this and the electoral process so that you can make an informed decision. If the union vote is successful, it will affect all local employees, and it is important that employees understand what this means for them and their daily lives at Amazon. “The company, which went through a major hiring frenzy last year when domestic customers had sales of $ 386 billion, posted profits of more than $ 22 billion.

In Alabama, some workers are getting tired of the process. One employee recently posted on Facebook: “This union stuff is getting on my nerves. Let it be March 30th !!! “

The situation is getting worse and union leaders accuse Amazon of a number of “anti-union” tactics.

The company has posted signs throughout the warehouse, next to hand disinfection stations and even in toilet cubicles. It sends texts and emails regularly and draws attention to the problems with the unions. The internal company app publishes photos of employees in Bessemer showing how much they love Amazon.

During certain training sessions, company representatives have pointed out the cost of union dues. If some workers asked specific questions in the meetings, then the representatives from Amazon followed them in their workplaces and again emphasized the disadvantages of unions, say employees and organizers. The meetings were called off when the voting began, but the signs are still there, said Jennifer Bates, a union-friendly worker at the warehouse.

In this charged atmosphere, even routine matters have become suspicious. The union has raised questions about changing the timing of a traffic light near the warehouse where work organizers try to speak to workers if they are stopped in their vehicles as they exit the facility.

Amazon asked district officials to change the timing of the light in mid-December, although there is no evidence in the district’s records that the change was made to thwart the union. “Traffic for Amazon is secured by changing shifts,” said the public records as the reason the district changed the light.

Amazon regularly navigates to traffic issues at its facilities, and wasting unpaid time in congested parking lots is a common complaint from Amazon employees on Facebook groups.

However, retail workers union president Stuart Appelbaum questioned the timing of the request in Bessemer, as it did at the height of the organization. “When the light was red, we could answer questions and have a quick chat with the workers,” he said.

Last week the union questioned an offer by the company to Alabama warehouse workers to pay them at least $ 1,000 if they quit by the end of March.

“They are trying to remove the most likely union supporters from their workforce by bribing them to leave and giving up their vote,” said Appelbaum.

But “The Offer,” as it is known among employees, was the same thing Amazon made to workers in all of its warehouses across the country. It’s an annual program that allows the company to reduce its headcount without layoffs after the busy season. It’s been around since at least 2014 when Jeff Bezos wrote about it in a letter to shareholders.

“Once a year we offer our employees to pay for the termination,” said Bezos at the time.

Mr. Appelbaum was not influenced. He said he believed Amazon decided to make the offer in all camps to rule out possible yes votes in Bessemer.

Mr Biden stopped pushing Amazon workers to unionize, but his testimony immediately increased the streak of an already momentous campaign.

“Let me be really clear,” said Mr Biden. “It’s not up to me to decide whether anyone should join a union. But let me be even more clear: It is not up to an employer to decide either. The decision to join a union rests with the workers. Point.”

He added, “Workers in Alabama and across America are voting on whether to unionize in their workplace. This is critical – an extremely important decision. “And it is one, he said, that should be done without intimidation or threats.

Despite the union’s suspicions, she has not filed any formal complaints with the National Labor Relations Board, Appelbaum said. Typically, unions can object to a company’s tactics before an election and the labor authority can intervene.

Should a complaint be filed, the labor authority may find that the election is invalid due to Amazon’s actions. After months of working to build support inside and outside the Amazon camp, the union’s last thing they want is for the labor authority to step in and decide that the elections must be held again.

Harvard Law School’s Mr Sachs said that, despite Mr Biden’s admonitions to meddle in elections, the current labor law allows Amazon to hold certain mandatory meetings with workers to discuss why they should not union and this enables the company to post anti-union messages in the workplace.

By aggressively targeting the union, Amazon risks angering the Washington Democrats, many of whom are already calling for greater antitrust control over large tech companies. Amazon launched a public campaign in support of legislation to raise the federal minimum wage to $ 15 an hour and bought prominent ads in the New York Times, Washington Post, and other publications.

In his video on Sunday, President Biden specifically mentioned how unions can help “black and brown workers” and vulnerable workers struggling during the economic crisis sparked by the pandemic.

Ms. Bates, 48, one of the leaders of the union action, started working in the Bessemer camp in May.

She said she was offended by some anti-union efforts by Amazon, particularly what the company told employees that they had to pay nearly $ 500 in union dues every year. Because Alabama is a right to work, there is no such requirement that an employee pay dues in a unionized workplace.

“It annoys me a little because I feel like they know the truth and they are not telling the truth and they take advantage of them because they know that employees come from a community that is considered black and low-income,” said Mrs. Bates, who is black. “It felt really horrible that you were standing there deliberately misleading people. Give them the facts and let them decide. “