“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.” -Alvin Toffler

Monday, February 20, 2023

In Person or Virtual. Business Finance Basics. February 22, 2023


Location

Anacostia Arts Center 1231 Good Hope Road Southeast Washington, DC 20020





Water Insecurity: It has begun. Opinion. Water Shortages and Violence in Mexico..U.S. government must fund water-saving efforts in Mexico if it wants to quell the nation’s drug violence

 

 

CLIMATE CHANGE | OPINION

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/water-shortages-threaten-to-increase-violence-and-disappearances-in-mexico/ 

 

Water Shortages Threaten to Increase Violence and Disappearances in Mexico

The U.S. government must fund water-saving efforts in Mexico if it wants to quell the nation’s drug violence

·        By Jordan Kinard on February 15, 2023

 

A farmer scuffles with a member of Mexico’s National Guard during a protest against the decision of the Mexican government to divert water from La Boquilla Dam to the U.S. as part of a 1944 bilateral water treaty between the two countries on September 8, 2020. Credit: Jose Luis Gonzalez/Reuters/Alamy Stock Photo

In 2006, Mexico declared war against drug traffickers in the wake of escalating inter-cartel warfare. Since then, there have been more than 300,000 murders in thecountry, a death toll escalated by violence between law enforcement, the military andthe cartels. An official list of the missing has risen to over 100,000 people, called losdesaparecidos—the disappeared. Many of them are presumably among the roughly52,000 unidentified bodies in Mexican morgues. The disappeared are, legallyspeaking, neither alive nor dead; they include people whose remains are undiscoveredor unidentified, and others who may be still alive and held in captivity.

In 2021 and 2022, with the No Están Solas project, I worked with Mexican human rights advocates who were trying to locate and identify the remains of some of the disappeared. I learned the crisis in Mexico is one with many faces: cartel violence, forced migration, and clashes between the Mexican government, its people and the drug traffickers who offer jobs, protection and resources, often through coercion.

I believe the violence will worsen if we do not address a powerful new factor: climate change and its effect on Mexico’s water supply. Changing weather patterns, the failure of government institutions to accommodate growing and moving populations, and the realities of decaying infrastructure are reducing the availability of usable fresh water in several parts of Mexico. This, I believe, is adding to crime, civil unrest and migration, as people search for more habitable or safer ground.

In the first half of 2021 Mexico had an average rain shortfall of 20 percent, and by2022 several states experienced shortfalls greater than 90 percent compared to expected levels. The loss of rainfall is putting greater stress on already over exploited aquifers and depleted reservoirs. To make matters worse, the government has mismanaged the water supply, failing to crack down on illegal pumping by cartels and farmers, and preferentially allotting scarce public water supplies to large companies.  This has inflamed the water crisis and caused the brunt of drought to be endured by Mexico’s poorer and marginalized communities.

From what I’ve seen, I believe that climate change will increasingly lead to the kind ofviolence that has defined the country’s drug war, much in the same way researchershave linked climate change to the Syrian Civil War. And here is where I think the U.S.can make a difference. The U.S. government has committed billions of dollars in aid toa war on drugs that has failed, with drug seizures at the US-Mexico border remaininghigh and drug-war related murders soaring since 2006. If the United Statesreallocated some of its drug war funding from militarized aid and law enforcement towater collection and distribution projects, this could reduce water’s role as a driver ofviolence and displacement.

It was during my work cataloging mass graves and helping spread legal information topeople affected by disappearances that I saw how the distribution of violence was notrandom and saw how the disappearance crisis and the murder epidemic are extensionsof one another. It seems to me that disappearances and confirmed murders aredisproportionately concentrated in areas where water reserves are strained.

Water access has long driven conflict in Mexico. Shortages of drinkable water create anew market for drug cartels who capitalize on soaring water prices by siphoning andreselling water from public utilities. At the same time the urban poor and farmers ,desperate for water are increasingly resorting to theft, kidnapping, and sabotage, alongwith peaceful protest in an effort to save themselves and their livelihoods. Governmentcrackdowns on these escalating disruptions pose a growing threat to Mexican civilians.Though long ignored by Mexico’s federal officials, state-sponsored violence isresponsible for many of Mexico’s unsolved deaths and forced disappearances.

In 2020, Chihuahuan farmers occupied a dam in protest of Mexico’s treaty-obligedwater diversions to the United States while in a drought. In response, the Federalgovernment deployed the National Guard, which killed at least two people.  More recently, disgruntled citizens in the states Nuevo Leon and Coahuila burned PVC pipestransporting water from their regions to more influential areas like Monterrey. Whileit’s hard to know if any of the people involved in this civil unrest were disappeared, itwould not surprise me. The water crisis is intensifying civil unrest in an already chaoticsituation, and I fear the ranks of dead including the disappeared will swell as cartelsexpand their influence and state-sponsored violence continues.

According to the World Bank, Mexico’s murder rate surged from eight per 100,000people in 2006 to 28 per 100,000 in 2020. All this despite the fact that by 2016, theUnited States had given more than $1.5 billion in militarized aid for Mexico’s drug war.Quite simply, if the goal of the U.S. in rendering aid was to reduce violence whilestrengthening the rule of law, it’s made a bad investment. Indeed, the U.S.government has acknowledged a need to change its approach to combat violence andcartels in Mexico with the announcement of the Bicentennial Framework; however,the new framework notably neglects water specific environmental factors.Additionally, in 2021 alone the United States increased by nearly $200 million itshumanitarian assistance to Mexico and Central America to provide basic access tofood, water and shelter. That is commendable, but if the water systems of these areas are left unchanged then we can only hope for a sort of stable poverty with millions always on the edge of water scarcity.

Not only does the U.S. have the resources to aid Mexico’s water crisis, but it has the know-how.

The Biden administration has given $1.7 billion to Southwestern Indigenous tribes near the U.S.-Mexico border to help them improve water infrastructure. These efforts could be repeated in the geographically similar areas of Mexico, as the Environmental Protection Agency, through the Border Water Infrastructure Grant Program, already does in a limited area. The EPA bankrolls Mexican water projects, but only if they occur within 62 miles of the U.S. border and directly affect human and environmental health in the United States...........................

READ MORE AT: 


Washington, D.C.


 

bEMA International

Cooperation, Collaboration, Communication, Coordination, Community engagement, and  Partnering (C5&P)

 

A 501 (c) 3 organization

 

Water Insecurity: Why Las Vegas Is NOT Running Out of Water (Anytime Soon)

 

There is a lot of talk about the water levels at Lake Mead, and whether or not Las Vegas will run out of water. The drought in the southwest part of the country is getting more attention because of the situation with the Colorado River.

In this video I'm going to discuss the low water levels at the lake, and how it will actually have a bad impact and hurt other states (California & Arizona) and Mexico before it hurts the people living in Las Vegas, North Las Vegas, Henderson, Boulder City, etc.*


Washington, D.C.


 

bEMA International

Cooperation, Collaboration, Communication, Coordination, Community engagement, and  Partnering (C5&P)

 

A 501 (c) 3 organization

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sunday, February 19, 2023

You are needed! Public Comment on USDA WIC, and changes to SNAP and School Nutrition Standards by Feb 21st, April 10th,

 

USDA: Public Comment Period for WIC

 

Last Fall, the USDA released a proposed rule to update the WIC food packages to reflect the latest nutrition science. Here are ways you can engage on WIC:

  • Submit a public comment on the proposed rule to update WIC food packages by February 21, 2023.
  • Check out our media toolkit on proposed updates to the WIC food packages – help spread the word!
    • Check out our September 2022 joint blog with Salud America! on the importance of updating the WIC food packages to improve Latino health.
    • Check out UnidosUS and Hispanic Federation’s letter in support of proposed updates to the WIC food packages.
    • Check out this issue brief by the National WIC Association (NWA) on the importance updating the WIC food packages to close nutrition disparities for Latinos. 
    • Check out this recent post by the US Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (USHCC) on WIC’s impact on the Latino community.
  • Check out this funding opportunity from the WIC Community Innovation and Outreach (CIAO) Project
    • The USDA is working with Food Research and Action Center (FRAC), UnidosUS, the Native American Agriculture Fund and the Gretchen Swanson Center for Nutrition to help increase WIC participation and retention to reduce disparities.
    • The deadline for applications is March 23, 2023. Apply here!

 

USDA: Update on School Nutrition Standards

 

The USDA recently released a proposed rule to update school nutrition standards to improve child health.

  • Submit a public comment on the proposed rule to update school nutrition standards by April 10, 2023.
  • Check out our school meals nutrition standards media toolkit. – help spread the word!
  • Check out our Q/A webpage for more details on our school meal nutrition standards proposed rule.
  • Encourage families you reach to apply for free and reduced-price school meals for their children today!

 

USDA: Update to Changes on SNAP

 

Please find information below from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)’s Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) about upcoming changes to SNAP benefits, in addition to available resources to support the communities you serve.      

  • Beginning March 2023, temporary boosts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP)’s benefits (known as emergency allotments) that were authorized by Congress to help low-income families deal with the food and economic hardships of the COVID-19 pandemic will end nationwide following the recent passage of the FY23 Omnibus Appropriations Bill
  • SNAP is the nation’s largest Federal nutrition assistance program. Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, SNAP emergency allotments brought all SNAP households to the maximum benefit allowed by household size or provided SNAP households with a supplement of $95/month (whichever was greater).  
  • Prior to the passage of the FY23 Omnibus Appropriations Bill, Federal law required States to have an emergency or disaster declaration in place during an existing Federal public health emergency declaration in order to issue SNAP emergency allotments. Currently, 33 states (including DC and Guam) are providing SNAP emergency allotments. 18 States no longer have emergency or disaster declarations and, therefore, have already stopped issuing emergency allotments.  
  • For more information about what the end of SNAP emergency allotments means for you and/or the communities you serve, please visit the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)’s Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) website: https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/changes-2023-benefit-amounts
    • If you have questions about your SNAP benefits, please contact your state or local SNAP agency. You can find their contact information here: https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/state-directory.   
    • Please check out our latest infographic on forthcoming changes to SNAP benefits: >https://www.fns.usda.gov/snap/2023-benefit-changes<  
    • Please check out our latest blog on the end of SNAP emergency allotments.

 

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

 

  • If you think your children may be eligible for free or reduced-price school meals, contact your local school district at any time. 
  • The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) is a public health nutrition program for low-income parents, infants, and children. WIC provides foods to meet your and your family’s specific nutrition needs, plus nutrition education, breastfeeding support, and referrals to important health care and other social services. If you think you or your family may be eligible, visit https://www.fns.usda.gov/wic/wic-how-apply for more information.  
  • If you know families in need of additional support to put food on the table, local programs and partner organizations are available to help. You can call 1-866-3-HUNGRY or 1-877-8-HAMBRE to speak with a representative who will find food resources such as meal sites, food banks, or other social services available near your location.   

For further questions, please contact Alberto Gonzalez at alberto.gonzalezjr@usda.gov.  

Thank you,
White House Office of Public Engagement





GNDR Youth Opportunity with WWF Environment and Disaster Management Team. Apply for the pilot of the Flood Green Guide (FGG) Youth Champions program.

 

 

 

All GNDR Members 

World Wildlife Fund (WWF)’s Environment and Disaster Management (EDM) Team is inviting young individuals from Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, Asia, and the Pacific Islands to apply for the pilot of the Flood Green Guide (FGG) Youth Champions program.

 

If you are between the ages of 24 and 30 and from the Global South and interested in learning about nature-based solutions for flood management or disaster risk management, apply for the WWF Flood Green Guide (FGG) Youth Champions program.

 

More details can be found at: https://bit.ly/WWF_FGGYouth

 

The deadline is 5pm UTC-5 on March 1, 2023.

 

 

Insert Flood Green Guide Youth Champions Program_Announcement

 

Flood Green Guide Youth Champions Program_Announcement

 

 Download (pdf)

 








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