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Saturday, December 14, 2013
Webinar: January 14, 2014. Estate Planning for People with ID & DD and their Families.
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Politicians’ Delay Means Climate Catastrophe for Malawi’s Poor
http://www.ipsnews.net/2013/12/need-climate-change-policy-malawis-poor/
IPS is an international communication institution with a global news agency at its core, raising the voices of the South
and civil society on issues of development, globalisation, human rights and the environment
Politicians’ Delay Means Climate Catastrophe for Malawi’s Poor
LILONGWE, Dec 12 2013 (IPS) - Delays in finalising Malawi’s climate change policy, which has been in the making for the last three years, are affecting millions of families living in disaster-prone areas across this southern African nation, says the country’s minister of environment and climate change management Halima Daudi.
Daudi, who led the Malawian delegation to COP19 in Warsaw last month, tells IPS that the delay in drafting and making the policy operational comes at a cost to many of Malawi’s vulnerable.
“For example there is the GCF [Green Climate Finance] which needs us to come up with a governing instrument by establishing an authority designated to be the focal point to handle the funds and we cannot access that without a national policy on climate change,” she says.
For the last three years, the Malawian government, with the help of United Nations agencies, has been working on the National Climate Change Policy, a National Climate Change Investment Plan and a National Adaptation Plan to address medium- to long-term adaptation needs for Malawi.
William Chadza, executive director for the Centre for Environmental Policy and Advocacy, a local civil society grouping, explains that “as a country we cannot access financing for adaptation without a well-articulated national climate policy and a national adaptation plan which needs to establish a body to specifically handle climate funds.”
Daudi agrees. “It’s very difficult for us to access such funds for adaptation and mitigation, which in the end increases the vulnerability of so many families to [the impact of] climate change,” she says.
But she explained the delays were ”due to [a lack of] funding for holding consultative meetings, and mainly because we don’t want to rush this. It’s a very important policy that will define our resolve against climate change. We are taking time on it.
”But Dora Marema, coordinator for GenderCC, a network of women and gender activists working for gender and climate justice, says that the delays in implementing the national climate policies in several African countries, including Malawi, is affecting hundreds of thousands of people reeling from the effects of climate change.
“It’s true that most countries are failing to access funds for adaptation because their policies are not in place and the impact is on the most vulnerable, especially women trying to recover from disasters associated with climate change,” Marema tells IPS.
And the longer it takes to implement Malawi’s climate change policy, the longer it will be before Agnes Katete and her family get back on their feet.
In March, a mountain of water came gushing through the only door in Katete’s dingy shack in the wee hours of the morning. The water swept away her house and 10 others in Kilipula Village in the lakeshore district of Karonga, which lies 600 km from the capital Lilongwe.
Katete, a mother of four, was lucky. She managed to escape unhurt with her children.
But like many others in her village, she lost her rice fields. And now, nine months after they lost everything; they are still unable to pull through.
Katete and many others from her village are still living in make shift homes set up by government and U.N. agencies, surviving on food handouts.
“I don’t know what’s going to happen to me and my children because another rainy season has started and I still don’t have a house. I lost all my income and I have no food,” she tells IPS.
Over the last five years, persistent droughts, flash floods and erratic rainfall show how vulnerable the country has become. This year alone, according to the department for disaster affairs, floods have affected close to 12,877 households and wiped out entire crop fields mainly in the northern and southern parts of the country.
In March 2012, flooding caused by two weeks of torrential rains destroyed thousands of homes in eight districts, leaving an estimated 300,000 people destitute, eight people dead and several missing.
The largest impact of climate change could be on Malawi’s agriculture sector, which is heavily dependent on rain-fed cultivation. The country has three million hectares of arable land.
Evans Njewa, an environmental policy and planning officer, tells IPS that one of the adaptation methods that Malawi plans to promote and create awareness on is traditional soil conservation. He explains that conservation agriculture, which involves reduced tillage, permanent soil cover and crop rotation, can help adapt to climate change effects because it potentially increases productivity through better soils and helps farmers adapt to climate change through better water retention.
“Like many other African countries, we are looking at adaptation as a priority in the National Climate Policy,” Njewa says, because as “a less industrialised country” it is easier “to [be able to] concentrate on mitigation.”
IPS is an international communication institution with a global news agency at its core, raising the voices of the South
and civil society on issues of development, globalisation, human rights and the environment
Monday, December 9, 2013
Solicitation Opportunity: State of Delaware. Cyber Security
The State of Delaware will be posting a solicitation the
beginning of January for Cyber Security and Disaster Recovery Staffing
Services.
The State of Delaware offers a free Vendor Subscription service which
allows vendors to receive email notification when solicitations in specific
areas of interest are available.
Please take a moment to register for any area
of business you may wish to receive notification on at: https://de.blackboardconnect.com/.
This
service complements our central solicitation website http://bids.delaware.gov
that is a one stop shop for RFP’s, ITB’s and RFI’s for the State of Delaware.
Registration will enable you to receive an alert for each solicitation posted
of interest to your business at the time of posting.
December 11th...."Let's Rock". Think-Tank Panel Discussion with Beverly Bond.
Beverly Bond, founder of Black Girls Rock! will be hosting a think-tank panel discussion and town hall on race, gender and media messaging in the 21st century.
The Black Girls Rock! panel will be held at the
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, located in Harlem, N.Y., at
135th & Lenox on
Dec. 11, 2013,
5 to 9 p.m.
For more information, please visit:www.eventbrite.com/e/the-black-girls-rock-think-tank-presents-checkin-our-fresh-registration-4449971986.
The Black Girls Rock! panel will be held at the
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, located in Harlem, N.Y., at
135th & Lenox on
Dec. 11, 2013,
5 to 9 p.m.
For more information, please visit:www.eventbrite.com/e/the-black-girls-rock-think-tank-presents-checkin-our-fresh-registration-4449971986.
Saturday, December 7, 2013
Washington, D.C. Celebration December 19, 2013......138th birthday of Dr. Carter G. Woodson,
FYI
Greetings,
The
Moorland-Spingarn Research Center at Howard University is pleased to be joining
the Association for the Study of African American Life and History and the
National Parks Service in celebrating the 138th birthday of Dr. Carter G.
Woodson, founder of the Association, the Journal of Negro History (now the
Journal of African American History), and the annual Black History Month
commemoration. Dr. Woodson founded the graduate program in History at
Howard and served as Dean of its College of Arts and Sciences. He has
likely had a greater impact on the study of black history than any other single
individual in the world. This is to invite you to join us on December 19,
2013 at 6:00 p.m. for this annual celebration.
The
event will be held at the historic Shiloh Baptist Church, 1500 9th St. NW. Dr. Gregory
Carr, esteemed Director of the African American Studies Department at Howard,
is the featured speaker. I hope you will join me and the staff at
Moorland as we celebrate the life and legacy of one of our most distinguished
pioneers in the preservation, interpretation, and celebration of black
history and culture.
Sincerely,
Howard
Dodson, Director
Moorland-Spingarn
Research Center
Howard
Dodson, Jr.
Howard
Dodson Jr., Director, Moorland-Spingarn Research Center/Howard University Library System
(HULS)
500
Howard Place NW, Room 203 Founders
Washington,
DC 20059
(202)
806-7234; (202) 806-5903 fax
Thursday, December 5, 2013
December 6, 2013. Briefing on Shale Gas Debase (Fracking Process)
BRIEFING NOTICE
The Shale Gas Debate:
How Industry and Environmental Messages Stack Up
December 6, 2013
2:00 - 3:00 p.m.
188 Russell Senate Office Building
The Shale Gas Debate:
How Industry and Environmental Messages Stack Up
December 6, 2013
2:00 - 3:00 p.m.
188 Russell Senate Office Building
Recently, US Department of the Interior Secretary Sally Jewell called upon industry to provide better information to the public about the fracking process. She said the public debate is “confused” and “not well-informed,” stating that industry is responsible for making sure “that the public understand what [fracking] is, how it’s done, and why it’s safe.” Industry has also recognized the need to raise the public’s comfort level, especially in states such as Colorado, where three cities recently approved bans or moratoriums on hydraulic fracturing. New research at RFF shows that industry will need to provide not just more information, but better information if it is to improve public confidence.
This briefing will examine survey results about the public’s level of concern regarding the potential environmental and health risks associated with shale gas development, and how much people value reducing such risks—how much they are willing to pay in increased taxes, utility bills, and so on to reduce those risks. The briefing will also show how different sources of information (industry and environmental) affect people’s attitudes and beliefs about shale gas development in their states.
This briefing is based on a new survey conducted by RFF researchers of a random sample of individuals in Pennsylvania, where residents are still adjusting to the boom in shale gas development and drilling in their state, and in Texas, where residents are more accustomed to these types of energy development activities.
Speakers for this briefing:
- Dr.
Alan J. Krupnick, RFF Senior Fellow and Director of RFF’s
Center for Energy Economics and Policy
- Dr.
Juha V. Siikamäki, RFF Associate Research Director and Fellow
Watch Dr. Krupnick preview
the results of this survey on E&E TV.
RSVP to Christine Tolentino at tolentino@rff.org. For questions, contact
Shannon Wulf at wulf@rff.org.
CDC. Public Health Law Program
http://www.cdc.gov/phlp/publications/topic/emergency.html
Emergency Preparedness
The Public Health Emergency Preparedness Clearinghouse is a central repository for emergency preparedness-related statutes, regulations, orders, reports, and legal tools. The Clearinghouse is intended to aid jurisdictions considering updates and clarifications to their public health emergency legal preparedness activities.
Model Memorandums of Understanding
- Selected Model Memorandums of Understanding
Selected examples are provided to enhance coordination of preparedness across sectors.
Public Health Law Bench Books
- Bench booksCommonly used by judges as functional practice guides to accelerate their understanding of an area of law. States have public health law bench books for the judiciary; public health officials; state and local public health attorneys; and the public.
Toolkits, Handbooks, and Menus
- Legal Barriers Toolkits
Toolkits to help public health officials understand and use legal authorities to prepare for and respond to public health emergencies. They cover emergency authorities and immunities, emergency use authorizations, public health and schools, and scope of practice issues. Developed by the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials and the Public Health Law Program. - Selected Federal Legal Authorities Pertinent to Public Health Emergencies [PDF - 150KB]
Lists federal laws that address preparing for and responding to a range of natural and man-made disasters and emergencies. The list includes a brief description of the law and a citation. - Social Distancing Law Assessment Template
A standardized template for assessing legal authorities, hypothetical scenario and instructions for conducting a Legal Consultation Meeting, and examples of completed documents. - Court House Preparedness for Public Health Emergencies (Univ. of Pittsburgh) [PDF-852KB]
A case study demonstrating how Pennsylvania counties have conducted emergency planning that includes a planning template and planning resources. - Criminal and Epidemiological Investigations Handbook [PDF-12.4MB]
Provides an overview of criminal and epidemiological investigation procedures involving interactions between law enforcement and public health. Law enforcement and public health officials should read the entire handbook to understand the different goals and needs of the other organization before an event occurs. This handbook will teach public health and law enforcement how to work together to identify the biological agent, prevent the spread of the disease, avoid public panic, and apprehend those responsible.
Training and Educational Resources
- Legal Preparedness for Public Health Emergencies: A Model for Minimum Competencies for Mid-Tier Public Health Professionals [PDF - 363KB]
Model set of Minimum Competencies in Public Health Emergency Law for mid-tier public health professionals to advance the inclusion of law-based content in all public health emergency training, resources, and tools. Developed at the request of CDC’s Office of Public Health Preparedness and Emergency Response and the Association of Schools of Public Health as a companion document to the Public Health Preparedness and Response (PHPR) Core Competency Model (Dec 2010) for mid-level public health workers and the supportingKnowledge, Skills and Attitudes for the PHPR Core Competencies [PDF - 1MB] (Sept 2012). - Preparedness and Emergency Response Learning Centers (PERLC)
The PERLC develop and deliver competency-based preparedness and response learning products for the US public health workforce, including training on legal aspects of emergency response. The program is funded through CDC’s Office of Public Health Preparedness and Emergency Response. - Public Health and the Law: An Emergency Preparedness Training Kit
Training kit to prepare public health practitioners, their legal counsel, and other partners to understand and effectively address changes in the legal environment as a result of an emergency. Published by the National Association of County and City Health Officials and the Public Health Law Program. - Forensic Epidemiology 3.0
Training package designed to help public health and law enforcement agencies strengthen their coordinated response to pandemic influenza and similar disease outbreaks. - Public Health Emergency Law 3.0
Training to help public health practitioners and emergency management professionals improve their understanding of the role of law in public health emergency response. - Suggested Communicable Disease Vignettes (California Department of Health Services) [PDF-44KB]
Intended to train users to describe communicable disease scenarios that are disruptive to safe court operations, identify health benefits of various precaution methods, and define factors that result in infectious disease transmission.
Vulnerable Populations
- Older Adult Emergency Preparedness Web Portal
A web portal that serves as a one-stop source for further resources, tools, and information related to all-hazards preparedness for older adults. Focus areas include developing plans, collecting and using data, registries, training and competency, law-based solutions, caregiver preparedness, and sheltering older adults.
Disclaimer: Information available on this website that was not developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) does not necessarily represent any CDC policy, position, or endorsement of that information or of its sources. The information contained on this website is not legal advice; if you have questions about a specific law or its application you should consult your legal counsel.