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Fort McMurray Ends Veteran Homelessness

 

Community becomes the third in Canada to reach Functional Zero Veteran Homelessness



(Fort McMurray, AB – Aug. 21, 2023) – The Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness has recognized Fort McMurray as the third community in Canada to reach Functional Zero Veteran Homelessness. This milestone would not have been possible without the work of 14 community organizations supporting the program and serving the homeless sector, the Royal Canadian Legion and Veterans Affairs Canada.


Fort McMurray, Alberta join London, Ontario, and St. Thomas-Elgin, Ontario, as the three communities that have ended veteran homelessness.

What is Functional Zero Veteran Homelessness?

Achieving Functional Zero Veteran Homelessness means the number of veterans experiencing homelessness is less or equal to the number of veterans a community has proven to be able to house in a month, with a baseline of no more than three veterans per month experiencing homelessness.

Fort McMurray went through a rigorous third-party verification process led by the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness to be recognized as reaching Functional Zero Veteran Homelessness.

How was this milestone achieved?

Working with Built for Zero Canada (BFZ-C, a program of the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness) and its partners, the community developed tools to ensure that veterans experiencing homelessness are quickly identified and matched with the most appropriate housing and services.

The Municipality along with community agencies and partners worked together to implement a system to acquire real-time data on every veteran experiencing homelessness, with a By-Name List, and built a Coordinated Access system. This ensures the community can respond quickly and prevent veteran homelessness whenever possible, making homelessness for veterans rare, brief and non-recurring.   

Addressing homelessness in other populations

Although the number of veterans housed through this work is relatively small, solving homelessness for veterans serves as a framework for reducing and ending homelessness in other populations. Fort McMurray is already putting these lessons into practice and, as of May 2023, have reduced the number of people experiencing chronic homelessness by 58 per cent of their baseline, moving 391 people into housing.

Federal and Provincial funding supporting this work

This achievement would not have been possible without funding from the federal government through Infrastructure Canada’s Reaching Home program and Veteran Affairs Canada’s Veterans and Family Well-Being Fund; and from the Government of Alberta through the Outreach and Support Services Initiative.


Quotes:

“Achieving deep reductions in chronic homelessness and ending homelessness for veterans in the face of a wave of new homelessness being experienced across the country is a huge accomplishment. Fort McMurray is demonstrating incredible national leadership by proving that homelessness can end and showing how to do it. They are giving hope to communities across the country.”  – Tim Richter, President and CEO of the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness.

“These communities’ achievements are a testament to their care and hard work — and are in recognition of veterans’ service to Canada. Everyone deserves a safe place to call home and Fort McMurray shows us, once again, that when we put a laser focus on our goal, we can end homelessness.” – Marie Morrison, Director of Built for Zero-Canada, Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness.

“We have such tremendous gratitude and respect for the people that have served our country, and this achievement demonstrates what can happen when we all work together to fully support community members experiencing homelessness. My deepest appreciation goes out to all of the community organizations and other levels of government that collaborated with us to make this a reality. While there is much more work to be done, my hope is that there will be lessons learned from this positive step that can applied to how we best serve those continuing to experience homelessness in our region.” – Mayor Sandy Bowman, Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo

“Alberta’s government is committed to supporting people experiencing homelessness, especially those who have bravely served our country. Affordable housing linked with supports is a critical part of a successful response to homelessness and I am proud to work with leaders in the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo to move Albertans in need into appropriate housing options.” – Jason Nixon, Minister of Seniors, Community and Social Services

“We owe veterans a debt of gratitude and to look after them by providing them with a safe and stable place to call home, like they ensured we had too. Our work with the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness and the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo exemplifies a strong collaboration aimed at supporting veterans. It underscores our unwavering dedication to those who have served our nation. Achieving the milestone of Functional Zero Veteran Homelessness is a significant achievement.” – The Honourable Sean Fraser, Minister of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities

 

King Charles 'desperately concerned' about Canadian wildfires

 King Charles has sent a message to Canadian communities grappling with wildfires after learning of states of emergency in the Northwest Territories and British Columbia.

Charles speaks about environmental issues in Yellowknife, Northwest Territories on Thursday, May 19, 2022. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Bill Braden

“My wife and I were desperately concerned to learn of the recent states of emergency declared in the Northwest Territories and British Columbia due to the wildfires,” the King's statement issued Wednesday reads.

Seven days ago, the N.W.T. government declared a state of emergency due to the raging wildfires that have forced more than 20,000 people to evacuate from the capital Yellowknife, and other communities.

Last year, then-prince Charles and then-Duchess of Cornwall Camila visited the territory during their three-day tour of Canada where Charles met with First Nations chiefs to discuss Indigenous-led solutions to climate change and meet with residential school survivors.

He referenced the trip in the statement sent to the Governor General.

“We recall with great fondness our visit to Yellowknife and the Northwest Territories last year,” he said. “We can only begin to imagine the heartbreak in those communities as they face this disastrous situation.”

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The visit in 2022 marked Charles’ 19th time coming to Canada, and Camilla’s fifth. His first time here was in 1970, and hers was in 2009.

Before that, the couple was last in Canada in 2017, when they took part in Canada 150 celebrations. During that tour, Charles and Camilla visited Iqaluit, Ottawa, Wellington, Trenton, Ont., and Gatineau, Que.

In the online statement, the King also shared his “deepest condolences” for people who have lost loved ones and his prayers for the thousands of people who have been displaced due to the unprecedented crisis.

British Columbia is also under a province-wide state of emergency issued on Aug. 18 as threatening wildfires across the region have destroyed structures and forced more than 27,000 people from their homes.

As of Wednesday, the province is battling more than 375 active fires.

The King’s statement also acknowledged the nation-wide efforts to combat the devastating wildfires, highlighting the “tireless work of local officials, volunteers and first responders in assisting and protecting their neighbours and communities in the face of such danger and uncertainty.”

“The beauty of Canada is not limited to its landscapes," the King said. "Its true beauty lies in the strength and resilience of Canadians and the care and concern they show to one another in the face of adversity.”

WE WANT TO HEAR FROM YOU

Are you impacted by the wildfires currently blazing across British Columbia and Northwest Territories? Have you been forced to evacuate your home as a result? 

চন্দ্রাভিযানে ইতিহাস গড়ল ভারত

 সব শঙ্কা কাটিয়ে চাঁদের বুকে সফলভাবে অবতরণ করেছে ভারতের মহাকাশযান চন্দ্রযান-৩। আজ বুধবার ভারতের স্থানীয় সময় সন্ধ্যা ৬টা ৪ মিনিটে চন্দ্রযান-৩–এর ল্যান্ডার ‘বিক্রম’ চাঁদের দক্ষিণ মেরুতে অবতরণ করে। এর মধ্য দিয়ে চাঁদে মহাকাশযান অবতরণকারী দেশের তালিকায় যুক্ত হলো ভারত।

ভারতীয় মহাকাশ গবেষণা সংস্থা (ইসরো) চন্দ্রযান-৩–এর অবতরণের দৃশ্য সরাসরি সম্প্রচার করে। লাখো মানুষ এই সম্প্রচারের সাক্ষী হয়েছে। এ উপলক্ষে দেশটির সব স্কুল খোলা রাখা হয়। ব্রিকস সম্মেলনে দক্ষিণ আফ্রিকায় থাকা ভারতের প্রধানমন্ত্রী নরেন্দ্র মোদি ভার্চ্যুয়ালি ইসরোর আয়োজনে যুক্ত হন।

         ব্রিকস সম্মেলনে দক্ষিণ আফ্রিকায় থাকা ভারতের প্রধানমন্ত্রী নরেন্দ্র মোদি চন্দ্রযান–৩               অবতরণের সময় ভার্চ্যুয়ালি ইসরোর আয়োজনে যুক্ত হন

চন্দ্রযান-৩ যেখানে নেমেছে, চাঁদের ওই অঞ্চলে বরফপানি অথবা জমাটবাঁধা বরফ রয়েছে। এতে স্থানটি পানির পাশাপাশি হতে পারে অক্সিজেন ও জ্বালানির উৎস, যা ভবিষ্যতে আরও চন্দ্রাভিযান অথবা স্থায়ীভাবে চাঁদে বসতি গড়তে সহায়ক হতে পারে।

চন্দ্রযান-৩–এর সফল অবতরণের মধ্য দিয়ে ইতিহাসের পাতায় ভারত নিজেদের নাম লেখাল, যারা প্রথমবারের মতো চাঁদের রহস্যময় দক্ষিণ মেরুতে পৌঁছাতে সক্ষম হয়েছে।

এর আগে সাবেক সোভিয়েত ইউনিয়ন, যুক্তরাষ্ট্র ও চীন চাঁদের বুকে সফলভাবে নভোযান অবতরণ করিয়েছে। এখন তাদের সঙ্গে চতুর্থ দেশ হিসেবে যোগ হয়েছে ভারতের নাম।

প্রায় একই সময়ে চাঁদের দক্ষিণ মেরুতে অবতরণের জন্য লুনা-২৫ নামের মহাকাশযান পাঠিয়েছিল রাশিয়া। তবে রাশিয়ার মহাকাশযানটি গত শনিবার চাঁদে বিধ্বস্ত হয়। এর মধ্য দিয়ে ৪৭ বছরের মধ্যে রাশিয়ার প্রথম চন্দ্রাভিযান ব্যর্থ হয়।

২০১৯ সালে চাঁদের দক্ষিণ মেরুর কাছে অবতরণের উদ্দেশ্যে চন্দ্রযান-২ পাঠিয়েছিল ভারত। কিন্তু অভিযানটি ব্যর্থ হয়।

গত ১৪ জুলাই ভারতের অন্ধ্র প্রদেশের শ্রীহরিকোটার সতীশ ধাওয়ান মহাকাশকেন্দ্র থেকে চন্দ্রযান-৩ উৎক্ষেপণ করা হয়। চন্দ্রযান-৩-এর ল্যান্ডারের নাম ‘বিক্রম’, রোভারের নাম ‘প্রজ্ঞান’। ল্যান্ডারটি উচ্চতায় ২ মিটারের মতো, ওজন ১ হাজার ৭০০ কেজির বেশি। আকারে ছোট রোভারের ওজন ২৬ কেজি মাত্র। এই রোভারই চাঁদের বুকে ঘুরে ঘুরে বৈজ্ঞানিক গবেষণা চালাবে।

Meghan Markle Is Quickly Losing Weight Amid Her Increased Stress: ‘She’s Juggling a Lot’

Meghan Markle is known for her great fashion, but a recent look has left some scratching their heads. She stepped out in Montecito, California, on August 11 — a warm, sunny day — wearing a wool coat and a scarf wrapped around her neck. The duchess also captured attention with what was on her wrist: a NuCalm biosignal processing disc the company claims can “lower…stress, improve sleep quality and increase…focus.” Meghan has used stress patches over the years, “but more so lately, especially when [husband Prince] Harry’s not around,” a source tells Life & Style exclusively, noting that the Duke of Sussex was in the midst of a trip to Japan and Singapore to play a charity polo match when Meghan was spotted wearing the sticker. “And she’s been wearing winter coats in the summer, which is comforting to her, but it’s also odd.”


So odd that it’s sparking concern. “Meghan’s anxiety kicks in when she’s not in control,” explains the source, who says that after losing their lucrative contract with Spotify two months ago and being labeled “grifters” by a podcast exec at the company, Meghan, 42, and Harry, 38, are eager to find new ways to establish themselves as a success story since pivoting to the entertainment world following their 2020 exit from royal life in Britain. “It seems that the pressure of making her mark in Hollywood is finally getting to Meghan. Trying to reestablish herself, constant money problems, Harry traveling and leaving her home alone a lot — it all adds up. She’s stressed, and friends are afraid she could be spiraling.”

Meghan’s trying to mitigate the tension — she enjoyed a night out with friends at one of Taylor Swift’s L.A. Eras tour stops in early August — but it doesn’t always work. “When Meghan is stressed, she barely eats. Friends say she’s dropped at least 15 pounds,” shares the source, explaining that “she doesn’t have an appetite when she’s juggling a lot.”

And when Harry’s away — after returning from Asia, he heads to Germany for his beloved Invictus Games in September and later will travel to Africa solo to film a Netflix docuseries, according to reports — Meghan is on her own as she juggles caring for their kids, Archie, 4, and Lilibet, 2, with work and larger worries. “Being millions in debt is extremely stressful. Sometimes she’s not able to sleep at night because of it,” claims the source, explaining that “keeping up the lavish lifestyle they lead isn’t easy.”

Harry’s confessed they rushed to ink their reported $20 million Spotify deal in 2020 because they were desperate to pay for security after King Charles III cut them off. They also took out a $9.5 million mortgage on a $14.65 million estate in Montecito. Meghan’s admitted they were initially reluctant because “we didn’t have jobs” at the time and it felt like “it wasn’t possible” to buy it. “It’s like ‘I don’t want to go and look at all the things that I can’t afford,’” she explained. “That doesn’t feel good.”

But they did “everything they could” to get the home, she said, and closed the deal. Now, however, their income stream is less secure. “There’s a lot on Meghan’s plate,” says the source, noting that the Sussexes reportedly didn’t get their full Spotify payout since they only produced a single podcast series in more than two years. “This is not the life she expected.”

Yet she’s not without support. Her mother, Doria Ragland, 66, is just a few hours away in L.A., and “on the bright side, Meghan still has support from some A-listers who continue to come to her and Harry’s rescue,” says the source. Tyler Perry, who lent his LA home and security team to the Sussexes when they moved to America, remains a good friend, as do tennis champ Serena Williams and her husband, Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian. “Adele is also in Meghan and Harry’s corner,” says the source of one of the duo’s lesser-known confidantes. “She’s good friends with them both and wants them to succeed. Adele loves them — she still jokes about the years-ago crush she had on Harry.”

Another positive? The Sussexes’ Netflix deal is still intact. Though development of Meghan’s animated children’s show, Pearl, was halted last year, an August 7 announcement revealed that the couple’s Archewell Productions is developing the bestselling romance novel Meet Me at the Lake into a Netflix film, and Harry’s Heart of Invictus docuseries debuts on August 30. “Meghan’s trying to be hopeful,” says the source. “There are good days and bad. But it’s been an uphill battle, to say the least.”

Wisconsin Republicans ask newly elected liberal justice to not hear redistricting case

 MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Republicans who control the Wisconsin Legislature asked that the newest Democratic-backed justice on the state Supreme Court recuse herself from lawsuits seeking to overturn GOP-drawn electoral maps, arguing that she has prejudged the cases.

FILE - Janet Protasiewicz speaks after being sworn in as a Wisconsin Supreme Court justice, Aug. 1, 2023, in Madison, Wis. Republicans who control the Wisconsin Legislature have asked that Protasiewicz not hear lawsuits seeking to overturn GOP-drawn district boundary maps, saying she has prejudged the cases. Republicans argue in their motions filed Wednesday, Aug. 23 with the Wisconsin Supreme Court that Protasiewicz can’t fairly hear the cases because during her campaign for the seat earlier this year she called the Republican-drawn maps “unfair” and “rigged” and said there needs to be “a fresh look at the gerrymandering question.

Republicans argue in their motions filed with the Wisconsin Supreme Court on Tuesday and made public Wednesday that Justice Janet Protasiewicz can't fairly hear the cases because during her campaign for the seat earlier this year she called the Republican-drawn maps “unfair” and “rigged” and said there needs to be “a fresh look at the gerrymandering question.”

“Justice Protasiewicz’s campaign statements reveal that her thumb is very much on the scale in this case,” Republicans argue in their motion with the court.

Protasiewicz, who was backed by Democrats in her winning election in April, never said how she would rule on a redistricting lawsuit. She never committed to recusing herself from hearing the case. Her win gave liberals a 4-3 majority on the court.

Protasiewicz did promise to recuse herself from any case brought by the Wisconsin Democratic Party because it donated nearly $10 million to her campaign. There are two pending redistricting lawsuits, neither of which was brought by the Democratic Party.

However, the Republican-led Legislature argues that because Democrats would benefit from a redrawing of the maps, Protasiewicz must recuse herself from hearing the case. Staying on the case would violate Republicans' constitutional due process rights, they argue.

Republican Assembly Speaker Robin Vos has said that if Protasiewicz does not recuse herself from the redistricting case, he would look into pursuing her impeachment. Republicans have a two-thirds majority in the state Senate, which would be enough votes to remove Protasiewicz from office should the Assembly vote to impeach. However, her replacement would be named by Democratic Gov. Tony Evers.

Protasiewicz began her 10-year term in August. That week, two similar redistricting lawsuits were filed. The Legislature is seeking to intervene in both lawsuits and have Protasiewicz recuse herself from both.

Protasiewicz declined to comment when asked for her reaction to the request and whether she would step away from the cases.

“I appreciate your interest in the Wisconsin Supreme Court,” she said via email. “I do not wish to comment, but thank you very much for reaching out to me.”

Attorneys who brought the two redistricting cases had no immediate comment.

Wisconsin’s Assembly districts rank among the most gerrymandered nationally, with Republicans routinely winning far more seats than would be expected based on their average share of the vote, according to an Associated Press analysis.

Both lawsuits ask that all 132 state lawmakers be up for election that year in newly drawn districts. In Senate districts that are midway through a four-year term in 2024, there would be a special election, with the winners serving two years. The regular four-year cycle would resume again in 2026.

One lawsuit was filed on behalf of voters who support Democrats by Law Forward, a Madison-based liberal law firm, the Stafford Rosenbaum law firm, Election Law Clinic at Harvard Law School, Campaign Legal Center, and the Arnold & Porter law firm.

The other case was brought by voters who support Democratic candidates and several members of the Citizen Mathematicians and Scientists. That group of professors and research scientists submitted proposed legislative maps in 2022, before the state Supreme Court adopted the Republican-drawn ones.

Nick Jonas Adorably Carries His and Priyanka Chopra’s Daughter Malti in an IKEA Basket

 What’s a man gotta do when they take their baby to New York City’s Central Park? If you ask Nick Jonas, the answer is to use a reasonably priced IKEA basket.

Jonas’ wife, Priyanka Chopra Jonas, uploaded an Instagram photo dump of her family’s “August magic” on Tuesday, August 22, sharing several snaps of the couple’s 18-month-old daughter in the Big Apple.

In one photo, the 30-year-old Jonas Brothers singer plopped Malti in an IKEA SNIDAD rattan basket — which retails for $30 — as they walked around the park. Malti looked adorable in a blue onesie and matching sun hat, while her dad opted for a Boot Hill Salon muscle tee and black shorts. Jonas completed his look with a hat of his own, choosing a white baseball cap that he wore backward.

Chopra Jonas, 41, also joined the pair in Central Park. She posted a separate pic of herself watching Malti explore a rock formation on the grounds.

Jonas commented on his wife’s Instagram post with three heart-eye emojis.

The family of three visited Manhattan earlier this month for the Jonas Brothers’ two-night residency at Yankees Stadium. While Nick rocked out on stage with brothers Kevin Jonas and Joe Jonas, Chopra Jonas watched from the crowd in the VIP section.

Chopra Jonas shared even more snaps from their NYC visit on Tuesday. In one, Malti cuddled her Bitty Baby doll while in matching floral pajamas before changing into a custom “M” denim jacket and blush dress to take a peek out of the hotel window.

Chopra Jonas and Nick, who wed in 2018, welcomed their first baby in January 2022 via surrogate. After a 100-day NICU stay, Malti finally came home with her parents.

“It’s been 20 years of hustling and working at breakneck speed. I’ve always been like, ‘What’s the next thing?’ But now I feel I have a center, a sense of calm, because every decision ends up being about her,” Chopra Jonas recalled to British Vogue in February. “I want her to be able to look back and be proud of my choices. I want to do right by her.”

Since welcoming Malti, Chopra Jonas and Nick have brought their daughter wherever they go — including the Jonas Brothers’ current world tour. “My mom’s around, Nick’s parents come in when we have to travel,” Chopra Jonas exclusively told Us Weekly in March. “Both of us have to travel, but you kind of make it work. It takes a village and she’s the greatest gift of our lives.”

She added at the time: “I was raised by a working mother and father and you just kind of [juggle everything]. You rely on the community around you. I was raised by my grandmom, my grandparents when my mom and dad would be at work. And we do the same [for Malti].”

Malti even got the chance to check out her dad and uncles’ Yankees Stadium stage — and Nick’s drum kit — ahead of the opening night of The Tour, which fans caught a glimpse of via his Instagram.

To Trump, Foreign Business Is Scandalous, Unless It’s His Own

 WASHINGTON — After his fourth indictment, bringing his total count of felony charges to 91, former President Donald Trump last week posted a video online accusing President Joe Biden and his family of being criminals.

Former President Donald Trump, a Republican presidential candidate, at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines, Iowa

“The Biden crime family,” he claimed, had received millions of dollars from foreign countries. “I believe we have a compromised president,” Trump said, adding, “He’s a Manchurian candidate. That’s why Crooked Joe is letting other countries walk all over the United States.”


For Trump, outrage is a selective commodity when it comes to presidential families taking millions of dollars from foreign countries. During his four years in the White House and in the more than 2 1/2 years since, Trump and his relatives have been on the receiving end of money from around the globe in sums far greater than anything Hunter Biden, the president’s son, reportedly collected.

Unlike other modern presidents, Trump never gave up control of his sprawling business with its interests in multiple countries, nor did he forswear foreign business even as president. He shattered norms in his money making and unabashed boosting of his family’s company. The luxury hotel he opened down the street from the White House, for example, became the favored destination for lobbyists, dealmakers and foreign governments, including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Bahrain, which paid handsomely for accommodations, galas and more.

Trump also permitted his family to take positions in government that blurred the lines when it came to their private interests. Unlike Hunter Biden, Trump’s daughter Ivanka Trump and son-in-law Jared Kushner both served on the White House staff, where they could shape policies of concern to overseas businesses.

Kushner was heavily involved in setting the administration’s approach to the Middle East and made multiple contacts in the region. After turning in his White House badge, Kushner started a private equity firm with $2 billion in funds from Saudi Arabia and hundreds of millions more from other Arab countries that stood to benefit from U.S. policies and have an interest in a possible second Trump administration.

“The Trump family foreign commercial entanglements were far more numerous, involving dozens of foreign business conflicts,” said Norman Eisen, a lawyer who led unsuccessful court challenges to the former president’s practice of taking foreign money while in office.

The entanglements “implicated those like Jared and Ivanka who were actually working in government, whereas Hunter never did,” Eisen added. “Indeed, Trump himself openly benefited, whereas there’s not a shred of evidence that Biden the elder ever did.”

Hunter Biden’s business dealings have raised concerns because testimony and reports have indicated that he traded on his family name to generate lucrative deals. A former business partner has told congressional investigators that the younger Biden parlayed “the illusion of access to his father” to win over potential partners.

No hard evidence has emerged that Joe Biden, while vice president, personally participated in or profited from the business deals or used his office to benefit his son’s partners.

But Biden’s statements distancing himself from his son’s activities have been undercut by testimony indicating that Hunter put his father on speakerphone with international business associates; the future president talked about casual things like the weather, not business, according to testimony, but it seemed intended to impress Hunter’s associates.

All of which would typically generate scrutiny in Washington, where relatives of presidents have long taken advantage of their positions to make money. Access and celebrity are coins of the realm in the nation’s capital, and a relative who frequents Camp David, enjoys a good seat at a state dinner or rides Air Force One can get phone calls returned. This tradition has turned off many Americans, and even Democrats privately voice discomfort at Hunter Biden’s activities.

“If he traded on his father’s influence, he should be held accountable for that,” Rep. Jim Himes, D-Conn., said on MSNBC recently. “And I’m emphasizing this because you never, ever heard a Republican say the same thing about Donald Trump or his family.”

Republicans investigating the Bidens say they made more than $20 million from foreign sources in China, Ukraine and elsewhere, but a Washington Post analysis of congressional memos indicated that most of the money went to business associates, with $7 million going to the Bidens themselves, mainly Hunter.

“What both Hunter and Jared have in common is that they are the well-educated sons of prominent people, and that their familial ties certainly helped them in business,” said Don Fox, a former general counsel of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics. “That is where the similarities end.

“Hunter never held public office, and a fair amount of his work involving Ukraine occurred when his father was out of office,” Fox continued. The amount of money that Kushner could earn from the funds invested by the Saudis, he added, “dwarfs what anyone ever paid Hunter.”

The analogy to Hunter Biden rankles Kushner, who had a long track record in business before joining government and takes pride in negotiating the Abraham Accords, the diplomatic agreements normalizing relations between Israel and several Arab neighbors.

People close to him argue that the investments from the Saudis and other Arabs were based on trust that he could make money for them, not out of gratitude for policies he promoted. And they noted that the Biden administration has not reversed those policies but instead sought to build on the Abraham Accords.

“There is no factual comparison between Hunter and Jared,” a representative for Kushner said in a statement. “Jared was a successful businessman before entering politics, achieved historic peace and trade agreements, and like many before him, he re-entered business after serving for free in the White House, where he fully complied with the Office of Government Ethics rules.”

Chad Mizelle, the chief legal officer for Affinity Partners, Kushner’s firm, said in a statement, “Partisan politics aside, no one has ever pointed to a specific legal or ethical guideline that Jared or Affinity has violated.”

One of the few Republicans to criticize the Trump family’s blending of government service and foreign business has been Chris Christie, the former New Jersey governor running against the former president for the Republican nomination. “The Trump family have been involved in grifting for quite some time,” he said on CNN in June.

Christie, who as a U.S. attorney prosecuted Kushner’s father, singled out the business dealings of the former president’s son-in-law.

“Jared Kushner, six months after he leaves the White House, gets $2 billion from the Saudi sovereign wealth fund,” he said. “What was Jared Kushner doing in the Middle East? We had Rex Tillerson and Mike Pompeo as secretaries of state. We didn’t need Jared Kushner. He was put there to make those relationships, and then he cashed in on those relationships when he left the office.”

While in the White House, Kushner bolstered ties between the United States and Saudi Arabia, convincing his father-in-law to make the kingdom his first foreign destination as president, helping broker billions of dollars in arms sales and forging a close relationship with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Kushner defended Crown Prince Mohammed after Saudi operatives murdered Jamal Khashoggi, a columnist for The Washington Post and a U.S. resident. The CIA concluded that Crown Prince Mohammed ordered the 2018 killing. In 2021, Crown Prince Mohammed’s sovereign wealth fund approved the $2 billion investment in Kushner’s new firm despite objections from the fund’s own advisers.

Rep. James Comer, R-Ky. and chair of the House Oversight Committee, which is investigating the Bidens, acknowledged concerns with Kushner’s Saudi deal.

“I think that what Kushner did crossed the line of ethics,” Comer said when asked by CNN’s Jake Tapper this month. “What Christie said, it happened after he left office. Still no excuse, Jake. But it happened after he left office. And Jared Kushner actually has a legitimate business. This money from the Bidens happened while Joe Biden was vice president, while he was flying to those countries.”

In fact, as Comer’s committee reports indicate, some of Hunter Biden’s overseas money came while his father was vice president, but a significant share came afterward.

Spokespeople for Comer and Trump did not respond to requests for comment.

Trump has never been allergic to foreign money. Even as a candidate in 2016, he secretly pursued a deal to build a Trump Tower in Moscow until after he had effectively secured the Republican nomination. One of his lawyers reached out to the Kremlin for support for the project — the same Kremlin that Trump would interact with a few months later as president.

To address concerns about foreign financial interests, Trump promised not to pursue new business overseas while in office, but he did not give up his many existing moneymaking ventures in other countries, and his company, the Trump Organization, formally run by his sons Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, continued to expand operations abroad.

During Trump’s four years in the White House, the Trump Organization received 66 foreign trademarks, according to a report by the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, with most of them coming from China but others from Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Peru, the Philippines, Indonesia, Mexico, the United Arab Emirates and the European Union.

Foreign entities were good customers for Trump. While in office, 145 foreign officials from 75 governments visited Trump properties, and foreign governments or affiliated groups hosted 13 events at his hotels and resorts, according to the ethics group report.

While Trump in last week’s video described Biden as a puppet of the Chinese, falsely claiming that “China has paid him a fortune,” his own family has had significant financial ties to Beijing. Beyond the trademarks, Forbes calculated that a Trump business during his presidency collected at least $5.4 million in rent from the state-controlled Industrial and Commercial Bank of China.

Kushner’s family negotiated with Chinese and Qatari entities to rescue its debt-saddled New York City tower at 666 Fifth Avenue, eventually brokering a $1.1 billion lease deal with a U.S. company whose investors included Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund. (By that time, Kushner had sold his share of the tower to a family trust of which he was not a beneficiary, and people involved in the deal said the Qataris did not know about the deal beforehand.)

Ivanka Trump, for her part, initially kept her own clothing and accessories line while serving on the White House staff and received approval for 16 trademarks from China in 2018 before later deciding to shut down the business.

Despite lawsuits by Eisen and others alleging violations of the Constitution’s emoluments clause, none of the Trump family’s overseas deal-making was ever determined to be illegal by any authority. Nor has any of Hunter Biden’s.

But in Donald Trump’s telling, one is enough to compromise a president, and the other is not something to talk about.

Canada's emergency alert system has been busy with wildfires and extreme weather. Here's how it works

 

Some experts say system works well for weather, but could be better

With the increase in wildfires and other extreme weather events this year, more Canadians have been receiving emergency alerts on their phones, or through other media, directing them to take precautions or even evacuate their homes. 

The alerts come via Canada's National Public Alerting System, used for everything from Amber Alerts and alerts about dangerous people to storm warnings and evacuation orders. But most are about weather — and the number sent due to extreme weather, and especially wildfires, has soared in recent years. 

In 2021, it sent 175 alerts to Canadians, and 113 of them were related to extreme weather, according to Alert Ready the alert system's brand name. 

In 2022, the total jumped to 824, the majority (719) for severe weather or wildfires.

And so far in 2023, there have been 980 alerts, with almost all — 937 — related to wildfires or severe weather. 

Experts who study disaster management say the system works quite well for weather alerts. But as some Canadians have observed or experienced first hand, the system is not foolproof, and those experts say it could work even better. 

Vehicles on a highway behind a sign saying "Road Open".
Residents leave Yellowknife on Aug. 18 after receiving emergency evacuation orders due to wildfires. 

"The technology, the operation, the perception and the confidence of the public in the system all need to work together for these systems to function correctly," said Jack Rozdilsky, an associate professor of disaster and emergency management at York University in Toronto. 

The challenge, according to Jean Slick, professor of disaster and emergency management at Royal Roads University in Victoria, "has been, is the message sent? And is the message sent in a timely manner?"

How do alerts work?

The emergency alert system is multi-faceted and used by officials at the federal, provincial and territorial level, and by federal and provincial police forces.

The issuer enters the alert into the National Alert Aggregation and Dissemination (NAAD) System — the technological infrastructure owned and operated by the Ontario-based company Pelmorex, which also owns The Weather Network. The NAAD then sends the alert to the distributor, be it mobile service providers, cable and satellite companies, radio and television broadcasters — or all of the above — which then sends it to the public. 

Wireless devices must be connected to an LTE or 5G network to receive an alert; a challenge if cell access goes down due to the emergency. 

"We don't want to be dependent on any one technology," said Slick. "What we want to do is have multiple channels of communication with people. And those multiple channels will be disseminated in different ways." 

That might mean also sending the alert through social media — or even some more low-tech options, says Rozdilsky.

"Infrastructure we depend on can become fragile or damaged, such as electricity that powers internet devices or the towers that are needed to communicate," he said.

"It would be foolish for us not to think of having backups for the backup," pointing to measures such as signs on highways, going door-to-door, or even loudspeakers on a vehicle in situations where time permits. 

Plans within the plans

Slick says good emergency alert planning gives the public time to prepare. 

That might mean sending out a message alerting people to a risk that's being tracked, such as a fire or storm, in advance of sending an actual warning.  

"That helps them to pay more attention to and be more cognizant of warning messages when they come."

She also says officials should have a clear understanding of what triggers the next alert and the one after that.  

"There should be a plan on when to issue warnings — and within a plan, one of the things that you have are trigger points. And you have trigger points for different hazards."

For example, in the event of a wildfire, officials might have sent an evacuation warning. But she says there needs to be a clear understanding that if the fire crosses a certain boundary, another alert will be sent raising the warning to an evacuation order. 

Blond woman with glasses, smiling
Jean Slick, professor of disaster and emergency management at Royal Roads University in Victoria, says it's important not to depend on just one technology, but to use all measures available to each the most people. 

The content of the alert is also crucial, says Slick. It has to talk about the hazard, personalize it, describe what's going to happen, and talk about the consequences of not acting. 

"Those messages also need to have the protective actions you can take — which is shelter in place or to evacuate, or to stay alert and monitor on an hourly basis for further updates."

Any notion that sending out emergency alerts could cause panic, said Slick, is a myth. The idea dates back to the Cold War era, when governments worried that people would panic in the event of a nuclear incident. That led to the study of disaster management — and a discovery of just the opposite.

"What research shows is that human behaviour in disasters is almost — not completely, but almost always — pro-social," Slick said. "People will help, they'll support. They'll do things to help each other, help themselves and help one another. You just have to give them the information."

Timing is everything

When the people of Yellowknife were told they had to get out within 36 hours, officials made sure to tell those who had no vehicle and had to get on a flight to bring their pets, too. 

It was a simple but important move that, Slick says, might have been enough to prevent delays among people who didn't want to leave a pet behind. 

A woman sits by the conveyor belt at a baggage claims area with her dog in its crate.
A woman waits with her dog for a connecting flight at the airport in Edmonton, after being forced from their Yellowknife home due to wildfires, on Aug. 17. 

Equally important, she says, is for officials in rural areas to take into account livestock — and consider issuing pre-evacuation warnings. 

"People who have a livelihood and who are trying to get their horses or cattle or farm animals or pets to safety are often delayed in their leaving because of that," she said. "That early warning is important about impending threat so that people can start to take protective actions." 

Some phones still don't get alerts 

The CRTC, which regulates the alert system, says all cell phones sold by providers in Canada must be able to receive the alerts, meaning they must be LTE/5G capable.

But anyone who didn't get their phone from a Canadian provider or is still using older models may not receive the alerts.

In an email to CBC News, the CRTC said it is looking into how to "improve the reliability of networks and reduce the impacts of outages" for 911 calls and public alerts, including ways that phones could still get alerts in the event of an outage, such as over WiFi. 

Alerts also don't work if a phone is silenced or on airplane mode, though a silenced phone which is connected to a network will still get the message on its screen. 

Martin Bélanger, director of public alerting at Pelmorex, says emergency management officials will often use other measures to reach the public when sending an alert, including social media, their own websites or apps, or even news releases. 

"And if someone may not receive [the alert] because they didn't have a phone, or they didn't have the opportunity to listen to the radio or watch television, then they may also be in close proximity to someone who may have received the alert and they can also be informed of the situation," he said. 

Picture being on a downtown street corner or even just in a home where multiple people live. Your phone may not go off, but chances are another one near you will, or someone you know will send you the important information. 

Of course, no alert will work in the middle of the night if you are asleep with your phone turned off or on silent. 

Six people sit while watching a hillside burn in the distance.
People watch the wildfires from downtown Kelowna, B.C., on Thursday. 

Would old-fashioned sirens work better? 

Hawaii has an extensive outdoor siren alert system, more than 400 spread over four counties that are used to alert people primarily in the event of a tsunami, though according to the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency (HI-EMA), they can also be used to alert people of a hurricane, volcano or wildfire.

But no sirens went off as flames quickly engulfed Maui on Aug. 8. 

Maui's emergency management chief later said the sirens purposely weren't used because people associate them with tsunami danger, and might have led people to move toward the fire. 

"The public is trained to seek higher ground in the event that the siren is sounded," said Herman Andaya.

Though he said he stood by the decision, Andaya resigned from his position a day later. 

Several jurisdictions in Canada still have sirens, including tsunami warning systems in B.C., and those near nuclear power plants and other industrial areas in Ontario.

A cylindrical white siren is seen against a blue sky with trees in the background
One of Maui's many warning sirens is shown near Maui's Maalaea Harbor, on Aug. 14. The sirens were not sounded as wildfires engulfed the island.