… provider of organic and value-added organic fruits and vegetables today announced … of Brazilian ginger across its European customer base, Organto has … Organto and CEO of Organto Europe B.V. “We … and Asia.
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Organto Expands Organic Ginger Supply
Freedom From Religion Foundation to challenge North Dakota’s Ten Commandments Law
<figure class="gtxfimage alignleft"><img width="300" height="225" src="https://wpcdn.us-midwest-1.vip.tn-cloud.net/www.kvrr.com/content/uploads/2021/02/screenshot-2021-02-02-113718-300x225.png" class="wp-image-192640 attachment-medium size-medium wp-post-image" alt="" srcset="https://wpcdn.us-midwest-1.vip.tn-cloud.net/www.kvrr.com/content/uploads/2021/02/screenshot-2021-02-02-113718-300x225.png 300w, https://wpcdn.us-midwest-1.vip.tn-cloud.net/www.kvrr.com/content/uploads/2021/02/screenshot-2021-02-02-113718.png 332w" sizes="(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px"/></figure>FARGO (KVRR) – A non-profit group that works to oppose religious displays on public property says a new North Dakota law that allows the Ten Commandments in public schools is unconstitutional.
“The North Dakota law flouts the Constitution in an attempt to sneak religion and Christian nationalism into public schools,” according to the Freedom from Religion Foundation.
“Of course, FFRF will challenge any displays that go up in schools” the foundation said.
Burgum recently signed a bill designed to protect schools and teachers from lawsuits arising from posting the Ten Commandments in classrooms. Some attorneys and school officials also warned the legislation is unconstitutional and would spur costly and unwinnable legal fights.
Hoping to fend off legal challenges, the bill was amended with a requirement that the Ten Commandments be included in a display with other historical documents.
The FFRF says the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that Ten Commandments displays in public schools violate the Establishment Clause.
“The North Dakota Legislature and governor have colluded in a cynical exercise,” according to FFRF Co-President Annie Laurie Gaylor. “All the last minute window-dressing doesn’t change the constitutionally sinful nature of the law.”
What solutions to population decline in Europe’s regions?
What the EU can do about population change
Demographic change can pose a major challenge for the EU. The European Parliament has examined the causes and possible solutions around this issue.
The population dynamic in the EU has an impact on various aspects of life, from economic and social repercussions to cultural and environmental effects.
Though the full consequences of the Covid-19 crisis are still unknown, the pandemic is likely to affect birth and death rates as well as migration flows in Europe.
Demographic trends in the EU
- Depopulation of certain regions: sharp declines especially in Eastern and Southern Europe, due to the combination of intra-EU migration from these areas and low fertility rates
- Brain drain/gain: “sending regions” are losing high skills and competencies to the advantage of “receiving regions” as a result of permanent emigration
- The gap between urban and rural areas: rural areas make up to 44% of the EU’s surface, but 78% of the European population lives in urban areas or functional urban areas
- Ageing population: due to increasing life expectancy, 30.3% of the population is projected to be aged 65 years or older by 2070 (compared to 20.3% in 2019)
- Population decline: in 2015 the EU experienced the first natural population decline (registering more deaths than births); the population is expected to decrease significantly in the long run
Regions with a rapidly shrinking population are affected by a severe gap in the provision of social services (healthcare, cultural), physical (transport) and ICT connectivity, education and labour opportunities.
Main causes behind regional demographic changes
Depopulated regions are often low-income rural or post-industrial areas, with fewer job opportunities. The exodus of younger, skilled workers has further affected ageing, generation renewal and agricultural development.
The free movement of labour is one of the four freedoms of the EU and its single market. The economic crisis of 2008 led to young educated professionals from Southern and Eastern Europe moving to North-Western Europe.
The Covid-19 crisis is likely to encourage this trend. Reduced economic activity and unemployment are expected to generate a new wave of migration by young people both within and between EU countries.
What the European Parliament wants
MEPs want the demographic challenge to be a priority for the EU, alongside climate issues and the digital transition. A coordinated approach – integrating the principles of sustainability, greening and digitalisation across different EU policies – would also contribute to reversing negative demographic trends.
National and local authorities are equally important in the response to demographic changes. As partners in the Recovery and Resilience Facility, they are best placed to come up with recovery plans for the most vulnerable regions.
The EU should not neglect the rural and remote regions in its mobility strategy: transport networks can halt depopulation by reinforcing rural-urban connectivity.
Rural tourism could play an important role in addressing depopulation by boosting job creation and the economic and demographic diversification of rural areas.
The pandemic has revealed a digital divide, affecting in particular elderly people and those living in less developed regions. Investments in the digital sector should enable a fair and equal transition towards a digital economy and a digital online education system accessible to all citizens.
The spread of teleworking during the Covid-19 crisis might help reverse depopulation trends in rural areas, making it possible for young educated people to stay in areas which they would otherwise leave.
Tackling demographic imbalances increases the economic, social and territorial cohesion of the Union and is a way to counter radicalisation.
Hospital ministry service courses in Moscow
With the blessing of His Holiness Patriarch Kirill, on April 19, 2021, at the Hospital of St. Alexis, a 5-day course for clergy began on organizing spiritual assistance to the sick in medical institutions. Classes have been led by the chairman of the Synodal Charity Department, Bishop Panteleimon of Verey, representatives of the Hospital Ministry Commission under the Diocesan Council of Moscow and the Moscow Health Department, experts of the Synodal Charity Department, Diakonia.ru reports.
The course participants will be told about the pastoral ministry in the hospital. They will get acquainted with the peculiarities of caring for patients with COVID-19 and palliative patients, the psychological aspects of communicating with patients in the hospital. Participants will also learn how to use personal protective equipment when visiting patients with coronavirus infection.
“After the past year, the doors of many hospitals have opened for us. Doctors ask us to come to the sick, comfort them, support, organize assistance in their care, bring sisters of mercy and volunteers with us, ”says the head of the Synodal Charity Department, Vicar of His Holiness the Patriarch, Bishop Panteleimon of Verey. “We cannot but respond to this call and help those who are suffering, who are on the brink of death.”
End of last year a special group of hospital priests has been created in Moscow, who bypass hospital departments, visit the sick on call. The round-the-clock telephone of the Moscow Hospital Commission is +7 903 660-30-40 now accepts up to 20 calls daily. The number of requests is increasing.
Priests wishing to help in the spiritual care of the sick in medical institutions can sign up for courses at the link: https://bit.ly/kurs0421
The course program can be found on the Pastor portal for clergy.
From April 2, 2020 to April 16, 2021, priests from the special group made 1998 visits to people with coronavirus, suspected coronavirus and dying without symptoms of coronavirus. During this time, they visited 57 hospitals. Priests always visit coronavirus patients wearing protective equipment.
Photo: Pelagia Zamyatina. Priests from a special group at the temporary COVID hospital at VDNKh.
First debate and briefing on adequate minimum wages in the EU | News | European Parliament
, https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20210419IPR02304/
Antitrust: Commission fines three EU railway companies €48 million for customer allocation cartel
European Commission Press release Brussels, 20 Apr 2021 The European Commission has fined railway companies Österreichische Bundesbahnen (ÖBB), Deutsche Bahn (DB) and Société Nationale des Chemins de fer belges / Nationale Maatschappij der Belgische Spoorwegen (SNCB) a total of €48 million for breaching EU antitrust rules.
Pupils who follow a religion do better in class… even if they are not studying at a faith school – Daily Mail
- Religious children aged 14 typically go on to pass more GCSEs than their peers
- The difference amounts to more than a third of an extra GCSE on average
- The advantage appears to stem from belief itself rather than faith schools
Teenagers who believe in God are likely to get better exam results than those who don’t, a major study has found.
Children aged 14 who say that faith is important in their lives typically go on to pass more GCSEs than non-believing pupils.
The difference amounts to more than a third of an extra GCSE on average.
Teenagers who believe in God are likely to get better exam results than those who don’t, a major study has found
The inquiry, based on questionnaires completed by more than 8,000 teenagers, said the advantage appears to stem from religious belief itself and has nothing to do with whether a pupil goes to an academically strong faith school.
Nor is it connected to self-confidence, work ethic, sociability or the sense of control that young people have over their lives – qualities often linked to children from stable families with good incomes.
The findings, assembled by Lancaster University researchers and unveiled at a Royal Economic Society conference, will provide food for thought for parents anxious to get their child into a high-status faith-based state school.
The report said: ‘Belief is more important than the faith of the institution.’
Researchers said there are indications that pupils with spiritual faith go on to do well at A-Level and have a higher chance of getting into a selective Russell Group university, but their figures are not robust enough to prove it.
Children aged 14 who say that faith is important in their lives typically go on to pass more GCSEs than non-believing pupils
However the findings do show, they said, that teenagers who go to faith schools are more likely to hold religious beliefs when they reach the age of 25, and that faith schools do better than other secondary schools across a range of non-academic measures including suppressing bullying and winning approval from parents.
The evidence adds to the mystery of why holding religious faith appears to confer benefits. Well-being surveys routinely find that Christians and believers of other faiths are happier and more confident than others.
The findings were drawn from the Government’s National Pupil Database and from the Next Steps survey that has been tracking pupils in 650 schools since 2004. In the survey students were asked: ‘How important is your faith to the way you live your life?’
The academics looked at pupils from the age of 14 to 25, and they concentrated mainly on protestant and Roman Catholic Christians. The thinking of Muslim pupils was discounted because almost all professed religious belief – only 20 said they were not believers – and as a result no effective comparison could be made.
Researcher Andrew McKendrick said that teenagers ‘who are more faithful tend to achieve more passes and better grades at GCSE. There is also some evidence that academic test scores at age 18 and likelihood of attending university are also positively affected.’
He added: ‘We find big effects on GCSE attainment – a third of an extra pass for the faithful compared with the unfaithful. That is big compared to the average of six passes.’
Sierra Leone: European Union brings over 1,2 billion SLL in aid to Freetown fire victims
In response to the devastating fire incident in the capital city of Sierra Leone (Freetown) on 24 March 2021, which left 1,600 families homeless and more than 400 people injured, the European Union has provided €100 000 (1,218,912,700 Sierra Leonean Leones) in emergency funding. Funds will help the Sierra Leone Red Cross Society in assisting the victims with emergency support for shelter and basic non-food items through cash, but also food, psychosocial support and safe water and sanitation to prevent waterborne and hygiene-related diseases outbreaks.
Families also need support to restart their daily activities to avoid slipping into extreme poverty and hunger.The aid will benefit the 1,000 most vulnerable of them (7,000 people) who have lost their homes, food stocks, money and other valuables. Priority will be given to families with members with disabilities, the elderly, lactating mothers, pregnant women and children under 5 and households headed by women.
This funding to the Sierra Leone Red Cross is part of the EU’s overall contribution to the Disaster Relief Emergency Fund (DREF) of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC).
Background
The European Union and its Member States are the world’s leading donor of humanitarian aid. Relief assistance is an expression of European solidarity with people in need all around the world. It aims to save lives, prevent and alleviate human suffering, and safeguard the integrity and human dignity of populations affected by natural disasters and human-made crises.
Through the European Commission’s Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations department, the European Union helps millions of victims of conflict and disasters every year. With headquarters in Brussels and a global network of field offices, the European Union provides assistance to the most vulnerable people on the basis of humanitarian needs.
The European Union is signatory to a €3 million humanitarian delegation agreement with the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) to support the Federation’s Disaster Relief Emergency Fund (DREF). Funds from the DREF are mainly allocated to “small-scale” disasters – those that do not give rise to a formal international appeal.
The Disaster Relief Emergency Fund was established in 1985 and is supported by contributions from donors. Each time a National Red Cross or Red Crescent Society needs immediate financial support to respond to a disaster, it can request funds from the DREF. For small-scale disasters, the IFRC allocates grants from the Fund, which can then be replenished by the donors. The delegation agreement between the IFRC and ECHO enables the latter to replenish the DREF for agreed operations (that fit in with its humanitarian mandate) up to a total of €3 million.
For more information, please visit the European Commission’s website.
For further information, please contact:
Hilaire Avril
Regional Information Officer for West and Central Africa
European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations (ECHO)
Tel:+221 77 740 92 17
[email protected]
DG ECHO Website:
https://ec.europa.eu/echo/index_en
Twitter and Facebook accounts:
https://twitter.com/eu_echo
https://twitter.com/ECHO_WAfrica
https://www.facebook.com/ec.humanitarian.aid
Meteorologist Sven Sundgaard sues KARE 11, claiming he was fired over his sexual orientation, religion
Filed Thursday, April 15, the lawsuit includes additional claims of a hostile work environment, defamation and violation of the Minnesota Human Rights Act.
<p>Sundgaard is suing for back pay since the day he was fired, which the suit says equals at least $320,000, assuming the trial takes place in a year’s time. He’s also seeking up to $25,000 in punitive damages.</p> <p>KARE 11 denied the allegations in a statement to the media: “One of our core values as a station is inclusion. We are committed to maintaining a respectful workplace free from all forms of discrimination and harassment.”</p> <p>The station hired Sundgaard in 2006, and soon after he began telling his co-workers he was gay. In 2010, he converted to Judaism.</p>
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</div> <p>When Sundgaard appeared on the cover of local LGBTQ magazine Lavender in 2007, he said the news director at the time, Tom Lindner, was irate and asked Sundgaard, “What are people going to think?” Sundgaard said he reported the comment to human resources but never received a follow-up.</p> <p>After converting to Judaism, Sundgaard said, news director Jane Helmke asked whether he “still believed Jesus was the Messiah.” Sundgaard called the comment “invasive” and said it made him uncomfortable and unsure how to respond.</p> <p>The lawsuit also details an incident from early 2011 when Lindner allegedly sent Sundgaard “a hostile email regarding a promotional photoshoot Sundgaard had done, copying many coworkers.” An open-door meeting with Lindner ended with the news director screaming “Get the (expletive) out of my office,” according to Sundgaard, who said that once again a report to human resources went nowhere.</p> <p>According to the lawsuit, Sundgaard reported “similar incidents of differential treatment toward him based, in part, on his sexual orientation and prior reports of discrimination or harassment. No matter how many times he reported, the hostility and differential treatment continued.”</p> <p>The alleged incidents include delayed responses to time-off requests and management’s demand “to know his whereabouts at all times.”</p>
<p>Sundgaard claims that in 2017, management would not approve time off for him to appear as a speaker at a National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association conference or to spend time with his mother, who was in treatment for late-stage cancer, on her birthday. Sundgaard claims he told the news director he was going to take up the issue with Tegna and was told it was a station decision, not a corporate decision. Soon after, Sundgaard said Tegna issued him a warning for insubordinate and unacceptable behavior.</p> <p>About a week later, Sundgaard emailed upper management claiming the move was retaliatory and that, based on management’s “mistreatment, double standards and singling out” during his tenure that management did not want him to speak about his experience at the station as an openly gay on-air personality.</p> <p>In November 2017, Sundgaard said management issued a written warning about his “poor judgment” for a “sexually loaded” comment he made during a newscast when he said “I guess size really does matter” in response to a news story about whether Minnesota or Wisconsin had more lakes.</p> <p>The lawsuit also details what Sundgaard said are the station’s inconsistently applied social media policies. In April 2020, Sundgaard used Facebook to repost a comment from Minneapolis Rabbi Michael Adam Latz that criticized those protesting coronavirus-spurred public health restrictions around the U.S. and compared them to “white nationalist Nazi sympathizer gun fetishist miscreants.”</p> <p>The repost got public attention after right-leaning website Alpha News reported on it, which led to criticism from former congressman and media personality Jason Lewis, who tweeted “Today’s forecast: mostly sunny w/ a chance of idiocy … #Covid_19 models are about as accurate as his forecasts. @kare11 should fire him!”</p>
<p>Sundgaard said he removed the repost that night, told management he would stick to talking about the weather on social media and that he wanted to “discuss a remedy that would stop the hostility.” Sundgaard was fired the next day.</p> <p>At the time, news of Sundgaard’s dismissal made national headlines. He has since started doing forecasts on social media and for the local blog Bring Me the News.</p> <p>In a statement to Bring Me The News, Sundgaard said: “I’ve been overwhelmed and forever grateful for the outpouring of support I have received over the last year. I hope to continue to receive your support as I embark upon this difficult journey that will highlight the unfair treatment to which I was subjected. While a lawsuit is not ideal for anyone, I believe it is important to take action to prevent what happened to me from happening to others. I do this also, for the countless young people who have thanked me for being an openly gay man, making it easier for them to be true to themselves. My late mom always taught me to stick up for myself.”</p>
The road to COP26 starts in urban biocanteens
Small towns, mega-cities, districts, regions, federal states, all sort of subnational territorities have at least two things in common: their inhabitants need to eat and, at the same time, they find themselves on a planet where that same need is put at risk by climate change.
Some of them realised that food deserved a place of honour in a global revolution. Tackling the climate emergency through food policies, while calling on national governments to act, seemed appropriate to the local leaders who decided to speak with a unified voice and developed the Glasgow declaration on food and climate. Launched in December 2020 one year before the next UN climate conference (COP26, in Glasgow), the declaration is more than a commitment: it is already giving its fruits.
On March 23, the event ‘COP26 is already happening!’, supported by the EU regional development fund, URBACT and BioCanteens, presented the example of schools feeding children with organic and locally produced meals as a powerful way to value the environment. The online conference was moderated by Catherine André, journalist and cofounder of Voxeurop.
“Europe made some progress, but the Member states are raising obstacles,” said Marc Tarabella, Belgian mep member of the S&D group and the mayor of his native village, Anthisnes. “We see that it’s very difficult to change the mindset and we see a lot of resistance at a local level, people are looking for the lowest price at the expense of quality. Instead I think that we should enable people to have a choice down to the lowest level.”
Born with that goal, the URBACT programme helps cities find sustainable solutions and make a positive impact through networking and knowledge sharing. It also endorses the Glasgow declaration.
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Among the networks funded by URBACT, BioCanteens’ partners come from all corners of Europe: Mouans-Sartoux (France), GAL Pays de Condruses (Belgium), Rosignano-Marittimo (Italy), Torres Vedras (Portugal), Trikala (Greece), Troyan (Bulgaria) and Vaslui (Romania).
At a biocanteen, food becomes rich in meanings. “Where do you learn food education if not within the family?” asked François Jégou, lead expert of BioCanteens Transfer Network. The school has to take that role and teach the subject at lunch time. After all, today’s children will be future creators, reaserchers, voters, consumers, and leaders. It makes sense to start giving them the best we have to offer and the kind of food we will eat in 2045 and further.
Since translating food democracy into practice requires non comformist beliefs, however, biocanteens remain an exception. “When I look around in the world, I don’t have the impression that what we will discuss at COP is already happening: it’s rather the opposite,” said Jégou. “But, if I look more carefully, there are places were transition started long ago and were I can already see at least in part what a more sustainable city could look like.”
What is the secret of these places? According to Jégou, there are five: an ongoing fight against food waste, job creation along the municipal food chain, sustainable land use planning, a discussion around healthy food, and integrate governance.
Yet, “good practice is dangerous word” as it implies a copy-paste approach. The “proud of it” approach, instead, suggests a reinterpretation whenever a functioning system is transferred somewhere else.
To ensure a fairer access to quality food for all, making the case for positive solutions to local challenges is key. In particular, three issues were highlighted during the event: the public procurement constraint for food supply, the construction of participatory food governance and the relocalisation of agriculture.
Located in the real estate and tourism paradise of French Riviera, Mouans-Sartoux manage to become an anticonformism’s champion. Although public procurement contracts are usually unconvenient for small local producers, the city established a special agreement and is today calling on the EU Parliament to fight for food exception in public procurement.
It is “neither protectionism nor an economic revolution, it is just some collective intelligence and common sense,” according to Gilles Pérole, deputy-mayor for childhood, education and food at Mouans-Sartoux. “Buying turnip or a pen is not the same thing. Food is an essential good to life and therefore it must be protected with public procurement.”
In Spain, Mollet del Vallès became one of the first cities to pass a local food policy back in 2015. “Children had the possibility to collaborate” and “learned how to make healthier dietary choices at individual level but through active democratic participation, they also developped a sense of corresponsibility in the city wellbeing and made proposals that were then integrated in the city food strategy,” explained Albert Garcia Macian, head of the EU project and international relations office at Mollet del Vallès.
Similarly, the Swedish city of Södertälje has worked with a number of different development projects and activities to increase sustainability since the beginning of the 2000s. “We have been supporting our small scale local vegetables production both in the countryside and in the city, combining activities to support unemployed people, running a project called ‘Matlust’ (food for joy) for small and medium enterprises to help them become more sustainable, successful and employ more people,” said Sara Jervfors, head of diet unit at Södertälje (Sweden).
Even if the biocanteens are still rare, their experience will be inspiring others to follow. For this, Europe is a great catalyst thanks to all the networks already existing.
For instance, Un Plus Bio is a French organisation accompanying cities towards positive change in the food system and part of it is the so-called Club of Territories. The coordinator Amandine Pieux said “it became the space where local authorities share their practices using public catering as a tool for ambitious food policies.”
“The speed of the ongoing discussions in Europe is very different and the food debate has not been a priority in some countries,” said Cecilia Delgado, researcher and director of the portugues platform Alimentar Cidades Sustentaveis. “So there is a need to fuel in the local debate in local languages before joining the European debate and there is a need for peer to peer learning.”
Nowadays, European cities are really at the forefront of the ecological transition. With a growing population and a growing vulnerability due to climate change, all types of communities and subnational governments can’t afford the privilege to wait and see what happens of them.
Scotland is showing the way with projects like Nourish Scotland, which promotes the human right to food by integrating, localising and democratising it. Nourish Scotland is campaigning for “a good food nation”, said the food policy project officer, Sofie Quist. “In the context of climate change, we are working especially with policy makers, farmers, scientists and communities to understand how everyone can be part of the solution to climate change, in particular food producers.” And that’s a good part of the Glasgow declaration.
Next November, Glasgow will be the place to bring all these messages. At COP26, Member states will then be asked to to take up the many positive local examples and actively support the development of progressive and integrated food policies at all levels.