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Venture Global LNG Plaquemines plant ships first cargo, bound for Germany – Baird Maritime

US LNG company Venture Global LNG’s tanker Venture Bayou has departed the Plaquemines export plant in Louisiana for Germany, carrying the first LNG cargo produced at the facility, the company said on Thursday.
Venture Bayou, one of the company’s fleet of nine new LNG ships, is being sent to German utility company EnBW, the company said.
Venture Global has now sent more than 60 LNG cargoes to Germany since 2022, it added.
According to ship tracking data from financial firm LSEG, the vessel is expected to head to Brunsbuttel, Germany and will likely arrive there by January 8.
The US is the world’s largest exporter of the superchilled gas and a key provider of gas to Europe in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Like Venture Global’s Calcasieu Pass project, Plaquemines has exported its first cargo well ahead of the US Department of Energy’s requirement to commence exports within seven years from issuance of the Non-FTA export authorization, the company said.
“In just five years, Venture Global has built, produced and launched exports from two large-scale LNG projects which has never been done before in the history of the industry,” the company’s CEO Mike Sabel said in a statement.
Venture Global has two operating plants in Louisiana, including the 20 million metric tons per annum (MTPA) Plaquemines export plant, which recently began producing first LNG.
The plant currently under construction in Louisiana is already over budget by more than $2.35 billion.
Plaquemines will produce and export LNG while construction and commissioning continues for the remainder of the project’s 36 trains and associated facilities, it said.
When fully completed Plaquemines will be one of the largest LNG plants in the world and help keep the US ranked as the world’s largest LNG exporter.
The company earlier this month filed for what could be one of the largest initial public offerings globally next year.
(Reporting by Anjana Anil, Swati Verma and Ashitha Shivaprasad in Bengaluru; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
Baird Maritime

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Lottery results LIVE: National Lottery Set For Life draw tonight, December 26, 2024… – The Sun

THE National Lottery Set For Life numbers are in and it's time to find out if you've won the top prize of £10,000 every month for 30 years.
Could tonight's jackpot see you start ticking off that bucket list every month or building your own start-up as a budding entrepreneur?
You can find out by checking your ticket against tonight's numbers below.
Good luck!
Tonight’s National Lottery Set For Life numbers are: 09, 11, 24, 29, 36 and the Life Ball is 06.
The first National Lottery draw was held on November 19 1994 when seven winners shared a jackpot of £5,874,778.
The largest amount ever to be won by a single ticket holder was £42million, won in 1996.
Gareth Bull, a 49-year-old builder, won £41million in November, 2020 and ended up knocking down his bungalow to make way for a luxury manor house with a pool.
Sue Davies, 64, bought a lottery ticket to celebrate ending five months of shielding during the pandemic — and won £500,000.
Sandra Devine, 36, accidentally won £300k – she intended to buy her usual £100 National Lottery Scratchcard, but came home with a much bigger prize.
The biggest jackpot ever to be up for grabs was £66million in January last year, which was won by two lucky ticket holders.
Another winner, Karl managed to bag £11million aged just 23 in 1996.
The odds of winning the lottery are estimated to be about one in 14million – BUT you've got to be in it to win it.
©News Group Newspapers Limited in England No. 679215 Registered office: 1 London Bridge Street, London, SE1 9GF. “The Sun”, “Sun”, “Sun Online” are registered trademarks or trade names of News Group Newspapers Limited. This service is provided on News Group Newspapers’ Limited’s Standard Terms and Conditions in accordance with our Privacy & Cookie Policy. To inquire about a licence to reproduce material, visit our Syndication site. View our online Press Pack. For other inquiries, Contact Us. To see all content on The Sun, please use the Site Map. The Sun website is regulated by the Independent Press Standards Organisation (IPSO)
Our journalists strive for accuracy but on occasion we make mistakes. For further details of our complaints policy and to make a complaint please click this link: thesun.co.uk/editorial-complaints/

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Coin Master free spin and coin links for today (December 26, 2024) – Sportskeeda

Moon Active released three Coin Master links on December 26, 2024. Two links were posted on the game’s official Facebook page, one granting 50 spins and the other providing 10 spins and seven million coins. Another link was posted on the title’s Threads account, offering 50 spins upon redemption.
This article lists all Moon Active links available on December 26, 2024, along with a guide to claiming freebies from them.
Looking for Crossword hints & solutions? Check out latest NYT Mini Crossword Answers, LA Times Crossword Answers, and USA Today Crossword Answers
Here are the links that will grant you seven million coins and 110 spins in Coin Master upon redemption:
It’s important to note that these links will expire after three days and won’t grant any freebies beyond that period. Additionally, each account can only claim the freebies once.
To redeem Coin Master links, start by activating Wi-Fi or mobile data on your device and ensure the game is updated to the latest version. Next, visit the title’s official social media handles or click on a link listed above.
Upon clicking on a link, you will see a prompt with the options “Go Back” and “Continue.” Select the “Continue” button to open the app, which will then load the necessary resources and files.
Once loaded, a dialog box displaying the reward details and a green “Collect” button will appear. Tap the “Collect” button to receive all the free spins and coins in your in-game inventory.
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Peyote sacred to Native Americans threatened by psychedelic renaissance and development – Walla Walla Union-Bulletin

A peyote plant blooms while growing in the nursery at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative homesite in Hebbronville, Texas, Sunday, March 24, 2024.
A welcome sign written in several different Native American languages at the entrance to the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative homesite, led by several leaders within the Native American Church, in Hebbronville, Texas, Sunday, March 24, 2024.
Peyote growing in the wild on the 605 acres of land run by the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative, which is led by several members of the Native American Church, in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
Sandor Iron Rope, Oglala Lakota tribe member, president of the Native American Church of South Dakota and Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative board member, looks for seeds from a peyote plant, in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
Sandor Iron Rope, Oglala Lakota tribe member, president of the Native American Church of South Dakota and Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative board member, left, and Miriam Volat, executive director of the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative and co-director of the RiverStyx Foundation, look for peyote, a cactus and sacred plant medicine utilized in ceremony by members of the Native American Church, in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
Members of the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative and various chapters of the Native American Church and ABNDN, Azee Bee Nahgha of Diné Nation, look for peyote growing in the wild, in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
The offering garden at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative homesite, in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
Yankton Sioux and Apache tribal member Adrian Primeaux, stands for a portrait at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative, a spiritual homesite and peyote conservation site for Native American Church members on 605 acres of land in the peyote gardens of South Texas, Monday, March 25, 2024, in Hebbronville, Texas.
A sign leading to the tipi grounds at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative homesite in Hebbronville, Texas, Sunday, March 24, 2024.
Adrian Primeaux, of the Yankton Sioux and Apache, opens the gates to a peyote nursery at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative, in Hebbronville, Texas, Sunday, March 24, 2024.
Peyote plants growing in the nursery at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative homesite in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
Miriam Volat, executive director of the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative and co-director of The River Styx Foundation, examines young peyote plants in the nursery at IPCI in Hebbronville, Texas, Sunday, March 24, 2024.
Peyote plants growing in the nursery at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative homesite in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
Adrian Primeaux, of the Yankton Sioux and Apache, stands in the peyote nursery at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative, a spiritual homesite and peyote conservation site for Native American Church members on 605 acres of land in the peyote gardens of South Texas, Sunday, March 24, 2024, in Hebbronville, Texas.
This photo provided by the Library of Congress shows Comanche Nation Chief, Quanah Parker, in 1909. Parker played a major role in creating the Native American Church, whose members use peyote in spiritual ceremony.
This photo provided by the Library of Congress shows a Cheyenne Peyote leader in 1927.
A peyote plant blooms while growing in the nursery at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative homesite in Hebbronville, Texas, Sunday, March 24, 2024.
A welcome sign written in several different Native American languages at the entrance to the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative homesite, led by several leaders within the Native American Church, in Hebbronville, Texas, Sunday, March 24, 2024.
Peyote growing in the wild on the 605 acres of land run by the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative, which is led by several members of the Native American Church, in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
Sandor Iron Rope, Oglala Lakota tribe member, president of the Native American Church of South Dakota and Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative board member, looks for seeds from a peyote plant, in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
Sandor Iron Rope, Oglala Lakota tribe member, president of the Native American Church of South Dakota and Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative board member, left, and Miriam Volat, executive director of the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative and co-director of the RiverStyx Foundation, look for peyote, a cactus and sacred plant medicine utilized in ceremony by members of the Native American Church, in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
Members of the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative and various chapters of the Native American Church and ABNDN, Azee Bee Nahgha of Diné Nation, look for peyote growing in the wild, in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
The offering garden at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative homesite, in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
Yankton Sioux and Apache tribal member Adrian Primeaux, stands for a portrait at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative, a spiritual homesite and peyote conservation site for Native American Church members on 605 acres of land in the peyote gardens of South Texas, Monday, March 25, 2024, in Hebbronville, Texas.
A sign leading to the tipi grounds at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative homesite in Hebbronville, Texas, Sunday, March 24, 2024.
Adrian Primeaux, of the Yankton Sioux and Apache, opens the gates to a peyote nursery at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative, in Hebbronville, Texas, Sunday, March 24, 2024.
Peyote plants growing in the nursery at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative homesite in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
Miriam Volat, executive director of the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative and co-director of The River Styx Foundation, examines young peyote plants in the nursery at IPCI in Hebbronville, Texas, Sunday, March 24, 2024.
Peyote plants growing in the nursery at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative homesite in Hebbronville, Texas, Tuesday, March 26, 2024.
Adrian Primeaux, of the Yankton Sioux and Apache, stands in the peyote nursery at the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative, a spiritual homesite and peyote conservation site for Native American Church members on 605 acres of land in the peyote gardens of South Texas, Sunday, March 24, 2024, in Hebbronville, Texas.
This photo provided by the Library of Congress shows Comanche Nation Chief, Quanah Parker, in 1909. Parker played a major role in creating the Native American Church, whose members use peyote in spiritual ceremony.
This photo provided by the Library of Congress shows a Cheyenne Peyote leader in 1927.
HEBBRONVILLE, Texas (AP) — In this corner of southern Texas, the plump cacti seem to pop out of arid dust and cracked earth, like magic dumplings.
It’s only here and in northern Mexico that the bluish-green peyote plant can be found growing naturally, nestled under thorny mesquite, acacia and blackbrush.
For many Native American Church members who call this region the “peyote gardens,” the plant is sacrosanct and an inextricable part of their prayer and ceremony. It’s believed to be a natural healer that Indigenous communities have counted on for their physical and mental health as they’ve dealt with the trauma of colonization, displacement, and erosion of culture, religion and language.
The cactus contains a spectrum of psychoactive alkaloids, the primary one being the hallucinogen mescaline, and is coveted for those psychedelic properties. Even though it is a controlled substance under federal law, an exemption afforded by a 1994 amendment to the American Indian Religious Freedom Act made it legal for Native Americans to use, possess and transport peyote for traditional religious purposes.
For over two decades, Native American practitioners of peyotism, whose numbers in the U.S. are estimated at 400,000, have raised the alarm about lack of access to peyote, which they reverently call “the medicine.” They say poaching and excessive harvesting of the slow-growing cactus, which flowers and matures over 10 to 30 years, are endangering the species and ruining its delicate habitat.
Native American Church members say the situation has worsened with demands from advocates of the psychedelic renaissance seeking to decriminalize peyote and make it more widely available for medical research and treatment of various ailments. Agriculture, housing developments, wind farms in the region and the border wall, are also damaging the habitat, experts say.
A vast majority of peyote people agree the plant must be protected and should be out of reach for medical researchers, Silicon Valley investors and other groups advocating peyote decriminalization. But there are diverse opinions within the Native American Church on how to accomplish that goal.
While at least one group spearheaded by Native American Church leaders has begun efforts to conserve and propagate peyote naturally in its habitat using philanthropic dollars, others in the church are more suspicious of investors’ intentions, saying they fear exploitation and would rather get funding from the U.S. government to protect peyote.
Darrell Red Cloud, who is Oglala Lakota, remembers at age 4 using peyote and singing ceremonial songs at all-night peyote ceremonies with his family. Peyote has always been about forging a connection with the Creator, said Red Cloud. He’s the vice president of the Native American Church of North America.
“Our people were not religious people, we were prayerful people.”
Frank Dayish, former vice president of the Navajo Nation and chairperson of the Council of the Peyote Way of Life Coalition, compared peyote to the Eucharist in Catholicism.
“Peyote is my religion,” he said. “Everything in my life has been based on prayers through that sacrament.”
Adrian Primeaux, who is Yankton Sioux and Apache, says he grew up hearing the story of a malnourished and dehydrated Apache woman who fell behind her group during a forced relocation by the U.S. government in the 1830s.
“She was about to give up on life as she lay close to the Earth when she heard a plant speaking to her,” Primeaux said. “The peyote was telling her: Eat me and you will be well.”
She carried this plant back to Apache medicine men and elders who meditated and prayed with it, said Primeaux. He believes the Native American Church and what would become the Peyote Way of Life was unveiled during that spiritual quest.
Peyote is not just a medicinal herb — it is “a spiritual guide and a north star,” said Primeaux, who comes from five generations of peyote people. The plant has been a guiding light amid their traumatic history.
“It gave us hope and helped us process our thoughts, emotions and life purpose,” he said.
In October 2017, the National Council of Native American Churches purchased 605 acres in Hebbronville, Texas, to establish a peyote preserve and a “spiritual homesite” that is now run by the Indigenous Peyote Conservation Initiative or IPCI.
Steven Benally, a Navajo elder from Sweetwater, Arizona, and an IPCI board member, remembers his annual pilgrimages to the peyote gardens with his family. He recalls losing access to the gardens after the “peyotero” system took over, where government-licensed peyoteros harvested the button-like tops of the plant by the thousands and sold them to Native American Church members.
This meant that Native American people could not freely go onto privately owned ranches and prayerfully harvest peyote as they had done for generations. They lost their sacred connection with the land, Benally said.
It wasn’t until he threw open the gate to their sprawling ranch, affectionately called “the 605,” that Benally felt connected once again. He was so overcome by emotion that he placed a sign at the entrance with the words: “This is real.”
“It felt like we were finally living what we just dreamed, prayed and talked about,” he said.
One of Benally’s favorite spots on the property is a hilltop bench — a tranquil corner where visitors have placed prayer notes, painted rocks and other offerings to a nearby cluster of naturally sprouted peyote. Benally sits on the bench inhaling the gentle breeze and taking in the stillness.
“Our belief is that these plants, these animals, these birds are just like us,” he said. “They can hear, they can understand. They have their powers, they have their place, a purpose and a reason — just like us.”
The peyote preserve is a conservation site where the plant is not harvested but propagated and replanted naturally in its habitat without chemicals, said Miriam Volat, executive director for the nonprofit that oversees it. Native Americans who can produce their tribal identification cards can camp at the preserve and prayerfully harvest from amiable surrounding ranches, she said.
The goal is to restore peyote and its habitat, making it abundant in the region within the next 50 years.
Peyote grown in their nursery is under the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency’s watchful eye, she said. Licensed to operate, the nonprofit tries to balance being welcoming with satisfying the agency’s requirement to secure the plant behind locked gates and camera monitoring.
Those trying to protect peyote disagree on whether it should be grown outside its natural habitat. While scientists and conservationists say it is essential for the protection of the species, many Native American Church members say doing so would dilute its sacred nature.
Keeper Trout, a research scientist and co-founder of Texas-based Cactus Conservation Institute, remembers how abundantly peyote grew in the region during the 1970s. It’s all but disappeared.
“It was like walking on mattresses,” he said.
Trout empathizes with those who object on religious grounds, but he believes people should be able to cultivate and harvest anywhere. With a little help, Trout is confident the resilient plant can survive.
But many Native American Church members say where the plant grows matters. The ceremonial protocols were bestowed by the Creator’s grace and preserved through storytelling, said Hershel Clark, secretary for the Teesto chapter of the Azee Bee Nahagha of Diné Nation in Arizona.
“This is why we don’t support greenhouses, growing it outside its natural habitat or synthesizing it to make pills,” Clark said.
Red Cloud fears those changes would harm its sacredness.
“Then, it just becomes a drug that people depend on rather than a spiritual medicine,” he said.
Funding peyote preservation and conservation efforts has been a challenge as well.
The Native American Church of North America is calling on the U.S government to uphold its obligation to protect and preserve peyote in its natural habitat in southern Texas, which includes financial incentives for landowners, said Red Cloud. His organization is asking for a $5 million federal grant to jumpstart such a program.
IPCI started with seed money from Riverstyx Foundation, which is run by Cody Swift, a psychotherapist and prominent supporter of psychedelic therapy research. The organization continues to seek philanthropic dollars to carry the conservation effort forward and is not opposed to receiving funding from the U.S. government, Volat said.
“But, we’re not waiting for it,” she said.
There is suspicion and skepticism about Swift and other investors’ intentions in some corners of the Native American Church, Clark said. Swift has said in interviews that IPCI’s goal is to preserve peyote in its natural habitat under the leadership and guidance of Native American peyote people, a stance Volat, his co-director at the foundation, also affirms.
There is no question that opening peyote up to a broader market will create a supply crisis and increase access to those who have the financial resources, said Kevin Feeney, senior social sciences lecturer at Central Washington University in Ellensburg, Washington, who has studied the commodification of peyote.
Indigenous people would struggle to access their sacred plant while seeing others use it in a way they deem profane, he said.
Peyote supply remains limited for the Native American Church. Today, in southern Texas, only three licensed peyoteros are legally allowed to harvest the plant for sale to church members. Zulema “Julie” Morales, based in Rio Grande City, is one of them. She inherited the business from her father, Mauro Morales, who died two years ago.
She has been out in the fields since she was 10. Now 60, she says the peyote habitat is dwindling not because of peyoteros who harvest legally and ethically, but because of illegal poaching. She remembers her father gathering enough peyote to fill a dozen large trays while she can barely fill one.
Even though she is Mexican American and a Catholic, Morales, who charges 55 cents a button, considers it a privilege to provide peyote for ceremonial purposes. Her father, who customers called “grandpa,” hosted ceremonies for Native people every year and she has been a keen observer.
“As Mexican Americans, we value our traditions,” she said. “This is their tradition and it’s beautiful for us to be a part of that in our own way.”
At IPCI, one of the main goals is to teach future generations the value of getting back to their ancestors’ spiritual and healing ways, said Sandor Iron Rope, an Oglala Lakota spiritual leader and president of the Native American Church of South Dakota. At least 200 people gathered on IPCI’s grounds over Thanksgiving week, learning about peyote through panels, discussions, ceremony and prayer.
“We’ve put our moccasins and our footprints in this place,” Iron Rope said. “The hope is that these children, the next generation, will see the therapeutic value in getting rid of their phones and learning about what is right in front of them.”
Iron Rope says this is how he is fulfilling his responsibility to future generations.
“You can pray all you want, but you’re going to have to meet the Creator halfway somewhere,” he said. “You’re going to have to implement that prayer into action. And I see this as prayer in action.”
Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.
Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
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Highlighting the battles over religion in public schools in 2024 – KSWO

LAWTON, Okla. (KSWO) – As the new year closes in, 7News is counting down the top 7 stories which caught the eyes of viewers in 2024.
To reflect the countdown to 2025 these stories are being reexamined to determine if they still hold relevance as we transition into the new year.
One such story is the battle over religion in Oklahoma Public Schools.
The actions and rhetoric of Oklahoma State Superintendent Ryan Walters, along with a few select bills introduced into the state Legislature this year, caused shock waves to be felt not just in Oklahoma City, but right here in Southwest Oklahoma, as well.
The movement began with a bill which sought to allow chaplains in public schools. The bill would have allowed public school districts in the state to employ or accept volunteer chaplains.
This move was quickly met with pushback from the Democrats within the Legislature. However, the bill did end up passing the House by a vote of 54-37.
What caught the eyes of southwest Oklahomans was when the Satanic Temple announced that if the bill passes, they too will be placing their own ministers within public schools in the state.
The bill then failed to get past the senate chamber.
That said, this was not the last time the Satanic Temple announced plans for Oklahoma this year. After a bill was sent to the governor’s desk which would allow students to receive class credits for religious and moral instruction off school campuses, the group spoke up again.
In a social media post, the Satanic Temple stated their Academy of Independent Learning (HAIL) could soon be available for Oklahoma students. The post ended with the group asking if Oklahoma Governor Kevin Stitt will be the first to award school credit for courses taught by The Satanic Temple.
Unlike the first bill, this bill did get signed into law by the governor.
Of course, things didn’t end there. After the legislative session ended, Walters decided to send a memo mandating the incorporation of the Bible into lessons for Grades 5 through 12.
Legislators from this part of the state and outside civil rights groups sounded the alarms claiming the move to either be unconstitutional or simply a distraction from real problems being faced by public schools.
“Again, I would rather have, technology,” said Daniel Pae. “How do we support our teachers – that way they are being successful in the classroom. Those sorts of things.”
“We can’t allow Walters to continue this,” stated Freedom from Religion Foundation Staff Attorney, Chris Line. “It seems as if he almost wants to be a theocratic leader in Oklahoma. He is trying to push Christianity in any way that he can. This being the most extreme thing we have seen so far.”
Despite this push back, Walters marched on eventually purchasing more than 500 bibles to be used in AP government classes.
Walters has even requested 3 million dollars from the legislature to purchase more bibles for classrooms. This request was also met with swift pushback from some in Southwest Oklahoma.
Heading into the new year, more political fights over the role religion should play in Public Schools are likely to get more fierce as we get ever closer to the 2026 race for governor.

Copyright 2024 KSWO. All rights reserved.

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Government reform starts with data, evidence – Federal News Network

Kshemendra Paul, a senior executive in government, explains in his personal capacity why a governmentwide common operating picture will help promote efficiency.
Editor’s note: This commentary is authored by Kshemendra Paul. While I serve as the assistant inspector general for cyber assessments and data analytics, the views and opinions expressed are mine and do not reflect the views or positions of DOE OIG or the U.S. Government. It was developed by me in my personal time using personal resources. While the essay references publicly available DOE OIG and other oversight products, it is not a DOE OIG or oversight product.
It’s time to strengthen the use of data, evidence and transparency to stop driving with mud on the windshield and to steer the government toward improving management of its programs and operations.
Existing Government Accountability Office and agency inspectors general reports identify thousands of specific evidence-based recommendations to improve efficiency, economy and effectiveness, and reduce fraud, waste and abuse. Many of these recommendations aim at program design and requirements, highlighting specific instances of overlap, redundancy and duplication. Others describe inadequate internal controls to balance program integrity with the experience of the customer, contractor or grantee. While progress is being reported in part due to stronger partnerships with IGs, much remains to be done. Indeed, GAO’s 2023 High Risk List, which it has produced going back to 1990, shows surprisingly slow progress of efforts to reduce risk to government programs and operations.
Here are a few examples:
One of the main reasons for agency sluggishness is the lack of agency and governmentwide use of synchronized, authoritative and shared data to support how the government manages itself.
        Get tips on how your agency should tackle the data pillar of zero trust in our latest Executive Briefing, sponsored by Varonis.
For example, the Energy Department IG found that, “[t]he department often lacks the data necessary to make critical decisions, evaluate and effectively manage risks, or gain visibility into program results.” It is past time for the government to commit itself to move away from its widespread use of data calls, the error-prone, costly and manual aggregation of data used to support policy analysis and decision-making. Efforts to embrace data-informed approaches to manage government programs and operations are stymied by lack of basic agency and governmentwide data hygiene. While bright pockets exist, management gaps, as DOE OIG stated, “create blind spots in the universe of data that, if captured, could be used to more efficiently identify, track and respond to risks…”
The proposed approach starts with current agency operating models, then drives into management process integration to tackle root causes of dysfunction from the bottom up. It recognizes that inefficiency, fraud and other challenges are diffused, deeply embedded and have non-obvious interrelationships within the federal complex.
Technology and leading management practices offer a way forward. Specifically, a governmentwide common operating picture (COP) of government programs and operations federated across agencies could be created by aiming modern data management and analytics, entity resolution and artificial intelligence technology at fragmented federal data. The COP would tie together authoritative federal budget, finance, procurement, payroll, human capital, investment, asset, program and performance data.
The COP could further integrate other federal, non-federal, crowd-sourced and commercial data and information, and usefully link the same to specific federal programs, functions and organizations. For example, AI can ingest and link documents and their semi-structured information such as laws and regulations, congressional hearing and report language, GAO and OIG reports, findings and recommendations, agency and program strategies, plans and program evaluations, financial and performance reports, and incurred cost and financial audits.
The COP would provide a visualization of immediately available opportunities to increase efficiency, reduce fraud, improve performance and level up through benchmarking. It could do this at the program and agency levels. At the governmentwide level, it could provide insight into opportunities within mission areas, geographies and functions spanning agencies. Perhaps most importantly, the COP would have an immutable record of past data, decisions and actions to repeatably support and improve current decision-making.
Using the COP, OMB and agencies could develop and meaningfully scale an objective, ongoing and data-informed process of rating and reviewing specific risk-prioritized programs and operations across agencies. This process would enforce accountability for agencies to:
The criteria to distinguish between programs could build on approaches being used today by GAO and the IGs. Those that are not well managed or are not well performing are candidates for intervention to strengthen management controls to improve efficiency and reduce fraud. For example, based on agile oversight DOE recently initiated concrete moves away from pay and chase toward improved internal controls with energy-related rebate programs. Some programs may require deeper interventions, such as redesign, turn-around, merging with other programs, streamlining or downsizing until they demonstrate improvement. Occasionally, opportunities for incremental investment may surface. Finally, the COP could help agencies, the Office of Management and Budget and the White House develop and address their key analytic questions and instrument key performance indicators supporting their policymaking.
In some cases, cross-agency action may be indicated. In many, perhaps most cases, congressional action will be required. Transparency with the COP, in keeping with the Evidence Act, supports Congress’ Article I role. Indeed, the proposed approach could leverage Recovery Act lessons learned to partner with IGs and engage the American people to increase the public’s role and confidence, and that of state and local governments and other recipients of federal funds, in reforming government to make it more efficient, effective and accountable.
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Leadership and inclusive data governance, building on the federal data and evidence policies and agency capacity seeded by Evidence Act implementation over the past five years, are critical to the successful development of the COP. Furthermore, transparency, authoritative data and evidence are powerful tools towards changing incentives and behaviors inside agencies and with others towards aligned improvement.
OMB should consider establishing and resourcing a Federal Chief Data Analytics Officer (FCDAO) within OMB, focused and empowered to refine and validate the business case and approach, then build and scale the COP. Agencies should align their resources and contribution to the COP including elevating and building on their data analytics efforts, strengthening their adoption of data-centric architectures and not falling into the trap of subordinating the COP to modernizing legacy information technology. OMB would need to identify seed funding. Reduced fraud and waste could in part be repurposed to support agency working capital to resource the effort. Indeed, success establishing positive agency control over their data and its quality will open lower cost pathways to address technical debt.
The FCDAO would partner with other OMB leaders and agency counterparts to build the COP and ensure its use by agencies to close budget-management-performance gaps to drive governmentwide efficiencies, reduce fraud and support delivery of improved outcomes. The FCDAO would also work through policy concerns including data access and use, privacy, security and transparency. The potential impact of this trillion-dollar reform opportunity is magnified by its focus on engaging the public, integrating their input, reflecting the government’s actions, and showing results.
Kshemendra Paul has served for the past 17 years as a senior executive in the White House and across many federal agencies, leading people, building coalitions and advancing progress against complex public sector challenges. He has developed an aptitude and passion for using data and technology, focused on improving government management and information sharing to better serve the American people. Previously, Paul held a variety of private sector technology innovation, development, consulting, and leadership roles. He received Bachelor of Science degrees in electrical engineering and mathematics, and a Master of Science in electrical engineering from University of Maryland, College Park.
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Rutland rallying around family of mother, newborns on life support – Boston News, Weather, Sports | WHDH 7News

RUTLAND, MASS. (WHDH) – The Rutland community came together for a prayer vigil Thursday for a mother and her newborn twins who are on life support and in need of a miracle.
Patrick and Ciara Sullivan met while working as 911 dispatchers. Their love story as close to perfect as it gets if you ask Patrick, who has been at the hospital by his wife’s side since Dec. 16.
Hours before a scheduled C-section to deliver their twins, Ciara suffered a serious medical emergency and was rushed to the hospital. The twins, a boy and a girl, were delivered and immediately placed on life support.
So was Ciara, who is only 30 years old.
Now Patrick, a local firefighter, is coping with the unimaginable.
All three will be taken off life support on Friday.
Sullivan spoke with 7NEWS from the hospital, telling us about the love of his life.
“I’ve said this a couple of times .. since I’ve been here but she is without a doubt the best thing that’s ever happened to me,” he said. “She’s the most loving outgoing, charitable person I’ve ever met in my entire life.”
He added, “I think I know that they will be together again soon. They tell me that none of them are in pain.”
To support the family, visit: https://www.classy.org/campaign/patrick-sullivan-family/c651509
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'I Don't Regret Anything': How Farruko Balanced Spirituality and Dance Music on 'Carbvn Vrmor' – Rolling Stone

By Julyssa Lopez
Farruko is the first to admit that he’s been on a journey the last couple of years. “I think it’s not a secret that I had a really successful career with a lot of global hits… But what can I say? I think I forgot about myself as a human being to get to a certain position, so I stopped for some time to reflect and find myself and become more open to my own spirituality.”
For fans who have been following along, Farruko shared a glimpse of what he was going through during a show at Miami’s FTX Arena back in February 2022. After avoiding singing the lyrics to some of his biggest, most debaucherous songs — including the party-starting, pill-happy anthem “Pepas”— the Puerto Rican singer left the stage briefly. When he came back, he launched into a long sermon about how he was giving up secular music and dedicating his life to God. Fans had mixed reactions.

“It’s been a challenge,” Farruko admits. “With a lot of people, if you talk about spirituality or your beliefs and you say it publicly, people back away. And it’s not a mystery that I’ve paid a high price for it — I’ve felt in in losing fans, in losing views, in the professional side of being an artist, I’ve felt that impact. I had people used to a recipe that was working. And to suddenly change it and said ‘Hey, I don’t want to do this, now I want to go this way,’ it’s shocking.”
Despite the difficulty, Farruko has worked through more of the complexities of his transformation, channeling a lot of energy into new music. This month, he’s released Carbvn Vrmor, his first album in three years, full of songs that trace his whole experience. While some people may have expected a Christian album, the music here strikes a balance between commerciality and spirituality. Meanwhile, Farruko balances message of empowerment and positivity without being outright religious. “I don’t regret anything and I’m enjoying the process, and I’m enjoying the music I’m making. I think people decide if they like it or not, but I want to be remembered a someone who expresses their real feelings.”

The idea of this album revolves around a soldier in the future, fighting his own battles, and eventually he meets me, Farruko. The first part of the project is the solider explaining his side, and the second side is more about Farruko. I experimented with different genres; I don’t like just doing one thing. I watched out for things like crass language and the themes were really personal and intimate to me. This talks about a moment where you feel like you’re not worth anything, but then you look back at everything you’ve been through and you’re like, “No, I’ve been blessed.” It’s a track that hits me personally the most.

This album represents the struggles we all face as humans. Nowadays, we live in a society where people don’t like to show their vulnerabilities or what it’s like to be human. In the industry, you’re required to put on this persona that gives people what they want, and people forget you’re a real person who feels and suffers. So, to have that courage to express myself honesty and to bare myself in front of people has been a big deal.
Throughout the album, I sampled a lot of old songs and classics that meant something to me. “Mazacote” was one of the best examples of that: This song features a sample from Big Pun’s “Still Not A Player,” but we also sampled voices from Tego Calderon’s Métele Sazón” and a lot of ad libs from old-school reggaeton classics, like Don Chezina’s “Tra” and Don Omar’s live shows. We pulled from decades of that history. The song talks about reggaeton culture and our culture as boricuas. It also features Ñengo Flow, a Puerto Rican brother who I respect and who also, on personal level, is one of my close friends.

Dalex is on this track. He actually helped write some of “Blessings,” too. I typically try to collaborate with artists I really feel fit the vibe of the song. A long time ago, I stopped doing collaborations that feel forced—like stuff out of business interests, stuff that’s mutually beneficial, or because someone is trending. I’m realizing that things always work better if both artists really like the song they’re working on. Nowadays, the industry is so fast-paced  and everyone’s schedule is really packed, and sometimes you collaborate with someone who is going through a big moment and they actually don’t have time to promote the track, which affects the collaboration, if they’re not really feeling it or if they just did it for business. So you don’t even get to enjoy the creative process, and I like to share a lot with people I collaborate with — I like us to both spend time in the studio and to work together.

I have a lot of artists on this album who added a lot of the album, including Dalex. He’s like my brother. This is an album where, like Bad Bunny says, I did whatever I wanted and just let things flow.
I met her through my good friend Omar Montes, who is also doing amazing things with flamenco and urban sounds. And he introduced me to her and he said, “Honestly, this is one of the most talented artists in flamenco right now.” I told her that I was working on this song called “Sahara” with Arab and Moorish influences, which Spain has a lot of, and I said I wanted something that would convey that style. I want people to feel like they were in the desert, and she totally brought that to the table. I ended up loving that song so much because of what she did.
Sony Music invited me to a writing camp for Marshmello. I completely love electronic music — I think people saw that on my track “Pepas,” which is made for the club. So when I went in, I wanted to bring a track that was very real but still had a certain energy for the dancefloor. This song talks about fame and how when people love you, they love you — but how when you’re out of the spotlight, they forget about you. And it talks about not pleasing everyone. The fact that we got that message across through this mix of EDM, house, and reggaeton almost felt magic to me because electronic music is something that helps people get lost in the frequencies and the vibe. So I thought it would be cool to combine something with a crazy BMP that would accelerate people’s hearts, but also speak to them, too.

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