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Coronavirus testing of all 3000 residents in Melbourne’s nine housing towers already in lockdown has now been completed, the Victorian Health Department says.

Results are expected on Thursday, though it is unknown how long residents will have to stay in their apartments.

“Some very welcome, good news after a trying few days but the ordeal for these residents isn’t over just yet,” 9News Melbourne reporter Andrew Lund said.

“Authorities are still working through those results. They have told residents that those results will be available tomorrow although it is likely to be in the later half of the day.

“(Residents have been told that) until we have those results and develop a clear plan to support anyone who tests positive or is a close contact, you will need to remain in your home.

“People have been told to stay in their flats in those estates since Saturday afternoon.”

Residents in the towers in Flemington and North Melbourne have previously been told they would have to remain indoors for at least five days.

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Stocks Rise Despite Surge in New Virus Cases: Live Updates

Credit…Jeremy M. Lange for The New York Times

Brooks Brothers, the clothier best known for men’s wear that traces its roots back to 1818, filed for bankruptcy on Wednesday, as the brand buckled under the pressure from the coronavirus pandemic following years of declining sales.

The company, founded and based in New York, filed for Chapter 11 restructuring proceedings in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware. Claudio del Vecchio, the Italian industrialist who bought the brand in 2001 and still owns the company, told The New York Times in a May interview that he would not rule out Chapter 11 as a possibility for the company.

Brooks Brothers said in an emailed statement that the filing would allow it to obtain additional financing and facilitate a sale to a new owner.

The bankruptcy represents the latest big retail casualty during the pandemic, which has caused widespread store closures and sales declines, and pushed major names like J.C. Penney, Neiman Marcus and J.Crew into Chapter 11 proceedings since May. All of the chains, including Brooks Brothers, plan to keep operating, though likely in a pared-back fashion.

Brooks Brothers, with its tony men’s wear, has been hit especially hard by the pandemic in an era of remote work and job interviews through Zoom, and the postponement of celebrations like weddings, bar mitzvahs, graduations and more.

The company, which is the oldest apparel brand in continuous operation in the United States, said on Wednesday that it had decided to close 51 U.S. stores of its roughly 250 locations in North America. Earlier this year, Brooks Brothers said it would close its three U.S. factories, which are in Queens, Haverhill, Mass., and Garland, N.C., spurring concern around the health and the future of the brand.

Brooks Brothers has a unique and rich connection to American heritage and culture. It has dressed all but four U.S. presidents and its overcoats have been worn for the inaugurations of Abraham Lincoln, Barack Obama and Donald J. Trump, among others. It has outfitted Clark Gable, Andy Warhol and Stephen Colbert, and even Ralph Lauren started out as a salesman at Brooks Brothers in New York. — Sapna Maheshwari and Vanessa Friedman

Credit…Ting Shen for The New York Times

The Federal Reserve Bank of Boston on Wednesday released a list of lenders that have signed up for the central bank’s mid-size business lending program and are willing to make loans to new customers through the initiative.

Noticeably absent from the list are most of the nation’s biggest banks. Only Bank of America has so far agreed to participate and take on new clients, based on the Boston Fed’s map, while lenders like J.P. Morgan Chase, Citigroup, Wells Fargo are not listed.

The data released Wednesday was restricted to banks who are willing to lend to new customers. Most states have only a handful of open lenders, with seven listed in California and nine in New York, based on the Boston Fed’s release.

Banks can also participate in the program by making loans to existing clients. While thousands of banks are eligible to sign up, only about 300 had signed up to participate in total, Fed officials have previously said. The Fed has not released a full list of all banks participating in the program.

The Fed’s mid-size business lending program, called the “Main Street” program, opened for lender registration in June and became fully operational on Monday. While the Fed first said that it would set up a Main Street program in late March, it has never attempted to support mid-sized businesses before and Chair Jerome H. Powell has said that designing the program was a challenge. — Jeanna Smialek

Credit…Andrew Testa for The New York Times

The U.K. government’s top financial official announced a host of tax and spending measures on Wednesday to preserve and create jobs in Britain as the country anticipates a wave of layoffs caused by the pandemic.

Rishi Sunak, chancellor of the Exchequer, unveiled to Parliament a 30 billion pound ($37.7 billion) proposal that included tax cuts, employment coaching and even a 50 percent discount for diners who go to restaurants and pubs.

“Despite the extraordinary support we’ve already provided, we face profound economic challenges,” Mr. Sunak said. “Taken together in just two months, our economy contracted by 25 percent, the same amount it grew in the previous 18 years.” With more job losses forecast, he added: “I will never accept unemployment as an unavoidable outcome.”

But he said Britain’s furlough program, which has paid up to 80 percent of the wages of 9.4 million workers since March, would end in October, as previously announced. Keeping it longer, he said, would provide “false hope” to workers. Instead, employers will receive £1,000 for each employee they bring back to work through January.

Among the initiatives Mr. Sunak introduced:

  • £2 billion to pay the wages for up to six months for young people aged 16 to 24 offered new jobs.

  • A temporary cut to Britain’s VAT, a type of sales tax, for the hospitality and tourism industries to 5 percent from 20 percent.

  • An “Eat Out to Help Out” discount, cutting in half the cost of meals eaten in restaurants and pubs, up to £10 per person.

  • A reduction in the stamp duty, which is a tax paid on home purchases.

  • £3 billion targeted at creating green jobs by funding vouchers to pay for home insulation and making public buildings more energy efficient. — Eshe Nelson

Credit…George Etheredge for The New York Times

Wall Street shook off a global market slump to start Wednesday with a gain, as investors considered the latest fiscal efforts to support economies and new friction between the United States and China.

The S&P 500 rose slightly in early trading. European indexes were about 1 percent lower. Asian markets ended the trading session mostly lower with the exception of China’s indexes, where positive gains reflected recent efforts by the government to encourage stock-buying.

The uncertainty in financial markets seemed to mirror the mixed signals in the global economy as it continues to endure the coronavirus pandemic. In Britain, the chancellor, Rishi Sunak, announced further steps to support businesses, homeowners and young workers. Among the proposals were a fund to create six-month work placements for people aged 16 to 24 who are receiving welfare payments and are at risk of long-term unemployment, and a measure aimed at stimulating the real estate market by relieving sales taxes on property transfers.

Among the companies trading lower on Wednesday was HSBC, the London-based bank with a big presence in Hong Kong. Analysts said investors were concerned by reports by Bloomberg News that the Trump administration might restrict the ability of Hong Kong banks to buy U.S. dollars. The move, intended to undermine the Hong Kong dollar’s peg to the U.S. dollar, would be a way to punish China for tightening political freedoms in Hong Kong. HSBC shares traded in Hong Kong fell more than 4 percent.

Credit…Karim Jaafar/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Many countries have rushed out apps to trace and monitor the coronavirus this spring, only to scramble to address serious complaints that soon arose over extensive user data-mining or poor security practices.

Human rights groups and technologists have warned that the design of many apps put hundreds of millions of people at risk for stalking, fraud, identity theft or oppressive government tracking — and could undermine trust in public health efforts. The problems have emerged just as some countries are poised to deploy even more intrusive technologies, including asking hundreds of thousands of workers to wear virus-tracking wristbands around the clock.

In mid-June, after a barrage of criticism from privacy advocates, Britain abandoned the virus-tracing app it was developing and announced it was switching to software from Apple and Google that the companies have promoted as more “privacy-preserving.”

In May, after Amnesty International identified major security flaws with a mandatory virus exposure-alert app in Qatar, the government quickly released an update with new security features.

In fact, “the vast majority” of virus-tracing apps used by governments lack adequate security and “are easy for hackers” to attack, according to a recent software analysis by Guardsquare, a mobile app security company.

“It’s a cautionary tale for governments aggregating such an enormous amount of data,” said Claudio Guarnieri, the head of Amnesty International’s Security Lab who identified the problems with the Qatari app. — Natasha Singer

Credit…Chris Helgren/Reuters

United Airlines said on Tuesday that it was cutting back on the August flight schedule it announced just last week because travel demand was sliding again as coronavirus cases surged across much of the country.

United management told employees this week that it expected to fly about 35 percent as many flights next month as it did last August, down from the 40 percent it announced a week ago, the airline said in a securities filing released after the market close.

The airline said its flight schedule for the rest of the year was likely to look much like its reconfigured August plan because the recovery would remain choppy. The airline does not expect demand to recover fully until a “widely accepted” treatment or vaccine for the virus is available. United had operated about 12 percent as many flights in June as it did last year and expects to operate about 25 percent as many flights in July compared with the same month last year.

Demand for flights started to fall as the recent increase in cases nationwide — and the associated travel and quarantine restrictions — made flying less appealing, United said. Bookings for upcoming flights at the airline’s Newark hub, for example, had started to recover in the first half of June only to reverse course after Connecticut, New Jersey and New York, said on June 24 they would require travelers visiting from states with rising infection rates to quarantine for 14 days.

The airline also said that it planned to send out legally required notices to workers by mid-July warning of possible layoffs once federal aid to the aviation industry expires at the end of September. Those affected could be notified as soon as next month, United said. — Niraj Chokshi

Credit…Eve Edelheit for The New York Times

Walt Disney World in Orlando, Fla., will reopen on Saturday, and the Walt Disney Company has been posting marketing videos online to highlight the safety procedures it has designed to protect visitors and employees.

Some of the 1,000-plus responses to that particular video were supportive. Others were incredulous, with people using words like “irresponsible” and “disappointing.

The pandemic has devastated Disney’s businesses, and reopening its signature tourist attraction — with restricted capacity and government approval — is a major part of the company’s comeback attempt. But in doing so, Disney is stepping into a politicized debate surrounding the virus and efforts to keep people safe, where even the wearing of masks has become a point of bitter contention.

The Florida Department of Health reported 7,347 new Covid-19 infections on Tuesday, with 1,179 in the central part of the state, which includes Orlando. Those numbers are down from last week but still among the highest in the country, leading some to question whether Disney is being responsible in opening up Disney World.

“The world is changing around us, but we strongly believe that we can open safely and responsibly,” Josh D’Amaro, Disney’s theme park chairman, said in an interview. “For those that might have questions or concerns, when they see how we are operating and the aggressive protocols that we have put in place, they will understand. This is our new normal.” — Brooks Barnes

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Supreme Court Sides With Religious Schools In Discrimination Suit

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Supreme Court, siding with Catholic schools in a legal dispute with teachers who said they were unlawfully dismissed, ruled on Wednesday that religious institutions like churches and schools are shielded from employment discrimination lawsuits.

The 7-2 decision embraced a broad interpretation of the “ministerial exception,” a legal doctrine recognized by the Supreme Court in a 2012 case that bars ministers or people in similar roles from suing religious institutions for workplace bias. The court blocked two teachers from pursuing lawsuits accusing the two Catholic elementary schools in California of discrimination based upon age and disability.

Conservative Justice Samuel Alito, writing for the court, said there was “abundant” evidence that the two teachers performed “vital religious duties” and therefore fell under the exception.

“Educating and forming students in the Catholic faith lay at the core of the mission of the schools where they taught,” Alito wrote.

President Donald Trump’s administration sided with the schools, saying the ministerial exception should apply to any employee of a religious organization who performs an important religious function.

The ruling could strip more than 300,000 lay teachers working in religious schools of employment law protections and could impact industries including nurses in Catholic hospitals, the plaintiffs said in a court filing.

In a dissent, liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor said the decision had “no basis in law and strips thousands of schoolteachers of their legal protections.”

The teachers “taught primarily secular subjects, lacked substantial religious titles and training, and were not even required to be Catholic,” Sotomayor wrote in the dissent, which was joined by liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

At issue was the breadth of a “ministerial exception” that protects religious organizations from employee suits alleging violations of laws such as Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which bars employers from discriminating against employees on grounds including sex, race, national origin and religion.

The ministerial exemption was grounded in the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment guarantee of religious freedom, language meant to prevent government interference with religion.

The ruling arose from separate lawsuits brought by teachers Agnes Morrissey-Berru and Kristen Biel against two private schools that operate under the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles.

Biel accused St. James School in Torrance of unlawfully dismissing her when she requested time off to undergo surgery and chemotherapy for breast cancer. Biel died last year but her husband has continued the litigation on her behalf.

Morrissey-Berru brought an age discrimination case against Our Lady of Guadalupe School in Hermosa Beach after being told in 2015, just before her 65th birthday, that her contract would not be renewed.

Morrissey-Berru and Biel taught their students religion several days a week in addition to secular subjects.

Federal judges concluded that the ministerial exception barred both claims. The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals subsequently ruled that both lawsuits could proceed.

In a separate dispute affecting religious schools, the court on June 30 endorsed Montana tax credits that helped pay for students to attend religious schools, a decision paving the way for more public funding of faith-based institutions.

Reporting by Andrew Chung in New York and Jan Wolfe in Washington; Editing by Will Dunham



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Bow crane collapse: Four believed injured as firefighters carry out ‘complex rescue operation’

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Four people are believed to be injured after a crane collapsed on houses in east London, with firefighters involved in a “complex rescue operation”.

London Fire Brigade tweeted that it was “working to free people trapped inside”.

“A 20-metre crane has collapsed on to a block of flats under development and into two terraced houses on Compton Close,” said assistant commissioner Graham Ellis.









Crane falls on London homes

“Our urban search and rescue crews are undertaking a complex rescue operation and using specialist equipment to search the properties.

“This is a multi-agency response and is likely to be a protracted incident…”

It is not clear yet whether the trapped people have been rescued.

Police said they had received reports that four people were injured after they were called to the scene at around 2.39pm

Motiur Rahman – who lives on Compton Close – told Sky News: “The whole roof of my house is gone. It’s all twisted. I’ve had quite a shock.

“It was about two-thirty in the afternoon and I opened the window into the garden and just saw this big red thing coming down, and I ran. I thought, ‘I don’t know what to do.’ I thought the world was ending.”

Pictures show firefighters with ladders propped up against a house with its roof caved in, while aerial images show the twisted crane embedded in the building.

Image:
Police said four people had reportedly been injured
The crane collapsed in Bow, east London. Pic: Bridget Teirney
Image:
The crane collapsed in Bow, east London. Pic: Bridget Teirney

London Ambulance Service tweeted that “specialist resources” were at the scene.

A man working on a nearby construction site told PA Media that he had seen the crane being erected yesterday.

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Municipality won’t remove former mayor, despite home affairs demands – The Mail & Guardian

The home affairs department has given a Free State municipality an ultimatum to remove former executive mayor Nthateng Maoke from its payroll because she continues to draw a salary as an ordinary councillor, despite having been found to be an illegal immigrant.

In a strongly worded letter to the Setsoto council’s speaker Krog Mokhuoane two weeks ago, the department said that the municipality’s continued employment of Maoke, whom it found during an investigation last year to be a Lesotho national, was in violation of the Immigration Act. 

But Maoke is fighting back. Through her lawyers, she has interdicted the government from arresting her or deporting her to Lesotho.

Maoke, who was the ANC’s executive mayor from 2016 in the small municipality of Ficksburg, unceremoniously resigned from her position in December last year, after home affairs alleged that she had fraudulently obtained her South African citizenship. 

The ANC in the Free State, however, retained her as an ordinary councillor. According to the ANC, she continued to draw her salary because she had lodged a court review against the department regarding her citizenship status. 

Home affairs, however, is now having none of that, and has warned that should the municipality not comply with removing Maoke from its payroll it will take legal action against the council. 

“… Mrs Maoke is an illegal foreigner and the review before the court does not suspend the decision taken by the department … You are therefore instructed in terms of section 36 of the Immigration Act 13 of 2002 to initiate the process of terminating her employment with immediate effect, failure of which will leave the department with no choice but to take further legal action against the council for employing an illegal foreigner,” the letter read.

As executive mayor, Maoke was getting paid just over R500 000 a year. As an ordinary councillor she draws about R300 000 in salary. 

The eastern Free State municipality is made up of Ficksburg, Clocolan, Marquard and Senekal with an estimated population size of 125 751. The municipality has failed many of its residents in terms of service delivery — in Ficksburg, people are still using the bucket toilet system and in December, residents were forced to search for other water access points because their taps spewed muddy water. This is the same town where activist Andries Tatane was killed by police in 2011 during a service delivery protest. 

In Senekal, numerous service delivery protests have taken place in the past few years with residents demanding proper waterworks.

The ANC in that province has faced criticism from its own factions and the opposition over its handling of the matter. Mokhuoane told the Mail & Guardian that the municipality has found itself in a tough situation.  

“Subsequent to that letter from the department I received a letter from the attorneys of Maoke. They told me that they have an interdict to deport or arrest her until the court has decided over the matter [her citizenship]. It is only then when the high court gives us a judgment on the matter that we can act. There is nothing we can really do now and we have responded to the department,” said Mokhuoane. 

The department told the M&G previously that it had reached its decision that Maoke was a Lesotho national not eligible to hold public office, after a thorough investigation which proved that she was an illegal immigrant. 

Numerous attempts to get comment from Maoke’s legal representatives Van Aardt & Van Der Walt attorneys were not successful.



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Perfect Day announces $160M in funding

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Dive Brief:

  • Animal-free dairy producer Perfect Day more than doubled its Series C funding with $160 million of new investments announced Wednesday morning. The funding round, which initially closed at $140 million in December, is now worth $300 million. This brings the company’s total funding to $361.5 million.
  • The lead investor in the new funding tranche is the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, which has a current portfolio of $409.6 billion. The board, which manages retirement money for Canadians, put $50 million toward Perfect Day as the first investment for its new Climate Change Opportunities segment. Repeat investors Temasek Holdings and Horizons Ventures also participated in the new investment.
  • In the last several months, Perfect Day, which creates dairy through fermentation, has made many steps forward in its product development. It had its first launch with another manufacturer, selling four flavors of N’Ice Cream. It’s doubled manufacturing capacity and substantially reduced costs, the company said in a release. And its whey protein received generally recognized as safe status from the FDA.

Dive Insight:

As many investments, new products and R&D have been slowed down in recent months, Perfect Day is continuing to grow at breakneck speed. The fact that the new investment, which makes up about 44% of the company’s total lifetime funding, comes in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic shows that Perfect Day’s product offering remains attractive to investors. It offers a sustainable dairy ingredient that’s ready to go to market, both under its own brand name and through partnerships with other manufacturers.

“We never doubted we’d reach this point, we just didn’t expect to get here so quickly,” Ryan Pandya, co-founder and CEO of Perfect Day, said in a statement emailed to Food Dive. “And, thanks to our world-class team and investors, we’re not planning to take our foot off the pedal anytime soon. The coronavirus pandemic has shown just how fragile our food system is.”

Pandya, a scientist who previously made antibodies for the medical field, teamed up with Perumal Gandhi, who has a degree in biotechnology, in 2014. They worked to understand the science and chemistry behind making dairy proteins without cows. In 2018, the startup entered into a partnership with Archer Daniels Midland to scale and commercialize their dairy proteins. A year later, Perfect Day made its first product: Dairy-free ice cream under its own brand.

The company has not said what it would launch next, though it teased possibilities with a collection of images sent to the media in 2019. These options included milk, shredded and natural mozzarella cheese, cream cheese and spreadable cheddar cheese. But Pandya told Food Dive in January the company’s more immediate focus was partnering with food companies to use its protein as an ingredient rather than market its own products under the Perfect Day label.

“There would be no ice cream brand that isn’t aware of us pretty much at this point,” Pandya said. “Every major multinational (company) is talking to us.”

And while many are taking notice of Perfect Day’s capabilities as an ingredient, this latest funding round also shows that its sustainability bona fides also are being noticed. Sustainability is a core part of Perfect Day’s philosophy, but it isn’t one that the company broadcasts right now. The World Wildlife Fund notes dairy cows create large amounts of greenhouse gases, huge amounts of water and land are used to feed them, and poorly managed farms can lead to large scale land and water pollution. 

Consumer concern about sustainability has been growing. A survey conducted by management and consulting firm Kearney this spring found 11% of consumers have shifted their purchases based on environmental claims within the last year, and nearly half became more concerned about the environment during the pandemic. In April, 83% of consumers said they take the environment into consideration when making a purchase.

The Canada Pension Plan’s investment in Perfect Day gives a solid endorsement of the company’s sustainability potential, especially since it was chosen as the first investment in the fund’s climate change portfolio. This could pay dividends for Perfect Day that go well beyond the new $160 million in funds announced today.

With consumers valuing sustainability, food manufacturers may be more interested in making products with Perfect Day. And consumers will be more interested in seeking out these products, both under Perfect Day’s own brand or from other manufacturers who use Perfect Day’s protein. Increasing investor interest in everything Perfect Day is — vegan, cutting-edge food science and sustainable — continues to make the case for Perfect Day to go public and expand the reach of investors participating in its growth.

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How to Buy Tech That Lasts and Lasts

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Like household appliances, tech products have failure rates — the ratio of working to defective units. These rates can give you a sense of a brand’s reliability.

Consumer Reports, well known for publishing reliability ratings for household appliances, compiles similar reliability data for smartphones, laptops, tablets, TVs and printers by surveying subscribers who own the products.

People tend to have more problems with products that have moving parts, like printers with ink cartridges, than with electronics like TVs or tablets, said Jerry Beilinson, a technology editor at Consumer Reports. Brother printers fared well in the publication’s surveys. For phones, Apple and Samsung had strong reliability ratings.

Mr. Lai of the Fixers’ Collective recommends a grass-roots approach to assessing reliability. He reads web forums like Reddit to see what people are saying about a product. If a large number of customers report problems with the device, he said, he steers clear.

Another rule of thumb to consider is investing more in a product to make it last. That doesn’t mean you have to buy the most expensive phone or computer on the market. But it does mean investing in configurations that will make you happier in the long run, said Nick Guy, a senior staff writer for Wirecutter, a New York Times publication that tests products.

Let’s use an iPad as an example. If you wanted an iPad, you could pay $329 for the base model with 32 gigabytes of storage. But it’s probably a better idea to spend $429 on the model with 128 gigabytes of storage — that’s quadruple the capacity, which you can use to hold apps, games, photos and videos for years to come.

In tech parlance, this strategy is known as “futureproofing.”

If you’re turned off by the idea of spending more, there’s a way around that. You can look to buy the same higher-priced product refurbished — meaning it was returned by a customer and restored to its former glory — for a significant discount, Dr. Mars said.

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A view on climate change from the treetops of Western Africa

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By Jesús Aguirre Gutiérrez, researcher at the Environmental Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, and the Naturalis Biodiversity Centre, The Netherlands.

The tropical forest canopy is one of the Earth’s underexplored frontiers. To understand how these unique environments respond to climate change a team from the Ecosystems Lab at the University of Oxford and partner institutes in Ghana gathered evidence from the treetops, finding drier forests are at greater risks.

Our natural world is facing unprecedented changes in the distribution of biodiversity – the variety of life on earth – at local and global scales. Around one million species are threatened with extinction, posing an imminent threat to the functioning of ecosystems and to human wellbeing.

Image: A tree climber collecting leaf samples 30 m up a rainforest tree (Ankasa, Ghana). © Yadvinder Malhi.

In our new study, recently published in Nature Communications, we investigate if and how climate change has affected the diversity of tropical ecosystems in West Africa over the last decades. In particular, we wanted to understand if wetter and drier tropical forests responded in different ways to the same drivers of change.

For this study we conducted fieldwork in Ghana over six months. The field campaign was led by Dr Imma Oliveras and Dr Stephen Adu Bredu and coordinated by co-authors Theresa Peprah and Agne Gvozdevaite. It formed part of a global effort.  More than 25 research assistants from KNUST University and Forestry Institute of Ghana (FORIG) participated in the field campaign and were trained in the sampling techniques and scientific protocols for undertaking the research.

Albert Aryee labels plastic bags for collecting samples of leaves

Image: Albert Aryee labels plastic bags for collecting samples of leaves. All bags must be labelled with a unique code so that each leaf can be tracked to a branch, tree, and site. © Imma Oliveras

During the campaign we visited clusters of sample plots at three sites, stretching along a climate gradient from humid ancient rainforest through to parched try forest and savanna. We sampled leaves and branches from 299 trees. These were very long days, usually starting at 4.30 am with a group breakfast and by 6 am we would be already working in the field. We would finish the fieldwork at around 3 pm and then work in the field laboratories until 10 pm. Some of the research assistants – who were masters and undergraduate students at the time – have pursued further postgraduate studies after the experience and successfully found scholarships in Ghana, Europe and the US.

Group of researchers working in the field laboratoryImage: Working in the field laboratory. © Imma Oliveras

When starting this research, we expected that a drying trend would be reflected in overall diversity decreases for all tropical forests. However, we found that forest communities in drier sites experienced on average stronger declines in functional, taxonomic and phylogenetic diversity across time than forest communities in wetter areas.

This means that drier forests are transitioning towards increasingly more homogenous forest communities, diverging further from wetter forests in functional, taxonomic and phylogenetic diversity. In contrast, wetter forests showed on average increases in functional and taxonomic diversity, which could be the result of their higher atmospheric and ground water availability in comparison to that available for drier forests. Overall, climatic and soil conditions partly explained the changes in diversity and differences in responses between drier and wetter tropical forests in West African.

Stephen Adu-Bredu and Theresa Peprah from CSIR-Forestry Research Institute of Ghana, described that some of the most challenging things to do during the fieldwork were waking up daily at 3am in order to get to the field around 4am for predawn water potential measurements, as well as climbing of the trees at this hour of the day. They say: ‘The dry season CO2 exchange measurement was difficult and frustrating. One can spend over an hour or even a day on a single leaf, and the measurements are to be carried on three leaves per branch, as the protocol demands.’

Dr Imma Oliveras, senior study author and Deputy Programme Leader on Ecosystems at the Environmental Change Institute, University of Oxford, reflects on the field campaign: ‘To me this field campaign was an incredible enriching experience. These were busy days of knowledge exchange. I would be training local students on scientific methodologies, and they were teaching me about the local flora as well as about the local forests and of the Ghanaian culture and traditions.

‘Some forests had taboo days in which we were not allowed to go to the forest and we would use for catching up on lab work. We would also exchange knowledge in other aspects, such as cuisine.  I learned to make fufu and I taught them to cook Spanish omelets. Scientifically, I enjoyed training the research assistants in both data collection, data curing and data analyses, and most participants are now co-authors of other related research.’

Research team at base campImage: Part of the team at base camp. © Yadvinder Malhi. 

 In our study we did not assess on how diversity changes affect ecosystem functioning. However, there is ample evidence showing that decreases in functional, taxonomic and phylogenetic diversity could cause loss of forest functions, such as resources uptake, cycling and biomass production and resilience to a changing climate. Therefore, the ecosystem functions of communities that show decreases across all three facets of diversity could be especially vulnerable under a drying climate.

Overall, our study found that drier forest communities have undergone biodiversity homogenisation due to a warming and drying climate, which could ultimately have negative impacts not only on the functioning of ecosystems but also on their contribution to people’s wellbeing and livelihoods.

Research team driving into the field on top of truckImage: Heading into the field. © Yadvinder Malhi.

The work was funded through a European Research Council Advanced Investigator Grant to Prof Yadvinder Malhi, coupled with a Royal Society Africa Capacity Building Award. The transects of field sites where this work was conducted were established with the support of a NERC Standard Grant.

Citation: Aguirre-Gutiérrez, J., Malhi, Y., Lewis, S.L. et al. Long-term droughts may drive drier tropical forests towards increased functional, taxonomic and phylogenetic homogeneity. Nat Commun 11, 3346 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-16973-4



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How Caesar Act could hurt Lebanon’s Tripoli

Jul 8, 2020

TRIPOLI, Lebanon — The US Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act went into effect on June 17, promising to impose sanctions on any actor who provides significant business, military or reconstruction assistance to the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. In neighboring Lebanon, where hyperinflation and multiple financial crises are continuing since last year, the new law is likely to have a significant impact due to the country’s historically close economic relationship with Syria. Lebanese Prime Minister Hassan Diab called on the international community to “shield” Lebanon from the law’s sanctions during a conference in Brussels, Belgium on June 30.

The Caesar Act may have particularly acute implications for Tripoli, Lebanon’s second largest city, which sits just 30 kilometers (19 miles) from the Syrian border. The city has had a longstanding goal to become a regional logistics and economic hub and to act as a gateway for investment in Syria’s post-war reconstruction, and although some officials dispute the idea that disruptions will take place, it is now clear that US sanctions will deter any business or investment involving the Syrian government under Assad until there is a political transition in Damascus.

Cross-border smuggling between Lebanon and Syria may increase as official trade winds down with implementation of the act, exacerbating tensions on the ground in Tripoli, where shortages are already wreaking havoc on the city’s impoverished and crisis-hit residents.

Following years of neglect by the central government in Beirut, Tripoli had moved closer to capitalizing on its strategic position near the frontier. Work began on the Tripoli Special Economic Zone in 2016, the Lebanese Parliament approved a loan to expand the city’s port in 2018 and agreements were made the same year to renovate the city’s train station and to connect Tripoli to Syria by rail.

“There is no doubt that Tripoli is able to be a national, Arab and international investment project in the region,” said Toufic Dabbousi, the president of the Chamber of Commerce, Industry, and Agriculture in Tripoli and North Lebanon. He told Al-Monitor, “And that certainly requires great efforts, a political decision and an agreement with the international community.”

Although he stated that the Tripoli Special Economic Zone relies on a broader set of investments beyond those related to Syria, the zone’s acting chairman and general manager, Hassan Dennaoui, admitted it would be impacted by the Caesar Act.

“We will be losing some of the investors, Syrian and non-Syrian, who were looking to be part of the reconstruction of Syria,” Dennaoui told Al-Monitor. “They will think of stopping or holding any kind of investments.”

“Definitely it will be put on hold,” Lebanese political and economic consultant Roy Badaro told Al-Monitor about plans to use Tripoli’s facilities for post-war reconstruction, saying the port of Tripoli should be thought of as the center of Syrian reconstruction once the international community agrees it can begin.

Dabboussi maintained that trade between Lebanon and Syria would continue despite the Caesar Act because Lebanese traders deal with Syrians who “fall within the interests of America, the United Nations and the international community,” though certain kinds of indirect financial support for government projects may be subject to sanctions.

According to Badaro and other analysts, a decline in official trade between the two countries due to the rising risk of sanctions may lead to a complementary increase in smuggling.

Per year, around $400 million worth of fuel is reportedly lost to the cross-border smuggling. Flour and other items are commonly smuggled into Syria as well.

Badaro stated that poor communities near the Syrian border could potentially benefit from smuggling and other cross-border trade. But according to Sami Nader, the director of the Levant Institute for Strategic Affairs, the flow of fuel out of Lebanon into Syria through smuggling networks is a drain on Lebanon’s financial resources because it is subsidized by the country’s Central Bank.

Tripoli, where a reported 60% of the population makes less than one dollar a day, has already seen tensions come to a head in June over allegations of smuggling into Syria. On June 12 and 13, protesters in Tripoli stopped convoys of unmarked trucks allegedly heading for Syria, resulting in confrontations with security forces on June 13 that left over 80 people injured. Shortly afterward, the World Food Program, a United Nations organization, stated that two trucks that were stopped during those two days belonged to the WFP and had been part of a 39-truck convoy legitimately carrying goods shipped into Beirut from overseas to be transported as assistance to Syria. However, photographs from Tripoli on June 13 show at least nine trucks were halted by demonstrators.

Tripoli activist Ali Kemal el-Ali was on the scene during the clashes trying to separate demonstrators from the military. He told Al-Monitor that although the stopped trucks may have belonged to the WFP, Tripoli had indeed experienced an increase in smuggling activity in the days leading up to the implementation of the Caesar Act on June 17.

“Before the application of the Caesar [Act], what was once one or two trucks became hundreds, one after the other,” he said. “They were trying to smuggle through all the crossings at the same time in the north.”

Ahmad al-Bayaa is a lawyer in Tripoli who worked for the release of several of the protesters who were detained by security forces during the events of June 13. He stated that to local residents who are on the brink of starvation, the sight of trucks carrying food out of Lebanon sparked desperation — whether the convoys belong to the WFP or not.

“Their point of view was clear: that we are not finding food materials. Even using our money we cannot find food in the supermarket,” Bayaa told Al-Monitor. “He sees these trucks, loaded with things that he needs, that he and his family needs, and his poor city.”

The United Nations estimates that Lebanon imports around 80% of its cereal grains, meaning that during a period of hyperinflation when the US dollars used to pay for imports are growing ever more scarce, food supplies are reaching dangerously low levels.

“All the suppliers have stopped [shipments] for the last week,” said the manager of Abou Wahid, a popular supermarket in Tripoli, asking to remain anonymous. “So another week, the whole shop will be empty. How much can we continue like this?”

“They don’t know the value of their goods,” the manager told Al-Monitor about smugglers moving products through Tripoli and elsewhere. “They think about benefits, about money, but they don’t think about how the Lebanese people are in need.”

Tripoli residents already suffering shortages under Lebanon’s system-wide collapse are bracing for the ramifications of the Caesar Act. Due to the crisis gripping Lebanon, the impacts will highly depend on how far much further economic and social factors in Lebanon unravel.



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United pares its flights after a surge in virus cases crimps demand.

United Airlines said on Tuesday that it was cutting back on the August flight schedule it announced just last week because travel demand was sliding again as coronavirus cases surged across much of the country.

United management told employees this week that it expected to fly about 35 percent as many flights next month as it did last August, down from the 40 percent it announced a week ago, the airline said in a securities filing released after the market close.

The airline said its flight schedule for the rest of the year was likely to look much like its reconfigured August plan because the recovery would remain choppy. The airline does not expect demand to recover fully until a “widely accepted” treatment or vaccine for the virus is available. United had operated about 12 percent as many flights in June as it did last year and expects to operate about 25 percent as many flights in July compared with the same month last year.

Demand for flights started to fall as the recent increase in cases nationwide — and the associated travel and quarantine restrictions — made flying less appealing, United said. Bookings for upcoming flights at the airline’s Newark hub, for example, had started to recover in the first half of June only to reverse course after Connecticut, New Jersey and New York, said on June 24 they would require travelers visiting from states with rising infection rates to quarantine for 14 days.

The airline also said that it planned to send out legally required notices to workers by mid-July warning of possible layoffs once federal aid to the aviation industry expires at the end of September. Those affected could be notified as soon as next month, United said. — Niraj Chokshi

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