Wednesday, June 11, 2014

DEPUTY AG COLE'S REMARKS ON THE INCREASING NUMBER OF HEROIN DEATHS

FROM:  U.S. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT 
Deputy Attorney General James M. Cole Delivers Remarks at the “Pills to Needles: the Pathway to Rising Heroin Deaths” Event
~ Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Thank you, Joyce, for that kind introduction.  And thank you to the University of Alabama-Birmingham School of Public Health and the Jefferson County Department of Public Health for partnering with the United States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Alabama to host today’s community awareness summit.  It is an honor to be here with such a dedicated and diverse group of professionals, community leaders, and concerned citizens.

While I am pleased to be here, the issue that brings us together, prescription drug and heroin abuse, is not a happy one.  Unfortunately, the need to address these problems has become critical.  But the way we begin to deal with it is to come together as a community to better understand the symptoms and the underlying causes of the problem.  With the community, family, and friends, aware and engaged, we get that much closer to practical and sustainable solutions.

As the Attorney General recently observed, heroin and opiate addiction and abuse “is impacting the lives of Americans in every state, in every region, and from every background and walk of life.”

You have experienced this crisis, firsthand, here in the Birmingham region, where you have witnessed a more than five-fold increase in heroin overdose deaths between 2008 to 2012.  That rate is nothing short of tragic, and cannot be tolerated in our neighborhoods and it cannot be tolerated anywhere in our nation.

Communities like yours across the country are grappling to find solutions.  In Cleveland, Ohio, the community came together last fall for a daylong summit, much like this one, hosted by the Cleveland Clinic, the United States Attorney’s Office, and other state and local health care and law enforcement leaders after witnessing a 400% increase in heroin-related deaths.

They generated a plan to address every aspect of the problem, including education and prevention, health care policy, law enforcement and treatment.  As part of that plan, the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor’s Office produced a website “letsfaceheroin.com” that looks to increase awareness and understanding of the problem, and offers support and resources to those in need in the community, including young people, parents, community leaders, and current users.

In Vermont, the family of a heroin overdose victim joined with the United States Attorney’s Office to create an award-winning documentary, “The Opiate Effect,” to educate people about the realities and dangers of opiate abuse.

Clearly, part of the solution is prosecution. Here in the federal court in Birmingham, a 20-year sentence was handed down last month to Harold Mims for selling heroin that resulted in an overdose death.  There is also the ongoing prosecution of Patropius Foster, who is charged with distributing heroin that resulted in the death of local University of Alabama student Baker Mims.

We just heard from Baker’s parents, Ronnie and Beverly, and Tracy Bynum, whose daughter Madison also died of an overdose.  I want to offer you and your families my sympathy and my support, as well as my gratitude and respect.  You exhibit such strength and courage to come here today and speak personally about the tragedies you have faced.  I know how hard it must be for you to do this, but I also know that you do this so that others might be spared your pain.

While we can prosecute cases such as these two in Alabama – and the hundreds just like them around the country -- I want to make it clear that what we face is not just a crime problem, it is also a nationwide public health problem and a community problem.  And everywhere people look at this problem they come to the same three conclusions:  1. there is no single answer; 2. we cannot stand by and do nothing; and 3. we cannot arrest and prosecute our way out of it.

This issue demands that we all join together to employ a comprehensive strategy that addresses every aspect, every phase, every cause of this crisis.

The heroin use and overdose epidemic gripping this country has its roots in more than a decade of prescription drug abuse.  As the Attorney General recently remarked, the “increase in heroin abuse is a sad but not unpredictable symptom of the significant increase in prescription drug abuse over the past decade.”

 Abuse of prescription drugs leads to dependency and that dependency leads to demand for more prescription drugs. That demand, users find, ultimately cannot be satisfied by the harder-to-obtain and more expensive prescription pills.  That is where the heroin problems sneak in.  The ready availability and lower cost of heroin makes it an easy and cheap alternative with tragic consequences.

Now don't kid yourselves into thinking that the pills-to-heroin epidemic won’t come to your neighborhood, your family members, your churches.  This problem does not begin on the street or in prison; more often than not, it begins at home.  Even, in the homes of those closest to us.  More than half of all prescription drug abusers first obtained pills from friends or family, often by raiding the family medicine cabinet.  And no one should think that the size of their wallet or the size of their house or the extent of their education will protect them against the threat of heroin in their communities.

The demographic of prescription drug abusers has broadened and is hitting all geographic and socio-economic populations.   As a result, the growth of this problem is staggering.  Let me give you some examples:  among women, between 1999 and 2010, there was a 400% increase in the abuse of prescription painkillers.

Among people 25 to 64 years of age, drug overdoses cause more deaths than motor vehicle accidents.  Every day, 105 people die as a result of drug overdoses, and nearly 7,000 more are treated in emergency rooms.

In 2012, approximately 6.8 million people reported abusing prescription drugs in the prior month.   As a country and as a community, we cannot sustain this path.

Then, there is the issue of where the prescription drug abuse all too often leads.  The heroin use and overdose epidemic follows swiftly in the footsteps of the prescription drug abuse problem.  In a survey between 2008 and 2010, 81% of first-time heroin users had previously abused prescription painkillers.

The number of heroin users has seen a dramatic increase in the past several years.  In 2012, the number of heroin users had doubled from 2007.  More than 156,000 people reported using heroin for the first time during 2012.  Perhaps most troubling, the age of first-time heroin use is decreasing.  Predictably, and tragically, the increased heroin use has led to an increase in the number of heroin overdose deaths.

DEA has reported a disturbing, but unfortunately logical, trend in the heroin marketplace.  Mexican drug cartels have significantly expanded their production of heroin and distribution within the United States.  And, heroin traffickers are moving into areas with existing prescription drug abuse problems.  Like any business, they are finding the demand and meeting it.

Prescription drug abusers who have recently switched to heroin are the most vulnerable potential victims.  They are typically inexperienced users, more often younger than the average drug user.  They have a lower tolerance for the dangerous effects of heroin and are unfamiliar with drug purity and strength.  These problems are exacerbated as the heroin available in our communities has increased in purity and has in many cases been mixed with other drugs or substances, such as fentanyl, that not only dramatically increase the effects of heroin, but also increase the risk of overdose.

So why is the United States Department of Justice involved?  Why did I fly in from Washington to talk to you about this?  Because we need to sound the alarm.  Today, our children and grandchildren, our friends and neighbors, are abusing prescription drugs.  But far too often, and unless we act, tomorrow they will be heroin overdose victims.

I am here to elevate this issue to the national platform.  We are seeing, across the country, that a comprehensive public health strategy to address the heroin and prescription drug abuse and overdose crisis must include education, prevention, enforcement, and treatment.  To be successful, we must enlist the combined efforts of doctors and health care providers, educators, community leaders, law enforcement officials, faith-based groups, state and local public health officials, and the friends and family of drug abusers.

Here in Birmingham, the United States Attorney’s Office has worked with federal, state, and local law enforcement to attack the supply side of the heroin problem, prosecuting more than 50 people in a collaborative and focused effort to target dealers and their sources of supply.

Nationwide, since 2011, DEA has opened more than 4,500 heroin-related investigations.  As both a sign of the increasing problem and the efforts to combat the supply of heroin in the United States, the amount of heroin seized along the southwest border increased more than 320% between 2008 and 2013.

But I don’t want anyone to think that what we are talking about is simply a problem of drugs crossing our borders, or another country’s bad actors harming us.  This is an American problem, through and through.  Make no mistake, the practitioners who illegally dispense prescriptions, those who operate pill mills for prescription painkillers and the pharmacists who fill those prescriptions knowing their true purpose, are drug dealers no different from street-level heroin dealers.

They may look different than the Hollywood image of a drug dealer. They may even be our friends and our neighbors.  But they contribute to the problem just as much as the person selling $10 bags of powder.  Which is why, in addressing these issues, we must confront the problems of prescription drug diversion if we ever hope to reduce the number of future heroin users.

We confront this problem initially with education and supply reduction.  The Department of Justice, through the DEA, educates doctors, pharmacists, and other health practitioners in the identification and prevention of prescription drug diversion.  DEA’s Office of Diversion Control has conducted dozens of Pharmacy Diversion Awareness Conferences and one is coming to Alabama next year.

DEA also has worked to address the problem of prescription drug availability in the home.  DEA periodically conducts Nationwide Prescription Drug Takeback Days.  More than 780,000 pounds of prescription drugs were destroyed this year, and over 4.1 million pounds of prescription drugs have been destroyed since 2010.  Every prescription painkiller like this taken out of a medicine cabinet is one less pill that can end up in the hands of a young, first-time drug user.

DEA also uses Tactical Diversion Squads for enforcement, and there is one in Birmingham.  Their primary purpose is to investigate, disrupt and dismantle diversion schemes, pill mills, rogue clinics and pharmacies, doctor shoppers, and prescription forgery rings.

But we realize that even with these enforcement efforts, drug abuse and overdoses will continue to occur.  That is where you – the parents, friends, educators, and medical professionals – come in.  You must be educated on the early warning signs and the key indicators of abuse and you must realize that the most caring thing you can do is intervene.  Early detection and intervention has been demonstrated to be one of the most effective ways to reduce long-term substance abuse.

We can also help by taking greater advantage of proven methods of treating overdoses and saving lives in emergency situations.  The drug Naloxone can reverse the effects of heroin and opioid overdoses and has been proven to prevent overdose deaths.  More than 10,000 overdoses have been reversed using naloxone since 2001.

In Quincy, Massachusetts, where they faced a similar heroin epidemic, after police began carrying naloxone, overdose deaths dropped by 70%.  In New York, earlier this year, the state Senate and Assembly voted unanimously to allow wider distribution and use of naloxone.

But we also know that our work must include breaking the cycle of addiction and crime.  By treating drug addiction as a disease instead of a crime, we provide better outcomes for the defendant and the community.  That is why the Department of Justice is supporting more than 2,600 drug and specialty courts across the country that connect over 120,000 people convicted of drug-related offenses with the services and support they need to break the cycle of drug use and rejoin their communities.

By understanding the medical causes of drug addiction, making treatment available, and recognizing that alternatives to incarceration may be the appropriate answer for many drug users, we are being smart on crime and using all the tools we have to deal with these problems.

Unquestionably, these problems that bring us together today are daunting.  They present us with a challenge whose scope and deadly consequences are like nothing we've seen before.  But we have no choice, we have to deal with these issues head on.  And not just with a single, one dimensional approach, but with every tool we've got, it's that important.  And that means it's the responsibility of each and every one of us to do our part.  Parents, brothers and sister, aunts, uncles, and grandparents need to step in when they see a family member going down the dangerous path of drug abuse.  Teachers and coaches need to sit down with a student who's lost his or her way and counsel them.  And all of us, young and old, need to overcome the discomfort of confronting a friend who we see is in trouble.  Because without that loving confrontation, the trouble just gets worse and can end up with our losing that friend.

As much as I'd like to, I cannot stop this problem today or tomorrow.  But I can commit to you that we at the Department of Justice are dedicated to joining with you in the search for comprehensive solutions.  And I truly believe, that with sustained and committed effort by all of us, we will find those solutions; we will stop this crisis; and we will emerge a safer, stronger and healthier community and nation.  Thank you.

NY CONSTRUCTION COMPANIES OWNER PLEADS GUILTY TO TAX FRAUD

FROM:  U.S. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT 
Monday, June 9, 2014
Owner of New York Construction Companies Pleads Guilty to Tax Fraud

Eric Anderson, of Dix Hills, New York, pleaded guilty today in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York to the willful failure to collect and pay over employment taxes, the Justice Department and Internal Revenue Service (IRS) announced.

According to court documents, Anderson owned three construction companies located in Dix Hills: Anderson Framing, Anderson Enterprise and Anderson Trim Specialty.  Anderson corruptly endeavored to obstruct the IRS between 2006 and 2008 by using a check cashing service to cash over $10.5 million of gross receipts checks paid to his construction companies.  He concealed his check cashing activities from his tax return preparer so that the income was not included on the companies’ tax returns.  Anderson paid his employees in cash while failing to collect and pay over employment taxes to the IRS.  He also diverted cash receipts earned by his companies for his own personal use.  Finally, after learning of the criminal investigation, Anderson shredded business records and lied to IRS investigators about his use of the check cashing service.  The estimated tax loss resulting from Anderson’s activities is between $1 and $2.5 million.

Anderson faces a statutory potential maximum sentence of five years in prison and a potential fine of up to $250,000.  U.S. District Judge Arthur Spatt set sentencing for Sept. 19, 2014.

The case was investigated by IRS-Criminal Investigation and is being prosecuted by Trial Attorneys Mark Kotila and Jeffrey Bender of the Justice Department’s Tax Division.

THE WORLD OF MICRO-LOCOMOTION

FROM:  NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION 
Microorganisms: Studying the mechanics of their locomotion
Research has potential for improvements in treating diseases and reproductive health and creating new drug delivery systems

Bacteria often must swim through intricate environments in the human body to get where they need to go. How they do it is what fascinates Henry Fu.

"A microbiologist might look at the biology, or biochemical pathways," says Fu, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Nevada, Reno. "I am focused on the mechanics, rather than the biology."

Fu's goal is to understand the locomotion of bacteria and other microorganisms, such as sperm and protists, when they swim through such complex substances as mucus or bodily tissues. While both do contain fluid, they are more complicated than water, and bacteria almost certainly need different forces to navigate through them.

"People have tried to understand how they swim through regular water for a very long time, probably 50 or 60 years, but I want to know how this swimming is modified when they are swimming through things more complicated than water, like mucus," says the National Science Foundation (NSF)-funded scientist. "Mucus is more viscous and has elastic properties. People think of mucous as smooth and continuous, but it has a network of fibers. I'm looking at how those fibers interact with the microorganisms."

His work potentially has broad implications in the treatment of diseases, for example, in figuring out ways to block infection by halting a bacterium's movement, even after it has entered the body, such as in Lyme disease, where "bacteria have to burrow through your tissues to get to your bloodstream," Fu says. "Understanding how they do that could be potentially important in order to stop them."

The research also could prove valuable in reproductive health, where "the properties of mucus can affect the likelihood of fertilization," Fu says. "This could be important in treating infertility or contraception, when you could make it easier--or harder--for the sperm to move."

Researchers also could apply mechanical engineering lessons learned toward creating new drug delivery systems, such as nano-robots that could carry chemotherapy through the body to target a growing tumor.

Microorganisms swim by moving parts of their bodies. For example, many swimming bacteria have a tail-like flagellum, which rotates like a propeller, pushing them forward, while some algae have two flagella that "they can use like breast stroke," Fu says. "Part of what I am looking at is how they translate this motion into propelling themselves in the direction of where they want to go."

His research mostly is theoretical--in the computer and with pen and paper--designing models of these swimmers to see how they behave in different environments, and with variations to their swimming motions.

"What we do as modeling is based on well-known fundamental physics laws," he explains. "We could tell the computer the shape of a bacterium and its swimming motion, or how it is rotating, and the properties of the material or fluid it is moving in. We then ask it how it will move, and how much force and energy it will take. We might also ask what might happen if the flagellum or cell had a different shape."

Fu is conducting his research under an NSF Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) award, which he received in June 2013. The award supports junior faculty who exemplify the role of teacher-scholars through outstanding research, excellent education, and the integration of education and research within the context of the mission of their organization. He is receiving $400,003 over five years.

As part of the grant's educational component, he plans to create "Move Like a Microbe," a simulation of microscale microbial locomotion that "will bring the research to life for the public, and K-12 students, by providing a hands-on demonstration of how microorganisms are able to swim, and explain the consequences of microbial locomotion in everyday life," he says.

"Because microorganism are so small and because what they experience in a fluid environment is different from what we expect, this demonstration helps put them in the shoes of a microorganism," he adds. "They can control it, and make it swim, and feel the forces that the microorganism feels--and they will be learning about what it's like to try to swim when you're a tiny thing."

-- Marlene Cimons, National Science Foundation
Investigators
Henry Fu

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

READOUT: PRESIDENT OBAMA'S CALL WITH EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT AL-SISI

FROM:  THE WHITE HOUSE 

Readout of the President’s Call with Egyptian President al-Sisi

President Obama called Egyptian President Abdelfattah al-Sisi today to congratulate him on his inauguration and to convey his commitment to working together to advance the shared interests of both countries.  The President reiterated the United States’ continuing support for the political, economic, and social aspirations of the Egyptian people, and respect for their universal rights.  President al-Sisi expressed appreciation for the call and welcomed U.S. support for the new government.  The two leaders affirmed their commitment to the strategic partnership between the United States and Egypt and agreed to stay in touch in the weeks and months ahead.

PRESIDENT OBAMA CONGRATULATES PRESIDENT-ELECT RIVLIN ON HIS ELECTION WIN IN ISRAEL

White House Official Photo.
FROM:  THE WHITE HOUSE PRESIDENT 
Statement by the President on the Presidential Election in Israel

The people of the United States join me in offering Reuven Rivlin congratulations on his election as the next President of the State of Israel.

Over more than six decades, the United States and Israel have developed a unique relationship based on shared democratic values, our unshakeable commitment to Israel’s security, and our partnership in scientific research and innovative technology.  President-elect Rivlin has a long and dedicated record of public service and we look forward to continued strong ties, to the benefit of both our nations, under Mr. Rivlin’s presidency.

As President Shimon Peres nears the end of his term, he can look back on a remarkable legacy of courage, conviction, and compassion.  He has dedicated his extraordinary life to the cause of peace, and I look forward to welcoming him in Washington later this month where he will receive the Congressional Gold Medal.    

U.S. DEFENSE DEPARTMENT CONTRACTS FOR JUNE 10, 2014

FROM:   U.S. DEFENSE DEPARTMENT 
CONTRACTS
ARMY

ABSG Consulting Inc., Arlington, Virginia (W91278-14-D-0033); Allied Reliability, Inc.,* North Charleston, South Carolina (W91278-14-D-0034); and Andromeda Systems Inc.,* Virginia Beach, Virginia (W91278-14-D-0035), were awarded a $45,000,000 firm-fixed-price multiple-award, contract for reliability-centered maintenance and condition monitoring at Army Medical Command facilities in the continental United States, Alaska, Hawaii, U.S. possessions, and Germany.  The estimated completion date is June 9, 2019.  Funding and work location will be determined with each order.  Bids were solicited via the Internet with four received. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is the contracting activity.
MACNAK Korte Group LLC,* Lakewood, Washington, was awarded a $15,947,269 firm-fixed-price contract to design and build civil engineer administration/operations facility at Beale Air Force Base, California, with an estimated completion date of March 21, 2016.  Bids were solicited via the Internet with six received.  Fiscal 2010 military construction funds in the amount of $15,947,269 are being obligated at the time of the award.  U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Sacramento, California, is the contracting activity (W91238-14-C-0039).

AIR FORCE

Goodrich Corp., Westford, Massachusetts, has been awarded an $11,000,000 firm-fixed-price contract for Pakistan DB-110 sustainment effort that includes upgrade capabilities, spare and support equipment. Work will be performed at Westford, Massachusetts, and is expected to be completed by July 2015. This award is the result of a sole-source acquisition, and is 100 percent foreign military sales for Pakistan.  Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, Wright Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio, is the contracting activity  (FA8620-14-C-4017).
Exelis, Inc., Radar, Reconnaissance and Acoustic Systems, Van Nuys, California, has been awarded a $9,647,241 firm-fixed- price contract for a Ground Control Approach System (GCA).   This effort is a new program in support of a FMS case for the Saudi Arabian National Guard.  This action will provide a GCA for installation at a Khasham Al An Airbase.  The GCA system will be utilized for aircraft approach and landing guidance including airspace control services in support of air traffic control operations and Saudi Arabian National Guard aviation mission requirements.  Work will be performed in Saudi Arabia, and is expected to be completed by June 10, 2024.  This award is the result of a sole-source acquisition.   This contract involves 100 percent foreign military sales.  Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, Hanscom Air Force Base, Massachusetts, is the contracting activity  (FA8730-14-C-0008).

Northrop Grumman Systems Corp. Aerospace Systems, Redondo Beach, California, has been awarded an indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract with a maximum ordering dollar amount of $7,000,000 for L-Band Radio Frequency Power Amplifier for the Global Positioning System Spacecraft Navigation Payload.  The objective of this program is to demonstrate the direct digital synthesis of GPS signals concept by design, fabrication, assembly, test, and demonstration of a Digital Beam Forming Element, Engineering Design Unit, and the key enabling technology of the Digital Phased Array GPS payload architecture. Work will be performed at Redondo Beach, California. The ordering period is for 36 months; the work for task order 0001 is expected to be completed by March, 2015.  This award is the result of a competitive acquisition, and 16 offers were received.  Fiscal 2013 and 2014 research, development, test and evaluation funds in the amount of $1,089,908 for the initial task order 0001 are being obligated at time of award. The Air Force Research Laboratory, Det 8, Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico, is the contracting activity  (FA9453-14-D-0220).

NAVY

Airborne Systems Ltd., Bridgend, United Kingdom, is being awarded $7,750,856 for firm-fixed-price job order 0004 under a previously awarded Basic Ordering Agreement (N00164-13-G-WM55) for the procurement of components in support of the MK 59 Mod 0 Decoy Launch System.  The MK 59 DLS is a deck-mounted countermeasure system that is used to launch an advanced inflatable radar decoy cartridge to confuse hostile tracking and homing associated with anti-ship missiles by simulating the radar cross section of the ship.  Work will be performed in Bridgend, United Kingdom, and is expected to be completed by April 2016.  Fiscal 2014 other procurement (Navy) funding in the amount of $7,750,856 will be obligated at time of award.  Contract funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year.  The Naval Surface Warfare Center, Crane, Indiana, is the contracting activity.
*Small business

Airborne Systems Ltd., Bridgend, United Kingdom, is being awarded $7,750,856 for firm-fixed-price job order 0004 under a previously awarded Basic Ordering Agreement (N00164-13-G-WM55) for the procurement of components in support of the MK 59 Mod 0 Decoy Launch System.  The MK 59 DLS is a deck-mounted countermeasure system that is used to launch an advanced inflatable radar decoy cartridge to confuse hostile tracking and homing associated with anti-ship missiles by simulating the radar cross section of the ship.  Work will be performed in Bridgend, United Kingdom, and is expected to be completed by April 2016.  Fiscal 2014 other procurement (Navy) funding in the amount of $7,750,856 will be obligated at time of award.  Contract funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year.  The Naval Surface Warfare Center, Crane, Indiana, is the contracting activity.
*Small business

DOJ REPORTS 5 SERVICE MEMBERS DEAD IN POSSIBLE FRIENDLY FIRE INCIDENT


FROM:  U.S. DEFENSE DEPARTMENT 

Possible Friendly Fire Leaves 5 U.S. Service Members Dead
American Forces Press Service


WASHINGTON, June 10, 2014 – Five American troops were killed yesterday during a security operation in southern Afghanistan, Pentagon Press Secretary Navy Rear Adm. John Kirby said today.

In a statement, Kirby said investigators are looking into the likelihood that friendly fire was the cause.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of these fallen," he added.
The incident occurred during a security operation when the U.S. service members’ unit came into contact with enemy forces, International Security Assistance Force officials said in a statement issued from the command’s headquarters in Kabul, Afghanistan.

“Tragically, there is the possibility that fratricide may have been involved,” the statement said. “The incident is under investigation. Our thoughts are with the families of those killed during this difficult time.”

PRESIDENT OBAMA TO CONGRESS REGARDING CONTINUATION OF NATIONAL EMERGENCY WITH RESPECT TO BELARUS

FROM:  THE WHITE HOUSE 

Message to the Congress -- Continuation of the National Emergency with Respect to Belarus

TO THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES:
Section 202(d) of the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C.
1622(d)) provides for the automatic termination of a national emergency unless, within 90 days prior to the anniversary date of its declaration, the President publishes in the Federal Register and transmits to the Congress a notice stating that the emergency is to continue in effect beyond the anniversary date.  In accordance with this provision, I have sent to the Federal Register for publication the enclosed notice stating that the national emergency with respect to the actions and policies of certain members of the Government of Belarus and other persons to undermine Belarus's democratic processes or institutions that was declared in Executive Order 13405 of June 16, 2006, is to continue in effect beyond June 16, 2014.
The actions and policies of certain members of the Government of Belarus and other persons to undermine Belarus's democratic processes or institutions, to commit human rights abuses related to political repression, and to engage in public corruption continue to pose an unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.  For this reason, I have determined that it is necessary to continue the national emergency declared in Executive Order 13405 with respect to Belarus.
BARACK OBAMA

DOD PHOTOS OF TRYOUTS FOR 2014 WARRIOR GAME

FROM:  U.S. DEFENSE DEPARTMENT 



The Navy holds volleyball tryouts during the 2014 Wounded Warrior Team Navy Trials on Norfolk Naval Base in Norfolk, Va., June 4, 2014. DOD photo by EJ Hersom.




Retired Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Justin Schmidt rides a recumbent bicycle during the 2014 Wounded Warrior Team Navy Trials in Norfolk, Va., June 5, 2014. About 70 seriously wounded, ill and injured sailors and Coast Guardsmen from across the country are competing for a place on Team Navy 2014. About 40 athletes will be selected for the Navy's team and advance to the 2014 Warrior Games, an annual competition among each branch of the U.S. Armed Forces. DOD photo by EJ Hersom.




Retired Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Brian Canich shoots a basketball over Carlos Spence, a member of a local adaptive sports basketball team, at an exhibition game during the 2014 Wounded Warrior Team Navy Trials in Norfolk, Va., June 4, 2014. DOD photo by EJ Hersom.

CHAIR AT 2014 AUSTRALIA GROUP PLENARY MAKES STATEMENT ON NONPROLIFERATION

FROM:  U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT 
Statement by the Chair of the 2014 Australia Group Plenary
Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation
June 6, 2014

The need to strengthen global chemical and biological non-proliferation measures underscored by the chemical weapons situation in Syria dominated the Australia Group’s annual plenary meeting, which concluded today in Paris. Chaired by Australia and hosted in Paris by the French Government, the Australia Group seeks to counter the spread of technologies and materials that may facilitate the development or acquisition of chemical and biological weapons (CBW) by states and terrorists. The Plenary welcomed Mexico as a new participating state in the Group.

Among the measures AG participants agreed to take to strengthen CBW non-proliferation measures are:

Encourage more non-participants to adhere to the AG Guidelines – to make a political commitment to control the export of all items on the AG common control lists according to the AG Guidelines, including subsequent changes – in order to increase synergies with the growing number of non-participants using the Australia Group control lists and Guidelines as the benchmark for global best practice chemical and biological export controls and reduce loopholes that proliferators and terrorists can exploit. Such adherent countries will be afforded a broader range of information from AG participants to assist them in observing global best practice.

In line with UN Security Council Resolution 1540, increase efforts against CBW terrorism, including by adding to the AG Guidelines the requirement to consider the risk of diversion to terrorists when reviewing export licenses for AG-controlled items, and by sharing more information related to CBW terrorism with each other and with non-participants.

Enhance outreach to industry and academia to improve their understanding of the risks of CBW proliferation and how they can help prevent it -- not just to industry and academia within AG Participants’ jurisdiction, but also in multinational industry and academic forums and in outreach to non-participants.

The Australia Group affirmed its view that the horrific use of chemical weapons against the people of Syria underlines the necessity for the complete eradication of chemical weapons for all time by all countries through the universal adherence to and effective implementation of the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC). Since Syria’s accession to the CWC, the Australia Group welcomes the progress made in the destruction of Syria’s chemical weapons programme. However, until Syria facilitates the complete and verified destruction of its chemical weapons programme and resolves all ambiguities in its declaration to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, the international community will not have confidence that Syria is meeting its obligations under UN Security Council Resolution 2118 and the CWC in full. The Australia Group Plenary also expressed concern about continued reports of the use of chemical agents in the ongoing conflict in Syria. The AG Plenary considered lessons that could be learned from Syria's chemical weapons programme and agreed on measures to further strengthen non-proliferation export controls.

The Group continued its process of review of the proliferation risk associated with new and emerging technologies, and participating experts continued their review of lists of chemical and biological items that are to be subject to export control. Updated lists as well as the Australia Group Guidelines are available at www.australiagroup.net.

As in past years the 2014 Plenary enabled licensing and enforcement experts to share experience and information to prevent attempts to proliferate sensitive dual-use chemicals, biological materials, and related equipment. This year participants conducted a table top exercise to evaluate responses to various enforcement challenges and welcomed a comprehensive handbook on the identification of Australia Group listed items prepared by the United States. Australia Group participants affirmed their commitment to ensuring that their export controls did not hinder legitimate trade and technical cooperation in the chemical and biological sectors.

Australia Group participants agreed to amend the AG Guidelines to increase the prominence of “catch-all” controls on exports of unlisted items that may contribute to CBW, and put particular priority on “catch-all” implementation. They also agreed to enhance national efforts to control transfers of AG-listed technology in intangible forms or by intangible means, including via the provision of training. The Group also will continue to share information on approaches to visa vetting and to the control of proliferation-sensitive brokering services. Participants also clarified the implementation of the Group’s “no-undercut” policy, which promotes uniformity in the implementation of export controls.

Consideration was given to potential new members that have formally expressed interest in joining the Australia Group.

The Australia Group agreed to continue an active program of international outreach and engagement in 2014-15 to further enhance efforts to prevent the proliferation of chemical and biological weapons, with particular emphasis on encouraging adherence to the AG Guidelines, the threat of CBW terrorism, the need for “catch-all” controls, and the importance of outreach to industry and academia.

AG members accepted Australia’s offer to host the next Plenary in Perth, Western Australia, in 2015 to mark the 30th anniversary of the establishment of the Australia Group.

AG HOLDER WANTS TO BOOST VOTING ACCESS FOR AMERICAN INDIANS AND ALASKA NATIVES

FROM:  U.S. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT 
Monday, June 9, 2014
Attorney General Holder Suggests New Proposal to Boost Voting Access for American Indians and Alaska Natives
Idea Under Discussion Would Be to Require Jurisdictions That Include Tribal Lands to Locate at Least One Polling Place in Venue Selected by Tribal Government

In a new step to boost voting access for American Indians and Alaska Natives, Attorney General Eric Holder today suggested the idea of requiring state and local election administrators whose territory includes tribal lands to place at least one polling site in a location chosen by the tribal government.  Attorney General Holder said the Justice Department would begin consulting with tribal authorities about the concept, and following consultations, would seek to cooperate with Congress on enacting the potential proposal.

Attorney General Holder said action was necessary to confront the range of factors that have contributed to the reduced voting access experienced by American Indians and Alaska Natives.  Those factors include inaccessible polling places in tribal areas, English-only ballots for areas with limited English proficiency, and "precinct realignment" practices that attempt to combine geographically isolated Native communities.

“These conditions are not only unacceptable, they’re outrageous,” said Attorney General Holder.  "As a nation, we cannot, and we will not, simply stand by as the voices of Native Americans are shut out of the democratic process.  I am personally committed to working with tribal authorities – and with Congress – to confront disparities and end misguided voting practices once and for all.”

Attorney General Holder made the remarks in his weekly video message, which was posted on the Justice Department’s website.

Later today, Associate Attorney General Tony West will expand on this announcement in his remarks at the National Congress of American Indian Mid-year Conference in Anchorage, Alaska.  In his remarks, Associate Attorney General West will denounce the use of discriminatory practices used to prevent certain groups from participating in the voting process and further discuss the need to take critical next steps to tackle disenfranchisement among Indian Americans and Alaska Natives.

“Our proposal would give American Indian and Alaska Native voters a right that most other citizens take for granted: a polling place in their community where they can cast a ballot and receive voter assistance to make sure their vote will be counted,” Associate Attorney General West will say in his remarks.  “We take this step because voting is a legal right we guarantee to our citizens.  We do it because it is right. And we do it because our shared history compels no less.”

The complete text of Attorney General Holder’s video message is copied below:

“At every level of our nation’s Department of Justice, my colleagues and I are firmly committed to protecting the voting rights of every eligible American.  Unfortunately, when it comes to exercising this fundamental right, many individuals and communities face significant obstacles.  And this is particularly true among American Indian and Alaska Native populations.

“All too often, tribal communities must contend with inaccessible polling places, reduced voting hours – and even requirements for mail-in, English-only ballots in places with low literacy rates and limited English proficiency.  In some areas in Alaska, for example, state election officials have engaged in “precinct realignment” practices that combine two or more geographically isolated Native communities that are accessible to one another only by air or boat.  For some voters, this means that casting a ballot would require them to cross a body of water or a mountain range that’s impassable on a snowy November Election Day.

“Let me be clear: these conditions are not only unacceptable – they’re outrageous.  As a nation, we cannot – and we will not – simply stand by as the voices of Native Americans are shut out of the democratic process.  And I am personally committed to working with tribal authorities – and with Congress – to confront disparities and end misguided voting practices once and for all.

“As Attorney General, I support taking whatever steps are necessary to guarantee that voters have access to polling places on Indian reservations and in Alaska Native villages.  One idea in this regard would be federal legislation requiring any state or local election administrator whose territory includes all or part of an Indian reservation, an Alaska Native village, or other tribal lands to locate at least one polling place in a venue selected by the tribal government.  In other words, we suggest that each tribe in the nation should have at least one polling place in a location of its choice.  To consider this idea, the Justice Department will officially enter into formal consultations with sovereign tribes.  If the tribes support it, the department will formally propose legislation to Congress and work to enact it.

“For decades upon decades, American Indians and Alaska Natives have faced a distinctive history of discrimination that has adversely affected their right to vote.  As I made clear last November – at a White House Tribal Nations Conference in Washington – this Department of Justice and this Administration will never waver in our commitment to tribal sovereignty and self-determination.  Today, we’re taking a critical step to make good on that commitment.  And we’re reaffirming our dedication to expanding the ability of native peoples to exercise their most fundamental rights, to chart their own courses, and to build the better and brighter futures that they and their children deserve.”

CITY OF AUSTIN SETTLES EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION ALLEGATIONS WITH DOJ

FROM:  U.S. JUSTICE DEPARTMENT 
Monday, June 9, 2014
Justice Department Settles Employment Discrimination Allegations Against City of Austin

The Department of Justice announced today that it has entered into and filed a consent decree that, if approved by the court, will resolve the department’s allegations that the city of Austin violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by discriminating against African-American and Hispanic applicants for entry-level firefighter positions at the Austin Fire Department (AFD).

Title VII’s prohibitions of discrimination in employment forbid not only intentional discrimination, but also the use of employment practices, such as written tests, that result in disparate impact against any group based on the race, color, sex, national origin or religion of that group’s members, unless an employer can prove that such practices are job related and consistent with business necessity.  Absent such proof, those practices do not identify the best qualified candidates and violate the law.  The complaint, filed along with the consent decree in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas in Austin, alleges that in 2012, the city used a written test that disproportionately eliminated African-Americans and Hispanics from the hiring process, and that Austin cannot demonstrate that its use of the test was job related and consistent with business necessity.  Similarly, the complaint alleges that Austin’s method of weighting the 2012 assessments and processing candidates in descending rank order by composite score had an adverse impact on individuals in these protected groups who passed the written test, and that this practice was also not job related or consistent with business necessity.  The United States has challenged the hiring process Austin planned to use for these positions in 2013 as well.

The Justice Department, along with the city of Austin, filed a joint motion today requesting that the court provisionally approve the consent decree executed by the parties and schedule an initial fairness hearing regarding the terms of the consent decree.

The consent decree requires that Austin no longer use the selection practices challenged by the United States in screening and selecting candidates for the AFD’s entry-level firefighter positions.  The decree requires that Austin develop a new, lawful selection procedure that complies with Title VII, and also requires that the city pay $780,000 in back pay to entry-level firefighter applicants who were harmed by the 2012 hiring practice challenged by the United States and who are determined to be eligible for relief.  Additionally, African-American and Hispanic applicants determined to be eligible for relief under the decree will be eligible for one of 30 priority appointments to an entry-level firefighter position with the AFD.  All applicants must pass the new, lawful selection procedure and other lawful selection procedures in order to be considered for priority hire relief.  African-American and Hispanic applicants who are offered priority hire relief are also eligible for retroactive seniority.

“The Department of Justice will not permit employers to use screening and selection devices that adversely affect any protected group unless those devices are shown to properly distinguish between qualified and unqualified applicants,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Jocelyn Samuels for the Civil Rights Division.  “The department commends Austin for its efforts to address these issues and to ensure that effective, Title VII-compliant selection practices are put into place.”

The department and the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) each investigated the AFD’s hiring practices.  Today’s proposed resolution was made possible in part through collaboration between the department and the San Antonio Field Office of the EEOC.

More information about Title VII and other federal employment laws is available on the Department of Justice website.

FTC CHARGES SUPPLEMENT MARKETERS WITH MAKING DECEPTIVE CLAIMS

FROM: U.S. FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION 
Supplement Marketers Settle FTC Charges that “BrainStrong Adult” Memory Improvement Claims Are Deceptive

Supplement marketers i-Health, Inc. and Martek Biosciences Corporation have agreed to settle FTC charges of deceptive advertising for claiming that their BrainStrong Adult dietary supplement will improve adult memory and prevent cognitive decline. The complaint also alleges the marketers falsely claimed they had clinical proof that BrainStrong Adult improves adult memory.

“Supplement marketers must ensure that adequate scientific proof supports their specific advertising claims,” said Jessica Rich, Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection.  “When the results of a scientific study don’t match the hype, consumers are likely to be misled.”

Since at least March 2011, i-Health and Martek have sold BrainStrong Adult for about $30 for a 30-day supply at major retail stores, including CVS Pharmacy, Walmart, Walgreens, and Rite Aid; and online through drugstore.com and Amazon.com.  They advertised the product – which contains the Omega-3 fatty acid DHA – on television, on Twitter, and at brainstrongdha.com.

In the television ad, a woman forgets why she walked into a room. Through a voice over, her dog tells the audience she is there to find her sunglasses, which are sitting on top of her head.  Another voice over then asks, “Need a memory boost?  Introducing BrainStrong…Clinically shown to improve adult memory.”

The proposed administrative settlement covers any dietary supplement, food, or drug promoted to prevent cognitive decline or improve memory, or containing DHA. It bars the companies from claiming that any such product prevents cognitive decline or improves memory in adults unless the claim is truthful and supported by human clinical testing. The settlement also prohibits claims about the health benefits, performance, safety, or effectiveness of these products unless the claims are backed up by competent and reliable scientific evidence. Finally, the companies cannot claim they have clinical proof to support their claims when they do not.

For consumer information see: What’s in a health claim? Should be a healthy dose of proof.

The Commission vote to accept the agreement containing the proposed consent order for public comment was 3-1-1, with Commissioner Ohlhausen voting no, and Commissioner McSweeny not participating. Chairwoman Ramirez and Commissioner Brill issued a joint concurring statement, Commissioner Wright issued a separate concurring statement, and Commissioner Ohlhausen issued a dissenting statement.

The FTC will publish a description of the consent agreement in the Federal Register shortly. The agreement will be subject to public comment for 30 days, beginning today and continuing through July 9, 2014, after which the Commission will decide whether to make the proposed consent order final. Interested parties can submit written comments electronically or in paper form by following the instructions in “Supplementary Information” section of the Federal Register notice. Comments should be submitted electronically using this form. Instructions for submitting comments in paper form are listed in the “Accessibility” portion of the form.

NOTE: When the Commission issues a consent order on a final basis, it carries the force of law with respect to future actions. Each violation of such an order may result in a civil penalty of up to $16,000.

The Federal Trade Commission works for consumers to prevent fraudulent, deceptive, and unfair business practices and to provide information to help spot, stop, and avoid them.

GLIAL CELLS AND THE BRAIN

FROM:  NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION 
The beautiful brain cells you don't know about
Hint: They're not neurons

The number of nerve cells in the human brain sounds impressive: 100 billion. And it is.

But neurons may make up as little as 15 percent of cells in the brain. The other cells are called glial cells, or glia.

Glia are the rising stars of the neuroscience universe. Once delegated to simply a supporting role for neurons, these cells are now thought to play an important part in early brain development, learning and memory.

A 2013 workshop funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) enabled researchers who study learning and memory to get together (many for the first time) and reconsider glia's function.

"It was paradigm-shifting," said R. Douglas Fields, a neurobiologist at the National Institutes of Health and meeting organizer. "Everyone left enthused about the enormous potential for understanding brain function, especially learning and memory by studying how all the cells in the brain work together, rather than focusing exclusively on neurons."

In fact, Fields and other brain researchers who specialize in glia have since called for a greater focus on non-neuronal cells as part of the BRAIN Initiative, a collaborative research project announced by the Obama administration in April 2013.

When you learn something, how to catch a ball or use an equation, information is transmitted along the spindly arms of neurons via electrical signals. At the same time, glia called oligodendrocytes work to insulate these particular arms with a fatty substance called myelin so the information flows more efficiently.

Some studies show that glial cells known as astrocytes may have an even more active role in learning. Astrocytes may release chemicals that strengthen newly formed connections between neurons, making it more likely you'll be able to remember a new face, or the name of your co-worker's beloved golden retriever.

Understanding how we learn requires that scientists and engineers take a holistic approach to brain research.

NSF-funded research centers such as the Center of Excellence for Learning in Education, Science and Technology and the Temporal Dynamics of Learning Center integrate experimentation, modeling and technical application to help us understand what's really going on inside the brain. And to use that knowledge to educate students and to build intelligent technologies.

-- Sarah Bates, NSF

Monday, June 9, 2014

U.S. DEFENSE DEPARTMENT CONTRACTS FOR JUNE 9, 2014

FROM:  U.S. DEFENSE DEPARTMENT 

CONTRACTS
ARMY

Dell Federal Systems L.P., Round Rock, Texas (91QUZ-07-D-0006, MOD P00019); IBM Corp., Bethesda, Maryland (W91QUZ-07-D-0007, MOD P00017); Unicom Government, Inc., Herndon, Virginia (W91QUZ-07-D-0008, MOD P00017); CDW Government LLC, Vernon Hills, Illinois (W91QUZ-07-D-0009, MOD P00022); Iron Bow Technologies, LLC, Chantilly, Virginia (W91QUZ-07-D-0010, MOD P00024); and World Wide Technology, Inc., Maryland Heights, Missouri (W91QUZ-07-D-0011, MOD P00019), were awarded a $774,000,000 modification to their existing contracts for the Information Technology Enterprise Solutions - 2 Hardware, which encompasses all requirements for information technology, including hardware, software and related incidental services for providing end-to-end solutions. Funding and work locations will be determined with each order. The estimated completion date is June 23, 2015. Army Contracting Command, Rock Island Arsenal, Illinois, is the contracting activity.
Miltec Corp., Huntsville, Alabama, was awarded a $44,000,000 cost-plus-fixed-fee contract with options for labor, material, travel for research and development for the Advanced Hypersonic Weapon - Technology Demonstration for Space and Missile Defense Command, with an estimated completion date of June 5, 2019. Work will be performed in Huntsville, Alabama. Fiscal 2013 research, development, testing and evaluation funds in the amount of $10,786,000 were obligated at the time of the award. Bids were solicited via the Internet with one received. Army Space and Missile Defense Command is the contracting activity (W9113M-14-C-0015).

A-T Solutions, Fredericksburg, Virginia, was awarded a $23,889,413 modification (P00004) to contract W911S0-13-C-0009 to exercise option one for the Asymmetric Warfare Group (AWG) operations support requirement. Option one will provide personnel, expertise and the skills required to support AWG’s mission to Army and joint forces worldwide to predict, mitigate, counter, and defeat asymmetric and emerging hybrid threats. Fiscal 2014 operations and maintenance funds in the amount of $6,847,926 and fiscal 2014 other procurement funds in the amount of $17,041,487 were obligated at the time of the award. Estimated completion date is June 14, 2015. Work will be performed at Fort Meade, Maryland. Army Contracting Command, Fort Eustis, Virginia, is the contracting activity.

Raass Brothers, Inc., Provo, Utah, was awarded a $9,540,270 firm-fixed-price contract with options for constructing B-52 munitions storage igloos at Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota, with an estimated completion date of Nov. 30, 2015. Bids were solicited via the Internet with 10 received. Fiscal 2010 military construction funds in the amount of $1,891,908 and fiscal 2014 military construction funds in the amount of $7,648,362 are being obligated at the time of the award. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Omaha, Nebraska, is the contracting activity (W9128F-14-C-0009).

NAVY

General Dynamics National Steel and Shipbuilding Co., San Diego, California, is being awarded a not-to-exceed $64,056,766 modification under a previously awarded contract (N00024-09-C-2229) to procure advance material for the Mobile Landing Platform 4 Afloat Forward Staging Base platform. This action allows the procurement of ship sets for the purchase specifications supporting integrated propulsion, main diesel generator engines, propeller and shafting, integrated bridge, and voice communications. Work will be performed in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (38 percent); Beloit, Wisconsin (37 percent); San Diego (15 percent), Chesapeake, Virginia (9 percent); and Deerfield, Florida (1 percent), and is expected to be completed by March 2017. Fiscal 2014 ship conversion (Navy) funds in the amount of $48,042,574 will be obligated at time of award and will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. The Naval Sea Systems Command, Washington, District of Columbia, is the contracting activity.
Science Applications International Corp., McLean, Virginia (N00421-10-D-0016); Booz Allen Hamilton, Inc., McLean, Virginia (N00421-10-D-0017); Engility Corp., Chantilly, Virginia (N00421-10-D-0018); and National Technologies, Inc., Alexandria, Virginia (N00421-10-D-0019), are each being awarded modifications to previously awarded indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity multiple award contracts to exercise options for business financial management and program, and business analysis services in support of the Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division (NAWCAD). A not-to-exceed shared ceiling of $10,553,653 exists for the ordering period, and each contractor will be provided a fair opportunity to compete for individual task orders. Work will be performed at NAWCAD Patuxent River, Maryland (89.9 percent), and NAWCAD Lakehurst, New Jersey (10.1 percent), and is expected to be completed in June 2015. No funding will be obligated at time of award; funds will be obligated on individual task orders as they are issued. The Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division, Patuxent River, Maryland, is the contracting activity.

AH Environmental Consultants, Inc.*, Newport News, Virginia, is being awarded a maximum amount $10,000,000 firm-fixed-price, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity architect-engineering contract for environmental consulting services located in the Naval Facilities Engineering Command (NAVFAC) Southeast area of responsibility (AOR). The work to be performed provides for professional architect-engineering services for potable water, wastewater, stormwater, spill control and other related miscellaneous environmental services, to include various forms of support for these environmental programs. All work on this contract will be performed at various activities in the NAVFAC Southeast AOR. The term of the contract is not to exceed 60 months with an expected completion date of June 2019. Task order 0001 is being awarded at $71,935 for a sanitary survey at Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base New Orleans, Louisiana. Work for this task order is expected to be completed by December 2014. Fiscal 2014 operation and maintenance (Navy) contract funds in the amount of $71,935 are obligated on this award and will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. This contract was competitively procured via the Navy Electronic Commerce Online website, with 14 proposals received. The Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Southeast, Jacksonville, Florida, is the contracting activity (N69450-14-D-0029).
Navmar Applied Sciences Corp.,* Warminster, Pennsylvania, is being awarded a $7,958,350 modification to a previously awarded firm-fixed-price contract (N68335-12-C-0353) to exercise an option for the procurement of logistic services and mission travel in support of the TigerShark Persistent Surveillance Unmanned Aerial System Air Vehicles. Work will be performed in Afghanistan (92 percent), and Warminster (8 percent), and is expected to be completed in June 2015. Fiscal 2014 operations and maintenance (Army) funds in the amount of $7,958,350 are being obligated on this award, all of which will expire at the end of the current fiscal year. The Naval Air Warfare Center Aircraft Division, Lakehurst, New Jersey, is the contracting activity.

DEFENSE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS AGENCY

Aurora Flight Sciences Corporation, Manassas, Virginia, has been awarded a $10,457,663 modification (P00003) exercising the first option period on a seven-month base contract (HR0011-14-C-0014), with one 16-month option period. The contractor shall provide the personnel, equipment, materials, tools, facilities, and program management and technical effort to design, develop, integrate, test, and deliver the contractual requirements of the program for building two X-Plane aircraft. This is a cost-plus-fixed-fee contract. Locations of performance are Manassas, Virginia (81 percent); Indianapolis, Indiana (13 percent); Tucson, Arizona (1 percent); and Ventura, California (5 percent), with an Oct. 10, 2015, performance completion date. Type of appropriation is fiscal 2014 through fiscal 2015 research, development, test and evaluation in the amount of $10,457,663. The contracting activity is the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, Arlington, Virginia.

DEFENSE LOGISTICS AGENCY

Raytheon Company, McKinney, Texas, has been awarded a maximum $8,735,016 firm-fixed-price contract for receiver exciters. This contract was a sole-source acquisition. This is a 30-month base contract with no option periods. Location of performance is Texas with a Dec. 31, 2016, performance completion date. Type of appropriation is Navy working capital funds. The contracting activity is the Defense Logistics Agency Aviation, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (SPRPA1-14-G-001X-1010).

UPDATE: Harlan Global Manufacturing LLC,* Kansas City, Kansas (SPE8EC-14-D-0020), has been added as an awardee to the multiple award contract issued against solicitation #SPM8EC-11-R-0001 announced Aug. 1, 2011.
*Small business

PRESIDENT OBAMA MAKES REMARKS ON COLLEGE AFFORDABILITY

FROM:  THE WHITE HOUSE 

Remarks by the President on Opportunity for All: Making College More Affordable

1:51 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.  Everybody have a seat.  Welcome to the White House.  And I want to thank Andy for the terrific introduction.  And this is commencement season, and it’s always a hopeful and exciting time, and I’ll bet we might have some folks who just graduated here today.  Raise your hands.  Let’s see -- yes, we’ve got a couple of folks who are feeling pretty good.  (Laughter.) 
Of course, once the glow wears off, this can be a stressful time for millions of students.  And they’re asking themselves, how on Earth am I going to pay off all these student loans?  And that’s what we’re here to talk about.  And Andy I think gave a vivid example of what’s going through the minds of so many young people who have the drive and the energy and have succeeded in everything that they do but because of family circumstances have found themselves in a situation where they’ve got significant debt.
Now, we know, all of you know, that in a 21st century economy, a higher education is the single best investment that you can make in yourselves and your future, and we’ve got to make sure that investment pays off.
And here’s why:  For 51 months in a row, our businesses have created new jobs -- 9.4 million new jobs in total.  And over the last year, we’ve averaged around 200,000 new jobs every month.  That’s the good news.  But while those at the top are doing better than ever, average wages have barely budged.  And there are too many Americans out there that are working harder and harder just to get by.
Everything I do is aimed towards reversing those trends that put a greater burden on the middle class and are diminishing the number of ladders to get into the middle class, because the central tenet of my presidency, partly because of the story of my life and Michelle’s life, is this is a country where opportunity should be available for anybody -- the idea that no matter who you are, what you look like, where you come from, how you were raised, who you love, if you’re willing to work hard, if you’re willing to live up to your responsibilities, you can make it here in America.
And in America, higher education opens the doors of opportunity for all.  And it doesn’t have to be a four-year college education.  We’ve got community colleges, we’ve got technical schools, but we know that some higher education, some additional skills is going to be your surest path to the middle class.  The typical American with a bachelor’s degree or higher earns over $28,000 more per year than somebody with just a high school education -- 28 grand a year.  And right now, the unemployment rate for workers with a bachelor’s degree is about half of what it is for folks with just a high school education.
So you know that this is a smart investment.  Your parents know this is a smart investment.  That’s why so many of them made such big sacrifices to make sure that you could get into college, and nagged you throughout your high school years.  (Laughter.) 
Here’s the problem:  At a time when higher education has never been more important, it’s also never been more expensive.  Over the last three decades, the average tuition at a public university has more than tripled.  At the same time, the typical family’s income has gone up just 16 percent. 
Michelle and I both went to college because of loans and grants and the work that we did.   But I’ll be honest with you -- now, I’m old, I’ve got to admit -- (laughter) -- but when I got out of school, it took me about a year to pay off my entire undergraduate education.  That was it.  And I went to a private school; I didn’t even go to a public school.  So as recently as the ‘70s, the ‘80s, when you made a commitment to college, you weren’t anticipating that you’d have this massive debt on the back end. 
Now, when I went to law school it was a different story.  But that made sense because the idea was if you got a professional degree like a law degree, you would probably be able to pay it off.  And so I didn’t feel sorry for myself or any lawyers who took on law school debt. 
But compare that experience just half a generation, a generation ago to what kids are going through now.  These rising costs have left middle-class families feeling trapped.  Let’s be honest:  Families at the top, they can easily save more than enough money to pay for school out of pocket.  Families at the bottom face a lot of obstacles, but they can turn to federal programs designed to help them handle costs.  But you’ve got a lot of middle-class families who can’t build up enough savings, don’t qualify for support, feel like nobody is looking out for them.  And as Andy just described vividly, heaven forbid that the equity in their home gets used up for some other family emergency, or, as we saw in 2008, suddenly home values sink, and then people feel like they’re left in the lurch. 
So I’m only here because this country gave me a chance through education.  We are here today because we believe that in America, no hardworking young person should be priced out of a higher education. 
This country has always made a commitment to put a good education within the reach of young people willing to work for it.  I mentioned my generation, but think about my grandfather’s generation.  I just came back from Normandy, where we celebrated D-Day.  When that generation of young people came back from World War II, at least the men, my grandfather was able to go to college on the GI Bill.  And that helped build the greatest middle class the world has ever known. 
Grants helped my mother raise two kids by herself while she got through school.  And she didn’t have $75,000 worth of debt, and she was raising two kids at the same time.  Neither Michelle or I came from a lot of money, but with hard work, and help from scholarships and student loans, we got to go to great schools.  We did not have this kind of burden that we’re seeing, at least at the undergraduate stages.  As I said, because of law school, we only finished paying off our own student loans just 10 years ago.  So we know what many of you are going through or look forward -- or don’t look forward to.  (Laughter.)  And we were doing it at the same time -- we already had to start saving for Malia and Sasha’s education. 
But this is why I feel so strongly about this.  This is why I’m passionate about it.  That’s why we took on a student loan system that basically gave away tens of billions of taxpayer dollars to big banks.  We said, let’s cut out the middle man.  Banks should be making a profit on what they do, but not off the backs of students.  We reformed it; more money went directly to students.  We expanded grants for low-income students through the Pell grant program.  We created a new tuition tax credit for middle-class families.  We offered millions of young people the chance to cap their student loan payments at 10 percent of their income -- that’s what Andy was referring to.  Michelle right now is working with students to help them “Reach Higher,” and overcome the obstacles that stand between them and graduation.  This is something we are deeply invested in.
But as long as college costs keep soaring, we can’t just keep throwing money at the problem.  We’re going to have to initiate reforms from the colleges themselves.  States have to invest more in higher education.  Historically, the reason we had such a great public education system, public higher education system was states understood we will benefit if we invest in higher education.  And somewhere along the line, they started thinking, we’ve got to invest more in prisons than we do in higher education.  And part of the reason that tuition has been jacked up year after year after year is state legislators are not prioritizing this.  They’re passing the costs onto taxpayers.  It’s not sustainable.
So that’s why I laid out a plan to shake up our higher education system and encourage colleges to finally bring down college costs.  And I proposed new rules to make sure for-profit colleges keep their promises and train students with the skills for today’s jobs without saddling them with debt.  Too many of these for-profit colleges -- some do a fine job, but many of them recruit kids in, the kids don’t graduate, but they’re left with the debt.  And if they do graduate, too often they don’t have the marketable skills they need to get the job that allows them to service the debt.     
None of these fights have been easy.  All of them have been worth it.  You’ve got some outstanding members of Congress right here who have been fighting right alongside us to make sure that we are giving you a fair shake.  And the good news is, more young people are earning college degrees than ever before.  And that’s something we should be proud of, and that’s something we should celebrate. 
But more of them are graduating with debt.  Despite everything we’re doing, we’re still seeing too big a debt load on too many young people.  A large majority of today’s college seniors have taken out loans to pay for school.  The average borrower at a four-year college owes nearly $30,000 by graduation day.  Americans now owe more on student loans than they do on credit cards.  And the outrage here is that they’re just doing what they’ve been told they’re supposed to do.  I can’t tell you how many letters I get from people who say I did everything I was supposed to and now I’m finding myself in a situation where I’ve got debts I can’t pay off, and I want to pay them off, and I’m working really hard, but I just can’t make ends meet.
If somebody plays by the rules, they shouldn’t be punished for it.  A young woman named Ashley, in Santa Fe, wrote me a letter a few months ago.  And Ashley wanted me to know that she’s young, she’s ambitious, she’s proud of the degree she earned.  And she said, “I am the future” -- she put “am” in capital letters so that I’d know she means business.  (Laughter.)  And she told me that because of her student loan debt, she’s worried she’ll never be able to buy a car or a house.  She wrote, “I’m not even 30, and I’ve given up on my future because I can’t afford to have one.”  I wrote her back and said it’s a little early in your 20s to give up.  (Laughter.)  So I’m sure Ashley was trying to make a point, but it’s a point that all of us need to pay attention to.  In America, no young person who works hard and plays by the rules should feel that way. 
Now, I’ve made it clear that I want to work with Congress on this issue.  Unfortunately, a generation of young people can’t afford to wait for Congress to get going.  The members of Congress who are here are working very hard and putting forward legislation to try to make this stuff happen, but they have not gotten some of the support that they need.  In this year of action, wherever I’ve seen ways I can act on my own to expand opportunity to more Americans, I have.  And today, I’m going to take three actions to help more young people pay off their student loan debt.
Number one, I’m directing our Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, to give more Americans who are already making their loan payments a chance to cap those payments at 10 percent of their income.  We call it “Pay As You Earn.”  We know it works, because we’ve already offered it to millions of young people.  It’s saving folks like Andy hundreds of dollars potentially every month. It’s giving graduates the opportunity to pursue the dreams that inspired them to go to school in the first place, and that’s good for everybody.  And we want more young people to start their own businesses.  We want more young people becoming teachers and nurses and social workers.  We want young people to be in a position to pursue their dreams.  And we want more young people who act responsibly to be able to manage their debt over time.  So we’re announcing steps that will open up “Pay As You Earn” to nearly 5 million more Americans.  That’s the first action we’re taking today.
The second action is to renegotiate contracts with private companies like Sallie Mae that service our student loans.  And we’re going to make it clear that these companies are in the business of helping students, not just collecting payments, and they owe young people the customer service, and support, and financial flexibility that they deserve.  That’s number two.
Number three -- we’re doing more to help every borrower know all the options that are out there, so that they can pick the one that’s right for them.  So we’re going to work with the teachers’ associations, and the nurses’ associations, with business groups; with the YMCA, and non-profits and companies like TurboTax and H&R Block.  And tomorrow, I’m going to do a student loan Q&A with Tumblr to help spread the word -- you’re laughing because you think, what does he know about Tumblr?  (Laughter.)  But you will recall that I have two teenage daughters so that I am hip to all these things.  (Laughter.)  Plus I have all these twenty-somethings who are working for me all the time.  (Laughter.)
But to give even more student borrowers the chance to save money requires action from Congress.  I’m going to be signing this executive order.  It’s going to make progress, but not enough.  We need more.  We’ve got to have Congress to make some progress.  Now, the good news is, as I said, there are some folks in Congress who want to do it.  There are folks here like Jim Clyburn, John Tierney, who are helping lead this fight in the House.  We’ve got Elizabeth Warren, who’s leading this fight in the Senate.  Elizabeth has written a bill that would let students refinance their loans at today’s lower interest rates, just like their parents can refinance a mortgage.  It pays for itself by closing loopholes that allow some millionaires to pay a lower tax rate than middle-class families. 
I don’t know, by the way, why folks aren’t more outraged about this.  I’m going to take a pause out of my prepared text.  You would think that if somebody like me has done really well in part because the country has invested in them, that they wouldn’t mind at least paying the same rate as a teacher or a nurse.  There’s not a good economic argument for it, that they should pay a lower rate.  It’s just clout, that’s all.  So it’s bad enough that that’s already happening.  It would be scandalous if we allowed those kinds of tax loopholes for the very, very fortunate to survive while students are having trouble just getting started in their lives. 
So you’ve got a pretty straightforward bill here.  And this week, Congress will vote on that bill.  And I want Americans to pay attention to see where their lawmakers’ priorities lie here:  lower tax bills for millionaires, or lower student loan bills for the middle class.
This should be a no-brainer.  You’ve got a group of far-right Republicans in Congress who push this trickle-down economic plan, telling hard-working students and families, “You’re on your own.”  Two years ago, Republicans in Congress nearly let student loan interest rates double for 7 million young people.  Last year, they tried to strip protections from lower-income students.  This year, House Republicans voted overwhelmingly to slash Pell grants and make it harder for thousands of families to afford college.  If you’re a big oil company, they’ll go to bat for you.  If you’re a student, good luck. 
Some of these Republicans in Congress seem to believe that it’s just because -- that just because some of the young people behind me need some help, that they’re not trying hard enough.  They don’t get it.  Maybe they need to talk to Andy.  These students worked hard to get where they are today. 
Shanelle Roberson -- where is Shanelle?  Shanelle is the first in her family to graduate from a four-year college.  (Applause.)  Shanelle is not asking for a handout, none of these folks are.  They’re working hard.  They’re working while they’re going to school.  They’re doing exactly what we told them they should do.  But they want a chance.  If they do exactly what they’re told they should do, that they’re not suddenly loaded up where they’ve got so much debt that they can’t buy a house, they can’t think about starting a family, they can’t imagine starting a business on their own. 
I’ve been in politics long enough to hear plenty of people, from both parties, pay lip service to the next generation, and then they abandon them when it counts.  And we, the voters, let it happen.  This is something that should be really straightforward, just like the minimum wage should be straightforward, just like equal pay for equal work should be straightforward.  And one of the things I want all the voters out there to consider, particularly parents who are struggling trying to figure out how am I going to pay my kid’s college education, take a look and see who is that’s fighting for you and your kids, and who is it that’s not.  Because if there are no consequences, then this kind of irresponsible behavior continues on the part of members of Congress.
So I ran for this office to help more young people go to college, graduate, and pay off their debt.  And we’ve made some really good progress despite the best efforts of some in Congress to block that progress.  Think about how much more we could do if they were not standing in the way. 
This week, they have a chance to help millions of young people.  I hope they do.  You should let them know you are watching and paying attention to what they do.  If they do not look out for you, and then throw up a whole bunch of arguments that are meant to obfuscate -- meaning confuse, rather than to clarify and illuminate -- (laughter) -- then you should call them to account.  And in the meantime, I’m going to take these actions today on behalf of all these young people here, and every striving young American who shares my belief that this is a place where you can still make it if you try. 
Thank you, everybody.  God bless you.  God bless America. 
END                                                                     
2:12 P.M. EDT

U.S. CONGRATULATES PEOPLE OF PORTUGAL ON PORTUGAL DAY

FROM:  U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT 

On the Occasion of Portugal Day

Press Statement
John Kerry
Secretary of State
Washington, DC
June 9, 2014


On behalf of President Obama and the American people, I congratulate the people of Portugal as you celebrate Portugal Day on June 10.

The United States and Portugal share a close bond, dating back to the founding of the United States. In the centuries that have followed, millions of Portuguese and Americans have crossed the Atlantic in pursuit of opportunity and adventure.

For many of us, the bonds between our two nations are rooted not just in history, but also in family. My wife Teresa’s Portuguese heritage and my experience representing one of America’s largest Portuguese-American communities for nearly three decades in the United States Senate have made Portuguese culture an important part of my personal and public life. I was pleased to welcome Portuguese Foreign Minister Rui Machete to Washington in January and to share with him my personal affection for the people of Portugal and Portuguese culture.
Today, the strong partnership between our two countries is more vital than ever. We work together to advance global peace and security at NATO and the United Nations, and to promote shared prosperity by expanding our commercial ties, encouraging entrepreneurship and innovation, and creating opportunities for young people around the world.

As you honor Luís de Camões, reflect on Portugal’s rich culture, and enjoy time with family and friends, the American people celebrate with you. I am confident that our partnership will continue to deepen in the years to come.

DOD REPORT SAYS CHINA MILITARY MODERNIZING, PREPARING CONTINGENCIES FOR TERRITORIAL DISPUTES

FROM:  U.S. DEFENSE DEPARTMENT 
China Continues Military Modernization, Report Says
By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, June 5, 2014 – China continues to modernize and improve its military capabilities, according to an annual DOD report to Congress, and is also preparing for contingencies in the South and East China Seas where Beijing has been involved in increasingly tense territorial disputes with its neighbors.
The just-released “Military and Security Developments Involving the People’s Republic of China for 2014” report said China’s military expenditures continue to grow in keeping with its goal of being a regional and world power.
The main mission for the People’s Liberation Army, the report said, is to improve the capacity of its armed forces to fight and win short-duration, high-intensity regional contingencies.

China continues to prepare for potential conflict in the Taiwan Strait -- which includes deterring or defeating the United States, according to the report.
“The People’s Liberation Army also is placing emphasis on preparing for contingencies other than Taiwan, including potential contingencies in the South and East China Seas,” the report says.

The PLA Navy, the report said, conducted its largest-ever fleet exercise in the Philippine Sea.

China also conducted a series of joint military exercises in September and October, according to the report. “These exercises combined PLA ground, navy and air forces in large-scale maneuvers along China’s southern and southeastern coasts,” the report said.

“As China’s interests, capabilities, and international influence have grown, its military modernization program has also become increasingly focused on military investments for a range of missions beyond China’s coast, including sea lane security, counterpiracy, peacekeeping and humanitarian assistance/disaster relief,” the report says. The United States has worked with China on some of these missions.

Chinese leaders, the report said, see this era as a “period of strategic opportunity” to advance national development.

China is using the strategic space to prioritize economic growth and development and to achieve “national rejuvenation” by 2049, according to the report.
“At the same time, Chinese leaders express a desire to maintain peace and stability along their country’s periphery; expand their diplomatic influence to facilitate access to markets, capital, and resources; and avoid direct confrontation with the United States and other countries,” the report said.

Following this strategy, China’s presence is growing in all regions of the world, the report said. This has led to friction between some of its regional neighbors, including allies and partners of the United States.

The U.S.-China relationship is expanding and improving, the report said. In the military area there are questions about the rate of growth. The Chinese have not been transparent about their spending, with U.S. experts believing the country spends roughly $145 billion on defense, far beyond the $119 billion that China has officially announced.

China has sustained its investments in strategic forces modernization, as well as key anti-access/area-denial capabilities such as advanced intermediate- and medium-range conventional ballistic missiles, long-range land-attack and anti-ship cruise missiles, counter-space weapons, and offensive cyber capabilities, according to the report.

DOD WILL SAVE MONEY RETURNING SITES TO EUROPEAN HOST NATIONS

FROM:  U.S. DEFENSE DEPARTMENT 
Breedlove Supports Returning European Sites to Host Nations
By Army Sgt. 1st Class Tyrone C. Marshall Jr.
American Forces Press Service

DEAUVILLE, France, June 8, 2014 – The Defense Department will save money but will not reduce military readiness when it returns more than 20 sites across Europe that have been designated for return to host nations, the top U.S. military commander in Europe said.

In an interview with American Forces Press Service during events marking the 70th anniversary of D-Day, Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove, supreme allied commander Europe and commander, U.S. European Command, reaffirmed cutting excess infrastructure will produce DOD savings.

“What I have said ever since I’ve taken command -- even now after we are beginning to look at how do we respond to Russia -- I still believe that we have excess infrastructure here in Europe just like we do in the United States,” he said.
“We’re having to pay to maintain some of that infrastructure,” Breedlove said. “We need to skinny down and get rid of it.”

The Defense Department announced May 23 it will fully return 21 sites to their host nations in Europe, saving the U.S. government approximately $60 million annually. Military officials have said that neither existing force structure nor military capabilities will be affected.

Breedlove emphasized the cuts are intended to reduce excess infrastructure only.
“Infrastructure -- not force structure,” he said. “I believe we’ve probably gone too far in drawing down our force structure in Europe. We need to re-look at that as well.”

“But in the meantime,” Breedlove said, “giving back infrastructure saves us money, and it returns these lands and properties to their nations.”


NSF INVESTIGATES PRECURSORS OF AN EL NINO

FROM:  NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION 
World Oceans Day: 12 things to know about El Niño: Is it coming, and when?
How will it affect coastal species--and the fish on our dinner tables?
June 5, 2014

Just in time for World Oceans Day on June 8, cometh El Niño. But is El Niño really on the horizon? How certain are we of its arrival? And how will we know it's here? What effect will it have on the weather, on coastal species and on what's on our dinner tables?

To find out, the National Science Foundation (NSF) talked with biological oceanographer Mark Ohman and physical oceanographer Dan Rudnick of California's Scripps Institution of Oceanography. Their work is funded by NSF's Division of Ocean Sciences.

1) What is El Niño?

(Ohman) El Niño is the formation of warmer-than-usual ocean waters in the equatorial Pacific, with extensive temperature changes along the coast of South America during the month of December--hence the Spanish name "El Niño," the Christmas child. Scientists refer to the phenomenon as the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO). Its warm ocean phase is termed El Niño, and cool ocean phase La Niña.

2) Is El Niño predictable?

(Rudnick) Yes, to some extent. Scientists have identified the precursors of an El Niño; observations to monitor them are taking place near the equator. These observations are used in sophisticated models to predict the timing and magnitude of a developing El Niño. Right now, the models show anything from a weak to a strong El Niño ahead.

3) How do we know that changes in the ocean are the result of El Niño?

(Ohman) El Niño is the strongest year-to-year "signal" on Earth, with distinct temperature and precipitation changes over land and in the sea. Because the ocean is variable on many time scales (tidal, seasonal, year-to-year and decade-to-decade), it's essential to have a baseline of ocean measurements against which to measure departures from normal conditions.

Scientists at the NSF California Current Ecosystem Long-Term Ecological Research site, located in Southern California waters, have access to records of ocean conditions as far back as 1916.

4) Are all El Niños alike?

(Ohman) Not at all. Not only do El Niños vary in intensity, there are at least two major types. In one El Niño, termed Eastern Pacific, the most extreme temperature changes happen off the South American coast. In Central Pacific (CP) El Niños, the center of ocean temperature changes is much farther to the west. Some evidence suggests that the frequency of CP El Niños may be increasing.

(Rudnick) Ultimately every El Niño is different, and only some will strongly affect the coasts of the Americas.

5) When are the effects of El Niño the strongest?

(Ohman) The development of an El Niño is seasonal. The first ocean temperature changes usually begin during the Northern summer (June through September) then continue to grow, reaching their maximum during winter, from November to the following January. But precursors can sometimes be detected as early as February or March of the year of an El Niño's onset.

6) How often do El Niños occur, and how long do they last?

(Ohman) El Niños happen about every two to seven years. The last one was in 2009-10. Their duration is variable, but is usually six to eight months along the equator, with shorter time periods in higher latitudes. There have been exceptional cases of very long El Niños that lasted for two or more years, such as in 1957-59.

7) Are there new ways of observing developing El Niños?

(Rudnick) Yes, we're doing transects--criss-crossings of the ocean--using bullet-shaped, winged robotic gliders that collect underwater data. They're part of a project called Repeat Observations by Gliders in the Equatorial Region (ROGER).

These futuristic-looking gliders, called Spray gliders, traverse the oceans under their own power and are taking measurements in the Pacific Ocean near the Galapagos Islands. The information that returns with a glider tells us how the ocean is changing, and whether those changes indicate the coming of an El Niño.

8) How do the Spray gliders work?

(Rudnick) Spray gliders dive from the surface down to 1,000 meters (3,281 feet) and back, completing a cycle in six hours and covering six kilometers (3.7 miles) during that time.

The gliders carry sensors to measure temperature, salinity, current velocity, chlorophyll fluorescence (a measure of the abundance of phytoplankton), and acoustic backscatter (a measure of zooplankton). Spray gliders are launched for missions lasting about 100 days.

9) How do you know when to send out the gliders?

(Rudnick) The ROGER project wasn't originally designed to observe an El Niño, but the gliders were always capable of doing so. With a scientific project funded by NSF for two years, we couldn't realistically expect to catch an El Niño.

But science does involve serendipity, and we're fortunate to have the gliders in position just as an El Niño is appearing. We expect our data to include the most high-resolution repeated ocean transects ever done across the equator during an El Niño. Results from the gliders are showing the classic signs of an El Niño, including a strengthening equatorial undercurrent.

10) What effects will El Niño have on marine ecosystems along the U.S. West Coast?

(Ohman) During El Niño, the spawning grounds of coastal fish like sardines and anchovies often move closer to the coast. As warming waters from the open ocean come ever nearer to the California coast, cool upwelled water is found mostly along the edge of the land.

Warm-water plankton and fish may be transported far to the north of their normal ranges. In some El Niños, species that live along the coast of Baja California, Mexico, may be found as far north as off British Columbia.

11) Do seabirds and marine mammals respond to El Niño?

(Ohman) It all comes down to where the fish are. Some seabirds, especially those with limited foraging ranges or narrow food preferences, may have reduced reproductive success during an El Niño. California sea lions may have less fish prey available and therefore depressed birth weights of pups. Some whales, dolphins and porpoises may move to different foraging grounds where the fishing is better.

12) Will fisheries off California be affected?

(Ohman) El Niño may have a substantial effect on the catch of, for example, market squid, one of the most commercially important species off California. The spawning of this cool-water species may be severely curtailed, or take place in deeper waters than usual.

During an El Niño, U.S. West Coast sportfishers often catch more warm-water fish such as yellowfin tuna, dolphinfish (dorado), and yellowtail, and fewer cool-water fish like rockfish and lingcod. What's on your dinner table may, for a time, look just a bit different.

-- Cheryl Dybas, NSF

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