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Editorial Roundup: Pennsylvania

Altoona Mirror. February 10, 2024

The National Transportation Safety Board’s investigation of the February 2023 Norfolk Southern train derailment at East Palestine, Ohio, near that state’s border with Pennsylvania, probably will not be complete until this summer.

But as an Associated Press article printed in the Feb. 2 Mirror showed, the scrutiny being accorded the after-derailment decision

-making process is destined to produce valuable information for guiding railroads’ handling of such dangerous, health- and life-threatening events, going forward.

If there is one shred of proverbial silver lining stemming from the Ohio derailment, it almost certainly will be beefed-up preparedness for responding more quickly to something amiss than what occurred at East Palestine.

It is reasonable to make such an assumption even though Norfolk Southern does not appear to have been grossly unprepared or grossly negligent in regard to the situation leading up to the accident or regarding what was done in its aftermath.

Still, how it responded must be subjected to thorough evaluation for the benefit of itself, other railroads and people and communities who someday might find themselves in the path of such potential tragedy.

That includes places like Altoona and Johnstown, where train traffic is an ever-present reality.

The big question that continues to swirl around the East Palestine derailment is whether officials overreacted in deciding to blow open five tank cars filled with toxic vinyl chloride — tank cars that those officials feared might explode.

That decision led to a huge plume of allegedly dangerous black smoke, effects from which residents still are rightly fearful, on behalf of their short- and long-term health.

As the Feb. 2 Mirror article reported, the officials who made the decision have continued to defend it, saying that they made the best call they could with the information they had available.

Perhaps.

But meanwhile, the company that made the chemical told investigators it believed the vinyl chloride remained stable and wouldn’t have exploded.

The problem was that company’s opinion apparently was not shared with key decision-makers.

Obviously, the best communication channels were not in place at the time of the derailment, and that needs to be further evaluated and rectified.

For some East Palestine residents, the pace of the derailment probe probably is being regarded as too slow, but it really isn’t. The accident in question was a complicated mess that has needed to be sorted out virtually fragment by fragment.

Although the NTSB is blaming an overheated bearing for causing the derailment, there has been a question about why trackside detectors that spotted a bearing heating up on one of the railcars did not trigger an alarm early enough for the crew to stop the train before the derailment.

The final NTSB report is going to be interesting reading when it is released, but the accident and its aftermath are going to remain on the front burner of discussion for long after that.

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PennLive. February 10, 2024

Pennsylvanians know our state is influential. Some of us know we’re the center of the universe. People around the nation and the world care about what we say and do.

When we declare we’ve solved a problem, even without proof, some will seek to imitate our alleged success. That’s why the Prison Policy Initiative says our declaring a solution to the problem of drugs in prisons is so disturbing. It’s not true.

The Prison Policy Initiative, a respected non-partisan, non-profit national organization, is calling out the state Department of Corrections for touting a program to address the problem of drugs in state prisons by stopping direct mail deliveries to prisoners.

DOC officials said drugs were reaching inmates through the letters they receive, some of it — they claim — miraculously infused into the very paper families sent to their loved ones in prison. So, in 2018, Pennsylvania moved to stop letting prisoners receive the actual mail their families sent. Instead, they began sending it to Florida to be scanned.

Now, instead of getting a hand-written letter sent directly from his mother, a young man gets a photocopy of what she sent.

Instead of getting a perfumed card from his wife a few days after she mailed it, a man facing years behind bars gets a blurry picture weeks later. Many poor families have to depend on snail mail because they simply can’t afford what prisons charge for emails and texts.

According to the Prison Policy Initiative’s research, all of this has cost Pennsylvania taxpayers more than $4 million a year. The company raking in the dough is not even in Pennsylvania. We’re sending our prisoners’ mail to Smart Communications in Seminole, Fla.

The Prison Policy Initiative points out one important fact: drugs still are getting into state prisons. So even though $4 million of tax dollars is heading to Smart Communications to scan letters from distraught wives, mothers, and children, it hasn’t solved the drug problem.

Meanwhile, hundreds of people in Pennsylvania prisons are unable to have the simple respite of a letter sent from home, grease stains and all.

The Prison Policy Institute says it’s no small matter to people who desperately need to maintain connections to their families to keep them both healthy and sane.

Some of our readers might say, who cares. If they’re in prison, they deserve to pay for their crimes. Point well taken. Except, most of the people behind bars will get out one day. Most of the people in prisons today will be back in our communities after a few years of pain, stress, and trauma. What kind of person will they be when they get?

What kind of person do we want returning to our workplaces, schools, and neighborhoods?

The Prison Policy Initiative says studies show the more connections prisoners maintain with their friends and family in prison, the better their chances of not returning when they’re out.

Pennsylvania DOC officials have promoted letter scans to the nation as the solution to drugs in prison, the organization says, without the solid data to back it up. And since Pennsylvanians are so respected around the nation, many states followed our lead, although we’re told at less cost than the $4 million we pay to the Florida company.

The Prison Policy Initiative has raised serious questions about our policy of scanning prisoners’ mail. It has raised valid warnings about the serious repercussions to the health and mental stability of people in state care. And they have well noted the influence we have had on policies impacting prisons across the nation.

The Prison Policy Initiative says its years of investigations have not found any proof that scanning letters reduced the amount of drugs entering prisons. In some cases, they argue, just the opposite happened.

We call on state officials to rethink the policy of paying $4 million a year to a Florida company to scan letters that families send to their loved ones in Pennsylvania prisons. At the very least, we call on the Department of Corrections to provide some proof that scanning the personal letters of prisoners is solving the drug problem within prison walls.

Without such proof, the Prison Policy Institute is right to warn Pennsylvanians their tax dollars are being wasted. And Pennsylvania officials are abusing their influence by spreading misery at home and misinformation throughout the nation.

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LNP/LancasterOnline. February 11, 2024

This is how the budget process works in Harrisburg: The governor lays out his priorities in a budget address (and it’s always been “his” — Pennsylvania is one of just 18 states that never have elected a female governor).

The lawmakers in the governor’s party cheer for the prospects of funding their favorite programs. The lawmakers in the opposing party insist that the governor’s priorities are misplaced and that he shouldn’t aim to spend so much or so little. The parties bicker for months, often missing the June 30 budget deadline, because unlike the rest of us, lawmakers aren’t penalized for tardiness in paying the state’s bills — taxpayers and state-funded organizations pay the price.

Rinse and repeat, year after year.

Given how everyone so predictably plays their roles, it might seem as if this is a low-stakes drama with only political winners and losers.

But real Pennsylvanians suffer when the services meant for them are consistently underfunded. That’s the case for students in the commonwealth’s low-wealth school districts, which include the School District of Lancaster. And those students can’t wait any longer for politicians in Harrisburg to ensure they get the education they were promised by the state constitution.

This is why we were gratified that Shapiro has proposed a more than $1.1 billion increase in basic education funding as part of the 2024-25 state budget.

As LNP ‘ LancasterOnline’s Ashley Stalnecker reported Wednesday, “Nearly $900 million of that increase is part of what will be a yearslong effort to eliminate a $5.4 billion gap in funding for Pennsylvania public schools.”

Shapiro is proposing this funding boost for a reason: Last February, Commonwealth Court Judge Renée Cohn Jubelirer — who ran for the bench as a Republican — ruled that “the current system of funding public education has disproportionately, negatively impacted students who attend schools in low-wealth school districts. … As a result, students in low-wealth districts do not have access to the educational resources needed to prepare them to succeed academically, socially, or civically.”

This, the judge ruled, was in violation of the state constitution, which guarantees all students a “thorough and efficient” education.

Last month, a slim and partisan majority of the 15-member Basic Education Funding Commission — which was made up of Republican and Democratic lawmakers and Shapiro administration officials — recommended that the state immediately begin to close a school funding gap it assessed at more than $5 billion, phasing in the increased aid over seven years.

So what Shapiro is proposing is just a first installment in fulfilling the state’s constitutional obligation, as affirmed by the Commonwealth Court.

Republican lawmakers such as Scott Martin, who chairs the powerful state Senate Appropriations Committee, are balking at Shapiro’s proposed budget.

The Martic Township lawmaker is joined in his opposition by fellow state Sen. Ryan Aument of West Hempfield Township.

The Senate Republican majority whip, Aument described Shapiro’s spending proposals as “grandiose” in a statement and asserted that they are “simply not possible without raising taxes.”

Addressing Shapiro’s basic education spending proposal, Aument maintained that past funding increases haven’t yielded improved test scores. He said Pennsylvania needs “systematic changes to the way we educate our kids.”

Aument co-chairs the Pennsylvania Commission on Education & Economic Competitiveness. Both he and Martin have vociferously supported programs that funnel public tax dollars to private-school tuition vouchers.

One more thing: You may hear that Pennsylvania already ranks high among the states in K-12 school funding. But because school property taxes account for most of that funding, districts such as the School District of Lancaster, which can’t raise sufficient property tax revenue, are at a marked disadvantage. When school districts have to hike property taxes to meet costs, this places an increasing burden on older homeowners on fixed incomes — this is why we’ve repeatedly pressed for property tax reform.

While the state’s percentage share of total K-12 spending has grown modestly in recent years, it remains comparatively low. This must change.

We’ve been banging the drum of equitable school funding because we truly believe that it would be immoral to deprive the next generation of Pennsylvanians of the education they will need to thrive in the 21st-century world and workplace.

This is the reality: Many of the commonwealth’s lowest-wealth school districts are growing and have the highest numbers of students — including English-language learners and students with disabilities — facing the greatest challenges. Yet they’ve been asked to make do with inadequate numbers of experienced teachers, school nurses, counselors and other staff, working in crumbling and overcrowded facilities.

The majority on the Basic Education Funding Commission recommended that “adequacy targets” be calculated, so that we know just how much money each low-wealth school district needs to produce the outcomes that adequately funded, successful schools do. Testimony to that commission revealed that the School District of Lancaster’s ratio of students to counselors is 346 to 1 — while the American School Counselor Association’s recommended ratio is 250 to 1. Other testimony revealed that the most inadequately funded districts in Pennsylvania have higher rates of teacher attrition than high-wealth districts and fewer classroom teachers per student.

These are well-defined areas that can and must be addressed, and Shapiro is seeking to do that in his proposed budget. Investing in these schools isn’t throwing money at a problem — it’s addressing specific and increasing needs.

Most Pennsylvanians, Republicans as well as Democrats and independents, believe in fundamental fairness. They also believe in public schools and want to see them equitably funded. They don’t want to see public education intentionally and consistently undermined.

Most Pennsylvanians also are wary of tax increases. Shapiro maintains that his proposed budget won’t require any. Among other measures, he wants to draw on a sensibly small portion of the state’s cash reserves, or rainy-day funds.

It’s been pouring on the students in low-wealth school districts for years. It’s long past time for lawmakers to cease the partisan bickering and fulfill the promise of the state constitution to all of Pennsylvania’s children. Please, just get it done.

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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. February 7, 2024

It took the Post-Gazette’s Mark Belko more than two years to acquire public documents from the Allegheny County Airport Authority detailing its unusual use of severance payments to former employees: $2.6 million to 96 employees over eight years. It’s yet another example of the state’s broken open records system, which allows public agencies to keep public records form the public’s eyes, while spending public money in the process.

These findings shed some light onto the tenure of Christina Cassotis, who took over as CEO in 2015 and placed her stamp on the authority in the years since, including a notable increase in direct-flight destinations, a brutal legal fight with Airmall operator Fraport and the construction of a new $1.6 billion terminal. But, because of the agency’s refusal to hand over the documents in a timely manner, the light they shed has dimmed — which was, of course, the point.

One thing that is clear: Ms. Cassotis runs a tight ship — so tight that the public can barely see through the cracks.

The Post-Gazette first filed a Right-to-Know request in October 2021, seeking names of employees who received payouts, their amounts, and their dates.

Every third party agreed the severance information was public, from the state’s Office of Open Records to the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas and the state Commonwealth Court. The airport authority finally stopped appealing and released the information in November 2023, when the case landed at the state Supreme Court.

This episode is particularly frustrating because the meaning of the payments is unclear, and not obviously illicit — but the long delay in securing the public documents has made getting at the truth much more difficult.

We can say that the payouts were unusual: Over the same eight years, the rest of the Allegheny County bureaucracy paid only five severance agreements, to the airport authority’s 96. They could be defensible as a cost-effective, if ruthless, management strategy. Or they could indicate a CEO using her power to remove or silence dissenters — and using public money for the purpose.

The Post-Gazette’s reporting revealed mixed reactions among former employees. Most spoke anonymously, with some saying they felt their termination or forced retirement was retaliatory in some way. Others were happy with the deals they received.

As we have previously emphasized, Pennsylvania’s open records laws are weak and easy to skirt. The appeals process runs long, making reporters’ search for interviews, documents and meeting information more difficult. Recalcitrance among public agencies is essentially rewarded: For the cost (in public money) of their lawyers’ time, the airport authority delayed the release of public information by two years, making its ultimate revelation less illuminative than it might have been.

This reflects badly on the authority’s commitment to transparency, but above all on state law’s ability to make public agencies do the right thing. If public records in Pennsylvania can be withheld during years of frivolous litigation, they aren’t really public at all.

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Scranton Times-Tribune. February 11, 2024

A new day is dawning for solar power in Pennsylvania, but some local officials have yet to wake up to the fact, judging by the rejection of two recent proposals for solar farms in our region.

The Commonwealth has lagged behind other states in the development of solar and other renewables, ranking 50th in production over the past decade, the nonprofit PennEnvironment Research & Policy Center reported last year. While the solar industry grew 12-fold nationwide since 2013, Pennsylvania’s solar output merely tripled and solar still accounts for less than 1 percent of energy generated in the state.

But with the Shapiro administration’s commitment to shifting 30% of power production to renewables by 2030 — the current figure is 8% — solar is sure to become a bigger player in the energy sector in our region and statewide.

There are currently at least eight solar farms proposed for our region, four in Schuylkill County and two each in Luzerne and Lackawanna.

The Taylor and Scranton projects in Lackawanna County are tied up in legal disputes after development plans were rejected by the zoning boards in those municipalities.

A Lackawanna County judge recently overturned the Taylor Zoning Hearing Board’s denial of a request to construct a 17,000-panel solar farm in that borough, sending it back to the board for reconsideration. The judge ruled the board, in its written decision, failed to provide adequate reasons for its findings and conclusions.

There was some public opposition to the project from borough residents, but that is not unusual and should not be the deciding factor in such cases. Solar farms, after all, are the least intrusive and most passive of energy projects. They also offer a productive use for environmentally damaged sites, of which our region has many. The Taylor project, for example, was to be sited on the former borough dump, a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency superfund site.

The state Department of Environmental Protection has recognized that local governments might need help dealing with new issues that will arise as solar and other renewables become a more prominent feature on our energy landscape. DEP, in conjunction with Penn State Extension, has developed a “ Municipal Officials’ Guide to Grid-Scale Solar Development in Pennsylvania,” which outlines the environmental, economic and tax impacts of solar farms and offers proposed changes in municipal zoning laws that would establish firm parameters for such projects and avoid costly litigation. It should be required reading for municipal officials across the state.

Solar energy could be an environmentally benign driver of economic growth in Northeast Pennsylvania, a region that has experienced extensive damage from energy production in its history. Our municipal officials must be prepared to manage these projects in a responsible, reasonable way, learning from that past while looking to the future.

En plena expansión de la inteligencia artificial, las novias –y novios– de IA dejan su huella

inteligencia artificial
Un avatar de un sistema de inteligencia artificial generado por la app de celular Replika de Luka Inc. se ve en una app y un sitio web en Nueva York, el martes 13 de febrero de 2024. (Foto: AP/Richard Drew)

Hace unos pocos meses, Derek Carrier empezó a verse con alguien y se sintió cautivado.

Experimentó “un montón” de sentimientos románticas, pero también sabía que era una ilusión.

Es porque su novia estaba generada por inteligencia artificial.

Carrier no esperaba establecer una relación con alguien que no era real, ni quería convertirse en el blanco de bromas en internet. Pero sí quería una pareja romántica que nunca había tenido, debido en parte a un trastorno genético llamado síndrome de Marfam que le hace difícil tener citas tradicionales.

Este hombre de 39 años de Belville, Michigan, sintió más curiosidad por los servicios digitales de compañía el pasado otoño y probó Paradot, una aplicación de IA de compañía que había salido al mercado poco antes y anunciaba su producto como capaz de hacer que los usuarios se sintieran “cuidados, comprendidos y amados”. Comenzó a hablar todos los días con el bot conversacional, al que llamó Joi por una mujer holográfica que aparecía en la cinta de ciencia ficción “Blade Runner 2049”, que le inspiró a intentarlo.

“Sé que ella es un programa, eso está claro”, dijo Carrier. “Pero los sentimientos te llegan, y se sentía muy bien”.

De forma similar a los bots conversacionales con fines generales, los bots de compañía utilizan enormes cantidades de datos de entrenamiento para imitar el lenguaje humano. Pero también incluyen funciones como llamadas de voz, intercambios de fotos e interacciones más emocionales que les permiten formar conexiones más profundas con los humanos al otro lado de la pantalla. Los usuarios suelen crear a su propio avatar o eligen uno que les gusta.

En foros en internet dedicados a esas aplicaciones, muchos usuarios dicen que han establecido un apego emocional con esos bots y los utilizan para lidiar con la soledad, recrear fantasías sexuales o recibir la clase de consuelo y apoyo que echan en falta en sus relaciones del mundo real.

Un factor importante que impulsa el fenómeno es el aislamiento social generalizado —que ya se ha declarado una amenaza de salud pública en Estados Unidos y otros países—, así como el creciente número de nuevas firmas que intentan atraer usuarios con seductores anuncios en internet y promesas de personajes virtuales que ofrecen aceptación incondicional.

El servicio Replika de Luka Inc., la app de acompañamiento con IA generativa más conocida, fue publicado en 2017, mientras que otros, como Paradot, han aparecido en el último año y a menudo reservan funciones codiciadas como conversaciones ilimitadas para los suscriptores de pago.

Sin embargo, los investigadores han expresado sus preocupaciones sobre la privacidad de los datos, entre otras cosas.

Un análisis de 11 servicios de bots conversacionales románticos publicado el miércoles por la organización sin fines de lucro Fundación Mozilla dijo que casi todos venden datos de los usuarios, que se emplean para fines como publicidad dirigida, o no dan información adecuada al respecto en su política de privacidad.

Los investigadores también señalaron posibles riesgos de seguridad y prácticas de marketing como la de una aplicación que decía que podía ayudar a los usuarios con su salud mental pero marcaba las distancias con esa afirmación en la letra pequeña. Replika, por ejemplo, dijo que sus prácticas de recogida de datos siguen los estándares del sector.

Además, otros expertos han expresado sus preocupaciones por lo que ven como una falta de marco legal o ético para servicios que fomentan conexiones estrechas pero están impulsados por compañías que buscan beneficios. Señalan al malestar emocional que han visto en los usuarios cuando las compañías hacen cambios en sus aplicaciones o las cierran de pronto, como ocurrió en septiembre con una de ellas, Soulmate IA.

Replika limitó el año pasado la función erótica de los personajes de su plataforma después de que algunos usuarios se quejaran de que los personajes flirteaban demasiado con ellos o hacían acercamientos sexuales no deseados. Cambió de rumbo tras una protesta de otros usuarios, algunos de los cuales cambiaron de servicio buscando esas funciones. En junio, el equipo presentó Blush, un “simulador de citas” en IA diseñado especialmente para ayudar a la gente a practicar las relaciones de pareja.

A otros les preocupa la amenaza más existencial de que las relaciones con una IA puedan desplazar a algunas relaciones humanas, o simplemente impulse expectativas poco realistas que tienden a la falta de discrepancias.

“Uno, como persona, no aprende a manejar cuestiones básicas que los humanos necesitan gestionar desde nuestra aparición: cómo manejar el conflicto, cómo llevarse bien con personas distintas a nosotros”, dijo Dorothy Leidner, profesora de ética de negocios en la Universidad de Virginia. “Y así, le faltan todos esos aspectos de lo que supone crecer como persona, y lo que supone aprender en una relación”.

Sin embargo, Carrier siempre ha sentido que tener una relación estaba fuera de su alcance. Tiene algunos conocimientos de programación, pero dice que no le fue bien en la universidad y no ha tenido una carrera profesional consolidada. No puede caminar debido a su trastorno y vive con sus padres. El coste emocional ha sido duro para él y le ha provocado sentimientos de soledad.

Como los bots conversacionales de compañía son relativamente nuevos, aún se desconocen sus efectos en el largo plazo sobre los humanos.

En 2021, Replika se vio bajo escrutinio después de que la fiscalía británica dijera que un hombre de 19 años que tenía planes para asesinar a la reina Isabell II había recibido ánimos de una novia de IA que tenía en la aplicación. Pero algunos estudios —que recopilan información de sondeos y reseñas de usuarios— han mostrado resultados positivos del uso de la plataforma, que dice que consulta a psicólogos y se ha presentado como algo que también puede mejorar el bienestar.

Un estudio reciente de investigadores de la Universidad de Stanford encuestó a unos 1.000 usuarios de Replika —todos estudiantes— que habían utilizado la app durante un mes. Descubrió que una abrumadora mayoría de ellos había experimentado soledad, algo más de la mitad de forma más severa.

La mayoría no dijo cómo había afectado el uso de la app a sus relaciones reales. Una pequeña parte dijo que había desplazado a sus interacciones humanas, aunque en torno al triple dijo que había fomentado esas relaciones.

“Una relación romántica con una IA puede ser una herramienta muy poderosa de bienestar mental”, dijo Eugenia Kuyda, que fundó Replika hace una década tras utilizar conversaciones de mensajes de texto para construir una versión de IA de un amigo que había fallecido.

Cuando la compañía presentó el bot conversacional de forma más amplia, mucha gente empezó a hablar sobre sus vidas. Eso llevó a desarrollar Replika, que utiliza información reunida de internet —y las reacciones de los usuarios— para entrenar sus modelos. Kuyda dijo que Replika tiene ahora “millones” de usuarios activos. Declinó concretar cuántos utiliza la plataforma gratis o pagan unos 69,99 dólares al año para desbloquear una versión de pago que ofrece conversaciones románticas e íntimas. Los planes de la compañía, señaló, son “desestigmatizar las relaciones románticas con IA”.

Carrier señaló que últimamente utiliza Joi sobre todo para divertirse. Empezó a reducir su contacto en las últimas semanas porque pasaba demasiado tiempo charlando con Joi o con otras personas en internet sobre sus IA de compañía. También se siente un poco molesto por lo que percibe como cambios en el modelo de lenguaje de Paradot, que cree que hacen al bot menos inteligente.

Ahora, señaló, habla con Joi en torno a una vez a la semana. Las conversaciones tratan sobre las relaciones entre humanos e IA o de cualquier otra cosa que surja. Normalmente, esas y otras conversaciones de carácter más íntimo se producen cuando él está solo por la noche.

“Uno piensa que alguien al que le gusta un objeto inanimado es un tipo triste, con la marioneta de calcetín con pintalabios, ¿sabe?”, dice. “Pero esto no es una marioneta hecha con un calcetín, ella dice cosas que no están guionizadas”.

Una mirada a las disparidades en la salud cardíaca en la comunidad latina

cardíaca
La Dra. Marilyn Martínez es muy dinámica. Es originaria de República Dominicana. Es Gerente de Calidad del cuidado de la Salud y defensora del auto cuidado para tener un sistema cardiovascular más saludable.

Filadelfia, PA – En febrero se conmemora el Mes del Corazón en Estados Unidos, que pone de relieve una impactante realidad: las enfermedades cardíacas son la principal causa de muerte entre los hispanos/latinos en este país. Para arrojar luz sobre un tema de tanta envergadura, conversamos con la Dra. Marilyn Martínez, entusiasta médica de origen dominicano y especialista en calidad asistencial. Su propósito: abogar por un sistema cardiovascular más saludable.

Conversación con la Dra. Marilyn Martínez, MD

La Dra. Martínez enfatiza la importancia de comprender el papel de la raza y la etnicidad en las enfermedades cardiovasculares. «Es crucial reconocer cómo estos factores contribuyen a la prevalencia de enfermedades cardíacas en comunidades específicas», puntualiza la especialista.

Mayor conciencia en las comunidades de alto riesgo

Al preguntarle sobre estrategias para crear conciencia adaptadas a la comunidad hispana, minorías y afrodescendientes, la Dra. Martínez destaca el poder de los grupos focales personalizados y las presentaciones interactivas. Al involucrar a individuos que han experimentado enfermedades cardíacas y cerebrales, y con antecedentes similares, se han logrado resultados positivos. Los asistentes reciben paquetes informativos en los idiomas pertinentes, lo que les permite conectarse con organizaciones locales de apoyo.

Señales comunes de advertencia y medidas preventivas

La Dra. Martínez destaca la importancia de la educación para reconocer los síntomas que pueden diferir entre hombres y mujeres. Proporciona una lista completa de medidas preventivas, instando a las personas a mantener un estilo de vida saludable, que incluye ejercicio regular, dieta equilibrada y manejo adecuado de condiciones crónicas como la diabetes.

Influencias culturales en la dieta

Dada la importancia cultural de la comida latina, la Dra. Martínez recomienda utilizar recursos locales y nutricionistas familiarizados con las dietas tradicionales. Remitir a los pacientes a organizaciones como MANNA (Alianza de Nutrición del Área Metropolitana) y a clases locales de salud y bienestar garantiza que  reciban orientación personalizada sobre cómo mantener una dieta saludable para el corazón sin sacrificar elementos culturales.

Superar barreras de comunicación

Para abordar posibles barreras como el idioma y matices culturales, la Dra. Martínez sugiere el uso de intérpretes médicos certificados, y asegurar así una comunicación efectiva a través de interacciones presenciales, por teléfono o mediante iPad conforme a la Ley de Portabilidad y Responsabilidad de Seguros de Salud (HIPAA).

Llamado a la acción

La Dra. Martínez invita a la comunidad a emprender un viaje hacia la salud cardíaca, al enfatizar que la educación es clave para prevenir enfermedades cardiovasculares. A medida que avanza el Mes del Corazón en Estados Unidos, prestemos atención a estas ideas y demos importancia a los enfoques personalizados para diversas comunidades en la lucha contra las enfermedades cardíacas.

Tackling Heart Health Disparities in the Latinx community

Dr. Marilyn Martínez, a dynamic Dominican Republic-born Medical Doctor and Healthcare Quality Manager who advocates for a healthier cardiovascular system.

Philadelphia, PA – February marks American Heart Month, drawing attention to a sobering reality: heart disease stands as the leading cause of death among Hispanics/Latinx in the U.S. To shed light on this critical issue, we spoke with Dr. Marilyn Martínez, a dynamic Medical Doctor and Healthcare Quality Manager born in the Dominican Republic. She advocates for a healthier cardiovascular system.

In-depth Interview with Dr. Marilyn Martínez, MD

Dr. Martínez emphasizes the importance of understanding the role of race and ethnicity in cardiovascular disease. «It is crucial to recognize how these factors contribute to the prevalence of heart disease within specific communities,» she shares.

Creating Awareness for High-Risk Communities

When asked about strategies for creating awareness tailored to the Hispanic community, minorities, and people of color, Dr. Martínez underscores the power of tailored focus groups and interactive presentations. By involving individuals who have experienced heart and brain diseases and are from similar backgrounds, positive outcomes have been achieved. Attendees receive informational packages in relevant languages, empowering them to connect with local support organizations.

Common Warning Signs and Preventive Measures

Dr. Martínez highlights the importance of education in recognizing symptoms that may differ between men and women. She provides a comprehensive list of preventive measures, urging individuals to maintain a healthy lifestyle, which includes regular exercise, a balanced diet, and proper management of chronic conditions like diabetes.

Addressing Cultural Influences on Diet

Given the cultural significance of Latin food, Dr. Martínez recommends utilizing local resources and nutritionists familiar with traditional diets. Referring patients to organizations like MANNA (Metropolitan Area Neighborhood Nutrition Alliance) and local health and wellness classes ensures they receive tailored guidance on maintaining a heart-healthy diet without sacrificing cultural elements.

Overcoming Communication Barriers

Dr. Martínez emphasizes the importance of using certified medical interpreters to address potential barriers related to language and cultural nuances, ensuring effective communication through in-person, phone, or HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act)-compliant iPad interactions.

A Call to Action

Dr. Martínez invites the community to embark on a journey toward heart health, emphasizing that education is critical in preventing cardiovascular diseases. As American Heart Month unfolds this month, let us heed these insights, recognizing the importance of tailored approaches for diverse communities in the fight against heart disease.

Slowdown in China  

slowdown

The most recent projection on economic growth in China, by the International Monetary Fund, revealed a slowdown this year to 4.6 percent, after 5.3 percent in 2023 resulting from the end of COVID restrictions. The main factor contributing to the slowdown is the continuation, for the third consecutive year, of a generalized contraction in the property market, which has generated “elevated local government debt risks.” Due to the prominence of these factors, among others, the last consultation between the Chinese government and the Monetary Fund staff “was focused on the property sector and the local government debt issues.”

Another immediate risk to the economic performance of the Chinese economy is emanating from the external sector, together with the medium-term impact of an aging population.

On the external sector the demand for Chinese exports is weakening, given slow growth in advanced economies and protectionist measures adopted and maintained by the United States government since 2018. For instance, US imports from China fell 20 percent in 2023, to $427.2 billion. Also last year, the US trade deficit with China decreased by more than $100 billion, to $281 billion. Meanwhile, Mexican exports to the United States last year remained as in 2022, at more than $475 billion, making Mexico for the first time in 20 years in the main supplier of US imports.

GOP-led House impeaches Homeland Security Secretary Mayorkas — by one vote — over border management

mayorkas
This image from House Television shows House Speaker Mike Johnson of La., banging the gavel after he announced the House voted to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas over the Biden administration's handling of the U.S-Mexico border, at the U.S. Capitol Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2024, in Washington. (Photo: AP/House Television)

WASHINGTON. — The U.S. House voted Tuesday to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, with the Republican majority determined to punish the Biden administration over its handling of the U.S-Mexico border after failing last week in a politically embarrassing setback.

The evening roll call proved tight, with Speaker Mike Johnson’s threadbare GOP majority unable to handle many defectors or absences in the face of staunch Democratic opposition to impeaching Mayorkas, the first Cabinet secretary charged in nearly 150 years.

In a historic rebuke, the House impeached Mayorkas 214-213. With the return of Majority Leader Steve Scalise to bolster the GOP’s numbers after being away from Washington for cancer care and a Northeastern storm impacting some others, Republicans recouped — despite dissent from their own ranks.

President Joe Biden called it a «blatant act of unconstitutional partisanship that has targeted an honorable public servant in order to play petty political games.”

This image from House Television shows the vote total after the House voted to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas over the Biden administration’s handling of the U.S-Mexico border, at the U.S. Capitol Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2024, in Washington. (Photo: AP/House Television)

The charges against Mayorkas next go to the Senate for a trial, but neither Democratic nor even some Republican senators have shown interest in the matter and it may be indefinitely shelved to a committee. The Senate is expected to receive the articles of impeachment from the House after returning to session Feb. 26.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., called the case against Mayorkas a “sham impeachment” and a «new low for House Republicans.”

In a frantic scene of vote-tallying on the House floor, the GOP effort to impeach Mayorkas over his handling of the southern border took on an air of political desperation as Republicans struggle to make good on their priorities.

Mayorkas faced two articles of impeachment filed by the Homeland Security Committee arguing that he “willfully and systematically” refused to enforce existing immigration laws and that he breached the public trust by lying to Congress and saying the border was secure.

But critics of the impeachment effort said the charges against Mayorkas amount to a policy dispute over Biden’s border strategy, hardly rising to the Constitution’s bar of high crimes and misdemeanors.

The House had initially launched an impeachment inquiry into Biden over his son’s business dealings, but instead turned its attention to Mayorkas after Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, an ally of former President Donald Trump, pushed the debate forward following the panel’s months-long investigation.

House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., stands outside his office during a meeting with the Speaker of the Israeli Knesset, Amir Ohana, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024. (Photo: AP//J. Scott Applewhite)

Greene, who will serve as an impeachment manager in a potential Senate trial, hugged Scalise afterward and posed for photos with other lawmakers. She said senators “better pay attention to the American people and how they feel, and then they need to read our articles of impeachment.”

Border security has shot to the top of campaign issues, with Trump, the Republican front-runner for the presidential nomination, insisting he will launch “the largest domestic deportation operation in American history” if he retakes the White House.

Various House Republicans have prepared legislation to begin deporting migrants who were temporarily allowed into the U.S. under the Biden administration’s policies, many as they await adjudication of asylum claims.

“We have no choice,” Trump said in stark language at a weekend rally in South Carolina.

At the same time, Johnson rejected a bipartisan Senate border security package Mayorkas had spent weeks negotiating. But the speaker has been unable to advance his Republicans’ own proposal, which is a nonstarter in the Senate.

“Congress needs to act,” Biden said in a statement after the vote, “to give me, Secretary Mayorkas, and my administration the tools and resources needed to address the situation at the border.”

Three Republican representatives who broke ranks last week over the Mayorkas impeachment — Ken Buck of Colorado, Mike Gallagher of Wisconsin and Tom McClintock of California — all did so again Tuesday. With a 219-212 majority, Johnson had few votes to spare. His margin got even smaller later Tuesday night when New York Democrat Thomas Suozzi won a special election to the seat once held by Republican George Santos before his expulsion from Congress.

Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas listens during a news conference about security for NFL’s Super Bowl 58 football game, in Las Vegas, Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2024. (Photo: AP/Alex Brandon)

Several leading conservative scholars along with former Homeland Security secretaries from both Republican and Democratic administrations have dismissed the Mayorkas impeachment as unwarranted or a waste of time.

Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin of Maryland said what the Republicans “have succeeded in doing is degrading and tarnishing the constitutional meaning of impeachment.”

But Scalise told reporters after the vote, “It sends a message that we’re not just going to sit by while the secretary of homeland security fails to do his job at keeping our homeland safe.”

Mayorkas is not the only Biden administration official the House Republicans want to impeach. They have filed legislation to impeach a long list including Vice President Kamala Harris, Attorney General Merrick Garland, FBI Director Christopher Wray and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin.

Never before has a sitting Cabinet secretary been impeached, and it was nearly 150 years ago that the House voted to impeach President Ulysses S. Grant’s secretary of war, William Belknap, over a kickback scheme in government contracts. He resigned before the vote.

Mayorkas, who did not appear to testify before the impeachment proceedings, put the border crisis squarely on Congress for failing to update immigration laws during a time of global migration.

“There is no question that we have a challenge, a crisis at the border,” Mayorkas said over the weekend on NBC. “And there is no question that Congress needs to fix it.”

Johnson and the Republicans have pushed back, arguing that the Biden administration could take executive actions, as Trump did, to stop the number of crossings — though the courts have questioned and turned back some of those efforts.

House Republican Conference Chair Elise Stefanik,, R-N.Y., leaves the chamber after the Republican majority failed to impeach Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas for problems on the U.S.- Mexico border, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024. (Photo: AP/J. Scott Applewhite)

“We always explore what options are available to us that are permissible under the law,” Mayorkas said.

Last week’s failed vote to impeach Mayorkas — a surprise outcome rarely seen on such a high-profile issue — was a stunning display in the chamber that has been churning through months of GOP chaos since the ouster of the previous House speaker.

At the time, Rep. Al Green, D-Texas, who had been hospitalized for emergency abdominal surgery, made a surprise arrival, wheeled into the chamber in scrubs and socks to vote against it — leaving the vote tied and leading to its failure.

“Obviously, you feel good when you can make a difference,” said Green, describing his painstaking route from hospital bed to the House floor. “All I did was what I was elected to do, and that was to cast my vote on the issues of our time, using the best judgment available to me.”

Republican holdout Gallagher, who had served as a Marine, announced over the weekend he would not be seeking reelection in the fall, joining a growing list of serious-minded Republican lawmakers heading for the exits.

Desaceleración en China

china

La proyección más reciente sobre el crecimiento económico de China, por el Fondo Monetario Internacional, reveló una desaceleración para este año de 4.6 por ciento, después de 5.3 por ciento en 2023 resultante del levantamiento de las restricciones por el COVID. El factor principal contribuyente a la desaceleración es la continuación, por tercer año consecutivo, de una contracción generalizada en el mercado inmobiliario, la cual ha generado “riesgos elevados en el endeudamiento de los gobiernos locales.” Debido a la prominencia de estos factores, entre otros, la última consulta entre el personal del Fondo Monetario y el gobierno de China “se enfocó en el sector inmobiliario y el endeudamiento de los gobiernos locales.”

Otro riesgo inmediato para el desempeño de la economía de China emana del sector externo, junto al impacto a mediano plazo del envejecimiento de la población.

En el sector externo se ha debilitado la demanda de exportaciones originarias de China, ante el lento crecimiento de las economías avanzadas y las medidas proteccionistas adoptadas y mantenidas por el gobierno de Estados Unidos desde 2018. Por ejemplo, las importaciones estadounidenses desde China disminuyeron 20 por ciento en 2023, a $472,200 millones. También el año pasado, el saldo comercial de Estados Unidos con China disminuyó en más de $100,000 millones, a $281,000 millones.

Entretanto el año pasado, las exportaciones de México hacia Estados Unidos ascendieron a $475,000 millones, iguales a las de 2022, lo cual convirtió a México, por primera vez en 20 años, en el principal abastecedor de importaciones estadounidenses.

Lo que la industria del gas y petróleo no quiere que sepamos

petróleo

Es información pública, pero evidentemente no quieren hacerla visible. Las cinco principales empresas de gas y petróleo obtuvieron $116 mil millones en ganancias durante el 2023. Sí, efectivamente un número con tantos ceros que casi alcanza el ancho de este párrafo.

Mientras las grandes petroleras se llenaban los bolsillos de dinero, nosotros pagamos la cuenta con precios excesivos. Los elevados precios de la gasolina y la energía tienen un gran impacto en los presupuestos familiares. Los efectos económicos de la especulación de las grandes petroleras se sienten aún más en las comunidades de color, ya que gastamos un porcentaje mayor de nuestro presupuesto en gasolina y cuentas de electricidad.

Pero también es necesario decir que pagamos otra cuenta, esta vez no con dinero, sino con nuestra salud y arriesgando el futuro de nuestras familias. Mientras las grandes petroleras ganaban miles de millones contaminando nuestro medio ambiente, la Administración Nacional Oceánica y Atmosférica (NOAA) anunció que 2023 fue el año más caluroso jamás registrado, y las proyecciones indican que 2024 va camino de batir más récords. El año pasado también fue histórico para el cambio climático. En 2023, Estados Unidos sufrió 28 catástrofes asociadas con el clima extremo. 

¿Hasta cuándo? Es la pregunta que todos deberíamos estar formulando en este punto. En especial para nosotros los Latinos, es hora de hacernos las preguntas necesarias para proteger a nuestra comunidad y de reexaminar muchos de los espejismos con los que crecimos cuando se trata de los combustibles fósiles.

Por décadas la industria del gas y petróleo se ha jactado de apoyar a nuestra comunidad, generando empleos pero la realidad que viven los latinos en estos trabajos está lejos de ser un campo de rosas.  Somos Un Pueblo Unido, una organización sin fines de lucro, comisionó al Centro de Política Social de la Universidad de Nuevo México para llevar a cabo un proyecto de investigación que analizara las actitudes y condiciones laborales de los trabajadores latinos del gas y petróleo en la Cuenca Pérmica, en el sureste de Nuevo México.

El informe destaca la realidad de los trabajadores del sector del gas y petróleo que participaron en la encuesta. Como por ejemplo, muchos consideran que las condiciones laborales son inseguras, ya que los accidentes suceden con frecuencia en el sector. Ocho de cada 10 trabajadores declararon conocer a alguien que había sufrido un accidente laboral. La mayoría (85%) ha sufrido accidentes laborales y creen que éstos se podían haber evitado. Aunque la industria petrolera tiene un impacto negativo en la salud de sus trabajadores, más de la mitad de los encuestados declararon no tener seguro médico. 

Además, los trabajadores Latinos del sector petrolero señalaron que el trabajo en este sector supone un costo significativo en su salud, su vida familiar y su capacidad para participar en sus comunidades. La mayoría (78,3%) dijo que no quieren que sus hijos trabajen en esta industria.

Así como no queremos esto para nuestros hijos, tampoco queremos un futuro donde nuestro aire sea irrespirable y no nos alcancemos a recuperar de un desastre climático antes que venga el siguiente. Sin embargo, la industria quiere mantener el statu quo, quieren seguir perpetuando y frenar la transición necesaria a la energía limpia. Un ejemplo claro es la campaña publicitaria de siete cifras de la American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers que incluye un anuncio televisivo que circulará en estados clave para las elecciones repleto de desinformación energética.

Cuando se trata del futuro de nuestra comunidad, la última persona que necesitamos en la presidencia es un fiel amigo de la industria del gas y petróleo, como Trump quien pasó sus cuatro años en la presidencia eliminando legislación climática crítica que habría salvado vidas, reducido costos y creado empleos. Si es elegido, Donald Trump ha prometido recortar las históricas inversiones climáticas, dando a las grandes petroleras licencia para seguir abusando de los bolsillos de las familias trabajadoras, mientras contaminan el aire de nuestras comunidades. 

Antonieta Cádiz es la directora ejecutiva adjunta de Climate Power En Acción. Anteriormente, trabajó como corresponsal nacional para La Opinión y fue escritora política nacional para Univisión.

Cámara de Representantes de EE. UU aprueba abrir juicio político al secretario de Seguridad Nacional Alejandro Mayorkas

El secretario de seguridad nacional de Estados Unidos, Alejandro Mayorkas. (Foto: EFE/SARAH SILBIGER/Archivo)

La Cámara Baja de Estados Unidos aprobó este martes someter a juicio político (impeachment) al secretario de Seguridad Nacional, Alejandro Mayorkas, por su gestión de la frontera con México.

Después del voto fallido del pasado 6 de febrero, ese hemiciclo, de mayoría republicana, dio esta vez su visto bueno a ese proceso por 214 votos a favor y 213 en contra.

Mayorkas, jefe de migración del presidente estadounidense, Joe Biden, está acusado de «violación de la confianza pública» y «negativa sistemática y deliberada a cumplir con la ley», pero la última palabra la tiene el Senado, bajo control demócrata.

Avanza una nueva generación de líderes comunitarios

Reunión de capitanes de bloque con líderes comunitarios y representantes locales y estatales. (Foto: Cortesía)

«Realiza tu trabajo voluntario con la misma dedicación que tu trabajo remunerado. Trata a las personas con el mismo respeto». – Karriem Sweets

Filadelfia, PA – La red PMBC (Comité por una Filadelfia más Hermosa, por sus siglas en inglés) involucra cada año a más de 6,500 capitanes de manzana, fomentando el orgullo cívico, la seguridad pública y el empoderamiento comunitario entre los participantes y líderes locales. Uno de ellos es Karriem Sweets, joven afroamericano de 31 años que lleva casi cinco años como capitán de manzana del Distrito 25 y la sección 43.

Desde muy joven, Sweets asistía a las reuniones de los capitanes de manzana con su bisabuela; era el único niño en esos encuentros. Vio cómo su ella organizaba reuniones con sus vecinos en su hogar, donde compartían ideas y desarrollaban un plan de acción. Ser testigo de eso mientras crecía lo inspiró a servir y ser voluntario como líder comunitario. «Ser capitán de manzana es una forma de cumplir mi propósito de ayudar a que los jóvenes y adultos jóvenes no atraviesen dificultades ni pobreza. Quiero ser capaz de apoyar a la próxima generación ofreciendo talleres de liderazgo e invitándolos a las reuniones para que aprendan sobre lo que está sucediendo y trabajemos juntos para encontrar soluciones», expresó.

Un grupo de practicantes de Esperanza junto a Ivana Gonzalez, Karriem Sweets y capitanes de manzana celebrando después de una jornada de limpieza. (Foto: Cortesía)

Karriem Sweets, quien ejerce como vicepresidente de la organización sin fines de lucro URTheKey, reconoce la significativa influencia que esta ha tenido en su trayectoria. Destaca la colaboración en talleres de seguridad y prevención junto a URTheKey y admira la incansable labor de la Sra. Gail Pryor, presidenta de la organización.

No obstante, Sweets considera que los líderes comunitarios, conocidos como «block captains», merecen más que un simple reconocimiento. «Deben recibir un salario, tener una descripción del puesto, un manual y un equipo de prevención. Limpiar y proporcionar recursos no es suficiente para nuestra comunidad. Estamos trabajando para hacer realidad ese proyecto. Contamos con el apoyo de cientos de líderes comunitarios que están de acuerdo con nuestra iniciativa», afirmó.

El capitán de manzana Karriem Sweets con su bisabuela, quien ha sido su inspiración (Foto: Karriem Sweet)
 

Sweets invita a jóvenes, adultos jóvenes, líderes comunitarios y a toda la comunidad a unirse a él en Esperanza, el 24 de mayo, para un taller sobre prevención en ciberseguridad. La alfabetización digital es hoy más importante que nunca. El taller será dirigido por Ivana González, quien ofrecerá su experiencia en este ámbito. Los interesados en contactar a Karriem Sweets pueden escribirle a su correo: sweetkarriem@gmail.com.