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The Barngarla Determination Aboriginal Corporation (BDAC) heads to the Federal Courts in Adelaide on March 6 to contest the Federal Government selection of the Napandee site near Kimba, South Australia as the proposed site for their National Radioactive Waste Facility. We bring you a conversation between BDAC director Jason Bilney and Bunjileenee Robbie Thorpe from Bunjil's Fire radio program. Follow the campaign: Barngarla: Help Us Have a Say on Kimba, No Dump Alliance, Barngarla People.Sign the petition.Donate to the fundraiser for the Barngarla court case.We also hear from Dr. Alison Broinowski from Australian's For War Powers Reform, a part of the Independant and Peaeful Australia Network, about the US plan to station nuclear capable B52 Bombers at Tindal Air Base in the Northern Territory.Read CHARTING OUR OWN COURSE: Questioning Australia's Involvement in US-led Wars and the Australia–United States alliance: A People's Inquiry.
Jonathan S. Adelstein is the President & CEO of the Wireless Infrastructure Association (WIA). WIA represents nearly 200 companies devoted to building wireless broadband facilities that connect every corner of America. Since he became President in 2012, over 100 new members have joined the association, the annual wireless infrastructure show has broken participation records, a new association was formed in Europe, and a new nationwide training initiative and WIA PAC were launched. WIA is the principal organization representing the companies that build, design, own and manage telecommunications facilities throughout the world. Its members include carriers, infrastructure providers and professional services firms, with a combined market cap of over $400 billion. Mr. Adelstein served as Commissioner of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) from 2002 to 2009, for which he was twice nominated by President George W. Bush and confirmed by the U.S. Senate. At the FCC he achieved bipartisan progress on issues including broadband expansion, widening access to the Internet and media diversity.In 2009, following the FCC, Mr. Adelstein was nominated by President Barack Obama and confirmed by the Senate to serve as the Administrator of U.S. Department of Agriculture's Rural Utilities Service. There, he oversaw a $60 billion portfolio of rural electric, water, and telecommunications infrastructure loans. He spearheaded the strategic investment of nearly $7 billion under the Recovery Act into rural broadband and water infrastructure, as part of annual budgets of up to $15 billion.As a member of the Obama Administration, Mr. Adelstein was appointed as a member of the White House National Science and Technology Council, which coordinates science and technology policy across the Federal government, and the White House Business Council, leading Council meetings with business leaders across America.Previously, Mr. Adelstein held a number of legislative staff positions over 15 years in the U.S. Senate, culminating as a senior policy advisor to the Senate Majority Leader. Mr. Adelstein received an M.A. in History and a B.A., with Distinction, in Political Science from Stanford University. He attended the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, and served as a Teaching Fellow in history at Harvard University and a Teaching Assistant at Stanford University. He is a graduate of Phillips Academy, Andover. He was born and raised in Rapid City, South Dakota. An avid musician, he has performed with artists from local garage bands to members of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He currently lives with his wife and two children in the Washington, D.C. area.Learn More about Jonathan at:(1) Jonathan Adelstein | LinkedInhttps://wia.org/
1.12.21 Leticia Latino is the CEO of Neptuno is a champion in the telecommunications industry. We discuss #SmartCities, telecom needs, scholarships and apprenticeship programs through NATE, TIRAP/WIA, and the Broadband Deployment Advisory Committee. Her insights are amazing! Want to climb a tower?
sharing some raw and hard things in this episode...please be mindful of those around you while your listening (earpods might be good) or take it as an opportunity to have a hard conversation with a loved one, friends, your children. these triggers are real. they are seemingly large and small but truly, no matter how large or small, they need to be acknowledged and used to better ourselves. know that you're loved and thought of and that i have the greatest confidence in you and your heart to allow you to work through these triggers...and be there for others as they work through theirs.MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:ep 47. bone diseaseep 19. stories of abuse - why i createep 110. importance of yes & noUPCOMING SHOWS:limits show: @limitsofyourlonging (instagram show with 12 other artists for @nokidhungry) on instagram: https://www.instagram.com/limitsofyourlonging/rouge show at BDAC: https://www.bdac.org/ studio tour on ig & youtube open house labor day weekendLEAVE ME FEEDBACK: - what should i talk about next? let me know in the comments below. - did you enjoy this episode? if so, leave me a review!CONNECT WITH ME:katrinaberg.cominstagram @katrina.bergemail: k@katrinaberg.comjoin my SWEETlist
whether you want to break into your creativity or have a friend or child looking to do the same, here are some things to get you started. there's never been a better time to create, to work with your hands, to find respite from this crazy world, and to lift others in the process. enjoy these tips and keep me posted on your creative journey or the journey of your loved ones!set aside a space to createchoose a time to createchoose a mediumchoose a stylegive yourself a deadline/showMENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:ep 09: creating space for your passions ep 106: artist interview: jordan daines of midway utah art supply resourcesstyle mini courseep 30: 5 tips for artists & creatives at shows and marketsep 36: where to apply for showsUPCOMING SHOWS:on instagram: https://www.instagram.com/limitsofyourlonging/rouge show at BDAC: https://www.bdac.org/LEAVE ME FEEDBACK: - what should i talk about next? let me know in the comments below. - did you enjoy this episode? if so, leave me a review!CONNECT WITH ME:katrinaberg.cominstagram @katrina.bergemail: k@katrinaberg.comjoin my SWEETlist
The Human Family presents Human Voices, a podcast featuring conversations from artists and filmmakers creating socially aware and relevant art. Today, Paul Noot joins the show to discuss his mixed media work, “Unity of Worship.” Paul is an artist, educator and co-founder of the Bismarck Downtown Artist Cooperative, and lives in Bismarck, North Dakota – where he joined us and this podcast was recorded just prior to the pandemic. In the discussion, Paul shares his motivation behind “Unity of Worship,” his thoughts on the power of art, and shares a little about the artists who call BDAC home. The Human Family is a nonpartisan 501(c)(3) founded to promote human rights and social justice through film and art. Learn more about the The Human Family at www.human-family.org or on social media at Facebook: www.facebook.com/TheHumanFamilyND/ or on Twitter: twitter.com/HumanFamily_ND This episode was produced, recorded and mixed by Sean Coffman; Series artwork by Leah Marie Ecklund; and soundtrack by Peter McIsaac Music. Human Voices was co-created by the Human Family and Oscar De Leon of Chamber Six Media.
C'est le retour du Réflexion.s, le compte Instagram de Normandie Université. Nous accueillons Caroline, doctorante en chimie thérapeutique, qui avait le compte en main la semaine dernière. Nous discutons ensuite avec Quentin Rollet. Lui aussi est doctorant à Caen, et fut à l'honneur le 12 mars dernier, lors de la finale régionale de Ma Thèse en 180 secondes, où il remporta le Prix du Public. Portrait de BU : Qui est Pierre Barbéris ? Focus Animafac : Allons à la rencontre d'une nouvelle association, le BDAC.
On Friday 12 July 2019 Justice White handed down his ruling that the exclusion of Barngarla Native Title holders who do not live in the Kimba District from participating in a ballot to gauge community support for the radioactive waste facility was not a breach of the Racial Discrimination Act. On this radioactive show, Nuclear Free Campaigner for the Australian Conservation Foundation, Dave Sweeney, explains this legal challenge, the outcome and where to from here.This legal challenge was initiated by the Barngarla Determination Aboriginal Corporation (BDAC) the Native Title holders for the Kimba area. BDAC released a statement after the ruling. You can read it at: www.nodumpalliance.org.au/barngarla_statement To keep up to date with the campaign for responsible management of Australia's radioactove waste, go to www.foe.org.au/nuclear_free_sa and www.nodumpalliance.org.au
In Part 2, Mark chats about his time flying with the RAF Red Arrows and includes stories from the teams first time in Australia and flying in formation with Concorde over Heathrow.He also shares what it was like to fly the Harrier GR7 in combat and operating the jet off HMS Invincible.Thank you to BDAC for being great hosts and letting us film there - http://www.boscombedownaviationcollection.co.uk/Help keep the channel to keep going:https://www.patreon.com/aircrewinterviewor donatehttp://www.aircrewinterview.tv/donate/
In our 75th episode we hear from Mark Zanker who chats about flying the RAF Jaguar and the Harrier GR3/5 in part 1 of his interview.He describes what each aircraft was like to fly and he includes some great stories such as flying in Belize in the GR3 and displaying the GR5 over Rome!Thank you to BDAC for being great hosts and letting us film there - http://www.boscombedownaviationcollec...Help keep the channel to keep going:https://www.patreon.com/aircrewinterview
Thanksgiving ramblings and a synopsis, discussing seasons of life and the challenges we find within each season. In this episode, Katrina shares memories and examples of the opportunities and constraints seen throughout her life that helped a situation with her 12 year-old daughter, the challenge it presented in their relationship, and how she sought to better understand her daughter's perspective so they can continue to learn and grow together. Mentioned in this episode: "The Relatives Came" by Cynthia Rylant (a children's book) Public Surplus Upcoming Art Shows: November 29th - 100 DOLLAR SHOW, Springville Art Museum, Springville, UT, 6:30-8 pm November 30th - "EFFETS DE NEIGE", BDAC, Bountiful, UT (reception 6 - 8 pm, show up till Dec. 30th) Artists: Nancy Andruk Olson, Annie Kershishnik Blake, Candace Rideout, Megan Hayes, Greg Newbold, et moi December 1st - REFUGEE BENEFIT ART SALE, Laura & Steve Ricks home, 1292 Cedar Ave, Provo UT (preview 6-7, sale 7-8 pm) December 7th - HONORING UTAH ARTISTS, Alpine Art, Salt Lake City, UT (reception dec 7th 6-9pm, show up till first week of January) December 7th & 8th - CHRISTMAS ART SALE & DEMONSTRATION, Midway Art Association, Midway Community Center, 160 West Main Street, Midway, UT (Friday 11 am - 6 pm and Saturday 10 am - 5 pm) Till January 16th - 33rd ANNUAL SPIRITUAL & RELIGIOUS SHOW, Springville Art Museum, Springville, UT ==> connect with katrina
Skyler Ditchfield is the Co-Founder and CEO of GeoLinks, the fastest growing WISP in America. Recognized as an industry innovator and thought-leader, Ditchfield is currently appointed to the BDAC’s Streamlining Federal Siting Working Group, the Schools Hospitals and Libraries Coalition’s (SHLB) Strategic Advisory and Fundraising Committees, and the FCC Advisory Board for Wireless Internet Service Providers Association (WISPA). With both a passion and dedication to closing the U.S. Digital Divide, Ditchfield is determined to bring connectivity to every unconnected Anchor Institution in America over the next 7 years. To accomplish this goal, Ditchfield actively looks to change the landscape of Internet across America by influencing the reform of broadband funding and spectrum policy on both a state and federal level. Believing that action fuels influence, Skyler led GeoLinks to successfully connect more schools than any other ISP in both 2016 and 2017 earning GeoLinks’ a variety of awards including CENIC’s “Corporate Partnership Award” and the Central Coasts’ “Most Disruptive Technology” Award. Within his company, Ditchfield is passionate about cultivating the best company culture around—one that combines respect, collaboration, and a “best idea wins mantra.” His dedication and work ethic have earned him various accolades in including “Top Innovator in Diversity and Inclusion”, “World’s Top 5 Best Businessmen of 2017”, and Camarillo’s 2018 “Entrepreneur of the Year”.
In the 4th episode of art Work, we are privileged and excited to have Sarita Covington guest host in honor of Black History Month! Together with her guests, Ebony Noelle Golden and Paloma McGregor, the trio talk about art, resistance, and liberation. Are you just joining the party? Are you chasing the thing? What IS Liberation? This conversation will lead you through art-making, lessons in collectivity, visions of resistance... ultimately, to be FREE. Learn more about Sarita, Ebony, and Paloma below. Many thanks once again to Nova Mandarke for sharing his music. Sarita Covington is a multi-disciplinary artist/ activist from Harlem. She holds an MFA from the Yale School of Drama. She is co-founder of Company Cypher, an arts organization dedicated to transforming the conversation about race and skin tone prejudice by using theatre and hip-hop education to build community. She co-founded ACRE (Artists Co-Creating Real Equity), an organizing body that works closely with grassroots community organizers the People’s Institute for Survival and Beyond to provide Understanding & Undoing Racism/ Community Organizing Workshops for artists and cultural workers. She is also a collaborating artist with social impact organization B3W Performance Group, who are currently working on an international project called Forgiveness.rn rnHer work has received support from Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, Open Meadows Foundation, Puffin Foundation, Jerome Foundation. and BAX (Brooklyn Arts Exchange). Sarita has facilitated workshops for Fishkill Correctional Facility, Yale Schools of Divinity and Drama, Artspace’s City Wide Open Studios, NYC Public Schools, Philadelphia Charter School students, Danish High School students, Mexican youth in a Tijuana orphanage and the 59th Street Project.Website: www.saritacovington.comCypher: www.facebook.com/CompanyCypher Ebony Noelle Golden, native of Houston, Texas currently residing in the Bronx, serves as principal engagement strategist at Betty’s Daughter Arts Collaborative and the artistic director of Body Ecology Womanist Performance Project. BDAC is a cultural arts direct action group that works to inspire, instigate, and incite transformation, radical expressiveness, and progressive social change through community-designed, culturally-relevant, engagement initiatives, and creative projects. rnrnAs a strategist, Golden consults, co-creates, designs, implements, and evaluates impact-driven projects and initiatives that push for social transformation. As an artist-scholar, Golden stages site-specific rituals + live art productions that profoundly explore the complexities of freedom in the time of now. In 2016, she developed a seminar course, served as a lecturer of Womanist and Black Feminist performance art at The New School, and co-edited an anthology of experimental womanist writing published by Obsidian Journal of Literature and Arts. rnrnGolden is currently an Artist-in-Residence at the Hemispheric Institute of Performance and Politics at NYU where she is developing125th and Freedom, a performance art installation of ten choreopoetic rituals along 125th street between the Hudson and Harlem Rivers. The work explores home, migration, displacement, and the eradication of black space due to cultural, spiritual, and political gentrification.Website: www.bettysdaughterarts.com
On January 31, 2017, FCC Chairman Ajit Pai announced the formation of a new federal advisory committee, the Broadband Deployment Advisory Committee (BDAC or Committee), which will provide advice and recommendations for the Commission on how to accelerate the deployment of high-speed Internet access. The Commission intends to establish the BDAC for a period of two (2) years, with an expected starting date during the spring of 2017. The BDAC’s mission will be to make recommendations for the Commission on how to accelerate the deployment of high-speed Internet access, or “broadband,” by reducing and/or removing regulatory barriers to infrastructure investment. This Committee is intended to provide an effective means for stakeholders with interests in this area to exchange ideas and develop recommendations for the Commission, which will in turn enhance the Commission’s ability to carry out its statutory responsibility to encourage broadband deployment to all Americans
On January 31, 2017, FCC Chairman Ajit Pai announced the formation of a new federal advisory committee, the Broadband Deployment Advisory Committee (BDAC or Committee), which will provide advice and recommendations for the Commission on how to accelerate the deployment of high-speed Internet access. The Commission intends to establish the BDAC for a period of two (2) years, with an expected starting date during the spring of 2017. The BDAC’s mission will be to make recommendations for the Commission on how to accelerate the deployment of high-speed Internet access, or “broadband,” by reducing and/or removing regulatory barriers to infrastructure investment. This Committee is intended to provide an effective means for stakeholders with interests in this area to exchange ideas and develop recommendations for the Commission, which will in turn enhance the Commission’s ability to carry out its statutory responsibility to encourage broadband deployment to all Americans
Speaker or Performer: Molly McLain and Paul Noot Date of Delivery: October 30, 2016 Two local artists discuss their involvement in the Bismarck Alley project.Molly McLain is an advocate, artist, and educator raised in Valley City, ND. She lives in Bismarck and works for Farmers Union where she advocates for family farms. She is active in the arts world and frequently teaches classes and creates art projects and murals across the state with organizations, individuals, and schools.A founding member of the Bismarck Downtown Artist Cooperative, Paul Noot received his BFA from the University of North Dakota and his MFA from Brooklyn College in New York. Paul has worked with the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC, North Dakota Museum of Art in Grand Forks, and is currently the head of the Visual Arts department at Bismarck High School.He also teaches classes for Sleepy Hollow Summer Arts, International Music Camp, BDAC and Continuing Education courses for the University of North Dakota.Video version:youtu.be/RHlYg2BNco4