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Selles #332 episoodis on külaliseks inspireeriv juhtimiscoach, joogaterapeut ja personalijuht Kaire Parve, kellega sukeldume sügavatesse teemadesse nagu vaimne vastupidavus, mõtete juhtimine, potentsiaali avastamine ja sisemine tasakaal. Räägime, miks on negatiivsed mõtted tihti tugevamad kui positiivsed, kuidas tulla toime muutustega, milline mõju on joogateraapial ja miks tuleb tõelist rõõmu ja rahu otsida enda seest. Kaire jagab praktilisi soovitusi, teravaid taipamisi ja elulisi kogemusi, mis puudutavad nii juhtimist kui isiklikku arengut. Kuula saadet ja saa teada, miks “givers give” ja kuidas “mitte teadmisest algab tegelikult õppimine.” Rohkem infot leiad: www.kaireparve.com
Seekordse saate külaliseks on Kaire Vacker, kes on 37-aastane ja hariduselt jurist. Ta õppis 5 aastat õigusteadust ja on töötanud advokaadibüroos ja samuti 5 aastat Maksuametis kohtujuristina. Elu muutus tal siis kui viimastel aastatel Maksuametis sai ta kogeda korralikku ärevushäiret. Kaire ise tunnistab, et on elus mitu korda kogenud läbi põlemist. Sellest hetkest, hakkas ta teadlikkumat teed käima, uurima ja katsetama. Kui tal laps sündis, siis tegi ta jursti värgiga lõpparve, umbes kaheksa aastat tagasi ja siis tulid tema ellu eeterlikud õlid ja fotograafia. Lapse sünd viis Kairet aga otsima oma kohta või seda, mida ta on tulnud siia maailma päriselt tegema. Hetkest, mil ta lasi endale Human Design (HD) kaardi lugemist teha, oli ta võlutud. Ta ütleb, et sai endast nii hästi aru peale seda. Kogu tema keha reageeris ja ta asus seda õppima ning umbes kuu aega hiljem oli ta sõbrannale koosatanud HD raamatu. Siit läks käima soovitusturundus ning Kaire süvenes veelgi enam HD maailma. Oma kodukal pakub ta täna erinevaid HD ampse- salvestatud videosid, lisaks materjale erinevate teemade kohta. Samuti võimalus temaga konsultatsiooni bookida või saada seda koos isikliku raamatuga. Kaire kohta leiad rohkem infot leheküljelt www.kairevacker.com NB! Kas sulle meeldib rääkida? Kas sa tunned ennast rääkides mugavalt? Kas sind kuuldakse? Kas sina tead, mida sa oled tulnud siia maailma väljendama? Nii oluline on teada, mida ja kuidas sa ennast välejndad, sest meie kõne ühendab. Meie sisemaailma välisega. Kõri mängib olulist rolli ka meie unistuste täitumisel! Kairel ilmus just ahjusoe e-raamat sellel teemal! Leiad selle siit: https://kairevacker.com/product/korikeskus/ HEAD MÕTTED: “Minu läbipõlemine äratas mind üles.” “HD terminoloogia kohaselt saavad olla meie keskused kas värvilised ehk täidetud või värvitud ehk defineerimata. See värviline on see, kes meie oma loomult ja sünnipäraselt oleme.” “Kui sa punnid olla keegi teine, siis sa punnidki olla keegi teine - see ei ole see, kes sa päriselt oled.” “Selleks, et avarduda ei saa ma istuda mugavustsoonis.” “Täiskasvanuks saade on meil nii palju välist mõju, et me ei pruugi enam aru saada, kes me tegelikult oleme.” “Me kõik saame võtta vastutuse oma elus ja hakata elama elu sellisena nagu me tahame.” “Arvame, et me sünnime puhta lehena aga meil on väga suur pagas tegelikult kaasas.” “HD toetub meie strteegiale, kes on see, kes algatab, kes on see, kes ootab tunnustavat kutset, kes on see, kes toimib elule vastates jne.” “Meid ei ole väikesest peale õpetatud sisemist kõne kuulama.” “Kui sinu silmad säravad, siis inimesed tahavadki sinult seda teenust osta.” “Teha tuleb siis kui sa naudid, siis sa lood hoopis teisest kohast.” JÄLGI KAIRE VACKER TEGEMISI SIIT: https://kairevacker.com/ https://www.facebook.com/kaire.vacker https://www.instagram.com/kairevacker/ CHRIS KALA PODCASTI TOETAJAD: https://www.million.ee https://www.garden.ee https://www.ruthterras.eu https://www.ruumum.com JÄLGI MIND SIIT: https://www.youtube.com/@chriskalapodcast https://www.facebook.com/chriskkala https://www.facebook.com/chriskalapodcast https://www.instagram.com/chriskkala/ https://soundcloud.com/chris-kala-podcast/tracks https://open.spotify.com/show/6Ohs4fCrk5UsLt49PVLyRI
La storia dell'Egittologia, specialmente agli inizi, è una storia che, senza esitazioni, possiamo definire controversa. Se c'è una Voce che può, a suo modo, rappresentare le contraddizioni di quel tempo, riassumendole in sé, essa è quella di Pascal Xavier Coste. Attivo in Egitto, in qualità di Architetto al servizio del Pascià Muhammad῾Ali per un decennio (1818-1827), Coste è in grado di mostrarci, ancora oggi, la duplice faccia della distruzione in nome del progresso. Bibliografia: P. COSTE Architecture arabe ou monuments du Kaire, mesurés et dessinés de 1818 à 1826, Paris, Firmin et Didot, 1837; P. COSTE, Notes et souvenirs de voyage (1817-1877), Paris, Cayer, 1878; W. R. DAWSON, E. P. UPHILL, M. L. BIERBRIER, Who Was Who in Egyptology, 5 ed., London, Egypt Exploration Society, 2019, 110-111; C. NAUNTON, I Carnet degli Egittologi, traduzione italiana di Vera Verdiani, Milano, L'Ippocampo, 2021, (ed. orig. Egyptologists' Notebook, London, Thames & Hudson, 2020), 54-59. Musiche: J.S. Bach, Variazioni Goldberg BWV 988; Funny Bubbles by Keys of Moon | https://soundcloud.com/keysofmoon Music promoted by https://www.chosic.com/free-music/all/ Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/; "Do not wake the Snake" Music by Paolo Argento from Pixabay; "Arabic Sadness" Music by Sergei Chetvertnykh from Pixabay Suoni: http: //bigsoundbank.com by Joseph Sardin; http: //freesound.org CONTATTI: e-mail: info@kheru.it Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100086674804348 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kherupodcast/?igshid=MmIzYWVlNDQ5Yg%3D%3D
Kaire Põder, Triin Lauri ja Andre Veski, "Kas Eesti PISA on viltu?". Postimehe kirjastuselt. Tutvustab Marek Strandberg. Selle nädala raamat tutvustab enam kui 10 aastat kestnud haridusuuringuid ja on teetähiseks viimaste kümnendite Eesti PISA testide põhisele haridusedule. Põhjalikele andmetele toetudes tuuakse lugejate ette võrdlev ülevaade kohaliku hariduse võlu- ja valupunktidest nii alushariduse kui ka põhi-, kesk-, kutse- ja kõrghariduse tasanditel.
Šie metai mūsų šaliai ypatingi tuo, kad nuo rugsėjo 12 iki gruodžio 12 d. vyks Lietuvos kultūros sezonas Prancūzijoje. Po truputėlį aiškėja šio sezono programa ir kitos detalės.„Žydų kilmės autorių literatūra mums yra artimesnė, nes su jų bendruomene turime intymesnį istorinį, emocinį santykį“, – apie tai, kodėl Lietuvoje populiari Izraelio ir žydų literatūra, o visai neatrasti Palestinos rašytojų balsai, svarsto politologė Ieva Koreivaitė. Ji Šiuolaikinio meno centro skaityklai sudarė knygų apie Palestiną sąrašą. Kokia yra Palestinos literatūros situacija Lietuvoje?Netrukus Lietuvoje savivaldybių, neturinčių krašto muziejaus, bus mažiau. Šiam žingsniui pribrendo Pakruojis. Pasak savivaldos atstovų, steigti krašto muziejų reikalauja pats gyvenimas. Tačiau didžiausias iššūkis kol kas ne eksponatai, o darbuotojai. Kaip būsimame muziejuje save ketina reprezentuoti Pakruojis?Pasaulio kultūros įvykių apžvalgoje – kaltinimai vagyste Italijos kultūros viceministrui, prakeiksmo išsigandę turistų atsiprašymai Pompėjoje, su žeme sulygintas šiuolaikinio meno centras Kaire.„Stebiu ant ledo brėžiančius figūras čiuožėjus, net prarasdama saiką, kad tik negalvočiau apie mane kaustantį siaubą. O kausto ne tik karas. Kausto ir artimesnė problema – kad visa mūsų kultūros spauda nuo šių metų pradžios gyvena ant bedugnės krašto“, – komentare svarsto menotyrininkė Agnė Naruštytė.„Tūba yra visiems pažįstama – neįmanoma nepastebėti tokio dydžio instrumento scenoje. Kita vertus – nelabai ką apie ją žinome“, – apie Vokietijos metų instrumentą sako iniciatyvos pradininkas Hartmutas Šrioderis. Kodėl Vokietija kasmet renka metų instrumentą ir kokių ambicijų, populiarindama tūbą, turi ši šalis?Naujausias įrašas ne vieną žiūrovų pamiltą spektaklį Kauno valstybiniame muzikiniame teatre režisavusios Viktorijos Streičos biografijoje — miuziklas „Mozart!“. Koks gyvenimas verda senajame Valstybės teatre Kauno miesto sode, kodėl režisierei norisi ir vaidinti, ką ji mano apie dirbtinį intelektą, ir kodėl neverta plauti indų? „Sėskim ir pakalbėkim“ rubrikoje ją kalbina Kotryna Lingienė.Ved. ir red. Indrė Kaminckaitė
Saates on külas Kaire Vilgats, kellega teeme muu hulgas juttu Eesti Laulust. Kõlab ka mitmeid laule, mille tekstid pärinevad sünnipäevalaps Paul-Eerik Rummo sulest.
Kaire Saarep on Tööinspektsiooni peadirektor
Kaire Põder, Triin Lauri ja Andre Veski, "Kas Eesti PISA on viltu?" Postimehe kirjastuselt. Tutvustab Marek Strandberg. Selle nädala raamat tutvustab enam kui 10 aastat kestnud haridusuuringuid ja on teetähiseks viimaste kümnendite Eesti PISA testide põhisele haridusedule. Põhjalikele andmetele toetudes tuuakse lugejate ette võrdlev ülevaade kohaliku hariduse võlu- ja valupunktidest nii alushariduse kui ka põhi-, kesk-, kutse- ja kõrghariduse tasanditel.
Latino parents, students say they face racism, discrimination at North Kitsap HighPeiyu LinKitsap SunNORTH KITSAP — More than 40 members of the Latino community gathered in the library of North Kitsap High School on Tuesday to tell high school administrators about instances of discrimination against Latino students.Participant after participant stood up and spoke, most in Spanish, offering testimonies that ranged from stories of racial bullying on school buses and on campus to not getting important school notices for parents printed in Spanish. One parent shared a story of her son being subjected to racial stereotypes, being told by a teacher he eats too many burritos.The meeting was organized by NK High Principal Megan Sawicki. Danielle Castillejo, a therapist, and her husband, Luis, parents of students at North Kitsap High School and Poulsbo Middle School, led most of the conversation and interpreted what Latino families shared from Spanish to English to the Sawicki. They also interpreted what Sawicki said from English to Spanish to the attendees. A Kitsap Public Health District community engagement specialist was at the meeting to help with the interpretation.Sawicki said she called the meeting after hearing from Castillejo and other Latino families that there was a need to better understand the experiences of Latino families and students in North Kitsap High School, and what the school can do to make them better."I may not have all the answers, but I'm hoping that we can — I can — start learning a little more from you about how things are going for you and for our kids," Sawicki told those at the meeting.Some parents said that some teachers do not respect Latino students and the Hispanic culture they belong to. Others said their students are being bullied on campus and on school buses, and when they reached out to the school to report it, their requests were ignored or not followed up on by school administrators. One parent said that a teacher told a student their performance was harmed because they had eaten too many burritos. One said students are not taught to be proud of their culture at school.Some said Latino students were not given assistance in applying for college or given information about scholarships. One shared that a student was discouraged to pursue his dream when the student told a teacher he wants to become an engineer. One claimed that Latino parents didn't get notices to attend school meetings and that none of the information provided by the school was in Spanish, creating a barrier for Latino parents who speak little English to understand what happens at school.The system needs to be changed, they said, and they urged the district to hold more meetings in the future.Melissa Ramirez, whose parents are immigrants, graduated from NKHS in June. She said she never saw any representation of her culture in her years growing up in North Kitsap and she felt she had to leave her culture to fit in at school."And the reason why I'm saying this in English is because the school system did rob me of a lot of my Spanish-speaking skills," Ramirez said at the meeting.Ramirez's parents are immigrants from Mexico and she was born and raised in Washington. Ramirez is now a freshman at Western Washington University studying business administration with a concentration in marketing, she said.Ramirez said her university has an ethnic student center that provides support for students of color, and she wishes she would have had that in North Kitsap.Julie Castillejo, Danielle Castillejo's daughter, an NK sophomore, said on Skyward, an online portal where North Kitsap High School communicates with students and parents, the system automatically put her race as "Chicano," which refers to Mexicans living in the U.S., and her main language as Spanish, instead of leaving the race and language parts blank for her to decide. Julie said she's three-quarters Mexican and one-quarter European."It was unfair for them to just assume my race and it wasn't the right thing to do," Julie Castillejo told Kitsap Sun.Charo De Sanchez, a Latino community leader and a parent who previously had a child in the district, told the Kitsap Sun she thinks teachers should be educated to respect the Latino Hispanic community, She said students learn from their behaviors.Danielle Castillejo said that more meetings are needed to discuss discrimination and racism against Latino students."Latino students are under-resourced, so we need to create more resources, more options," she told the Kitsap Sun. "The first thing we need to have is that the teachers are able to have some training on inclusivity."In a written statement sent to the Kitsap Sun following the meeting, the North Kitsap School District said that the district is "deeply saddened" by the examples shared and that it is committed to listening to students, parents and the community to address discrimination and racist behavior."While the stories we have heard in this meeting are hard to hear, we are grateful that our students and families feel safe in talking about these concerns with us; we realize that has not always been the case," the district said in the statement. "Students and families should feel welcome and have a sense of belonging in our schools. When there are barriers to this, it is on us to have the courageous conversations to make meaningful changes."The district said providing equitable access to educational opportunities for all students is in its strategic plan and that efforts to support staff development in diversity, inclusion and equity began in 2019 and continue."We have worked in partnership with many community members, our two sovereign nations, and families to improve how we serve all students. We have increased support resources at all schools in response to concerns and needs," the district said in the statement.The district said that all secondary schools have student voice groups with diverse representation that meet with the superintendent. Creating a safe, welcoming, inclusive school where all students and their families feel like they belong is the school district's top priority, it said. It encouraged students to report concerns immediately."As we are learning from our students we continue to work to improve systems, structures and their school experience," the statement said.Reach breaking news reporter Peiyu Lin at pei-yu.lin@kitsapsun.com or on Twitter @peiyulintw. Since late 2022, KAIRE has supported and come alongside the grassroots efforts of Latino/a/x students, families, and community of North Kitsap, amplifying their concerns and self-advocacy within North Kitsap School District (NKSD). These are broadly stated as equal access to education for English Language Learners and pursuit of a culture of belonging with teacher skills development in nondiscrimination. KAIRE and Latino/a/x community have articulated these issues and proposed specific solutions, directly communicated to NKSD in the FEB 22, 2023 "Seven Solutions" letter. For months, NKSD has failed to meaningfully engage with individual families or respond with a plan to implement the proposed solutions. KAIRE supports Latino/a/ students, families, and community in their demand that NKSD meet them on theirterms. The table must be set by community, not by the District. https://www.kitsapsun.com/story/news/2023/02/06/latino-parent-group-meeting-with-north-kitsap-schools-over-race-issues/69864128007/
LINKS to ARTICLEShttps://www.kitsapsun.com/story/news/2022/11/26/latino-parents-students-discrimination-racism-at-north-kitsap-high-school/69673972007/https://www.kitsapsun.com/story/news/2023/02/06/latino-parent-group-meeting-with-north-kitsap-schools-over-race-issues/69864128007/https://www.kitsapsun.com/story/opinion/columnists/2023/03/10/parent-group-offers-steps-toward-safety-inclusion-in-schools/69987422007/https://www.kitsapsun.com/story/news/2023/05/22/eliminate-racial-violencehundreds-protests-at-nksd-for-racial-discrimination-against-latino-students/70229951007/https://www.kitsapsun.com/story/opinion/readers/2023/05/20/we-have-no-confidence-in-nksd-leadership-to-handle-racism-bullying/70237118007/https://www.kitsapsun.com/story/news/2021/05/07/kitsap-public-health-district-declares-racism-public-health-crisis/4984962001/IN Partnership with KAIRE:Kitsap Advocating for Immigrant Rights & EqualitySince late 2022, KAIRE has supported and come alongside the grassroots efforts ofLatino/a/x students, families, and community of North Kitsap, amplifying their con-cerns and self-advocacy within North Kitsap School District (NKSD). These are broadlystated as equal access to education for English Language Learners and pursuit of aculture of belonging with teacher skills development in nondiscrimination. KAIRE andLatino/a/x community have articulated these issues and proposed specific solutions,directly communicated to NKSD in the FEB 22, 2023 "Seven Solutions" letter. Formonths, NKSD has failed to meaningfully engage with individual families or respondwith a plan to implement the proposed solutions. KAIRE supports Latino/a/xstudents, families, and community in their demand that NKSD meet themon theirterms. The table must be set by community, not by the District.Speaker 1 (00:25):Good morning. Welcome to the Arise Podcast, conversations on faith, race, justice, gender healing. Um, sometimes we're talking a lot about the church, and you may have noticed a few months hiatus. Partly that is due to me, Danielle Rueb, Castillejo, doing this on my own, and also just in February, having a town hall and gathering the community together, which I want to talk more about and, and which this situation with the school board has not been resolved yet. So sadly, that has taken an, an honorable place of, of my time and I'm continuing to work towards that. But I thought it might be helpful to tell a little bit of the history of how that got started and, um, what happened for me and why the meeting happened in November of 2022. If you're following along, I'll put some links to the Kitsap Sun articles, uh, in the notes. But if you're following along with the story, there was an original meeting in November 22nd, 2022 at North Kitsap High School in the library. It was me, my husband, uh, a couple of community members I didn't really know very well. And then we had like seven to 10 days, I can't remember exactly, I could look it up in my notes to invite, uh, community members, la Latino community members. But there was things and events that preceded, um, preceded that meeting time in November. And I think those, that's part of the history that's important to know over the last three years and actually since maybe even like 2015 and right leading up to Trump's election, there were so many things that happened in the school that Luis and I, my husband, my partner and I, we just really let them slide, uh, microaggressions with the kids, bullying comments at school. And, you know, we semi address them, semi didn't address them, but just kind of trusted the school district to be following up on those issues. In 2016 when Trump was elected, I got a call from a friend and she said, Hey, we're not doing the celebration of Guadalupe. Everybody's afraid to meet, you know, Trump made president. This is a scary time. And if you're not familiar, what it is, uh, of, uh, December is the celebration of the Virgin of Guadalupe, the que that app appeared in Mexico and she's called the que de Guadalupe. And, and so I won't go into that history, but to celebrate that there's a mass, uh, there's singing, there's a process of communion, and then there's a celebration afterwards. So like the kids would dance, like sometimes there's mariachi, um, there's professional dancers that would come all, all the way to this little town here in Paul's bow. And my kids, we got four little kids, they were always invited to participate by one of my dear friends. So I was assuming this event would happened. I got a call from my friend like, hey, it's not going to happen. And, and there's a lot of fear in the community, and we said, no, like, let's make it happen. Let's move in solidarity, let's do this thing. And I even had a little op-ed, uh, published in the Seattle Times about, uh, this event. So we had, we had the celebration of Guadalupe. It was amazing, amazing food. And Trump, uh, his presidency continued for the next four years, obviously, and 2020 hit and we were in election season and then suddenly it was also pandemic season. And so we were all at home. And it, it quickly became clear to me, um, just in my own personal family situation and with the other situations that I knew of in the community, that not everything was equal. Not everything was going to be fair staying at home. When we first were at home, we had this, we didn't actually pay for internet at our house. I was in grad school at the time. I was trying to graduate 2020. I was going to graduate. We had this little hotspot we had bought on Verizon and we paid for a certain amount of like, gigs of internet per month. And we only turned it on when we really needed it. And we, we tried to limit our data too. So all of a sudden, imagine you got like four children at home, husband's unemployed, I need to do grad school. And we're all freaking sitting around our table cuz we live in a small house and, and we're trying to do schoolwork and we're, we got this hotspot running. Um, that's, that's an example of something that happened. And it, it took a few months, I think for us to get internet out to our house. Speaker 1 (05:14):Um, just, they were backed up and whatnot. But I actually had a friend offer to pay for our internet. And that's what helped us get us through what was during this time that things became even more apparent in the school system. To me, various things happened to my kids, even being online. We struggled in a rural area to, um, my kids struggled to, when they would turn their homework in online, it would show that it was turned in on our side, but at the school side, it would look like they hadn't turned in any homework. And so, for instance, one of my children, it, it showed like complete zeros everywhere and being in grad school and all the stress we had, I I, I didn't pay attention till I got a letter and someone's like, like, yo, your kid's failing class, so that's not like my child. So we contacted the high school, um, a math teacher was super helpful and an English teacher was so helpful and they were like, look, like we think something's wrong here, like, what's going on with your kid? Speaker 1 (06:21):So it was a combination of factors, combination of internet, combination of overwhelm in a house where you have kids with different learning styles and needs and we didn't have access to separate rooms and the internet capacity to do that. And that's when I think it just picked up. We had some bus incident bullying with my daughter being called effing Dora. Prior to this we had an incident at the middle school where my son was targeted and pulled in and said they had a video of him, uh, like basically like messing with gas caps of cars and siphoning gas. And when he said like, Hey, can you check the attendance? They're like, no, we have this video. So we had other experiences. Like I said, I, I just won't forget one of the teachers who I won't name here, just the callousness, the lack of engagement and uh, lack of understanding. And we didn't say anything about it. I'm not in charge of anybody else's how they're responding in a meeting. I just wanted to help my son get through, you know, this school year. Speaker 1 (07:30):So as you can imagine, it was hard. It was really hard. And uh, fall of 2020 was brutal. And 2021 was just as hard. So things began to build up for us. Had trouble getting this particular teacher to accept assignments from my son, had trouble communicating with this person and I was working full-time. My husband ended up having to quit his job because we could not manage four children in school and all of us absent all the adults absent from the home. Of course, of course not. It's not meant, it's not meant to be like that. My husband would go into the school district or the school and ask for things either at the middle school or high school. Like he would often encounter a barrier just at, at the front desk. I mean, he's very dark brown and curly hair and speaks English, but you know, he has an accent I can understand and many, many people understand him. But, but in that frame, it became really hard for him to access the help he needed for our kids. Then I would have to send an email and when I would send an email, then there would be a response, but response to him, no. So this thing snowballed. Like we tried to have a meeting with the superintendent, tried to get this scheduled. It got put off until fall of 2022 September. Speaker 1 (08:59):So we get a meeting scheduled, we get it on the calendar. I'm a licensed mental health therapist associate in Washington. So I have like clients scheduled, like, you know, scheduled weeks out. They have their time during the day. So when we scheduled this appointment with the superintendent, I made sure to be careful of my schedule, arranged it around her, and the day before she changes it by an hour. And that messed with me and my schedule and my client. But I said, you know what, I, I need to do this for my child. So I moved my client, I was able to move. My client showed up to the meeting. I think it was like an hour before the meeting, the superintendent emails like, oh, sorry, emergency came up. I won't be there. Speaker 1 (09:43):We're talking like a year since the first incident happened. Over a year. Show up to the meeting. I had some community witnesses there. My husband and I were able to tell our story. There was some response, some compassion. Um, and outta that meeting, a principal of the high school invited, invited us to gather some of the families from the school. We set a date. The first day didn't work. And then we landed on November 22nd. It was the week of Thanksgiving last year. And I was like, man, I don't know if anybody's gonna come. And I was honestly afraid to invite people. I didn't know if other people, I knew other people were talking about issues, but I didn't know. I didn't know what I didn't know. We put the word out, text messages, kind of like called friends, but it was last minute. There wasn't a lot of notice. There was there was like, we made like a handmade flyer. Um, not a lot of social media. If you go back and look through my social media, there just wasn't a lot at that time. Speaker 1 (10:48):Show up to the school. The meeting was supposed to start at six 30. I show up around six and I'm getting calls at like, people are like, Hey, where are you at? I'm like, Hey, the meeting doesn't start yet. And people are like, Hey, we're here. So we go in the meeting. Um, it becomes really apparent that we wanted to talk through some stories but also move towards solutions. We really wanted to move towards solutions in this first meeting, but what became really apparent is that the racism and the discrimination and the stories of the people that attended, which was somewhere between 40 and 50, it was so significant that we were not gonna get through just like three stories and people were gonna feel cared for almost three hours later. We ended this meeting. We did not get to solutions. We, we committed at that meeting to get to solutions, but we didn't get to them. So much trauma, so much harm happened in the last few years. And I'm not talking just North Kitsap High school people showed up that attended other schools in our districts because they had not had a way to communicate where, where they felt safe and heard. Speaker 1 (11:57):And I left that meeting and for days I just was tired and sick and my body was achy. It's something, you know, it's kind of like one thing when you know your family's experiencing discrimination, but it's another thing when you hear the discrimination happening on all fronts with other families. And there were kids in this meeting, teenagers, and you know, when teenagers are in these meetings, they are normally like, uh, they're like looking at their phones, they're like texting, whatever. Like no one was doing that. No one. And so I just wanna point out that this is the history, this is where this came from. I didn't know these families had these stories. I had heard rumors and I wanted to hear from them, but I didn't know what we were opening up. And it wasn't just stories about Latinx families, it was stories about what happened to African American folks in school, what happened to native folks, what happened to Asian American folks in school? Speaker 1 (13:02):There were stories, there were stories about people feeling suicidal, people having their mental health affected stories about not knowing how to apply to college, not having the resources to do it. And I won't repeat the trauma stories here because some of them are documented in the news articles in the notes. But what I wanna say is this movement in North Kitsap school district has a history. And it has a history far bigger than my family. It has a history far bigger than my kids. And also because we're exposing the history, there's blowback, there's payback, there's slander, there's gossip, there's other people like pushing in because justice has been stalled for so long. Equal access to education for so long, discrimination has just been a given. It's been a given. Racialized comments and stereotypes. I mean it's a given. Speaker 1 (14:03):And I think at the beginning I had some naive idea that when we would come back to solutions in which we did get to solutions in February when we didn't hear back from the school district that somehow those solutions, they would, the school district would see them as proactive, as good, as caring, as like we're invested in our community, but that's not how it's gone. So I wanna tell more of that story later, but I just wanted to share the history of how November came to be. Some of the details of how, how it got planned, which was barely any plan at all. Not even like planning for an official interpreter. Thank God some people just showed up that could help with that. Because I can tell you that Luis and I were beat like so tired at the end of that. And I wanted to share where I've been for the last few months, been involved in organizing bridge building, doing a lot of apologizing, a lot of learning, a lot of crying, a lot of frustration and a lot of like working in systems that are actually not meant to prevent racial violence or discrimination. Speaker 1 (15:15):They're actually meant to prevent equal access to education. These systems aren't looking for solutions. And so when we walk in with solutions, they're like, what the heck is this? But it, I don't think it has to be that way. I think our county can be different and that may be a fool's errand. I don't know. Sometimes I think it's very foolish. Hope is like that. It can feel very foolish. But I wanna acknowledge that there's been amazing community support and unity. We don't always think the same. We don't always have the right way to get there. We don't know how to get there. We have different problems sometimes we don't like the person we're organizing with. That's all true. But the fact is, we want something better for our kids. We want our kids to have access to education. We want our kids to live in a place where they feel like they belong and they don't need to resort to suicide and gun violence and they can come to us for help with anxiety and mental health issues, depression, sadness. I think we can't agree on those things and that's why I'm here in my community and that's why I've stayed because I believe that as humans we do share those things in common. And um, I hope you'll follow along on the next few podcasts as we tell more of these stories. And um, I'm just honored to be able to share a bit of this history with you today and go ahead and check out the notes. I'll talk to you soon. Bye.
“Kinnisvarajutud” podcasti 130. osa võime liigitada meie "puust ja punaseks" seeriasse, kuna sukeldume juriidikasse ja teemasse, mis väga palju kirgi kütab ning aukartust äratab. Meil on külas LEADELL Pilv advokaadibüroo jurist Kaire Sepper, kes võtab meil käest kinni ja juhatab kohtutäiturite juurde kinnisvara ostma. Seitse aastat kohtutäituri büroos töötanud Kaire räägib muuhulgas üksipulgi lahti, kuidas käib kohtutäituri poolt müüdava kinnisvaraobjekti müügiprotsess, kuidas kujuneb objekti alghind, kas objekti on alati võimalik eelnevalt ka näha või tuleb osta n-ö põrsas kotis, kas saab osta ka pangalaenuga ning kuidas ostetud objekti ilma suurema kära ja mürata hiljem kätte saab. Väga õpetlikus ja praktilises saates proovivad Algis ja Siim kõikvõimalikul moel erinevatele ohukohtadele osutada ning tonte seinale joonistada, aga Kaire blokeerib kõik üritused ning selgitab rahulikult ja positiivsusest pakatades kogu protsessi detailideni lahti. Siim igatahes juba kerib oksjonikeskuse lehte... --- Podcast “Kinnisvarajutud” võtab luubi alla Eesti kinnisvaraturu ning üritab erinevad teemad sügavuti lahti võtta. Eesmärk on rääkida kinnisvarast kui varaklassist (väike)investori vaatenurgast ning olla valdkonnast huvitatutele abimeheks ja meelelahutuseks. Saatejuhid on mikroinvestor ja kinnisvarahuviline Siim Semiskar ja kinnisvaramaakler ning 1Estate Kinnisvara juhatuse liige Algis Liblik. Kuulajad saavad kaasa rääkida, küsimusi küsida või saate kohta tagasisidet anda Facebooki grupis Kinnisvarajutud. Jälgi meid ka Instagramis: https://www.instagram.com/kinnisvarajutud/ Toeta meie tegemisi Patreonis ja saa ligipääs boonusepisoodidele ja muule lisamaterjalile: www.patreon.com/kinnisvarajutud
FK299! Kas Kaire Vilgats on uus Lia Laats? Kutsusime ta külla, et seda temalt küsida. Rääkisime nii “Suvitajatest”, dubleerimisest kui Eurovisioonist. Uudistes: Deadpool 3 sai omale kurikaela, John Wick 4 sai omale pikkuse, Lennuk saab omale järje ja Riddick naaseb koju. Kinokavadesse saabuvad “Suvitajad”, “Veri”, “Minu naaber Adolf”, “Maskeraad”, “Belle ja Sebastian: uus põlvkond”, “Virvatuli” ja “Sipelgamees ja vapsik: kvantmaania”. Sisukord: 08:43 Kiri 17:10 Kinotabel 24:27 Uudised 38:30 Intervjuu: Kaire Vilgats 1:10:57 Suvitajad (Eesti) 1:18:19 Minu naaber Adolf 1:21:58 Belle ja Sebastian: uus põlvkond (Prantsusmaa) 1:23:15 Virvatuli (Portugal) 1:26:09 Sipelgamees ja vapsik: kvantmaania 1:37:32 Telekava
Measuring the dimensions of an asteroid hundreds of millions of miles in outer space is not an easy task — but there is a way.The asteroid needs to pass in front of a bright star. When that happens, you snap a picture and you can see its silhouette. When NASA wanted to do this for one particular asteroid, the angle for the photo was elusive. But they knew that the asteroid was passing directly above Senegal. So, they got in touch with astronomers there.Maram Kaire, a top Senegalese astronomer aspiring to build a space agency for his country, was one of them. His story, "Star Chasers of Senegal," is airing on NOVA, produced out of GBH in Boston.Kaire discussed the project, and his personal journey, with The World's host Marco Werman.Marco Werman: What was your reaction when NASA contacted you for help in coming up with the dimensions of this asteroid?Maram Kaire: It was just like a dream [come] true, because when I was young at 12, I start being interested in astronomy, particularly in space science in general. And, you know, when you are a young boy here in Africa, in West Africa, in Senegal, dreaming about stars, about planets and so on, one of the most important words you keep in your mind is "NASA." And it was incredible to receive this attention from Mr. Marc Buie [for the] stellar occultation for NASA. We can understand how important it is for the Lucy mission to get this kind of data. Just living in my dream and it's wonderful.So, the Lucy mission that you mentioned, it was all about capturing that occultation, which is when the asteroid passes in front of a bright star. When you worked with NASA, you and other astronomers in Senegal were taking pictures of that. What were the challenges?Well, the first challenge is to know precisely where to put your telescope, because we are chasing after the shadow cast by the asteroids. It's a very, very tight and short precise moment. You know, the asteroids will pass between the Earth and the star, and usually it's about 1 to 3 seconds. So, you have to be at the right place recording the data at the right moment. So, like Marc Buie used to say, if you don't get the data at the right moment, you don't get the data ever.It's really incredible. In the NOVA episode that airs tonight, Maram, you explain your own path to astronomy. [Clip from documentary: "I started to read books and getting out to observe the stars, constellations. I was 12, and I decided to start to build my own telescope. And this is how things began and never stopped."] Yeah, you never stopped. I've got to ask you, Maram, do you still have that telescope you built when you were 12? Yeah. You know, just listening to this part remind me that maybe all my life is just like a challenge. So, when I was 12, I started maybe watching the sky. My father thought, at this time, that buying a telescope is not a very good thing to do. So, it was very difficult for me. I kept on [looking at] some books with pictures of telescopes, dreaming about them. And one day, I decided just to build it by myself. So, it was one year searching, finding pieces for building this telescope. But in the end, it worked. And I had my own telescope doing things like this. If I can't have any kind of help to do it, I have to do it by myself. So, this is why we never stopped [trying] to create vocations for the young generation and telling them that it is possible to do things here in Africa by themselves.Yeah. What a great lesson. I mean, it's interesting, Senegal does not have a modern space program, not yet, anyway — I know that's one of your ambitions — but when you became interested in astronomy, you dug into your country's history. And I gathered that history with the stars went a lot deeper than you expected. What did you learn about Senegal's history with astronomy?We started talking about astronomy, but also discussing about the importance of science and astronomy for religious communities here in Senegal. You know, 95% of Senegalese people are Muslim and they used to watch the sky. You know, in Islam, we have five prayers in a day. So, you have to know precisely when to start praying. One day, I was asked to give a help, maybe to find the right position of the new crescent for beginning the holy month of Ramadan for fasting. The fact is that there is some very important person in the Muslim community here in Senegal who used to deal with astronomy in the past, like Sheikh Mbacke Bousso, who we talk about in the documentary, and Sheikh Hady Toure and so on. So, some people who used to practice astronomy just to find the right direction to Mecca, it is something very far in the history of Senegal that people used to watch the stars and the sun and the moon to have a sort of calendar.This interview has been lightly edited and condensed for clarity.Related: NASA's iconic image of Earth still inspires 50 years later. Fmr astronaut Mae Jemison reflects on it.
Hommikus! oli külas tööinspektsiooni uus peadirektor Kaire Saarep.
Non è semplice inquadrare la figura di Émile Prisse d'Avennes (1807-1879). In questo episodio tentiamo di tracciare i contorni di questo ingegnere, artista, pioniere e fine osservatore e di raccontare del suo straordinario contributo all'Egittologia e in particolare alla Storia dell'Arte dell'Antico Egitto. Bibliografia: É. PRISSE d'AVENNES, Histoire de l'art égyptien d'après les monuments, depuis les temps les plus reculés jusqu'à la domination romaine; ouvrage publié sous les auspices du Ministère de l'instruction publique, des cultes et des beaux-arts ; texte par P. Marchandon de La Faye,... (d'après les notes de l'auteur), Paris, A. Bertrand, 1868-79 (URL: https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b7300477j). É. PRISSE d'AVENNES, L'art arabe d'après les monuments du Kaire depuis le VII siècle jusqu'à la fin du XVIII, Paris, J. Savoy & Cie editeurs, 1869-77 (URL: https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k9688960b.texteImage). M. NORTON "Prisse A Portrait", Saudi Aramco World 41, Novembre/Dicembre 1990 (URL: https://archive.aramcoworld.com/issue/199006/prisse-a.portrait.htm). J. RAVEN, MAARTEN, "Prisse d'Avennes: between Facts and Fiction" in: É. Prisse d'Avennes, Atlas of Egyptian Art by prisse d'Avennes, Cairo, The American University in Cairo Press, 2000. M. VOLAIT, "Prisse d'Avennes Émile", in: Dictionnaire critique des historiens de l'art actifs en France de la Révolution à la Première Guerre mondiale, Philippe Sénéchal, Claire Barbillon, dir., Paris, site web de l'INHA, 2009 (URL: https://www.inha.fr/fr/ressources/publications/publications-numeriques/dictionnaire-critique-des-historiens-de-l-art/prisse-d-avennes-emile.html?search-keywords=prisse+d%27avennes). S. IKRAM, "Émile Prisse d'Avennes and Ancient Egypt" in: Egyptian art : the complete plates from Monuments égyptiens & histoire de l'art égyptien / Émile Prisse d'Avennes, with a selection of original texts by Émile Prisse d'Avennes, Köln, Taschen, 2014, 7-23. K. MADRIGAL, "Champollion et Prisse d'Avennes: L'aventure de la Chambre des Ancêtres de Karnak", SENOUY 14, 2015, 24-29 (URL: https://www.champollion-adec.net/article.php?id=476). Musiche: Epic Chase by MaxKoMusic | https://maxkomusic.com/ Music promoted by https://www.chosic.com/free-music/all/ Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-SA 3.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ Vopna by Alexander Nakarada | https://www.serpentsoundstudios.com Music promoted by https://www.chosic.com/free-music/all/ Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ West in Africa by John Bartmann; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Dark Side Of Our Past by MaxKoMusic | https://maxkomusic.com/ Music promoted by https://www.chosic.com/free-music/all/ Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-SA 3.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ Suoni: bigsoundbank.com by Joseph Sardin CONTATTI: e-mail: info@kheru.it Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100086674804348 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kherupodcast/?igshid=MmIzYWVlNDQ5Yg%3D%3D
Head õpetajate päeva, kallid kuulajad! Meie tänaseks saatekülaliseks on õpetaja ja mentor Kaire Kollom-Vahtra, kes on kui elukestva õppe kehastus. Kaire tundis 39-aastaselt, et tal on, mida jagada ning suundus ülikooli õpetajaks õppima. Ta astus Tartu Ülikooli kutseõpetaja erialale ning üsna pea alustas ka tööd Kammeri koolis käsitöö- ja kodunduse õpetajana. Kui bakalaureusekraad käes, jätkas Kaire õpinguid Tartu Ülikooli magistris haridusinnovatsiooni erialal. Kahjuks jõudis Kaire pereelu, töö ja õpingute balansseerimisel läbipõlemiseni, kuid on peale aastast pausi, tagasi koolis. Saates jagab Kaire meiega oma elukogemust ja põhimõtteid, millest üks on "Iga päev natuke ja üks asi korraga". Aitäh Koolibri Kirjastus, kellega koostöös loosime õpetajate päeva puhul välja ühele õnnelikule kuulajale saates kasutatud motivatsioonikaarte. Kui loosiõnnele lootma ei taha jääda, siis saad kaardid endale soetada siit: https://koolibri.ee/et/raamatud/motivatsioonikaardid/9356 Head kuulamist! Kaire Kollom-Vahtra https://www.facebook.com/kaire.kollomvahtra Kaire juhendamine ja mentorlus https://www.facebook.com/kaire.koolitused Kaire lapitööd https://www.facebook.com/kaire.lapitood 8+8+8 tasakaalu kell: https://shorturl.at/JQ179 Kuula meid: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC79s56RUnB7xKbkr9bbq0Lg Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3bzOQfO Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lHsXoY Google Podcasts: https://bit.ly/2WJS4ri Jälgi meid: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/opimekoos/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/opimekoos Kui sulle meeldib see, mis me teeme, siis toeta meid: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/opimekoos https://www.patreon.com/opimekoos Aitäh Sulle ja kuulmiseni! Saates Õpime koos esitatud seisukohad ei pruugi ühtida Tartu Veeriku Kooli ega Tartu Forseliuse Kooli seisukohtadega.
Nous vous invitons à découvrir le parcours inspirant de Maram KAIRE, CEO d'Africaspace, astronome sénégalais dont le nom a été donné à un astéroïde. Joanne Stacy Eyangoet Rachel Sumbu invitent Maram a revenir sur sa carrière, ses choix professionnels, l'importance de l'astronomie pour nos pays africains, ses doutes et ses espoirs. Cet épisode drôle et motivant nous enseigne que rien n'est impossible mais surtout que nous devons créer nous même nos opportunités.
Taskuhääling "Õpime koos" otsustas uurida, kuidas hoitakse eesti keelt ja kultuuri erinevates Euroopa riikides ning kuidas toimivad sealsed Eesti koolid. Integratsiooni Sihtasutuse toel asusimegi ringreisile ning saatesarja “Õpime koos Euroopas” jooksul saame läbi persoonilugude teada igaühe Eesti lugu ning saame aimu, kuidas toimib kohalik elu ja koolisüsteem. Tänane saade jõuab sinuni Hollandi pealinnast Amsterdamist ning meie saatekülalisteks on Margit Tera, Agnes Kuusik-Dijkstra, Kaire van der Toorn-Guthan. VÄLEK - Eesti Koolid väljaspool Eestit Facebooki grupp https://www.facebook.com/groups/338388539586219/ Eesti Koolid välismaal: https://globalestonian.com/et/eesti-koolid-keskus Eesti Kool Hollandis: https://sites.google.com/view/eestikoolhollandis Saate ilmumist rahastas Eesti Vabariigi Välisministeerium ning toetas Integratsiooni Sihtasutus. https://www.integratsioon.ee/ kodulehelt leiad vajaliku info eesti keele õppimise ning Eestis elamise ja tagasipöördumise kohta. "Õpime koos" Kuula saateid: YouTube: bit.ly/327qt5V Spotify: spoti.fi/3bzOQfO Apple Podcasts: apple.co/2lHsXoY Google Podcasts: bit.ly/2WJS4ri Jälgi meid sotsiaalmeedias: Instagram: www.instagram.com/opimekoos/ Facebook: www.facebook.com/opimekoos Anna meile hoogu juurde ja hakka taskuhäälingu püsitoetajaks: www.patreon.com/opimekoos Kui soovid taskuhäälingut “Õpime koos” ühekordselt toetada, siis täname sind annetuse eest MTÜ Tartu Loomemaja arveldusarve kontole EE437700771002831014
MyHits Intervjuu: Kaire Koidu ja Kätlin Värton (MNSH)
Sel talvel on reisimine hoogustunud. Kuhu eestlane sõita tahab ja kuidas vastutustundlikult reisida, sellest räägib 25 aastat turismivaldkonnas tegutsenud Estraveli müügidirektor Kaire Saadi kell 7.35.
Kohalike omavalitsuste valimised on ukse ees. Kell 7.35 arutame Haapsalu linna kitsaskohtade ja vajaduste üle Lääne Elu peatoimetaja ja pressinõukogu liikme Kaire Reiljaniga.
Hooaja viimases saates räägivad lugusid kooskasvamisest Toivo ja Kaire Maimets.
If you've ever worked on set, you have definitely befriended your script supervisor. They are the hub. The epicenter. We all rely on them for notes, dialogue, time code, continuity and for me…gossip, I mean they are the center of everything. I had the pleasure of talking to some of my favorite scriptys today. They have been such amazing forces in my life and I I'm sorry you only get to hang with them for this episode. There jobs on set are crucial but these woman have been support, friendship, love and all the good things to me as I've gotten to work with them on so many shows throughout my career. I hope you have time take a listen and see if they like the soup :)
Welcome to First off, let's kill all the lawyers that off misquoted Shakespearean phrase from the 1500s. But as many people will still say today, it's probably not a bad start. I'm David Halford. And I've been practicing law for about 30 years here in South Florida. And the goal behind this broadcast is to bring lawyers in that maybe shouldn't be on that kill list and let you meet some of the local lawyers in this town. Talk about what they do talk about some trending things in law, and just overall kind of educate on on various aspects. My guest today pretty easy one, if you look at the name of the law firm, it's Karen Heffernan. Well, he's care and I'm Heffernan, so that that puts the law firm together, but good friend of mine, I've known mark my entire legal career since we went to law school together. But Mark, welcome. Thanks, Dave. And actually, when you said 30 years practicing our graduation was about 30 years ago this weekend. So good lord, or something like that? It does. It does. So let's, let's talk a little bit about you. What was your journey to get into law? I mean, what was what was the decision between, you know, for law school, and then kind of how did it go from there, like, candidly, I think I was too dumb to do anything else. So stumbled into law school, I really had no direction when I went to law school. And thankfully, my brother in law was a practicing lawyer in Miami. And he had a workers compensation and Personal Injury firm. And he was kind enough to give me a job, both in law school and coming out of law school. So I worked there for a while and went out on my own. Shortly thereafter, I opened up my practice in 1997. And was on my own and then you and I joined up probably almost about probably almost about 10 years ago. Yeah, yeah. Which was, which is an interesting story. Mark, and I had stayed in touch since law school. But then mark had a very interesting case of a guy who broke his neck and in a world Indoor Football League. And so given my background, you know, sort of asked me to help with that case, and things went very well. And yeah, and I think at the same time, we were probably working on that negligent security case. I don't know which one came first. But we had the negligent security case as well. And it worked on both those cases. And the next thing I knew we were part of, yeah, no, it worked. Worked out. Well. Very similar, I think in in in background and everything else. Oddly enough, you know, you've been married a long time. It's now my 32nd wedding anniversary today. How long? Yep. But you know, three kids and and sort of that stability of of life, which I think is important. 100%? All right. So let's, let's talk about one of the things obviously, that we do in our practice between you and I 1000s and 1000s of automobile cases, right. Right now, Florida is on the verge of probably the most sweeping changes in in automobile insurance law in the last 50 years. So, Senate Bill 54 has passed the House and the Senate is now just waiting for the governor signature. But But let's talk about that a little bit, because we hear the phrases a lot. So Florida, up until maybe this this January, something governor signs it, it's been a no fault state. So what does that mean? Sure. What What is the no fault portion of it mean? Yeah. In other words, here's the law in Florida, because because it is unique. I think Florida is only one of a handful of states, that actually still has no fault. I believe it's one of two and the backward the backward ation of the system is it I guess it is what it says no fault. So in Florida, you were and still are currently until the governor signs the law, right responsible for payment of your own medical bills. So if you're in an accident, and the accident is not your fault, your insurance company knows as your P IP carrier, your no fault carrier will pay 80% of your medical bills up to $10,000. And with that PIP requirement, I think it's twofold. Right? So Florida, I think, again, was one of only two states that doesn't require a driver to have bodily injury liability coverage in effect. So all you need in order to drive a car in Florida is the minimum requirements of P IP, which is for payment of your own medical bills, and to replace someone else's car property damage of $10,000. Even that is so outdated, because right now you're talking about a fender bender in Florida on any car is going to exceed $10,000. So both were one was outdated, the system itself and then the minimum requirements were likewise outdated. Yeah. Which is which is bizarre when you look at it because those minimum requirements, I think were put in place in 1972. So you haven't right, you haven't changed those numbers since since 1972. Insane. So so the odd thing is and we see a lot in our practice because people come in and they said I don't know I'm fully insured, right? But so if I understand what you're saying to be fully insured in Florida now, you don't have to have any insurance that covers you if you cause an accident. That's That's correct. You just have to have coverage to, to pay for the damage to somebody else's car, but not the damage that you may have caused that other person. Right? So you you get you seriously hurt somebody right? You're still fully insured by the laws of Florida. Correct. And but you have to have no insurance that protects you correct? That's a little bizarre. So let's talk about this change. Because like I said, probably the biggest change in 50 years in this law, as it has now passed the House, the Senate, what is the law going to be in Florida to be insured now? Sure. So the law will now require you to carry 2550 we use those numbers, right, so 25,000 per person 50,000, in total, for bodily injury liability coverage. So now, if you cause an accident, you are going to be responsible for paying the person that you injured, you're going to have to have a minimum of 25,000 bodily injury liability coverage to compensate that one person. And if there's three people in the car for people, they would get a combined 50,000. So you're forcing the drivers to now carry bodily injury liability insurance to compensate the injured party, it's also going to shift the payment of the medical bills. So the payment of the medical bills were assumed to be paid in the old system, by your own carrier under that tip. Now, the person who is injured will either have his health insurance, pay those medical bills, you can purchase the med pay policy, you can you can purchase that when you purchase your auto coverage. So med pay can pay your medical bills, or you will pay it from a settlement. Okay, so your medical bills will be paid in one of three ways. In the event that you're involved in an accident now, and I saw in a lot of the debate, the issues being raised by the House and the Senate talked about with the P IP skin scheme, being you know, your medical bills, you know that $10,000 being covered that that was an area that was ripe for fraud, right. And I think we've seen a lot of that with staged accidents and and some of those lawyers that should be on that list to be killed, you know that, that have to have deals with accident clinics and everything else, because it was it was almost an automatic. Here's $10,000, right, if I got into a little minor fender bender, so that, to me is the most important part of this change. One having a lot the bodily injury liability coverage, I think is great. And increasing the limits. Also for property damage is going to be helpful. But the most important part, I think, which was hurt, it hurts you and I and it hurts people that are legitimately injured, because you're listening to accidents 24, seven from these accident clinics, right. And by the way, these accident clinics aren't just advertising. And there are some good clinics, right? There are some doctors that are in this to actually treat and help people and make them better. But there are a number of clinics that have exploited the P IP system to the max. And they have used runners. They do everything that lawyers aren't supposed to do. Right. So they contact clients, they get the police report, they offer people money to come treated their clinic. So when you and I walk into a courtroom with an auto case, jurors may have been involved in an accident before and have been illegally contacted illegally recruited paid money to come to a clinic. So you and I are always walking in with a little bit. We're behind walking in. Because people are looking at us like Well, how do we know you're not associated with one of those clinics? How do we know that this is real? So I think getting rid of that will be terrific. And it should cut down on a lot of fraud because you had a lot of people that might have been involved in a minor fender bender that were not injured, got a call from a clinic country with us, we'll pay you some money. Right? Because how many times have you had a client come into your office and say I heard I'm entitled to $10,000? Oh, sure, for my accident, right. They're confusing the tip benefits that the doctor is going to get with money that they're entitled to get. So let's go it's going to be very telling to see how that changes the landscape. And are we going to see a decrease in some of these advertising, you know, campaigns that are going, you know, have been an accident call those calls calls? I think so because they depend on the cash flow to fund that advertising. Right. And if their client the cash flow, isn't there from from the P IP insurance, those cases aren't going to be as valuable to them as they have been. And actually, we still need the governor to sign the bill. Right. We're still waiting for governor design it hopefully he will, too. They're on the way there. You know, I had I had read one of the stats that they were relying on the the insurance industry cited his reason for keeping the P IP scheme in place. And they were saying that I think 42 or 43% of the population or the drivers would see an increase in their rates. Does that mean 58% or 59% are going to see a decrease well, that their rates that they're not even talking about. That's going to be the big question because I've seen and the estimates are that somewhere between 35 to 45% of the drivers don't carry that At least that 2550. Okay. And so they're saying that population, you would only make sense? Well, you're absolutely have to see an increase. But the question is then people that have carried, and I've carried those limits you carry those well above those for all these years, is it going to now decrease for us? It should. Right. I mean, that the, the cited statistic had been the one that we and I just, you and I just discussed a 41 or 42%, that we're going to see an increase. I'm curious to see the 58. That should be receiving a decrease, right that, of course, if the insurance industry isn't mentioning it that leads me to believe that yes, in fact, 58%, we'll probably see a decrease. Yeah, you want to bet on that? Right. Our insurance bills are not going down. Okay. I go from they'll figure out a way I can promise you. That's, that's the other concern that I've seen is is so unfortunately, we live in a state right now, where about one in five drivers don't carry any insurance, despite what the law says. Right. So I think some of the concern with this was, well, we've already got one in five, and now you're going to make it more expensive for them. Are we going to see less, more drivers just not carry insurance? You know, David, that's, that's, um, that's a troubling question. And because yes, there are people that are out there struggling financially that do everything they can to hold on to a car, and now you're saddling them with a burden of perhaps an additional insurance cost, but I think it's the problem is really twofold. With the insurance one, there is no enforceability. Right. So how many times if, again, we've had people come into our office, we get a police report, insurance canceled insurance suspended. So a lot of times people will purchase that insurance policy in order to get the registration, make one payment on it? And then the insurance lapses, right. So yes, they are driving around without insurance, and perhaps their license will be suspended if they get pulled over. But there is no immediate enforcement. There's no mechanism by which the state actually enforces and tracks down people that are driving uninsured. So I think part of what needs to happen is yes, the first step is changing from the no fault system to the to mandatory bodily injury liability system. But to we have to do something about enforceability. I mean, you can't just make one payment on your insurance, get your registration, and then boom, that's it. Now you're uninsured again, because you're going to be in this vicious cycle of again, nobody having insurance, right. And we see save a lot, not just obviously, you have to have that to get registered. And you're right, there's no follow up on that. There's no annual the state doesn't say, you're required to send us proof of insurance. You had it when you registered the vehicle. And that's all that matters, right. You also see that a lot of time with leased vehicles, because the the companies that leased them require you to carry 100 300 most times. problem with that, again, they do it they lease the car, then there's no enforceability. To follow up to say, Are you maintaining that insurance on the vehicle? Right, I think with the lease, they might though, don't they have some some form of force place coverage? Once you get a letter, if you've got a leased vehicle that hey, we we received notice that your insurance is lapse, or they only going to put on comprehensive and collision? Or who knows? I don't know. I mean, they do that. Look, mortgage companies were very strong about that mortgage guys will do that, and put it in place and say, you know, because that's part of the contract, and it might be in the lease, part of contract says you have to show proof of insurance, right. But they're listed. And I know, I think the automobile carrier carriers are also listed. But again, I don't know if it's enforced, right? Because if it lapses, they're supposed to be listed on that policy, so they get notification. Correct. So the big thing is, you know, what's, what's going to happen with that? Let's talk a little bit about something you talked about this morning, right? traffic. One of it's one of the great, you know, favorable byproducts of the pandemic was traffic decreased dramatically. The only favorable thing about the pandemic was traffic. The I remember, I was making it to the office, you know, from avatar to brick wall. I was making it in 1520 minutes, no traffic, I was one of the, you know, few cars on the road, this morning gridlock. Yeah, well, it's, it's, it's back, it's back. So. So let's just talk about the averages. And How's this? If this changes, how's that going to affect them? You know, are you going to be required to go out and get that insurance now or, again, there's the there's the enforceability, right, I own my car, let's say I just carry PIP Now, obviously, that's not going to be sold anymore, right. Is it going to be how is the state going to require me to make sure that I've got that new insurance? You know, I don't know. I think we'll have to wait for the governor to sign the bill. And they should be there should be a date of enforceability on there. Right. And it doesn't it won't apply retroactively No. effect forward, usually October 1, right. Well, if he signs it, the law will go into place January 1. Okay, so well, we'll go into place January 1, so effective January 1. I think all those policies will then have to be amended I suspect to comply with the new law. So if you've got an old policy is set to expire in February or March, your policy would have to be amended to add bodily injury liability coverage and drop perhaps p IP coverage. Right. So the question is, is, is that something that's somehow going to be enforceable? I'm assuming I'm assuming the insurance companies are gonna have to notify you, right? Oh, by the way, that coverage doesn't exist anymore. Right. Here's the alternative. He was the alternative. Correct. But But whether that gets registered somehow by the state to be enforced? What's the same now? Right. So we often write when we get a police report, and we have a client come to our office who's involved in an accident. And on the police report, there's no insurance listed. We often write to the state of Florida and their their databases. candidly, you know, Department of Highway Safety and motor vehicles is really terrible. You know, we get insurance information for three years in the past, which I find hard to believe. I don't know how they're that it's far back. So I can't remember the last time we wrote to them and actually gotten valuable information back. Oh, I don't think I ever know this person does have insurance. And here's with who he has insurance greatly. It's, it's terrible. Yeah. I mean, we do the due diligence to try to find that. But yeah, I don't think I've ever had had a response that says, Yeah, here we go here. Yeah, we got in here. So if they don't have the information, or at least are providing, obviously they don't have it, because they're not providing it to us when we requested. That's where that's where it has to start. They have to get that information, and then then do something with it to notify people, we've received information that your policy has lapsed, if you don't get coverage right away. x y&z can happen to you, including suspension of your driving privileges, when i think i think that's going to be the biggest thing, because until there's some teeth in there, and people do start getting their license suspended for some period of time. It's a step in the right direction, for sure. But and then at some point, does it just make more sense for people to say, you know, what, between what I have to pay for my car, gas, registration, insurance, maintenance? Am I better off taking an Uber every day to work? I don't have to worry about parking, I don't have to worry about all those incidental expenses. I don't have the stress. You know what, maybe we'll just take an Uber everyday. And I think you're starting to see that. I mean, again, at least before the pandemic, and now I think you'll obviously see Uber and all of that coming back. But but the mindset of that generation is, what do I need to own a car? Correct. I mean, I have a car, pick me up, take me wherever I want, right. And I don't have any of the headache of it. And it's cheaper, right? It might be cheaper, depending obviously, on how far you live and what kind of car you drive. But it might be cheaper. And if you've got a couple of tickets on your license or had your license, suspended insurance is going to be expensive for you. So you might just say, forget it, it's not worth it. And this is not a paid endorsement for Uber or Lyft, or any any mode of public transportation. But I think what you've seen coming out of the pandemic is obviously car sales are through the roof, right. And I think people kind of want to drive their own car, or at least being an Uber by themselves. I don't think they want to be in public transportation if they can avoid it. Right. Which is, which is interesting, because again, a lot of the things with a pandemic, you see car sales for the roof, boat sales, people want a vehicle somehow to get outside of their home, and still be safe, correct? You know, I mean, I can sit my own car, I can drive and clear my head and knees and go from there. So well, interesting. So we see that shift. You know, it'll be interesting. And I think to follow, are we going to see a decrease for the people that have already carried those limits, and done the right thing and protected themselves? Or are we going to see the same? Yeah, like you said, I, I can't recall ever getting a decrease from my insurance carrier ever. Right? So at least give me one initially, let me let me get one at least the first time and then raise my rates. Let me for once again, decrease. But you're right. It'll be interesting to see what happens. We probably won't know for a couple years. But step one is getting it signed. I think it makes sense. It does make sense for sure. I think you're going to reduce the number of claims. For sure. Yeah, I it certainly I think makes sense. Because, again, if it's followed, and we don't see the number of totally uninsured people increase, you know, but if it's followed, yeah, there's coverage for people. In other words, you now have to be more accountable, you cause an accident, right? You're being accountable, saying, Okay, I'm providing these benefits, which again, in the vast majority of cases, hopefully should be adequate. You know, obviously, some it's not if you have a devastating injury or anything else. It's going to be a whole different animal. But but having people in short, I think is a benefit. And like we said it's twofold. It's one having that person insured but to you're cutting down the person that might not be injured, that has now been solicited, right to go to a clinic and start treating for the benefit of the clinic, and perhaps an illegal kickback. I'll use the word kickback or contribution to the alleged injured party. So just getting rid of that segment of the population getting rid of those cases has to be a tremendous benefit to the insurance carriers to the insurance companies. And that's and that's what most of the politicians have said, because because of the fraud, and and it is been a pretty rampant thing. Yeah. And and you're right, it's easy to see, you know, and it's, you know, if you go it's, you know, you sit in your doctor's office, you know, for half hour before seeing the dog, right, I've got TV on there. Yep. It's amazing the amount of clinics and everything else that are all advertising. And with with misleading commercials, since they're not regulated by the Florida Bar, right, the commercials tend to be misleading, and you may be entitled to $10,000. In benefits. How many times have you heard that? Right? You are not entitled to $10,000 in benefits, your doctor is going to be entitled to $10,000 you're not entitled to a penny of it. Yeah. But but they all think but they think, right? Well, you pick them up? And so yeah, well, we'll see that eliminated. And, and it was interesting, because I went back and I looked at the history of the whole p IP. And it was actually two professors in a Harvard Law Review. And the theory at the time, was that it would, it would decrease all of the claims because everybody had to have their own insurance. Okay. Which again, in theory sounds right. Except, you're now not, you're still having no responsibility for for what you've caught. Correct. So, so And again, it's just antiquated. I mean, it's a that goes back into the early 70s. Or when they started this. So the no fault, I think, when it was in 1982, I think was it amended in 82? I think it actually started 70s. But I think it was amended in 82. And yeah, I mean, we we haven't seen any significant change is a lot more about that those limits have been in place since at least 1982. Right? Those those limits of $10,000 for your own medical bills. And for property damage. Since 1982. Quite you tell me medical bills and expenses have gone up since 1981. Er, visit, you know, a couple of CAT scans in your visit, we've seen bills 40 $50,000 for a one day ER visit, right? So what are you accomplishing with $10,000? A tip absolutely nothing. Right. So now the question though becomes with hospitals, everything else, you know, what are they going to do when people don't have health insurance? Right. You know, I mean, is this now going to become more of a burden on on Jackson and everything else? Because, unfortunately, we've still got a lot of people don't have health insurance in this country? No, that's true. And I know the hospital lobby really was in favor of keeping the VIP system the way it was, because for them the reimbursement rate on the VIP claims was much greater than it was on some other health insurance. Well, yeah, I look at it at least they offered that ER visit, you know, initially when they came in, so they could do the scans and all that. So it'll be interesting seeing how that affects, right. Alright, so let's let's talk about, let's talk about your practice. You talked about getting into workers comp and pie. And that's what you've done your entire career. Well, yeah, that's how we started, I actually didn't do much of the worker's comp when I was working with, with my brother in law, I was doing the personal injury, they had a really nice personal injury firm, that I was able to step into a couple of his partners had left. So I was able to step in and had a lot of active cases. And I worked there. From 19. I started actually in law school. So probably started like in 1989, until I went out on my own in 1997. And when I went out on my own, again, started with just the auto cases, did some workers comp and then slowly transitioned into some more personal injury stuff, that negligence security stuff in the medical malpractice. So what gives you an it's easy, and we can all talk about all this the grind of practicing lawyers, but what gives you satisfaction in practicing law? I don't think it's a particular case. I think it's a it's a particular outcome for a particular client. So we do have occasions, you and I have had the occasion, right where you have been able to change someone's life. Unfortunately, those are cases where money is probably not going to fix the situation. Right? you've you've dealt with some devastating injuries. so short, short, and you've dealt with you have dealt with an injury with tragically injured brain injury to a young gal. So while you weren't able to bring her back to what she was like before, you know, you did everything possible to make her life going forward better, and without your help. She wouldn't be as well off as she is today. Right? 100% You and I had the same experience with our negligent security case. Granted, our client was a paraplegic, and he will never be able to live the life that he was living before. But we did everything possible to ensure that his life going forward was as good as it could be. And without our help, he wouldn't have as good a life as he has now. So those are the cases where Where you feel good at the end of the day, you feel sad for the person that's gone through the tragedy, because they're never gonna be able to get their life back. But you've done everything possible to give them the best possible life going forward. Well stated, and I think that is that is the joy in seeing what you've been able to do. And again, in the system we have, it's a compensation system, but you've given them the best opportunity and we see clients come back who are now Yeah, he's, he's, he's paraplegic, but but he's gotten businesses he's thriving. He's, you know, he's adapted in a situation where, in both the cases you've referenced, if we weren't able to do those things, I don't know if either one of them would still be alive today. Probably not. Right? Because I remember the one client that we're discussing the negligent security case, in this in the condition that we I'm gonna say the condition we found him. I remember when I first went to meet him, the physical condition that he was in his living conditions, they were horrible. I mean, they were somebody he was, he was living a life that he was destined for death. powerful stuff, and that's what makes Mark and I continue to go to the office every day and and we'll, we'll sit and watch with everybody else as these law, swimming, the governor signs it. That's going to be the law in Florida and big, big changes in automobile law. For the first time in a long time in Florida, but listen, been a pleasure. I think I'll see you at the office. But we'll be back next week. And we'll talk more about different aspects of law and and hopefully we've gotten more care off the, you know, first off, let's kill all the lawyers. So yes, have a great week, and we'll see you soon. Thank you, David. Attorney David Heffernan Kaire & Heffernan, LLC (305) 372-0123 www.KaireLaw.com
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Jaimee's character was our introduction to the background of the post-adult world storyline in The Tribe, with young Cloe wandering the streets in the TV series before meeting Amber and Dal. And as time unfolded, Cloe 'grew up' in the series, becoming an independent young woman, finding her own identity. Jaimee brought Cloe's journey to life, appearing in Seasons 1, 2, 3 and 4 of The Tribe. The Tribe is of course a drama series set against a world that has been impacted by a virus pandemic, leaving the young people, teenagers and children left behind to build a new world, in a world without adults. It is also approximately the 20th year anniversary since The Tribe was first broadcast - and how ironic it is that many themes and elements in the series have resonated with the virus now affecting the real world in 2020. As well as YouTube, episodes of The Tribe (and Cloud 9's other titles including 'Revelations - The Initial Journey' and 'Atlantis High') can now be watched on Amazon Prime Video in multiple countries around the world, Tubi, Pluto TV and in high quality in many countries on Cloud 9's Vimeo channel https://vimeo.com/cloud9screenent/vod_pages/page:3/sort:date with more ways to watch we hope coming soon. Subscribe to The Tribe's Official Podcast which can also be heard as an audio only version on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, and other leading podcast providers (don't forget to subscribe, look up 'the tribe official' podcast! :) ). So wherever you are - and to all fans of The Tribe, new and old, longtime and recent viewers who may have started watching or discovering - we hope you enjoy this podcast interview and what its participants are up to during this difficult time - as well as as the 'look back' on making The Tribe TV series. Thank you Jaimee and Ray for the conversation - and of course to you, the listener. Keep safe, keep strong and keep the dream alive. For more information, join us on social media and please check out: https://facebook.com/thetribeofficial - The Tribe's Official Facebook Page https://twitter.com/thetribeseries - The Tribe's Official Twitter Page https://www.instagram.com/thetribetvseries/ - The Tribe's Official Instagram Profile https://twitter.com/Cloud9_NZ - Cloud 9’s Twitter Page https://www.youtube.com/user/thetribetvseries - The Tribe's official YouTube Channel © 1999-2020 Cloud 9 (The Tribe) Ltd. All rights reserved.
Just nemad on Eestit kõige rohkem Eurovisioni lavadel esindanud – tegu on meie taustalauljate kuldse kolmikuga – Kaire Vilgats, Dagmar Oja ja Jelena Juzvik! Nüüd tuletasid nad Taavi Libele oma uskumatud seiklused meelde.
Nele-Liisi ja Owe õnnitlus Kaire Vilgatsile
Nele-Liisi ja Owe õnnitlus Kaire Vilgatsile
Kahekümne üheksandas episoodis on meie saatekülaliseks graafiline disainer Kaire van der Toorn-Guthan, üle 20 aasta Rotterdamis elanud eestlane. Me kohtusime Kairega tänu tema uuele huvitavale projektile, praegu valmivale fotoraamatule “Eesti läbi 100 silmapaari”, millest me saates ka räägime. Tartust pärit Kairel olid lõppenud neljanda kursuse õpingud Tartu ülikooli arstiteaduskonnas, kui 1991.a. suvel läks koos sõbrannaga Düsseldorfi lapsehoidjaks. Nii räägimegi tema teekonnast, miks ei saanud temast arst, vaid graafiline disainer, ning mis hoiab teda Eestile lähedal. Lisaks räägime: miks ja kuidas sündis Eesti Maja Hollandis? kuidas ta mõtleb graafilisest disainist? kuidas on seotud ühiskonna disainiteadlikkus ning heaolu? millised on Eesti ning Hollandi disainikeele erinevused? ja miks on just praegu eriline aeg pildistamaks sadat erinevat inimest sünniaastatest 1918-2017? Saade on salvestatud 8. oktoobril 2017. aastal üle Skype silla Rotterdami ning Palo Alto vahel. Head kuulamist!
Kahekümne üheksandas episoodis on meie saatekülaliseks graafiline disainer Kaire van der Toorn-Guthan, üle 20 aasta Rotterdamis elanud eestlane. Me kohtusime Kairega tänu tema uuele huvitavale projektile, praegu valmivale fotoraamatule “Eesti läbi 100 silmapaari”, millest me saates ka räägime. Tartust pärit Kairel olid lõppenud neljanda kursuse õpingud Tartu ülikooli arstiteaduskonnas, kui 1991.a. suvel läks koos sõbrannaga Düsseldorfi lapsehoidjaks. Nii räägimegi tema teekonnast, miks ei saanud temast arst, vaid graafiline disainer, ning mis hoiab teda Eestile lähedal. Selles episoodis räägime Miks ja kuidas sündis Eesti Maja Hollandis? Kuidas ta mõtleb graafilisest disainist? Kuidas on seotud ühiskonna disainiteadlikkus ning heaolu? Millised on Eesti ning Hollandi disainikeele erinevused? Miks on just praegu eriline aeg pildistamaks sadat erinevat inimest sünniaastatest 1918-2017? Liitu uudiskirjaga www.globaalsedeestlased.org, et uus saade jõuaks iga nädal sinu postkasti!
This week Jeff,Mike and Kaire discuss everything from the shooting in Las Vegas, Hugh Hefner dying,the NFL vs Colin Kapernick, Nelly being accused for rape as well as so much more. INDULGE See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week Jeff,Mike and Kaire discuss the Houston flooding,Floyd Mayweather vs Mcgregor,religion conspiracies,leonardo dicaprio as the joker as well as much. INDULGE (if anybody has suggestions on how balance audio between three microphones comment under the episode) See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.