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Public-private partnerships (P3s) can be important strategies for financing transportation and other large infrastructure projects. Advancing public infrastructure projects with P3s requires careful analysis of the associated costs and the sharing of risks and rewards. To learn about trends in P3 financing, we speak with Professor Jonathan Gifford of the Schlar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University and Director of the Center for Transportation Public-Private Partnership Policy. Jonathan earned his BS in civil engineering from Carnegie Mellon University and an MS and PhD in civil engineering (transportation) at the University of California, Berkeley.
Årets Eurovision Song Contest ha väckt starkt engagemang men Sveriges bidrag Bara bada bastu med vinsttippade KAJ tog inte hem segern. Så hur var egentligen stämningen i Basel och var det rätt låt som vann? Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Kulturnytts Tanja Ulriksson reder ut frågan tillsammans med P3s musikreporter Jonas David som är på plats i Basel.
With state capital support on the decline and infrastructure aging out of usefulness, higher education leaders are under pressure to find new ways to fund capital projects—without compromising mission, control, or long-term sustainability. In this episode of Changing Higher Ed®, Dr. Drumm McNaughton explores creative capital funding strategies institutions are using to meet urgent facility and housing demands. His guest, Brent Miller—Higher Education Market Sector Leader at HED—shares how colleges and universities across the country are structuring public-private partnerships (P3s), securing transformational donor gifts, and leveraging local bond initiatives to move large-scale capital plans forward. This conversation is especially relevant for presidents, CFOs, trustees, and VPs of facilities navigating deferred maintenance, campus growth, or strategic repositioning. Brent brings 30+ years of architectural and capital planning experience to the conversation, offering insights from some of the most innovative projects in higher ed capital development. Topics Covered: Why traditional state funding is no longer enough—and what institutions are doing about it How public-private partnerships (P3s) work, and which types of projects they're best suited for Case studies from USC, UC Irvine, University of Michigan, UC Merced, and more Donor and corporate partnership models that align with institutional missions How local bond initiatives are changing the future of community colleges What boards and presidents need to know about aligning capital projects with strategy and risk Real-World Examples Discussed: USC's Iovine and Young Academy, funded by a $70M gift from Jimmy Iovine and Dr. Dre UC Irvine's interdisciplinary health sciences building—merging donor intent and design University of Michigan's Ford Robotics Building, a co-developed corporate-academic research hub UC Merced 2020, a $1.3B P3 that doubled the university's physical capacity Cal State San Marcos' early mixed-use P3 development for housing and retail A facilities deal struck to replace plant equipment at cost and pay via utility savings General Motors University as an early model of industry-aligned higher ed Three Key Takeaways for Leadership: Ensure capital alignment with strategy: Every capital initiative should support the university's mission, enrollment trajectory, and long-term vision. Build in lifecycle costs: Deferred maintenance and energy savings must be part of the upfront planning—not afterthoughts. Communicate across stakeholders: From boards and donors to students and local communities, transparency is essential to success. This episode provides both a strategic framework and actionable insight into how today's institutions can overcome capital constraints through innovation, collaboration, and long-range thinking. Recommended For: Presidents, provosts, CFOs, trustees, board chairs, and facilities executives leading campus master planning, housing expansion, or long-term capital strategy. Read the transcript: https://changinghighered.com/capital-funding-strategies-higher-education/ #HigherEdLeadership #PublicPrivatePartnerships #HigherEducation #HigherEducationPodcast
In this Master Builders episode of Navigating Major Programmes, hosts Riccardo Cosentino and Shormila Chatterjee challenge the mindset around alliance contracts with Jane Ogilvie, the Alliance Director of Toronto's East Harbour Transit Hub Alliance and a 20-year veteran of major projects management in her home country of Australia. Jane shares the details of this collaborative approach—one that has long been popular in certain industries Down Under but is still quite new in Canada. From method variations to adopting an alliance contract model mid-project to the future of this framework in Canada and beyond, Jane's insights highlight the benefits of abandoning an us-versus-them mentality in favour of more collaboration between project participants.“I've worked on P3s and alliances and a lot in between, as I mentioned. And I think P3s still have their place. You know, I think you need a mix of the different styles of contracts, and you need to look at the risk profile of a project to see which one makes sense. You know, there are some types of contract where I would always say, you know, a P3 is probably a better model. And then there's ones that I'd say, obviously an alliance is a better way to go as an outcome. So as an owner, I think you need to look at that spectrum of where is the risk profile? How much of the risk can you share versus what's still a retained risk that you need to retain? As an owner, you can't push everything onto a contract.” - Jane OgilvieKey Takeaways:The importance of having a legal framework to support collaboration in projects.The demographic differences in the soft skills that best serve collaborative contract participants.The benefits of combining and coordinating multiple alliances in a multi-discipline, large-scale project.How alliance contracts can take project value beyond capital cost.How to determine the ideal methodology for different types of projects.The conversation doesn't stop here—connect and converse with our community via LinkedIn:Follow Navigating Major ProgrammesFollow Riccardo CosentinoFollow Jane OgilvieRead Riccardo's latest a www.riccardocosentino.com Music: "A New Tomorrow" by Chordial Music. Licensed through PremiumBeat.
I dag går vi langs yellow brick road fra Smaragdbyen til P3s gule løper. Vi finner ut av vår fargesesong ved hjelp av fargeteori, stemmer disse med kuppene vi fant på black friday? Bergens fashion fest var nå på lørdag og vi var vitner til Catwalken, så lytt til ros og ris... I studio: Martine Figenschau, Embla Klausen Herland og Lily Austdal Produsent: Kristiane Reigstad Ansvarlig redaktør: Sofie Larsen Nesdal
In this special Master Builders episode of Navigating Major Programmes, Riccardo Cosentino and co-host Shormila Chatterjee are joined by Marianne Smith, a distinguished partner at Blakes National Infrastructure Group, to celebrate her remarkable career and pay tribute to Judy Wilson, a trailblazer in Canada's infrastructure industry. Judy, a world-renowned procurement lawyer and a champion for diversity, left an indelible mark on the sector before her passing. This episode honors her legacy while highlighting Marianne's own contributions as one of Judy's closest mentees.With over 20 years of experience in infrastructure and procurement law, Marianne has played a pivotal role in shaping public-private partnerships (P3s) across Canada. She shares her journey from working alongside Judy to becoming a leader in the field, emphasizing how mentorship and advocacy for diversity have been central to her success."Judy was a champion of diversity. She was an ally before we had the nomenclature of what an ally is. She used her power, authority, influence. Not just selfishly, but also to promote, women, people of color, anyone who might've felt, that they didn't belong in the boardroom or around the table, talking about tough, infrastructure type issues. She really did impact so many people in that way." – Marianne SmithKey Takeaways:Judy's approach challenges with creativity, focus on client needs, and advocate for diversity to drive meaningful changeHow to leverage your expertise to develop frameworks and processes that can become industry benchmarks.How to build inclusive environments that encourage collaboration and empower diverse teams to succeed.Why investing in mentorship by sharing knowledge and supporting the growth of future leaders. If you enjoyed this episode, make sure and give us a five star rating and leave us a review on iTunes, Podcast Addict, Podchaser or Castbox. The conversation doesn't stop here—connect and converse with our LinkedIn community:Follow Marianne Smith on LinkedInFollow Shormila Chatterjee on LinkedInFollow Navigating Major Programmes on LinkedInFollow Riccardo Cosentino on LinkedInRead Riccardo's latest at www.riccardocosentino.com Music: "A New Tomorrow" by Chordial Music. Licensed through PremiumBeat.DISCLAIMER: The opinions, beliefs, and viewpoints expressed by the hosts and guests on this podcast do not necessarily represent or reflect the official policy, opinions, beliefs, and viewpoints of Disenyo.co LLC and its employees.
Kontentan 38. Spela Creedence! Livesändning från 21/9. Kontentan gästas denna vecka av Linus bror och Tomas! Ett litet mer ostrukturerat avsnitt än vanligt men kvartetten går igenom P3s lista över världens bästa låtar, filmen “La Belle Epoque” och Zlatans medverkan i Hot Ones. Låtar som spelades under programmet: Roger Miller - King Of The Road Robyn - Dancing on My Own kent - La Belle Epoque Nelly - Hot In Herre Creedence Clearwater Revival - Cotton Fields Medverkande: Jonathan Ärfström, Linus Olofsson, Ludwig Olofsson och Tomas Bergström
Linnea Wikblad är nominerad till Årets programledare på Guldörat 2024! David Druid får en 40-årspresent som han är lite äcklad av! Vi pratar om obehaglig ögonkontakt! Helen Sjöholm ärar oss med sin närvaro pga att Du måste finnas finns med på P300, listan där vi, tillsammans med musik-Sverige och några av våra lyssnare, har tagit fram världens 300 bästa låtar från P3s start 1964 fram till idag. Babs Drougge på P3 Nyheter om slopad flygskatt och spanska pineapple-gate. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Programledare: David Druid och Linnea Wikblad
Ni berättar era bästa sätta i halsen-historier (på rätt sida mörkret). P3s techreporter Evelina Galli om en framtid där den svenska polisens kan använda sig av AI-övervakning. Vi går igenom termer som används för att runda algoritmerna. P3 Din Gatas Petter Hallén om Hiphopens närvaro på festivaler. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Programledare: Christopher Garplind och Ayan Jamal.
Igår gigade Bruce the boss Springsteen i Stockholm. P3s egna Matilda Berggren var där och såg fenomenet Bruce. Hon berättar allt om vad 74-åringen gör bra och mindre bra. Vad hennes mål är inför nästa Springsteen-konsert och om han verkligen älskar Sverige så mycket som svenska folket tror. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Programledare: Margret Atladottir och Branne Pavlovic
Robert Poole, Directory of Transportation Policy at the Reason Foundation, talks about findings from the recently released 2024 Annual Privatization Report. Mr. Poole discusses some key trends in infrastructure fund investment, pension fund investment, and greenfield P3s, and what impact those trends may have this year.
I helgen anordnades ett illegalt rave i Frankrike där 8000 personer festade. Polisen sa helt enkelt fuck it, ni får festa. Så därför undrar vi när ni, med fri tolkning, kände fuck it låt dom festa. Effie Karabuda kommer och snackar att porren vi sökt på i inkognitoläge ligger risigt till. P3s korre Love Lyssarides rapporterar live från Tel Aviv och berättar om attacken Israel utförde mot World Central Kitchen som dödade sju medarbetare och krigs-influencers. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Programledare: Christopher Garplind och Hanna Hellquist.
In this engaging episode of "NABWIC Talks," we welcome back Lisa Buglione, the dynamic Executive Director of AIAI, alongside the esteemed Ms. Sue Lee, CEO of Lesura Strategies and NABWIC's Billion Dollar Luncheon Woman in the Spotlight. Together, they delve into the transformative value that public-private partnerships (P3s) offer to small and minority-owned businesses, shedding light on the plethora of opportunities the industry presents. Through their expert lens, Lisa and Sue Lee explore how P3s can serve as a catalyst for growth and development for minority businesses, providing insights, strategies, and real-world examples. Tune in to discover how your business can navigate and thrive in the world of P3s, leveraging these partnerships for sustainable success. suelee@lesura.us | 347.563.5984 | www.lesura.us NABWIC's Vision: The Vision of the National Association of Black Women in Construction (NABWIC) is to build lasting strategic partnerships with first-rate organizations and individuals that will provide ground-breaking and innovative solutions for black women in construction and their respective communities.| NABWIC.ORG
Join us for a special encore presentation on the dynamics of public-private partnerships (P3s) and the pivotal role of diversity and inclusion in shaping social infrastructure. This episode brings back a highly informative panel discussion led by Lisa Buglione, Executive Director of AIAI, alongside esteemed panelists Sandra McQuain, Seth Miller Gabriel, Joe Lewis, and Brandy Rogers McDonald. Together, they offer an in-depth exploration of how P3s serve as a beneficial avenue for small businesses, especially those led by black entrepreneurs. With over two decades of impactful management and operations experience, Lisa Buglione has been a driving force behind AIAI's national growth, enhancing membership, brand recognition, and organizational reach. This episode promises to provide listeners with a comprehensive understanding of P3s, underscored by real-world insights and strategies for leveraging these partnerships for sustainable business growth. Tune in to rediscover how P3s can open doors for small black businesses and contribute to more inclusive social infrastructure projects. Don't miss this opportunity to gain expert perspectives on harnessing the power of P3s for community and business advancement. ___________________ NABWIC's Vision: The Vision of the National Association of Black Women in Construction (NABWIC) is to build lasting strategic partnerships with first-rate organizations and individuals that will provide ground-breaking and innovative solutions for black women in construction and their respective communities.| NABWIC.ORG ____________________ Please join us at 11:30 AM, Wednesday, February 21st for NABWIC's Billion Dollar Luncheon in Public Private Partnerships/CRA Opportunities. Register on Eventbrite: https://bdlp3cra.eventbrite.com
Robert Poole, a leading expert in the U.S. public-private partnership transportation sector, joins infrastructure reporter Caitlin Devitt to talk about upcoming deals including toll lanes and bridges in the Southeast and high speed rail in the West as well as states that are advancing P3s and action on the federal front.
Welcome to the penultimate episode of Transit Unplugged for 2023! This week we wrap our series recorded at the CUTA conference in Edmonton with an interview with Arthur Nicolet, CEO of Transdev Canada (https://www.transdev.ca/en/).Paul and Arthur not only talk about contracting in Canada, but pairing with the episode featuring Transdev US CEO Laura Hendricks, talk about the role of contracting around the world. Contracting seems to naturally pair with public-private partnerships (P3s) and Arthur talks about the benefits for all sides when agencies and private contractors are free to find the best solution to solve the problem at hand, not the solution people initially thought would be the right one.Paul and Arthur wrap the conversation with a look at ahead to 2024 and the role of AI in transit--one of our favorite topics here on Transit Unplugged.Next week in the final episode of 2023, we have Paul Skoutelas and Petra Mollet of APTA looking back at the year and ahead to what's to come.And we're going to have a special bonus episode coming out December 29th, so stay tuned for that.If you have a question or comment, you can reach us at info@transitunplugged.com.00:00 Introduction to this episode by Paul Comfort01:48 Introduction and Background of Transdev Canada04:37 Understanding Public-Private Partnerships09:58 The Role of Contractors in Public Transit15:50 Future Trends in Public Transit23:19 The Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Public Transit26:01 Coming up next week on Transit Unplugged
Stort tack alla underbara lyssnare för alla kronor rätt in i bössan, det blev ett rekordsumma för vår lilla bössa i musikhjälpen! Sveriges Radios USA korre Ginna Lindberg är med och snackar om tidigare republikanske kongressledamoten George Santos och hans upptåg på internet och i världen. Och vad är det egentligen för film som spelats in i amerikanska kongressen? Hanna och Christopher får äntligen prata om konceptet tid - är det P3s fel att Hanna aldrig kommer i tid? Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. Programledare: Hanna Hellquist och Christopher Garplind
In this episode, you'll hear a session recorded earlier this summer at the 2023 Appalachian State University energy summit in Boone, North Carolina. This panel included my B&D colleague, Kevin Mara, and two industry experts, Chris DePodesta and Carolyn Arida, from the infrastructure investment group at Harrison Street. The topic evolving Energy public-private partnerships or energy P3s for higher education.
Karsten deler litt vel mye detaljer om hvordan han har brukt tiden mens han har vært syk. Sjur og Hedda spiller hovedrollene i P3s nye TV-serie «Hybris». Hør episoden i appen NRK Radio
Tonight we sat down with 2023 2 time Walls Ford 100 Winner, 5 Time Feature winner and unofficially King Of The Mountain Kasey Beattie Kasey started his career like all of us did in a 4 cylinder division with a little cavalier that could, ran that at Groveton, winning a couple features along with some bad breaks winning 2 championships in the kids division before getting booted to race against the adults in the 4 Cylinders He progressed and took his shot at a Tiger Car, having his start at the world fastest Walmart parking lot Oxford and running full time at Thunder Road and White Mountain Motorsports park winning a couple features in that division along with some troubling times and finishing P3 Overall in season points at WMMP Progressed from a Tiger Car to a ACT Late Model picking up his first win in a ACT car in 2022 along with a couple bunch of bridesmaid finishes P3s and even went back to Oxford to try his luck on a ACT Tour race. Along with trying other tracks such as Waterford and running the white line all the way around the place2023 was by far Kasey biggest break out season of his Late Model career, dick stomping the field at the WMMP Walls Ford Opener this year and collect a few wins 5 to be exact and 1 being this past Saturdays feature winner for the 3rd and final Wall's Ford 100 putting on a clinic on the outside and clinching his championship at WMMP Listen to his story and enjoy our laughs he even teaches us about how Late Model drivers ride, and whatever the f cutting center means along with other Late Model lingo Enjoy ! Thanks to our sponsors Robinson Portable SandblastingHelgers South Coast Power EquipmentGendron MotorsportsThomas Welding
Basta genomgår en lång och smärtsam mikrosveksbehandling av Fredrik som måste få ett slut.Fanny svärds kille har en lista med ord som låter fantastiska men som egentligen är hemska.Ploj blev betydligt mer golvad av knäckebrödsfabriken än av kite på Dalhalla och resten av grabbarna delar med sig av en fantastisk derbyvinst.Men framförallt - vi lyssnar till P3s plågsamma och GRÄNSLÖSA stöld av Toras tjejnytt!In i värmen med er och starta veckan med ett mysigt GRABBHÄNG! ❤️Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/gott-snack-med-fredrik-soderholm. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome back to The Path Forward! In today's episode, Rick Fernandez is joined by Carol Todd, Director of Communications for the Association for the Improvement of American Infrastructure (AIAI), an organization solely dedicated to moving P3s forward and strengthening American infrastructure. Follow along as they talk about procurements and P3s and why they could be a great leveraging tool not a lot of people are taking advantage of. They also discuss how this topic applies to different sectors (including education) and how Carol is responsible for maintaining marketing efforts and brand integrity. You won't want to miss this insightful discussion!To learn more about AIAI and their services click on https://aiai-infra.org/ Host: Rick Fernandez Guest: Carol Todd: Director of Communications AIAITime Stamps & Show Notes: (00:00 - 01:16) Welcome Carol! (01:16 - 03:00) Born in Ireland, Raised on a Farm, to AIAI(03:01 - 04:56) Educate and Solve Problems for People(04:57 - 09:07) Let's Talk Some Practical Examples(09:08 - 13:02) Why Aren't People Leveraging Expertise? (13:03 - 18:23) Different Sectors and P3 Education (18:24 - 21:00) Where Do You See This Going?(21:01 - 26:59) Life As the Director of Communication & Members of AIAI(27:00 - 29:13) What Do You Enjoy Most About Your Job(29:14 - 30:14) Wrap up, and Potential Intern
For our season finale of Courage My Friends, we return to this year's George Brown College Labour Fair, The other P3s: pandemic, privatization, precarity,,, and planet!! In the panel on ‘Food Industries: Feeding Ourselves on a Precarious Planet', moderator Lori Stahlbrand is joined by guests: Joshna Maharaj, a chef, social gastronomy activist, educator and host of the Hot Plate podcast; Chris Ramsaroop, an organizer, educator and activist with Justice for Migrant Workers; and Charlotte Big Canoe, partner and membership director at The Full Plate. The four discuss food justice, social gastronomy and the rights of workers from farms and factories to fine-dining and food agencies in these times. Maharaj explains: “Social gastronomy is a practice about the power of the kitchen to change lives. Now that is a giant thing to say. But essentially what we're talking about is a growing movement of chefs who are finding really meaningful ways to use our craft to support and nurture communities. It's using our celebrity, our purchasing power and our influence to build a more just and sustainable food system … But also it's about taking the idea of hospitality beyond restaurants, to institutions, to community spaces, and to public policy.” Ramsroop likens the current migrant worker system to that of indentureship: “People who come to work in Canada are on a Tied Work Permit … They have no labour and social mobility. And once they try to exert their rights or if they get injured and sick, in most cases they're sent home and they will not be so-called, named or able to return back to Canada… [Under] ‘agricultural exceptionalism' or ‘corporate exceptionalism' … we create something as a crisis, you get rid of all the rules and regulations and you say that the industry can … .ramp up production, bring people to come to work and face no accountability when things hit the fan … We tried to warn people to say, look, you cannot have workers coming to work in Canada under very precarious conditions, people are going to die. Nobody listened. Nobody took the initiatives or steps to protect workers. And lo and behold, we saw what happened during the pandemic and farm workers.” Reflecting on her organization and supporting food industry workers, Big Canoe says: “So what we want to focus on at The Full Plate is thinking about those little things that might make a difference for you in this role and might make it so that you feel you can stay in hospitality a little bit longer … Often you get to a point where your body can't take it anymore. You're mentally drained. You just want to do something else and kind of exit. And that's a really hard place to be in because it makes it so that people don't value this industry and ..we want people to love it. Because for a restaurant setting, people come to you on their best days. They come to you to celebrate … milestone moments in their life. And they also come in on some of their worst days and they want a little bit of a lift up...It's not just a set of hands bringing food to a table … For the people there to stay in that industry and continue to provide hospitality to others, we have to also give the hospitality back to those folks.” About our guests: Joshna Maharaj is a chef, a two-time TEDx speaker and activist who wants to help everyone have a better relationship with their food. She believes strongly in the power of chefs and social gastronomy to bring values of hospitality, sustainability, & social justice to the table. Maharaj works with hospitals & schools in Canada to build new models for institutional food service. Her first bookTake Back the Tray (May 2020) captures the lessons and experience from her work in changing institutional food systems around the globe. She is an enthusiastic instructor of both culinary and academic students, constantly finding ways to make food stories come alive. Maharaj hosts Kitchen Helpdesk, a weekly call-in food show on CBC Radio, and she co-hosts a food and drink podcast called HotPlate, currently in its fourth season. Charlotte Big Canoe is the partner and membership director at The Full Plate, a Toronto based non-profit that provides access to services and supports to hospitality workers in need. The Full Plate was founded in early 2020 by a group of women in the hospitality industry, and has grown to include access to produce boxes or grocery gift cards, wellness programs for hospitality workers, and training focused on inclusive environments in restaurant spaces. Big Canoe is of mixed heritage, with her father's family from the Chippewas of Georgina Island, and her mother's family being Irish settlers. Big Canoe has worked in various roles in the hospitality industry over the past 14 years, with a focus on wine and spirits education. Chris Ramsaroop is an organizer with Justicia for Migrant Workers, a grassroots activist collective that has been organizing with migrant workers for nearly 20 years and whose work is based on building long term trust and relationships with migrant workers and includes: engaging in direct actions, working with workers to resist at work, launching precedent setting legal cases, and organizing numerous collective actions. Ramsaroop is an instructor in the Caribbean Studies Program at the University of Toronto and a clinic instructor at the University of Windsor, Faculty of Law. Ramsaroop is working to complete his PhD at OISE/University of Toronto. Chris is also currently assistant professor at New College, University of Toronto, Community Engaged Learning. Transcript of this episode can be accessed at georgebrown.ca/TommyDouglasInstitute or here. Images: Joshna Maharaj, Chris Ramsaroop / Used with permission. Charlotte Big Canoe / https://thefullplate.ca/about. Music: Ang Kahora. Lynne, Bjorn. Rights Purchased. Intro Voices: Ashley Booth (Podcast Announcer); Bob Luker (Tommy); Injila Rajab Khan and Danesh Hanbury (Street Voices) Courage My Friends podcast organizing committee: Chandra Budhu, Ashley Booth, Resh Budhu. Produced by: Resh Budhu, Tommy Douglas Institute and Breanne Doyle, rabble.ca. Host: Resh Budhu.
On this episode of Let's Get Surety®, we are joined by Government Relations staff Larry LeClair of NASBP and Mike Oscar of the American Subcontractors Association (ASA) to discuss current federal legislative initiatives that NASBP and ASA are working together on and significant recent wins! They discuss efforts to amend the Water Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (WIFIA) to ensure performance and payment protections are in place on WIFIA funded projects, as well as pursuing proposed legislation on bonding federal P3 projects, and introduction of H.R. 2726 the Small Business Payment and Performance Act, which will remedy situations in which small construction businesses are forced to finance federal contracting agency unilateral change orders. Get more information from NASBP about advocacy efforts by signing up for NASBP's Focal Point, an electronic legislative/regulatory bulletin, and find out more about ASA's advocacy work on their website and in their magazine Contractor's Compass. With special guests: Lawrence LeClair, Director, Government Relations, NASBP and Michael Oscar, Director of Government Relations, American Subcontractors Association (ASA) Hosted by: Kat Shamapande, Director, Professional Development, NASBP and Mark McCallum, CEO, NASBP Sponsored by Old Republic!
Julia har nått sista droppen med sina gränslösa instagramföljare och stänger av kommentarerna för gott!Fredrik har varit på Bingo och Julias förlovningsfest och gjort bort sig å det grövsta framför Elaine Eksvärd!Joe Bidens uttänka död diskuteras och vi DRABBAS av insikten av att våra hjältar snart går samma öde till mötes!Otippade självmord!RFSUs äckliga språk!P3s cringeiga ton!Twitters förvandling till LiveLeak!Nigerianska horornas voodotradition och ÄR det så fel att bli groomad?Rätten att säga SD-hora! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In our fifth episode of this season of Courage My Friends, we revisit the George Brown College Labour Fair. This year, the theme of the fair is: The other P3s: pandemic, privatization, precarity,,, and planet!! In this episode, we share the panel discussion on ‘Gig Workers and Precarity in the 21st Century.' Moderator Jon Weier is joined by panelists Simran Dhunna and Jobanjeet Kaur of the Naujawan Support Network and Jennifer Scott from Gig Workers United. The groups discusses the tribulations faced by those working in precarious and gig jobs, increasingly exploitative employment structures and organizing for the rights and dignity of vulnerable workers. Reflecting on the meaning of exploitation for precarious workers, especially international students and immigrant workers, Kaur says: “Exploitation involves taking from workers that is rightfully ours. Wage theft, sexual harassment, inadequate job training, threats of deportation are all the forms of exploitation because they rob us of our earnings, safety and dignity.Sometimes people just take it as we are not being paid and it's just exploitation of our money or something. No, it's also the exploitation for the dignity of a worker. Because we go there professionally, work and put in the hours and everything, and it's like they take our dignity away when they refuse to pay us.” Speaking to the situation facing gig workers in Ontario, Scott says: “Gig workers are misclassified workers. And so that means that we don't have basic workers' rights and protections … because apps, you know, our bosses, are disrupting employment standards and putting downward pressure on wages, on employment standards, on working conditions, not just for gig workers, but for all workers in the delivery and logistics sector … Bill-88 was something that apps like Uber and other bad bosses lobbied quite aggressively for … because it creates a standalone piece of legislation with separate and lesser protections, which really reinforces the narrative that apps use, that gig workers are not real workers.” When it comes to organizing workers, Dhunna says: “There's the legal realm and then there's the realm in the streets. We don't rely on lawsuits or kind of the legal system to build our power, but it is a reality. It is a tool and a weapon that is used by employers just as they have done with Bill-88, and with other legal mechanisms to silence workers. And it's not something that's going to intimidate workers, of course. We're thankful for some of the support that's come from other labour organizations and publications like Briar Patch, because this is kind of the way we've begun to connect with groups … that are waging similar struggles across the country.” About our guests: Simran Dhunna is currently studying medicine at Queen's University. She is a member of Naujawan Support Network. Jobanjeet Kaur is a former international student who immigrated from Panjab in 2018. She was an active organizer in the Alpha College protests, and is now a member of Naujawan Support Network. Jennifer Scott is a gig worker and the President of Gig Workers United CUPW. She began delivering on apps in 2017 as a bicycle courier. She was a member in the Justice for Foodora Couriers CUPW campaign where workers won the right to unionize with 90% of workers voting YES to their union. Transcript of this episode can be accessed at georgebrown.ca/TommyDouglasInstitute or here. Images: Simran Dhunna, Jobanjeet Kaur, Jennifer Scott / Used with permission. Music: Ang Kahora. Lynne, Bjorn. Rights Purchased. Intro Voices: Ashley Booth (Podcast Announcer); Bob Luker (Tommy); Injila Rajab Khan and Danesh Hanbury (Street Voices) Courage My Friends podcast organizing committee: Chandra Budhu, Ashley Booth, Resh Budhu. Produced by: Resh Budhu, Tommy Douglas Institute and Breanne Doyle, rabble.ca. Host: Resh Budhu.
Kevin Cox, CEO of Ferrovial's Vertiports, discusses what steps the company is taking to develop Vertiports across the US. Cox discusses the potential for Vertiports to be develops as public private partnerships (P3s), how site selection decisions are made, and what legal and regulatory framework will be required for this cutting edge infrastructure to advance. #EVTOL, #vertiport #infrastructure
The second episode of this season, features a recording of the keynote address delivered by past president of the Canadian Labour Congress, Senator Hassan Yussuff at George Brown College's 31st annual Labour Fair. Anchoring a week of labour focused discussions and speaking to George Brown College students and faculty, the Senator focuses on this year's theme, 'The other P3s: pandemic, privatization, precarity,,, and planet!!' Reflecting on federal workers delivery of CERB during the pandemic, the Senator says: “Those workers, six weeks it took them to create that program, to build it from scratch and to make sure it was working so we can get people money ... That's never happened in the history of this country ... Everybody always says, 'The public service cannot perform to the speed of the private sector.' Well, guess what? In the pandemic, it was the public service that was there looking after Canadians and meeting the needs of Canadians.. we need to recognize that because these are working men and women in our country that we need to celebrate.” In terms of workers' rights during and after the pandemic, the Senators asks: “How is it that we asked workers to go to work day in and day out and that workers don't have access to paid sick days in this country? ... Many of the workers who are working in grocery stores and other places are in precarious jobs ... It speaks to the need for reform to our employment standards. How we can get those workers to be treated in a fair way and of course to have fundamental rights when they go to work. Because the dignity of work is fundamental to the kind of economy we want to build in this country." The Senator remarks on one of the hypocrisies of the gig economy: “Why does the corner-store person who operates a business and employs people have to contribute to EI and CPP for their employees, but yet a corporation as large as Uber, as an example, doesn't have to contribute because they say 'The people who work for us are not our employees.' How is that right? And how is it fair? How could you tell the corner-store that they have to comply with employment standards, but yet none of that applies to a large corporation such as Uber? I think it speaks volumes to the challenges we face.” Speaking on the possibility for change, the Senator says: “I learned a long time ago that without tension, there is no change.If you want the status quo to remain, do nothing. If you want it to change, you'll create some tensions. And it's necessary, by the way. That's how we achieve change. And the systems that are wrong and are unfair to working people in this country can be changed.” The video recording of the Senator's address is also featured on rabbleTV. About the speaker: Hassan Yussuff was appointed to the Senate of Canada to represent Ontario in June 2021 and sits as a member of the Independent Senators Group. Senator Yussuff is one of Canada's most experienced labour leaders. An immigrant from Guyana, he has had a long and accomplished career as a union activist, recently serving two terms as the president of the Canadian Labour Congress from 2014-2021; the first person of colour to lead Canada's labour movement. In addition to his work in Canada, Yussuff is a prominent international activist. In 2016, he was elected for his second term as president of the Trade Union Confederation of the Americas, an organization uniting 48 national organizations and representing more than 55 million workers in 21 countries. Yussuff has also served on numerous task forces and organizations, including the Government of Canada's NAFTA Council and its Sustainable Development Advisory Council, and co-chair of the Task Force on Just Transition for Canadian Coal Power Workers and Communities. Senator Yussuff is a member of the Standing Senate Committee on Banking, Trade and Commerce, the Standing Senate Committee on National Security and Defence, and the Subcommittee on Veterans Affairs. Introduction to Senator by George Brown College president, Gervan Fearon. Session Moderator, Susan Heximer. Student Vote of Thanks: Danesh Hanbury. Transcript of this episode can be accessed at georgebrown.ca/TommyDouglasInstitute or here. Image: Senator Hassan Yussuff / Used with permission. Music: Ang Kahora. Lynne, Bjorn. Rights Purchased. Intro Voices: Ashley Booth (Podcast Announcer); Bob Luker (Tommy); Injila Rajab Khan and Danesh Hanbury (Street Voices) Courage My Friends Podcast Organizing Committee: Chandra Budhu, Ashley Booth, Resh Budhu. Produced by: Resh Budhu, Tommy Douglas Institute and Breanne Doyle, rabble.ca. Host: Resh Budhu.
In the first episode of our fourth series, we welcome CLiFF (Canadian Labour International Film Festival board members, Lorene Oikawa and Derek Blackadder and George Brown College faculty and organizer with the Labour Fair, Kathryn Payne. We discuss the importance of bringing labour education to post-secondary and wider communities through the 31st annual Labour Fair at Toronto's George Brown College (organized by the School of Labour and the Tommy Douglas Institute) and its collaboration with the Canadian Labour International Film Festival (CLiFF). This episode sets the stage for the re-airing of major Labour Fair events on this podcast as well as on rabbleTV over the coming weeks. Reflecting on the Labour Fair at George Brown College, Payne says: “The Labour Fair initially was meant to make sure that working class students .. had some knowledge of the unions in their sectors so .. they could find folks who could help them out and who could represent them. And also teach them the basics of organizing. Right? I mean, the main thing that we are always teaching is that we are stronger as a collective.…Our theme this year is P3s, so Pandemic, Privatization, and Precarity. But in our conversations, both with teachers and amongst each other, we've also sort of added a fourth P, which is the Planet.” Speaking to the importance of CLiFF in these times, Blackadder says: “Its ongoing relevance is that it shows working people a mirror. .. it lets them look at a film that represents them in some way, shape or form.That will allow them to ..make that connection that in that bigger world, workers have a great deal more in common, than they do those things that divide us.” Oikawa points to issues that demand attention: “There's still that issue about workers' rights, workers' safety, having fair wages, safe workplaces for workers - ongoing, still needs scrutiny. Environmental issues… That's the brilliance of CLiFF. A number of issues will continue to be reflected in the films that we show at our labor Film Festival, but have been shown as well….There's never a point where, ‘oh, we're done. We don't need to know our history.' We have to continue to know our history.” About today's guests: Lorene Oikawa is on the board of the Canadian Labour International Film Festival and helps organize screenings in British Columbia. She started volunteering for CLiFF in its inaugural year, 15 years ago. She is past president on the board of the National Association of Japanese Canadians and a human rights activist. Lorene is a fourth generation Japanese Canadian and a descendant of survivors of the forced uprooting, dispossession, incarceration, and exile from 1942 to 1949. She is a co-editor of the book, Honouring Our People: Breaking the Silence. She was the first Asian Canadian executive vice president for the BC Government and Service Employees' Union (BCGEU). Derek Blackadder spent over 30 years working for several trade unions in a variety of roles. He currently volunteers with LabourStart, writes the Webwork column for Our Times Magazine, is Co-Chair of the Northumberland (ON) Coalition for Social Justice and is a contributor to RadioLabour. He combines his commitment to the labour movement and his love of film by serving on the board of the Canadian Labour International Film Festival (CLiFF). Kathryn Payne is a full-time educator in the School of Labour at George Brown College in Toronto. Her areas of interest include labour and working class culture, women's work, diversity and sexuality studies, colonialism, and neoliberalism. Her work for the School of Labour is multifaceted: she designs curricula, liaises with union educators, teaches General Education courses at George Brown, and helps organize the annual George Brown Labour Fair. She has also been active in the sex worker rights movement, queer activism and was one of the founding members of George Brown's Positive Space Campaign. Transcript of this episode can be accessed at georgebrown.ca/TommyDouglasInstitute or here. Image: / Used with permission. Music: Ang Kahora. Lynne, Bjorn. Rights Purchased. Intro Voices: Ashley Booth (Podcast Announcer); Bob Luker (Tommy); Injila Rajab Khan and Danesh Hanbury (Street Voices) Courage My Friends Podcast Organizing Committee: Chandra Budhu, Ashley Booth, Resh Budhu. Produced by: Resh Budhu, Tommy Douglas Institute and Breanne Doyle, rabble.ca. Host: Resh Budhu.
In this episode Inside the Castle spotlights the Denver South Platte Public Private Partnership project (P3). The South Platte River & Tributaries (Adams & Denver Counties), Colorado, Ecosystem Restoration and Flood Risk Management project is the fourth P3 project executed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Public private partnerships (P3s) are a tool that can accelerate delivery by providing significant upfront funding, leveraging appropriations while optimizing local participation, and promoting risk sharing in project delivery. Utilizing P3s can streamline delivery, share risk, and provide significant life-cycle cost savings. Listen in to learn how the Corps is working closely with the City and County of Denver to implement a locally led delivery approach for the entire project. This alternative delivery approach is expected to result in a savings of roughly $121-194 million and is anticipated to be delivered two-five years ahead of a traditionally delivered project.
For nearly 30 years, Jim Baller, Partner at Keller & Heckman, LLP, has worked tirelessly advocating for creating equality in the realm of digital access. The pandemic certainly accelerated the mainstream recognition of this divide and the need to provide high-speed, quality to all communities. In this episode Jim shares his work in helping communities close the gap through various means including public private partnerships (P3s). He also shares ideas how all of us can play a part in making broadband accessible to all of us and why it's so important we do this now. Thank you for listening and please take a moment to rate and review our show on your favorite app. To get a hold of us here at Keepin' The Lights On, please email: podcast@graybar.com You can reach Jim here on LinkedIn -- https://www.linkedin.com/in/jimballer/
Titeln förklarar redan för dig vad avsnittet kommer handla om. Vi börjar med att prata om P3s nya regler angående galan och priser. Sen går vi in på spotify och youtube wrapped och därefter dedikerar vi resten av tiden för Metro Boomin sjuka album Heroes & Villains. Tack grabbar för ni var med!
Äntligen kryssdags igen! Duka fram frukosten, öppna upp kryssplanen och utmana dina vänner i musik tillsammans med Jörgen Lötgård. Denna vecka kommer P3s egen metal-expert John Andersson ta oss i hand när vi djupdyker tillsammans i genren och trasslar upp alla dess krångliga förgreningar. Skicka in ditt svar senast lördagen den 3 december kl. 23:59 om du vill vara med och tävla.
On this episode of the Construction Record Podcast, digital media editor Warren Frey speaks with several stakeholders in the public-private partnership (P3) space about the current P3 landscape, the history of the P3 model in Canada and the upcoming 30th anniversary Canadian Council for Public Private Partnerships (CCPPP) conference taking place later this month in Toronto. Warren spoke to CCPPP president and CEO Lisa Mitchell as well as CCPPP vice-chair and PWC Canada partner and national capital projects and infrastructure leader Johanne Mullen about their thoughts about P3s, infrastructure and risk management. Warren also interviewed Torys LLP partner and CCPPP chair Mark Bain as well as Mark Romoff, the former CCPPP president and CEO and someone with a unique perspective on how P3s have developed and where they're going in Canada and in a global context. You can listen to The Construction Record on the Daily Commercial News and Journal of Commerce websites as well as on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and Amazon Music's podcast, and you can listen to our previous podcast about uses for drones and telematics onsite and beyond here. Thanks for listening. DCN-JOC News Services
P3 involves a public agency partnering with a private entity on a project. A twist on the traditional public-private partnership puts the community first and focuses on its challenges and opportunities. This approach works particularly well with green infrastructure, as discussed in this episode with Dominique Lueckenhoff, a former water official for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and a Senior Fellow at the US Water Alliance. Dominique talks about the creation of community based P3s to advance green infrastructure as part of the Chesapeake Bay TMDL, beginning in Prince George's County, Maryland. She also explains how Chester, Pennsylvania used the formula to establish a stormwater utility.waterloop is sponsored by Varuna, the tool that provides water utilities with full system awareness and offers a new resilience dashboard that identifies internal and external risks. Learn more at Varuna.citywaterloop is a nonprofit media outlet featuring conversations about solutions and science. Visit waterloop.org
Public-Private Partnerships. The hosts for this show are Jay Fidell and Tom Yamachika. Our state has a love-hate relationship with public-private partnerships (P3). P3s are where public (government) interests and funds partner with private companies to cooperate and share risks and benefits. The most recent and visible example is our iconic Aloha Stadium. This turn-around in the middle of the project is unfortunate. But it is not the only instance of P3s getting sacked. The debate about P3s seems to have many elements that are similar to the debate about privatizing some government services. Would it be justifiable if P3 can provide those goods or services at lower cost to the taxpayers without an appreciable reduction in quality? Would it be justifiable if the vendor is as transparent and accountable to the public as the government agency is or was? If we think it is good for our State, what risk is there that in a few years the government leaders will change and pull out the rug? The ThinkTech YouTube Playlist for this show is https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLQpkwcNJny6lmEllOKP493URXssFT4N7G Please visit our ThinkTech website at https://thinktechhawaii.com and see our Think Tech Advisories at https://thinktechadvisories.blogspot.com.
This podcast features a very informative panel with Lisa Buglione and panel members Sandra McQuain, Seth Miller Gabriel, Joe Lewis and Brandy Rogers McDonald as they provide an indepth look at P3s and how they can be beneficial to small businesses. Lisa Buglione is Executive Director of AIAI. With more than 20 years of high-profile management and operations experience, Ms. Buglione oversees every aspect of AIAI's operations and national public outreach initiatives. From coordinating regional and national conferences to creating game-changing organizational operations strategies, Ms. Buglione is instrumental to AIAI's rapid growth in terms of membership, brand awareness and prolific organizational expansion across the country. ________________________ NABWIC's Vision: The Vision of the National Association of Black Women in Construction (NABWIC) is to build lasting strategic partnerships with first-rate organizations and individuals that will provide ground-breaking and innovative solutions for black women in construction and their respective communities.| NABWIC.ORG
Season 2 Episode 13: Creation of a National Infrastructure Bank | 0:44The US Has Had Four National Infrastructure Banks | 1:17Crumbling Infrastructure Hurts Competitiveness | 2:30Rep. PPH Interview with Economics Experts on the Proposal for NIB | 4:24Alphecca Muttardy, Board Member, NIB Coalition | 4:53What Is an NIB and Why Do We Need One? | 5:00Projects that Could Be Funded by the NIB | 5:19Infrastructure Investments Are Good for the Economy | 8:48Roosevelt's RFC Was Infrastructure Bank | 11:28Nationwide Rural Broadband Funded by the NIB Is Modern REA | 11:36Muttardy on the Scope of NIB Projects | 12:27The Scope of the REA and Its Impact on Rural America | 13:01'It Is a Disgrace that We Have Houses in America with No Running Water' | 13:35Chinese NIB Is Building a Nationwide Water Grid. | 13:49 NIB Projects Could Help Arizona Farmers | 14:12Public Private Partnerships (P3s) vs NIB | 14:29Arizona Water Initiative Allocates $750 mil in P3s for 'Water Augmentation' | 14:37Keep Public Infrastructure in Public Hands. Water Is a Public Good. | 15:09Ellen Brown, Founder, Public Banking Institute and Author | 15:52'P3s Want Profits. NIB Is Basically a Bank at Cost.' | 15:56Who Can Invest in the NIB? | 16:40Muttardy: How the NIB Would Be Capitalized? | 17:08Brown: Individuals Can Invest in the NIB | 18:37Crumbling US Infrastructure Hurts Competitiveness | 18:57China Invests 8% of GDP in Infrastructure. US Invests 2.4%. | 19:35Putting People to Work Building Infrastructure Will Rebuild the Middle Class | 20:00Given Current Economic Uncertainties, How Would Our Strategies Change if We Had NIB Now? | 20:36Dr. Robert Hockett, Edward Cornell Professor of Law and Finance at Cornell University | 21:45The US Relies Too Much on Private Sector Initiative | 21:51If Your Motive Is Profit Maximization, It Is Not in Your Interest to Prioritize the Public Good | 22:15Brown on Inflation: Shortages Are to Blame | 23:28COVID Relief Money that Was Sent to the Banks Is Just Sitting There Unspent | 24:05COVID Relief Money that Went to People Is Long Gone | 24:28'People Are Spending Now But They Have Less Money than Before COVID' | 24:52'There's Not a Lot of Demand Competing for the Goods. The Problem Is Shortages.' | 25:11The American System Model of Building Infrastructure to Promote Growth & Production | 25:19Keep the Farmers and Small Businesses in Business | 25:30Hamilton: 'This Bank Is to Be Used for Infrastructure, Manufacturing and Development of the Economy' | 25:56'We've Had an Infrastructure Bank Before. The Problem Is Political.' | 26:33'If the Money Goes to Productive Purposes -- Things that Do Pay Back -- then You Have a Sustainable System.' | 27:06Muttardy: 'Policy Banks' Are Investing Money in the Most Productive Place | 27:52The US Needs a Long-Term Infrastructure Plan | 28:29What Are Common Objections to NIB? | 29:31Muttardy: The NIB Has Checks and Balances as Well as Transparency | 29:59NIB Will Have Engineers to Help Local Governments Design Efficient Systems | 30:37All NIB Loans Are Transparent for Public to See | 31:42Who Owns the Infrastructure Built with NIB Loans? | 32:02Hockett: Who Owns the Infrastructure Depends Upon the Project | 32:41Muttardy: Most NIB Loans Will Go to Public Entities who Own their Infrastructure | 34:03To Relieve Bottlenecks, NIB Can Make Private Sector Loans | 34:30The NIB's Role in Affordable Housing | 35:35Hockett: Historical Perspective on Housing | 36:19And more...
Lesia Vasylenko är ukrainsk parlamentariker, mamma till tre barn och befinner sig just nu i Kiev. Utrikeskorren Johan-Mathias Sommarström sitter i ett skyddsrum i Lviv och ger oss en rapport om senaste dyggnet. P3s inrikesreporter Erik Glaad går igenom den senaste väljarbarometern där sossarna går starkt. Babs Drougge från P3 Nyheter förklarar branden vid kärnkraftverket Zaporizjzja. David Druid lanserar Dave Aid och Joanna Górecka om hennes nya P3 Dokumentär "Sektledaren Mor Lilly". Programledare: Kodjo Akolor, David Druid och Margret Atladottir
Äntligen kryssdags igen! Denna vecka gästas vi av P3s alldeles egna Emma Percival som ger oss höjdpunkter från det nystartade kvällsprogrammet "P3 med Emma Percival". Kryss och kram! Skicka in ditt svar senast lördagen den 19 februari kl. 23:59 om du vill vara med och tävla.
Linnea Wikblad svarar på DINA frågor om mat! David Druid har sett Tindersvindlaren! Kodjo Akolor minns sin tid som programledare i Melodifestivalen! Vi hyllar Oscar Zia! P3s inrikespolitiska reporter Erik Glaad har varit på Vänsterpartiets kongress! Del 1 av personporträtt av svarta Vinter-OS-deltagare! Dessutom lyckas Linnea fånga diagnos: kille på film och Kalle Berg från P3 Nyheter rapporterar om konspirationsteorin som sprids om Sverige & undantagstillstånd i Ottawa. Programledare: Kodjo Akolor, Linnea Wikblad och David Druid
At fuldmånen laver ballade med menneskelig adfærd er så indgroet et koncept, at selv oldgræske filosoffer var overbeviste om at man skal gemme sig, når månen er helt rund.Ifølge utallige anekdoter påvirker fuldmånen både fødsler, kriminalitet, epilepsi og ikke mindst vores søvn. Det er så voldsomt at selv P3 har talt om det, men i deres søgen efter hvorvidt fuldmånen kan ødelægge mænd og kvinders søvn udbryder værterne fra "Påstand mod Påstand" desperat: "Videnskabeligt Udfordret: Hvordan påvirker fuldmånen vores søvn?"Lyt med når Mark gennemgår den nyeste forskning indenfor fuldmåne-effekter og forsøger at hjælpe P3s værter med at finde ud af, hvordan månen egentlig påvirker mennesket.Hvis du vil være med til at optage live med os på Discord kan du støtte os på 10er og blive en af vores kernelyttere https://bit.ly/VU10er - hvis pengene er knappe kan du også bare tjekke vores Facebookgruppe ud, vi hygger max!Du kan også tjekke vores webshop: bit.ly/vushop. Vi har T-shirts, kaffekopper og tasker! Og meget mere! Der er også en hønsetrøje!Send os vanvittig videnskab eller stil et spørgsmål på facebook, Instagram eller vudfordret@gmail.comTak til Christian Eiming for disclaimer.Tak til Barometer-Bjarke for Gak-O-meteretHusk at være dumme
In this episode, Jonathan Schein, CRE, discusses infrastructure with Korin Crawford, CRE. Infrastructure: New Imperatives Emerge was listed as the #5 issue in the 2021-22 Top Ten Issues Affecting Real Estate® by The Counselors of Real Estate®. Korin Crawford, CRE, is Executive Vice President of Griffin|Swinerton (G/S) and is responsible for originating, evaluating, structuring, and closing public-private partnerships (P3s) for G/S. Korin leverages 20 years of experience in infrastructure, real estate, and M&A of property-backed operating businesses with an emphasis on P3s and real estate transactions in complex regulatory environments. The “Top Ten in 10” series is part of The Counselors of Real Estate's CRE® Thought Leaders podcast program. In each episode, we discuss an issue from the 2021-2022 Top Ten Issues Affecting Real Estate®. Further Reading The 2021-2022 Top Ten Issues Affecting Real Estate®: https://cre.org/topten/ Read Korin's piece in Real Estate Issues: https://cre.org/real-estate-issues/new-infrastructure-imperatives-emerge/ Intro Music: Driven To Success by Scott Holmes Music – licensed under CC BY 4.0
Infrastructure investment, whether through direct investments in specific projects or through commingled funds, is an attractive asset class for public pension systems and other institutional investors. In this episode of Public Pensions & Investments Briefings, Yuliya Oryol, Andrée Blais and Shant Boyajian introduce you to public-private partnerships (P3s) and alternative delivery methods for infrastructure projects. In addition to P3 projects in the U.S., they also discuss other countries, such as Canada, that have a more developed and mature market for investing in infrastructure projects by public pension systems and other institutional investors. Yuliya, Andrée and Shant also discuss the Biden administration's infrastructure plan, which should open up investment opportunities for institutional investors.
The DSM USA Policy Headquarters podcast is a monthly conversation between experts on public policy topics impacting business and the relationship between government and the private sector. In this episode, the podcast covers public-private partnerships, also known as P3s, and highlights the relationship between government and business in economic development, infrastructure projects and entrepreneurial efforts. Tej Dhawan, chief data officer at Principal Financial Group and local entrepreneur, and Debi Durham, director of the Iowa Economic Development Authority (IEDA) and the Iowa Finance Authority (IFA), join the podcast to discuss building partnerships within Iowa and the Greater Des Moines (DSM) community.
As governments look to balance budgets amid the stress of the COVID-19 pandemic and recession, panelists discuss potential further steps such as delayed infrastructure projects that may be seen barring any further passage of federal relief funding. With states and municipalities providing an estimated 80 percent of US public infrastructure investment, the panel also discusses how the slowdown on such projects may affect the economy, jobs, and the municipal market. This special briefing features a panel of experts, including Alison Premo Black, PhD, senior vice president and chief economist for the American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA); Norman E. Brown, nonvoting member, Metropolitan Transportation Authority Board of Directors and legislative director, New York State Council of Machinists; Howard Cure, director of municipal bond research, Evercore Wealth Management; Robert Poole, director of transportation Policy and Searle Freedom Trust Transportation Fellow, Reason Foundation. Notable Quotes: “One thing to really keep an eye on is the situation with federal investment. The Fast Act ended on September 30th, but federal investment accounts for about half of all state highway program capital outlays.” - Alison Premo Black “Finally, I think the idea of bringing private capital more into infrastructure in the US, through long-term P3s, has the potential to be bipartisan.” - Robert Poole “In some ways, the MTA is a victim of its own success.” - Howard Cure “In the age of COVID, having a system that relies so heavily on farebox recovery, dictates a system that is full of crowded trains.” - Norman Brown Be sure to subscribe to Special Briefing to stay up to date on the world of public finance. Learn more about the Volcker Alliance at: volckeralliance.org Learn more about Penn IUR at: penniur.upenn.edu Connect with us @VolckerAlliance and @PennIUR on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn Special Briefing is published by the Volcker Alliance, as part of its Public Finance initiatives, and Penn IUR. The views expressed on this podcast are those of the panelists and do not necessarily reflect the position of the Volcker Alliance or Penn IUR.
This podcast features FASAB staff members Robin Gilliam and Domenic Savini, as they discuss important aspects of accounting for public-private partnerships, also known as P3s, and the work FASAB has completed on the P3s project to date. FASAB completed the first phase of the P3s project in 2016 with the issuance of SFFAS 49, “Public-Private… Read More
Public-Private Partnerships (P3s) can provide significant advantages by leveraging commercial efficiencies and innovation while shifting risk to the private sector in exchange for profits linked to performance. However, architecting a public private partnership is more art than science. Want to understand key challenges, trends, and lessons of space-related P3s? In this episode, Aerospace's Karen Jones and special guest Randy Segal (Hogan Lovells) will dive into how we can lay the groundwork for future P3 success in the space sector. You don't want to miss it!
Texas Water Development Board (TWDB) Chairman Peter Lake joins us to discuss water infrastructure financing in Texas and more. Chairman Lake provides a wide-ranging interview showcasing his knowledge on water infrastructure finance, risk and creditworthiness assessment, opportunities for private capital, water markets, and much, much more. In this session, you'll learn about: Pete's background and how a finance expert wound up on the TWDB TWDB's SWIFT Program (State Water Implementation Fund for Texas) The TWDB's regional planning process for water supply Issues in marketing TWDB's $1 billion bond portfolio to investors Water & its relationship with economic development and the business community Why institutional investors look for positive stories, needed services and creditworthiness when assessing an investment TWDB's programs assessing borrower creditworthiness and implementing post-loan compliance The increasing role of climate risk and the importance of local participation in climate planning P3s & investment portfolios and the relationship with regulatory risk and technology risk Two examples of opportunities where private capital might be leveraged to create value in water supply by lowering technology and regulatory risk Resources and links mentioned in or relevant to this session include: Pete's LinkedIn page Pete's Twitter handle: @twdb_peter Texas Water Development Board website TWDB's SWIFT homepage Slaking Texas' Thirst with Carlos Rubinstein Thank You! Thanks to each of you for listening and spreading the word about The Water Values Podcast! Keep the emails coming and please rate and review The Water Values Podcast on iTunes and Stitcher if you haven't done so already. And don't forget to tell your friends about the podcast and whatever you do, don't forget to join The Water Values mailing list!
Krister gråter, Sara er våryr og Tara er Oprah Winfrey/Tarapeuten de aldri ba om. Sammen presenterer de ukas hotteste juicy news, hehe. Noen stikkord for uka spør du? Vi sier Beychella, Third Trimester Tristan og P3s nye serie Blank. Kanskje noen fra Å-kjendis dukker opp der??? Hvem vet ;););)))