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Tuesday, January 9, 2024

NYC students forced to go remote as city houses nearly 2K migrants at their school

 Students at a Brooklyn high school were kicked out of the classroom to make room for nearly 2,000 migrants who were evacuated from a controversial tent shelter due to a monster storm closing in on the Big Apple.

The city made the move amid concerns that a massive migrant tent at Floyd Bennett Field would collapse from torrential rains and gusting winds — packing them instead into the second-floor gym at James Madison High School five miles away. 

The school’s neighbors were not keen on the last-minute decision.

“This is f—ed up,” said a local resident who identified himself only as Rob. “It’s a litmus test. They are using a storm, a legitimate situation, where they are testing this out. I guarantee you they’ll be here for the entire summer.

The decision to clear the migrants out of the field came as city officials feared for the safety of the tent city at the field with heavy rains and winds gusting up to 70 mph.

“There’s 1,900 people getting thrown into my neighborhood, half a block from where I live and we don’t know who they are,” he said.

“They’re not vetted. A lot of them have criminal records and backgrounds and we don’t even know.”

One irate mom even went off on the migrants as they pulled up inside a line of school buses in the pouring rain shortly before 6 p.m.

One mother went off on the migrants as their bus pulled up to the school Tuesday evening.Steven Vago
The migrant move began shortly before 5 p.m. as more than two dozen school buses lined up at the field for the short drive to the school.

“How do you feel? Does it feel good?” the woman, who only identified herself as Michelle, screamed at the buses.

“How does it feel that you kicked all the kids out of school tomorrow? Does it feel good? I hope you feel good. I hope you will sleep very well tonight!”

Said a local dad, “How do you feel stealing American tax money?”

The school announced online earlier in the day that classes would be held remotely on Wednesday due to “the activation of James Madison High School as a temporary overnight respite center” for the migrants.

City officials are evacuating a migrant tent shelter at Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn due to extreme weather.Getty Images

The decision to clear the migrants out of the field came as city officials feared for the safety of the tent city at the field with heavy rains and winds gusting up to 70 mph forecast for later on Tuesday and into Wednesday.

“To be clear, this relocation is a proactive measure being taken out of an abundance of caution to ensure the safety and wellbeing of individuals working and living at the center,” City Hall spokeswoman Kayla Mamelak said.

“The families are already in the process of being temporarily relocated and will continue to be provided with essential services and support,” Mamelak added.

“The relocation will continue until any weather conditions that may arise have stabilized and the facility is once again fit for living.”

“How do you feel? Does it feel good?” the woman, who only identified herself as Michelle, screamed at the buses.Steven Vago
The migrant shelter at Floyd Bennett Field took a beating in December from high winds.Getty Images

By midday, officials were already prepping the high school for the migrants’ arrival from the airfield about five miles away, with 10 marked NYPD vehicles and a half-dozen Emergency Management trucks parked outside. 

“They told us we had to get everything out by 5 [p.m.],” gym teacher Robyn Levy said outside the school.

“They sent us the email at 6 in the morning. I don’t know when we’ll be able to back.”

“What I want to know is why here?” Levy said.

“Why not send them somewhere where students wouldn’t be disrupted, where students learning wouldn’t be disrupted?”

The first of about 1,900 migrants moved to Floyd Bennett Field in November amid an influx of migrants in the city.Getty Images

The migrant move began shortly before 5 p.m. as more than two dozen school buses lined up at the field for the short drive to the school.

It wasn’t the first time extreme weather has been an issue at the 2,000-bed tent facility, which took a pounding last month when heavy rain and gusting, 55-mph winds shook metal bolts and hinges loose from the ceiling.

The ferocious storm on Dec. 18 dropped up to 4 inches of rain in the region and had migrants inside the tents fearing for their lives, they told The Post at the time.

“The wind was so strong, it looked like the tents were going to give way and be blown apart,” Venezuelan migrant Reibi Rodrigues said.

“When we told security we were afraid of an imminent collapse, they told us the door was open and we could leave when we want.

“But where were we going to go?”

City Hall officials said they had an evacuation plan in place and ready to execute if needed, but said no flooding was reported at the former federal airfield during the December downpour.

By midday, officials were already prepping the high school for the migrants’ arrival from the airfield about five miles away, with 10 marked NYPD vehicles and a half-dozen Emergency Management trucks parked outside.Wayne Carrington

They also said they were unaware of bolts and hinges falling from the top of the tents.

The first migrants moved to the abandoned Brooklyn airfield in November after Gov. Kathy Hochul negotiated with the White House for access to the site to erect a tent city.

Critics worried about the remote location, but city officials were desperate to find space for the thousands of migrants flooding into the Big Apple.

It wasn’t the first time extreme weather has been an issue at the 2,000-bed tent facility, which took a pounding last month when heavy rain and gusting, 55-mph winds shook metal bolts and hinges loose from the ceiling.Wayne Carrington

“I warned the administration that something like this would happen from day one and they refused to listen,” Councilwoman Joann Ariola (R-Queens) told The Post Tuesday.

“Floyd Bennett Field is entirely unsuitable for a tent complex, and how we are wasting tax-payer dollars to evacuate nearly 2,000 people when they should have been placed somewhere like the Park Slope Armory.

“This did not take a fortune teller to predict,” she said.

“It was common sense.”

Nearly 70,000 migrants remain in the city’s care from among the 162,000 who have arrived in the five boroughs from the US border since the spring of 2022.

City Hall officials said they had an evacuation plan in place and ready to execute if needed, but said no flooding was reported at the former federal airfield during the December downpour.Wayne Carrington
The city also erected migrant tents at Randall’s Island in Manhattan and the former Creedmore Psychiatric Center in Queens, but said Tuesday that those sites are less exposed and not considered vulnerable to extreme weather.

Adams also said that while the tents at the other two sites are “anchored” to the ground, the ones at Floyd Bennett Field are only held down by “heavy stones.”

https://nypost.com/2024/01/09/metro/migrants-evacuated-from-floyd-bennett-field-due-to-high-winds/

UAE President Tells Netanyahu: "Ask Zelensky For Money"

 Via The Cradle,

Emirati President Mohammed bin Zayed (MbZ) refused a request by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to pay unemployment stipends to Palestinian workers from the occupied West Bank and instead told his ally to go "ask Zelensky" for money during a recent phone conversation, according to informed officials who spoke with Axios.

Since the historic attack on southern settlements by Hamas in Gaza on October 7, Tel Aviv imposed a closure on the occupied West Bank and banned about 150,000 Palestinian workers from entering Israel.

As concerns grew that a worsening Palestinian economy would exacerbate the violent escalation in the West Bank, Netanyahu refused calls by the defense ministry and Shin Bet to put the issue of paying unemployment stipends to a vote in the security cabinet. Instead, he turned to his allies in Abu Dhabi.

During a phone call with MbZ a few weeks ago, Netanyahu "broadly asked for help in regards to the Palestinians," the sources tell Axios. However, the conversation turned sour once the Israeli premier "specifically asked if the UAE would be willing to pay the Palestinian workers," leaving the UAE leader "stunned."

"MbZ told Netanyahu he couldn't do it, and then sarcastically suggested the Israeli prime minister turn to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky instead," the sources said, adding that the Emirati leader remarked that "Zelensky gets a lot of money from many countries, so maybe he would be able to help."

"The notion that Arab countries will come in to rebuild and pay the bill for what's currently happening is wishful thinking," an Emirati official told Axios.

In mid-December, Netanyahu reportedly told Knesset officials that Saudi Arabia and the UAE would foot the bill to rebuild Gaza.

"The first step in Gaza will be to defeat Hamas. After that, I believe that the UAE and Saudi Arabia will support the rehabilitation of the Strip," Netanyahu said during a closed-door testimony to the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee.

On Tuesday, Israeli media repeated these claims, reporting that US officials seeking to revive a Saudi-Israel normalization deal believe this would secure Saudi funding to "rebuild Gaza."

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/uae-president-tells-netanyahu-ask-zelensky-money

JPM on tenterhooks over Novartis-Cytokinetics merger rumour

 With M&A news coming thick and fast on the first day of the JP Morgan Healthcare conference in San Francisco, attendees were left hanging as proceedings closed with no news on a rumoured offer by Novartis to acquire Cytokinetics.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Novartis is in “advanced talks” to buy Cytokinetics, which is currently riding high after its cardiovascular drug aficamten hit the mark in a phase 3 trial in obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) as 2023 came to an end.

Citing unnamed sources, the newspaper has said that Novartis is close to a deal that would value Cytokinetics at $10 billion, after a bidding war that reportedly also included AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson.

Shares in Cytokinetics spiked 15% after the report was published, having already almost doubled after the aficamten study was announced, driving its valuation north of $8 billion, but at the time of writing none of the parties were commenting on the speculation.

If confirmed, it would crown a frenetic period of dealmaking for Novartis at the start of 2024, coming after a $1.2 billion alliance with artificial intelligence in drug discovery specialist Isomorphic Labs, a $425 million takeover of Dutch biotech Calypso and its IL-15 inhibitor for autoimmune diseases, and a licensing deal with China’s Shanghai Argo Biopharmaceutical covering two RNAi interference (RNAi) therapies in the cardiovascular and metabolic diseases area.

Aficamten is a would-be competitor to Bristol-Myers Squibb’s Camzyos (mavacamten), which is currently the only FDA-approved treatment for HCM and has been tipped as a future blockbuster, making $142 million in the first nine months of 2023, following its FDA approval in April 2022.

HCM is an inherited disorder in which the heart muscle becomes thickened and can obstruct blood flow, and affects around 280,000 people in the US, of whom around two-thirds have the obstructive form of the disease. It is one of the most common reasons for sudden cardiac death in people who are younger than 35.

Cytokinetics has said that the broad efficacy and encouraging safety profile of aficamten give it a chance of becoming the “cardiac myosin inhibitor of choice among physicians and patients.”

Boston Scientific snaps up Axonic for $3.7bn

Meanwhile, in amongst the biotech dealmaking at JPM, medical device giant Boston Scientific agreed a $3.7 billion acquisition of medtech company Axonics, which makes devices for urinary and bowel dysfunction based sacral neuromodulation (SNM) therapy.

SNM therapy is a minimally invasive procedure used in the treatment of overactive bladder (OAB) and faecal incontinence, delivering mild electrical pulses to the sacral nerve to restore communication between the brain and the bladder.

https://pharmaphorum.com/news/jpm-tenterhooks-over-novartis-cytokinetics-merger-rumour