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Monday, May 27, 2024

Wildwood closes boardwalk, declares state of emergency over ‘unruly’ teens on Memorial Day weekend

 The New Jersey shore town Wildwood closed its popular boardwalk for a few hours early Sunday morning after hordes of “unruly, undisciplined” teens descended on the walkway, local officials said.

Police shut down the boardwalk to the public just past midnight after receiving an “irrepressible number” of complaints about an “extremely large number of young adults & juveniles” visiting the boardwalk for Memorial Day Weekend, according to a statement from authorities.

City officials did not cite a specific incident that led them to shut down the boardwalk, but claimed that cops were addressing “civil unrest.” Conditions “began to deteriorate despite the presence and efforts of local police officers and multiple mutual aid law enforcement agencies,” the statement adds.

Police shut down the Wildwood, New Jersey boardwalk early Monday morning, citing “civil unrest.”Alamy Stock Photo

Wildwood Mayor Ernie Troiano, Jr. said that the city had declared a “state of emergency”  which allows it to send an abnormally large police presence to the area  and blamed the situation on “unruly” teens.

“Wildwood will not tolerate unruly, undisciplined, unparented children nor will we stand by while the laws of the state tie the hands of the police,” Troiano, Jr said in a news release.

“We wholeheartedly support the City of Wildwood Police Department in protecting this community from these nuisance crowds on our boardwalk and in the city,” the mayor added.

The boardwalk reopened to the public shortly after 5:30 a.m. Monday morning.AP

Local cops were so busy responding to the “unrest” on the boardwalk that “we were unable to respond to certain calls for service within the city for a period of time,” Wildwood city officials said in the statement.

Police re-opened the boardwalk at around 5:30 a.m., removing police tape that had been set up at the walkway’s entrances, according to a report from NBC10 Philadelphia.

A rainstorm that erupted overnight also helped disperse whatever crowds remained, video from the scene shows.

Local officials Monday afternoon released an explanation for their decision to declare a “state of emergency.”City of Wildwood
Local authorities said they would be giving “no further statements or interviews” explaining why they declared the state of emergency “in honor of the solemness” of the Memorial Day holiday.

The boardwalk shutdown comes a day after a 15-year-old boy was stabbed on the boardwalk in nearby Ocean City Saturday night, spending panicked crowds of beachgoers fleeing the area.

https://nypost.com/2024/05/27/us-news/nj-shore-town-closes-boardwalk-and-declares-state-of-emergency-after-chaos-over-unruly-teens-on-memorial-day-weekend/

Amazon in talks with Italy to invest billions of euros in cloud plan, sources say

 Amazon's computing unit AWS is in talks with Italy to invest billions of euros in the expansion of its data centre business in the country as part of the tech giant's effort to boost its cloud offer in Europe, four people familiar with the matter said.

Discussions between parties over the size and the location of the investment are ongoing, according to the sources, with one of them saying Amazon Web Service (AWS) is considering expanding its current site in Milan or building a new one.

Both AWS and a spokesperson for the cabinet's office digital transition department declined to comment. A spokesperson for Italy's industry ministry was not immediately available to comment.

AWS launched its first cloud region in Italy in 2020 as part of a plan to invest 2 billion euros ($2.2 billion) by 2029.

It counts luxury carmaker Ferrari and insurer Assicurazioni Generali among its customers in the country, its website showed.

AWS has recently unveiled a 15.7 billion euros investment in data centres in Spain's northeastern Aragon region, replacing a previous 10-year plan announced in 2021, when the company earmarked 2.5 billion euros for the country.

According to one of the sources, AWS' investment in Italy would be in the billions but it might not reach the scale of its plans for Spain. An announcement is not imminent.

In Germany, AWS plans to invest 7.8 billion euros through 2040.

AWS is also building infrastructure to provide cloud services to telecom customers, which require vast resources.

It snagged its first customer earlier this month when Telefonica Deutschland announced plans to move 1 million customers to AWS cloud.

AWS last year announced plans to store data on servers located in the European Union to protect data privacy for government and customers in highly regulated industries.

Analysts and executives say many big corporate customers have started spending again on cloud computing after pausing last year, as interest in artificial intelligence drives a rebound of growth in the $270 billion cloud infrastructure market.

Alphabet, which struck a landmark deal in 2020 to supply cloud services to Italy's biggest bank Intesa Sanpaolo, has invested 1 billion euros in Italy to set up the two cloud regions Intesa relies upon.

Microsoft a year ago said it was launching its first cloud region in Italy as part of a $1.5 billion investment plan it had announced in 2020.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/exclusive-amazon-talks-italy-invest-154535904.html

US Military Hid Quantico Breach Attempt By Jordanians In Box Truck In Possible Dry-Run

 Weeks ago, two individuals in a box truck attempted to breach the gates at Quantico Marine Corps Base in Triangle, Virginia. Armed guards immediately stopped them, and the base's top brass quickly covered up the incident.

The reason for burying this incident? It's an election year for President Biden - and this type of news is politically explosive. The suspects were two Jordanian nationals, one rumored to be terrorist, raising suspicions that they entered illegally through the Biden administration's open southern border, as one report says, adding this could've been a dry run for a potential vehicle-borne improvised explosive device attack.

Potomac Local News first reported the incident. Since then, the New York Post has exposed how the May 3 incident was potentially covered up, even for those on the base for two weeks. 

Matt Strickland was the first to report the incident to the local media outlet. He told NYPost, "After I [raised the alarm], I had people who work at Quantico messaging me saying, 'Holy f—k, when did this happen?" 

He said, "Two weeks after it happened, Quantico finally put an email out to employees on base letting them know." 

"It was basically 'F—k, guys, I guess we aren't going to be able to keep this secret, we should try to do some CYA' [cover your ass]," said Strickland, a former Blackwater contractor and combat incident analyst at the National Ground Intelligence Center. 

Strickland said, "Every American has a right to know what happened at Quantico," adding, "Citizens have a right to know what is going on in their backyard." 

Why is that, you ask?

Well, as the NYPost explained:

Some reports speculated the two men arrested had recently crossed the southern border into the US, and one was [said to be] on the US government's terrorist watch list.

Strickland was told one of the people involved had a Virginia ID, while the other was a terrorist. The Post has not been able to independently verify either rumor.

Both men are in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) custody. Authorities would not comment further, only saying the two will remain in ICE custody until deported.

Strickland continued:

"Who would they be keeping that information from? The reasoning would be so the terrorists, or whoever the Jordanians are working for, don't know all the information. But whoever those two Jordanian men are working for already know what they planned to do and that they were apprehended.

"The only people who don't know what happened are the American people."

This is why Strickland believes the incident was abruptly covered up:

"The secrecy is purposeful because it was illegal immigrants, one of who was on the terror watch list, who breached the gates. 

"And they're allowing these illegal immigrants to come across the border."

The NYPost's Editorial Board asks...

And this is not the first incident. We covered a report over the weekend of two undocumented Chechens, with one using a "telephoto lens" - taking photos outside the home of an elite US Army special forces colonel near Fort Liberty, formerly Fort Bragg, in North Carolina.

None of this should be surprising to ZeroHedge readers. The Biden administration's experiment of letting unvetted and unvaxxed illegal aliens into the nation - upwards of ten million - is truly shocking. Even the Department of Homeland Security admitted the southern border has been open to terrorists and criminals. The FBI has made similar warnings, with known terrorists apprehended on the border. 

Recall earlier this year, Ohio Sheriff Richard K. Jones warned"There are more red flags going off now than before 9-11" thanks to open southern borders. 

Also, an Iranian intelligence officer is running around America, plotting assassination attacks against former and current government officials. 

Don't forget the countless terrorists that have already crossed the border and are unknown at this point because of open southern border policies. 

Great job, Democrats. The American people will never forget how open southern borders have fueled chaos nationwide—all because you want a new voting base. How selfish. This issue will haunt the party in the upcoming elections, as the majority of Americans are fed up.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/holy-f-k-us-military-hid-quantico-breach-attempt-jordanians-box-truck-possible-dry-run

CommonSpirit 'doubly concerned' about California Medicaid

 Chicago-based CommonSpirit is concerned about Medicaid funding across many of the states in which it operates, but "doubly concerned" about California, its strongest market and the state in which about 30% of its business occurs, CFO Dan Morissette said during a May 23 investor call. 

Earlier this month, California Gov. Gavin Newsom outlined plans to divert more than $7 billion in funding from the healthcare sector to address a major funding deficit. 

The governor's proposal would reallocate $6.7 billion from Medi-Cal provider rate increases set for Jan. 1, 2025, to balance the state budget, which is facing a shortfall of $27.6 billion this year and a projected deficit of $28.4 billion in 2025.

"We're doubly concerned given the state budget," Mr. Morissette said. "Lean times create new concerns for us as it relates to Medicaid funding, which does not cover even the direct cost of care for the various ministries that we serve."

California's $6.7 billion funding proposal was generated by the managed care organization tax that was expected to provide $19.4 billion in federal funding through 2026. In 2024, rates rose to at least 87.5% of Medicare rates for primary care, maternity care and nonspecialty mental health providers. According to Politico, these rates will continue, but no more workers will be added under the revised plan.

CommonSpirit executives said that the health system is out of network with only one major payer in California — an unnamed Medicaid provider in the north of the state.

"All other payer arrangements have either just been signed or we were out of network for a short period of time and have successfully rejoined the network," Mr. Morissette said. "We always find it disruptive — as all providers do — to be out of network, but sometimes we don't have much choice given our need for the cross-subsidy where the commercial insurers do provide a substantial amount of our EBIDA margins. It's a really difficult and delicate balance."

CommonSpirit said it receives about $600 million in California provider fees — a permanent program through Proposition 52 — and these funds will not be affected because they are not part of the general fund.

"However, we always include a 0% increase in our budget and long-range financial planning when it comes to the Medicaid rate because that's what we've been experiencing," said Benjie Loanzon, senior vice president, finance and corporate controller. "We don't expect an increase in the Medicaid rate with this proposal."

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/finance/commonspirit-doubly-concerned-about-california-medicaid.html

CDC Preps for 'Possibility of Increased Risk to Human Health' From Bird Flu, monitors 350 exposed farm workers

 The CDC is preparing for the possibility of H5N1 posing an increased risk to human health, even though that current risk remains low, the agency said on Friday.

"It is possible that influenza A(H5N1) viruses could change in ways that allow them to easily infect people and to efficiently spread between people, potentially causing a pandemic," the agency stated in an email to media.

As of May 22, about 350 farm workers are being monitored for illness after exposure to infected cows or infected raw cow's milk, according to researchers led by Shikha Garg, MD, of the CDC's National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, writing in the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Reportopens in a new tab or window.

"The number of persons monitored continues to increase," they added.

In April, the CDC announced that a dairy farm workeropens in a new tab or window in Texas developed conjunctivitis associated with H5N1 infection, the first human case linked to an ongoing multistate outbreak in dairy cows. Then earlier this week, a second caseopens in a new tab or window in Michigan was reported of a person who also developed conjunctivitis from infection with H5N1. This most recent case was identified through daily monitoring of farm workers, the report said.

Of note, a study published on Fridayopens in a new tab or window in the New England Journal of Medicine showed that when researchers fed mice raw milk from dairy cows infected with H5N1, the mice rapidly developed signs of illness. At 4 days after exposure, high levels of virus were found in the animals' nasal passages, trachea, and lungs and moderate-to-low virus levels were identified in other organs, a finding that is consistent with H5N1 infections found in other mammalsopens in a new tab or window.

The FDA has confirmed that pasteurization inactivates H5N1 virusesopens in a new tab or window and that the commercial milk supply is safe, however "all persons should avoid consuming raw milk or products produced from raw milk," noted Garg and colleagues.

Clinicians should consider the possibility of H5N1 when evaluating patients who present with conjunctivitis or respiratory illness following a relevant exposure, the CDC authors emphasized. People who have job-related or recreational exposure to infected birds, poultry, dairy cattle, or other infected animals or contaminated materials are at highest risk for infection and should take precautions, including using personal protective equipment, self-monitoring for symptoms of illness, and seeking prompt medical care if they develop symptoms.

While reiterating that the current risk to the U.S. public from H5N1 viruses is low, if a novel influenza A virus acquired the ability to infect and be transmitted easily in humans in a sustained manner, "an influenza pandemic could occur," the CDC authors wrote.

"Comprehensive worldwide surveillance and investigation of every novel influenza A virus case in humans is essential to prepare for any developments that increase the risk to human health," Garg and coauthors emphasized.

The CDC is currently monitoring trends in influenza activity by looking for unusual changes in the percentage of positive influenza tests and through the CDC's National Wastewater Surveillance System. As of May 18, no indicators of H5N1 or other unusual human influenza activity has been detected.

The CDC is also increasing influenza surveillance activitiesopens in a new tab or window over the coming months by working with commercial laboratories to increase submission of influenza-positive test specimens to public health laboratories for virus subtyping. Also, the CDC is collaborating with manufacturers of commercial diagnostic tests to potentially develop an H5N1 test that could be made widely available if needed.


Disclosures

Garg and other study authors reported no financial disclosures.

Primary Source

Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report

Source Reference: opens in a new tab or windowGarg S, et al "Outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza A(H5N1) viruses in U.S. dairy cattle and detection of two human cases -- United States, 2024" MMWR 2024; DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm7321e1.


https://www.medpagetoday.com/infectiousdisease/generalinfectiousdisease/110336

'Indian drugmakers to see FY25 revenue boost in key US market, says India Ratings and Research'

 Indian drugmakers, which have the U.S. market as a key segment, will sustain their revenue improvement in fiscal 2025 due to drug shortages in the United States, Mumbai-based India Ratings and Research said on Monday.

India is a hub of bulk generic drug manufacturing and drugmakers including Dr Reddy's, Cipla, Sun Pharma derive a significant share of revenue from both the U.S. and Europe.

The world's largest drug market is facing decade-high drug shortages, the research firm said in a note citing data from with Utah Drug Information Service.

There is an active shortage of 233 drugs across 22 therapeutic categories as of April, led mainly by discontinuing production of some drugs, rising demand and delays in shipments, it said, also citing data from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

"US-catering Indian generic players have seen a strong financial performance during FY24, due to lower raw material cost and stability in pricing," said Vivek Jain, Director of Corporate Ratings at India Ratings and Research.

Reddy's reported a 29% jump in North America sales for the most recent quarter ended March 31, while Cipla saw an 11% jump in revenue from the region.

Smaller rival Lupin's North America sales grew 22.6% during the fourth quarter.

IMPROVED RESULTS

India Ratings and Research said increasing regulatory costs led to many US-based generic pharma manufacturers halting the production of certain drugs.

The increasing complexity of filing applications for new drugs is adding to the shortages and reducing competition, the research firm added.

Indian companies could likely fill the gap by expanding supply chains and increasing participation across therapeutic categories, it said.

Earlier this month, both Reddy's and Cipla said they are preparing for new launches in the U.S.

Additionally, price erosion in the U.S. market - where lower prices amid stiff competition affect drugmakers' margins - is expected to fall to the single digits over the next 12 to 18 months from double digits in 2022, the research firm said, likely improving returns.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/indian-drugmakers-see-fy25-revenue-102203858.html

US, European nations consider vaccinating workers exposed to bird flu

 The United States and Europe are taking steps to acquire or manufacture H5N1 bird flu vaccines that could be used to protect at-risk poultry and dairy workers, veterinarians and lab technicians, government officials said, moves influenza experts say could curb the threat of a pandemic.

U.S officials last week said they were moving bulk vaccine from CSL Seqirus that closely matches the current virus into finished shots that could provide 4.8 million doses of vaccine. European health officials told Reuters they were in talks to acquire CSL's prepandemic vaccine.

Canadian health officials said they have met with GSK, maker of Canada's seasonal flu shots, to discuss acquiring and manufacturing a prepandemic bird flu vaccine once its seasonal flu production capacity is freed up.

Other countries, including the UK, are discussing how to proceed on prepandemic vaccines, scientists said.

The actions follow the explosive spread of a new strain of bird flu that emerged in late 2020 and has caused unprecedented numbers of deaths among wild birds and domestic poultry and has begun infecting many mammal species.

In March, U.S. officials reported the first outbreak of the virus in dairy cattle, which has infected dozens of herds in nine states and two dairy workers. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has estimated that 20% of the U.S. milk supply shows signs of the virus, indicating a wider spread is likely.

Human exposures to the virus in poultry and dairy operations could increase the risk that the virus will mutate and gain the ability to spread easily in people.

“All of our efforts need to be focused on preventing those events from happening,” said Matthew Miller, co-director of the Canadian Pandemic Preparedness Hub at McMaster University. “Once we have widespread infections of humans, we're in big trouble.”

Dr. Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at the University of Saskatchewan, said she has been in discussions with U.S. and Canadian officials about using vaccines to protect workers following the virus' spread into new mammal species.

Dawn O'Connell of the U.S. Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response said the government is "looking closely" at the possibility of vaccinating farm workers and others in close contact with the virus.

The U.S. has contracts with CSL and GSK to test prepandemic vaccines that more closely match the circulating virus than older H5N1 vaccines in the stockpile. The U.S. is moving forward with the CSL vaccine, a Department of Health and Human Services official confirmed.

Discussions about prepandemic vaccine use are going on at government levels and among scientists in a number of places, including in the UK, said Wendy Barclay, chair in influenza virology at University College London, who also researches avian flu for the UK Health Security Agency.

If deployed strategically to dairy farmers, healthcare workers and those in close contact with infected animals, "it would put a pin in the virus," she said, although she said it was not clear if this step was necessary yet.

The UK government did not comment but said it is monitoring the situation in the U.S.

In Europe, the European Commission's Health Emergency Preparedness and Response Authority is working on a joint procurement of CSL Seqirus's vaccine to "potentially prevent a pandemic" sparked by individuals exposed to infected birds and animals, spokesman Stefan De Keersmaecker told Reuters.

A spokeswoman for CSL, which has contracts for pandemic influenza vaccines with 30 governments, said the company has been in talks with several governments about procuring vaccines since 2022. Those requests have accelerated with the U.S. outbreak, she said.

PREPANDEMIC STOCKPILE

The U.S. maintains a stockpile of prepandemic vaccine candidates and bulk vaccine against an array of influenza strains and conducts clinical trials to support an Emergency Use Authorization or FDA license in the event of pandemic.

Seasonal flu vaccine makers, including Sanofi, could also be asked to shift to producing pandemic flu vaccines.

The U.S. is in talks with mRNA vaccine makers Pfizer and Moderna about potential pandemic vaccines.

Dr. Richard Webby, a St. Jude Children's Research Hospital virologist who studies flu in animals and birds for the World Health Organization, said the situation in dairy cattle merits vaccine use.

"If we look at the exposure levels that some of these farmers are getting, it's high," Webby said.

The decision on how and when to use the vaccine will hinge on evidence of increased transmission, severity of disease, cases in people with no link to a dairy farm and mutations in the virus, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Principal Deputy Director Nirav Shah said.

Dutch flu virologist Ron Fouchier of the Erasmus MC in Rotterdam, who has conducted experiments mapping the changes necessary for bird flu to spark a pandemic, said Europe's plan is to procure the CSL vaccine for people occupationally exposed to the virus.

His lab could well be eligible if a vaccine becomes available, he said, adding, "I would certainly take it."

https://www.yahoo.com/news/us-european-nations-consider-vaccinating-050439255.html