Home secretary Yvette Cooper has said an additional 75 million for the Governments border command is new funding from the Budget. Ms Cooper was pressed on Labours plans to tackle people smuggling ahead of the Interpol General Assembly in Glasgow on Monday (4 November). The home secretary told BBC Breakfast: Its part of the Budget settlement. Its in addition to the 75 million wed already talked about, which is only just starting to be invested now. The further amount doubles the border commands funding to 150 million over two years. The money will be used to fund high-tech surveillance equipment and 100 specialist investigators who will target criminals engaged in people smuggling.
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We can solve poverty: How will impact investing change the face of charitable finance?: Save The.. News video on One News Page on Monday, 4 November 2024
The United Nations Biodiversity Conference, also known as COP16, has concluded in Colombia without an agreement on a roadmap to ramp up funding for species protection. Zhang Junjie, director of the Initiative for Sustainable Investment at Duke Kunshan
The world’s biggest nature conservation conference closed in Colombia on Saturday with no agreement on a roadmap to ramp up funding for species protection. The 16th Conference of Parties (COP16) to the UN’s Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) was suspended by its president Susana Muhamad as negotiations ran almost 12 hours longer than planned and
Nevada is one of the most unaffordable places in the country. The mayor of Reno says cities need to deregulate housing and densify, rather than sprawl.
Negotiations at the world’s biggest nature conservation conference ran hours into overtime in Cali, Colombia on Saturday, with talks deadlocked on funding for efforts to “halt and reverse” species loss. A closing plenary session, scheduled for Friday evening, started more than four hours late as groups of negotiators huddled behind closed doors seeking to iron
Would you like to open a store credit card? Consumer Reports says to think twice before you sign the dotted line.
Negotiations at the world’s biggest nature conservation conference entered extra time in Cali, Colombia, on Friday as talks deadlocked on funding for efforts to “halt and reverse” species loss. A closing plenary session, scheduled for 6:00 pm Colombian time (2300 GMT), had not started more than three hours later as smaller groups of negotiators huddled
Tech companies are investing in nuclear power as they hunt for carbon-free, reliable electricity to support artificial intelligence data centers.
Fueled by more than $21 million from Delaware and NEVI, Camden and Harrington will be among the first cities in Delaware to receive new EV chargers.
A North Carolina business owner is asking for help five weeks after Hurricane Helene caused her family physical, financial, and emotional devastation.”I understand there have been so many lives lost, and there are more important things that people lost,” Terri Cox said as she got teary-eyed speaking with WYFF News 4’s Destiny Chance.Cox and her family own The Olde World Christmas Shoppe in the Biltmore Village, one of the areas of Asheville hardest hit by the storm.”There are some people who are local homeless people, and we worried about them,” Cox said. “We worried about just everybody, everywhere in the Asheville area, number one. And then when we realized that the store was just decimated, it was heartbreaking.” The store on the corner of Boston Way, near The Corner Kitchen and Estate Jewelry, and across the street from Well Bred Bakery, sells novelty holiday and decor items.”We looked at pictures and drone photographs and videos, it was completely covered. I think it was between about 15 feet high on the building, and inside, it was over nine feet high. The water was inside the building,” Cox says.She says when they were finally able to go inside, things had already molded.”We’ve already started the process to remediate, but that’s very expensive, and then to rebuild, because the whole building is gutted right now, down to the subcore. There’s a crawl space, and it has many feet of mud inside, and we’ve been told that the mud is dangerous. It has listeria. It has E coli biohazard, and we’re told that needs to come out also, which is going to be expensive but it’s dangerous,” she said.Along with the destruction of the building, Cox says she and her family are coping with the emotional toll the storm’s aftermath has taken.”My parents took over this Christmas Shoppe in 1989,” she said. My mom is gone now; she’s not here anymore. And she was such a huge part of the store, and we always kept one wreath up that she had made that we never took down. It was for sale, you know, before she passed away, but we kept it up. And when I knew that wreath was gone, and just everything that my parents had worked so hard for it was, it was devastating,” she said.Cox says the Federal Emergency Management Agency won’t be able to offer assistance to cover the demolition and remediation required. She also says the Small Business Administration says they do not have funding to help. So they started a GoFundMe in order to reopen.”We lost over $200,000 worth of merchandise, but we won’t use the GoFundMe money to replace any merchandise,” she said. “We just need it to remediate.”Cox is a teacher in Atlanta and says the outpouring from the community has been tremendous.”I had to let my school know why I was missing days, back and forth between here and North Carolina and they were devastated, too. I didn’t even realize half of my students had visited the shop and talked about so many memories their families have had in the area,” she said.WYFF asked if Cox and her family are still in the Christmas spirit, given the circumstances.”I’m hopeful, very hopeful we can be back up and running by summer of 2025,” she said. “But that’s being optimistic.”
Standard Uranium CEO Jon Bey joined Steve Darling from Proactive to recap the companys productive year and outline its plans to drive uranium exploration…