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  • Extreme Diversity in the Songs of Spitsbergen’s Bowhead Whales

    K. M. Kovacs, Spitsbergen Whaling Published 4 April 2018

    Arctic whaling in the eighteenth century. The ships are Dutch and the animals depicted are Bowhead Whales.  Source: Ellis, R. 1994. Monsters of the Sea. Robert Hale Ltd.

    Abstract

    Almost all mammals communicate using sound, but few species produce complex songs. Two baleen whales sing complex songs that change annually, though only the humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) has received much research attention. This study focuses on the other baleen whale singer, the bowhead whale (Balaena mysticetus). Members of the Spitsbergen bowhead whale population produced 184 different song types over a 3-year period, based on duty-cycled recordings from a site in Fram Strait in the northeast Atlantic. Distinct song types were recorded over short periods, lasting at most some months. This song diversity could be the result of population expansion, or immigration of animals from other populations that are no longer isolated from each other by heavy sea ice. However, this explanation does not account for the within season and annual shifting of song types. Other possible explanations for the extraordinary diversity in songs could be that it results either from weak selection pressure for interspecific identification or for maintenance of song characteristics or, alternatively, from strong pressure for novelty in a small population.

    1. Background

    Complex ‘song’ in mammals is rare. While many mammalian taxa produce repetitive ‘calls’, sometimes called advertisement songs [13], few mammals produce vocal displays akin to bird song, which is defined by multiple frequencies and amplitude-modulated elements combined into phrases and organized in long bouts [4]. Such songs have been documented in only a few mammalian species, including some bats (Chiroptera), gibbons (Hylobatidae), mice (Scotinomysspp.), rock hyraxes (Procavia capensis), and two great whales, humpback (Megaptera novaeangliae) and bowhead (Balaena mysticetus) whales [3,58]. With the exception of gibbons, in which males and females duet [5], complex songs in mammals are thought to be produced only by males [6,911]. Male mammals are thought to sing to defend territories, advertise their quality, attract mates or some combination of these functions [5,11].

    The song in baleen whales has been studied extensively only in humpback whales, which sing similar songs within a season across a whole population. The structure of that song gradually evolves over the season in unison [12] and transfer of song types has been documented to occur directionally from one population to another over a period of years [13]. Humpback whale songs are composed of a hierarchy from units to sub-phrases to phrases to themes [12].a stamp of bowhead whales

    Less is known about the songs of bowhead whales compared with humpback whales, but bowhead whale songs generally consist of a single phrase that includes amplitude- and frequency-modulated elements repeated in bouts, with two different sounds often produced simultaneously [14]. A pilot study from the Fram Strait in 2008–2009 provided the first indication that tens of song types were produced by bowhead whales in this region within a single overwinter period [8]. No year-round studies of song diversity exist for other bowhead whale populations although multiple song types in a single year have been documented for two other populations [15,16]. Herein, we document extremely high inter- and intra-annual diversity in the mammalian song from the Spitsbergen bowhead whale population.

    Bowhead whales in the North Atlantic; Artist: Bárður Jákupsson: Wikipedia

    2. Material and methods

    Omni-directional hydrophone recorders were deployed and redeployed annually from 2010 to 2014 in September on a long-term oceanographic mooring in western Fram Strait, at about 78°49 N, 5° W (electronic supplementary material, figure S1). The mooring deployed in 2011 was not recovered. Instruments recorded acoustic data for the first 14–17 min h−1 throughout the year. Upon recovery, the data were downloaded and spectrograms (10–4000 Hz, 2048 point FFT, 50% overlap, Hann window) were created for each data file. Spectrograms were then reviewed visually for the presence of bowhead whale songs that were classified by eye based on time-frequency characteristics of each song type [17]. Files with ‘loud’ songs (possessing distinct units, song bandwidth exceeding 500 Hz) were analysed further to determine the unit structure and song composition. Individual songs were assigned a unique number if more than one iteration occurred (e.g. Fram2012-11 was the 11th song recorded in the 2012–2013 season while Fram2012-54 was the 54th; electronic supplementary material, S1–S4). Each song type was characterized by frequency, duration and amplitude and/or frequency modulation, number of units and phrases and compared to all other song types within and between years to determine the minimum number of different song types detected and to describe the diversity of songs in this species at this location.

    3. Results

    Bowhead whale songs were detected 24 h per day throughout most of the winter every year (electronic supplementary material, figure S2). The greatest number of different song types was recorded in December and January (figure 1). A total of 184 different song types were recorded in the 3-year study period. Each song type was recorded in only one deployment period.

    Figure 1.

    Total numbers of bowhead whale song types recorded in each month (bars) and cumulative number of song types (dashed lines) by year. The greatest number of different song types occurs in December and January, presumed to be the peak of mating season for bowhead whales.

    There was interannual variation in the number and timing of songs. The fewest songs were recorded in 2010–2011 (39 song types total, 895 recordings). Both 2012–2013 (69 song types total, 1338 recordings) and 2013–2014 (76 song types total, 998 recordings) had approximately twice as many different songs (figure 1).

    While most song types were short-lived — from hours to days — and seldom lasted longer than a month (figure 2), every year a few song types persisted throughout the winter. The overall trend for all years was a progression of song types appearing and then disappearing over time, with the greatest within-year diversity occurring in January for all 3 years examined.

    Figure 2.

    Total number of hours and months during which each song type was recorded by year. In most cases, a song type was only recorded in one month, though in some instances the same song type was recorded in two to four different months. (a) 2010–2011: 38 song types were recorded; (b) 2012–2013: 69 song types were recorded; (c) 2013–2014: 76 song types were recorded.

    Of the 3231 recordings containing songs over the 3 years, slightly over half (53%) contained only a single song type, while two different songs occurred in 37% of the recording periods. Less than 10% of all recordings contained more than two different song types.

    4. Discussion

    The diversity and interannual variability in songs of bowhead whales in this 3-year study are rivalled only by a few species of songbirds [4]. Among other mammalian singers, mice and gibbons tend to produce highly stereotyped and repetitive songs with few elements (e.g. [3,5]). Variation in rock hyrax and bat songs is primarily through changes in the arrangement of units [6,11]. Humpback whales produce complex songs that are similar within a year [7,12,13]. Although the repertoire of any one individual bowhead whale in this study cannot be determined, the catalogue of song types (184) is remarkably varied.

    It is not known whether individual bowhead whales sing multiple song types in a season, but some are known to share the same song type in the same period in the Bering – Chukchi – Beaufort (BCB) population [14,16]. Nor is it known if individual bowhead whales maintain the same song throughout their lifetime or if they switch within and/or between years.

    One explanation for the very high song diversity in the Spitsbergen bowhead whale population could be that the animals occupying this area in modern times include immigrants from both the BCB and the eastern Canada – western Greenland bowhead populations. Until recently, these populations have been assumed to be isolated from each other due to extensive, impenetrable sea ice cover in the High Arctic. However, in the past few decades, extreme declines in sea ice extent and thickness may have facilitated contact between these populations [18]. However, even if this region contains bowhead whales from multiple populations, this does not fully explain the high numbers of different song types recorded in this study or the lack of recurrence of song types from year to year.

    It is plausible that the bowhead whales in the Fram Strait are simply a remnant of the original Spitsbergen population that survived the extreme historical levels of exploitation [19]. The influence of small population size on song diversity is conflicted; some studies suggest song diversity increases in smaller populations, although others have found that reduced or isolated populations exhibit a reduction in song diversity and produce simpler songs [20,21].

    In some species, females appear to prefer a diverse song repertoire [2225], suggesting that increased complexity of singing might confer reproductive advantages. A recent study of howler monkeys (Alouatta spp.) documented trade-offs in male reproductive characteristics based on (temporary) social structure: in groups with fewer males, or smaller social groups, males invested more in vocal displays as a reproductive tactic [26]. Normally, testes size and vocal repertoire (or other reproductive displays) are considered evolutionary trade-offs: depending upon social context, one of these may provide a selective advantage for individuals within a population over the other. 

    Bowhead whales are the only High Arctic resident baleen whale. Thus, interspecific identification via song may not confer the same selective advantage for bowheads that it might for other cetacean species. This could reduce selection pressure on song stereotypy, allowing for greater variation in song types as a result of a long-term cultural mutation in songs, or song novelty itself might confer an advantage [4,20,22,23].

    Because bowhead whales sing underwater, in heavy ice during the polar night, a nuanced understanding of the variable syntax of this species will be difficult to obtain. Nevertheless, the singing behaviour of Spitsbergen bowhead whales, in which tens of distinct song types are produced annually, makes them remarkable among mammals.

    Data accessibility

    Exemplar song files are deposited in Dryad Digital Repository (doi:10.5061/dryad.1ck400f) [31].

    Authors’ contributions:
    All authors collected the data and conceived the idea for analysis. K.M.S. analysed the data. All authors contributed to interpreting the results, writing the manuscript and agree to its publication. All authors are accountable for all aspects of the work.

    This work was funded by NPI, The Svalbard Environmental Protection Fund, Svalbard Science Forum, the Fram Centre Incentive Fund and the Norwegian Research Council (grant no. 244488/E10).

  • Confessions of a Catholic (Who Doesn’t Believe in Confession)

     by Rose Madeline MulaOpen Air Confessional

    My hearing is no longer reliable.  As I sat at Mass one recent Saturday afternoon, I thought the officiating priest said something about “Fake News” and the current political climate.  Was he sympathizing with Donald Trump?  My first instinct was to walk out.  But since I hadn’t heard the context of his remarks, I wasn’t sure.  So I stayed, recalling another Mass, at another church, during another era of political contention, when another priest declaimed from the pulpit that it was our responsibility to vote for George Bush. I was furious!

     A confessional with a priest and a sinner, 1740; Cornelis van Alkemade. Wikimedia Commons

    Of course Bush was pro-life, which apparently overrode any other issue in the eyes of the Catholic Church.  But not mine.  When I got home, I pulled out my computer, before even taking off my coat, and shot off a respectful (barely) email to the offending prelate.  I said I strongly objected to being told how to vote, and I did not know if I could even consider myself a Catholic anymore because I disagreed with the Church’s single-minded focus on pro-life, to the exclusion of a candidate’s position on any other issue. If Hitler had been a Catholic and was anti-abortion, I asked, would he have been forgiven for the holocaust?  And if I missed Mass one weekend for no good reason and died before I could confess this so-called mortal sin, would the Pearly Gates be slammed in my face and I be banished to spend eternity with Adolf? 

    Furthermore, though I didn’t equate George Bush with Hitler, were we to ignore the fact, for one example, that under his governorship, Texas had executed a record number of convicted killers?  No problem, the priest responded, “The Church isn’t anti-death penalty.”  Wrong!  How could someone whose words I am supposed to live by be so woefully misinformed?  I sent him links to several irrefutable sites confirming the truth.  He apologized profusely so I resisted my impulse to abandon Catholicism, and I voted for Al Gore.

    Flash forward to my current religion crisis.  Had this other priest expressed support for Donald Trump, whom I consider contemptible?  It was time for another email in which I asked him to clarify his — and the Church’s — position re the new tenant of the Oval Office.  I was not hopeful.  Trump, after all, is pro-life, even though he does nothing to help disadvantaged children once they leave the womb.  Thankfully (and surprisingly!)  the priest responded that both he and the Church, share my opinion of Trump and that being pro-life doesn’t give anyone free rein to commit abuses in other areas. However, They are prohibited from making strong statements to that effect because of the separation of Church and State (a precept that didn’t bother the Bush-loving priest I had encountered decades ago).

    So I guess I’ll continue to go to Mass weekly and even abstain from meat on Fridays of Lent, though I don’t know why it’s now okay to gobble a Big Mac on other Fridays, which once was a sin.  And am I a heretic for believing the Church should allow priests to marry, change its policy on birth control, and abolish confession?  I mean is it logical that I be required to confess to someone who possibly had sexually abused children that I coveted George Clooney?  Also, am I wrong to hope the Church will soon “forgive” homosexuals for their sexual orientation which I believe is not a choice but a condition of birth, such as eye color?  Further, is it sinful for me to believe that women should be admitted to the priesthood?

    When I expressed that thought recently, a girlfriend  (whose neck was encircled by a chain bearing a cross almost as large as the one on which Jesus was crucified) almost fainted in horror.  Will she be wearing wings in the Great Beyond while I’m sharing a fire pit with Adolf?

    Given all this, am I really a Catholic — or just someone who attends weekly Mass through habit?  I ask God every day.  So far, no answer; but neither has the roof of my church threatened to cave in when I enter.

    ©2018 Rose Madeline Mula for SeniorWomen.com


    Editor’s Note:  Rose Mula’s most recent book is Confessions of a Domestically-Challenged Homemaker &  Other Tall Tales, available at Amazon.com and other online booksellers.  Grandmother Goose: Rhymes for a Second Childhood is available as an e-book on Amazon.com for the Kindle and at BarnesandNoble.com for the Nook at $2.99; the paperback edition is available for $9.95.   Her website is rosemadelinemula.com.  
  • Federal Reserve Research, Warning: Don’t Infer Regional Inflation Differences from House Price Changes

     St. Louis Fed Reserve Exteriiorby Charles S. Gascon and Andrew Spewak,  Research Division of the St. Louis Federal Reserve

    If house prices in one metropolitan statistical area (MSA) are increasing much faster than in another MSA, should one infer that overall inflation is also much faster in the former? No. Consider the nation’s two largest MSAs: New York, New York, and Los Angeles, California. In New York, house prices have grown only about 2 percent annually since 2011, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency house price index (HPI). Meanwhile, house prices have skyrocketed in Los Angeles, growing over 8 percent annually during the same period. If house prices were a proxy for regional inflation, this would imply higher inflation in Los Angeles than in New York. In reality, despite the major differences in house price growth, overall inflation trends have been very similar in these two areas. According to the regional consumer price indexes (CPIs), prices in both areas have increased a little over 1 percent per year during this period. 

    In this essay, we examine incongruities between regional house price growth and regional inflation and why house price growth doesn’t accurately reflect overall changes in the cost of living.

    Regional Disparities

    Figure 1 maps average annual HPI growth from 2011 to 2015 across the nation’s 381 MSAs. HPI growth is fastest on the West Coast. Conversely, HPI growth throughout the rest of the country has been relatively slow: 200 MSAs have rates between 0 and 2.5 percent. The general intuition is that, since housing is the largest expenditure for most households, variations in house prices should closely follow variations in the overall cost of living.1

     

     

     

     

    However, despite large regional differences in house price growth, regional inflation rates vary little across the country. Figure 2 maps inflation in MSAs from 2011 to 2015, as measured using the implicit price deflator from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA).2 In all but three MSAs, the annual rate of growth is between 0 and 2.5 percent, close to the national average of 1.3 percent.3 

    House Price Growth versus Changes in the Cost of Living

    There are a few reasons why regional house price growth does not measure regional inflation and thus does not accurately reflect changes in the cost of living. First, house prices capture both the price of housing services (i.e., shelter) and the value of housing as an asset (which is primarily the price of the land). The latter drives most of the change in house prices. As the value of housing increases (decreases), the return on investment for homeowners increases (decreases), driving up (down) the price that consumers will pay for housing. Changes in house prices are useful for studying broad housing market trends, as well as household wealth, but do not necessarily reflect changes in the actual cost of housing services for homeowners. 

  • A decade after housing bust, mortgage industry is on shaky ground, experts warn: “There is great fragility. These lenders could disappear from the map”

     
     Professors Richard Stanton and Nancy Wallace found the boom in nonbank lenders poses a systemic risk to the mortgage market.

    Despite tough banking rules put in place after last decade’s housing crash, the mortgage market again faces the risk of a meltdown that could endanger the US economy, warn two Berkeley Haas professors in a paper co-authored by Federal Reserve economists.  The threat reflects a boom in nonbank mortgage companies, a category of independent lenders that are more lightly regulated and more financially fragile than banks—and which now originate half of all US home mortgages.

    “If these firms go out of business, the mortgage market shuts down, and that has dire Implications for the overall health of the economy,” says Richard Stanton, professor of finance and Kingsford Capital Management Chair in Business at Haas. Stanton authored the Brookings paper, “Liquidity Crises in the Mortgage Market,” with Nancy Wallace, the Lisle and Roslyn Payne Chair in Real Estate Capital Markets and chair of the Haas Real Estate Group. You Suk Kim, Steven M. Laufer, and Karen Pence of the Federal Reserve Board were coauthors.

    Bank regulation fueled boom in nonbank lenders

    Berkeley Haas Prof. Richard Stanton

    Prof. Richard Stanton

    During the housing bust, nonbank lenders failed in droves as home prices fell and borrowers stopped making payments, fueling a wider financial crisis. Yet when banks dramatically cut back home loans after the crisis, it was nonbank mortgage companies that stepped into the breach. Now, nonbanks are a larger force in residential lending than ever. In 2016, they accounted for half of all mortgages, up from 20 percent in 2007, the Brookings Institution paper notes. Their share of mortgages with explicit government backing is even higher: nonbanks originate about 75 percent of loans guaranteed by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) or the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA).

    Nonbank lenders are regulated by a patchwork of state and federal agencies that lack the resources to watch over them adequately, so risk can easily build up without a check. While the Federal Reserve lends money to banks in a pinch, it does not do the same for independent mortgage companies.

    Scant access to cash

    Prof. Nancy Wallace

    Prof. Nancy Wallace

    In stark contrast with banks, independent mortgage companies have little capital of their own and scant access to cash in an emergency. They have come to rely on a type of short-term funding known as warehouse lines of credit, usually provided by larger commercial and investments banks. It’s a murky area since most nonbank lenders are private companies which are not required to disclose their financial structures, so Stanton and Wallace’s paper provides the first public tabulation of the scale of this warehouse lending. They calculated that there was a $34 billion commitment on warehouse loans at the end of 2016, up from $17 billion at the end of 2013. That translates to about $1 trillion in short-term “warehouse loans” funded over the course of a year.

    If rising interest rates were to choke off the mortgage refinance market, if an economic slowdown prompted more homeowners to default, or if the banks that extend credit to mortgage lenders cut them off, many of these companies would find themselves in trouble with no way out. “There is great fragility. These lenders could disappear from the map,” Stanton notes.

    The ripple effects of a market collapse would be severe, and taxpayers would potentially be on the hook for losses posted by failed mortgage companies. In addition to loans backed by the FHA or VA, the government is exposed through Ginnie Mae, the federal agency that provides payment guarantees when mortgages are pooled and sold as securities to investors. The mortgage companies are supposed to bear the losses if these securitized loans go bad. But if those companies go under, the government “will probably bear the majority of the increased credit and operational losses,” the paper concludes. Ginnie Mae is especially vulnerable because almost 60 percent of the dollar volume of the mortgages it guarantees comes from nonbank lenders.

    Vulnerable communities would be hit hardest. In 2016, nonbank lenders made 64 percent of the home loans extended to black and Latino borrowers, and 58 percent of the mortgages to homeowners living in low- or moderate-income tracts, the paper reports.

    The authors emphasize that they hope their paper raises awareness of the risks posed by the growth of the nonbank sector. Most of the policy discussion on preventing another housing crash has focused on supervision of banks and other deposit-taking institutions. “Less thought is being given, in the housing finance reform discussions and elsewhere, to the question of whether it is wise to concentrate so much risk in a sector with such little capacity to bear it,” the paper concludes.

    Stanton adds, “We want to make the nonbank side part of the debate.”

  • March for Our Lives Was a Rally in the District of Columbia, A Response to the Mass Shootings That Catalyzed Support for Gun Regulation

    Jo Freeman's DC March for our lives

    By Jo Freeman

    Millions of people marched in over 800 US cities and in several other countries in response to the mass shootings that have catalyzed support for gun regulation. The main march in the District of Colombia was changed to a rally as the expected numbers grew. Instead of marching up Pennsylvania Ave. from 3rd to 12th Streets, people packed it, as well as some surrounding streets.

    A very large stage was erected on 3rd Street near the Capitol. Jumbotrons and large speakers lined Pennsylvania Avenue. for several blocks. Organizers appear to have learned from the deficiencies of the massive women’s march in 2017, where only some of the crowd could hear, let alone see, any of the speakers.

    My application for press credentials was denied. Since I couldn’t gain access to the camera riser in order to photograph the speakers on the stage, I hung out at Freedom Plaza, 13 blocks away. With a long telephoto lens, I could see a Jumbotron and barely see the stage at the base of the Capitol. It was a good spot from which to photograph signs, as people flowed onto the Plaza on their way to the rally. 

    These signs were largely homemade and some were very creative. There were a limited number of professionally printed signs. While some were anti-Trump, that was a minor theme. The NRA was a preferred target. Some recycled 1960s sentiments. One said “Hey, hey, NRA! How many kids were killed today?” During the Viet Nam War, the chant was “Hey, hey LBJ. How many kids did you kill today?” Signs directly attacking the 2nd Amendment were rare though it is the main shield used by the NRA to defend and expand gun possession.

    March 24 had a milder flavor than most protests, in part because the teenagers who organized it had parental approval and lots of adult support. Even the cops were cool; police would prefer to be the only ones to carry guns. There were no incidents. The DC National Guard blocked the streets and cops directed traffic elsewhere. If the issue of gun violence had not been so grave, it would have felt like a celebration rather than a protest.Girls clothes are more regulated

    Many organizations held backup events, before, during and after the rally. The Woman’s National Democratic Club held several at its large house in Dupont Circle. They featured speakers whose friends and relatives had been killed by guns. The Club provided materials for participants to make their own signs and gave out “evil eye” mittens. 

    A few blocks away, seniors from a nearby retirement home greeted those going to the rally Saturday morning. Gays Against Guns brought a bus from NYC. They held a mini-rally near Freedom Plaza with signs, speakers, and street theater. This included a runway where a gay man impersonated Rep. Barbara Comstock (R – Va), who is high on the list of Representatives GAG wants to defeat.

    The New York Avenue Presbyterian Church was open for demonstrators to drop in, freshen up, eat snacks and watch the stage on CNN. Indeed, it was probably the best place to see and hear without being in the middle of a crowd directly in front of a Jumbotron.

    Staff from the Democratic National Committee and volunteers from the League of Women Voters asked participants to sign statements that they would register to vote. The DNC passed out stickers to young people with the year they would reach voting age.

    While this was not the largest march/rally I have been to (despite the claim by the March’s professional PR firm that it was “Said To Be Largest Ever in Capitol’s (sic) History”) it may have been the most diverse, at least racially and by age. (It’s hard to read class from personal appearance). Although the mass school shootings have been at largely white schools, minority communities suffer far more gun violence and deaths. Reducing gun violence is one issue for which one can truly say “Black and white together, we shall overcome.”

     

  • Updated – Voting 2018: New Election Security Funds are Breakthrough for Democracy

    DREs machines

    Updated: Trump-Approved Budget Short on Election Security, Counties Say

    Tucked away in the massive $1.3 trillion spending bill President Donald Trump signed last week is a nugget of funding that local election officials have desperately needed. Unfortunately, they say, it isn’t nearly enough.

    It’s only “a drop in the bucket of what is really needed,” said Jeff Greenburg, the director of elections in Mercer County, Pennsylvania.

    Pennsylvania is one of 41 states where some counties and cities use election equipment that is more than a decade old, according to the New York University School of Law’s Brennan Center for Justice. Older machines are more likely to malfunction or break down on Election Day, causing long lines and potentially dissuading some people from casting their ballots. Some older machines also are susceptible to wireless malware attacks, even if they are not directly connected to the internet, or have removable memory devices a hacker might manipulate.

    The Brennan Center for Justice at NYU Law welcomed news that Congress has set aside $380 million to shore up the nation’s aging election infrastructure. The Brennan Center has long advocated for replacing outmoded machines and computers vulnerable to hacking or malfunction as a way of securing our democracy.

    “With so much infighting on Capitol Hill, this is a breakthrough for election security and the health of our country’s democracy,” said Lawrence Norden, deputy director of the Brennan Center’s democracy program. “Dozens of states are struggling to keep old equipment up to date, and this infusion of cash from Congress is an important down payment on securing our elections, and instilling confidence among the public that their votes will be accurately, securely counted.”

    The Brennan Center estimates that this fall some 41 states will use balloting machines more than a decade old. The Center has reported that state election officials have resorted to buying spare parts on eBay, and some rely on computers running outdated software like Windows 2000 to manage elections and voter registration.

    The Brennan Center has previously advocated for roughly $400 million to replace the nation’s most insecure voting machines, and has worked with lawmakers and voting technology experts to press for these funds to be appropriated by Congress. But in a new analysis conducted by the Brennan Center and Verified Voting, the groups found that because of the way the omnibus funds will be allocated, they will still be insufficient to replace all the country’s most insecure paperless systems that are impossible to audit to ensure accuracy.

    “Thirteen states use these types of non-auditable systems – five statewide – and while some states will receive sufficient funds to replace them, most will only get only a fraction of the necessary funds,” said the Brennan Center’s Norden. “So while there is much to celebrate today, tomorrow the campaign to secure our elections continues.”

    The Brennan/Verified Voting analysis looks at the replacement cost for what are known as paperless DREs (or direct-recording electronic voting machines). These machines produce no auditable paper ballot, so they are nearly impossible to audit if a system breaks down or malfunctions. The Brennan/Verified Voting analysis then takes the funding allocation formula in the omnibus to estimate how much these new funds will allow states to replace these vulnerable machines.

    Of the 13 states that use paperless DREs, the new funds will not allow full replacement in at least 11 of those states.


     

    Note: The Brennan Center’s  estimates are lower than some state-specific estimates. Replacement costs here are based on equipment, not on maintenance or software licensing. For more information, read the full analysis here. Read about all the Center’s work on election security and infrastructure here.

  • Congressional Floor Action, Bills Introduced: Reauthorizing the Debbie Smith Act Funding for Public Crime Laboratories’ Work to Build Capacity & Process DNA Evidence Including Evidence Collected in Rape Kits

    Floor Action: 

     Pictured: Congresswoman Annie Kuster*, D-NH

    Rep Ann Kuster
    Appropriations — On March 23, Congress passed H.R. 1625, the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2018, clearing the measure for the president’s signature and avoiding a shutdown of the federal government. The current continuing resolution (P.L. 115-124) expired on March 23.
     
    The $1.3 trillion spending bill includes, among other provisions, the provisions of the Targeted Awards for the Global Eradication of Human Trafficking (TARGET) Act, and H.R. 5252, the Keep Young Athletes Safe Act.
     
    Human Trafficking — On March 21, the Senate passed, 97-2, H.R. 1865, the Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act. The vote clears the bill for the president’s signature.
     
    Miscellaneous  On March 19, the House passed H. Res. 788, a resolution expressing the profound sorrow of the House of Representatives on the death of the Honorable Louise McIntosh Slaughter (D-NY).
     
    On March 20, the House passed S. 2040, to designate a facility of the United States Postal Service as the “Amelia Earhart Post Office Building,” and H.R. 4463, to designate a facility of the United States Postal Service as the “Mabel Lee Memorial Post Office.”
     
    On March 22, the Senate passed, by unanimous consent, S. Res. 448, a resolution designating March as “National Women’s History Month.”

    Mark-Ups:

    International — On March 20 [correction, SWW], the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations approved several bills by voice vote, including S. Res. 426, a resolution supporting the goals of International Women’s Day, as amended, and H.R. 1660, the Global Health Innovations Act.

    Hearings:

    Violence Against Women — On March 20, the Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing, “The Need to Reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act.”

    Member Statements

    1. Senator Chuck Grassley R (IA)

    Witnesses

    Panel I

    1. Ms. Katharine Sullivan
      Principal Deputy Director
      Office On Violence Against Women
      U.S. Department Of Justice
      Washington, DC
       

    Panel II

    1. Ms. Amanda Nguyen
      CEO And Founder
      Rise
      Washington, DC
       
    2. Ms. Cindy Dyer
      Vice President For Human Rights
      Vital Voices Global Partnership
      Washington, DC
       
    3. Ms. Tracy M. Prior, 
      Chief Of The Family Protection Division
      San Diego County District Attorney’s Office
      San Diego, CA
       

  • Ferida Wolff’s Backyard …. Snow in Spring and A Broken Tree

    Snow in Spring

    Snow in Spring

    It’s Spring! Normally I’d be thinking of crocuses and daffodils and waiting for the hibiscus to send out thick buds that will turn into giant red flowers. But this season has started off strangely. The bushes in our backyard are showing puffs of white instead of the colorful promise of hydrangeas. Branches from the pine trees are touching the ground with the weight of wet snow.

    What is going on? This is the fourth nor’easter we’ve had this month, bringing snow and sleet at a time when we should be having a gentle shift into the next season. We speak about global warming and yet we see snow in Spring?

    I remember the saying that March comes in like a lion and goes out like a lamb. I also can recall one year that we had snow in the beginning of April. So things do sometimes defy expectations. However, we are in a time of large shifts in our climate.  It’s hard to ignore the changes that are taking place across the world. The atmosphere is heating up, causing glaciers to melt, oceans to rise, more floods, and fires in drier lands. And yet, we can still have snow at the beginning of Spring.

    What we do affects things, whether it is personally or globally. Our climate has changed over the millennia but we seem to be hurrying things up lately. I hope that our current leaders work to minimize climate changes rather than take a short-term approach for political gains. Our planet is a marvelous place; let’s try our best to support it.

    US Spring forecast:

    https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/2018-us-spring-forecast-cold-snow-to-linger-in-the-northeast-severe-storms-to-kick-off-early-in-south/70004044

    NASA evidence of global warming: https://climate.nasa.gov/evidence/

     

    Bradford Pear broken treeBroken Tree

    This past week was full of a variety of weathers. It was raining. It was snowing. The wind was blowing like mad. And then the sun came out, lighting up the sky as if nothing had happened. But plenty had happened. It was a nor’easter that affected lots of people. Some people lost power. Neighborhoods all along the coasts expected flooding after the wind moved out to sea and would probably affect the tides coming in.

    Our backyard trees weathered the onslaught but our neighbor’s Bradford Pear tree wasn’t so lucky. A large branch broke off, spreading wood and the buds of new leaves across both our yards. The downed branch fell onto a bush that has been in our yard for over forty years, each summer sending flowers and new stems as a reminder that summer was approaching. But it left both our roofs untouched, thank goodness.

    It reminds me not to take anything for granted. Trees are so strong and impressive yet they, too, are part of the progression of life. It’s important to appreciate the present because that is all we truly have. Even as we plan for the future we can live moment to moment along the way. Which is good to remember because another rain/snow storm is expected.

    Editor’s Note: Even though this source address Minnesota weather and greenery, it is very informative generally for those of us who are concerned about our trees and bushes: 

    Protecting trees and shrubs against winter damage: https://www.extension.umn.edu/garden/yard-garden/trees-shrubs/protecting-from-winter-damage/
    Minnesota’s harsh climate is often responsible for severe damage to landscape plants. Winter sun, wind, and cold temperatures can bleach and desiccate evergreen foliage, damage bark, and injure or kill branches, flowerbuds, and roots. Snow and ice can break branches and topple entire trees. Salt used for deicing streets, sidewalks, and parking lots is harmful to landscape plantings. Winter food shortages force rodents and deer to feed on bark, twigs, flowerbuds, and foliage, injuring and sometimes killing trees and shrubs. All is not bleak, however, as landscape plants can be protected to minimize some of this injury.

    Caring for Your Trees After a Heavy Snowfall from Arbor Day Foundation Blog

    Anyone who has lived around trees is all too familiar with the dreaded “crack” that often follows a major snowstorm. Spring storms can be devastating as the heavy, wet snow can prove to be too much for some trees. Although cottonwoods, elms, willows and poplars tend to be hit the hardest, due to their soft, brittle wood, no trees are completely safe with heavy snow or high winds. The method in which you care for your trees after a snowstorm will play a major role in their recovery.

    ©2018 Ferida Wolff for SeniorWomen.com

  • March 23rd: FTC and FCC Hosting Joint Policy Forum and Consumer Expo to Fight the Scourge of Illegal Robocalls

    Robo CallsEvents will highlight cooperative efforts by the two agencies to combat illegal calls and promote innovative solutions to protect consumers

    The live video feed and other information related to this event will be available at: 

    www.fcc.gov/news-events/events/2018/03/fighting-scourge-illegal-robocalls.

    Unwanted calls — including illegal robocalls, spoofed calls, and telemarketing — are a major source of complaints to both the FTC and FCC. Under Acting FTC Chairman Maureen K. Ohlhausen and FCC Chairman Ajit Pai, the agencies have combated this consumer problem through numerous policy-making efforts and strong enforcement actions.

    “Consumers are fed up with illegal robocalls that disturb their privacy and often pitch scams,” said Acting FTC Chairman Ohlhausen. “We’re going to expand our fight against this scourge through initiatives like the upcoming Technology Expo and Policy Forum, which amplify our impact through close coordination with the FCC and other partners.”

    “Scam robocalls and deceptive spoofing are real threats to American consumers, and they are the number one consumer complaint at the FCC,” said FCC Chairman Pai. “We’re committed to confronting this problem using every tool we have. I’m pleased to announce these efforts in our continued work with the FTC to protect consumers.”

    On March 23, the two agencies will co-host a Policy Forum at FCC headquarters to discuss the regulatory challenges posed by illegal robocalls and what the FTC and FCC are doing to both protect consumers and encourage the development of private-sector solutions. 

    On April 23, the FTC and FCC will also co-host a Technology Expo for consumers at the Pepco Edison Place Gallery in Washington, D.C. This event will feature technologies, devices, and applications to minimize or eliminate the illegal robocalls consumers receive. The FTC and FCC have worked closely with phone companies, tech innovators, and others to find solutions for consumers to the problems of illegal robocalls and malicious spoofing. More information on this Expo, including how innovators can seek to participate, will be available at:  www.fcc.gov/news-events/events/2018/04/stop-illegal-robocalls-expo.

    In combating abusive and fraudulent calls through early 2018, the FTC’s enforcement actions have resulted in 134 lawsuits against 789 companies and individuals alleged to be responsible for placing billions of unwanted telemarketing calls to consumers. The FTC has been awarded judgments totaling over $1.5 billion and has collected over $121 million from these violators.

    Under Chairman Pai, the FCC proposed over $200 million in fines last year alone for apparent illegal spoofing by telemarketers in first-of-their-kind cases under the Truth in Caller ID Act. In addition, the FCC has adopted new rules to allow phone companies to block robocalls that are likely to be illegal, such as those purporting to be from non-existent numbers. The agency is also seeking public input on ways to help authenticate caller ID information and reduce unwanted calls to reassigned phone numbers.

    The Federal Trade Commission works to promote competition, and protect and educate consumers. You can learn more about consumer topics and file a consumer complaint online or by calling 1-877-FTC-HELP (382-4357). Like the FTC on Facebook(link is external), follow us on Twitter(link is external), read our blogs and subscribe to press releases for the latest FTC news and resources.

    Editor’s Note,  an additional source: 

    Prepared Statement of the Federal Trade Commission: “Still Ringing Off the Hook: An Update on Efforts To Combat Robocalls,” Before the Special Committee on Aging, United States Senate

  • Scout Report: Computer Dating, “Nel Blu Dipinto Di Blu”, Western Front WWI,Women’s History, Vaccinations, Newsmap, “Look Out Honey, ‘Cause I’m Using Technology”

    RESEARCH AND EDUCATION

    PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE WORLD WAR I MEMOIR OF MARGARET HALL
    SOCIAL STUDIES

    Born in Massachusetts, Margaret Hall joined the American Red Cross during World War I and served in the town of Chalons, France. While in France, Hall documented her experiences on the Western Front through dozens of photographs and letters. The Massachusetts Historical Society offers this digital exhibit containing 245 of Hall’s photographs, alongside 29 other images. Visitors can browse this collection chronologically or conduct a text search. Suggested searches include place names (such as Chalons, Paris, Verdun) and other frequent keywords (including Red Cross, trench, soldier). This powerful collection of images includes photographs of Red Cross workers offering soldiers coffee and cigarettes, images of Red Cross workers beside the graves of soldiers who died in battle, and a particularly poignant photograph of a civilian walking alone through a street that has been badly destroyed by the war. This online collection accompanies a book of the same title – visitors may explore short excerpts of this book in the publication section of the website. [MMB]

     

     

    WOMEN WHO SHAPE HISTORY: EDUCATION RESOURCES
    SOCIAL STUDIES

    In honor of Women’s History Month, the Smithsonian Institution compiled this collection of 37 “lessons, activities, exhibitions, videos and tools that can be used to teach students about women’s history in America.” These resources were designed by staff at a number of Smithsonian museums and institutions, including the National Air and Space Museum, the National Portrait Gallery, and the National Museum of American History, and the Smithsonian Center for Learning and Digital Access. Visitors can browse this collection by title, provider, and grade level. The collection includes a short video from the National Portrait Gallery about artist Amy Sherald (who recently painted Michelle Obama’s portrait); a collection of profiles of women scientists, courtesy of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics; and an extensive resource list of books about Native American women, compiled by the National Museum of the American Indian. [MMB]

     

     

    NATIONAL CENTER FOR CASE STUDY TEACHING IN SCIENCE: VACCINES, SOCIAL MEDIA, AND THE PUBLIC HEALTH
    HEALTH

    From the National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science comes this lesson plan that is designed to help students identify misinformation and pseudoscience regarding vaccinations. This lesson plan was authored by Kim R. Finer, a biologist at Kent State University, and is designed specifically for college undergraduates who are not science majors. This lesson may also be adapted for high school-level students. In this lesson, students are introduced to the scientific method while also learning about common characteristics of pseudoscience. Students also learn about the science behind vaccinations and the importance of herd immunity. Interested educators can download this lesson plan and accompanying notes in PDF format. Due to its focus on social media literacy, this lesson may also appeal to librarians and social studies instructors in addition to science instructors. [MMB]

       

    DE YOUNG MUSEUM: CURRICULUM RESOURCES FOR EDUCATORS
    SOCIAL STUDIES

    The de Young Museum in San Francisco offers this collection of resources for art educators. While some of these items are designed to accompany a visit to the de Young Museum, many of these resources may be adapted and used in art and social studies classrooms across the globe. These resources are divided into three categories. In Get Smart with Art, teachers will find a collection of slideshows that connect items in the de Young Museum with a variety of social studies topics. For instance, the slideshow, “Site in Sight: How Location Shapes Perspectives,” highlights a number of artworks that demonstrate “the individual voice of each artist examining his or her unique perspective of a concept, place, time, or idea.” Meanwhile, the Art & Science section features a number of interdisciplinary materials, including lesson plans, developed by the de Young Museum in partnership with the California Academy of Sciences. Finally, the Teacher’s Guide section contains additional information about items in the de Young Museum. [MMB]

     

     

    U.S. NEWS MAP
    SOCIAL STUDIES

    The Georgia Tech Research Institute in collaboration with eHistory.org at the University of Georgia, have created the U.S. News Map: a tool that allows students and researchers to explore historic American newspapers with ease. In addition, the News Map allows users to identify geographic and chronological patterns in the history of journalism. The News Map features newspapers that are part of the Library of Congress’s Chronicling America Historic Newspapers collection that were published between 1789 and 1922. To use the News Map, visitors can search for any keyword and select start and end dates. From here, visitors can see and explore the frequency of the selected search term over time (via a timeline) and across geography (via pins on a map). When users select one of the map pins, they can see the year and publication where the term appeared. From here, users have the option of exploring the newspaper in PDF format. [MMB]

     

     

    THE ACADEMIC FAMILY TREE
    SCIENCE

    For researchers of all stripes, the Academic Family Tree is “a nonprofit, user-content-driven web database that aims to accurately document and publicly share the academic genealogy of current and historical researchers across all fields of academia.” The project emerged from Neurotree.org: a project that sought to map out neuroscience research around the globe. Since Neurotree.org launched in 2005, scholars in other disciplines began to develop their own “academic genealogies.” Today, the Academic Family Tree contains nearly 700,000 researchers from dozens of disciplines, including education, linguistics, sociology, biology, law, history, and much more. Visitors may search the Academic Family Tree by research institution and individual. From here, visitors can view how individual researchers are connected to one another (e.g. advisors and graduate students). In addition, users can search for connections between researchers. [MMB]

     

     

    LOOK OUT HONEY, BECAUSE I’M USING TECHNOLOGY
    LANGUAGE ARTS

    “Look Out Honey, ‘Cause I’m Using Technology,” is a line in a 1973 song by Iggy Pop and the Stooges. It’s also the title of a delightful blog by Jenny Arch, a public librarian who has worked in both adult services and youth services. Arch’s blog will appeal to two audiences. First, fellow librarians will enjoy her thoughtful reflections about her work, which includes a recent post about providing services for patrons with low vision or hearing loss and another recent post about what customer service means in a library setting. Second, book lovers (along with parents and teachers of young book lovers) will also enjoy this blog, which is full of thematic book recommendations and short reviews. For instance, Arch recently posted about her favorite books read in 2017, dividing her list into children’s/teen books, adult fiction, and adult nonfiction. Arch also recently posted a series of quotes from books that she read in 2017, offering readers a unique way to learn about new books. Other topics addressed in this blog include early childhood literacy and the art of creating a good library display. [MMB]

     

     

    KHALED BIN SULTAN LIVING OCEANS FOUNDATION: CORAL REEF ECOLOGY CURRICULUM
    SCIENCE

    The Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation is a “non-profit environmental science organization and ocean research foundation established to help preserve, protect and restore the world’s oceans and aquatic resources through research, education, and outreach.” The foundation is based out of Annapolis, Maryland and focuses on coral reef preservation. For science educators, the foundation offers a number of curricular resources designed for high school students. These resources, which align with the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) and the Common Core State Standards (CCSS) include interactive quizzes, short educational videos, and eleven curricular units that address topics such as reef formation, reef organism behavior, and threats to coral reefs. To access these materials, educators will need to create a free account. [MMB]

     

     

    GENERAL INTEREST

    Back to Top

    BLACK BROADWAY ON U: WHERE D.C.’S CULTURAL RENAISSANCE WAS BORN
    ARTS

    In the early twentieth century, Washington, D.C.’s U Street neighborhood was home to a rich intellectual and artistic community. During the years, the historically Black neighborhood was home to numerous pivotal figures including anthropologist and writer Zora Neale Hurston, jazz musician Duke Ellington, and singer/actress Pearl Bailey (to name just a few) and hosted a number of Black-owned theaters and nightclubs. Launched in 2014 by Shellee M. Haynesworth, Black Broadway on the U is a “multi-platform story and public history initiative created to amplify, chronicle, preserve and enhance, the under-told story, cultural legacy, local memories and voices of Washington, D.C.’s marginalized Black community along the historic greater U Street community when it was known as ‘Black Broadway,’ a city within a city.” This website is one component of that project. Here, visitors can explore a series of short documentary films that incorporate oral history interviews (in the stories section) and explore an interactive map that highlights over 60 important historic spots in the U-Street neighborhood (in the discover section). Fans of Black Broadway on the U may also want to follow this ongoing project on Twitter. [MMB]