Categories
US

Missing Kiely Rodni: Massive search as friends reveal teen’s last known footsteps in possible abduction case

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A massive search effort was underway Tuesday morning for the missing California 16-year-old Kiely Rodni, who vanished after telling family she was going to head home from a high school graduation sendoff early Saturday.

The Placer County Sheriff’s Office has said they were investigating a possible abduction because the girl’s SUV was also unaccounted for. Rodni graduated from high school two years early, and it is unlike her to run away or fail to come home, according to her mother, Lindsey Rodni-Nieman.

A spokesperson told Fox News Digital on Tuesday that investigators were still “exploring all possibilities” and confirmed that teens were using alcohol and drugs at the party.

Rodni had enough drinks to become drunk, according to her friend and another recent graduate, Sami Smith, who added that she did not believe the teen would have driven under the circumstances.

CALIFORNIA 16-YEAR-OLD VANISHES IN POSSIBLE ABDUCTION AFTER PARTY; MOTHER PLEADS FOR HER RETURN

Kiely Rodni shown in two undated photos

Kiely Rodni shown in two undated photos
(findkiely.com)

“At the point when I left, I thought she was going to stay there,” said Smith, who departed the campground just a few minutes before Rodni was last seen. “Everybody was camping. It was late enough that she should have stayed. Ella She’s not the type to go and drunk drive or anything.”

Smith said she spent most of the night with Rodni.

“For the amount of drinks we both had together, she’s not that dumb,” she added. “I remember we were partying together. Ella She was having fun. Ella She seemed really happy — she was like normal, just on an adrenaline rush. Saying ‘Hi’ to everybody.

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Search teams gather to investigate Kiely Rodni, who went missing on Aug. 6, 2022, after attending a party.

Search teams gather to investigate Kiely Rodni, who went missing on Aug. 6, 2022, after attending a party.
(Derek Shook for Fox News Digital)

But Rodni-Nieman says her daughter texted her around 12:15 am Saturday and said she was heading home. The family lives about 10 miles away from the campground at a lodge south of town.

Smith, 18, said that there were plenty of attendees whom she had not previously met but none who seemed suspicious, gave unwanted attention or followed the pair around.

She said she didn’t notice anyone much older and that the party consisted mainly of teens, recent graduates and some college students from the surrounding areas. Some came from as far away as San Francisco, she said ella, but that was not unusual because the area is a summer vacation town.

Authorities briefed a search-and-rescue team ahead of Tuesday morning's search for missing Kiely Rodni near Lake Tahoe.

Authorities briefed a search-and-rescue team ahead of Tuesday morning’s search for missing Kiely Rodni near Lake Tahoe.
(Derek Shook for Fox News Digital)

“We met a few strangers together,” she said. “We both tended to trust people. I say ella ‘tended to’ because now I do n’t think I will continue to trust people. But ella she’ll give anyone the benefit of the doubt.”

Search crews and police from multiple counties scoured through the area beginning early Tuesday morning.

They started by searching Lake Prosser by boat as the land-based search party gathered on the shoreline.

The search also included several aircraft, including helicopters and airplanes flying in formation above, and all-terrain vehicles, including four-wheelers, trikes and dirt bikes. There were search dogs present and at least 100 members of law enforcement visible, including members of the FBI, who initially focused their attention on Campsite 4.

Crews pulled the boats from the water around noon and FBI agents were seen knocking on doors in the area. The FBI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

“Right now, we are currently searching many areas,” said Angela Musallam, the Placer County Sheriff’s public information officer.

The party, which stretched from Friday night into Saturday morning at the Prosser Family Campground in the Tahoe National Forest, involved dozens or hundreds of kids from a handful of nearby communities in the rural area, including Truckee and North Lake.

Around 12:15 am, she texted her parents that she was heading home. However, according to her mother de ella, no one has come forward to say they saw her leave de ella, no one was with her at the time, and nobody could remember when she left or see her car drive away.

Her phone, which last pinged at the party, has been turned off. Authorities say her vehicle de ella, a silver 2013 Honda CRV with the California license plate 8YUR127, is also unaccounted for.

Authorities are urging teens who were at the party to come forward, and the community announced a “Teen to Teen” information gathering event from 5 pm to 7:30 pm PT at the Tahoe City Save Mart in an effort to get attendees talking.

Search teams gather to investigate Kiely Rodni, who went missing on Aug. 6, 2022, after attending a party.

Search teams gather to investigate Kiely Rodni, who went missing on Aug. 6, 2022, after attending a party.
(Derek Shook for Fox News Digital)

“We have had a lack of reach out from many Tahoe kids who were at the party or may know any information,” the announcement reads. “We are only looking for information such as who was at the party that you may have seen [and] the times you came and left.”

Rodni’s mother is asking anyone who attended the party and their parents to look through their photos, social media posts and videos for any signs of Rodni. Home and business owners in the surrounding area are also asked to check their surveillance cameras for signs of the girl on Aug. 5 and Aug. 6.

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Search teams gather to investigate Kiely Rodni, who went missing on Aug. 6, 2022, after attending a party.

Search teams gather to investigate Kiely Rodni, who went missing on Aug. 6, 2022, after attending a party.
(Derek Shook for Fox News Digital)

Storefronts and signposts in the surrounding area and as far away as Reno have been plastered with missing-person flyers.

Rodni is described as 5 feet, 7 inches tall and around 118 pounds. She has blonde hair and hazel eyes. She has a tattoo on her ribs of the number “17.”

GABBY PETITO’S PARENTS ANNOUNCE WRONGFUL DEATH LAWSUIT AGAINST MOAB POLICE OVER BRIAN LAUNDRIE 911 CALL

Kiely Rodni was last seen at a rural campground near the border of California and Nevada around 12:30 am, Saturday, according to local authorities.

Kiely Rodni was last seen at a rural campground near the border of California and Nevada around 12:30 am, Saturday, according to local authorities.
(Placer County Sheriff)

She was last seen wearing green Dickies pants, a black tank top and jewelry, according to authorities. She has a nose ring and several other piercings.

Anyone with information is asked to call the Placer County Sheriff’s Office’s dedicated tip line at 530-581-6320. Callers can remain anonymous.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The California Highway Patrol is also urging anyone who sees Rodni to call 911.

The family is offering a $50,000 reward for Rodni’s return, and Smith is asking members to share Rodni’s story, raise awareness and call in any information that may help investigators.

She has also helped organize a website, findkiely.com, where friends and family are sharing the latest information they have gathered.

Fox News’ Ashley Papa contributed to this report.

Categories
Business

Queensland farmer battling Suncorp Bank vows to keep pushing to fix financial services

A farmer who looks set to lose his farm after taking on his bank over what he says were dodgy lending practices has vowed to keep fighting for accountability in financial services.

It comes amid fears more Australians could find themselves at the mercy of a financial mediation system in need of review.

Ronald Feierabend has been in dispute with Suncorp Bank since he discovered discrepancies in the budget being used to estimate the profitability of his sugar cane farm Wingadee, near Bundaberg, during an application to refinance in 2014.

A series of mediations failed to resolve the dispute, and in 2021 the Supreme Court ruled that Suncorp could appoint receiver managers and sell the farm to recover outstanding costs.

The property will now be auctioned on September 1.

According to prudential regulation expert Andy Schmulow, the outcome was a sign of the failures in a debt mediation system that still favored the banks.

Mr Schmulow has called for a complete overhaul of the financial dispute resolution process.

‘They’re circling like vultures’

Throughout his long-running complaint, Mr Feierabend said he had been subjected to extreme pressure exerted by the bank, which he accused of not acting in good faith.

A wide shot of a man facing the camera flanked by police who face away.
Police escorted Mr Feierabend off his farm in March.(Rural ABC: David Barnott-Clement)

In March, police escorted him off the farm.

“There’s been people who have been eyeing off the property, and you know, they think it’s going to be a fire sale,” Mr Feierabend said.

He alleged the bank withheld essential documents and failed to disclose his right to a free, internal dispute resolution process that would have saved him tens of thousands of dollars and resolved the matter sooner, to claim the bank denies.

“Emotionally, the way I’ve been attacked, I feel like I’ve been violated,” he said.

A blurred photo of two people walking by as the Suncorp name under a bright yellow circle is displayed.
Suncorp Bank says it works within all legislative requirements and best practices.(AAP: Dave Hunt)

“I’ve seen the farm deteriorate into such a state that the whole farm needs to be refurbished or rebuilt.”

A spokesman for Suncorp Bank said due to confidentiality constraints, it would not comment directly on Mr Feierabend’s case.

“We are committed to working with and supporting our customers and take our responsibilities as a longstanding Queensland bank, with strong roots in agribusiness, very seriously,” he said.

“Suncorp Bank has robust internal processes and resources to ensure our customers are supported, including the option of having an impartial internal review of a complaint.”

Twin Peaks regulation fails

Australia’s financial regulation system is often referred to as the “twin peaks” model because of the interaction between the Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC), which regulates the conduct of the sector, and the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA), which is charged with ensuring the stability of the broader financial system.

Dr Schmulow, who is a senior lecturer in the School of Law at the University of Wollongong, said it was a model that had solved many issues in the financial sector but failed to protect consumers.

“The Australian model is of great international interest, but perhaps of more international interest is why has such a good model failed so spectacularly in terms of regulating conduct in the financial industry?” he said.

“How do we know it’s failed so spectacularly? Well, because that’s the evidence [that] came out of the royal commission.”

“The reasons why it has failed are independent of the model itself… [and] would have caused the same failures had we used any other models for the regulation of the financial industry.”

A smiling man in an expensive-looking suit, glasses, stands in front of a book case with leather-bound books.
Dr Schmulow says the culture at banks has not changed since the royal commission.(Supplied)

Dr Schmulow cited the broad remit of ASIC, the size, complexity, and in some cases, contradictory nature of the Corporations Act 2001 and timidity in the regulators as reasons the system was still failing after the Royal Commission into Misconduct in the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services Industry.

Instead, he advocated for a “principles-based, outcome-determined” regime that would allow a customer to argue their case on the basis of fairness.

“In Suncorp’s case and their loans to Mr Feierabend, it would have been up to Suncorp to prove they had not acted unfairly,” he said.

“From what it sounds like, Suncorp has acted in a manner which is just unconscionable.

“Hopefully, under a principles-based regime, they wouldn’t get away with it.”

‘Bait and switch’ code duping consumers

In a statement, Suncorp Bank’s spokesman said the bank “ensures we work within all legislative requirements and best practice, including the Banking Code of Practice.”

But Dr Schmulow said the voluntary code was a smokescreen, and as more people found themselves in financial distress, it would be shown to be ineffective at changing the behavior of institutions towards their customers.

“I would actually say that the banking code of practice and its enforcement provisions are something akin to a bait and switch trick,” he said.

“It’s a deception that is put before the consumer to make the consumer think that they have rights of recourse.

“I can give you an assurance there will be more scandals because the culture in our big banks has not changed.”

A spokesman for the Australian Banking Association (ABA), which established the code, said it was enforceable through the Australian Financial Complaints Authority (AFCA) and contract law.

“It clearly sets out the obligations of banks to ensure fair dealings with customers who have a dispute, including obligations by banks to comply with the Australian Securities and Investment Commission (ASIC) guidelines in resolving complaints,” he said.

Farmer fighting ‘to the death’

Mr Feierabend has appealed to ASIC, AFCA, APRA, the ABA, the Australian Consumer Complaints Commission (ACCC) and numerous senators about his treatment from the bank.

AFCA said it could not investigate his claims due to time limits on when they could consider a complaint, while the other agencies determined his complaint to be outside their jurisdiction and referred him back to ASIC.

In a statement, a spokesman for ASIC said reports of misconduct were received in confidence, and so it would not comment on Mr Feierabend’s case or confirm if it was investigating.

Close up of documents on a table with a blurred figure in the background.
Mr Feierabend has appealed to the regulators in his dispute with Suncorp Bank.(Rural ABC: David Barnott-Clement)

But Dr Schmulow said the broad scope of ASIC, coupled with a culture that did not aggressively pursue misconduct, meant individuals rarely had a chance to have their complaints investigated.

Mr Feierabend said despite all the setbacks, he had no regrets, and his legal team was continuing to investigate the mediation process.

“This is a matter of right and wrong, and for me, it’s a fight to death now,” he said.

“I still believe right to the bottom of my heart that we will come out of this with the truth.

“I know I’m not the only one in this position. I would do it again. I couldn’t do it any differently.”

As part of the response to the royal commission, the Australian Law Reform Commission is currently reviewing the laws that govern the sector, with a view to simplifying them.

An interim report tabled in parliament in February 2022 identified legislative complexity, overly prescriptive legislation, difficulty with definitions and obscured goals as key problems.

The final report is due in November 2023.

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Categories
Technology

UK CMA financed Dar Lighting Limited £1.5 million for RPM

In March 2022, the UK Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) fined the lighting products supplier, Dar Lighting Limited (Dar), £1.5 million for engaging in resale price maintenance (RPM), in breach of the UK prohibition against anticompetitive agreements, with the text of the CMA’s 241-page decision only having been made available earlier this summer.

While the decision is one of many by the CMA in recent years to tackle illegal RPM practices (for example, see our recent alert on the surge of RPM enforcement all over Europe here), this case is different in that its focus is not on direct and explicit contractual terms imposing RPM, but rather on the perception that Dar’s sales partners got from messages conveyed to them in relation to their ability to offer product discounts.

GIVE’S CONDUCT

The CMA found that Dar, which operates a selective distribution system to sell its domestic lighting products, restricted its retailers’ freedom to set their own online prices and to offer discounts for the products they onsold.

More specifically, the CMA’s investigation focused on a number of terms and provisions contained in Dar’s selective distribution agreements with its resellers, as well as Dar’s branding guidelines, which contained strict instructions relating to the use of brand names and logos, product photography, typography, and brand colors on the resellers’ websites. Although the CMA noted that these instructions “were not explicitly or directly about the price at which the products were being sold but about product presentation” and that they did not “explicitly prevent discounting,” the UK competition watchdog nonetheless found that the manner in which these instructions were communicated and enforced by Dar created a perception amongst the brand’s authorized resellers that discounts were not permitted because they were not compatible with the goals of the selective distribution system.

The CMA relied on two key types of contemporary evidence to establish that, in the absence of written price-fixing obligations, Dar’s practices in effect prevented its resellers from offering sales discounts to customers:

  1. Dar’s internal communications, which showed a perception within the company itself that discounts and sales campaigns were not compatible with the spirit of Dar’s selective distribution programme, with employees reporting internally those authorized resellers who would advertise discounts; and

  2. External communications with Dar’s resellers, including via WhatsApp, which the CMA concluded gave rise to an anti-discount culture for online selling, thus creating a perception amongst authorized resellers that Dar’s selective distribution system somehow allowed the brand to prevent discounting. For example, a Dar employee sent the following WhatsApp message to a reseller explaining why the reseller was not admitted to the selective distribution network: “To be able to control the prices customers who have [Dar brand] must have a designated area with an approved [Dar brand] display” (emphasis added).

The CMA clarified that selective distribution is a legitimate way for a business to make products available only to select retailers, who meet certain criteria, and is a useful tool for brand protection. However, the authority highlighted that brands who adopt a selective distribution model must take particular care to ensure that the implementation/enforcement of the selective distribution system does not lead to any infringement of competition law. It is in this context that the CMA held that Dar’s implementation and enforcement of its selective distribution system ran afoul of the UK prohibition against anticompetitive agreements.

RPM

The CMA ultimately concluded that Dar effectively operated and enforced a pricing policy that would ensure authorized resellers would not advertise or sell Dar products online below a certain minimum price specified by Dar. In the UK and EU, such practices amount to illegal resale price maintenance and constitute a so-called “hardcore” restriction of competition that cannot benefit from the safe harbor applicable to vertical agreements.

RPM practices are amongst the most hotly enforced cases by the CMA. For example:

  • In 2021, the CMA fined Roland £4 million for illegal RPM with respect to electronic drum kits and components;

  • In 2020, GAK (Digital pianos, digital keyboards, and guitars), Fender (guitars) and Korg (synthesizers and high-tech equipment) received penalties for RPM of £0.3 million, £4.5 million, and £1.5 million respectively;

  • In 2019, £3.7 million was levied on Casio (digital pianos and keyboards) also for engaging in resale price maintenance; and

  • In 2017, the CMA fined the National Lighting Company £2.7 million for restricting its resellers’ freedom to set resale prices online.

Finally, it is worth noting that Dar’s fine was subject to a 20% discount because it admitted it had broken the law and settled the case with the CMA. This also means that the CMA decision will not be appealed further.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

There are a number of very important points that brands and manufacturers need to be aware of when structuring and enforcing their distribution strategies:

  • Selective distribution systems remain a great tool to ensure a high level of quality protection for brands. Dar itself moved from open to selective distribution because, as the CMA found, it became concerned about “maintaining the quality of its brands and customer service levels, as well as preventing some Resellers from free-riding on the customer support and marketing investments made by other Resellers.”

  • What the CMA’s decision makes clear, however, is that selective distribution cannot be misused to give authorized resellers the impression that the system is a front for restrictive practices, such as illegal resale price maintenance.

  • The success of any well-designed distribution system, which does not contain any direct or express terms that restrict competition, rests and falls on how the system is enforced and implemented in practice. This means that brands should take great care to adequately train their sales personnel to ensure that there is no misinterpretation in relation to the genuine and legitimate nature of their commercial strategies. In the case of Dar, it was the internal and external communications, including via WhatsApp, that ultimately proved fatal. It was not Dar’s contracts or guidelines that restricted competition but rather the way in which the distribution model was conveyed to commercial partners.

  • Dar’s case shows that it is not enough to comply with competition law on paper – for a competition authority, substance will be more important than form. Competition law compliance should thus be weaved into the cultural fabric of each business.

  • The CMA has just published its key legal instrument regulating vertical agreements – the Vertical Agreements Block Exemption Order, which came into force on 1 June 2022, and the associated CMA guidance published on 12 July 2022. These documents remain the hardcore nature of RPM practices and make it clear that such conduct is highly unlikely to be regarded as compatible with competition law. The recent nature of these legal instruments could also mean that the CMA will be looking at supply and purchase agreements, and in particular at RPM, very closely in the coming years.

Categories
Entertainment

Australian model Miranda Kerr reveals she walks barefoot on the grass to help with jet lag

Miranda Kerr walks “barefoot on the grass” to help her “reconnect” after a long flight.

The 39-year-old Australian model – who has Flynn, 11, with ex-husband Orlando Bloom and Hart, four, and two-year-old Myles with spouse Evan Spiegel – has revealed the way she copes with jet lag is to take the time to “rebalance” herself.

Speaking to PORTER, Miranda said: “I like to go for a walk outside when I arrive and, if possible, go barefoot on the grass to reconnect, ground myself and have a bit of time to rebalance. Melatonin is also great to help get you in the time zone.”

Victoria Beckham swears by magnesium, herbal tea, and sticking to an exercise routine no matter how tired you are.

The 48-year-old fashion designer told the publication: “Jet lag is really difficult. I try not to use any sleep medication – instead, I’ll take magnesium and have a herbal tea and try to go to sleep, but it’s easier said than done. If you are a working mum, you have to get up and power through. And I always do my workout – I never skip it, even when I feel incredibly tired, because it gives you more energy and gets you back into your routine. I don’t have the luxury of napping in the day, so I land and get straight into the time zone.”

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Categories
Sports

Cameron Smith joins LIV Golf, contract, salary, when will he join, latest, updates

Cameron Smith is set to become the latest golf star to default to LIV Golf in a mega-money deal.

Just a day after Australian golfer Cameron Percy let slip that Smith and fellow Aussie Marc Leishman were set to join the breakaway tour, The Telegrpah reported Smith has inked a $AUD140 million deal.

Watch LIVE coverage from The USPGA Tour with Fox Sports on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

Smith’s first tournament with the rebel tour is set to be the LIV’s International in Boston which begins September 2.

Despite the report, Smith did not elaborate in his press conference ahead of the FedEx Cup play-offs.

“You know, my goal here is to win the FedExCup Playoffs,” Smith said.

“That’s all I’m here for. If there’s something I need to say regarding the PGA Tour or LIV, it’ll come from Cameron Smith, not Cameron Percy.

“I’m a man of my word and whenever you guys need to know anything, it’ll be said by me.”

Cameron Smith has reportedly signed on with the LIV tour.
Cameron Smith has reportedly signed on with the LIV tour.Source: Getty Images

MORE COVERAGE

Aussie golf’s ‘special’ $3.4m move earns big boost… but Smith wait goes on amid LIV link

‘They want to come back’: The final pieces in Aussie golf’s historic $3.4m shift

However, Smith confirmed he “absolutely” had plans to play in the President’s Cup even though the report claims he’d be with LIV Golf at the time.

After further LIV-related questions, Smith thanked the reporters and walked out of the press conference.

To date, LIV Golf has signed golf stars like Phil Mickelson, Bryson DeChambeau and Brooks Koepka, but Smith’s arrival brings more credibility to the competition given he is World Number Two and recently won The Open.

The Australian star declined to comment after winning the Claret Jug but refused to deny it and sent the rumor mill into overdrive.

“I just won the British Open and you’re asking about that? I think that’s pretty- not that good,” Smith said.

Pressed on the matter, the Australian was coy.

“I don’t know, mate. My team around me worries about all that stuff, I’m here to win golf tournaments,” he said.

The Telegraph goes on to state that LIV CEO Greg Norman struck a deal prior to Smith’s famous Open triumph and that an official announcement confirming the latter’s move is not expected until the FedEx Cup play-off series is complete.

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Categories
Australia

Giant Australian Cuttlefish numbers arise near Whyalla after fishing ban is reimposed

Whyalla tourism operators have been buoyed by recent figures showing a surge in Giant Australian Cuttlefish numbers.

Recently published figures reveal a 28 per cent increase in the numbers of cuttlefish migrating to waters around the Eyre Peninsula town for their breeding season.

The findings come just a few months after the South Australian government reimposed an upper Spencer Gulf fishing ban for cuttlefish north of Arno Bay and Wallaroo.

Whyalla Dive Shop owner Tony Bramley said his business relied on tourism generated by cuttlefish and was glad to see numbers increasing.

“I don’t think there’s anything else people who are concerned about the aggregation could ask for,” he said.

“It’s absolutely fantastic news because it shows the efficacy of that spatial closure, which was taken away two years ago because, according to the government at the time, it had done its job.”

The ban was originally put in place by the former state government after cuttlefish numbers fell from 200,000 to just 13,000 in a few years. It was repeated two years ago.

The latest aggregation has attracted more than 137,000 individuals.

A man with white hair and a white beard faces the camera, with four gas cylinders in the background.
Whyalla Diving Services owner Tony Bramley says his business relies on the cuttlefish.(ABC News: Declan Gooch)

A ‘reassuring’ result

Cutty’s Boat Tours began operating glass bottom boat tours for the first time this year, enabling more tourists to see the cuttlefish.

Owner Matt Waller said it was reassuring to see the numbers increasing.

“It just says to us that yes, this is a good thing. Yes, this is an industry that’s going to exist in the future,” he said.

“It gives us a bit more confidence for sure.”

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Permanent ban being considered

SA Regional Development Minister Clare Scriven said the latest ban would last until May 2023 but the government was looking at ways to make it permanent.

“Not only is the Giant Australian Cuttlefish spawning aggregation unique to South Australia, it creates opportunities for small businesses in regional areas to benefit from the extraordinary show of nature on our doorstep,” she said.

Two giant pink and white cuttlefish swim underwater.
Cuttlefish gather in the waters around Whyalla to breed and hide their eggs under rocks.(Supplied: Jayne Jenkins)

Mr Bramley said that while he was happy with the current level of protection, he felt the cuttlefish had not yet recovered from fishing over the past few decades.

“Old timers like myself have been saying that since commercial fishing in the 90s, the numbers are nothing like what they were,” he said.

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Categories
US

Schumer: Senate will vote again on $35 insulin cap after GOP blocked it

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (DN.Y.) said Monday night that he is going to bring a $35 cap on patients’ insulin costs back up for a vote this fall after Republicans blocked it over the weekend.

“They blocked a $35 price for insulin for non-Medicare people,” Schumer said on MSNBC’s “The Rachel Maddow Show.” “We’re going to come back and make them vote on that again.”

The move can help put pressure on Republicans and highlight what Democrats view as a winning issue ahead of November’s midterm elections.

Democrats hammered Republicans for voting against the $35 cap over the weekend.

That vote came up in the context of overruling the parliamentarian’s decision that applying the $35 cap to people with private health insurance violated the complicated Senate rules Democrats were using to bypass a GOP filibuster.

Seven Republicans still voted with all 50 Democrats, three short of the 60 votes needed, and it is possible more Republicans would support it if it came up as a standalone measure, not in the context of a Senate rules vote.

“We got all 50 Democrats,” Schumer said in a separate interview Monday on NPR. “We did get seven Republicans. We’re going to bring that back in the fall, because there’s going to be huge heat on Republicans.”

Schumer did not specify whether he would bring the $35 cap up by itself or as part of a larger, bipartisan insulin measure from Sens. Jeanne Shaheen (DN.H.) and Susan Collins (R-Maine), which had previously faced difficulties gaining enough GOP support.

Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) suggested Monday he would support a $35 cap if it came up again.

“Vote on the cap was not [about] insulin It was [about] Others ignoring budget rules,” I have tweeted. “Dear colleagues join me in supporting the Collins-Shaheen bill to cap insulin at $35 & enact [pharmacy benefit manager] reforms in a bipartisan way.”

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Categories
Business

Tasmanian property investor drop ‘a worry’ for the rental market, REIT says

There are growing concerns a drop in investors buying into Tasmanian real estate could further shrink the availability of rental properties in the state.

The number of investors purchasing a Tasmanian property in the June quarter fell by 20 per cent compared to the previous quarter.

Out of 1,781 properties sold, just 16 per cent were purchased by investors, with even fewer Hobart properties (12 per cent) purchased as investments.

“That’s a worry,” the president of the Real Institute of Tasmania, Michael Walsh, said.

He fears properties being sold could be removed from an already tight rental market that has a current statewide vacancy rate of about 1 per cent.

“That’s probably a big discussion to be had on the implications for the rental market,” he said.

Mr Walsh said 30 per cent of buyers needed to be investors to properly support the private rental market.

“We just don’t have the private investment right now that tries to keep pace with that demand. Where people live is anyone’s guess,” he said.

Supply of affordable rentals ‘falling for over a decade’

Mary Bennett from Anglicare’s Social Action and Research Center said the drop in investment was concerning if it meant properties were leaving the long-term rental market and not being replaced by new supply.

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Categories
Technology

How to Watch Samsung Reveal its Next-Gen Foldables at Galaxy Unpacked

Samsung’s almost unveiled its next-generation foldables, which means the days of relying on leaks are almost over. The company’s virtual Galaxy Unpacked event will start on Aug. 10 at 9 a.m. ET / 6 a.m. PT You can watch along with us on Samsung’s website or in YouTube embed below. Samsung will also publish all the new details from the event on its newsroom landing page.

As they’ve trained us to expect over the years, Samsung’s Unpacked events are when Samsung unwraps its new kit. Everyone’s anticipating the next generation Galaxy Z Flip 4 and Galaxy Z Fold 4. The two folding smartphones will likely take the reins from the Galaxy Note with the companion S Pen — that device has been replaced outright with the Galaxy S22 Ultra, now a part of the early-year flagship lineup.

If you were reading along with the rumours, you might know this year’s foldables are billed out to be as interesting as last year’s releases. The Z Flip 4 is a foldable device that flips down into a clamshell shape, while the Galaxy Z Fold 4 will be marketed toward multitaskers. But while Samsung was figuring out the look and feel of the smartphones the last few years, we’re thinking this year’s launch will be billed as the “upgrade” for folks who are finally foldable form-factor curious.

Since Samsung’s similarly-timed Unpacked event introduced new accessories into the ecosystem last year, there are also rumblings that a new Galaxy Watch 5 will join the brood of existing Samsung wearables alongside a Galaxy Watch 5 Pro with improved health tracking sensors aimed at training athletes. The Galaxy Buds Pro may also bump up to the next generation, which would be nicely timed against Google’s recently launched Pixel Buds Pro.

We will know everything in mere hours. Samsung has already opened pre-orders for those ready to drop cash on the unknown. For everyone else, join us back here during the Unpacked event time to see what’s new.


Editor’s Note: Release dates within this article are based in the US, but will be updated with local Australian dates as soon as we know more.

Categories
Entertainment

Nigella Lawson’s age leaves fans in shock amid MKR airing

Nigella Lawson is delighting Australian viewers with her My Kitchen Rules debut.

The British home cooking queen, who has replaced controversial chef Pete Evans on the 2022 season of Channel 7 reality series, has managed to reinvigorate the struggling franchise with her on-screen charisma and star power.

And even though she’s been on the culinary circuit for decades, people have been surprised to learn of the food writer’s real age.

Lawson, who published her first cookbook in 1998 before breaking onto TV with her own show Nigella Bites the following year, turned 62 in January. Yes, you read that right.

Lawson, who has two children with her first husband, late journalist John Diamond, recently credited her youthful looks to avoiding sun exposure and eating “lots of fats.”

She also previously told Oprah.com she was “trying to go with” aging.

“I think what ages a face most is disappointment and a lack of enjoyment. So I try to do what I love,” she said.

The 12th season of the Channel 7 cooking show follows a two-year hiatus for MKRwhich suffered declining ratings in 2019 and 2020.

Presumably in a bid to compete with its rival prime-time show, Channel 9’s Married At First Sight, the series was copping criticism for overdoing it on the dramatics and straying from its humble roots.

In an effort to bolster the franchise, the network parted ways with original judge Evans following a slew of controversies, and promised the series would be bouncing back to its core values ​​of “real food and real people” in 2022.

It’s understood Lawson will only feature in half of the season, with former MasterChef judge Matt Preston joining Feildel for the back half. Celebrity chefs Colin Fassnidge and Curtis Stone are also set to return as guest judges.

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