Categories
US

NYC tries again on curbside compost collection, minus the ‘psychodrama’

New York City is embarking on a new approach to curbside composting after a decade of fitful progress and scrapped promises, with a program that aims to strip organic recycling of its long-running “psychodrama.”

Set to launch in October, the pilot program will offer weekly pick-ups of food waste and yard scraps to all residents of Queens, no sign-ups required. While not mandatory, the initiative will encourage New Yorkers to separate their organics into sealed bins – with the goal of cutting down on both harmful emissions and rat- enticing street trash.

“We designed this program to be the last composting program that we roll out in New York City,” Sanitation Commissioner Jessica Tisch said during a press conference on Monday. “This is by far the cheapest, the most efficient, the easiest for New Yorkers to use.”

Leftover food and yard scraps make up roughly a third of the city’s residential waste stream – amounting to 8 million pounds per day of recyclable material that is left to rot in landfills and produces methane, one of the most harmful greenhouse gas emissions.

Converting New Yorkers’ decaying mounds of egg shells, coffee grounds and soiled paper into nutrient-rich soil – or renewable energy, through a process known as anaerobic digestion – is crucial to the city’s climate goals. But previous attempts at municipal organics collection have floundered, with low participation that experts blame on a lack of funding for education and expansion.

After allowing pilot programs to languish in a handful of neighborhoods for years, former Mayor Bill de Blasio paused organic pick-ups as a result of COVID budget cuts. In February, Mayor Eric Adams squashed a planned expansion of the program, deriving the effort as largely “symbolic” and not worth the price-tag.

The revamped strategy, according to Adams, will meet his demands for a more targeted and cost effective approach. The city will spend just $2 million in “new needs” during the next fiscal year, with a cost per district of less than half the previous program, according to a Sanitation Department spokesperson, Joshua Goodman.

Because yard scraps are believed to make up the largest share of composting material in the start-up phase, the program will begin in Queens, home to 41% of the city’s street trees. Given the reduction in yard waste over the winter, the city will suspend pick-ups at the end of December, before resuming in late March.

Eric Goldstein, the New York City environment director for the Natural Resources Defense Council, questioned the wisdom of putting the program on hiatus just three months after its debut – especially as city officials stress the importance of recycling food waste.

“The details matter: For this program to be successful it has to be simple and consistent,” Goldstein said. “Stopping and starting the program sends a confusing message to city residents.”

Other tweaks will seek to incorporate past lessons, officials said. Unlike earlier initiatives, residents will not be required to sign up for pick-ups. They can also request a free brown bin from the city, or use their own, as long as it has a secure lid (yard scraps can go directly into bags).

Buildings with more than 10 units will receive a bin automatically, a response to previous complaints from residents that their landlords were blocking them from participating.

“If you live in a building and want to participate in the compost program, say to your building manager: ‘We know that you have a brown bin, it was delivered to you by the city of New York, where is it? I would like to put my food scrap in it,” Tisch said.

According to Goldstein, the key to the city’s composting success lies in building awareness through a sustained voluntary program, then rolling out a universal and mandatory curbside collection, similar to trash or recycling. Despite the major’s cost concerns, he notes that cities such as San Francisco or Seattle, which have adopted universal composting, have seen long-term taxpayer savings.

While Adams has not committed to a citywide program, a veto-proof majority of the City Council now supports requiring the curbside collections in all five boroughs.

“The Council likely forced [the mayor’s] hand here,” said Goldstein. “That’s a good thing.”

Categories
Technology

Quantum makes off-market bid for SA graphite play

Quantum Graphite has made a play for fellow SA graphite developer and explorer Lincoln Minerals. Under the off-market bid, Quantum is offering one of its shares for every 40 Lincoln shares based on the two-day weighted average price for Quantum shares of 40.67 cents. The offer represents a 30 per cent premium to Lincoln’s most recent share price of 1.02 cents.

Lincoln’s South Australian tenure totals about 1177 square kilometers on the Eyre Peninsula, which is shaping up as Australia’s world-class flake graphite province.

Quantum has its sights firmly set on the prospective landholding that houses the high-grade Kookaburra Gully graphite deposit. In 2013, Lincoln released a maiden JORC mineral resource estimate coming in at 2.2Mt grading a spectacular15.5 per cent total graphitic carbon, or “TGC”.

As an additional sweetener, the tenure includes the historic Koppio Graphite mine containing a JORC inferred mineral resource of 1.85Mt at 9.76 per cent TGC.

Quantum’s South Australia operation, about 40km south along the Eyre Peninsula, takes in the Uley 2 and Uley 3 resources where a hefty 7.2 million tonnes going 10.5 per cent TGC has been defined.

According to Quantum, the addition of Lincoln’s flake graphite assets to its arsenal delivers a greater economy of scale from their joint development.

Not surprisingly, the Kookaburra Gully graphite deposit exhibits many similar key characteristics as that of the broader geology of Quantum’s Uley deposits.

Importantly, the metallurgical properties of the Kookaburra Gully graphite deposit match those of the Uley deposits, posing clear synergies for the preferred processing path for each of the projects.

Quantum is looking to develop thermal energy storage battery cells utilizing graphite from its Uley deposit on the Eyre Peninsula through a joint venture with Sunlands.

The duo says the high-purity natural flake graphite found at Uley is important for Sunlands’ downstream processing and technologies required to develop thermal energy storage, or “TES” cells. TES cells are devices that temporarily store energy to be used for power generation later. They can be used to balance fluctuating energy demand caused by the changeable nature of renewable energy generation.

Additionally, natural flake graphite is an important component of lithium-ion batteries. Quantum previously reported during the next 18 months demand for natural flake graphite could increase from about 30 to more than 50 per cent of the anode market share and by 2025 the material will be the dominant force in the sector – moving above the now in-vogue synthetic versions.

The Eyre Peninsula is part of the highly endowed Gawler Craton mineral province that hosts the world-class Olympic Dam, Prominent Hill and Carapateena copper mines along with a bevy of iron ore mines in the infamous “Iron Triangle” of the Middleback Ranges.

Lincoln’s Gum Flat Project, only 2km from Quantum’s Uley project, hosts a plethora of iron-rich magnetite and hematite-goethite deposits with a combined JORC mineral resource of 109Mt.

Despite its proximity to the Uley deposits, limited exploration has been done at Gum Flat for graphite. Resampling conducted by Lincoln on previous drilling targeting iron ore mineralization returned a suite of encouraging results including 13m at 12 per cent TGC from only 57m down hole.

Whilst Quantum will have its hands full assessing Lincoln’s graphite assets, the tenure also hosts a compelling suite of intriguing gold, zinc-lead-silver, copper, manganese, uranium and vanadium prospects all worthy of a second glance.

Quantum already has its foot on plenty of graphite at its Uley deposits in South Australia’s world-class flake-graphite province. If Lincoln’s shareholders accept Quantum’s offer, it could be a game changer for the evolving graphite developer.

Is your ASX-listed company doing something interesting? Contact: [email protected]

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Categories
Entertainment

Today’s Wordle Answer (August 9th, 2022): Puzzle 416 Hints, Clues, and Solution

Summer is the best time for flipping burgers and today’s Wordle answer for August 9th, 2022, is perfect for a barbecue.

While the solution for Puzzle 416 is most at home in the kitchen, it could also be your name – if your name means “noble” in Latin, that is.

As a Wordle challenge, this one is relatively difficult, combining some uncommon consonants and not many vowels with a bit of niche word that has much more popular alternatives.

What’s more, today’s puzzle also includes one of the trickier features that can pop up in Wordle, a double letter. The way the game deals with double letters is quite tough on the player, so it’s very easy to get down to your last guess without having much of an idea where to go next.

To make your task just a little easier, we’ve come up with some Wordle hints for August 9th, 2022, to give you a clue, as well as compiled a list of recent solutions from the last month.


Clues and hints for Today’s Wordle Answer

When it’s not going to plan, playing Wordle can feel like a really menial task. However, when the reward at the end of the job is so delicious, isn’t it worth putting in the effort?

Whether you’re just looking for some guidance or are down to your last guess, here are some Wordle hints to set you on the right track.

Your clues for Puzzle 416 are:

  • The answer contains just 1 vowel in the 2nd position
  • It also contains a repeated consonant, with the letters next to each other in the word
  • The word often comes up in popular cartoons, whether it’s Spongebob’s specialty dish or Marge’s sister in The Simpsons

Previous Wordle Answers

Take a look at this list of recent Wordle solutions from the last month if you’re struggling for ideas. While none of these will come up again, they can still give you a sense of the kind of letters at appear and what to incorporate into your guesses.

  • #385 – Stead – July 9
  • #386 – Berth – July 10
  • #387 – Madam – July 11
  • #388 – Night – July 12
  • #389 – Bland – July 13
  • #390 – Liver – July 14
  • #391 – Wedge – July 15
  • #392 – Roomy – July 16
  • #393 – Wacky – July 17
  • #394 – Flock – July 18
  • #395 – Angry – July 19
  • #396 – Trite – July 20
  • #397 – Aphid – July 21
  • #398 – Tryst – July 22
  • #399 – Midge – July 23
  • #400 – Power – July 24
  • #401 – elope – July 25
  • #402 – Cinch – July 26
  • #403 – Motto – July 27
  • #404 – Stomp – July 28
  • #405 – Upset – July 29
  • #406 – Bluff – July 30
  • #407 – Cramp – July 31
  • #408 – Quarter – August 1
  • #409 – Coyly – August 2
  • #410 – Youth – August 3
  • #411 – Rhyme – August 4
  • #412 – Buggy – August 5
  • #413 – Alien – August 6
  • #414 – Smear – August 7
  • #415 – Unfit – August 8

Today’s Word Answer August 9th

The Wordle answer today is patty.

Adopted in the late 17th Century, patty originally referred to a small, squished pie and is derived from the common French word, pate. In Jamaica it still has this meaning, while in the USA – as well as Australia, New Zealand and increasingly the UK – it usually refers to a flattened portion of ground meat and is synonymous with burger.

The word burger also has an interesting etymology, since it’s an example of a linguistic phenomenon called back formation. This is where speakers create new words by adding or removing perceived affixes from older words.

Hamburgers are named for the German city of Hamburg, but because of confusion with the English word ham, people thought that the ham was added to burger rather than the “-er” being added to Hamburg. This misunderstanding eventually led to burger being commonly used as its own word.

There are plenty more word games around to try out. Why not see if one of these Wordle alternatives takes your fancy?


Categories
Sports

Fresh twist in Port Adelaide’s prison bar jumper debate as Collingwood makes bizarre teal strip offer

It is the great debate that has been labeled “ridiculous” by Geelong star Patrick Dangerfield, and it’s just taken another bizarre twist.

The lingering feud over Port Adelaide’s prison bar jumper has possibly – and certainly tentatively – moved forward with Collingwood prepared to offer the Power a minor concession, according to a News Corp report.

Watch Kochie blast Collingwood in the video above

Analysis, local footy and the biggest moments, Seven and 7plus are the home of footy shows for every fan. Stream them all for free on 7plus >>

The Magpies are reportedly prepared to let Port wear its prison bar jumper if the white stripes are replaced by teal stripes.

The historical Guernsey is worn by the Port Adelaide Magpies in the SANFL and used to be seen in the AFL during the national comp’s heritage round. However, the AFL has scrapped that round.

Port Adelaide will not be allowed to wear their prison bars jumper for the derby against Adelaide. Credit: AAP

Port Adelaide has since wanted to bring the jumper back into the AFL for the Showdown games against crosstown rival Adelaide but those requests have been met with staunch opposition from Collingwood who believe only their club should wear black and white stripes.

Dangerfield recently weighed into the debate, saying: “If we profess to be a national competition then… [that means] you have to acknowledge and understand the history.

“Being a national competition means we should acknowledge what those teams have done, even though it was in the SANFL (in Port Adelaide’s case), I think it’s still really important to acknowledge that history.”

According to reports, the clubs are due to discuss the issue but it is said that Collingwood will not budge from this latest teal bar offer.

Patrick Cripps set for AFL court over big bump.

Patrick Cripps set for AFL court over big bump.

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Categories
Australia

Donna Adams appointed as Tasmania’s first female Commissioner of Police

Donna Adams has been appointed Tasmania’s first female Commissioner of Police, after 35 years in the force.

The highest-ranked woman in the 125-year history of Tasmania Police began her career as a constable when she was 19 years old.

Commissioner Adams said she felt “privileged” and “honoured” to be the 15th person to take on the role of commissioner.

“This is an extremely proud moment for me, and I’m really looking forward to making positive change,” she said.

“It’s not a position I thought I’d be awarded when I first joined Tasmania Police back in 1987, straight out of school.

“In fact, I only had a very simple ambition to join the drug squad, and as it turns out, it was an ambition I did not fulfill.”

Commissioner Adams has previously spoken about being greatly outnumbered by men when she first started in the force.

“When I first went to Bellerive CIB (Criminal Investigation Branch) in 1990, I had to share a toilet with the men and had my name on the first cubicle,” she said.

In 2009, she became the first woman promoted to the rank of commander, before last year becoming the state’s first female deputy commissioner.

Police Minister Felix Ellis, new Police Commissioner Donna Adams and Premier Jeremy Rockliff walk away from a building.
Premier Jeremy Rockliff (R) described Commissioner Adams as “a highly capable professional”.(ABC News: Maren Preuss)

Focus on ‘back-to-basics policing’

Throughout her career, Commissioner Adams has received several awards, including the Commissioner’s Commendation for her work after the 1996 Port Arthur massacre, as well as an Australian Police Medal for Distinguished Service.

She will take over the role of Darren Hine, who will retire on October 11 after more than 40 years in Tasmania Police and 14 as Commissioner of Police and Secretary of the Department.

Commissioner Adams said she had a “big pair of shoes to fill.”

“Darren [Hine] you have provided outstanding leadership, and support to me over the past 14 years,” she said.

“He has transformed Tasmania Police through his inclusive leadership.”

The 54-year-old said she would focus on “back-to-basics policing” in the wake of the pandemic and that “prevention and disruption” would also be a key issue.

“Now’s the time to re-focus on high visibility policing, and ensuring we have a strong focus on local policing issues in local communities,” she said.

“We need to do everything we can to prevent harm before it occurs, we need to do everything we can to prevent victims, from being a repeat victim of crime.”

Premier Jeremy Rockliff said the significance of his appointment could be “understated.”

“Donna is a highly capable professional, and well placed to provide exceptional leadership to Tasmania Police, and the community,” he said.

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Categories
US

Democrats celebrate as climate bill moves to House – and critics weigh in | US politics

Democrats celebrated the much-delayed Senate passage of their healthcare and climate spending package, expressing hope that the bill’s approval could improve their prospects in the crucial midterm elections this November.

The bill, formally known as the Inflation Reduction Act, passed the Senate on Sunday in a party-line vote of 51-50, with Vice-President Kamala Harris breaking the tie in the evenly divided chamber.

Raucous applause broke out on the Senate floor after Harris announced the final tally, and Democrats continued their victory lap once the vote had concluded amid a belief that the bill will give Biden – and many Democrats – a record of significant achievement to campaign on.

“I’m really confident that the Inflation Reduction Act will endure as one of the defining feats of the 21st century,” the Senate majority leader, Chuck Schumer, said at a press conference after the bill’s passage. “To do small things with 50 votes is rough. To pass such a major piece of legislation – with only 50 votes, an intransigent Republican minority, a caucus running from Bernie Sanders to Joe Manchin – wow.”

Democrats’ work is not quite done though. The Senate-approved bill now heads to the House, which must pass the legislation before it can go to Joe Biden’s desk. The House is scheduled to return from its recess on Friday to take up the bill, and Democratic leaders have expressed confidence that it will pass.

“The House will return and move swiftly to send this bill to the president’s desk – proudly building a healthier, cleaner, fairer future for all Americans,” the Democratic speaker, Nancy Pelosi, said in a statement.

Democrats hope the bill’s passage could also help them persuade voters to keep them in control of Congress in November, when every House seat and 34 Senate seats will be up for grabs. So far, Democrats’ prospects in the midterm elections have appeared grim, as Republicans are heavily favored to regain control of the House of Representatives.

Asked on Monday morning whether he believed the bill’s approval would benefit Democrats running in November, Biden said, “Do I expect it to help? Yes, I do. It’s going to immediately help.”

Biden pointed to some of the bill’s healthcare provisions, including capping Medicare recipients’ out-of-pocket prescription costs at $2,000 a year, to argue that the legislation would provide concrete assistance to millions of Americans. But that policy will not go into effect until 2025, and Biden acknowledged that some of the bill’s most important provisions will take time to kick in.

That delayed implementation could prove detrimental to Democratic candidates trying to make a pitch to voters about how the party has made the most of its control of the White House and Congress.

Despite its name, the bill is also not expected to provide immediate relief to Americans struggling under the weight of record-high inflation. According to a report issued by Moody’s Analytics, the bill will “modestly reduce inflation over the 10-year budget horizon”.

Republicans accused Democrats of ramming through a partisan bill that failed to address voters’ top concerns, as polls show most Americans believe the economy is getting worse.

“Democrats have proven over and over they simply do not care about middle-class families’ priorities,” the Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell, said after the bill’s passage. “They have spent 18 months proving that. They just spent hundreds of billions of dollars to provide it again.”

Republicans’ talking points were echoed by a surprising voice on Sunday: Bernie Sanders. The progressive senator expressed concern that the bill would do little to help working Americans, after he unsuccessfully pushed amendments to the bill that would have expanded its healthcare and financial assistance provisions.

“It’s a very modest step forward,” Sanders told MSNBC. “Bottom line is, I’m going to support the bill because given the crisis of climate change, the environmental community says this is a step forward. It doesn’t go anywhere near as far as it should. It is a step forward.”

Democrats have championed the bill’s environmental provisions, which mark America’s most significant legislative effort yet to address the climate crisis. Experts estimate that the climate policies in the spending package will slash US greenhouse gas emissions by 40% by 2030, compared with 2005 levels. That accomplishment will bring the US within striking distance of Biden’s goal to cut emissions in half by the end of the decade, which scientists say must be achieved to avoid climate disaster.

To win the support of the centrist senator Joe Manchin, the bill also includes controversial proposals to expand oil and gas development on federal lands, which have sparked outcry among some climate activists. But the bill’s defenders say the climate benefits of the legislation far outweigh the costs.

As the spending package moves to the House, Pelosi has the weighty task of keeping her entire caucus in line to ensure the bill’s passage. Given Democrats’ narrow majority in the lower chamber, Pelosi can afford to lose only a few votes and still get the bill passed. It seems like Pelosi will have the votes she needs, after moderates and progressives alike endorsed the package, so Biden could be reaching for her bill-signing pen by the end of the week.

Categories
Entertainment

The Block launches huge in new reality battle

The Block appears to have tapped into the dreams of city viewers who have endured two years of rolling lockdowns.

A Tree Change season, the first ever rural reno for the Nine series, launched to a huge 867,000 meter viewers, despite heated competition. That’s up 16% on 2021’s 747,000 premiere and in effect positions Nine well for a stong second half of the year.

It was easily ahead of The Masked Singer‘s 522,000 (rising to 598,000 for the reveal of Ryan Moloney), the return of MKR (503,000) and Spicks & Specks (449,000).

Later 60 minutes was 445,000 then Mystery Road: Origin (263,000).

Commonwealth Games was still big, at 724,000 / 396,000 / 331,000 with 7 mate topping multichannels with a huge 396,000.

Seven network won Sunday with 38.6% then Nine 27.2%, 10 15.0%, ABC 12.9% and SBS 6.3%.

Seven News was #1 at 982,000 viewers.

Nine News drew 807,000 with a late edition at 223,000.

The Sunday Project drew 314,000 / 248,000 for 10. 10 News First was 253,000 / 188,000. NCIS: Hawaii was 169,000 then FBI (93,000).

ABCNews was 572,000 for ABC. compass (164,000) and movies: Suffragette followed.

On SBS it was SBS World News (141,000 / 121,000), Mysteries From The Grave: Titanic (110,000) and Hindenburg: The New Evidence (75,000).

In Total TV numbers last Sunday were:

hunted: 982,000
Beauty & the Geek: 707,000
Mystery Road: Origin: 569,000
NCIS: Hawaii: 355,000

OzTAM Overnights: Sunday 7 August 2022

Categories
Sports

NRL 2022: Adam Hills, Physical Disability Rugby League, World Cup, Australia

Physical Disability Rugby League pioneer Adam Hills is set to play against some of the team-mates he helped introduce to the game after being selected in an extended Australian squad for October’s World Cup in England.

Hills, who was awarded an OBE for services to Paralympic Sport and Disability Awareness in the Queen’s 2022 New Year’s Honors List, was instrumental in the establishment of a PDRL competition in Britain and has played for Warrington since 2018.

However, the comedian and TV host declared his allegiance to Australia on an episode of The Last Leg aired in the UK on July 29, which also featured an announcement of the draw for the PDRL World Cup.

The tournament will be played Warrington from October 23 to October 30 and features Australia, England, New Zealand and Wales.

A 40-man Australian squad was announced on Monday and will be reduced to 20 players on August 14, with Hills hoping to be among those selected for the World Cup.

“Honored to make the extended squad to represent Australia in the PDRL World Cup,” Hills tweeted. “Whether selected or not, I’ll do all I can to support the team.”


Adam Hills is a household name in Australia and England

Adam Hills is a household name in Australia and England
©RLWC2021


The majority of the squad played in a historic selection trial between the Gold Coast Titans and NSW PDRL teams at Cbus Super Stadium on July 16.

A fundraising campaign has been launched to assist with travel and other costs for the Australian PDRL team.

A household name in both Australia and England, where he hosts The Last Leg and Channel 4’s coverage of Super League, Hills is also a RLWC2021 ambassador.

After learning that there was a PDRL competition in Sydney, which included his beloved Rabbitohs, Hills offered to help Warrington establish a team.

Commuting from London to train and play, he has since played more than 20 matches for Warrington, two for Souths and represented NSW City and Lancashire.

A documentary Hills made about Warrington’s trip to Australia to play South Sydney in the Physical Disability World Club Challenge won an award in the Television/Digital Documentary category at the 2019 British Sports Journalism Awards.

Hills is now poised to pull on the green-and-gold jersey of Australia at the PDRL World Cup in England, which will be played alongside the Men’s, Women’s and Wheelchair tournaments.

The final of the PDRL World Cup will be the second match in a double-header with the Samoa v France game at Halliwell Jones Stadium on October 30.

Categories
Australia

NSW Premier’s ‘thank you’ cash bonus reduced by tax as nurses work overtime during COVID-19

New South Wales nurses say the tax office has claimed much of their $3,000 pandemic “thank you” payment after many were pushed into a higher tax bracket by working extra shifts during the latest COVID-19 wave.

NSW Premier Dominic Perrotet announced in June that public healthcare workers would receive the bonus to thank them for their increased workload due to COVID-19.

It came four months after thousands walked off the job to protest staffing levels that had pushed an already stretched system to its limit during the pandemic.

But according to Diane Lang, NSW Nurses and Midwives Association’s delegate at Bega’s South East Regional Hospital, the promised $3,000 had since been cut in half for many staff.

She said the reduced payment came at a time when many nurses were doing overtime and extra shifts to cover staff shortages caused by the latest wave of infections.

A close up of a woman wearing sunglasses.
Diane Lang says the thank you payment has been taxed significantly for some nurses.(ABC South East NSW: Adriane Reardon)

“For many nurses, completing overtime and ensuring the health system did not collapse during a wave of COVID and influenza cases placed them in a higher tax bracket than usual,” Ms Lang said.

“All those people who have done all those extra shifts and all that overtime have paid a lot of tax.

“We knew we had to pay tax, but we were under the impression it was going to be paid separately to our wages, so there’s a lot of angry nurses out there at the moment.”

NSW Health has been contacted for comment.

Taxed for hard work

Genevieve Stone is the secretary of the union’s branch at Wollongong Hospital where nurses were “heartbroken” after the full amount failed to land in their bank accounts.

“What we found is the nurses who worked overtime in that pay period were the ones who were taxed the most, and got the least amount of money,” she said.

“The pandemic has been dragging on for a ridiculous amount of time, and I think we were all hoping for a morale boost in the way of this payment.

“We were hoping to be more heard and appreciated, but that hasn’t happened.”

The front of a building with a sign saying Wollongong Hospital
The union says those who worked hardest were taxed the most and earned less.(ABC Illawarra: Tim Fernandez)

Ms Stone said a pay rise in line with inflation would be “much more beneficial” to the workforce than a one-off payment, with both senior and junior staff leaving the profession in waves.

“We’re always called martyrs and angels, but that overshadows that we are highly skilled workers,” she said.

“We go to university, we’ve got medical knowledge, we do manual labor and we deserve to be valued.

“We are haemorrhaging nurses.”

a man wearing glasses standing behind a microphone
NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet had planned to thank employees for their hard work during the pandemic.(abcnews)

Industrial action planned

A nurse for more than 40 years, Jill Telfer is the secretary of the union’s branch at Tamworth Hospital.

She said that while some of the tax could be returned next financial year, many nurses were still “very disappointed”.

“I wasn’t the greatest thank you I’ve ever received,” Ms Telfer said.

“What dropped into our pay was $2,700 as we had super taken out automatically and we were also taxed, so I received about $1,700, but many received much less than that.

“The payment was just like a pat on the head, because we are desperate to change our situation in our public hospitals.

“We would prefer we were offered a fair pay rise.”

Ms Telfer said further industrial action was planned and many, including herself, were considering an early retirement.

“I know good friends who have got positions elsewhere because they didn’t want to keep doing this,” she said.

“We were short staffed before COVID, but now it’s even worse and it’s just got to be fixed.”

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Categories
US

White House denies more IRS funding could increase audits on lower-income Americans

The Biden administration on Monday pushed back against concerns that an extra $80 billion in funding for the IRS that Democrats included in their latest health care and climate change spending package could increase audits on lower-income households.

When asked about the possibility of more audits on middle-class Americans, the White House pointed to a letter written by IRS Commissioner Chuck Rettig last week, in which he maintained that additional funding for the tax-collecting agency will not increase audits on households earning less than $400,000.

“These resources are absolutely not about increasing audit scrutiny on small businesses or middle-income Americans,” Rettig wrote in the letter. “As we have been planning, our investment of these enforcement resources is designed around the Treasury’s directive that audit rates will not rise relative to recent years for households making under $400,000.”

Providing the IRS with an influx of funding has been a top priority for President Biden and is one of the most prominent provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act that Senate Democrats passed along party lines early Sunday.

DEMOCRATS’ MINIMUM CORPORATE TAX WOULD HIT THESE INDUSTRIES THE HARDEST

President Joe Biden

President Biden speaks about inflation and the economy from the White House campus May 10, 2022. (Getty Images/Getty Images)

The Democrats projected that enhancing IRS funding could add an extra $124 billion in federal revenue over the next decade by hiring more tax enforcers who can limit tax evasion by rich individuals and corporations. Roughly $1 trillion in federal taxes goes unpaid yearly because of errors, fraud and a lack of resources to adequately enforce collections, the IRS estimated last year.

But Republican lawmakers have sounded the alarm over the proposal, warning that it could have serious ramifications for lower-income workers.

That’s because the IRS disproportionately targets low-income Americans when it conducts tax audits each year. In fact, households with less than $25,000 in earnings are five times as likely to be audited by the agency than everyone else, according to a recent analysis of tax data from fiscal year 2021 by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) at Syracuse University.

IRS charles rettig

IRS Commissioner Charles Rettig testifies before the House Ways and Means Oversight Subcommittee on March 17, 2022, in Washington. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images/Getty Images)

The reason for that is a rise in what is known as “correspondence audits,” meaning the IRS conducts reviews of tax returns via letters or phone calls rather than more complex face-to-face audits. Just a fraction – 100,000 of the 659,000 audits in 2021 – were conducted in person.

According to the Syracuse study, more than half of the correspondence audits initiated by the IRS last year – 54% – involved low-income workers with gross receipts of less than $25,000 who claimed the earned income tax credit, an anti-poverty measure.

STRATEGISTS, TAX EXPERTS WEIGH IMPLICATIONS OF MANCHIN-BACKED BILL ON MIDTERM ELECTIONS

Even taxpayers with a total positive income that ranged from $200,000 to $1 million had one-third the odds of being audited by the IRS compared to the lowest-income wage earners. About 9 million taxpayers reported these high-income levels in 2021, but fewer than 40,000 of their returns were audited, or roughly 4.5 out of every 1,000. That contrasts sharply with lower-income Americans, who faced an audit rate of 13 out of every 1,000.

The discrepancy is primarily due to high-income taxpayers having complex investments that can easily shroud the gaps between taxes owed and paid vs. tax reported and paid.

capitol hill

Night falls at the Capitol in Washington, Dec. 2, 2021. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite/AP Newsroom)

“Barring an unlikely significant change in the composition of IRS enforcement, the stepped-up IRS enforcement would subject taxpayers across the income spectrum to more scrutiny and greater audit risk,” the conservative Heritage Foundation said in a recent blog post.

Still, Rettig argued that hiring more enforcement officers and modernizing the agency’s antiquated technology could actually help the IRS to avoid auditing honest taxpayers.

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“Large corporate and high-net-worth taxpayers often engage teams of sophisticated representatives pursuing unsettled or sometimes questionable interpretations of tax law,” he said. “The integrity and fairness of our tax administrative system relies upon the ability of our agency to maintain a strong, visible, robust enforcement presence directed to these and other similarly situated noncompliant taxpayers.”

FOX Business’ Jacqui Heinrich contributed to this report