Categories
US

Fairfax Co. police release bodycam footage of McLean shooting; family says shooting ‘cannot be justified’

Police in Fairfax County released body-worn camera footage of an officer fatally shooting a 26-year-old man in McLean last month, saying it shows it a “very active and chaotic incident” the department is continuing to investigate.

Police in Fairfax County, Virginia, released body-worn camera footage of an officer fatally shooting a 26-year-old man in McLean last month, saying it shows a “very active and chaotic incident” the department is continuing to investigate.

County police responded to two 911 calls from a house on Arbor Lane in McLean on July 8 for a report of a man having a mental health crisis. When police entered the front door of the house on their second visit, the video shows 26-year-old Jasper Aaron Lynch pacing, then throwing a decorative wooden mask at officers and running toward them with a wine bottle. Two officers deployed their Tasers, and one of the officers fired his weapon, striking Lynch four times.

The shooting is the subject of a criminal investigation by the department’s Major Crimes Bureau in cooperation with the Fairfax County Commonwealth Attorney’s Office. The police department is also conducting an internal investigation.

“On the occasions when police officers use deadly force, it’s always profoundly sad…. And because a police use of deadly force was involved, we, again, take it very seriously,” Fairfax County Police Chief Kevin Davis said during a news conference Thursday.



“This one is gonna take a little bit longer to assess and investigate,” than other police shootings, Davis said. “Some are more clear than others; this one isn’t exactly as sterile because there’s a lot going on. There’s a lot going on that the camera captures, and there’s a lot going on that our investigation will concentrate on that’s not within the view of the cameras.”

While the investigation is still ongoing, Davis said he would refrain from offering his opinion or assessment of the officers’ actions. But in response to a reporter’s question, he said the video shows the officers attempted to verbally de-escalate the situation by using Lynch’s first name to address him and by telling him to drop the objects in his hands and then using their Tasers, unless -than-lethal option, before shots were fired.

The Lynch family released a statement shortly after the police news conference.

“Our son, Aaron, was experiencing a severe mental health crisis on July 7,” the statement from Pat and Kathy Lynch stated. “He was scared and asked for both of the 911 calls that were made that day. We believe that the three police officers who answered the second 911 call could have, and should have, handled this far differently. To respond to Aaron’s mental health crisis by shooting him at all, let alone multiple times, cannot be justified. We recognize that, at times, police officers face grave and unknown dangers in the line of duty, but that was not the case for that call at our home regarding our son. Aaron was about 5′ 6,” slightly built, and holding just a bottle and a decorative mask.”

The statement went on to say: “As parents, we mourn the heartbreaking loss of our son and are left with only memories and regret. Had we known there was any possibility that the police responding to the second 911 call would use lethal force against Aaron during a mental health crisis, we would not have involved them until a mental health counselor could be present, as was the case for the response to the first 911 call. We hope our efforts to find out more about this incident will, in the future, help families in similar situations avoid such a tragic outcome.”

2 separate 911 calls

During the first 911 call to the house just after 7 pm, officers responded with a trained co-responder from the community health department. However, by the time authorities arrived, Lynch had left the house.

Shortly after 8:30 pm, a family friend called 911 a second time, saying Lynch had returned and was throwing things in the house, according to audio of the call also released by police. By that time, the single clinician who currently works with the department was completing paperwork, Davis said, and did not respond to the house with officers the second time.

The body-worn camera footage shows officers who arrived talking with Lynch’s sister in the front yard where she tells officers her brother has been struggling with his mental health and had started experiencing hallucinations and paranoid thoughts after the death of a former girlfriend.

During the earlier 911 call, the family friend told officers there were “no weapons of any kind” in the home, and in the conversation in the front yard, one of the officers tells Lynch’s sister, “We’ll help as much as we can, but we’re kind of, like, more of a last — not last resort — but we’re, like, if it’s gotten to the point where he’s going to harm himself immediately.”

A short time later, officers entered the front door of the house. When Lynch appears in the living room, officers shout at him, “Bud, put it down,” and “Aaron, you’re all right.”

Bodycam footage shows Lynch throwing the mask then approaching the officers quickly with the raised bottle. Two of the officers fire Tasers with no effect. A third officer fires his sidearm multiple times, and Lynch falls to the ground on the front porch. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

There have been five shootings involving Fairfax County police officers so far this year. There was just one last year.

Davis said the department has responded to some 6,700 calls for service involving people experiencing mental health crises — which amounts to an average of 33 a day. Less than 1% of those calls involve use of force.

The department is in the first phase of a program to expand the use of mental health clinicians as co-responders on police calls involving mental health crises. On Aug. 8, the department will transition to the second phase, which will add a second clinician. Eventually, there will be 16 clinicians working in the program.

Davis also said his department provides officers with the “gold standard” training in use-of-force and that more than 40% of officers are trained in crisis intervention techniques.

WTOP’s Kristi King contributed to this report.

Categories
Business

Hatched scores Media Agency of the Year as Thinkerbell wins Full Service second year in a row

The 2022 Mumbrella Awards ended at Royal Randwick, with Hatched winning Media Agency of the Year for the first time and Thinkerbell taking home Full Service Agency of the Year for the second time in a row.

Thinkerbell also won the Independent Agency of the Year category, in which it was highly commended (HC) in 2021.

The awards ceremony was hosted by writer and comedian Paul McDermott, as over 30 awards were handed out to the best talent and innovators across Australia and New Zealand’s marketing, advertising, media, production, PR and communications industries.

Howatson+Company received a nod as Emerging Agency of the Year, while its Rejected Ales campaign for Matilda Bay was crowned the Mumbrella Award for Insight.

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The rest of the Agency of the Year categories were split between Thrive PR (PR), AKQA (Specialist), Traffic (Promo or Experiential) and The Monkeys, part of Accenture Song (Creative).

72andSunny’s work Helping You Help Them’ for Google earned it the Ad Campaign of the Year award. The campaign was showcased in 2021 to celebrate community helpfulness. For TV Ad of the Year, Special’s Christmas campaign for Optus, ‘Yuleglide’, received the crown.

Other brands and agencies winning the night include Half Dome, PHD Media, CHEP Network, Tourism Noosa, Broadsheet and more.

See the full list of winners below:

Winner: Remove The Barrier – Great Barrier Reef Foundation with Arcadia, Only Everything, We Are Different

  • Mumbrella Award for Bravery

Winner: NAB JAB – Six Black Pens & TBWA with Mindshare for NAB

  • Mumbrella Award for Culture

Winner: Half Dome

  • Mumbrella Award for Insight

Winner: Rejected Ales – Howatson+Company for Matilda Bay

  • Mumbrella Award for Innovation

Winner: The Rocket Stove – FINCH/Creatable

  • Mumbrella Award for Data-Driven Marketing

Winner: Real-Time Routes – PHD Media for Virgin Australia

HC: realestate.com.au Property Owner Track Acquisition – REA Group

  • Mumbrella Award for Collaboration

Winner: Performance Enhancing Music – CHEP Network with Spotify, Resonance Sonic Branding for Samsung Electronics Australia

  • Mumbrella Award for Sustainable Practices

Winner: Tourism Noosa Sustainability Programs – Tourism Noosa

  • Marketing Team of the Year

Winner: Uber

HC: Optus

Winner: The Trade Desk ANZ

  • Marketing Technology Company of the Year

Winner: Tracksuit

  • Content Marketing Strategy of the Year

Winner: Crime Interrupted – Host/Havas for Australian Federal Police

  • Best Use of User Experience

Winner: Planet Puberty – GHO Sydney for Family Planning NSW

  • Best Use of Real-Time Marketing

Winner: McGowan Sofa Bed – The Royals for Koala

HC: Federal Budget 2021 – Six Black Pens with NAB, Mindshare for NAB

  • Under-30 Achiever of the Year

Winner: Grace Watkins, CEO & Co-founder, Click Management

HC: Camille Gray, Strategy Director, Initiative Australia

HC: Kate Holland, Marketing Manager, UnLtd/MOOD

  • Industry Leader of the Year

Winner: Melissa Fein, CEO, Initiative Australia

HC: Nick Shelton, Director & Publisher, Broadsheet Media

  • Production Company of the Year

Winner: Mushroom Creative House

  • Best Use of Experiential Marketing

Winner: KFC Big Bucket – Prism Sport + Entertainment with Mediacom, Ogilvy, OPR, Geometry, Stanhaz Events, NRL for KFC (Yum)

  • Pro Bono Campaign of the Year

Winner: Donation Dollar – Saatchi & Saatchi for Royal Australian Mint

Winner: Yuleglide – Special with Finch, Flux and Universal McCann for Optus

No winner representative was present at the ceremony

  • Media Campaign of the Year

Winner: Origin SnackDown – HERO with UM, Channel 9 for Menulog

HC: Crime Interrupted – Host/Havas for Australian Federal Police

Winner: Helping You Help Them – 72andSunny ANZ with Finch, Thirteen & Co, Otis, Vandal, Atticus & PHD for Google Australia

HC: One House to Save Many – Leo Burnett Australia with CSIRO, James Cook University, Room 11 Architects, The Glue Society, OMD. for Suncorp Group

Winner: Broadsheet Media

HC: Man of Many

  • Full Service Agency of the Year

Winner: Thinker Bell

Winner: Thrive PR

HC: Eleven

  • Specialist Agency of the Year

Winner: AKQA

HC: Orchard

HC: Shadowboxer

  • Emerging Agency of the Year

Winner: Howatson+Company

HC: Campfire x

  • Promo or Experiential Agency of the Year

Winner: Traffic

  • Independent Agency of the Year

Winner: Thinker Bell

HC: Special

Winner: Hatched

HC: Initiative

  • Creative Agency of the Year

Winner: The Monkeys, part of Accenture Song

Categories
Australia

Mark Buddle arrested, fronts court in Melbourne

Court documents show Buddle has also been charged with conspiring – between March 19 and June 3, 2021 – to import a commercial quantity of a border-controlled drug.

Each offense carries a maximum sentence of life in prison.

Mark Buddle's solicitor Stephen Zahr outside Melbourne Magistrates' Court on Friday.

Mark Buddle’s solicitor Stephen Zahr outside Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on Friday.Credit:Nine News

The court documents also reveal Melbourne magistrate Julie Grainger granted investigators a warrant to arrest Buddle on July 23.

He’d arrived in Melbourne early on Friday on a chartered flight from Darwin, flanked by AFP officers, after a court approved his extradition from the Northern Territory.

The 37-year-old had been living abroad for six years after leaving Australia for Turkey, and then northern Cyprus, in 2016.

Following the cocaine seizure in 2021, federal authorities issued a global arrest alert. Buddle was apprehended by Turkish authorities in June and held in Ankara before being deported back to Australia this week.

Buddle arrives back in Melbourne.

Buddle arrives back in Melbourne.Credit:AFP

Australian investigators will allege Buddle was involved in a transnational criminal syndicate operating out of Hong Kong and Turkey, that saw 160 kilograms of cocaine – with an estimated street value of $40 million – imported to Melbourne but then seized by authorities.

On Tuesday, the AFP revealed federal investigators began preparing for Buddle’s arrest in October 2021 before Interpol issued a red notice – a global alert – for his capture.

His extradition came months after five people were arrested in connection to the importation, which was concealed in a shipment of air filters. Those five included the alleged co-ordinator of the crime syndicate, a 42-year-old Sydney man, and four Victorians.

The Sydney man was charged with importing a commercial quantity of border-controlled drugs. Three Melbourne men were also remanded on allegations they played a role in the collection and distribution of the cocaine shipment.

Magistrate Kieran Gilligan ordered Buddle return to Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on November 25 via video link.

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Categories
US

Alex Jones ordered to pay Sandy Hook parents more than $4M

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — A Texas jury Thursday ordered conspiracy theorist Alex Jones to pay more than $4 million — significantly less than the $150 million being sought — in compensatory damages to the parents of a 6-year-old boy killed in the Sandy Hook massacre, marking the first time the Infowars host has been held financially liable for repeatedly claiming the deadliest school shooting in US history was a hoax.

The Austin jury must still decide how much the Infowars host should pay in punitive damages to Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewiswhose son Jesse Lewis was among the 20 children and six educators who were killed in the 2012 attack in Newtown, Connecticut.

The parents had sought at least $150 million in compensation for defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Jones’ attorney asked the jury to limit damages to $8 — one dollar for each of the compensation charges they considered — and Jones himself said any award over $2 million “would sink us.”

It likely won’t be the last judgment against Jones — who was not in the courtroom — over his claims that the attack was staged in the interests of increasing gun controls. A Connecticut judge has ruled against him in a similar lawsuit brought by other victims’ families and an FBI agent who worked on the case. He also faces another trial in Austin.

Jones’ lead attorney, Andino Reynal, winked at his co-counsel before leaving the courtroom. He declined to comment on the verdict.

Outside the courthouse, the plaintiffs’ attorney Mark Bankston insisted that the $4.11 million amount wasn’t a disappointment, noting it was only part of the damages Jones will have to pay.

The jury returns Friday to hear more evidence about Jones and his company’s finances.

In a video posted on his website Thursday night, Jones called the reduced award a major victory.

“I admitted I was wrong. I admitted it was a mistake. I admitted that I followed disinformation but not on purpose. I apologized to the families. And the jury understood that. What I did to those families was wrong. But I didn’t do it on purpose,” he said.

The award was “more money than my company and I personally have, but we are going to work on trying to make restitution on that,” Jones said.

Bankston suggested any victory declarations might be premature.

“We aren’t done folks,” Bankston said. “We knew coming into this case it was necessary to shoot for the moon to get the jury to understand we were serious and passionate. After tomorrow, he’s going to owe a lot more.”

The total amount awarded in this case could set a marker for the other lawsuits against Jones and underlines the financial threat he’s facing. It also raises new questions about the ability of Infowars — which has been banned from YouTube, Spotify and Twitter for hate speech — to continue operating, although the company’s finances remain unclear.

Jones, who has portrayed the lawsuit as an attack on his First Amendment rightsgranted during the trial that the attack was “100% real” and that he was wrong to have lied about it. But Heslin and Lewis told jurors that an apology wouldn’t suffice and called on them to make Jones pay for the years of suffering he has put them and other Sandy Hook families through.

The parents testified Tuesday about how they’ve endured a decade of trauma, first inflicted by the murder of their son and what followed: gun shots fired at a home, online and phone threats, and harassment on the street by strangers. They said the threats and harassment were all fueled by Jones and his conspiracy theory spread to his followers via his website Infowars.

A forensic psychiatrist testified that the parents suffer from “complex post-traumatic stress disorder” inflicted by ongoing trauma, similar to what might be experienced by a soldier at war or a child abuse victim.

At one point in her testimony, Lewis looked directly at Jones, who was sitting barely 10 feet away.

“It seems so incredible to me that we have to do this — that we have to implore you, to punish you — to get you to stop lying,” Lewis told Jones.

Barry Covert, a Buffalo, New York, First Amendment lawyer who is not involved in the Jones case, said the $4 million in compensatory damages was lower than he would have expected given the evidence and testimony.

“But I don’t think Jones can take this as a victory,” he added. “The fact is, $4 million is significant even if we might have thought it would be a little higher.”

Jurors often decline to award any punitive damages after deciding on a compensation figure. But when they choose to, the punitive amount is often higher, Covert said. He said he expects the parents’ attorneys to argue that jurors should send the message that no one should profit off defamation.

“They will want jurors to send the message that you can’t make a quarter of a billion in profit off harming someone and say you’ll just take the damages loss in court,” Covert said.

Jones was the only witness to testify in his defense, and he only attended the trial sporadically while still appearing on his show. And he came under withering attack from the plaintiffs attorneys under cross-examination, as they reviewed Jones’ own video claims about Sandy Hook over the years, and accused him of lying and trying to hide evidence, including text messages and emails about the attack. It also included internal emails sent by an Infowars employee that said “this Sandy Hook stuff is killing us.”

At one point, Jones was told that his attorneys had mistakenly sent Bankston the last two years’ worth of texts from Jones’ cellphone. Bankston said in court Thursday that the US House Jan. 6 committee investigating the 2021 attack on the US Capitol has requested the records and that he intends to comply.

And shortly after Jones declared “I don’t use email,” Jones was shown one that came from his address, and another one from an Infowars business officer telling Jones that the company had earned $800,000 gross in selling its products in a single day, which would amount to nearly $300 million in a year.

Jones’ media company Free Speech Systems, which is Infowars’ parent company, filed for bankruptcy during the two-week trial.

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Associated Press writer Michael Tarm in Chicago contributed to this report.

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For more of the AP’s coverage of school shootings: https://apnews.com/hub/school-shootings

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Categories
Business

Queensland mum Alexi Bennett, partner and kids forced to live in motel room amid rental crisis

A young family has been forced to live in a Gold Coast motel amid an ongoing housing and rental crisis crippling Queensland.

But even with a virtually spotless rental history, stable income and no prior issues with their previous properties, Alexi Bennett and her partner Tinei Tiumalu say they still can’t find a place to live two months after their troubles began.

The couple, who has three young children, had to leave their previous rental home in May after their lease was not renewed.

“We were effectively made homeless,” Ms Bennett told NCA NewsWire.

Ms Bennett first spoke to the Gold Coast Bulletin about her plight and how it left them with no place to go.

She said they were now living in a small motel room which cost $850 a week while she continued applying for new properties from the Tweed region up to Logan.

“We’ve been going through real estates, private rentals, Gumtree, even the apps that aren’t really well known and there’s still nothing,” Ms Bennett said.

“It’s just rejection after rejection, or we’ve been told it’s already just been leased.”

“It’s a daily thing now.”

Ms Bennett’s plight is just one of many stories amid a shocking housing emergency leaving thousands of Queenslanders struggling to find a home.

Last month, the Queensland Council of Social Service (QCOSS) revealed more than 50,000 Queenslanders were waiting for a home on the social housing register.

The QCOSS blamed unaffordable house prices, rising costs of living and a slew of natural disasters plaguing the state.

Ms Bennett, a qualified aged care nurse, with her removalist partner Mr Tuimalu, are financially able to afford a rental property but have been constantly rejected from applications.

“It hits you; it really brings you down,” she said.

“My anxiety is through the roof. I sit up at night looking at homes, it leaves you speechless.”

Ms Bennett said she was remaining as positive as possible in the face of the constant rejections.

But she admitted she doesn’t know what the future holds.

“I don’t want my kids to know this life or the amount of guilt around simple things,” Ms Bennett said.

“We can’t even have fish and chips on the beach or go to the Ekka because of the money we have to pay in rent.”

According to research group SQM Research, renting a house on the Gold Coast costs about $970 as of August 4.

The average cost of a unit is around $653 a week.

Earlier this month, housing campaign group Everybody’s Home released data showing the “red zones” where rent prices had surged ahead of wage increases.

Northern parts of the Gold Coast had an average increase of 15.1 per cent to $835.50 for a rental.

The Brisbane CBD had a 3.6 per cent rise to $556.60.

Read related topics:Brisbane

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Categories
Australia

Man jailed for killing associate over a text message and music

An Adelaide man who stabbed an associate in the heart, killing him, has been jailed for at least four years.

Abdi Abdullah Ali, 32, was acquitted of the murder of Matthew Scott Bristow but found guilty of his manslaughter after a trial by judge alone.

Ali, who came to Australia from Somalia as a young boy, had offered to plead to the lesser charge but it was not accepted by prosecutors.

Matthew Scott Bristow died on an Adelaide footpath after suffering a chest wound. (Supplied)

Mr Bristow, 43, died on February 5, 2020 with a trail of blood leading to where his body was found on a suburban footpath.

Sentencing Ali in the Supreme Court on Friday, Justice Anne Bampton said there was insufficient evidence for her to make specific findings about the circumstances of the stabbing.

In the lead-up to the killing, the two men and a woman had been driving around in a car.

Bristow was found collapsed at suburban Prospect and died at the scene. (9News)

Justice Bampton said it had been submitted to her that both men were affected by drugs and there had been a dispute over a text message and over the music being played.

The judge said while Ali had not intended to kill, his actions were unlawful and dangerous.

“You took the life of a man, causing untold grief and distress to his mother, his cousin and other family members,” she said.

Justice Bampton said because a knife was involved, Ali’s offending could not be considered at the lower end of the scale.

She jailed him for five years and three months, taking into account his willingness to plead guilty to manslaughter, and set a non-parole period of four years, two months and 12 days.

Categories
US

Authorities pursue fleeing driver in Jefferson Park

Authorities are in pursuit of a fleeing driver in East Los Angeles Thursday night. Sky5 is overhead.

The pursuit began after the Los Angeles Police Department spotted a suspected stolen vehicle, a white Kia, just before 10 pm, according to Officer Cruz.

The California Highway Patrol then picked up the pursuit, which traveled to the San Fernando Valley, then towards downtown Los Angeles on the 5 Freeway before exiting onto the 110 Freeway.

The Kia exited near the campus of USC and began to run red lights, so the CHP ended its pursuit. The LAPD is tracking the car as of about 10:45 pm

By 11 pm, the driver seemed to be going in circles in a residential area of ​​Jefferson Park, with no police vehicles nearby. A passenger ran from the vehicle near Adams-Normandie.

At about 11:25 pm, the driver stopped his car in a Ralphs parking lot, got out and put his hands above his head, despite the lack of law enforcement officers near him.

He then laid down in an apparent attempt to surrender, though no one was trying to take him into custody.

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Categories
Business

China Evergrande to get $818mn for scrapping stadium deal

Embattled Chinese property giant Evergrande has canceled a contract to build a football stadium in a southern city in return for 5.52 billion yuan ($818 million), it said in a filing.

The real estate behavior has been involved in restructuring negotiations after racking up $300 billion in liabilities in the wake of Beijing’s crackdown on excessive debt and rampant speculation in the property sector.

In a filing to the Hong Kong stock exchange late Thursday, Evergrande said “the group’s liquidity issue has adversely affected the development of and construction on the land” in Guangzhou.

The contract allowed for commercial and sports uses of the land for 40 years, as well as other business uses for 50 years, the filing said.

The latest refund will enter a project escrow account designated by the government and will be used to settle debts relating to the deal, Evergrande said.

Evergrande, one of China’s biggest developers, has scrambled to offload assets in recent months, with chairman Hui Ka Yan paying off some of its debts using his personal wealth.

Its troubles are emblematic of the problems rippling across China’s massive property sector, with smaller companies also defaulting on loans and others struggling to raise cash.

bys/oho/dan

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Categories
Sports

Week one fixtures, teams, times, scores, all you need to know

Chelsea also have a recent defeat to keep them grounded when they step out on the field at Goodison Park against old boy Lampard’s side.

Everton beat Chelsea 1-0 when they teams met on Merseyside in May with Brazilian Richarlison scoring the goal that helped secure top-flight survival.

Richarlison has, however, since moved to Tottenham and Everton’s lack of forward firepower has yet to be addressed in the transfer market, which remains open until the end of the month.

Champions Manchester City begin their title defense in the capital where David Moyes’ West Ham are looking to continue their progress after an encouraging seventh place finish last season.

City are likely to feature their new signing Erling Haaland in attack and the Norwegian will be hoping to put aside his disappointing display in the Community Shield loss to Liverpool last week.

Liverpool, who won that curtain raiser 3-1, are also in London and will expect to make a winning start against promoted Fulham.

New signing Darwin Nunez scored against City and could line up against Marco Silva’s side.

New Manchester United boss Erik ten Hag, pictured in Melbourne last month, has his work cut out for him at Old Trafford.

New Manchester United boss Erik ten Hag, pictured in Melbourne last month, has his work cut out for him at Old Trafford.Credit:Getty Images

Last season was a long nightmare for Manchester United but the 20-time champions are hoping that former Ajax boss Erik ten Hag can get off to a winning start to his time at Old Trafford against Brighton on Sunday.

United have used Anthony Martial as their central striker in pre-season, but he is doubtful for the game against Graham Potter’s side and that could mean a start for Cristiano Ronaldo despite his reported desire for a transfer.

Former European champions Nottingham Forest are back in the Premier League after a 23-year absence and mark their return with a difficult test at Newcastle United who enjoyed a fine second half to last season.

Antonio Conte has made some useful additions to his Spurs side, which finished fourth last term and will expect three points from the visit of Southampton.

The fixtures (all times AEST)
saturday

Crystal Palace v Arsenal (5am)

  • Arsenal will be involved in the opening game of a Premier League campaign for the fifth time. They have won thrice but were beaten 2-0 by Brentford in the 2021-22 season-opener.
  • Four of the last six league matches between the two teams have ended in draws, with Palace and Arsenal winning one each.
  • Arsenal lost four out of their last six away league matches in the 2021-22 season.

Fulham v Liverpool (9.30pm)

  • Liverpool won six straight Premier League games against Fulham between 2012 and 2019, but were unable to beat them in the 2021-22 season, drawing 1-1 away and losing 1-0 at home.
  • Forward Mohamed Salah became the first player in Premier League history to score on the opening weekend of five successive seasons with his goal against Norwich City last year, and could extend his own record with a strike against Fulham.
  • Liverpool won five of their six games against promoted sides in the 2021-22 season.

sunday

Bournemouth v Aston Villa (12pm)

  • Promoted Bournemouth last played in the top flight in the 2019-20 season, when they finished 18th.
  • Villa have won only one of their five opening day Premier League games against newly promoted teams (one draw, three losses), a 1-0 victory at Bournemouth in 2015-16.
  • Bournemouth have won three of their four league meetings with Villa, all by a 2-1 scoreline. They lost the other clash.

Leeds United v Wolverhampton Wanderers (12pm)

  • After winning only three league matches in a run of 25 at Leeds, Wolves have won three out of their last four at Elland Road.
  • Luke Ayling scored a 91st-minute winner to seal a 3-2 win for Leeds the last time the teams faced off in the league.
  • Only one of the six Premier League meetings between the teams have ended in a draw, with Wolves winning three and Leeds winning two.
Two-time European champions Nottingham Forest are back in the Premier League for the first time this century.

Two-time European champions Nottingham Forest are back in the Premier League for the first time this century.Credit:PA

Newcastle United v Nottingham Forest (12pm)

  • Nottingham Forest are back in the Premier League after a 23-year absence.
  • Forest have failed to beat Newcastle in eight Premier League meetings.
  • Forest have been busy during the summer transfer window, with former Manchester United midfielder Jesse Lingard one of 12 new recruits.

Tottenham v Southampton (12pm)

  • Southampton have only won four Premier League away games against Spurs.
  • Late goals by Mohamed Elyounoussi and Che Adams sealed a 3-2 victory at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium in their last meeting.
  • Spurs’ new signing Richarlison will miss the game after being suspended for one game for throwing a flare off the field while playing for Everton against Chelsea last season.

sunday

Everton v Chelsea (2.30am)

  • Everton have been unbeaten in their last five home matches against Chelsea, having won four of those clashes.
  • Chelsea have won 27 out of 60 Premier League meetings (D20) between the teams.
  • Everton forward Salomon Rondon is suspended after being sent off against Brentford last season.

Leicester City v Brentford (11pm)

  • Brentford will be seeking a first Premier League win over Leicester in their third attempt.
  • Brentford are winless in their last 10 meetings with Leicester in all competitions (D1 L9) since a 3-2 win in League Division Two in March 1953.
  • Leicester are yet to make a signing in the summer transfer window.
Kristoffer Ajer's Brentford have not beaten Leicester in almost 70 years.

Kristoffer Ajer’s Brentford have not beaten Leicester in almost 70 years.Credit:PA

Manchester United v Brighton (11pm)

  • United have won seven of their 10 Premier League matches with Brighton, including all five at Old Trafford.
  • Brighton thrashed United 4-0 at the Amex Stadium when the teams last met in May.
  • New United boss Erik ten Hag will take charge of the team in the league for the first time.

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monday

West Ham United v Manchester City (1.30am)

  • After losing four home games in the league against City in which they conceded 17 goals, West Ham have drawn the last two, including a 2-2 stalemate in May.
  • West Ham have beaten City only nine times in 42 Premier League meetings, with seven of those wins coming at home.
  • New City signing Erling Haaland could make his Premier League debut for the champions.

Reuters

  • Watch the UEFA Champions League winners Real Madrid take on the UEFA Europa League champions Eintracht Frankfurt in the UEFA Super Cup on Thursday 11 August, streaming ad-free, live and exclusive on Stan Sport.
Categories
Australia

If working smarter comes from new ideas, it’s time we had some

Get it? Economic growth doesn’t come primarily from cutting down trees and digging stuff out of the ground – and the scientists are right in telling us we must do less despoiling of the environment, our “natural capital” – it comes overwhelmingly from using human ingenuity to think of ways to produce more with less.

That’s why the report says improved productivity is “the key to prosperity” and is based on “the spread of new, useful ideas”.

Credit:

To be more concrete, productivity is improved by people thinking of ways to improve the goods and services we produce, ways to make the production process less wasteful – more efficient – ​​and thinking up goods and services that are entirely new.

This gives us a mixture of novel products, improved quality and reduced cost.

Over the past 200 years, since the start of the Industrial Revolution, the productivity of all the developed economies has improved by a few per cent almost every year. In our case, over the past 120 years the economic output of the average Australian is up seven-fold, while hours worked has consistently failed.

Trouble is, the miracle of productivity improvement has been a lot less miraculous in recent times. Over the past 60 years, our productivity improved at an average rate of 1.7 per cent a year. Over the decade to 2020, it “slowed significantly” to 1.1 per cent a year.

It’s pretty clear that, if we’re going to get back to higher rates of productivity improvement, we’ll have come up with some new ideas on how to make the service industries more productive, without diminishing quality.

The report is quick to point out that much the same has been happening in all the rich countries. (It does note, however, that the level of our productivity is now lower than it was compared with the levels the other rich countries have achieved.)

This is significant. It suggests that whatever factors have caused our productivity performance to fall off are probably the same as those in the other rich economies. But as yet, none of them has put their finger on the main causes of the problem.

If they’re still working on the answers, so are we. So the report focuses on thinking about what may be causing the problem and where we should be looking for answers. Remember, this is just the first of several reports.

So, unlike the rent-seekers and econocrats, it’s offering no magic answers. But it does come up with a good explanation for at least part of the productivity slowdown: for most of the past two centuries, one of the main ways we’ve produced more with less is by using newly invented “labour-saving equipment” to replace workers with machines in farming, mining and then manufacturing.

The quantity of goods we produce in those industries has never been greater, but the number of people employed to produce it all is a fraction of what it once was. And this accounts for a huge proportion of the productivity improvement we’ve achieved since the Federation.

Because producing more with less makes us richer, not poorer – increases our real income – total employment has gone up rather than down as we’ve spent that extra income employing more people to perform all manner of services – from menial to hugely skilled.

So successful have we (and all the rich economies) been at shifting workers from making goods to delivering services that the service industries now account for about 80 per cent of all we produce and about 90 per cent of all employment.

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See the problem? In the main, services are delivered by people. So the economy’s now almost completely composed of industries where it’s much harder to improve productivity simply by using machines to replace workers. It’s far from impossible, but it’s much harder than on a farm, mine site or factory.

That’s the more so when you remember that two of the biggest service industries are health and social assistance, and education and training.

It’s pretty clear that, if we’re going to get back to higher rates of productivity improvement, we’ll have come up with some new ideas on how to make the service industries more productive, without diminishing quality. That’s what comes next in the Productivity Commission’s series of reports.

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