30 June 2023

PRESS RELEASE: The City of Mesa has received over $6,565,000, which includes over $6 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)

The list of funding recommendations was submitted by Mesa City Council to HUD as part of the City's Annual Action Plan, following a 30-day public comment period and City Council and Human Services Advisory Board public meetings earlier this year. 



Funding Awarded for Housing and Community Development Programs

June 29, 2023 at 9:19 am

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sharethis sharing buttonThe City of Mesa has received over $6,565,000, which includes over $6 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), for various programs to help Mesa residents in need during the 2023/2024 fiscal year.


The funds awarded by HUD through its Community Development Block Grant (CDBG), Emergency Solutions Grant (ESG) and HOME Investment Partnerships (HOME) programs support housing and community development activities in Mesa that benefit low and moderate-income residents and assist in preventing slum and blighting influences.

 > The City has also announced funding for its Human Services programs, which receive money from the General Fund and the ABC: A Better Community program contributions.

"Mesa appreciates how the federal government is stepping up to find local solutions to issues, especially homelessness, which includes important annual allocations like the HUD funds, said Natalie Lewis, Deputy City Manager. "It also includes once in a generational capital funding from US Treasury launched during the pandemic that will deliver long-term local tools/resources, and cross-agency technical assistance to identify ways to remove barriers that expedite local results."

The list of funding recommendations was submitted by Mesa City Council to HUD as part of the City's Annual Action Plan, following a 30-day public comment period and City Council and Human Services Advisory Board public meetings earlier this year. 



> Mesa allocated the funding to various programs, including homeless and crisis services, food and basic needs, health services, youth services and education, employment training and tax and legal assistance.

Among the allocations:


  • $1 million to the City of Mesa for its Emergency Rehabilitation Program to offer grant assistance to address emergency items in disrepair, such as air conditioners in the summer, water heaters, plumbing and electrical issues impacting the immediate livability of a home
  • $1.5 million to the City of Mesa for its Major Rehabilitation Program, a deferred loan program to address extensive home repairs
  • $300,000 to the City of Mesa for its Utility and Rent Deposit Program
  • $1 million to the City of Mesa to replace playground equipment, upgrade playground surfacing and install shading at Whitman Park, 1750 N. Grand. The project includes ADA accessibility improvements to the playground and surrounding parking area
  • $350,000 to the City of Mesa to install playground equipment and benches, install shading and add playground surfacing to achieve ADA accessibility at Aripine Park, 915 S. Horne
  • $198,258 to Copa Health, Inc. for the Homeless Day Center and Community Court Navigation
  • $100,000 to Child Crisis Arizona for counseling services for the homeless, foster children and youth in Mesa

  • $120,728 to A New Leaf for the East Valley Men's Center

$119,562 to Save the Family Foundation of Arizona for Rapid Rehousing

A complete list of agencies and funding allocations is available on the City's website.

ZELENSKY'S ZUGZWANG...Ukraine’s broken hopes for a fast-paced war

The anticipated ‘blitzkrieg’ strategy was not successful and the Ukrainian offensive became stuck in positional warfare, losing a lot of the military equipment provided to it by the West. By the end of June, Kiev managed to occupy a mere eight villages, but was not able to reach the main Russian fortifications. 



Zugzwang

Description

Zugzwang is a situation found in chess and other turn-based games wherein one player is put at a disadvantage because of their obligation to make a move; player is said to be "in zugzwang" when any legal move will worsen their position. ---- Wikipedia
30 Jun, 2023 12:01

Zelensky's Zugzwang: Ukraine's ‘blitzkrieg’ strategy has failed, so where does that leave its much-hyped counteroffensive?

For the past six months, Kiev has been preparing a breakthrough to the Sea of Azov, but Russia wasn't planning to roll over
Zelensky's Zugzwang: Ukraine's ‘blitzkrieg’ strategy has failed, so where does that leave its much-hyped counteroffensive?

The counteroffensive of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU), widely hyped by Ukrainian and Western officials since the beginning of the year, has been going on for nearly a month. Since June 4, Kiev's forces have been trying to advance on the southern section of the frontlines in Zaporozhye Region and in the western part of the Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR).

The anticipated ‘blitzkrieg’ strategy was not successful and the Ukrainian offensive became stuck in positional warfare, losing a lot of the military equipment provided to it by the West. By the end of June, Kiev managed to occupy a mere eight villages, but was not able to reach the main Russian fortifications.

Kiev and its Western partners are now particularly concerned about the planned breakthrough to the Sea of Azov, since the strategic goals of the counteroffensive have failed and the land corridor to Crimea remains under Russian control. So why has Ukraine’s much-hyped operation failed? 

How was the current front line formed?

The front line in Zaporozhye Region and the western part of the DPR was formed in the spring of 2022. At that time, Russian troops were able to merge their Crimean units, which captured the cities of Tokmak and Pologi, with the Donbass units to form the ‘Mariupol cauldron’. 

Meanwhile, the Russian Army’s attempts to move closer to Zaporozhye and capture the cities of Gulyai-Pole and Orekhov – the AFU’s main strongholds in Zaporozhye Region – were not successful.  

To the east, in the area of the Vremyevsky salient, active battles continued until the summer of 2022. On July 14, the DPR territorial defense headquarters confirmed the capture of Neskuchny village south of Vremyevka – the last settlement liberated by the People’s Militia of the DPR in this section of the front.

The strategic importance of this section of the front

Even though the Russian Army did not get to Zaporozhye or flank the AFU’s positions in Donbass, the military achievements of last spring and summer were extremely important for Russia. 

Firstly, Moscow took control of the Crimea-Melitopol-Berdiansk-Mariupol-Rostovskaya highway where the automobile bridge to the Crimea is located. As a result of these efforts, the peninsula became better connected with mainland Russia.

Secondly, control over these territories created a buffer zone around Crimea and forced the Ukrainians to retreat from the Sea of Azov, which became completely Russian territory. Also, Moscow was able to build a single front from the mouth of the Dnieper River to the Russian border (as it was in the summer of last year).

RT

This positioning, however, also came with certain vulnerabilities for the Russian troops. If the Ukrainian offensive had been successful and the AFU had broken through to the Sea of Azov, the Russian front would have split into two parts. However complex, the attempt was worth it for Ukraine, since the AFU could have then blocked the Russian Army’s Donbass units and posed a serious threat to Crimea and Sevastopol – the Black Sea Fleet’s main military base.  

RT

To the east, the AFU was able to advance through the fields in the direction of the village of Rabotino, which is on the road from Orekhov to Tokmak. Both sides have suffered losses but Ukraine is also losing a vital asset – time – as the pace of the counteroffensive slows down. 

Moreover, the Russian Air Force is constantly attacking UFU warehouses and staging areas. All this increases the costs of the counteroffensive and makes the Ukrainian Army’s ultimate success even less likely. 

Ukraine’s broken hopes for a fast-paced war

The series of defeats has disappointed Ukrainian society, which was counting on a fast-paced operation and a breakthrough on the front. Every two weeks, Ukrainian journalist Roman Shrike polls his Telegram subscribers on the estimated duration of the war. On June 15, the option that the war will continue for ‘more than another year’ received over 50% of votes for the first time. 

Propagandist Aleksey Arestovich noted that Ukraine’s success in Kharkov Region is an exception to the rule and cannot be repeated over and over again. He described the fighting in Zaporozhye Region as “a bloody fight accompanied by losses on both sides”. In order for Ukraine’s next offensive to be more successful, Arestovich says the country needs Western planes. 

Meanwhile, ordinary Ukrainians, some of whom were forced to become refugees while others lost their jobs or were forcibly conscripted, see that the current situation – in which the country is growing poorer by the day and people risk danger daily – can last for many more years. 

All this greatly strains society, which sees no quick victory ahead. At the same time, several cities, including a major part of Kiev, have announced a general mobilization on behalf of their regional councils. General mobilization in Ukraine has already been in effect since February 24, 2022, but these new statements demonstrate a new desperation. Of particular concern is the order for everyone liable for military duty to come to military enlistment offices, regardless of whether they have personally received a summons.

Western pressure meant that Zelensky was obliged to make a move, in the full knowledge that his hand was weak. Thus, he was like a chess player faced with a Zugzwang. 

BOOK PROMO: Meet the Man Who Kept Our Nation’s Secrets for 50 Years | Amanpour and Company

 
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From Green Beret to CIA covert operations: A fascinating career

When Michael G Vickers was 17, he decided he might like a career in the CIA.

“I imagined myself doing things that only a James Bond could do,” he writes in “By All Means Available – Memoirs of a Life in Intelligence, Specials Operations, and Strategy” (Alfred A. Knopf).

“Diving headfirst through a window and coming up shooting.”

Fast forward half a century, and Vickers can look back at a remarkable career in the intelligence services, where he served under six Presidents, including two years working directly for George W. Bush and six with Barack Obama as Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence.

From his time as a Green Beret to taking charge of the CIA’s covert operations against the Soviets in Afghanistan, the book recounts his extraordinary life and career, including the operation to find and eliminate the al-Qa’ida leader Osama Bin Laden.

Certainly, his Special Forces training wasn’t just tough — occasionally, it verged on the insane.

Once, Vickers was given instructions on Special Atomic Demolition Munitions (SADM), or what Vickers calls a “backpack nuke.”

The SADM was a small, low-yield nuclear device that could be strapped to a parachutist’s back and used quickly if to blow up a bridge, a dam or a mountain pass.

The issue, however, was that once deployed and the timer set, a team had to remain in close visual range.

“We hoped it wouldn’t result in the team’s vaporization,” writes Vickers.

By All Means Available: Memoirs of a Life in Intelligence, Special Operations, and Strategy by Michael G. Vickers

Later, the weapon’s inventors admitted to Vickers that they “never really got that timer to work properly.”

While the public perception of intelligence work may seem glamorous, the reality, says Vickers, is very different, especially when life-or-death decisions have to be made. 

“I have been involved, in one way or the other, in lethal intelligence and military operations for a large portion of my career,” he tells The Post. 

“It is never easy to take a human life, but it is sometimes necessary to save a lot more lives and to defend against aggression.”

Today, Vickers foresees greater challenges ahead for the intelligence community as technology moves on apace.

“In the next decade or two, advances in artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and synthetic biology will transform not just the intelligence world, but warfare, economies, societies, and even what it means to be human,” he says.

“And, unfortunately, the impact of these revolutionary technologies will very likely be bad as well as good.”

When Vickers retired in 2015, he was invited to the White House by President Obama to be presented with the National Security Medal — the nation’s highest award in the field of intelligence. 

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