Sunday, August 29, 2021

Time To Pick Up The Pace > Use it or Lose it!

 

A Mish-Mosh

AUGUST 25, 2021 05:59 PM ET

State and local rental assistance programs have doled out little of the $46.5 billion in emergency rental assistance and jurisdictions that don’t disperse money soon could have to return it.

Only 11% in Rental Assistance Spent, Treasury Department Prepares to Reallocate Unspent

Applicants at a rental assistance fair for Jackson residents at the Mississippi Trademart, line up to be assigned the proper station in the state Fairgrounds, Saturday, July 24, 2021, in Jackson, Miss.

Applicants at a rental assistance fair for Jackson residents at the Mississippi Trademart, line up to be assigned the proper station in the state Fairgrounds, Saturday, July 24, 2021, in Jackson, Miss. AP PHOTO/ROGELIO V. SOLIS 

Only 11% of the $46.5 billion in emergency rental aid authorized by Congress has been dispersed to tenants facing eviction, according to the latest data from the U.S. Treasury Department.

If state and local programs administering the rental assistance are not able to get money out the door to renters soon, they may lose out.

The Biden administration put grantees on notice through new guidance issued Wednesday that the Treasury Department is prepared to claw back unspent funds and reallocate the money to other jurisdictions. If grantees, including state and local governments, have not dispersed their first round of allocated funds by Sept. 30, the department is required to “recapture excess funds that have not been obligated … and reallocate those resources to high-performing jurisdictions that have obligated at least 65% of their original allocation.”

Congress approved $46.5 billion in emergency rental assistance to respond to the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic, allocating two tranches of money in December and March. Only about $5 billion of the first tranche of funding has been spent, according to Treasury Department data detailing payments through the end of July. The pace at which money is being distributed to renters hasn’t drastically improved over the summer, even as the nationwideeviction moratorium expired and was replaced by a new moratorium that covers only some jurisdictions with high rates of coronavirus transmission.

In July, $1.7 billion was distributed to 341,000 households—a slight uptick from June, when $1.5 billion was distributed to 290,000 households. Close to 1 million households have received payments.  That represents positive progress, said Diane Yentel, president and CEO of the National Low Income Housing Coalition.

“But the overall rate of spending emergency rental assistance remains much too slow,” she said in a statement.

“Some communities are spending the money quickly and well,” she said. “Seven months after funds were first allocated to them, nine states have spent less than 3% of the money and 16 states have spent less than 5%.”

Speeding Up the Pace

To speed up the pace at which struggling renters get their hands on the emergency assistance funds, the Treasury Department guidance released Wednesday includes recommendations meant to streamline the application process. The guidance clarifies that renters can self-attest to aspects of their rental assistance applications, such as their financial hardship, risk of homelessness or household income (when documentation is not available).

Documentation requirements have posed a significant barrier to faster application processing, according to the National Council of State Housing Agencies.  

 “We are pleased that Treasury is relaxing federal requirements that had slowed some emergency rental assistance program grantees’ delivery of funds,” said NCSHA Executive Director Stockton Williams. “The revised rules will enable state, local and tribal governments to further accelerate the delivery of much-needed rent relief.”

The guidance also indicates that state and local grant programs can provide advance bulk rental assistance payments to large landlords and utility providers based on an estimated amount of eligible debt. In addition, the guidance allows state and local programs to partner with nonprofits to provide assistance to renter households at risk of eviction while their applications are being processed.  

While the Biden administration has chided state and local governments for not getting the money out faster, most government officials had to design emergency rental programs from scratch and it’s taken time for them to craft eligibility rules and find partner organizations to spread the word to tenants. Some programs also adopted more stringent rules than others, which has slowed down the process of vetting applicants and approving payments.  

A dispute over the legality of the eviction moratorium could be headed back to the U.S. Supreme Court, and an adverse ruling could end the ban at any time—making the functionality of the rental assistance programs even more critical, Yentel said.  

“There is little time and no excuse left—states, cities and counties must do more, better and faster to get rental assistance to tenants in need,” she said.

Andrea Noble is a staff correspondent with Route Fifty.


 

 

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Public Notice & 30-Day Public Comment Period | Proposed AZPDES Renewal Permit for City of Benson Wastewater Treatment Plant

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DeConstructing The Sit-Com Format: Kevin Can F**k Himself

That's an excellent way to start off bad with a strong explicit headline. No fear of censorship.
The kicker - Instead of following the breakdown of a boundary between reality and fiction, we end up watching two increasingly unrelated narratives – the better of which keeps getting interrupted by a clunking 90s sitcom, complete with dull storylines about get-rich-quick schemes or the boss coming to dinner that neither illuminate nor complicate Allison’s story, nor create any thematic symbiosis. 

Kevin Can F**k Himself review – the sitcom wife finally snaps in Breaking Bad-lite

The brilliant Annie Murphy skewers TV cliches in this meta-sitcom that takes a detour into drug-fuelled crime drama. But can it deliver on its ingenious premise?

By Lucy Mangan 

Last modified on Fri 27 Aug 2021 14.12 EDT

(Loooooooks ffffffamiliar but ddifferent
Familiar but different … Kevin Can F*** Himself.

 

Let's re-wind to the start: "It’s a classic multi-camera sitcom setup: an ordinary Joe sitting on his couch in a brightly lit sitting room, trading beer-fuelled wisecracks with his dad and his buddies while a laughter track greets every utterance. His inexplicably beautiful wife appears – a new butt of new jokes! – to roll her eyes at the schlub on the sofa, gather glasses from the coffee table and leave more beer.

Then she returns to the kitchen on her own and everything darkens, goes quiet. Artifice disappears. She closes her eyes in despair and gashes her hand as she shatters one of the merry gang’s empty beer steins against the counter.

Such is the setup of new Amazon drama (or comedy-drama) Kevin Can F**k Himself, which deconstructs the sitcom format to turn the lens on to the most traditional, and traditionally second-string, character of them all: the patient, beleaguered wife. Here, Annie Murphy (breakout Emmy-winning star of Schitt’s Creek) is the long-suffering Allison. She is married to boorish Kevin (Eric Petersen), works at the local liquor store owned by her aunt and uncle, and dreams of a better life in a home they can call their own – perhaps even outside the drab city limits of Worcester, Massachusetts.

The conceit – a happy facade in front of friends and family, bleak realism when she’s “off” – is a good one, a metaphor for the human condition we can all get behind. It promises a new and highly fertile way of examining both the cultural messages we are shaped by and the divisions between our – particularly women’s – public and private selves. . .

Maybe the show pulls its two narratives together in the second half of the season. I hope so. It’s too good an idea, and features too many great performances, to waste."

Reference for more details: https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2021/aug/27/kevin-can-fk-himself-review-amazon-annie-murphy 

Saturday, August 28, 2021

Time-To-Snooze on That 'My Pillow Guy'

Mike Liddell is losing case-after-case and facing financial penalties

Partisan Republican vote ‘audits’ are making elections less safe, officials say

Copies of widely used voting software recently made its way to the public, opening potential vulnerabilities

Josh Marcus
San Francisco
comments
 
Insert  >> More Top Stories
 
 

Even though they’re often conducted under the nominal banner of election security, Republican efforts to scrutinize the 2020 election results have made elections less safe, according to cyber security experts.

Earlier this month, copies of the widely used Dominion Voting Systems election software were shared with attendees at an election event organised by MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell, a Trump supporter and booster of election conspiracy theories.

It’s unclear how the software reached participants, but cyber experts told the Associated Press that now that the Dominion software, which is used in roughly 30 states, is out in public hands, it may make it easier for hackers and others bad actors to find vulnerabilities.

“It’s a game-changer in that the environment we have talked about existing now is a reality,” Matt Masterson, a former top election security official in the Trump administration, told the AP. “We told election officials, essentially, that you should assume this information is already out there. Now we know it is, and we don’t know what they are going to do with it.”

The Independent reached out to Mr Lindell and has not received a response.

Dominion has said it won’t comment on the sharing of its software, citing an investigation into the incident.

The software appeared to be copied from counties in Colorado and Michigan where Trump allies sought access to voting technologies as part of post-election attempts to challenge the 2020 results.

Federal, state, and local officials are probing whether Colorado election officials provided unauthorised people with access to the voting systems.

Privacy concerns have also cropped in Arizona, where the GOP Senate is conducting a highly partisan audit of the 2020 election results for most of this year with no concrete results, an effort that has been roundly criticised by state officials, including prominent Republicans. . .

County commissioners in Maricopa County, the center of the audit, have balked at a subpoena request from the audit group to turn over internet routers that are used countywide, which hold passwords, law enforcement data, and other sensitive materials.

They have argued that these routers weren’t even connected to election equipment in the first place, but the Arizona state attorney general has ruled that the county must comply with the request, or else it could lose up to a quarter of its budget under state law.

The Independent has reached out to Cyber Ninjas for comment, but has not received a response.

. . .

Donald Trump’s own Homeland Security agency said that the 2020 election was the most secure in history, and none of the former president and his allies’ numerous election-related lawsuits have turned up any evidence of voter fraud that would’ve impacted the election result."

American Legion 102nd National Convention @ Phoenix Convention Center August 27 - September 2 2021

An event not usually covered by your MesaZona blogger but newsworthy nonetheless.
102nd National Convention begins Friday

102nd National Convention begins Friday

The American Legion is looking forward to being together again during the 102nd National Convention that gets underway Friday, Aug. 27, in Phoenix. Attendees will participate in meetings, workshops and training sessions, and hear from distinguished guests, speakers and more on the convention floor at the Phoenix Convention Center. National convention concludes Sept. 2 with the election of a new national commander and officers.

For a schedule of events and more, visit legion.org/convention/resources.

Activities held during convention

• Color Guard contests – Friday, Aug. 27

• American Legion Family Night at Chase Field – Monday, Aug. 30, 6:40 p.m. Reserve tickets

100 Points of Hope scavenger hunt 

Workshops and training sessions

102nd The American Legion National Convention in Phoenix, Arizona 2021  Convention Committee and Subcommittee Tentative Meeting

• MyLegion.org Workshop – Monday, Aug. 30. 

Subject Matter Expert Training – Saturday, Aug. 28, and Monday, Aug. 30

Incoming District Commander Training – Monday, Aug. 30

• The American Legion Media Alliance – Monday, Aug. 30

Live stream coverage

National Convention | The American Legion

The following events will be streamed live on The American Legion National Headquarters Facebook page and YouTube page. All times listed are Pacific, and are tentative and/or subject to change.

• Color Guard Contest – Friday, Aug. 27, at 4 p.m.

• Patriotic Memorial Service – Sunday, Aug. 29, at 11 a.m.

• Convention General Sessions – Tuesday, Aug. 31, Wednesday, Sept. 1, and Thursday, Sept. 2, at 8:30 a.m.

2021 national convention app

The American Legion’s National Convention mobile app is also available for download, free of charge, from the Apple Store or Google Play. The app includes maps, information from meeting times to registration and shuttle hours, the floor agenda, a guide to Phoenix and more. More timely than the souvenir convention guide attendees receive, it will continue to be updated with information, news headlines and alerts throughout the convention, including any updated health and safety guidelines related to the pandemic.

Stay updated with what’s happening at The American Legion’s biggest annual gathering by following online at legion.org, Facebook and Twitter.

 
First some background: PREVIEW
 
What's on the agenda - let's take a look 
The American Legion National Convention 2021
The American Legion National Convention 2021
PhxSoul.com: American Legion's 102nd National Convention in Phoenix on  August 24-September 2; Post 65 to Host Full Week of Events

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