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Tax Levy Decrease Approved by Alton Committee of the Whole, Among Other Items

2 years 7 months ago
ALTON - The Alton Committee of the Whole held a very brief meeting on Monday night, during which they approved a partial abatement of the 2022 Tax Levy, a Mutual Aid Box Alarm System agreement, and awarded a bid for 1819 Woodland Avenue. Alderwoman Elizabeth Allen was the sole member absent from the meeting. According to the wording of the tax levy resolution, the director of Planning & Development recommended abating (or decreasing) the 2022 Tax Levy, which established the General Obligation Refunding Bond of $8,750,000. This resolution essentially lowers the maximum amount of property tax dollars that can be collected by the city, though the new amount was not specified. The resolution passed unanimously. A resolution authorizing an intergovernmental agreement for participation in the Mutual Aid Box Alarm System (known as the “MABAS Master Agreement 2022”) also passed unanimously. This agreement essentially allows local units of government to collaborate and use

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Heart Association providing community impact mini-grant funding

2 years 7 months ago
The American Heart Association is helping local organizations improve the health in the St. Louis metro area. Applications are now open for Community Impact Grants to local organizations working to promote sustainable health improvement changes where we live, work, learn,…
St. Louis American Staff

Raw data: police shootings of unarmed suspects are way down

2 years 7 months ago
Every year I like to take a look at the Washington Post's Fatal Force database to see if we're continuing to make progress on police shootings of unarmed suspects. We are: This is adjusted for population shares. Black suspects are still killed at the highest rate, but only slightly. Hispanics are killed at the lowest ...continue reading "Raw data: police shootings of unarmed suspects are way down"
Kevin Drum

Welcoming Rainey Reitman as board president of Freedom of the Press Foundation

2 years 7 months ago

Freedom of the Press Foundation is proud to announce our newest president of our board of directors, digital rights activist Rainey Reitman. Rainey was a co-founder of Freedom of the Press Foundation and has served on our board for 10 years. Her deep knowledge of online advocacy, coalition building and civil liberties has helped make Freedom of the Press Foundation a stronger organization.

Rainey worked for the Electronic Frontier Foundation for 11 years, first as its activism director and then as its chief program officer. Rainey also co-founded and served for six years as a steering committee member of the Chelsea Manning Support Network. She currently serves as a board member for the Filecoin Foundation for the Decentralized Web.

FPF board of directors unanimously voted on Rainey as its next president last week, after she was nominated for the role by FPF’s prior president Edward Snowden, who continues to serve on the board.

“Journalists today face unjust prosecutions, public attacks and government surveillance for doing their jobs. Freedom of the Press Foundation’s vital mission to defend the rights of journalists is as necessary today as the day we founded it ten years ago,” Rainey Reitman said. “Edward Snowden has been a wonderful leader for our board and a personal inspiration. I’m honored to follow in his footsteps as president and continue his work of creating a fearless, impactful organization.”

Edward joined the board of FPF in 2014 and has served as president since 2016. During his tenure as president, Edward has acted as a tireless advocate for press freedom and worked to raise awareness of the organization’s important work. He has also helped highlight the dangers of using the Espionage Act to silence whistleblowers and journalists, as he himself is under the ongoing threat of prosecution for documents he leaked showing surveillance abuses by the NSA. Edward has offered guidance and advice to FPF’s technical projects, including our ongoing development of SecureDrop, which helps sources securely and anonymously transfer documents to journalists. FPF has more than doubled in size during his time as our board president.

“I’m incredibly proud of the work we’ve accomplished during my time as FPF board president and am looking forward to the heights we’ll reach under Rainey Reitman’s leadership,” Edward Snowden said. “There’s no one better to succeed me than Rainey. I’ve worked with her for a long time, and she is one of the most principled and tireless advocates for free speech and privacy online that I know.”

In addition to Edward and Rainey, FPF’s board of directors includes whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg, Academy Award-winning filmmaker Laura Poitras, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Wesley Lowery, renowned actor and activist John Cusack and executive director Trevor Timm.

FPF protects and defends public interest journalism in the 21st century. We build SecureDrop, the world’s leading whistleblower submission system, used by over 80 news outlets worldwide. We have trained thousands of journalists to better protect their sources using digital security. And we run the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker, the news website and database that documents every press freedom violation in the United States. You can help us fund all this work by joining our membership program here.

Freedom of the Press Foundation

IBEW/NECA Electrical Connection Offers Winter Electrical Safety Tips

2 years 7 months ago
Who doesn’t squirrel away aging holiday lights or old patched extension cords, electrical blankets and space heaters better suited for museums pieces? Americans are pack rats. But when it comes to outdated electrical devices pulled out of storage for use during the winter, whatever value there is in saving yesteryear can be a danger. This […]
Dede Hance

Daily Deal: EZ Tagg

2 years 7 months ago
Never worry about misplacing your keys, wallet, phone, or other essential items again! The EZ Tagg Anti-Lost Device keeps track of your keys and valuables with a wireless radiofrequency signal so they can be located easily wherever you go. The EZ Tag’s ultra-durable material resists bending and cracking, so you can throw it in your […]
Gretchen Heckmann

Forest Park to track many animals for new study

2 years 7 months ago
Astrid, like all other birds of prey, swallows her smaller food whole, fur and all. She often throws up what's left of her food, which is a pellet of bones, fur, and scales that she can't digest.
Liz Dowell