Tag: emergency

  • What the end of the public health emergency means for Title 42

    What the end of the public health emergency means for Title 42

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    But in the following days, the administration walked back that assertion — and refused to explain why, prompting confusion and furor among immigration groups.

    “You have to have read half a dozen different Title 42 orders and court decisions and all the relevant statutory provisions” to understand the policy, said Aaron Reichlin-Melnick, policy director at the American Immigration Council. “It’s not exactly user friendly.”

    The Biden administration is, by this point, used to being dogged over its immigration policies. But the current place it finds itself in with respect to Title 42 is uniquely confusing: a combustible combination of judicial challenges, public health considerations and acute political pressures.

    Here’s our effort to break down where things stand:

    What’s the latest?

    The government has used Title 42 to turn away asylum seekers more than 2 million times for nearly three years. Until last week’s announcement, the policy’s fate was expected to be settled by the Supreme Court. Justices will hear arguments this month over a lawsuit filed by a group of Republican-led states trying to keep the measure in place.

    When the White House announced it would end the public health emergency, it did so in a statement of administration policy against two Republican measures attempting to end the Covid emergencies immediately. The administration decried such an abrupt end, saying enacting both bills “would lift Title 42 immediately, and result in a substantial additional inflow of migrants at the Southwest.”

    But the next day, Biden and his aides made things murky when they suggested the White House might have to wait on a Supreme Court ruling to know Title 42’s fate. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre referred reporters to the Department of Justice. And the DOJ didn’t respond to POLITICO’s request for comment on its legal stance.

    But as Reichlin-Melnick sees it, it’s simple.

    “If you look at the Title 42 order from the CDC, which is currently in effect, that order on its face says that it shall no longer be in effect when the public health emergency expires,” he said. “That’s really it.”

    What exactly is Title 42?

    Section 645 of Title 42 of U.S. Code addresses public health, social welfare and civil rights. In March 2020, the Trump administration granted the CDC director power to issue orders implementing the Title 42 authority to turn people away at the border. This also notably gave the CDC director the power to determine when these orders would end.

    Then-CDC Director Robert Redfield issued the first order on March 20 just days after a national Covid emergency had been declared. Redfield extended the order for another 30 days in April. He renewed it indefinitely in May.

    Flash forward to August 2021: The Biden administration — prompting a wave of backlash from immigrant advocates and Democrats — rolled out its own Title 42 order that remains in place today. But there was a notable change under this order: Now the policy could end in one of two ways — either via the expiration of the HHS public health emergency or the CDC director’s determination that it was no longer necessary, “whichever occurs first.”

    So what’s the problem, especially once both emergencies expire?

    In April 2022, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky announced the Biden administration would lift Title 42 restrictions, writing she “no longer found a public health justification” for keeping them in place. That prompted a group of GOP-led states to successfully challenge the decision, which left Title 42 in place.

    Then came the curveball last November. In a separate case, a U.S. district court judge ruled the use of Title 42 was “arbitrary and capricious,” arguing it hadn’t been updated to align with the present state of the pandemic. The judge told the Biden administration it must wind down the policy by Dec. 21.

    A group of 19 GOP-led states — many of the same states in the Fifth Circuit challenge — made a last-ditch bid to intervene in the case. Their move was rejected by the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. The states followed with an emergency appeal to the Supreme Court, and a divided bench agreed to temporarily keep the Title 42 order in place while it examined whether or not the states may intervene to challenge the district court’s order.

    What’s next?

    This brings us to today: A pending Supreme Court case and an end date to the public health emergency from the White House.

    It’s unclear what the White House’s announcement around the end of the public health emergency means for the Supreme Court case, Reichlin-Melnick said. It’s expected the high court will move forward with scheduled arguments this month; he said the Supreme Court is unlikely to throw out a case simply because the Biden administration has announced a future date, one that could change between now and May 11.

    But he and other experts say if the Biden administration really sticks to this timeline, the ongoing court cases appear irrelevant. That’s because the GOP-led states are trying to keep the August 2021 order in place, and that order is explicitly tied to the end of the public health emergency.

    The handling of the border has been no easy task for the Biden administration — stymied by court challenges and a Congress unable to reach a deal on much-needed immigration reform.

    David Bier, associate director of immigration studies at the Cato Institute, noted that May is one of the peak months for migration at the southern border, as the weather becomes ideal for travel.

    Administration officials have continued to say they’re preparing for the policy’s end, rolling out new reforms — some of which rely on the expansion of Title 42 — to alleviate pressure at the border. But this preparation has been ongoing for two years, Bier noted, and it wouldn’t be all that shocking to see officials once again ask for more time.

    They would have to issue a new Title 42 order not tied to the public health emergency, he said, though this would mean another load of lawsuits — and another load of criticism.

    “Once they issue a new order,” he said, “it opens a whole new can of worms.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • UK deploys emergency response teams to tackle Turkey quake

    UK deploys emergency response teams to tackle Turkey quake

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    London: The UK government said on Monday that it will immediately deploy emergency response teams to Turkey to assist with rescue efforts in the wake of the country’s worst earthquake in decades.

    A powerful 7.8 magnitude earthquake rocked Turkey and Syria early on Monday, killing more than 2,300 people. Turkey’s disaster agency said more than 1,500 people died there, while it is estimated that over 800 people were killed in Syria.

    The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) said it is deploying a team of search, rescue and medical experts to help on the ground following the 7.8 and 7.5 magnitude earthquakes and subsequent aftershocks.

    A flight is expected to depart the UK at 4 pm local time and arrive around 9 pm local time in the Turkish city of Gaziantep.

    “The UK is sending immediate support to Turkey including a team of 76 search and rescue specialists, equipment and rescue dogs,” said UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly.

    “In Syria, the UK-funded White Helmets have mobilised their resources to respond. We stand ready to provide further support as needed,” he said.

    The UK said it is providing the support that the Turkish government has asked for.

    The UK International Search and Rescue team has specialist search equipment including seismic listening devices, concrete cutting and breaking equipment, propping and shoring tools.

    “The British Embassy in Ankara is in close contact with the Turkish authorities to understand how we can best support those on the ground,” said Jill Morris, the British Ambassador Designate to Turkey.

    “Our thoughts are with all those affected by the earthquakes today. We pay tribute to the brave Turkish first responders working to save lives,” she said.

    In northwest Syria, the UK-aid-funded White Helmets have activated a significant search and rescue response and mobilised all their resources to respond to emerging needs.

    The UK government said it is in contact with British humanitarian workers in the affected areas, and stands ready to provide support to any British nationals affected.

    Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Monday’s earthquake was the worst the country had seen since 1939, when a powerful tremor in eastern Turkey killed nearly 33,000 people.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • House votes to end Covid public health emergency

    House votes to end Covid public health emergency

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    Still, the disclosure that Biden plans to wind down the emergencies might have helped shore up the Democratic vote. The final tally was 220-210, with no member crossing party lines.

    Republicans, who know the bill has no chance of being enacted with Biden in the White House, said their aim was to send a message and push the administration for a more detailed plan for winding down the emergency.

    “We’ve been asking for one for a year,” Rep. Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.), the House Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee chair, told POLITICO. “Hopefully, this will have them send a plan … there are issues we need to deal with.”

    Energy and Commerce Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.), noting that Biden had declared the pandemic over in an interview with CBS News in September, argued it shouldn’t take months to unwind the emergency.

    “I’m pleased the administration is following the House Republicans in finally abiding by President Biden’s own acknowledgment,” she said.

    The end of the emergencies will halt a wide-ranging set of eased regulations established at the pandemic’s outset to bolster the country’s response. The administration’s move will mean many patients will have to pay for all, or some portion, of the costs of Covid therapeutics, depending on their health insurance or lack thereof.

    The unwinding could also mean the end of Title 42, ordered by the Trump administration in March 2020 to shut down the southern border, though Republicans argued the policy could remain. The Biden administration has tried to end Title 42, but courts have blocked those efforts several times and Title 42’s fate will likely be decided by the judiciary.

    Democratic leadership whipped against the bill Tuesday, saying the legislation would “abruptly end numerous policies” without sufficient coordination and leave states without billions in funding.

    But they also said the emergencies shouldn’t go on indefinitely and backed the administration’s plan to end them in a few months.

    “There’s a right way to wind down,” said Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.). “Make sure there aren’t vulnerable people that would be impacted …This isn’t a serious effort. This is about messaging.”

    The House also voted mostly along party lines, 227-203, to end a federal rule requiring health care workers to be vaccinated against Covid-19.

    Republicans plan to bring to the floor later this week the resolution by Rep. Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.) to end the Covid national emergency.

    That declaration undergirds Biden’s plan, now stuck in court, to forgive some federal student loans. The Senate passed a resolution by Kansas Republican Sen. Roger Marshall in November to end the national emergency, with 12 Democrats joining a united GOP in the 61-37 vote.

    Marshall took advantage of a provision in the 1976 National Emergencies Act that allows senators to call for a vote on presidentially declared emergencies, and he could do so again.

    Guthrie told POLITICO before the House vote Tuesday that Republicans would have a Senate vehicle to end the emergency in case the Biden administration doesn’t do so on May 11.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • US plans to end COVID emergency declarations in May

    US plans to end COVID emergency declarations in May

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    Los Angeles: The Biden administration has announced it plans to end the COVID-19 public health emergency (PHE) on May 11.

    The COVID-19 national emergency and PHE were declared by the Trump Administration in 2020. They are currently set to expire on March 1 and April 11, respectively.

    The Biden Administration’s plan is to extend the emergency declarations to May 11, and then end both emergencies on that date, according to a statement of the White House, Xinhua News Agency reported.

    The statement came in opposing two House bills that would end the emergency declarations sooner.

    The public health and national emergencies have enabled US hospitals to respond more flexibly when faced with patients spikes during COVID-19 surges.

    Ending the emergency declaration could have implications for funding for tests and vaccines as well as impact other pandemic-related policies, the National Public Radio (NPR) reported.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Covid-19 Still International Health Emergency: WHO

    Covid-19 Still International Health Emergency: WHO

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    SRINAGAR: The WHO has said that the Covid-19 pandemic still constitutes a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC), the WHO’s highest alert level.

    The announcement came amid the recent increase of weekly reported deaths worldwide. After its quarterly assessment meeting on the Covid-19 pandemic on Friday, the WHO’s International Health Regulations (2005) Emergency Committee announced on Monday that Covid-19 continues to constitute a PHEIC, which has been concurred by WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

    Covid-19 remains a dangerous infectious disease with the capacity to cause substantial damage to health systems, the committee said in a statement, while acknowledging that the Covid-19 pandemic may be approaching an inflection point, Xinhua news agency reported.

    Although infection or vaccination may lead to higher levels of population immunity globally and limit the impact of morbidity and mortality, “there is little doubt that this virus will remain a permanently established pathogen in humans and animals for the foreseeable future,” the committee added.

    It then called for long-term public health action that will prioritise the mitigation of Covid-19 impact on morbidity and mortality.

    Meanwhile, the committee recommends that countries should achieve 100 per cent vaccination coverage of high-priority groups, improve reporting of SARS-CoV-2 surveillance data to the WHO, and ensure long-term availability of medical countermeasures, such as Covid-19 vaccines, diagnostics and therapeutics.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Biden to end Covid health emergency declarations in May

    Biden to end Covid health emergency declarations in May

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    Lifting the health emergency could also mean the abrupt termination of Title 42, a health policy reinstated during the Trump administration in March 2020 at the beginning of the Covid pandemic and used to shut down the southern border. The authority gave border officials the ability to rapidly “expel” migrants without a chance to seek U.S. asylum.

    The Biden administration’s attempts to end Title 42 have been repeatedly blocked by the courts, most recently with the Supreme Court’s decision to temporarily keep the policy in place. While a ruling by the high court isn’t expected until June, the White House’s move to end the declaration could lead to the case being dismissed as moot.

    The announcement Monday, which came with little warning, surprised lawmakers and industry officials, raising concerns over how the administration plans to unwind the myriad of options the emergency declarations have provided over the last three years.

    “I’ve yet to hear, ‘Okay, here is the rationale,’” said Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), a member of the chamber’s health committee. “I’m sure that they have one, I just haven’t heard it.”

    The expiration of emergencies also signals a shift in the administration’s approach to the southern border amid growing scrutiny from House Republicans over its immigration policies. Title 42, which was originally reinstated during the Trump administration in March 2020, has given federal border officials the ability to rapidly “expel” migrants without a chance to seek U.S. asylum.

    A senior administration official defended the decision making, telling POLITICO that “we’re committed to having a smooth, coordinated rollout and we believe today’s announcement does just that.”

    “This decision is based on what is best for the health of our country at this time,” the senior official said. “We’re in a pretty good place in the pandemic, we’ve come through the winter, cases are down dramatically from where they were the past two winters.”

    But others familiar with the matter said the administration had originally discussed announcing its May 11 end date for the emergencies next week, as it approached a Feb. 11 deadline for giving stakeholders advance notice.

    The disclosure was accelerated after it became clear that House Republicans planned to push measures aimed at ending the emergencies, and that some Democratic lawmakers might vote for them absent further clarity from the administration on its official end date.

    Biden health officials have spent the last several months preparing for the complex unwinding of the health emergencies, which will eventually involve shifting responsibility for the distribution of most vaccines and treatments to the private market.

    The process comes as most Americans have returned to their every day lives, and as federal funding for the White House’s Covid response dried up in the face of Republican opposition.

    Myah Ward and David Lim contributed to this report.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Plane carrying Andhra Pradesh CM makes emergency landing

    Plane carrying Andhra Pradesh CM makes emergency landing

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    Vijaywada: An aircraft carrying Andhra Pradesh Chief Minister Y.S. Jagan Mohan Reddy made an emergency landing at Gannavaram airport on Monday evening, reportedly due to a technical snag.

    The chartered aircraft in which the Chief Minister and senior officials were travelling to New Delhi returned to the airport, around 30 minutes after take-off.

    The aircraft took off at 5.03 p.m. and returned to the tarmac at 5.27 p.m. It made a safe landing.

    According to the Chief Minister’s Office, the pilot identified an AC valve leakage which led to a problem in the pressurisation system. This forced the pilot to return to the airport to ensure safety of the passengers.

    The Chief Minister was on his way to the national capital to address diplomats and entrepreneurs in a curtain raise event related to the AP Global Investors Summit-2023.

    After the aircraft returned to the Gannavaram airport, the Chief Minister left for official residence at Tadepalli.

    The officials were making alternate arrangements for the Chief Minister, public representatives and officials to go to New Delhi on Monday night.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • COVID-19 still a global health emergency, says WHO

    COVID-19 still a global health emergency, says WHO

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    The verdict is in: The COVID-19 pandemic is still a global health emergency, the World Health Organization has concluded. But it might not be for much longer. 

    The decision from the WHO — exactly three years after COVID-19 was first declared a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC) — comes after a meeting of the COVID-19 emergency committee on January 27. WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus concurred with the committee’s advice that there is a continued risk posed by COVID-19.

    The news comes as countries increasingly deliberate how to move forward from the acute phase of the pandemic, with the U.S. looking at annual COVID-19 boosters, for example. However, the committee found that, globally, there are still a high number of deaths from COVID-19 compared to other infectious respiratory diseases; vaccine uptake is still insufficient in low- and middle-income countries and there is uncertainty about emerging variants.

    But the reality is that the pandemic no longer poses the same threat as it did when it spread like wildfire through the globe in 2020. The committee acknowledged this, saying the crisis “may be approaching an inflection point.”

    As for exactly how the world will transition away from a PHEIC and into endemicity is still up for debate, with the committee acknowledging that it is unlikely that the virus can be eliminated from human and animal reservoirs. The committee recommended that a proposal be developed for an alternative mechanism that would maintain international focus on COVID-19, even after the crisis is no longer classified as a PHEIC. 

    For now, Tedros has asked countries to continue work in several areas, including maintaining their focus on vaccination of high-priority groups, improving reporting of COVID-19 surveillance data and increasing uptake of COVID treatments and tests.

    “Today’s announcement is a recognition that the global threat posed by COVID-19 is not over,” said Seth Berkley, CEO of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance. “While the world has made remarkable progress over the last two years, implementing the largest and fastest global vaccine rollout in history, we cannot afford to be complacent.”



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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )

  • Kemp declares state of emergency in Georgia over ‘Cop City’ protests

    Kemp declares state of emergency in Georgia over ‘Cop City’ protests

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    Police allege that Manuel “Tortuguita” Teran, 26, shot first, although activists who were present during the raid dispute authorities’ version of events. According to the Georgia Bureau of Investigations, the officers involved were not wearing body cameras at the time of the shooting.

    Teran’s death sparked global protests against police violence, as activists held vigils from Akron, Ohio, to Kurdistan. Atlanta protests turned violent Saturday, with protesters throwing rocks at the skyscraper that houses the Atlanta Police Foundation and setting fire to a police cruiser.

    In his State of the State address on Wednesday, Kemp decried the protesters as “out-of-state rioters” who “tried to bring violence to the streets of our capital city.” He said it was “just the latest example of why here in Georgia, we’ll always back the blue.”

    Kemp called out the National Guard to guard the state Capitol, the governor’s mansion and other public facilities during the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020 and kept them mobilized and providing security at the Capitol well into 2021.

    Since the summer of 2021, Defend the Atlanta Forest protesters have engaged in extended tree-sits, rallies, and other forms of resistance against the development of over 380 acres of forest land to build a mock city and tactical training ground for police.

    Standoffs between protesters and police have escalated recently, with protesters throwing Molotov cocktails at officers and police employing tear gas and rubber bullets to remove protesters from treehouse encampments. Since December, a dozen protesters have been charged with domestic terrorism under a state law that can carry up to a 35-year prison term.

    Activists argue that the construction of the training complex would exacerbate police violence against the predominantly Black and brown communities in the county and perpetuate environmental racism due to chemical runoff from weapons testing.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Chopper carrying Sri Sri Ravi Shankar makes emergency landing in TN

    Chopper carrying Sri Sri Ravi Shankar makes emergency landing in TN

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    Chennai: A helicopter carrying Art of Living founder Sri Sri Ravi Shankar and three others made an emergency landing at the Ukiniyin tribal hamlet in Tamil Nadu’s Erode district on Wednesday.

    The spiritual leader was travelling to Tirupur from Bengaluru. The other people in the chopper were two of his assistants and the pilot.

    Sources told IANS that the helicopter made the emergency landing due to poor weather conditions and the pilot complained of difficulty in navigating.

    Kadambur police who rushed to the spot on receiving the information told IANS that all the occupants of the chopper were safe.

    The helicopter took off after an hour when the weather situation improved.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )