The Australian Government has released the draft Fifth National Mental Health Plan for consultation. Emerging Minds will attend forums and will develop a written submission to the Australian Government on the draft plan.
To ensure that the plan includes clear actions for improving the mental health of Australian infants, children, young people, parents and families, Emerging Minds encourages community members, professionals, researchers and organisations to participate in the upcoming consultations.
To have your say, Emerging Minds encourages you to:
1. Download and review the draft plan, and consider whether the actions identified in the plan take into account the mental health needs of Australian infants, children, young people, parents and families.
2. Register to participate in one of the upcoming face-to-face workshops to ensure that personal, practice, organisational and research expertise on the needs of infants, children, young people, parents and families are understood.
3. Provide written feedback via a survey on the Department of Health website.
Making a written submission Details on how to make a written submission are available on the Department of Health website.
If you want to contribute to the written submission that will be prepared by Emerging Minds, please register your interest by emailing info@emergingminds.com.au by Monday 14th November, 2016.
The elevator at the westbound stop on SR-520 at the Clyde Hill/Yarrow Point Freeway Station is out of service until further notice.
Westbound transit riders who require the use of an elevator can board or exit SR-520 transit service at the Evergreen Point Road Freeway Station instead. The elevators are located at the west end of the platform near the stairway to the transit plaza.
Additionally, the elevator at the eastbound Yarrow Point stop is not affected. Westbound transit passengers who need to get to Yarrow Point can transfer to eastbound service at Evergreen Point to Yarrow Point.
Every effort is being made to restore the elevator as soon as possible. We apologize for any inconvenience. Your patience is appreciated.
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You might guess that Reddit's misogynists worship at the altar of the man who made "grab them by the pussy" a household phrase. You'd be right, a new Daily Beast analysis shows.
A jury awarded $3 million to a former UVA dean. Next, 'Rolling Stone' is facing a $25 million damages claim from the fraternity named in its retracted rape report.
A bartender's best kept secret—Fernet-Branca—is a secret no more. We've rounded up some of the best Fernet-Branca cocktails—and recipes!—to try this fall.
Swift finally broke her election silence with a selfie from the polls but, conspiracy theories about her sweater aside, still has made no endorsement. The people are not pleased.
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It's an historic day. What else can be said besides, thankfully, we're almost there. Without delay, here's how to get through the night (and if it's with a drink in hand, skip to the end for some recommendations). – Emily Banks
There are still several hours to go on this Election Day, and we've got an hour-by-hour guide to take you through the night. A few highlights: Right about the time this email hits your inbox, leaks and rumors about exit polls may begin to spread (although actual results of exit polls should be held until voting closes, so trust reports at your peril). At 6 p.m. ET, the first polls close–in Indiana, home to Trump's running mate Gov. Mike Pence. At 9 p.m. ET, 40 of the 50 states will have finished voting. Follow all the latest news here.
Here are today's top stories...
Donald Trump's big-money calvary never rode to his rescue. The GOP candidate is ending his campaign against Hillary Clinton the way he began it: heavily outspent. Overall, Clinton and her allies raised more than $1 billion through Oct. 19, the last date for which comprehensive figures are available, compared with about half that for Trump and his allies.
Earth just had the hottest five years on record. The floods, droughts and storms unleashed by rising temperatures are likely only a prelude to new weather extremes, the World Meteorological Organization said. That warming may have been responsible for a drought in East Africa between 2010 and 2012 that led to about 258,000 deaths, as well as flooding in southeast Asia in 2011 that cost more than $40 billion.
The number of unsold central-London homes under construction will reach a record high this year. That's a 24 percent rise from the end of last year, according to a report by Molior London seen by Bloomberg News. The market has been grinding to a halt as concerns about the economy following the Brexit vote and rising property taxes deter buyers.
Smith & Wesson is looking to change its name. The gun maker's board already approved a new moniker for the 164-year-old company starting Jan. 1: American Outdoor Brands Corp. Investors will vote on the change at a Dec. 13 meeting. The change only affects the holding company, not the brand name of its guns.
India will abolish the country's largest currency notes in a fight against unaccounted wealth and corruption. In an unscheduled address to the nation, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the government will scrap 500 rupee and 1,000 rupee notes.
In America, Election Day and drinking go together like gin and tonic, like Jack and Coke, like waking up the morning after elections and swallowing twice the recommended dose of ibuprofen. It's the patriotic thing to do, as it involves participating in a national tradition older than the nation itself.
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The Daily Beast - Cheat Sheet - PM EditionRepublican presidential nominee Donald Trump filed a lawsuit Tuesday in Clark County, Nevada over an early-polling place that allegedly remained open two hours past its stated closing time on Friday. The campaign claims that people should not have been allowed to vote after the location closed on the final night of early voting, but, as in many states, people who were already in line after the polls closed were allowed in to fill out their ballots. His campaign takes reported issue with others who were allowed to vote despite the fact that they were not in line when the location closed. Trump and Nevada GOP chairman Michael McDonald called the location, which was in a 30-percent Hispanic neighborhood in Las Vegas, was kept open improperly. Trump said it was evidence of a "rigged system." A spokesman for the county, Dan Kulin, told NBC News that the location acted properly and that under Nevada law, everyone who was in line at the time the poll was scheduled to close—7 p.m. local time—was entitled to cast their ballot. The last vote was cast just before 10 p.m. local time. "Nothing happened that wasn't supposed to happen," Kulin said. "Voters who were in line by the scheduled closing time were allowed to vote."The Trump campaign asked for all voting machines and ballots involved in the disagreement to be set aside instead of counted. During an 11 a.m. hearing, Clark County judge Gloria Sturman tore into Trump's lawyers and then threw out the challenge. "Are [the votes] not to be counted?" she asked. "What are you saying? Why are we here? You want to preserve the poll data? That is offensive to me. Why don't we wait to see if the secretary of state wants to do this?" She added, "I'm not going to expose people doing their civic duty helping their fellow citizens vote, that they are taking their personal time to preserve… to public attention, ridicule, and harassment."
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump filed a lawsuit Tuesday in Clark County, Nevada over an early-polling place that allegedly remained open two hours past its stated closing time on Friday. The campaign claims that people should not have been allowed to vote after the location closed on the final night of early voting, but, as in many states, people who were already in line after the polls closed were allowed in to fill out their ballots. His campaign takes reported issue with others who were allowed to vote despite the fact that they were not in line when the location closed. Trump and Nevada GOP chairman Michael McDonald called the location, which was in a 30-percent Hispanic neighborhood in Las Vegas, was kept open improperly. Trump said it was evidence of a "rigged system." A spokesman for the county, Dan Kulin, told NBC News that the location acted properly and that under Nevada law, everyone who was in line at the time the poll was scheduled to close—7 p.m. local time—was entitled to cast their ballot. The last vote was cast just before 10 p.m. local time. "Nothing happened that wasn't supposed to happen," Kulin said. "Voters who were in line by the scheduled closing time were allowed to vote."The Trump campaign asked for all voting machines and ballots involved in the disagreement to be set aside instead of counted. During an 11 a.m. hearing, Clark County judge Gloria Sturman tore into Trump's lawyers and then threw out the challenge. "Are [the votes] not to be counted?" she asked. "What are you saying? Why are we here? You want to preserve the poll data? That is offensive to me. Why don't we wait to see if the secretary of state wants to do this?" She added, "I'm not going to expose people doing their civic duty helping their fellow citizens vote, that they are taking their personal time to preserve… to public attention, ridicule, and harassment."
Donald Trump was booed and heckled at his own polling location—a New York City school—on Tuesday as he arrived to cast his ballot for himself for the 45th president of the United States. Many were already in line at P.S. 59 around 11 a.m. when he pulled up. Several people posted social-media videos of the scene.
Julian Assange on Tuesday released a statement defending WikiLeaks' decision to post documents from the Democratic Party during the presidential election campaign. Assange insisted he would have published documents from Donald Trump's campaign if he had access to them. "This is not due to a personal desire to influence the outcome of the election," he wrote. "The Democratic and Republican candidates have both expressed hostility towards whistleblowers… Publishing is what we do. To withhold the publication of such information until after the election would have been to favor one of the candidates above the public's right to know." Assange also said his organization is not working with Russia, as has been reported. "The Clinton campaign, when they were not spreading obvious untruths, pointed to unnamed sources or to speculative and vague statements from the intelligence community to suggest a nefarious allegiance with Russia," he added. "The campaign was unable to invoke evidence about our publications—because none exists."
The New York Board of Elections has received an official complaint against Eric Trump, who apparently violated New York election law by posting a picture of his completed ballot on Twitter. The Democratic Coalition Against Trump filed the complaint Tuesday morning, after Trump tweeted and deleted a picture of his filled-out ballot. It is illegal to photograph a completed ballot in the state. Similar anti-"ballot selfie" laws have been overturned and challenged across the U.S., and an effort to change the law in New York proved unsuccessful last week when a judge ruled that it would cause too much confusion to do so with the election so near in time.
The city of Orlando on Monday reached a deal to purchase the remains of the Pulse nightclub for $2.25 million in order to transform it into a memorial for the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history. "There are lots of people that are making a visit to the site part of their trip, part of their experience of Orlando, so I think 12 to 18 months of leaving it as-is would be appropriate," said Mayor Buddy Dyer. Before that transition, the city will ask the community to contribute ideas for what the memorial will look like. Dyer said the city hopes to "create something to honor the memory of the victims that are deceased [and] those that were injured, and a testament to the resilience of our community."
In an Instagram comment, Gisele Bundchen appears to have refuted Donald Trump's claim Monday that her husband, NFLer Tom Brady, voted for the candidate. A fan wrote, "Gisele I heard you and Tom were backing Trump! Is that true??" The supermodel responded: "NO!" Brady himself on Monday morning said he hadn't voted, in an appearance on the Kirk & Callahan radio show. At a rally in New Hampshire, Trump had claimed: "Tom Brady, great guy, great friend of mine, great, great champion, unbelievable winner. He called today and he said, 'Donald, I support you, you're my friend, and I voted for you,'" Trump told the crowd. "This guy is a champ and a winner and he is a great person," Trump continued. "So I said, Tom, you voted for me, you support me, am I allowed to say it tonight to this massive crowd in New Hampshire? He said, 'If you want to say it, you can say it.'"
CHARLOTTE, N.C.—Democrats watching the must-win state of North Carolina are keeping a close eye on African American turnout in the state, which dropped by 9 points in early voting compared to early voting in 2012, when President Obama lost the state to Mitt Romney by 2 points. Rep. G.K. Butterfield, a Democrat from the northeastern portion of the state and the chairman of the Congressional Black Caucus, attributed the drop mostly to Hurricane Matthew, the storm that swept across the state's coastal counties in September and displaced thousands of African American voters, who still have not returned to their homes. Other Democrats have worried that changes to the state's early voting laws, along with court fights over those changes, have led to confusion over when and how to vote in North Carolina this year. In 2013, the Republican-led state legislature reduced early voting days and hours, required a photo i.d. to vote, and eliminated same-day registration. Much of the law was overturned, but early voting locations were significantly reduced in some counties. The silver lining for North Carolina Democrats still worried about African American turnout was a last-minute surge in the final two days of early voting, which adjusted the drop among black voters to 9% from a projected drop of 25%. Butterfield said Tuesday morning that the Clinton camp, as well as the DNC and DSCC had upped their spending on African American turnout efforts after he raised concerns about it several weeks ago. As a result, he said 45% of eligible African Americans in North Carolina have turned out so far in 2016, the same rate as white voters. Butterfield was confident the African American vote would surpass 2012 when all the votes are counted, but added, "All of this suggests it's going to be a long night."—Patricia Murphy
The first votes of the 2016 presidential election were cast at midnight in the tiny New Hampshire mountain town of Dixville Notch. The village, which is just south of the Canadian border, has been hosting midnight voting since 1960. It has successfully predicted three of the last four election results (although President Obama tied with local favorite Mitt Romney in 2012). With less than a dozen registered voters, the voting was over pretty quickly. Minutes after midnight, the ballots were already in—four for Hillary Clinton, two for Donald Trump, one for Gary Johnson, and one write-in vote for Romney, according to The Boston Globe. With the exception of 1968 and 2008, Dixville Notch has been won by Republican candidates; until early this morning, Clinton, in her 2008 and 2016 primaries, had never received a single vote there. Two other small New Hampshire towns also voted earlier Tuesday, Hart's Location and Millsfield.
In an unprecedented gesture early Tuesday, Kensington Palace released a statement on behalf of Prince Harry denouncing the treatment of his new girlfriend by the press. The American-born actress Meghan Markle has been inundated with paparazzi attention, and the statement said "a line has been crossed." The prince confirmed his relationship with the Suits star and said he is "disappointed" he could not do more to protect her and her family in the beginning of their relationship. The statement accuses members of the press of attempting to obtain private information about Markle, stalking her, and trying to illegally gain access to her property and that of her mother. The prince also called out the sexist and "racial undertones" present in coverage and on social media regarding his relationship with Markle.
Angelina Jolie Pitt will maintain sole custody of the six children she has with Brad Pitt. The actors announced Tuesday that they had reached a joint custody agreement. The children—ages 8 to 15—will have visitation from their father for the foreseeable future. The couple has faced a tumultuous divorce, after the actress moved to separate from him in September. Days earlier, Pitt allegedly created a disturbance on a private jet that extended out onto the tarmac. Jolie Pitt has said she filed for the divorce "for the health of the family."
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The software giant said Russian hackers were behind a low-volume spearphishing campaign, which exploits a previously undisclosed security flaw in the operating system.
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VIDÉO - Le nouveau site du Figaro Étudiant est en ligne depuis ce matin. Doté d'un nouveau design, il est organisé autour de 5 univers, du brevet au premier emploi.
QUIZ - La culture G est de plus en plus présente aux concours et divers examens d'entrée. La difficulté? L'épreuve ne peut pas être bachotée. La meilleure solution est de s'entraîner.
Le dernier budget du quinquennat pour l'enseignement supérieur et la recherche, en hausse de 850 millions d'euros, a été voté lundi en première lecture à l'Assemblée nationale, malgré l'opposition de la droite.
Les étudiants américains contractent des dettes colossales pour acquérir leurs diplômes. Donald Trump et Hilary Clinton ont détaillé leurs propositions pour alléger ces emprunts.
Dans le cadre d'un «concours de prévisions», 97% des 450 jeunes participants prévoient la victoire de la candidate démocrate qui remporterait 49,3% des scrutins et les voix de 332 grands électeurs.
L'inventeur britannique de l'aspirateur sans sac va investir 15 millions de livres sterling pour former des ingénieurs compétitifs au niveau international.
VIDÉO - Dans une école normande, les élèves boivent de l'eau et les menus sont conçus par un nutritionniste. Cette partie du documentaire de Michael Moore sorti en septembre fait beaucoup réagir.
L'ambassade australienne de Paris vient de délivrer son 200.000e visa vacances-travail, l'occasion de revenir sur une année enivrante, bourlingue sensorielle entre barrières de corail et feuilletés à la saucisse.
Que faire en cas de harcèlement scolaire ? Quelle riposte adopter ? Peut-on porter plainte ? Quel est le rôle des enseignants et de la direction ? Quelles sont les sanctions? Le Figaro Étudiant essaye de répondre à vos questions
VIDÉO - Selon l'enquête internationale HBSC, le harcèlement a diminué au collège, entre 2010 et 2014. La deuxième journée nationale «Non au harcèlement» se tient ce jeudi.
Dans un livre poignant, Mathilde Monnet, 15 ans aujourd'hui, raconte la honte, la peur et la souffrance qu'engendrent les insultes, les brimades et les humiliations qu'elle a subies au collège.
Un étudiant américain s'est fait voler un Kit Kat dans sa voiture laissée ouverte la semaine dernière. L'entreprise a chargé sa voiture de 6.500 barres chocolatées pour le consoler.
INTERVIEW - Après le Harlem Shake ou l'Ice bucket challenge, le dernier phénomène viral sur le web consiste à filmer et diffuser une scène du quotidien ou chaque figurant est figé. Le Figaro a demandé au pédopsychiatre Stéphane Clerget ce qu'il traduit de notre jeunesse.
Oxidizer Selection and Technology Options http://click.1105newsletters.com/?qs=0e6a0380cebb24d28981c44b1787a136bd2b98937625fc47e9d716b3a663fda6b569cf7102994146 Selecting a control device for industrial organic gaseous emissions is an easier process today than it was when air pollution control regulations were first introduced. This is due in part to years of reliable service by a number of mature technologies. Facility owners and project consultants have a variety of options at their disposal to meet regulatory compliance with a minimal impact on everyday operations. The most widely used oxidizers employ a successful combination of residence time, conversion temperature, and turbulent mixing in the combustion chamber to eliminate gaseous emissions.
A cursory review of these technologies reveals that four main exhaust stream characteristics are key to selecting the right control device: pollutant type, pollutant concentration, airflow volume, and airflow temperature. It is vital to properly characterize, identify, and measure process conditions for the simple reason that lower airflow volumes result in a smaller oxidizer and thus lower the capital and operating cost investment. Another advantage to reduced oxidizer size is there are fewer secondary emissions from the oxidation process, meaning that less carbon monoxide, oxides of nitrogen, and carbon dioxide byproducts are produced from the conversion process. This may aid greatly in the permitting process for the control device.s
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Ces informations sont fournies uniquement à titre indicatif Le Figaro ne pourrait être tenu pour responsable des dommages directs ou indirects résultant d'erreurs, d'omissions, d'altérations ou de délais de mise à jour.
This is it. After nearly two years, this wild, weird, often-worrisome presidential race is now in the hands of the American voter. There are a number of ways to describe 2016—the Trump election, the battle of Obama, the enthusiasm gap year, the nation divided race—and a number of possible outcomes (see here and here). But one thing is clear: the United States will never be the same.
"Is that all there is," you say? Kidding aside, as consequential as this contest has been, what happens next matters more. We are living in a time of uncertainty, fear, and uncompromising division. Yet we are also living in a time of progress, innovation, and hope. Both of those things can be true—are true. Voters have heard these contradictory themes at campaign rallies, on cable news, and on social media for the past 18+ months. It is now up to the next leader of the free world, the new Congress, and, one hopes, the American people themselves—moved to more meaningfully exercise their own power as constituents of those leaders, just as they seem to be moving to the polls in record numbers—to decide what to do with all of that. Do we move forward toward a cohesive, cooperative future? Or descend deeper into the partisan abyss? Tonight we should have a pretty good idea of whom we've chosen to lead us into the next phase. That's all there is. Let's do this, America!
We've got Election Day covered from all angles: Mark Halperin, John Heilemann and the journalists of Bloomberg Politics are joined by an all-star lineup including former Governors Haley Barbour (R-MS) and Jennifer Granholm (D-MI); GOP strategists Mike Murphy, Mary Matalin, Dan Senor and Sarah Isgur Flores; Democratic strategists James Carville, Anita Dunn, Mike Feldman, Hari Sevugan and Karine Jean-Pierre; American Conservative Union Chair Matt Schlapp; Former Congressman Harold Ford Jr. (D-TN); Princeton Professor Eddie Glaude; and more. Watch our special two-hour With All Due Respect tonight at 5 pm ET live on Bloomberg TV, at Bloomberg.com, or streaming on Twitter.
"...Clinton had cast her ballot in Chappaqua, New York. The first woman to be nominated for president by a major U.S. party, Clinton said she'd thought of her late mother while voting and said, "I'll do the very best I can if I am fortunate enough to win today." Trump was expected to vote at a school in Manhattan, and had called into Fox News to reflect on the "beautiful process" of his more than 500-day campaign. As most polls showed Clinton narrowly favored to win, he also warned of "purposely" inaccurate surveys and said he'd consider it "a tremendous waste of time, energy and money" if he loses."
"Just 596 days after Senator Ted Cruz kicked off the 2016 presidential race by announcing his candidacy, Election Day is here. Between working (efforts to make this a national holiday have failed), taking care of children (many schools are closed today), walking the dog (Hillary Clinton has two, Donald Trump none) and voting (don't forget!), you might find yourself texting and surfing and flipping through cable news channels in search of clues to who's winning. Here, an hour-by-hour guide for what to look for. All times are Eastern Standard Time, which is only fitting, with two New Yorkers vying to move to Washington D.C."
"Accompanied by rock stars, ex-presidents, old friends and their grown children, the Democratic and Republican nominees pleaded with voters to end a traumatic campaign with an emphatic endorsement of their visions for the country. In Philadelphia, Mrs. Clinton drew the biggest crowd of her 19-month campaign to the vast plaza in front of Independence Hall, where Bruce Springsteen, the balladeer of working-class America, rhapsodized about her values and the candidate portrayed herself as a protector of freedom and equality....In Manchester, N.H., Mr. Trump took the stage with his family at Southern New Hampshire University Arena as "God Bless the U.S.A." blared, blue laser beams illuminated the dark hall and a smoke machine piped a haze over the crowd. Mr. Trump asked a country polarized over his personality and tactics to embrace his plan to thoroughly shake up Washington."
"State leaders, voting experts and advocates say they are preparing for an unusual level of confusion and chaos Tuesday as voters cast their ballots in a historically bitter presidential race. Early voters in some states have faced hours-long lines the past several days. Democrats have filed a flurry of last-minute lawsuits alleging voter intimidation by Donald Trump supporters. And there have been some heated polling site confrontations between Trump voters and Hillary Clinton backers. Election monitors are especially worried this year about the specter of voter intimidation after calls by the Republican candidate for his supporters to stake out polling places and watch for fraud."
"He's ending his campaign against Hillary Clinton the way he began it: heavily outspent by his opponent. Trump can't blame his financial disadvantage on a lack of wealthy supporters. Some of them promised that big money was coming, but never followed through. And as of Sunday, even Trump himself hadn't spent nearly as much on his own campaign as he promised. Overall, Clinton and her allies raised more than $1 billion through Oct. 19, the last date for which comprehensive figures are available, compared with about half that for Trump and his allies. Support from super-political action committees, which can accept donations of unlimited size, was particularly lopsided in Clinton's favor."
"Whichever party wins control of the Senate is likely to claim power by the slimmest of majorities, making the 60-vote margin needed to advance legislation more elusive. Republicans are expected to keep the House, but they too will have a smaller majority, giving more leverage to a group of ultra-conservatives who have pushed to shut down the government in the past. The bitter partisan vitriol of the presidential campaign won't end with the election. Republicans are already gearing up to investigate -- and perhaps impeach -- Clinton if she wins. If Donald Trump prevails, he would enter the White House believing congressional leaders of his party sought to undermine his campaign, but that voters took his side."
Daybook (All times eastern)
5:00 p.m.: 2-hour special episode of With All Due Respect airs live on Bloomberg TV and Twitter
6:00 p.m.: Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine hold election night event at the Javits Center in New York City
6:30 p.m.: Donald Trump and Mike Pence hold election night 'Victory Party' at the New York Hilton Midtown in New York City
Congressman Xavier Becerra of California discusses the state of the race and what might happen if a candidate were to challenge the results in an individual state.
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