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9 million Americans wrongly told they were approved for student debt forgiveness

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9 million Americans wrongly told they were approved for student debt forgiveness

About 9 million Individuals with scholar loans who had utilized for the Biden administration’s student-debt forgiveness program mistakenly obtained emails final month that stated their functions had been authorised. 

The messages had been a part of updates the Division of Schooling issued in November to inform 16 million debt reduction candidates that that they had been authorised to have as much as $20,000 forgiven. However a further 9 million individuals obtained emails saying that they had obtained mortgage forgiveness after they had not been authorised for reduction as a result of the method was halted attributable to authorized challenges, in line with officers. And others who hadn’t but utilized for the coed mortgage reduction program additionally obtained the e-mail. 

The error was made by Accenture Federal Providers, a contractor with the Schooling Division, which despatched the emails on November 22 and 23. The error could solely compound confusion amongst some debtors concerning the debt-relief program, which for now stays in limbo attributable to a number of authorized challenges, with the Supreme Courtroom earlier this month agreeing to listen to one of many circumstances. 

About 26 million individuals had utilized for the mortgage reduction effort previous to the courtroom rulings which have successfully stopped the Biden administration’s capability to just accept new functions. Within the meantime, the Biden administration has prolonged the pause on scholar debt repayments, which had been slated to renew in January, till as late as June 30, 2023, to present debtors extra respiration room whereas the authorized challenges transfer ahead.

On December 8, the Job Creators Community, a conservative group, stated it submitted a request to the Supreme Courtroom to listen to a second case regarding the loan-relief program. The group had sued in October, arguing the Biden administration violated federal procedures by failing to hunt public enter on this system. 

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“Corrective motion”

“Speaking clearly and precisely with debtors is a prime precedence of the Division,” a spokesperson for the Schooling Division stated in an e mail to CBS MoneyWatch. “We’re in shut contact with Accenture Federal Providers as they take corrective motion to make sure all debtors and people affected have correct details about debt reduction.”

The e-mail topic line incorrectly knowledgeable 9 million recipients: “Your Scholar Mortgage Debt Reduction Plan Has Been Accepted.” Nonetheless, the textual content of the letter was correct, letting these recipients know that the dedication of their eligibility would proceed “if and after we prevail in courtroom.”

Corrected emails might be despatched to these recipients and people who obtained the e-mail in error inside the subsequent few days. 

In a press release to CBS MoneyWatch, Accenture blamed the difficulty on “human error.”

“Accenture Federal Providers regrets the human error that led to an e mail being despatched to various scholar mortgage debt reduction candidates with an inaccurate topic line,” the agency stated. “Working carefully with the Division, Accenture Federal Providers will assessment high quality management measures to assist correct and well timed communications to candidates within the Scholar Mortgage Debt Reduction program.”

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Twelve injured after Qatar Airways flight hits turbulence

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Twelve injured after Qatar Airways flight hits turbulence

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Twelve people were injured as a result of turbulence during a Qatar Airways flight from Doha to Ireland, Dublin Airport said on Sunday. 

Emergency services attended to six passengers and six crew members “reporting injuries after the aircraft experienced turbulence while airborne over Turkey”, the airport said in a statement.

Despite the incident, the Boeing 787 Dreamliner — Flight QR017 — landed safely and on schedule just before 1pm local time, the airport said. 

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The rough air conditions struck during meal service and lasted less than 20 seconds, according to passengers interviewed by Irish broadcaster RTE.

This comes five days after a bout of extreme turbulence on a Singapore Airlines flight from London to Singapore resulted in a fatality and more than 100 injuries. 

Turbulence remains a consistent though rare cause of non-fatal injuries in aviation, according to the International Air Transport Association, with about 12 injuries on average reported a year. The problem is being exacerbated by changing climate conditions that make such events more frequent and severe.

Clear-air turbulence, which is invisible and unpredictable, remains a particularly significant challenge for the industry.

A 73-year old British man died on Tuesday after flight SQ321 hit turbulence at 37,000 feet over the Myanmar-Thai border, 10 hours into its flight between London Heathrow Airport and Singapore.

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That flight made an emergency landing in Bangkok, Thailand. 

Singapore’s prime minister promised a “thorough investigation” into the incident on Wednesday, while Singapore Airlines told news outlets that it had introduced a “more cautious approach” to turbulence, including tightening rules on using seatbelt for its flights. 

Modern aircraft are designed to withstand severe turbulence, but the unpredictability and suddenness of these events continue to pose safety concerns, particularly for flight attendants and passengers not wearing seatbelts during unanticipated disturbances.

Efforts to mitigate turbulence risks include enhancing data collection and real-time reporting systems to better predict and avoid such conditions. 

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Low percentage of Americans in military is

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Low percentage of Americans in military is

Washington — Rep. Pat Ryan said Sunday that he sees the small share of Americans — less than 1% — who are active-duty service members in the U.S. military as “deeply problematic as a democracy.”

“When you lose touch between those that are fighting our wars and their families and everyone else, that’s something so essential that we have to figure out how to bring folks together, and get more folks serving,” Ryan said on “Face the Nation” ahead of Memorial Day. 

Ryan, a veteran, said he and his colleagues in Congress have worked to prioritize recruiting within an annual defense bill, citing challenges among each branch of the military with recruiting numbers. 

“We’ve been pushing and a bunch of directions to say that is not acceptable to the Department of Defense,” Ryan said. “And, and we’re starting to see the numbers come up.”

But for the New York Democrat, he said “the most powerful thing” he’s done in Congress is participate in a tradition of hand-washing the Vietnam Veterans Memorial to mark Memorial Day. The bipartisan effort was started by Rep. Mike Waltz, who also appeared on “Face the Nation” on Sunday.

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Reps. Pat Ryan and Mike Waltz on “Face the Nation,” May 26, 2024.

CBS News


Waltz, a Florida Republican who is also a veteran, said of the tradition that it’s “important for the American people” to see the lawmakers of various backgrounds “honoring our forefathers” together, despite their differences. 

“I saw the acrimony and the in-fighting and I said, you know, let’s get a group of veterans together,” Waltz said, explaining how the tradition got its start. “People who really have skin in the game.”

Ryan and Waltz touted working to increase the number of veterans in Congress, saying they’re hoping to get more people who have served in the military or perfromed national service to represent Americans. 

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And Waltz noted that when it comes to serving the country, “service doesn’t just have to be in the military.”

“One of the things that we’re both adamant and advocates of is getting us back to national service as a country,” Waltz said. “That doesn’t necessarily have to be in uniform, but it could be with the national park, inner-city tutoring, elderly care. But how do we get young people out in an environment where they’re learning leadership, discipline, followership, serving a cause bigger than themselves and with fellow Americans who may not look or come from the same backgrounds as them.”

Waltz suggested that the government incentivize service, proposing that young people could perform a year of service after graduation and receive a benefit. 

“I think we need to rethink service as a country,” he added. 

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Nato countries plan ‘drone wall’ to defend borders with Russia

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Nato countries plan ‘drone wall’ to defend borders with Russia

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Six Nato countries are planning to develop a “drone wall” to help defend their borders with Russia after a series of provocations, ranging from forced migration to attempts to amend the frontiers.

Ministers from Finland, Norway, Poland and the three Baltic states said at the weekend that they had discussed creating a co-ordinated system of drones along their borders with Russia to prevent smuggling and further provocations, and to help with defence.

“This is a completely new thing — a drone wall stretching from Norway to Poland — and the goal is to use drones and other technologies to protect our borders . . . against provocations from unfriendly countries and to prevent smuggling,” Lithuania’s interior minister Agnė Bilotaitė told the Baltic News Service.

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All six countries have faced so-called hybrid attacks — non-military measures that tend to have an element of deniability — from Russia in recent months and years, including undocumented asylum seekers from Africa and the Middle East being sent over their borders.

Mari Rantanen, Finland’s interior minister, told public broadcaster Yle that the drone wall plan would “improve in time” and could help defend the Nordic country’s 1,340km-long border with Russia.

Details of the timing and how the drone wall would work were not provided. Bilotaitė said each country needed to do its “homework” and suggested that EU funds could be used as well.

The frontline Nato states have stepped up warnings about Russia’s intentions after Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and its subsequent moving of its economy to a war footing.

Russia’s defence ministry published a draft proposal last week on its website on unilaterally expanding its maritime borders with Lithuania and Finland, before deleting the plan.

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A day later, Russian border guards removed 25 buoys from Estonian waters that were marking the border, sparking outrage and messages of support for Tallinn from Nato and a number of its member states.

Many Nato countries believe Russia could test Nato’s border within the next five to 10 years, while intelligence services have uncovered a number of assumed sabotage operations on their soil.

Russia’s war against Ukraine has highlighted the importance of drones, with both sides using them in attacks. Several Nato countries have responded by setting up or intensifying their drone warfare units.

The six Nato countries also discussed plans at the meeting for evacuating large parts of their population in the event of a conflict. Finnish officials, for instance, have expressed surprise that Ukraine has kept its civilian population in or close to the frontlines, saying that the defence plans of the Nordic country involve evacuating border populations.

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