Spectrum

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Spectrum

Spectrum features conversations with an eclectic group of fascinating people, some are famous and some are not, but they all have captivating stories.

  1. 14 FÉVR.

    Rural Practice Incentive Program brings lawyers to underserved populations.

    Ohio, like most states, has vast regions that have too few lawyers based upon population needs. In Ohio, 82 of the 88 counties do not have adequate representation. Only the top six urban counties meet the standard of one lawyer per 700 people, says Chief Justice Sharon Kennedy of the Supreme Court of Ohio That leaves 6.5 million people or 56 percent of Ohio’s population without access to attorneys to meet their basic legal needs such as issues related to health care, housing, food assistance, criminal defense and cases involving children, including custody, neglect, and abuse. For example, Vinton County, Ohio only has two lawyers for a county population of 12,000 people, according to Chief Justice Kennedy. To help solve this problem, Ohio is launching a pilot program to bring young lawyers to these underserved areas. There is a partnership between the Ohio Department of Higher Education, the Ohio Access to Justice Foundation and the Supreme Court of Ohio to ease the crisis. Third year law students and lawyers who have been licensed less than eight years who want to practice in one of the underserved counties can work for a prosecutor’s office, a public defender, or take court appointed cases totaling 520 hours per year. If they apply to the program and qualify, the attorneys can earn between $30,000 and $50,000 toward repaying student loans. There is a three-year commitment with $10,000 being paid each year with the possibility of extending the term for two additional years. If this program is successful, then the partners will work to expand the program and possibly try other incentives to fill the lawyer gap. Other states also will be monitoring Ohio’s efforts. If interested, you may apply by March 15, 2024. For more information go to: https://highered.ohio.gov/initiatives/workforce-development/rural-practice-incentive-program#HowtoApply

    37 min
  2. 2 FÉVR.

    MIT Technology Review’s 2024 10 breakthrough technologies.

    At the end of each year, the editors and staff of the MIT Technology Review select the top 10 new technologies that will breakthrough in the coming year. The list is prepared and published to give the average person a glimpse of what is on the horizon and what might be incorporated into our daily lives, according to Amy Nordrum, executive editor. Besides being executive editor, Nordrum also is a frequent guest on WNYC and NPR’s Science Friday with Ira Flatow. The Review staff spends months discussing and analyzing what might be hot for the next 12 months. In addition, the Review allows readers to vote on an 11th addition to the list. That selection will be revealed in April. To further educate the public, Nordrum added in December five things that were not put on the 2024 Breakthrough list but items that should be watched. In this podcast episode, Nordrum breaks down each of the selections and explains its importance in understandable terms. Some items she describes are: · A-I for everything · Apple Vision Pro · 1st Gene Editing Treatment · Weight Loss Drugs · Twitter Killers On the list of five items left out, she discusses: · New drugs for Alzheimer’s disease · Sustainable aviation fuel · Male to male reproduction. Listen to the podcast to hear her description of each breakthrough, and visit their website to see more: https://www.technologyreview.com/2024/01/08/1085094/10-breakthrough-technologies-2024/

    59 min
  3. 22 JANV.

    News media are obsessed with covering former Pres. Donald Trump.

    There are mutual obsessions between the news media who cover former President Donald Trump and Donald Trump and the news media. Both rely on the other and both benefit from the other. The news media makes money off covering Trump and Trump gets unending publicity from the news media, regardless of his activities or misstatements of facts. This unholy alliance is unhealthy for the true dissemination of news and for our democracy, according to Dr. Michael Bugeja, Distinguished Professor of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Iowa State University. While networks like Fox, MSNBC and CNN are singularly focused on Trump’s every move, other news events no longer get covered, says Bugeja. Instead of news on national and international levels, we get a constant diet of analysis from all political viewpoints, he adds. Analysis and speculations on what might happen next have replaced hard news coverage of truly breaking events. We also are bereft of local news coverage in many parts of the country, leading to a true news void. As a result, people have migrated to their own media silos for opinions that match our own and the general public becomes more ignorant about true news and news events. Bugeja also notes that the news media are ill equipped to cover a possible autocracy if Trump gets elected in November 2024. In a recent article for Poynter, a think-tank for journalists, Bugeja said: “Tenets about impartiality and balance do not apply when covering autocracy. Journalists cannot hold a tyrant accountable by framing his viewpoint as one side of a partisan story.” Many experts, quoted by Bugeja, fear retribution towards journalist if Trump is re-elected and overt attacks being made on the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. He strongly suggests that Americans need to prepare themselves to fight an autocracy by reading and understanding the powers within our Constitution and the Bill of Rights. For more articles by Dr. Bugeja: https://www.poynter.org/author/michael-bugeja/

    48 min
  4. 5 JANV.

    Local news outlets disappearing at an alarming rate…What’s next?

    While 60 percent of Americans have more trust in local news than national news, local media are disappearing at an alarming rate. We are losing an average of two newspapers per week and by 2025, we will have lost nearly one-third of our local newspapers nationwide, according to a 2022 study done by Northwestern University. Currently about 20 percent of the nation lives in a news desert with little to no access to local news. Will anything replace the dying newspaper population? Local and regional non-profit news organizations are springing up across the country as an alternative. There are various business models for these non-profits depending on the region they serve. Leadership for these new publications is coming from various directions. Some leaders have had long careers in journalism, and some are early in their journalism careers. Regardless of the experience level, many journalists are seeing the revival of hyperlocal news media to be critical to the survival of our democracy. Andy Alexander is a long-time award-winning journalist. He was Washington Bureau Chief for Cox Newspapers and is a former ombudsman for the Washington Post. Today, however, he currently acts as board chair for the Foothills Forum, a non-profit news agency in Rappahannock County, Virginia. Dani Kington is a young journalist who decided to leave mainstream media to be one of the founders of a local news non-profit in Athens, Ohio…a rural part of Appalachia. They both give their perspectives on this new form of journalism and talk about what might be the next steps to saving this valuable form of public media. For more information on the Foothills Forum, visit : https://foothills-forum.org Read the Athens Independent here : https://athensindependent.com

    1 h 7 min
  5. 12/12/2023

    Political update on both parties from Time Washington Correspondent

    Philip Elliott, Washington correspondent for Time and author of Time’s newsletter, D.C. Brief, breaks down the status of national politics as we sit just less than a year away from the 2024 Presidential Election. Although former President Donald Trump is leading in the early polls for the GOP nomination, Elliott reminds us that the first Republican primary in Iowa is always unpredictable. He also says that GOP candidate Nikki Haley is doing well with traditional Republicans and has amassed noteworthy support and financial backing for the Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina primaries. Elliott also says that the 2024 is volatile with the two main candidates, Trump and President Joe Biden, both being unpopular with large segments of voters. If one adds potential Independent candidates like Liz Cheney and Robert Kennedy Jr. to the mix, the election picture becomes even more murky, he says. Elliott also talks about the political quagmire of issues such as funding for Israel, the unexpected support of Palestinians by many Americans, and the need for continued funding of the Ukraine war. He points to the precarious status of House Speaker Mike Johnson and the disarray among House Republicans. Finally, Elliott expresses his concerns about the ratcheting up of violent rhetoric and the impact that might have on potential violence in America. Subscribe to the DC Brief : https://Time.com/DCBrief

    1 h 7 min
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32 notes

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Spectrum features conversations with an eclectic group of fascinating people, some are famous and some are not, but they all have captivating stories.

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