Take Action for Fish Used as Decor, Try These 5 Vegan Vitamin D Sources, and More!

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vit d

5 Ways to Increase Your Vitamin D Intake

Did you know that most almond milk is supplemented with vitamin D? Discover some other easy ways to ensure that your body is getting the nutrients it needs.
Find Out How

fish

ACT TODAY: Tell The Pearl Hotel That Fish Aren't Decorations

Please immediately let The Pearl Hotel know that fish are sentient beings and urge it to stop using them as hotel room decorations.
Take Action Now

melting pot

Vegan at The Melting Pot: 4 Courses, So Much Yum

The fondue mecca is offering more vegan options! If there's not a location near you, don't worry, because we have a full guide on how to eat vegan at the top chain restaurants.
See All the Options

vegan leather

See the Ingenious Way Designers Are Making Vegan Leather

You'll never guess the origins of these innovative vegan leather accessories. Wearable apples—what?!
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Professional Agitator Ingrid Newkirk Takes Down Skin Sellers to Save Animals

It's only natural that the world's largest animal rights organization would have the most unshakable die-hard animal liberator at its helm.
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Police Smash Window and Save Puppy From Hot Car Just in Time

This puppy was lucky, but at least 44 animals left in hot cars last year were not. PETA is launching a new initiative to save lives.
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sugar

Is Sugar Vegan?

Have questions about sugar? We've got answers.
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Bureau of Transportation Statistics Upcoming Releases

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BTS 2-Week Outlook

 

Bureau of Transportation Statistics Upcoming Releases

June 4 through June 15

 

The Bureau of Transportation Statistics will release the following data sets in the next two weeks:

 

  • Airline Fuel Cost and Consumption, April 2018
Tuesday, June 5, 2018 - 11:00am ET
BTS Airline Fuel Cost and Consumption database to be updated with April data. Last month, US airlines March fuel cost was $1.99 per gallon, down seven cents from February ($2.06) and up 34 cents from March 2017 ($1.65). Industry summary of airline fuel consumption, total fuel cost and price paid per gallon are available on the database. Individual airline numbers through December are available on the BTS website.

 

  • Airline Industry Full-Time/Part-Time Employment, April 2018
Thursday, June 7, 2018 - 11:00am ET
BTS Airline Employment database to be updated with April data. Last month, U.S. airlines March employment (707,086 total full-time and part-time)) was up 0.1pct from February and up 2.2pct from March 2017. Monthly full-time and part-time employment statistics reported by U.S. airlines that operate at least one aircraft that has more than 60 seats or the capacity to carry a payload of passengers, cargo and fuel weighing more than 18,000 pounds. Includes passenger and cargo airlines.
  • Transportation Services Index (TSI), April 2018
Wednesday, June 13, 2018 - 11:30am ET
The Freight TSI measures the month-to-month changes in for-hire freight shipments by mode of transportation. The Passenger TSI measures the month-to-month changes in travel that involves the services of the for-hire passenger transportation sector. Last month, BTS reported that the Freight TSI rose 1.4 percent in March from February, rising for the second consecutive month to reach an all-time high.

 March TSI

 

  • Airline Traffic Data, March 2018
Thursday, May 10, 2018 - 11:00am ET
U.S. airlines monthly passengers, revenue passenger-miles, available seat-miles and load factor for systemwide, domestic and international. Numbers are seasonally-adjusted and unadjusted. In the previous release for February, U.S. airlines systemwide (domestic and international) scheduled service passenger enplanements rose 1.4 percent from January, rising to 72.8 million to reach a new all-time seasonally-adjusted high.

 

Feb air traffic

 

 

BTS Previously

 

BTS has released the following: 

  • North American Freight Data, March 2018
Tuesday, May 22, 2018
BTS reported that truck was the most used mode for shipping freight between the U.S. and other North American countries (Canada and Mexico) in March 2018
  • Most-used mode: Truck moved $66.5 billion of freight, up 4.1 percent compared to March 2017 
  • Second mode: Rail moved $16.1 billion of freight, up 1.9 percent compared to March 2017  

 

March Transborder

 

  

  • Airline On-Time Data, March 2018
Wednesday, May 23, 2018
BTS reported that In March 2018, the reporting carriers posted an on-time arrival rate of 80.9 percent, up from both the 79.9 percent on-time rate in March 2017 and the 79.3 percent mark in February 2018. 

 MArch ATCR

 

See BTS Release Schedule

 

 

 

BTS Contact: Dave Smallen

202-366-5568

david.smallen@dot.gov


U.S. Department of Transportation | 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE | Washington DC 20590 | 202-385-HELP (4357) GovDelivery logo

Dozens of migrants and refugees drown off coasts of Tunisia and Turkey

The Refugee Brief, 4 June
 
By Kristy Siegfried @klsiegfried   |  4 June, 2018
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
Dozens of migrants and refugees drown off coasts of Tunisia and Turkey. Reuters reports that at least 48 people died when their boat sank off Tunisia’s southern coast on Saturday night. Another 67 were rescued by the coast guard and dozens more are still missing. Security officials said the boat was packed with about 180 migrants from Tunisia and other African countries. A survivor said the captain had abandoned the boat after it started sinking to avoid arrest. In another incident on Sunday morning, nine Syrian refugees, including seven children, drowned when their speedboat capsized near the Turkish town of Demre in the southern province of Antalya. Dogan News Agency reports that among six rescued survivors were a couple who had lost five of their children in the disaster. They told reporters that no one on board knew how to sail and that they had been stuck in the same place for two hours before they sank. The deaths this weekend bring the number of migrants and refugees who have died or gone missing in the Mediterranean so far this year to 651 .
Italy’s new government presses for migration policy reform. In his first weekend as Italy’s interior minister, Matteo Salvini travelled to Pozzallo, Sicily, a town that has become a main port of arrival for migrants and refugees rescued while attempting to cross the Mediterranean. Salvini claimed that Sicily had become “a refugee camp for Europe ”. As leader of the far-right League, Salvini has vowed to send half a million undocumented migrants “home”. He was sworn in on Friday as part of a new populist government formed by the League in coalition with the Five Star Movement. Last week, Salvini said he wants to see cuts in funding to reception centres for asylum-seekers. In Pozzallo, he said that limiting new arrivals and increasing deportations would save lives. Critics argue that the government’s repatriation plans are unworkable and risk fomenting racism and politicizing a humanitarian issue.
WHAT’S ON OUR RADAR
UN envoy seeks deal to avoid assault on Yemeni port. The Guardian reports that “last-ditch efforts” are underway to persuade the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen not to launch an assault on the Houthi-controlled port of Hudaydah before a deal can be agreed to preserve the port’s vital role in the distribution of humanitarian aid. The UN special envoy for Yemen, Martin Griffiths, is reportedly in the capital, Sana’a, to discuss the possibility of international control of the port . Medical sources on Saturday said more than 100 soldiers and civilians had been killed in the assault on Hudaydah in the past week.
Indiscriminate attacks claim lives in Syria’s Idlib. Last month, at least 24 civilians were killed and dozens more injured in six separate attacks by armed opposition groups in Idlib governorate, according to the UN’s deputy regional humanitarian coordinator for Syria, Ramesh Rajasingham. Outlining details of the incidents on Saturday, Rajasingham noted that the civilian population in Idlib included more than one million internally displaced people who have already “suffered indescribably” through more than seven years of conflict. He said that not abiding by international humanitarian law by minimizing harm to civilians could amount to war crimes.
Fading hope in South Sudan camps drives youth into crime. More than 200,000 South Sudanese have taken refuge from their country’s conflict in six “Protection of Civilians” sites across the country. Thompson Reuters Foundation reports that poverty and lack of opportunity in the camps have seen the rise of gangs , mostly made up of young men aged between 15 and 20. Although interventions by peacekeepers and community police have helped reduce crime in the past year, the gangs are still a source of concern. Schools run by foreign aid agencies in the PoC sites suffer from funding shortages.
Sydney school learns how to educate refugee children. Fairfield Public School, a primary school in the west of the city, is at Australia’s front line in educating refugee children. Some 40 per cent of students are from a refugee background, many of them from Syria and Iraq. Speaking to the Sydney Morning Herald, the school’s principal, David Smith, said his first duty, before he thinks about the children’s formal education, is to build their sense of security . Many of the children arrive traumatized and in poor health, with large gaps in their formal education, but eager to learn.
GET INSPIRED
Caption text
Since it launched five years ago, a London-based charity called the Bike Project has refurbished more than 3,000 second-hand bicycles and given them to asylum-seekers and refugees. “For a refugee, having a bike is very important,” Ussamane Silla from Guinea Bissau told The Guardian . “Public transport is costly and London is a big place.” As well as donating bicycles, and training some refugees to become bike mechanics, the project offers cycle training for refugee women, many of whom have never ridden a bike before.
DID YOU KNOW?
Most sea arrivals to Greece this year have been refugees from Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan. Between January and April, families with children made up 37 per cent of arrivals.
 
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Produced by the Communications and Public Information Service. 
Managing Editors: Melissa Fleming, Christopher Reardon and Sybella Wilkes
Contributing Editor: Kate Bond
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Views expressed in reports highlighted in this newsletter
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