Email accounts used by the Treasury Department’s senior leadership were compromised by suspected Russian government hackers who carried out a massive cyber-espionage campaign against several U.S. federal agencies, according to Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon. The ranking Democrat on the Senate Finance Committee said the “full depth” of the Treasury hack “isn’t known.”

Senate Finance Committee staff were briefed about a major breach of the Treasury as part of the SolarWinds hack, Wyden said in a statement Monday night.

“Hackers broke into systems in the Departmental Offices division of Treasury, home to the department’s highest-ranking officials. Treasury still does not know all of the actions taken by hackers, or precisely what information was stolen,” Wyden said.

The Internal Revenue Service said there was no evidence the agency was compromised or taxpayer data affected, Wyden added.

Wyden said Microsoft alerted the department to the compromise, which began in July.

Cybersecurity experts believe a sophisticated group of hackers was able to enter U.S. government networks earlier this year via a loophole in products developed by SolarWinds, which provides software for government agencies and large companies.

The hackers were then able to access sensitive information and communications of SolarWinds clients, including the departments of Treasury, Commerce and Energy and Los Alamos National Laboratory, which oversees the country’s nuclear weapons.

President Trump has the cyber-espionage campaign, suggesting China could be the culprit, but top U.S. officials, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Attorney General William Barr, have pointed fingers at Russia.

“This was a very significant effort, and I think it’s the case that now we can say pretty clearly that it was the Russians that engaged in this activity,” Pompeo said Friday in an interview on the conservative radio program “The Mark Levin Show.”

Barr agreed with Pompeo, saying during a press conference on Monday that it “certainly appears to be the Russians.”

The Kremlin has denied responsibility.

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Once the COVID-19 vaccines are made available to the general public outside of frontline workers and long-term care facilities, the dosages are going to be tracked using a website called Florida SHOTS. It records all vaccination records, and has sections for both health care providers and pharmacists.

Doctors have so far found it effective in tracking vaccines; it’s proven especially vital for the COVID-19 vaccine which requires two doses. The portal breaks down specifics of who administered it, when and even what batch it came from.

“We used to be looking at several pieces of paper from seven different doctors with bad handwriting, and ‘Was it a two, or a four?’ Or ‘What day was that, does it count? We’re not sure,'” said Dr. Nicole Bruno with Island Coast Pediatrics. “It really was hard to keep track of. This is why so many things have gone electronic, because you can clearly see dates, times of administration, see timelines.”

For the two doses of the COVID-19 vaccine, the site shows when you got the last one and when you are due for the second booster. For Pfizer’s vaccine, you need to get the second dose after 21 days, Moderna’s after 28 days.

“It’ll help us keep accurate accounts of who got it, who received it, who hasn’t received it, what batch they received,” Bruno said. “So we are starting fresh here with different vaccines and types and lot numbers. You can literally link it down to what vial did it come from, if something were to come up with a side effect from a batch.”

Bruno says most Florida daycares and schools already have access to this program as well.

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German pharmaceutical company BioNTech is confident that its coronavirus vaccine works against the new UK variant, but further studies are need to be completely sure, its chief executive said Tuesday.

The variant, detected mainly in London and the southeast of England in recent weeks, has sparked concern worldwide because of signs that it may spread more easily. While there is no indication it causes more serious illness, numerous countries in Europe and beyond have restricted travel from the UK as a result.

“We don’t know at the moment if our vaccine is also able to provide protection against this new variant,” Ugur Sahin told a news conference the day after the vaccine was approved for use in the European Union. “But scientifically, it is highly likely that the immune response by this vaccine also can deal with the new virus variants.”

Sahin said that the proteins on the UK variant are 99% the same as on the prevailing strains, and therefore BioNTech has “scientific confidence” that its vaccine will be effective.

“But we will know it only if the experiment is done and we will need about two weeks from now to get the data,” he said. “The likelihood that our vaccine works … is relatively high.”

Should the vaccine need to be adjusted for the new variant the company could do so in about 6 weeks, said Ugur, though regulators might have to approve the changes before the shots can be used.

BioNTech’s vaccine, developed together with U.S. pharmaceutical company Pfizer, is authorized for use in more than 45 countries including Britain, the United States and the EU.

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On Monday night, the Lee County Homeless Coalitioin honored those homeless people who have died with a vigil. A memorial day, of sorts, for the lives lost.

27 candles were lit and placed into 27 white paper bags with all 27 names of the homeless people who have died in Lee County.

The Lee County Homeless Coalition has held this vigil every year for the past 24 years. But, some of the homeless say that something needs to be done to make sure no more people die.

Alejandro Serebryakov says this can’t keep happening. “For people to be just dying left and right, there is no excuse,” Serebryakov said.

Therese Everly is on the board of the Lee County Homeless Coalition. “They were somebody’s mother, somebody’s father, somebody’s brother or sister. They were a part of us. They were a part of our community here,” said Everly.

On any other day of the year, the homeless population in Lee County says they aren’t treated as a part of the community. They say they’re ostracized, ignored and are not receiving the help they need to get off of the streets and back on their feet.

“There is a problem right here,” said Jasmine Miller, another homeless person in Lee County.

A problem that has s simple solution. “We can solve this if we just had shelters in place. What are they doing with this money?” said Crystal Czyscon, a homeless advocate.

Mayor Anderson says solving the City of Fort Myers’ and Lee County’s homeless problem isn’t that simple.  “What a lot of people fail to recognize is that they are categories of homelessness and one solution doesn’t fit all. It takes different strategy for each of those categories. So simply building a shelter is not an answer,” said Mayor Kevin Anderson.

Everyone who spoke tonight says the ultimate goal is to make sure this annual candlelit vigil doesn’t need to be annual anymore.  They also want to make it clear that homelessness isn’t just a Lee County issue or a government issue in general, it’s a societal issue.

The hope is that the whole community can come together to help fix it.

The homeless population says there were actually about 125 people who have died in Lee County. The County says that number may be inaccurate. That 125 figure is taken from the number of creamations. Only 12 were confirmed to be experiencing homelessness. The others were either people they could not find addresses for or those who could not afford funeral services, etc.

Also, many of the homeless people say that CARES Act funding has been misused by Lee County and isn’t actually going to help them. Lee County Government’s Communications Director, Betsy Clayton, sent us a breakdown of the county’s spending.

Lee County has accepted CARES Act dollars to help homeless people and to help with homelessness prevention. Some of the activities funded using these dollars include:

  • Homeless Outreach Team: $450,000
  • Housing Counseling: Eviction and Foreclosure Prevention: $200,000
  • Rapid Rehousing Program: $2.4 million
  • Homeless Outreach Center: $525,000

factsheet lee county CARES act spending

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An Illinois woman who ordered flags for her grandmother’s garden got a surprise when the package arrived — someone’s apparent COVID-19 test specimen.

Andrea Ellis was wrapping Christmas gifts at her aunt’s house in East Moline, in northwestern Illinois, when she opened a padded envelope containing the flags she ordered weeks ago from the department store chain Kohl’s, according to The Quad City Times.

“I pulled out the flags and I told my aunt, ‘Look how cute these are,’” she said. “I pulled out the packing slip and then noticed something deeper inside the envelope and pulled that out. It was a biohazard bag containing someone’s COVID-19 test specimen.”

Ellis, who didn’t immediately reply to a Monday phone message from The Associated Press, called the police, who referred the issue to the county health department, according to East Moline police Chief Jeff Ramsey.

Janet Hill, the chief operating officer at the Rock Island County Health Department, told the AP that she picked up the biohazard bag over the weekend and that it appeared to contain a used nasal swab and identifying information of a person from Virginia. She said she was figuring out what to do next, including contacting health officials in Virginia and trying to determine if the specimen was still viable.

“I’ve never heard of anything like this,” Hill said. “I want this person to know that the test has not been done yet.”

Wisconsin-based Kohl’s issued a statement Monday apologizing for “this very unusual and inexplicable experience” and saying the package was sent from an “outside direct ship vendor” and not directly from the retail chain.

The company said it launched its own investigation, but it declined to give further details, including the name of the vendor.

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The huge pandemic relief and spending bill includes billions of dollars to promote clean energy such as wind and solar power while sharply reducing over time the use of potent coolants in air conditioners and refrigerators that are considered a major driver of global warming.

The energy and climate provisions, supported by lawmakers from both parties, were hailed as the most significant climate change law in at least a decade.

“Republicans and Democrats are working together to protect the environment through innovation,” said Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., chairman of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee.

“This historic agreement includes three separate pieces of legislation that will significantly reduce greenhouse gases,″ Barrasso said, citing measures that promote technologies to “capture” and store carbon dioxide produced by power and manufacturing plants; reduce diesel emissions in buses and other vehicles; and authorize a 15-year reduction of hydrofluorocarbons, or HFCs, that are used in everything from cars to air conditioners. HFCs are considered a major driver of global warming and are being targeted worldwide.

“All three of these measures will protect our air while keeping costs down for the American people,″ Barrasso said.

The sprawling legislation also extends tax credits for solar and wind power that are a key part of President-elect Joe Biden’s ambitious plan to generate 100 percent “clean electricity” by 2035.

Sen. Tom Carper of Delaware, the top Democrat on the environment panel, said the bill would cut pollution from school buses, air conditioners, refrigerators and more, while creating thousands of American jobs and helping “save our planet from the climate crisis.″

“Make no mistake,″ he said, the new legislation “will soon be some of the most significant climate solutions to pass out of Congress to date.″

The bill won praise across the political spectrum, as environmental groups and major business organizations hailed an agreement years in the making.

“While much more remains to be done″ to address climate change, the bipartisan agreement “ramps up clean-energy research and development programs, bolsters energy efficiency, reauthorizes a critical EPA program to reduce diesel pollution, advances a new DOE program to transition to electric school buses … and rebukes (President Donald) Trump’s last attempts to slash environmental programs across the board,” said Matthew Davis, legislative director of the League of Conservation Voters.

Marty Durbin, a senior vice president at the Chamber of Commerce, called the package — the first major energy bill in more than a decade — “truly historic” and among the most significant action Congress has ever taken to address climate change.

“This package demonstrates the progress that is possible when businesses, environmental groups, labor and policymakers work together to find solutions on difficult issues,″ Durbin said. The bill will not only address climate change, but also “promote American technological leadership and foster continued economic growth,″ Durbin said.

The dramatic if gradual reduction of HFCs in particular “will bring significant climate relief relatively quickly,″ said Matt Casale, director of environment campaigns for the U.S. Public Interest Research Group. He called the bill “a step forward” in a range of areas that will serve as a building block for the incoming Biden administration.

Much of the sweeping energy package — long promoted as a “down payment” on fighting climate change — was agreed to earlier this year, but the package fell apart in March over a dispute among Senate Republicans on the HFC provision.

Carper and Sen. John Kennedy, R-La., pushed for a measure they said would give U.S. companies the certainty needed to produce “next generation” coolants as an alternative to HFCs. Both men represent states that are home to companies that produce the alternative refrigerants.

The Kennedy-Carper amendment was supported by dozens of senators, including 17 Republican co-sponsors. But the amendment was opposed by Senate GOP leadership, including Barrasso and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky.

Barrasso said he worried the measure could add a layer of new federal rules onto a patchwork of current or future state rules regarding HFCs. He pushed for language ensuring that states would not impose stricter requirements than the federal rule. In the end, lawmakers agreed to prevent state and local governments from regulating HFCs for at least five years.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski, the Alaska Republican who chairs the Senate Energy Committee, said the energy package “will foster innovation across the board on a range of technologies that are critical to our energy and national security, our long-term economic competitiveness and the protection of our environment.″

In a separate development, the bill also includes nearly $10 billion to reauthorize the Water Resources Development Act to pay for flood control, environmental restoration, coastal protection, harbor improvements and other projects.

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Across Southwest Florida, we are starting to see the impacts of red tide on our coasts. But since the conditions are worsening, it’s also impacting the air we breathe.

Lea Edwards came to Southwest Florida to visit with family and said, “Right away, I think you can notice the smell.”

She has heard of red tide before but she says she doesn’t much experience with it. “I don’t think I’ve experienced it as much as I have today.”

Dead fish are lining the shore of Lighthouse Beach Park on Sanibel, which is currently under a red tide health alert.

“One of the big human health concerns with red tide would be the fact that when the cells get close to shore and they get in the breaking waves and things like that, they can burst and release the toxin into the sea spray,” said Mike Parsons, director of the Vester Field Station at Florida Gulf Coast University.

Parsons wants to measure red tide toxins in the air that give us irritation and make us cough. “How far do these toxins travel in the air then? And number two, since we’re also looking at that with the blue-green algae, could there be any interactions between microcystins from blue-green algae and brevetoxins from red tide?”

Those are the same methods as when he samples blue-green algae toxins in the air using canisters.

“We’ll put out the units, leave them on for a certain period of time, and then collect them,” Parsons said.

Edwards just hopes it gets better for her and her family so they can enjoy their visit. “I hope that it gets better and I hope that, yeah, for other people too, that they go to beaches that don’t have this.”

Parsons is considering placing air quality samplers at Vester Field Station, near Bonita Beach and in Cape Coral to see how red tide and blue-green algae toxins interact.


NAPLES

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Monday, CenturyLink Sports Complex was packed with people waiting in line for COVID-19 tests before their family gatherings this week. But are people really feeling safe to gather and travel after a negative test result?

Some say yes others say that those results are just a snapshot in time. All in all, many students, parents and everyone just want to see their families after months apart.

Many are used to long lines for shopping but now, they’re for a different purpose. James and Isobel Charlton are headed to Illinois. Luckily for them, they’re been tested before so they know what to expect. “This is my third time. And, this is my fourth time,” the Charlton’s said.

Emma Carr and Tate Emo are really looking forward to seeing their family but felt they couldn’t do so without a COVID-19 test. “I would feel so guilty, I feel so bad.”

Rapid tests seem to be at the top of everyone’s lists this week. Alaina Omonode says she needs that negative test result because she’s going to visit her grandma. “She probably wouldn’t let me hug her, to be honest. I wouldn’t want to either,” Omonode said.

Emma and Tate said they were doing what they thought was right. They wore their masks,  kept a social distance. But then, someone they knew tested positive.

“Really scary, just really worried, for them and for us.. It’s sort of frustrating as well. It’s a little depressing too,” said Carr and Emo. So for them,  a negative test would be a gift.

“Relieved. Just a massive amount of relief if we’re negative,” they said.

A negative COVID-19 test isn’t the perfect gift. You can test negative in the morning and then positive in the afternoon. “if we’re positive later, then we’re going to be positive, but for right now we’re OK to travel to go see our family,” said the Charltons.

According to the CDC, though, a test helps. “It’ll make her feel safer. It’ll make me feel safer,” said Omonode.

So Alaina and others lined up. “It’s the least I can do. Stay in line for an hour,” Omonode said.

They hope this gift will bring less loneliness and more family for the holidays. Less worry and more peace of mind. “This is what I look forward to. I go to college out of state so I don’t get to see them too often this is a really great time for me,” said Omonode.

Just to be with family for the holidays. “Just being together. Yep, being together,” said the Charltons.

RSW will be busier than it has been but nowhere close to what we typically see during the week of Christmas. Only 140,000 Floridians are expected to travel by air during the holidays. That is a 59% drop compared to this time last year.

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A former Florida Department of Health employee sued the state on Monday over a search warrant executed on her house after investigators said they identified a message sent from a computer at the address to health department employees.

Rebekah Jones, who was fired in May for insubordination after repeatedly violating department policy about communicating with the media, helped create the state’s coronavirus dashboard. She contends that she was fired for not falsifying data.

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement served the search warrant earlier this month. Jones posted a 31-second video of officers entering her home, and the department later released more than 20 minutes of bodycam video that shows she refused to respond to phone calls and knocks on her door.

The message that led to the search warrant implored employees still at the Health Department “to speak up before another 17,000 people are dead. You know this is wrong. You don’t have to be a part of this. Be a hero.”

Jones has had several run-ins with law enforcement over personal issues, but has gained international attention by disputing Florida’s COVID-19 statistics. She was paid almost $48,000 a year as a Department of Health employee, but since May has raised nearly $260,000 on a GoFundMe account after criticizing Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis.

“Plaintiff’s firing captured a great deal of media attention nationally and in Florida, much of it negative toward Governor Ron DeSantis,” the lawsuit says. “Governor DeSantis openly denounced Plaintiff in the most vitriolic and vituperative manner in the furor following her firing.”

It says the search of her home was a “sham.”

The commissioner of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement, Rick Swearingen, said he was “proud of the professional” shown by his agents as they executed a legal search warrant at the home.

“Our criminal investigation continues, and while I have not seen this lawsuit, I believe the facts will come out in court,” the commissioner added in an email sent to reporters.

No charges have been filed in the investigation.

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A Florida mom is struggling to make ends meet at Christmastime thanks to Florida’s unemployment system.

Charity Morris of Lawtey, Florida, says she can’t get her kids any gifts this year after missing unemployment benefits and months of struggling to pay the bills.

She says she has tried everything she can to get it fixed, and now, it’s affecting her children.

“Just trying to keep my lights on and my kids fed. About the best I can do.”

Morris says she has started to sell things on eBay just to get by.

“You have to basically ask people for help, and I’m not one of those to do that. Never received unemployment in my life. This is the first time, you know. It’s hard.”

Out of work since March, she received unemployment benefits for a little while – until they suddenly stopped in August.

“They said that it’s under review due to the backdating process. And they see that I’ve done everything I’m supposed to do. I was like, what can we do to fix it?”

Despite her efforts, her account still says “suspended.”

“The times that you can get through to somebody, they tell you something different every time. Like 48 hours. They just try to get you off the phone.”

Missing that $125 a week, her two youngest kids, 5-year-old Emily and 14-year-old Kyle, have also made sacrifices.

“My kids haven’t gotten birthday presents. They haven’t gotten any Christmas.”

She says her credit is ruined, she has lost her only form of transportation and they’ve shut off her electricity twice.

“It’s by the grace of God and good people in my life that I’m even going.”

Holding onto the kindness of others when the holiday spirit is hard to find, Morris’ wish this year is for relief.

“Fix it, that’s all I can say.”

Morris says she used to work for herself, cleaning houses and doing maintenance, and finding a job in the pandemic hasn’t been easy.

If you’re struggling because of unemployment issues, email us at tips@winknews.com.


For ongoing updates and information on unemployment, follow WINK News Investigative Reporter Sara Girard on Twitter and Facebook.

She also updates the WINK News FAQ: Unemployment Resources page as information is received.

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