6,131 research outputs found

    Stronger Partnerships for Safer Food: An Agenda for Strengthening State and Local Roles in the Nation's Food Safety System

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    Examines federal, state, and local agencies' responsibilities, strengths, and weaknesses in ensuring food safety. Recommends systemwide reforms to enhance state and local roles and improve surveillance, outbreak response, and regulation and inspection

    Draining the Swamp Requires Robust Whistleblower Protections and Incentives

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    The Trump Administration has promised to \u27drain the swamp,\u27 combat corporate corruption, and root out waste, fraud, and abuse in the federal government. To achieve those laudable goals, the new Administration will need to appoint effective leaders to the agencies or subagencies charged with enforcing whistleblower-protection laws, and Congress will need to preserve and, indeed, enhance whistleblower protections in the public and private sectors. This Article provides a detailed agenda for the new Administration to ensure effective enforcement of federal whistleblower-protection laws and an agenda for Congress to plug significant gaps in whistleblower-protection laws

    Wireless Communication Technologies for Safe Cooperative Cyber Physical Systems

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    Cooperative Cyber-Physical Systems (Co-CPSs) can be enabled using wireless communication technologies, which in principle should address reliability and safety challenges. Safety for Co-CPS enabled by wireless communication technologies is a crucial aspect and requires new dedicated design approaches. In this paper, we provide an overview of five Co-CPS use cases, as introduced in our SafeCOP EU project, and analyze their safety design requirements. Next, we provide a comprehensive analysis of the main existing wireless communication technologies giving details about the protocols developed within particular standardization bodies. We also investigate to what extent they address the non-functional requirements in terms of safety, security and real time, in the different application domains of each use case. Finally, we discuss general recommendations about the use of different wireless communication technologies showing their potentials in the selected real-world use cases. The discussion is provided under consideration in the 5G standardization process within 3GPP, whose current efforts are inline to current gaps in wireless communications protocols for Co-CPSs including many future use casesinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Semi-Annual Report to Congress for the Period of April 1, 2006 to September 30, 2006

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    [Excerpt] I am pleased to submit this Semiannual Report to the Congress, which highlights the significant activities and accomplishments of the Office of Inspector General (OIG) for the six-month period ending September 30, 2006. During this reporting period, our investigative work led to 295 indictments, 260 convictions, and over 76millioninmonetaryaccomplishments.Inaddition,weissued66auditreportsandquestioned76 million in monetary accomplishments. In addition, we issued 66 audit reports and questioned 90.2 million in costs. During this reporting period, the OIG continued to provide audit and investigative oversight of the Department of Labor’s (DOL’s) response to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. We issued six management letters related to this effort. One of the letters identified individuals who had received disaster unemployment assistance (DUA) from one state, while also receiving DUA or state unemployment compensation from another state. In addition, an OIG investigation led to the indictment of a disaster-reconstruction company owner who had allegedly neglected to pay approximately 1.4millioninemployeetaxesowedtotheFederalandstategovernments.OIGauditsincludedsignificantrecommendationstoaddressvulnerabilitiesidentifiedinDOLprogramsandoperations.Forexample,weissuedaperformanceauditthatdeterminedthatDOL’scoalminehazardousconditioncomplaintprocessneededimprovement.WealsoconductedseveralauditsassessingtheadequacyoftheDepartment’sinformationsecurityprogramandidentifiedchallengesintheareasofaccesscontrolsandprotectionoverpersonallyidentifiableinformation.OurinvestigationscontinuetocombatlaborracketeeringintheworkplaceandfraudinvolvingDOLprograms.Oneparticularinvestigationresultedinseveralformerhigh−rankingofficialsofLaborers’InternationalUnionofNorthAmericaLocal91intheStateofNewYorkeitherpleadingguiltyorbeingsentencedforconspiringtocommitviolationsoftheHobbsAct.AnothersignificantcaseinvolvedRalphsGroceryCompany.Ralphspledguiltytoseveralfelonycountsrelatedtochargesthatitillegallyrehiredlocked−outworkersduringthesupermarketlabordisputeinSouthernCaliforniamorethantwoyearsago.InJune2006,thecompanyagreedtopay1.4 million in employee taxes owed to the Federal and state governments. OIG audits included significant recommendations to address vulnerabilities identified in DOL programs and operations. For example, we issued a performance audit that determined that DOL’s coal mine hazardous condition complaint process needed improvement. We also conducted several audits assessing the adequacy of the Department’s information security program and identified challenges in the areas of access controls and protection over personally identifiable information. Our investigations continue to combat labor racketeering in the workplace and fraud involving DOL programs. One particular investigation resulted in several former high-ranking officials of Laborers’ International Union of North America Local 91 in the State of New York either pleading guilty or being sentenced for conspiring to commit violations of the Hobbs Act. Another significant case involved Ralphs Grocery Company. Ralphs pled guilty to several felony counts related to charges that it illegally rehired locked-out workers during the supermarket labor dispute in Southern California more than two years ago. In June 2006, the company agreed to pay 70 million in fines and restitution. Finally, recognizing the need to collaboratively combat document and benefit fraud, the OIG joined with the Departments of Homeland Security, Justice, State, and other agencies to form task forces in 10 major cities. Led by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the task forces have been highly effective in targeting criminal organizations and ineligible beneficiaries engaged in this type of fraud. In one case, an investigation found that the owner of a labor leasing company used counterfeit labor certification forms to apply for at least 250 green cards. The owner of the company pled guilty to charges and faces 37 to 46 months’ incarceration. The OIG remains committed to promoting the economy, integrity, effectiveness, and efficiency of DOL programs and detecting waste, fraud, and abuse against those programs. I would like to express my sincere appreciation to a professional and dedicated OIG staff for their significant achievements during this reporting period

    Keeping America's Food Safe: A Blueprint for Fixing the Food Safety System at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

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    Summarizes Health and Human Services' food safety programs, highlights concerns about current laws and policies, and outlines reform proposals. Suggests creating a Food Safety Administration to coordinate policy, inspection, and enforcement activities

    Tennessee Highway Safety Office Highway Safety Plan FY 2020

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    https://digitalcommons.memphis.edu/govpubs-tn-safety-homeland-security-highway-safety-office/1005/thumbnail.jp

    The Challenge of Time-Predictability in Modern Many-Core Architectures

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    The recent technological advancements and market trends are causing an interesting phenomenon towards the convergence of High-Performance Computing (HPC) and Embedded Computing (EC) domains. Many recent HPC applications require huge amounts of information to be processed within a bounded amount of time while EC systems are increasingly concerned with providing higher performance in real-time. The convergence of these two domains towards systems requiring both high performance and a predictable time-behavior challenges the capabilities of current hardware architectures. Fortunately, the advent of next-generation many-core embedded platforms has the chance of intercepting this converging need for predictability and high-performance, allowing HPC and EC applications to be executed on efficient and powerful heterogeneous architectures integrating general-purpose processors with many-core computing fabrics. However, addressing this mixed set of requirements is not without its own challenges and it is now of paramount importance to develop new techniques to exploit the massively parallel computation capabilities of many-core platforms in a predictable way
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