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Alberta Launches Canada’s First Contact Tracing App as Economy Slowly Reopens

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GOP Senators Resume Calls for Biden-Burisma Probe to Proceed

The Biden-Burisma investigation is again coming back into focus after the COVID-19 outbreak reset priorities for lawmakers and pushed the probe onto the back burner. Two Republican senators on Thursday sent a letter to the State Department (pdf) asking for records and interviews with persons of interest regarding Burisma Holdings, the Ukrainian energy company that once employed former Vice President Joe Biden’s son Hunter Biden on its board. Co-signed by Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) and Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), the letter requests interviews and documents that pertain to the probe. “The Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs and the Committee on Finance (the Committees) continue to examine potential conflicts of interest relating to the Obama administration’s policy decisions with respect to Ukraine and Burisma Holdings,” wrote Johnson and Grassley,…

Alberta Launches Canada’s First Contact Tracing App as Economy Slowly Reopens

WINNIPEG—Alberta launched the country’s first phone app on Friday to trace contacts of people infected with the COVID-19, as the country slowly restarts its economy.

Increased testing and contact tracing are key parts of plans to reopen economies that have largely closed to slow the pandemic’s spread, with no proven vaccine or treatment available.

Currently, contact tracing is done manually, by asking infected patients to recall with whom they have interacted.

Alberta’s voluntary app, called ABTraceTogether, uses Bluetooth wireless technology to identify phones, which also have the app installed, that have come into 2-metre contact with an infected person for at least 15 minutes within a 24-hour period.

Once a person with the app becomes infected, Alberta Health Services will ask the person to upload encrypted data that will allow tracing workers to reach others who have been in close contact.

No geo-location data is collected, and data about encounters are stored encrypted on phones.

“The faster Alberta Health Services contact tracers can inform exposed people who were close contacts, the quicker we will be able to prevent potential outbreaks,” Alberta’s chief medical officer of health Dr. Deena Hinshaw said.

Alberta became the latest province this week to announce a phased plan to reopen services and businesses.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Wednesday said it would be important to ensure privacy and data security are balanced with the need for more information on the virus’ spread. He said there are multiple proposals in development that might apply to Canada.

Privacy advocates in Britain have urged the government to prevent a soon-to-be-launched app from turning into a form of state surveillance.

Alberta has the third-highest case count in Canada – 10% of the national total – and one of Canada’s most aggressive testing programs. Many of its cases are due to outbreaks in meat plants and nursing homes.

Ontario, the most populous province, is looking at options for apps, provincial Health Minister Christine Elliot told reporters.

Canada’s death toll rose less than 5% on Friday to 3,223 deaths, while cases climbed to nearly 54,000, as daily numbers continue to flatten.

The province of Quebec, the country’s virus epicenter, said it has started ramping up testing ahead of a plan to begin reopening businesses and schools this month. Testing will prioritize hospital patients with symptoms, health-care workers, nursing home staff and residents, Quebec public health director Horacio Arruda said.

“The more we test, the more we find,” he told reporters.

By Rod Nickel

This article is from the Internet:Alberta Launches Canada’s First Contact Tracing App as Economy Slowly Reopens

US Trade Body Votes to Lock in High Duties on Chinese Tile Imports

WASHINGTON鈥擳he U.S. International Trade Commission on April 30 determined that imports of Chinese ceramic tile are subsidized and sold at less than fair value, materially harming U.S. producers. The vote by the U.S. trade body locks in U.S. Commerce Department anti-dumping duties of up to 356.02 percent, and anti-subsidy duties of up to 358.81 percent on Chinese imports of a wide range of ceramic tile products. The duties were finalized on March 31. Imports of ceramic tile from China were valued at an estimated $481.3 million in 2018, the Commerce Department said last month. The Commerce Department said it would impose a final anti-dumping rate of 356.02 percent on Belite Ceramics (Anyang) Co. Ltd and Foshan Sanfi Import & Export Co. Ltd., and a China-wide entity to which they belong;…