Saturday, July 9, 2022

Sports: What to read and watch

Read about Brittney Griner's uncertain path ahead, watch Wimbledon.

What to Read This Weekend

Brittney Griner, a seven-time All-Star center for the W.N.B.A.'s Phoenix Mercury, pleaded guilty to drug charges on Thursday.Alexander Zemlianichenko/Associated Press

One hundred forty-one days.

That is how long Brittney Griner has been behind bars in Russia. That is how long she has been stuck in the middle of a high-stakes stare-down between the United States and Russia at exactly the wrong time, Kurt Streeter wrote, as President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia continues his invasion of Ukraine, echoing the return of the Cold War.

One hundred forty-one days. That is how long Griner has been in limbo.

What terrible uncertainty and fear she must feel, facing a decade in a Russian prison if she is convicted. Griner captured that emotion in her recent letter to President Biden. "I'm terrified I might be here forever," she wrote. She added, "Please don't forget about me."

Read the full column here.

What to Watch This Weekend

Ons Jabeur winning a point against Tatjana Maria in their women's singles semifinal match Thursday.Kirsty Wigglesworth/Associated Press

All times are Eastern.

Tennis

We've reached the Wimbledon singles finals. On Saturday, Ons Jabeur, the first Arab or African woman to reach a Grand Slam singles final in the Open era, will face Elena Rybakina in the women's final (9 a.m., ESPN). On Sunday, Novak Djokovic will get a chance to win a seventh Wimbledon singles title as he takes on Nick Kyrgios of Australia (9 a.m., ESPN).

Basketball

The W.N.B.A. All-Star Game takes place Sunday in Chicago, pitting a team led by captain A'ja Wilson of the Las Vegas Aces against one led by captain Breanna Stewart of the Seattle Storm (1 p.m., ABC). You can also catch the 3-point contest and the skills challenge at 3 p.m. Saturday. (ESPN).

Baseball

Catch two games between the Yankees and the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park, at 7:15 p.m. Saturday on Fox and at 7:08 p.m. Sunday on ESPN.

Soccer

The three-and-a-half-week Women's Euro tournament has already begun. On Saturday, watch what could be one of the better games of the group stage: Netherlands vs. Sweden (3 p.m., ESPN2). And on Sunday, catch France vs. Italy (3 p.m., ESPN+).

"It is true of all major tournaments — whether contested by women or men — that part of the charm lies in an unpredictability rooted in the comparative rarity of meaningful international soccer," Rory Smith wrote last week in his newsletter. Grab the popcorn.

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Заявление по случаю праздника Ид аль-Адха

Department of State United States of America

Перевод предоставлен Государственным департаментом США



Государственный департамент США
Офис официального представителя
Заявление для прессы Государственного секретаря Энтони Блинкена
8 июля 2022 года

От имени Соединенных Штатов я желаю мусульманам всего мира благословенного праздника Ид аль-Адха.

Ид аль-Адха – это мощное напоминание о нашей общей человечности и нашей обязанности заботиться друг о друге. Ритуалы Ид и Хаджа отмечают посвящение Авраама и его сына Богу и отражают приверженность ислама равенству. В это праздничное время люди из всех слоев общества откладывают в сторону свои личные обязательства, чтобы оказать помощь нуждающимся.

Мы желаем Хаджа Мабрура паломникам со всего мира, совершающим своё священное путешествие в Мекку и Медину. Пусть этот особый праздник остается чествованием единения и преданности служению. Ид Мубарак.


Для просмотра оригинала:  https://www.state.gov/on-the-occasion-of-eid-al-adha-2/

Этот перевод предоставляется для удобства пользователей, и только оригинальный английский текст следует считать официальным.


This email was sent to stevenmagallanes520.nims@blogger.com using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: Department of State Office of International Media Engagement · 2201 C Street, NW · Washington, DC · 20520 GovDelivery logo

Canada Letter: The struggle to build transit projects on time and within budget

Partnerships with the private sector were supposed to protect cities from cost overruns and delays.

Canada's Slow and Troubled Path to Rapid Transit

Canada is on a mass transit building spree. But to say that things are not going according to plan would be an understatement.

After more than a decade of construction, a major intersection in Toronto remains a chasm from a light rail project.Ian Austen/The New York Times

On Thursday, a justice of the Court of Appeal for Ontario leading a provincial inquiry wrapped up three weeks of testimony on Ottawa's light rail system. The project has been described as a debacle after being plagued with delays, repeated shutdowns, equipment failures and a destructive derailment that closed the entire system for seven weeks.

In Toronto, a 19-kilometer stretch of Eglinton Avenue is still a mess, 11 years on, with a giant excavation where it crosses Yonge Street. Bus trips along the major artery remain jarring as construction continues on a rail system that was supposed to open two years ago. That may not happen until next year.

Last month, an elevated rail network in Montreal known as the Réseau Express Métropolitain delayed some of its openings until 2024. And earlier plans for another network costing 10 billion Canadian dollars were set back when the Caisse de Dépôt et Placement du Québec, the province's pension and investment fund, left the project after many residents said that its downtown portion would disfigure the city and after the transit authority said that it would siphon too much business from its existing routes.

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Aside from delays, cost overruns and all-around headaches, what these projects have in common is that they were structured as public-private partnerships, an approach that first gained momentum in Canada during the 1990s. Rather than follow the traditional route of managing, owning and maintaining the project, governments strike a deal with a business — most often a special company formed by several corporations — to handle the work under contract.

But the struggles in those transit projects have now taken the shine off such partnerships.

"There is definitely a rethinking on public-private partnerships in Canada, and it's been precipitated by the transit sector," said Matti Siemiatycki, the director of the Infrastructure Institute at the School of Cities at the University of Toronto. "Transit has just added a whole other level of complexity, and the record is decidedly mixed."

An inquiry is examining the myriad troubles plaguing Ottawa's light rail system.Ian Austen/The New York Times

At first, the partnerships were mostly used to build and maintain large public buildings like hospitals. For the most part, Professor Siemiatycki said, they generally worked out well.

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In theory, collaborating with a group of companies can bring expertise and skills that governments lack to get the project done efficiently and on time.

And while it costs cities more to use partnerships, those extra costs on the front end mean overruns can be unloaded onto the private-sector partners and penalties can be set up that discourage or prevent delays.

"It's like an insurance policy that if things go wrong down the road, then they are the private sector's responsibility," Professor Siemiatycki said.

That idea, he said, has been badly shaken. In 2020, Crosslinx, the private consortium behind the Toronto rail project, sued the local transit body for 134 million Canadian dollars in extra costs it claimed were related to the pandemic. The two sides reached an out-of-court settlement, with the transit authority agreeing to reimburse Crosslinx an undisclosed amount.

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"Governments used to say they were paying more upfront, but they were well protected in the case of a large cost overrun or delays or poor delivery," Professor Siemiatycki said. "What's happened in practice is that many of those risks and the cost of those risks have boomeranged back to governments. It's becoming clear that government is the risk holder of last resort."

And the contractual nature of the partnerships has often left the public and even politicians in the dark about exactly what's going on.

Not all of the public-private transit partnerships have turned sour. Professor Siemiatycki said that Vancouver's Canada Line train system was generally a success, as was a light rail system in the twin Ontario cities of Kitchener and Waterloo.

Several cities have struggled with private sector transit partnershipsIan Austen/The New York Times

It's also unclear whether using the old-fashioned approach would have kept the projects on track with their timelines and budgets. For years, for instance, the Toronto Transit Commission managed a major extension of one of its subway lines. It opened in 2017 — two years later than expected. Its budget of 1.5 billion Canadian dollars had more than doubled.

It's not just governments that are questioning the value of the partnerships. SNC-Lavalin, an engineering firm in Montreal that is a major partner in the Toronto and Ottawa projects, has sworn off public-private partnerships for the foreseeable future.

Transit projects, however, are clearly a major priority for Canada. Among other things, the federal government views them as important tools for meeting the country's carbon emissions reduction goals.

With more projects on the way, Professor Siemiatycki said it would be critical for the country to figure out a better way to build them.

"It continues to be a really big issue in Canada," he said. "There's a lot of hope and aspirations being connected with major public transit investment. But it really, really isn't common to get the delivery right."

Trans Canada

Geof Blance riding the Tour Divide near Steamboat Springs, Colo.Daniel Brenner for The New York Times

This week's Trans Canada section was compiled by Vjosa Isai, a news assistant for The New York Times in Canada.

  • This 2,700-mile bikepacking race from the Canadian Rockies to the U.S.-Mexico border was extreme to begin with. But now, with increasingly hot temperatures and other challenging weather conditions, it's even tougher.
  • Connor Bedard, the most exciting future N.H.L. player, wasn't eligible to be selected in this year's draft — but he will be ready when his time comes next year.
  • Gooey, flaky and delicious, butter tarts are a classic Canadian treat. Sara Bonisteel, a writer for The Times's Cooking section, shares her butter tart recipe. Here's a clip of Sara baking them.
  • A major network disruption at the telecommunications company Rogers caused internet and phone outages across Canada on Friday, prompting some local police services to warn that 911 callers may be unable to connect to emergency dispatchers.
  • "I thought it was a baby buffalo in the beginning," said Travis Mudry, who was operating an excavator in the Klondike gold fields of the Yukon in June. Upon closer inspection, he saw that the dark and shiny animal, preserved in the frozen ground, had a trunk. It was a woolly mammoth.
  • Xiao Jianhua, a Chinese Canadian billionaire who mysteriously disappeared from a luxury hotel in Hong Kong more than five years ago, is now on trial in China.
  • Raised in a conservative Sudanese family, the Toronto-based culture writer Elamin Abdelmahmoud had to re-examine his identity when he and his family immigrated to Canada. "In my corner of Kingston, the only place I saw Blackness was in the world of hip-hop," Mr. Abdelmahmoud writes in one of a series of essays in his new memoir, "Son of Elsewhere."

A native of Windsor, Ontario, Ian Austen was educated in Toronto, lives in Ottawa and has reported about Canada for The New York Times for the past 16 years. Follow him on Twitter at @ianrausten.

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We're eager to have your thoughts about this newsletter and events in Canada in general. Please send them to nytcanada@nytimes.com.

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