Friday, March 6, 2020

ODEP News Brief - March 6, 2020

ODEP News Brief. Driving Change - Creating Opportunity

March 6, 2020

Federal Agency Recruiting and Outreach Webinar

The Employer Assistance and Resource Network on Disability Inclusion (EARN) will present a webinar on "Federal Agency Recruiting and Outreach: The Role of Accessible Online Content" on March 18 from 1:00-2:00 p.m. ET. This webinar will take a closer look at the Section 508 standards that govern the accessibility of federal information and communications technology (ICT), including what these standards address and why they are important for outreach and recruitment of job seekers with disabilities.

Register for the EARN webinar

Future of the Workforce Report

The Council of State Governments (CSG), in collaboration with the State Exchange on Employment & Disability (SEED) and National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL), released "The Future of the Workforce: Approaches to Increasing Access & Inclusion" report at a disability employment policy seminar held at the 2019 CSG National Conference. The report was compiled by the National Future of the Workforce Task Force, which brought together state policymakers, researchers, and subject matter experts to examine strategies to increase access and inclusion for people with disabilities regarding advances in automation and technology, the rise of the gig economy, and the changing nature of apprenticeship.

Read "The Future of the Workforce: Approaches to Increasing Access & Inclusion" report

Learn about SEED

State Disability Employment Policy

The National Conference of State Legislators (NCSL), a partner of the State Exchange on Employment & Disability (SEED), published an interactive webpage summarizing state legislation enacted during 2019 that affects employment opportunities for people with disabilities. NCSL identified 102 bills from 36 states that directly relate to policy options identified in the SEED "Work Matters" report. The webpage provides an overview of the legislative analysis, categorizes the enacted bills based on "Work Matters" policy areas, and features a tool to search by policy topic.

Visit the webpage

Read the "Work Matters" report

American Job Center Disability Webcast Series

The Department of Labor's Employment and Training Administration posted a compilation of its weekly Webcast Coffee Chat Series on the WorkforceGPS website. The 10 webcasts address topics to help American Job Centers support people with disabilities to enter or return to the workforce. Each webcast includes a transcript with links to online tools and resources.

View the webcasts

 

If you are having trouble viewing this newsletter, please go to https://www.dol.gov/odep/newsletter/

ODEP Home Page

Contact Us

 

 

 


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TV Ratings: 'Grey's Anatomy' Hits 5-Week High With Alex Karev Farewell

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March 06, 2020

TV Ratings: 'Grey's Anatomy' Hits 5-Week High With Alex Karev Farewell

"Grey's Anatomy" rose to its highest TV rating in five weeks, and there are no prizes for guessing why.

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Join NOAA Planet Stewards at NSTA Next Month!


NOAA Planet Stewards Banner

Join NOAA Planet Stewards at

The National Science Teaching Association National Conference in Boston, MA - April 2 to 5, 2020

That's less than a month away! 

 

This year NOAA Planet Stewards will have a strong presence at the conference.

See all our events below!

In addition to our sessions, workshops and share-a-thons, we'll be hosting an informal Happy Hour, and all current and alumni NOAA Planet Stewards are invited to attend and be formally recognized at the National Earth Science Teachers Association (NESTA) Friends of Earth Science Reception. Keep reading to find out all the details.

I look forward to seeing you there.

Bruce Moravchik

Coordinator, NOAA Planet Stewards Education Project


Do you have a classroom activity, teaching resource, digital dataset, or APP that you'd like to share with other science teachers? NOAA Planet Stewards is partnering with NESTA to bring you an Ocean, Climate, and Weather Share-A-Thon at NSTA. This event will provide you with the opportunity to reach out to large audiences of K-12 science teachers. During the Share-a-Thon, teachers move around the room from table to table. You'll have about 5 to 10 minutes with teachers. Your name can be included in NESTA's online program and if you need it, NESTA can provide a letter recognizing your presentation. 

The NOAA/NESTA Ocean, Climate, and Weather Share-a-Thon will take place Friday, April 3 12:30 PM - 1:30 PM, 052AB, Boston Convention and Exhibition Center.

Complete this form to present at the Share-a-Thon!

(If you'd like to participate in more than one NESTA Share-a-Thon, you'll need to complete the form again, selecting a different Share-a-Thon)

NESTA Logo

Angela

All NOAA Planet Stewards are invited to attend the Friends of Earth Science Reception April 4, 6:30 to 8:30 PM, at the Harbor Ballroom I & II, Westin Boston Waterfront Hotel). At the reception, the NESTA Executive Director will formally recognize and offer certificates of appreciation for excellence in Earth Science teaching to all attending NOAA Planet Stewards Educators. Come see old friends and meet new ones! 

To be recognized at the reception

and receive a certificate,

RSVP here.


NOAA Ocean Service Education / NOAA Planet Stewards 

Schedule of Events at NSTA 2020

 

Thursday, April 2

8:00 - 9:00am

NMEA Whale of a Share-a-Thon

052AB, Boston Convention & Exhibition Center 

Join NOS Education and NOAA Planet Stewards at the The National Marine Educators Association (NMEA) Whale of a Share-a-Thon where you can meet seasoned educators involved in ocean and freshwater initiatives from local and national organizations, as well as explore and take home engaging hands-on activities and educational resources for your classroom.

Presenter(s) Bruce Moravchik, Education Coordinator, NOAA National Ocean Service

----------------------------------------------------------------------

5:00 - 6:00pm

NOAA Planet Stewards—Engaging Data, Digital Storytelling, and Making a Difference Through Content, Collaboration, and Action

Room: 052AB, Boston Convention & Exhibition Center 

Find out about professional development and educational resources from NOAA scientists, collaborative online tools, and funding streams to put your knowledge into action in your classroom. NOAA Planet Stewards engage students in three-dimensional learning challenges to increase their science literacy and have them respond to real-world environmental threats. Find out how you can become a NOAA Planet Steward today! Door Prizes will be distributed!

Presenter(s) Bruce Moravchik, Education Coordinator, NOAA National Ocean Service. Kurt Mann, Executive Producer, NOAA Ocean Today

----------------------------------------------------------------------

7:00 - 9:00pm: 

NOAA Planet Stewards Happy Hour

Lucky's Lounge 355 Congress St, Boston, MA 02210-1828 

Just a 7 minute walk from the Boston Convention Center join current and alumni Planet Stewards educators, project partners and supporters for an informal gathering. Relax, have a drink and a bite to eat, meet your peers and other professionals in the field of Earth science and education. All Are Welcome! 

Host: Bruce Moravchik, Education Coordinator, NOAA National Ocean Service

----------------------------------------------------------------------

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Friday, April 3

11:00am - 12:00pm: 

NOAA's Ocean Today Videos and Data in the Classroom

Room: 052AB, Boston Convention & Exhibition Center

Hook students with digital storytelling and data-based three-dimensional activities on phenomena impacting them right now. Jump-start discussions with dramatic videos! Engage students with TRULY interactive data-based three-dimensional activities! Return to school with 300+ free videos and NGSS activities from NOAA! Door Prizes will be distributed!

Presenter(s) Bruce Moravchik, Education Coordinator, NOAA National Ocean Service. Kurt Mann, Executive Producer, NOAA Ocean Today

----------------------------------------------------------------------

12:30 - 1:30 pm: 

NOAA/NESTA Ocean, Weather, Climate Share-a-thon

Room: 052AB, Boston Convention & Exhibition Center

Join NOAA Planet Stewards, National Earth Science Education Association educators, and many others who will be sharing classroom activities, teaching resources, digital datasets, APPs, information about national level programs, and much more, to help support your teaching of  Ocean, Climate, and Weather in your classroom.

Do you have a classroom activity, teaching resource, digital dataset, or APP that you'd like to share with other science teachers? This event will provide you with the opportunity to reach out to large audiences of K-12 science teachers. During the Share-a-Thon, teachers move around the room from table to table. You'll have about 5 to 10 minutes with teachers. Your name can be included in NESTA's online program and if you need it, NESTA can provide a letter recognizing your presentation. 

Complete this form to present at the Share-a-Thon!

(If you'd like to participate in more than one NESTA Share-a-Thon, 

you'll need to complete the form again, selecting a different Share-a-Thon)

----------------------------------------------------------------------

2:00 - 3:00pm

NOAA/NESTA Lecture: Sea Level Rise Here and Now

Room: 253C, Boston Convention & Exhibition Center

NOAA has been measuring sea levels for over a century, ensuring safe transportation for mariners and coastal preparedness from ocean storms. Observations are showing that due to decade's worth of sea level rise, high tide flooding is becoming more common in many U.S. coastal communities, adversely affecting infrastructure and public patience. Find out more about the science of sea level rise, the impacts coastal communities like Boston may face in coming years, and the products and services NOAA has developed to help communities plan and prepare for next season, next year and for decades to come.

Presenter(s) William Sweet, Oceanographer, NOAA. 

A brief bio of Dr. Sweet:

Dr. Sweet is a NOAA Oceanographer studying sea level rise and changes in coastal flood risk. He recently assessed future coastal flood risk for US Department of Defense installations worldwide and was a chapter author for the 4th National Climate Assessment. Before NOAA, he probed the seas with life and death situations, from wind pulses and fish kills to upwelling and marine diversity. He received his B.A. in Physics from UNC Chapel Hill and a Master's and Ph.D. in Physical Oceanography from NC State University. He currently lives in Annapolis, MD and sails the Chesapeake with his wife and kids looking for signs of sea level rise.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

3:00 - 4:30 pm

National Middle Level Science Teachers Association (NMLSTA) Meet Me in the Middle Share-A-Thon 

205 A-C, Boston Convention & Exhibition Center 

Discover exciting resources and information about national level programs that will inspire you and your middle level students in exciting science learning, and network with middle level leaders from NSTA and NMLSTA (the National Middle Level Science Teaching Association).

Presenter(s) Bruce Moravchik, Education Coordinator, NOAA National Ocean Service. Paul Taylor, Outreach Coordinator, NOAA National Ocean Service

----------------------------------------------------------------------

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Saturday, April 4

8:00 - 9:30 am

NOAA in Your Classroom I: Sea Level Rise, Remote Sensing, and Real-World Data

Room: 105, Boston Convention & Exhibition Center

Explore how NOAA monitors sea level rise using in situ and remote sensing tools. Dive into Data in the Classroom is an online NGSS-focused resource for investigating today's most pressing environmental issues where students develop problem-solving skills through online and classroom-ready activities with a scaled approach to learning and easy-to-use data exploration tools using simulations, models, and real-time NOAA data. Door Prizes will be distributed!

Presenter(s) Bruce Moravchik, Education Coordinator, NOAA National Ocean Service. Rafael de Ameller, Lead, NOAA Environmental Visualization Lab

----------------------------------------------------------------------

10:00 - 11:30 am 

NOAA in Your Classroom II: Planet Stewards—Students Affecting Real Change

Room: 105, Boston Convention & Exhibition Center

Join the NOAA Planet Stewards team and get ideas for using data and phenomena in your classroom. Find out how to get funds to engage your students in real stewardship activities to protect or adapt your community to the environmental impacts it faces. Data and resources to use in the classroom will be demonstrated and shared. Door Prizes will be distributed!

Presenter(s) Bruce Moravchik, Education Coordinator, NOAA National Ocean Service. Jennifer Simms, Education Coordinator, NOAA Marine Debris Program. Frank Niepold, Education Coordinator, NOAA Climate Program Office. NOAA Planet Stewards Teachers: Angela Gospodarek, Ben Graves, Robin Tiller, Jennifer Pietros 

----------------------------------------------------------------------

6:30 - 8:30 pm

National Earth Science Teachers Association (NESTA) Friends of Earth Science Reception 

Room: Harbor Ballroom I & II, Westin Boston Waterfront Hotel

Come see old friends and meet new ones at NESTA Friends of Earth Science Reception. At the event, the NESTA Executive Director will formally recognize and offer certificates of appreciation for excellence in Earth Science teaching to all attending NOAA Planet Stewards Educators.

To be recognized and receive a certificate, RSVP to the reception here.


Planet Stewards jpg

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Secretary Michael R. Pompeo With Joe Kernan, Becky Quick, and Andrew Ross Sorkin of CNBC Squawk Box

You are subscribed to Counterterrorism for U.S. Department of State. This information has recently been updated, and is now available.

03/06/2020 11:05 AM EST

Michael R. Pompeo, Secretary of State

QUESTION:  Well, with the coronavirus hitting countries around the world, the U.S. State Department has issued travel advisories for American citizens, including for China, Italy, South Korea.  The advisory for China is a Level 4.  Americans should not travel there.  This comes as the number of infections in the United States has topped 200, with 12 deaths.  Joining us now with more on the U.S. response to the virus, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.  Mr. Secretary, it's great to have you in, especially in studio here with us.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Great to be with you.

QUESTION:  The testing kits.  I know we – that seems to be paramount on what we're trying to do, and I know the Vice President is heading things up.  And we were looking at some lofty numbers, goals that we were told we would hit that we are now not going to hit.  What's the holdup, and can we really address this without many, many more testing kits?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  So I'm not involved in the testing kits directly.  I'm trying to work on the things outside the United States to make sure we get it right there.

QUESTION:  You hear —

SECRETARY POMPEO:  But I've seen – I've certainly seen the work that's going on.  They're trying to get the private sector ramped up to get the rate right so that we can do all the testing that's needed.  We'll work hard at that.  We have taken this incredibly seriously; we'll continue to do that.  The testing kits are one element of America's effort to reduce risk.

QUESTION:  South Korea is testing hundreds of thousands of people, and we – was it the original – oh, you're not an – I don't know if you're the person to ask, but it was the original reagent from the CDC that they didn't realize wasn't – didn't work properly?  Or —

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Yeah, I'm not the right person to ask.

QUESTION:  Okay.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  I'm not – I've not been involved in that level of detail, Joe.

QUESTION:  All right.  But you would concede that's something that we have to —

SECRETARY POMPEO:  We've got to get it – we've got to get it right.

QUESTION:  We've got to —

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Yes, sir.

QUESTION:  Here's something you might be able to address, and that is:  I'm hearing from Eunice that the restaurants – Eunice Yoon, our reporter in Beijing —

QUESTION:  Eunice Yoon is based in Beijing.

QUESTION:  The restaurants are – there's people in restaurants again.  People are going back to work.  It almost looks like China has had some success in dealing with this and capping it.  We would hope that that could happen in other countries around the world including the United States, but we're told that we don't have the same type of capability to quarantine people because we're not as authoritarian as the Chinese Government, as the Communist Party.  Could we have a similar success here with our civil liberties that we take for granted?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Yeah, I'm confident we can handle it here.  I'm confident that we'll handle it better than any nation in the world.  I'm happy you complimented the Chinese Communist Party today, but remember this is the —

QUESTION:  Oh, I'm not complimenting.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  — this is the Wuhan coronavirus —

QUESTION:  Right, right. 

SECRETARY POMPEO:  — that's caused this, and the information that we got at the front end of this thing wasn't perfect and has led us now to a place where much of the challenge we face today has put us behind the curve.  And that's not the right – it's not the way infectious disease doctors tell me it should work.  It's not the way America works with the transparency and openness and the sharing of the information that needs to take place.  It has proven incredibly frustrating to work with the Chinese Communist Party to get our hands around the data set which will ultimately be the solution to both getting the vaccine and attacking this risk.

QUESTION:  The Chinese Government is now pushing back, and again, Eunice Yoon has been reporting some of what they've put in the state-run media, where they say that it's not clear that this even came from China at this point, and that they're mad at the United States for not thanking them for the efforts they've taken to try and slow it down to this point.  What do you say to that?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  I'm happy about the efforts that they have taken, but no less authority than the Chinese Communist Party said it came from Wuhan.  So don't take Mike Pompeo's word for it.  We have pretty high confidence that we know where this began, and we have high confidence too that there was information that could have been made available more quickly and data that could have been provided and shared among health professionals across the world.  It's most unfortunate.

QUESTION:  Let me ask you about travel, though.  There was a producer from Vice News who took to Twitter yesterday who had flown in from Italy, gone through customs at JFK, and said that she was not asked at all about her medical situation or whether she had been exposed to the virus or anything like that.  What type of confidence should we have when you hear reports like that?  She had been coming in not necessarily from an area, I think, that was the epicenter of this, but nonetheless, I think people are looking to try and understand sort of what – not travel bans, per se, but how customs is looking at this as people are coming in and out of the country.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  So those are reasonable questions.  I would urge everyone not to rely on anecdote stories that one hears about a particular instance, but look at the actions that we're taking.

So you're right, Italy is something that we've handled in a nuanced way.  There are pockets of Italy where there are real challenges, other places less so, and we've tried to get the State Department's role there, the travel advisories for American citizens traveling there, to get the level right.  And then the Vice President's team are trying to get right the piece which is folks coming back not just from Milan or from Naples, but from all parts of the world to make sure that we have the testing right, that we have the restrictions right.

We also don't want to overreact.  We don't want to get this wrong in ways that are disconnected from the science and the reality.  So we work every day to make sure all across the United States Government – indeed, our CDC and healthcare professionals working all across the world – to share information both to reduce risk here —

QUESTION:  Right.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  — and then begin the important work on the vaccine as well.

QUESTION:  At this – you just have opinions like every – go ahead, Andrew.  You want to follow up on that?

QUESTION:  Well, no, no, the only follow-up I was going to ask about that is do you want people self-quarantining when they're coming – I mean, we had heard a story yesterday – again, all these are anecdotes.  There was somebody who actually had the virus on a plane – there were something like 223 people on a commercial plane – and apparently, everybody on that plane has now been asked to quarantine themselves.  The question is how long do those quarantines go on.  Should schools get shut if people on that plane have children?  I mean, it becomes very complicated very, very quickly.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  It does.  It gets quick – complicated very quickly.  Here's what I'd urge all your viewers:  Go to CDC.gov.  Go to the sites where the best data available to the smartest, hardest-working people in the world on infectious disease live and work.  That's the American CDC.  They will make very clear what the U.S. Government's recommendations are, and that's the place to go.  There's a lot of websites out there saying a lot of things with a lot of anecdotes.  The data often turns out to just be —

QUESTION:  But at the same time, so much of what the CDC is doing has been criticized.  There was that nurse yesterday who came out publicly who was very upset.

QUESTION:  From the Seattle area, yeah.

QUESTION:  I mean, again, all anecdotal and you're hearing these one-off stories, but —

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Yeah.

QUESTION:  To the extent that we're trying to inspire confidence or you want to have confidence in all of this —

SECRETARY POMPEO:  It's a complicated world.  People can go on social media and say a lot of things.  I've watched the U.S. Government's response to this since literally the day we first learned, the day the State Department was asked to go rescue Americans from the center, the heartbeat of where this began in Wuhan and Hubei province, and the excellence of our team, our medical professionals, my team, my diplomats that rescued hundreds of Americans.  I've watched the U.S. Government respond.  This response has been serious, robust, and will continue to be.

QUESTION:  I have a personal question for you.  I have a personal question for you.  When you walked in, I said, "Are you shaking hands?"  And you shake hands with lots of people from international places.  And you said you still were shaking hands.  Tell me what you know about the virus, because you've been spending a lot of time with people at the CDC.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  I do what the CDC tells me to do.  I wash my hands.  I take all of the precautions.  I'm behaving the way that the CDC is asking every American and everybody around the world to behave.

QUESTION:  So no fist-bump for you?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  We – I'm happy to fist-bump too.  I saw my son last night.  That's what we did.  (Laughter.)

QUESTION:  At the town hall the President had last night, he stayed after and then he addressed how much he doesn't like shaking hands his whole life.

QUESTION:  He never has.  I mean, that's – yeah, right.

QUESTION:  And he shook – he said that I will shake as many hands as anybody wants to shake my hand here tonight, I'm going to shake their hand.  We shook hands, actually.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  We did shake hands.

QUESTION:  We didn't hug, did we?  No, because I'm mad at you for Wichita State, actually, for that recommendation.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  I watched the game last night, too.  I'm working my way through it.  A lot of anxiety.

QUESTION:  Yeah, yeah.  Can we just – since we – Secretary of State, there's a few other things that you're dealing with, all right?  Actually, I want to you ask you:  Is Secretary Azar, is he still a point man?  He was pulled from some of the appearances –

SECRETARY POMPEO:  No, so —

QUESTION:  — today over the weekend.  There's no —

SECRETARY POMPEO:  He is still – he is still —

QUESTION:  He is not thought of less favorably?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  He is the person that the State Department primarily interacts with.  We sent to work with the Vice President a woman named Deborah Birx, who works for me at the State Department, who has been working on global health issues for most of her life, to help the team.  But the entire team is still working on this, and Secretary Azar is a big part of it.

QUESTION:  What do you hear from the heads of state or from your counterparts in other countries right now?  What's —

SECRETARY POMPEO:  So as I have traveled these past weeks, what they want is American help, American help in three dimensions.  First, information.  What do we know?  How are we responding?  How should they think about it in their country?  Second, and this is especially true for countries that have long borders with either Iran or China, they're very worried about the transmission across the border, across their boundaries, and they want our assistance in how they should think about that.  And then third, we've tried to help these countries with supplies as well to make sure that they had supply chains that they could access.  They often have health care infrastructures that aren't remotely like ours, and so they're looking for our assistance to think about how to build that resistance out inside their country.

QUESTION:  We have seen some – just one quick.

QUESTION:  No, go ahead.

QUESTION:  We have seen some hoarding on different places where every nation starts to care about their own citizens too, like with India this week saying that they were going to hold back 10 percent of the raw materials for pharmaceuticals that they've been sending to us to this point.  So how do you deal with that where there are mask shortages everywhere?  I mean, every country wants to help, but they also want to protect their own citizens, too.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Oh yes, every leader has a first responsibility to take care of the citizens of their own country.  But when you have a complex situation like we have today, it's often the case that assisting people in other countries where there are real serious outbreaks has the reflective benefit of helping people in your own country, too.

QUESTION:  Right.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  So we watch this.  We watch these supply chains very closely.  We're working to build out capacity here in the United States so we can be sure to do the things we need to do for the American —

QUESTION:  To the extent that you're worried about systemic risk in any of these countries, in terms of what could happen to their economies if things continue apace, what are you worried most about?  Because investors right now are trying to game out, dare I say, sort of how this plays itself out and really where the risks lie.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Yeah.  Well, look, you first look to the places where there's big economies that are deeply connected to America's economy.  That first place is China, with a billion plus people and enormous economic connectivity to the United States.

QUESTION:  But do you worry about their banking systems?  Do you worry about the Italian banking system, for example?

SECRETARY POMPEO:  I worry about banking systems in lots of places around the world lots of days.  Secretary Mnuchin has the con on that, but I watch how we think about risk to the financial systems.  But honestly, we'll get a labor report this morning.  We've got the lowest unemployment rate.  This is an economy that was in a good place.  We now – for good or for bad, we've got Brent Crude trading at 47 dollars a barrel.  Americans will benefit from lower gasoline prices.

So there are changes that will take place in the economy, but the mission set is to work to take down risk and be transparent so that decision makers, whether they're economic decision makers or medical decision makers, have data sets upon which they can act, and not basing their decisions on an anecdote.

QUESTION:  I think last night the President actually got quite a bit of applause after answering the Taliban question, which – it's a tough one for the average American to get his head around, that we're in some type of talking about peace but we're – the confrontation seems to – military has stepped up over the last week and a half after we got closer, apparently, to some type of deal.  What really is happening?  The President said, look, eventually, after 20 years, we've just got to bring our guys home.  So – and I understand the President actually talked to the —

SECRETARY POMPEO:  He did.  He spoke —

QUESTION:  — head of the Taliban.  First time ever.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  He spoke to Mullah Barader earlier this week.  Look, President gave me two missions sets.  The first mission set was to reduce the risk and cost to the United States of America.  We have 13,000 young men and women who are there.  You know them.  It's fifth – fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh tour in Afghanistan.  It's time to reduce that risk.  We spend $25, $30 billion a year.  That's an awful lot of money.

The second mission set was to make sure that America is never attacked from Afghanistan today, and so this is what we've been working on.  And so a – an important component of that is getting all the parties in Afghanistan – and that includes some really bad actors, including Taliban actors – all the parties to come sit down and begin to have a political resolution to this conflict that, in their country, has been going on for 40 years.  We're determined to do that.

Your point, Joe, about the violence levels, they're still lower than they have been in the last five or six years.  The Taliban have made clear to us their expectations that their folks are going to stop fighting.  They don't – it's not a unitary entity, but we see the path forward towards a peace and reconciliation opportunity.  But in the end, the Afghan people are going to have to make their decision.

QUESTION:  Before you go, real quick, it's a cabinet question.  There have been reports that Alex Azar has been effectively sidelined by the President.

QUESTION:  You heard me ask that, right?

QUESTION:  And I didn't – I didn't hear him ask that.

QUESTION:  You didn't hear me ask that —

QUESTION:  I completely apologize.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  And I denied that there's any accuracy to that, yes.

QUESTION:  He denied —

QUESTION:  I completely missed it.

QUESTION:  He said that that's who State actually interacts with most.

QUESTION:  Every once in a while, I —

QUESTION:  And every once in a while, you ask a really good question, and I completely missed it.

QUESTION:  You miss them all.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  This is why I love being on your show.

(Laughter.)

QUESTION:  Yeah, all right.  Anyway, Mr. Secretary, we appreciate it.  Thank you.

SECRETARY POMPEO:  Joe, thank you all.

QUESTION:  Thank you very much, Secretary.

QUESTION:  Thank you.

 


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