Contract

Clinical Trials Information System (CTIS) sponsor end user training programme - February 2024, European Medicines Agency, Amsterdam, the Netherlands, from 12 February 2024, 09:00 (CET) to 15 February 2024, 13:30 (CET)

Retrieved on: 
星期五, 一月 19, 2024

A hands-on approach is taken to explaining and demonstrating the functionalities of the system, such as user management, how to submit an initial application as well as modifications, both substantial and non-substantial.

Key Points: 
  • A hands-on approach is taken to explaining and demonstrating the functionalities of the system, such as user management, how to submit an initial application as well as modifications, both substantial and non-substantial.
  • Also, how to manage the life cycle of a Clinical Trial, how to apply Deferral rules and respond to a Request for Information (RFI) will be addressed.
  • A blended learning approach is being used, offering components on-demand, self-paced and live virtual.
  • This training programme is open to sponsor users of the new CTIS: commercial and non-commercial sponsors as well as Contract Research Organisations (CROs).

FTC Action Leads to Ban for Ganadores Real Estate and Income Scam, its Owner, and Managers

Retrieved on: 
星期五, 一月 19, 2024

“Ganadores scammed hard-working people with false promises of financial freedom, leaving many consumers with nothing but crushing credit card debt,” said Samuel Levine, the Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection.

Key Points: 
  • “Ganadores scammed hard-working people with false promises of financial freedom, leaving many consumers with nothing but crushing credit card debt,” said Samuel Levine, the Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection.
  • When consumers realized that Ganadores’ promises were false and sought refunds, the defendants often refused, telling consumers they had only three days to seek a refund.
  • The settlements include two proposed court orders: one order against the companies and Richard Alvarez and Sara Alvarez; and the other order against Bryce Chamberlain.

Wheat Pool 2.0: The time might be ripe for a revival of Prairie co-ops

Retrieved on: 
星期三, 一月 17, 2024

The Saskatchewan Wheat Pool, the once-mighty agricultural co-operative that became Viterra, is remembered by its iconic, but decaying, grain elevators that still dot much of the province’s rural landscape.

Key Points: 
  • The Saskatchewan Wheat Pool, the once-mighty agricultural co-operative that became Viterra, is remembered by its iconic, but decaying, grain elevators that still dot much of the province’s rural landscape.
  • Others come only after a raw, hard struggle, a grim rancher straining to pull the calf from a desperate cow.
  • Others come only after a raw, hard struggle, a grim rancher straining to pull the calf from a desperate cow.
  • Bunge, headquartered in Missouri, wants more of it; the wheat pool founders, based all over the province, wanted some of it.

Increasingly consolidated industry

  • The top five companies already control 90 per cent of the global grain trade; six of them sell 70 per cent of all agrochemicals and four of those also sell 60 per cent of all the seed.
  • Farmers owing money on contracts they were unable to fulfill because of events out of their control.

The view from Australia

  • To get a glimpse into what was lost when the Wheat Pool became Viterra, we can look to Australia.
  • Like Canada, farmers in Australia no longer have a national wheat marketing board.
  • Unlike in Canada, however, Australian farmers held on to their co-operative grain handling company, Co-operative Bulk Handling (CBH).


As a result, CBH says average post-farmgate costs for its members are 15 per cent lower than for Australian farmers who rely on multinational corporations — including companies like Bunge and Viterra — for storage, movement, marketing and export. Through CBH, Australian farmers don’t just have a powerful corporate entity looking out for their financial interests, but a company that can help them navigate government lobbying and relationships with agricultural input providers and their growing arsenal of data being used to power artificial intelligence applications.

Co-operative green shoots

  • While there are places in rural Prairies Canada that are prospering — especially those proximate to urban centres — the long-term trends remain.
  • But while perhaps dormant, the co-operative impulse is not gone and may indeed be ripe for a reawakening.
  • He is a fourth-generation farmer, small-business owner and director on the board of the Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan.


Marc-Andre Pigeon receives funding from the co-operative and credit union sectors as well as funding from government funding bodies for his research into co-operatives and credit unions. Natalie Kallio receives funding from the co-operative and credit union sectors as well as from government funding bodies for research into co-operatives.

Post Office Horizon scandal: four reasons why the government's model for outsourcing is broken

Retrieved on: 
星期二, 一月 16, 2024

For over a decade, the Post Office and its supplier, Fujitsu, insisted that the Horizon system used in its branches was completely “robust”.

Key Points: 
  • For over a decade, the Post Office and its supplier, Fujitsu, insisted that the Horizon system used in its branches was completely “robust”.
  • Instead, it blamed the shortfalls on sub-postmasters, made them pay the losses, and prosecuted over 700 of them.
  • The multimillion-pound contract between the Post Office and Fujitsu is at the heart of the scandal.

1. The systems are too complex to understand

  • It had to process all kinds of transactions, from selling travellers cheques to managing rent payments, across tens of thousands of disparate branches, using a complicated web of communications systems.
  • The problem is, by outsourcing such a complex service, the Post Office ended up without the expertise to understand how it worked and what Fujitsu was (or wasn’t) doing.

2. Contracts generate perverse incentives

  • But then how do they get a supplier to do everything they need and not just the things in the contract?
  • This kind of “service level agreement” is still standard in many government contracts.

3. The buyer is locked in

  • There’s an idea in economics that if a supplier needs to make these “specialised investments”, it’s very difficult to get rid of that supplier.
  • They have a huge advantage over their competitors, because anyone else would need to make these investments all over again.
  • Read more:
    Post Office scandal: why thousands of victims are yet to see justice

    This is what happened with the Horizon contract.

4. Suppliers are prioritised over workers and the public

  • Horizon was responsible for processing all branch transactions and keeping track of all money coming in and going out.
  • Government bodies are dependent on protecting their relationships with these suppliers and are invested in their financial stability.
  • But as long as UK government bodies outsource complex, essential services, it’s unlikely that the Horizon fiasco will be the last public scandal with a government contract at its heart.


Alice Moore is a member of the University and College Union.

Latest news - Next CULT meeting: 24 January 2024 - Committee on Culture and Education

Retrieved on: 
星期日, 一月 14, 2024

Access to page content (press "Enter")

Key Points: 
  • Access to page content (press "Enter")
    Direct access to language menu (press "Enter")
    Direct access to search menu (press "Enter")
    EN - English
    BG - български
    ES - español
    CS - čeština
    DA - dansk
    DE - Deutsch
    ET - eesti keel
    EL - Ελληνικά
    EN - English
    FR - français
    GA - Gaeilge
    HR - hrvatski
    IT - italiano
    LV - latviešu valoda
    LT - lietuvių kalba
    HU - magyar
    MT - Malti
    NL - Nederlands
    PL - polski
    PT - português
    RO - română
    SK - slovenčina
    SL - slovenščina
    FI - suomi
    SV - svenska
    News
    MEPs
    About Parliament
    Plenary
    Committees
    Delegations
    Other websites
    Other websites
    News
    MEPs
    About Parliament
    Plenary
    Committees
    Delegations
    Multimedia Centre
    President’s website
    Secretariat-general
    Think tank
    EP Newshub
    At your service
    Visits
    Legislative train
    Contracts and Grants
    Register
    Open Data Portal
    Liaison offices
    Committees
    European Parliament
    Search
    Search
    Please fill this field
    CULT
    European Parliament
    Search
    Menu
    Choose your committee
    Choose your committee
    All committees - Homepage
    Foreign Affairs
    Human Rights
    Security and Defence
    Development
    International Trade
    Budgets
    Budgetary Control
    Economic and Monetary Affairs
    Tax Matters
    Employment and Social Affairs
    Environment, Public Health and Food Safety
    Public Health
    Industry, Research and Energy
    Internal Market and Consumer Protection
    Transport and Tourism
    Regional Development
    Agriculture and Rural Development
    Fisheries
    Culture and Education
    Legal Affairs
    Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs
    Constitutional Affairs
    Women’s Rights and Gender Equality
    Petitions
    Beating Cancer
    COVID-19 pandemic: lessons learned and recommendations for the future
    Special Committee on foreign interference and disinformation, and on strengthening integrity in the EP
    Foreign Interference in all Democratic Processes in the European Union, including Disinformation
    Artificial Intelligence in a Digital Age
    Protection of Animals during Transport
    Use of Pegasus and equivalent surveillance spyware
    Go to the page
    CULT
    Home
    Highlights
    Members
    Press releases
    Newsletters
    Publications
    Subject files
    Meetings
    Meeting documents
    Webstreaming
    Votes
    Minutes
    Documents
    Latest documents
    Search
    Work in progress
    Events
    Hearings
    Workshops
    Meetings with National Parliaments
    European Citizens’ Initiatives
    Supporting analyses
    Latest documents
    Search
    Presentation
    About
    Go back
    CULT
    Home
    Highlights
    Next CULT meeting: 24 January 2024
    Next CULT meeting: 24 January 2024
    12-01-2024 - 11:20
    Share this page on Facebook
    Share this page on Twitter
    Share this page on LinkedIn
    2024 © Image used under the license of Adobe Stock
    The CULT committee will hold its next meeting in Brussels on
    Wednesday 24 January 2024, 10.00 - 12.30 and 15.00 - 18.00
    in meeting room
    SPINELLI 1G3.
  • Provisional calendar of CULT Committee meetings for the first half of 2024
    (PDF - 215 KB)
    List of CULT Coordinators
    (PDF - 117 KB)
    EP calendar 2024
    (PDF - 196 KB)

Newsletters - REGI News 2023 - Committee on Regional Development

Retrieved on: 
星期日, 一月 14, 2024

Access to page content (press "Enter")

Key Points: 
  • Access to page content (press "Enter")
    Direct access to language menu (press "Enter")
    Direct access to search menu (press "Enter")
    EN - English
    BG - български
    ES - español
    CS - čeština
    DA - dansk
    DE - Deutsch
    ET - eesti keel
    EL - Ελληνικά
    EN - English
    FR - français
    GA - Gaeilge
    HR - hrvatski
    IT - italiano
    LV - latviešu valoda
    LT - lietuvių kalba
    HU - magyar
    MT - Malti
    NL - Nederlands
    PL - polski
    PT - português
    RO - română
    SK - slovenčina
    SL - slovenščina
    FI - suomi
    SV - svenska
    News
    MEPs
    About Parliament
    Plenary
    Committees
    Delegations
    Other websites
    Other websites
    News
    MEPs
    About Parliament
    Plenary
    Committees
    Delegations
    Multimedia Centre
    President’s website
    Secretariat-general
    Think tank
    EP Newshub
    At your service
    Visits
    Legislative train
    Contracts and Grants
    Register
    Open Data Portal
    Liaison offices
    Committees
    European Parliament
    Search
    Search
    Please fill this field
    REGI
    European Parliament
    Search
    Menu
    Choose your committee
    Choose your committee
    All committees - Homepage
    Foreign Affairs
    Human Rights
    Security and Defence
    Development
    International Trade
    Budgets
    Budgetary Control
    Economic and Monetary Affairs
    Tax Matters
    Employment and Social Affairs
    Environment, Public Health and Food Safety
    Public Health
    Industry, Research and Energy
    Internal Market and Consumer Protection
    Transport and Tourism
    Regional Development
    Agriculture and Rural Development
    Fisheries
    Culture and Education
    Legal Affairs
    Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs
    Constitutional Affairs
    Women’s Rights and Gender Equality
    Petitions
    Beating Cancer
    COVID-19 pandemic: lessons learned and recommendations for the future
    Special Committee on foreign interference and disinformation, and on strengthening integrity in the EP
    Foreign Interference in all Democratic Processes in the European Union, including Disinformation
    Artificial Intelligence in a Digital Age
    Protection of Animals during Transport
    Use of Pegasus and equivalent surveillance spyware
    Go to the page
    REGI
    Home
    Highlights
    Members
    Press releases
    Newsletters
    Meetings
    Meeting documents
    Webstreaming
    Votes
    Minutes
    Documents
    Latest documents
    Search
    Work in progress
    Events
    Hearings
    Workshops
    Meetings with National Parliaments
    Missions
    Supporting analyses
    Latest documents
    Search
    Presentation
    About
    Go back
    REGI
    Home
    Newsletters
    REGI News 2023
    REGI News 2023
    Share this page on Facebook
    Share this page on Twitter
    Share this page on LinkedIn
    REGI Newsletter September - November 2023
    (PDF - 407 KB)
    REGI Newsletter May - July 2023
    (PDF - 3 MB)
    REGI Newsletter Jan - April 2023
    (PDF - 3 MB)

FTC Takes Action Against Global Tel*Link Corp. for Failing to Adequately Secure Data, Notify Consumers After Their Personal Data Was Breached

Retrieved on: 
星期三, 一月 3, 2024

“The FTC is committed to protecting the rights to privacy and security of personal information for all consumers, including incarcerated consumers and their loved ones,” said Samuel Levine, Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection.

Key Points: 
  • “The FTC is committed to protecting the rights to privacy and security of personal information for all consumers, including incarcerated consumers and their loved ones,” said Samuel Levine, Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection.
  • A forensic analysis showed that a handful of hackers accessed billions of bytes of the exposed data.
  • The company also repeatedly and falsely claimed in marketing materials following the incident that it had never suffered a data breach.
  • As part of the proposed order with the FTC, Global Tel*Link and two of its subsidiaries are prohibited from misrepresenting their data security practices and will be required, among other things, to: