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Area Sports Roundup, May 7 | Local Sports | sentinelsource.com – The Keene Sentinel

ConVal baseball falls to Hollis-Brookline

PETERBOROUGH — After a solid two innings to start the game, the wheels fell off for the ConVal baseball team in a 16-3, 5-inning loss to Hollis-Brookline Friday in Peterborough.

Hollis scored 11 runs in the third inning.

Brady Carpentiere got the start and “did his job pitching to ground balls,” said head coach Matt Harris. “We just didn’t make the mental plays.”

Owen McGuire went 1-1 at the plate with two runs scored an a hit by pitch. Sam Scheinblum went 2-2 with a double and an RBI.

ConVal next hosts Pelham Tuesday at 4:30 p.m.

ConVal softball falls late to Hollis-Brookline

PETERBOROUGH — A late-inning explosion pushed Hollis-Brookline softball over ConVal, 7-1, Friday in Peterborough.

Tied 1-1 heading into the fifth inning, Hollis scored six late runs on ConVal’s Lily Mandel to get the win.

“[Hollis] came to play tonight,” said ConVal head coach Amanda Hinton.

Hinton said she would have put another pitcher in once Hollis started hitting Mandel, but did not have another other pitchers available.

The Cougars only mustered two hits, a double from Sam Henderson and a single from Morgan Bemont.

Brianna Hutchinson had the lone RBI for ConVal.

ConVal’s game against Souhegan, originally scheduled for Monday, has been postponed because of non-COVID- or weather-related issues. The Cougars next take the field against Pelham Wednesday in Peterborough.

KHS boys tennis finishes undefeated week

The Keene boys tennis team wrapped up a 4-0 week with another tight win Friday, 5-4 against Concord in Keene.

The Blackbirds took four of six singles, with Nick Walton, Dillon Rodgers, Max Santos and Sam Bergeron each winning their match.

Concord took two of three doubles, but Keene got the points they needed with Walton and Ethan Lewis earned the win at first doubles.

“The guys ground it out,” said head coach Bill Hay. “Wasn’t easy. … Good atmosphere.”

Keene moves to 5-4 on the season and travels to Lebanon Monday.

Keene girls tennis falls to Concord

CONCORD — The Keene girls tennis team fell to Concord, 8-1, Friday in Concord.

Nishitta Matta earned the lone point for the Blackbirds, an 8-6 win in first singles.

The Blackbirds next host Goffstown Monday at 4:30 p.m.

Fall Mountain baseball downs Newport

NEWPORT — The Fall Mountain baseball team crushed Newport, 21-5, Friday in Newport.

Mitch Cormier got the start for the Wildcats and went three innings, giving up two earned runs on six hits. Dominic Van Laere Nutting pitched in relief for the final four innings and only giving up two hits to earn the win.

Curtis Hosley had three hits and four RBI while Cormier had two hits and two RBI.

Lucas Gay, Hayden Chandler, Noah Blake, Lucas Roy Ryan Schadler and Noah Gutierrez also recorded hits for the Wildcats.

Fall Mountain next travels to Lebanon Monday for a 4 p.m. start.

FPU men’s track takes fourth at NE10’s

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — The Franklin Pierce University men’s track & field team put together six All-Northeast-10 Conference performances — including four from freshmen — and 21 point-scoring performances Friday at the NE10 Championships, hosted by American International College.

Combined with a pair of point scorers from Thursday’s limited action, the Ravens totaled 85 points on the way to a fourth-place finish, out of 11 teams.

Senior Antonio Rua claimed the NE10 Elite 24 Award, as the competitor with the highest cumulative grade-point average.

When all was said and done, the Ravens finished fourth with 85 points. Southern Connecticut State piled up 301.5 points to claim its fourth straight NE10 title. The Owls were followed by host AIC in second (175 points) and their cross-town rival, New Haven, in third (105).

Franklin Pierce’s Donnelly Takes NE10 Title in 10k

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — The women’s NE10 Conference Track & Field Championships got underway with limited competition Friday, as the hammer throw and the 10k were conducted.

The Franklin Pierce University women’s track & field program made the best of the abbreviated amount of competition, as graduate student Bethaney Donnelly brought home the NE10 title in the 10k. The NE10 Championships are being hosted by American International College.

Donnelly led wire-to-wire in the race and turned in a time of 39:11 to take first place by nine seconds. The victory put the Ravens out on the right foot in the NE10 Championships with 10 early points.

The women will compete in a full day of events Saturday to round out the NE10 Championships.

Other Scores:

Boys volleyball: Hollis 3, Keene 0 (from 5/6)

‘This Is Politics’: Dr. Rachel Levine’s Rise as Transgender Issues Gain Prominence. – The New York Times

At the time, she said, there were “some attacks” on her, but “they were not that brutal.” But after she was elevated to health secretary and took a front-and-center position responding to the pandemic, the hate escalated.

“She told me she was at a gas station early on in the Covid lockdown and some guy in a pickup truck started driving around her screaming about medical tyranny,” said Mara Keisling, the executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality.

At first, she tried to ignore it. But she drew the line at the dunk tank episode, and used her daily news conference to push back.

“While these individuals may think that they are only expressing their displeasure with me,” she said, they were hurting “thousands of L.G.B.T.Q. Pennsylvanians.”

As assistant secretary for health, Dr. Levine has a wide portfolio; the job is what you make it, and can be either the “most influential public health voice” in the nation, or “window dressing,” depending on the aspirations of its occupant, said Dr. Levine’s predecessor, Adm. Brett P. Giroir.

Dr. Levine said she intended to prioritize mental health, health equity and the opioid epidemic, a problem she also tackled while in Pennsylvania. Her “most urgent” priority, she said, is fighting the coronavirus, and especially addressing vaccine hesitancy.

But she also intends to advocate on behalf of transgender youth, and work to raise awareness, as she did during her visit to Belmont Hill. Her former math teacher, Michael Sherman, who has taught there for 48 years, said Dr. Levine was invited because the school wanted to emphasize diversity, and she is the only known female graduate.

NBA DFS: Best/worst plays for Saturday, May. 8th – Fake Teams

Welcome to your daily NBA DFS digest at Fake Teams, gents. Every day I’m here with a handful of pro-tips to roster a winning team just a few hours from now. And on top of that, I’ll bring you some statistical trends from the past week of games!

Gotta Win The Day: Best/Worst DraftKings plays for tonight’s slate

  • Love: Pascal Siakam (PF/C). I’m sorry to disappoint you by picking Pascal as the top-play of the day for the second post in a row, but here we are. The algorithm must be asleep because he’s not catching up at all with Siakam’s exploits. The salary isn’t literally low, obviously, but it’s far from the $10K Pascal deserves. Siakam’s last three games: 71, 40, and 71 FP. He comes off a career-high scoring match with 44 pops against Washington on Thursday. He has dub-dubbed in two of the last three averaging 40 MPG and a silly 36-10-4-2 while shooting 53% on a monster 26 FGA! The turnovers have sat at 4 in each of those three, sure, but this man is closing the year on a scorching hot run, and although Toronto is cooked and out of the playoffs he has everything to keep thriving.
  • Hate: Kelly Olynyk (C). I am Kelly-O’s No. 1 stan. With that out of the way, let me tell you that this man has been unstoppable of late (48, 63, and 54 DKFP in the last three) but that on the year Kelly has been a putrid play against Utah. In three games against the Jazz, starting all of them and playing almost 30 MPG, all Olynyk has done facing the stiff Gobert has been finishing with 24, 16, and 19 FP. Ugh. The average line he got was down to a paltry 8-7-1. I’m sorry, folks, but I’m just not going to pony up $8.5K+ for a guy that hasn’t even averaged 20 DKFP in his matchups against Utah. I’m all in for Houston re-inking the biggie boy to pair him with Wood next season and going forward, and if that’s not the case I hope he lands in a good situation as a free agent, but I just can’t like Kelly tonight.
  • Love: Caris LeVert (SG). I just checked the Wiz last few games out of curiosity. They have allowed opponents to score 129, 135, 141 (Indiana last Monday), and 125 in their last four games. That’s absolutely insane. LeVert had a little bit of a stinker on the first leg of back-to-back games on Wednesday, but prior to that he put up 52 DKFP against these very same Wiz (33-7-5-0-2 line) and he rebounded from that dud with a season-high 63 FP facing Atlanta a couple of nights ago: 31-3-12-2-3 dub-dub in 41 (!) minutes played. You tell me how that’s something to hate. LeVert has reached 42+ DKFP in four of his past five games getting back to Apr. 29, and even on that bad outing against Sacto he still put up a relatively nice 14-3-3-1 line on a putrid 28% shooting that is obviously a freakish outlier number. This is a key game between the two play-in foes out East, so you know this will be a high-stakes one for everybody involved.
  • Hate: Michael Porter Jr. (SF/PF). Okay, hear me out. MPJ has been ridiculous in the past couple of weeks. Like, absolutely molly-bonkers. He’s averaging 42+ DKFP per game in the last nine games. And that is taking his 28 and 30 FP games against LAL and NYK this very week. He just doesn’t know how to score fewer than 20 points, hit 3 triples, or pull down his customary 6 boards. That’s all cool, but does Denver want Porter to put on maximum effort? MPJ, or Jokic, or whoever for that matter, I mean. Denver is in a glorious position when it comes to the postseason. They are fourth in the standings and locked into a first-round home advantage. It is up to them to win and face Portland, or stay at no. 4 and face Dallas—as things stand today. Denver can basically go all-in, or do nothing. The risks in playing any Nugs player ROS are quite high depending on how they opt to approach the remaining games, or if they just go the load-management route. Not liking the situation.
  • Love: Draymond Green (PF/C). If there is a team Dray can feed on, that’s the Tanking Thunder. Green is not your casual fantasy play, let alone your average basketball player. This guy is averaging some ridiculous 6-7-8-1-1 line on the year. He’s shooting fewer than 6 FGA per game and 1.9 of those are coming from beyond the three-point line. His usage rate is down at 12.7%. Nothing makes sense with Green, seriously. The most stupid thing, though, is that he somehow has dub-dubbed here and there (not on points, but on rebounds and dimes) and he’s also got two triple-doubles in the past month which is straight dumb. Most fantasy folks out there will be scared after Thursday’s outing against the Thunder in which he finished with just 30 FP, but the truth is that he put up a near-dub-dub with a 5-9-9 line. Odds are he hits double-digit marks on those latter-two cats for a bulkier score. Oh, and GSW is fighting for the chance of defeating LeBron and the Lakers in the play-in (LOL).

What’s cooking? Statistical trends from Week 19 (Apr. 26 to May. 2)

  • This is getting boring. LOL. One month straight getting the No. 1 DK spot wasn’t enough for Russell Westbrook, who has now five consecutive weeks at the top of the leaderboard. That’s bonkers. Russ did it to the tune of a 65 DKFP average on four games played in the past seven days, putting up a 24-13-12 trip-dub on a monster 39 MPG.
  • Tatum (62), the only other player to break the 60-FP barrier did it on just 3 GP, which takes a bit from him. Luka finished third with 59 FPG on a heavier dose of play on 4 GP and a 31-8-10 dub-dub.
  • On a per-minute basis, Giannis was on a league of his own posting a ridiculously efficient 2.75 FP/min mark. Nobody came even remotely close, with Jokic sliding in no. 2 (1.67) followed by Russ and Luka (both at 1.65).
  • Russ was the only player good enough to post a week-trip-dub, although Doncic came close along with Dejounte Murray (!) and Lonzo Ball (!!).
  • Silly cheap values: Alize Johnson, Mychal Mulder, Frank Jackson, Juan Hernangomez, McDermott, Rondo, Nesmith, Anfernee, Aaron Holiday, Ty Jerome, Cam Payne, Forbes
  • A little more expensive but still with massive ROI: Oshae Brissett, Lonzo, Dejounte, Bey, Tim Hardaway Jr., Birch, Olynyk, Thadd Young, Lowry, Mikal Bridges, DeRozan
  • Some very expensive players not doing enough: Giannis, Embiid, Beal, Paul George, Kyrie, Capela, Gobert, Ingram, Morant, McCollum, Jrue, Garland, Rozier, Simmons, John Collins, Tobias
  • Cheap points (min. 3 games played): Frank Jackson, McDermott, Mulder, Forbes, Lonnie, Rudy Gay, Melo, Juan Hernangomez, Seth Curry, Ty Jerome, Okoro
  • Cheap threes: Mulder, Forbes, Seth, Anfernee, Frank Jackson, Nian, Juan Hernangomez, Ty Jerome, Shamet
  • Cheap boards: Alize Johnson, Willy, Dwight, Theis, Favors, DJ Wilson, Dedmon, Markkanen, Len, Vanderbilt, Gafford, Deck, Clarke
  • Cheap dimes: Rondo, Mike James, Aaron Holiday, Gary Harris, Flynn, Ish, THT, Goodwin, Saben Lee, Ty Jerome, Temple, Looney, Poole
  • Cheap steals: Cody Martin, JTA, Rivers, Thybulle, Clarke, Connaughton, Willy, Burke, Rondo
  • Cheap blocks: Biyombo, Craig, JTA, Reed, Thybulle, Melton, Tony Bradley, Mo Wagner, Brimah, Dwight, Naz Reid, Gafford
  • Cheap FG% (min. 8 FGA): McDermott, Melo, Tye Jerome, Juan Hernangomez, Mulder, Forbes, Theis, Naz Reid, Seth, Gay, Kenyon Martin Jr., Frank Jackson, Quickley, Rondo

If you have any comment or question about the daily column, tonight’s games, players involved in them, or even season-long fantasy NBA topics, just drop it below or reach out to me on Twitter at @chapulana and I’ll get back to you as soon as I grab a keyboard!

E. Lynn Harris Invisible Life book trilogy to be adapted by HBO – Republic World

HBO has started working on developing a show based on author E. Lynn Harris’ critically-acclaimed book trilogy called Invisible Life.  The novel series is based on a young, gay and Black author who fashioned a deeply moving and compelling coming-of-age story out of the then-highly controversial issues of bisexuality and AIDS. According to The Hollywood Reporter, playwright Harrison David Rivers is adapting the novels for the small screen. 

HBO to develop the Invisible Life book trilogy into series

Rivers will work as the executive producer of the series along with Proteus Spann and Tracey Edmonds.  Rivers is a GLAAD Award-winning writer of plays like When We Last FlewSweet, Where Storms are Born, and the musical Five Points. In the trilogy, the first book titled Invisible Life was published in 1991. It is acclaimed as one of the classic gay novels in literature. The sequels of the novel were titled – Just As I Am (1995), And This Too Shall Pass (1997). 

The first book in the series was named as one of the top 20 classic gay titles in literature by the Los Angeles Times. It explores the issues of race, HIV and AIDS, bisexuality, and being closeted. It’s one of Harris’ ten books that made the New York Times best-seller list. Harris passed away in 2009, but before he died, the IP rights for his works were purchased by Proteus Spann’s Proteus E2 Productions with the author’s blessing. This deal included a total of 16 books published by Harris between 1991 and 2010. 

Spann talks about the Invisible Life series

In an interview with Deadline, Spann said that it has been the passion of his adult life to bringing E. Lynn’s masterful storytelling to a broader audience. He added that for many men, his books were a safe haven, a place where they could see themselves long before television and film would ever attempt to accurately portray the subject matter. It is women, however, who make up a majority of Harris’ fan base. He mentioned that for many women, his books became the first reference they could access privately and even begin to explore the possibility that their brothers, friends, lovers, and even husbands may be gay, bisexual, or leading a double-life.

Get the latest entertainment news from India & around the world. Now follow your favourite television celebs and telly updates. Republic World is your one-stop destination for trending Bollywood news. Tune in today to stay updated with all the latest news and headlines from the world of entertainment.

Drag Race RuCap: It’s The Mothertucking Snatch Game Binches, And I Need A Shoey After This – Pedestrian TV

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G’day friends, it’s Sunday! Welcome back to our RuPaul’s Drag Race Down Under recaps, that we have appropriately titled ‘rucaps’, because we’re geniuses. This week’s episode was the SNATCH GAME!! The moment we’ve all been waiting for!! I know you have a lot of thoughts, and so do I, so let’s dive right in.

The first point of order is to mourn the loss of our beloved First Nations queen, and bonafide daddy Jojo Zaho. She added so much character and wit to the season, and honestly, you can already feel her absence in the werkroom.

Our Down Under queens don’t mourn for too long, however, and begin talking about the great Aussie legend, the shoey. The Kiwis have no fkn idea what a shoey is, and so naturally everyone gets out their high heels and does one.

When I tell you this is peak television, I truly am not lying. Look at the imagery, it really speaks for itself.

he’s a pisspot through and through…

It’s now time for the queens to find out what gaggery, fuckery and wiggery will be going on this week, and who better to do that than the person who legalised gay marriage in Australia, Kylie Minogue herself.

She’s holding two pink feathers (for what reason, I have no idea, but I do not dare to question it), and continuously makes references to her smash hits like ‘Wow’, ‘Get out of my way’ and ‘Spinning Around’.

If you are not familiar with any of these songs, then consider this your opportunity to go and listen to them, else your homosexuality be denounced.

Also, I am incredibly saddened that Kylie is just a screen appearance. In a perfect world, we would have her on the judging table. Miss Rona, you are the winner of this week’s challenge.

introducing everyone’s fave gay icon: the green absinthe fairy from Moulin Rouge.

Kylie tells the girls that they’ll be playing the mother tucking Snatch Game, which is the one challenge in every Drag Race season that everyone looks forward to.

However, we introduce the aforementioned gaggery, fuckery and wiggery, when both Art Simone and Scarlet Adams put forward their plan to do Bindi Irwin. TWO Bindis? When there are so many other options? Kath & Kim were robbed.

The two decide to make peace, much like the emus and the humans did in the great emu war, and it is decided that Art will take Bindi, will Scarlet will do everyone’s favourite Aussie, Jennifer Coolidge.

thank me gator, bitch.

Meanwhile, Kita Mean is having a crisis over whether to do Carole Baskin (do it) or Dr Seuss (don’t fkn do it).

She goes with Dr Seuss (goddammit) because she thinks the risk will pay off for her, and thus we were all robbed of seeing everyone’s favourite Aussie, Carole Baskin, on our screens.

cat in the hat or cat in the cage?

The queens then do one on ones with RuPaul himself, which is really just an excuse for Ru to remind Coco that her looks are rotten.

Anita Wigl’it tells one of the best jokes I’ve heard in yonks, when she tells Ru that she will be portraying Queen Elizabeth II for snatch game.

Please read the following line with a Queen Elizabeth voice, like Anita did:

“When somebody turns 100, I write them a letter, and when somebody turns 16 Prince Andrew writes them a text.”

Absolutely. Dead.

Meanwhile, Etcetera Etcetera tells the room that she will be portraying Lindy Chamberlain-Creighton. Yes, the woman who was wrongfully accused of killing her baby, and claimed a dingo got to it.

Everyone questions whether or not it will pay off, but queen of smooth brains, Etc Etc, has a plan. The no-thoughts-head-empty representation on my screen is really touching my heart.

no thoughts, just be cute.

Now we crack right into the good stuff, with some stunning impersonations (and a fucktonne of bad ones) being offered up.

First up is Karen from Finance as Dolly Parton, who starts strong then flatlines. Much like Jolene, Dolly would hate this.

I was geeked for a killer Karen snatch game, but alas, now I must speak to the manager and complain.

regrets life decisions in yeehaw.

Meanwhile, Art Simone does a very strange and hyper-sexual Bindi Irwin, and Coco Jumbo does a Lizzo impression that’s super one-note.

Scarlet on the other hand has a pretty spot-on Jennifer Coolidge voice, but the look is lacking.

regrets life decisions in blonde.

Moving on down to queen Etc Etc, and my GOD was this impression hilarious. It was completely irreverent, which is what drag is, and she also kinda looked like an early days Lindy.

There was a torchlight to look for her missing baby, and a dingo puppet with blood on it. When I tell you I screamed at every instance of this snatch game, I truly am not lying.

nobody can say this dingo was planned, ’cause it was great.

And Schitt’s Creek fans rejoice, finally we have some Moira Rose / Catherine O’Hara representation in the snatch game.

Elektra Shock sold the hell out of this impersonation, and I was giggling like a little school kid. Some may say it wasn’t the best impression in the world, and they’d be right as fuck, but hey, it was entertaining, David.

elektra, stop acting like a disgruntled pelican.

Also, can we just go back to Etc Etc for a sec a sec and appreciate this ripped answer card?? My hand covered my mouth the entire time. This is exactly the kind of batshit stuff we expect to see from an Aussie snatch game.

fkn screaming.

Anita killed it as Queen Elizabeth II. Drag Race Down Under had some questionable impressions, but it was pretty clear early on that this one just had to be the winner.

I mean, those jokes about the key to living long being to not piss her off and wear a seatbelt? We’re all going to hell for laughing.

“who needs a husband when you have two corgis and a jar of peanut butter”

Snatch Game is over, and it’s now time for the cry in front of the makeup stations and unpack your trauma part of every episode, and Maxi straight up fkn asks how supportive everyone’s parents are of their drag.

I’m not even a drag queen and I winced at the question. Welcome to RuPaul’s Therapy Race, I guess.

Anita talks about her tough relationship with her father in England, who not only doesn’t support him being gay, but always lived so far away, making the bond even harder to strengthen.

I just love Anita so much, and this made me so upset. Can we all stop hurting Anita, please and thank you??

gentlemen, start your engines, and may the best trauma win.

And now, ladies and gentlemen, her

we traded Courtney Act for… this?

I refuse to comment least I be sued through my fibro roof.

Anyway, it’s runway time, which RuPaul clearly missed the memo for, and the theme, despite both Minogues being on this episode, is sea sickening.

I mean, we could have had a Minogue-themed runway? Somebody could’ve come out atop a mass-orgy of gays, like she did in the ‘All the Lovers’ music video? It would’ve been perfect, I’m just saying.

(Also Ru is back in drag?? Despite saying in episode 1 that he’d stay out of drag for the whole show??? And there was no comment or remark made about him being all dressed up????)

me looking at unaffordable homes in Sydney and Melbourne.

The queens serve some lovely oceanic looks, and my faves were definitely Kita Mean, Etcetera Etcetera and Karen from Finance.

I mean, look at our loveable icon Etc Etc, as a deep-sea diver hoe. Anchors away boys, it’s about to get wet.

Are you nautical or nice?

I truly couldn’t avoid showing off this crazy shark look. Karen. Has. Taste.

I mean she’s being eaten by a shark? On the runway? Genius.

we’re gonna need a bigger boat.

Ru then tells all the queens on the mini mini-stage that they all fkn sucked at snatch game, except for Anita, who wins this week’s Drag Race Down Under challenge. Etc Etc landed a solid safe for her Lindy, and Kita was also safe for her Dr Seuss.

Everyone else was up for elimination. That’s six queens who disappointed Ru this week, instead of the usual bottom three. Can I get a yikes in the comment section.

Then, backstage, Dannii Minogue appears to tell the queens that she’s living for their looks, and sounds like every gay person’s straight friend that they meet one night in a dingy nightclub, never to see again.

She also sings ‘This Is It’ (the best song to come out of Australia, fight me), and makes reference to her song ‘Put the Needle On It’. The queens then make an awkward joke that they know all about playing with needles and Dannii makes the most awkward face ever.

To be fair, so did I. Moving on then, shall we?

alexa play Put the Needle On It Cicada Vocal Mix Edit, thanks.

The bottom two queens are announced to be Coco Jumbo for her lacklustre Lizzo, and Art Simone for a Bindi Irwin that just didn’t have enough jokes.

The pair lipsync to RuPaul’s ‘I’m That Bitch’ instead of a fkn Minogue song, because the show likes to remind us that it is, in fact, homophobic. (For legal reasons, this show and all its brands and partners are absolutely beloved by the gays.)

The lipsync is pretty bad, with both queens giving almost no energy. To be fair, they were probably expecting ‘Can’t Get You Out Of My Head’, so I can’t blame them.

where in the fkn ocean is my lost Kylie Minogue lipsync?

And thus, the lipsync concludes, and it’s time for the winner to be declared.

Coco Jumbo is called out as the winner, because she gave way more energy than Art this time around, and unfortunately, we have to say goodbye to Miss Simone.

Art was a frontrunner, an absolute legend and a queen with a huge amount of followers going into this competition. It’s truly shocking to see her go so soon, when I wasn’t finished admiring the full gallery.

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GOOD NEWS: Honors student credits success to endurance, perseverance – Odessa American

Special to the Odessa American

By Rebecca Bell

MC executive director, Institutional Advancement

MIDLAND “‘Keep going and never give up. I can do anything I envision as long as I simply try.’ That’s what my grandmother, or ‘Nanny’ as I called her, told me,” William Blaine Martin said.

One of his favorite quotes is from the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg: “So often in life, things that you regard as an impediment turn out to be great, good fortune.”

At the young age of 18, Martin has certainly had his share of those impediments, starting at the beginning of his life when he spent the first three months in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit because of a premature birth. His parents divorced when he was 3 years old, and for several years, he and his younger brother Reagan lived with their mother in Big Spring and Coahoma.  Because of persistent issues relating to their mother’s mental health, the boys moved to Midland to live with their father and stepmother. Blaine finished elementary school at Fannin Elementary School and then attended Goddard Junior High School.

On May 7, Blaine will graduate from Midland College with an associate degree, and on May 14, he will graduate from high school. For the past four years, he has been attending Early College High School at Midland College (ECHS@MC), where he has excelled at both an accelerated high school curriculum and his college courses. At the high school level, he is National Honor Society president, Student Council vice president and the founder and president of the LGBT Club. Following the trend of excelling, Martin was selected as a National College Match finalist through QuestBridge. This past March 11, he received word that he had been accepted to Trinity University in San Antonio and was awarded a $100,000 academic scholarship by the university.

“Trinity was my first choice,” Martin explained. “I want to major in Political Science and International Relations, and Trinity is renowned for its programs in the state. Of course, it’s an expensive school, and I wasn’t sure if Trinity would even be a possibility. My father lost his job in April 2020 and just got another job this past March. Thankfully, the scholarship will help immensely.”

The scholarship didn’t come without a lot of hard work and perseverance. Martin said that most evenings he studied and did homework until 3 a.m. and then got to school before 8 a.m. He did this throughout high school, while also enduring criticism from those closest to him when he announced that he was gay in 2018, suffering extreme heartbreak from his mother’s death in 2019 and losing his beloved “Nanny” when she passed away in February 2020 from unknown causes.

“Even though my mother suffered from mental health issues, she was my best friend,” Martin said. “My mom dedicated her life to ensuring that my brother and I were happy and felt loved. Like my mom, I’ve always tried to be a caring and loving person who always has a smile on my face. My mother and grandmother instilled in me a love of gardening and painting, and they taught me to always be generous and kind. When she was capable of working, my mother was a great nurse.

“My grandmother, who was always proud of her Native American ancestry, said that we are descended from Native American medicine men, and we should act as healers in the world. She always told me that if you can’t help heal someone, whether emotionally or physically, then you have no purpose in life. I guess that’s why my eventual goal is to go to law school and advocate for the LGBTQ community, indigenous individuals and those suffering from mental health issues. Providing a voice for the voiceless is my ultimate goal, whatever form that may take.”

Just as his grandmother advised, Martin has kept going. This past year he served as president of the Midland College Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society (the first ECHS@MC student to ever serve as president) and received a Distinguished Officer recognition from the Phi Theta Kappa, Texas Region. In March, the University of Texas System and Texas Association of Community Colleges honored Martin as a member of the 2021 All-Texas Academic Team. In addition, Martin has consistently made the President’s and Dean’s list at Midland College.

Traces of his love of academia can be found in his childhood, as well.

“When I was a child I loved to read, and still do,” Martin said. “I found books to be a great escape, where happy people lead happy lives. I think I read every book in the library at Coahoma Elementary School!

“I’ve also really enjoyed my Midland College literature classes. Stacy Egan [Midland College English Professor] has inspired me to expand my horizons in literature. Much like when I was a child, writing and reading are still therapeutic and intellectually invigorating. Some of my favorite authors are Amanda Gorman, Marcus Aurelius, Seneca, Emily Dickinson, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Ralph Waldo Emerson, William Blake, Robert Frost, Truman Capote and Friedrich Nietzsche. Reading their works has prompted me to write a few poems and short stories of my own that center around topics such as self-discovery, love and coping with immeasurable grief.”

Martin continues to be grateful for the support his family, specifically his father Greg, stepmother Amy, grandfather Larry Fryar, aunt and uncle Neanda & Kerry Fryar and uncle Dan Hudgins have given him.

“All of the work I have done, I have completed on my own,” he said. “There is power in being independent. However, I have found that it is always good to reach out to those who surround me. They have helped me fight the everyday battles.

“My experience at ECHS@MC, especially in my Midland College courses, has been nothing short of exceptional. I refer to the Midland College campus as my home. I’m usually on campus from 8 in the morning until 9 at night studying in the library and working part-time in the Language Hub. I’ve met people from all walks of life and different cultures. This small environment has offered the stories of many who make the world a better place. My goal is to join them in this endeavor.”

Hum Bhi Akele Tum Bhi Akele: Anshuman Jha ‘Had to Be Extra Careful’ Playing Gay Character On-Screen, – LatestLY

Actor Anshuman Jha plays a homosexual boy in the upcoming film Hum Bhi Akele Tum Bhi Akele, and he says he was careful to avoid stereotypes and caricatures that often accompany the portrayal of gay characters in films. “I did feel responsible as an actor when I took this character because being a heterosexual man who was playing a homosexual character, I had to be extra careful and sensitive towards the portrayal. I do not want to play Veer (his role) in a caricaturish manner, on in those stereotyped ways,” Anshuman told IANS. Hum Bhi Akele, Tum Bhi Akele Trailer: Anshuman Jha, Zareen Khan Are on a Road to Self Discovery in This LGBTQ+ Romantic Drama.

“Honestly, playing a gay man with sensitivity was a genuine challenge and I did a certain amount of research work, and interacted with people. I have friends in the LGBTQ community, too, so I have a certain amount of insight. I hope the audience sees it in my performance,” he added. The film directed by Harish Vyas is about a homosexual boy and a lesbian girl on a road trip that lets them discover the essence of love in friendship. While Anshuman plays the gay boy, Zareen Khan essays the lesbian girl. Hum Bhi Akele Tum Bhi Akele: Anshuman Jha and Zareen Khan’s Road-Trip Story to Premiere on Disney+ Hotstar on May 9 (View Post).

“I think acceptance of different voices is important, and that was the most important part of the story. I remember Harish sir shared the story of the film in a few lines to me in a cab as we rode from the New York airport to our destination. He told me it is a story of a boy, and a girl and a road trip. I said ok, what else? He said they are soulmates. The boy is gay, and the girl is a lesbian. During the journey, they discover pure love and friendship that they share for each other. I

was just hooked there. It was a fascinating story for me, and the dimension between the boy and the girl from the LGBTQ community also shows their side of the story, and how they struggle in our society for acceptance,” said Anshuman. The film has been screened at various international film festivals and has also won a few awards. Anshuman bagged Best Actor (jury) at the Rajasthan International Film Festival and the film received the Best Film Audience Choice Award at the HBO South Asian Film Festival. “Hum Bhi Akele Tum Bhi Akele” releases on Disney+ Hotstar VIP and Disney+ Hotstar Premium on May 9.

(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on May 08, 2021 01:13 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).

‘Love, welcome and respect’: He advocates for LGBTQ faithful – Associated Press

Inside Allentown’s Cathedral of St. Catharine of Siena, with its tall stained-glass windows and sanctuary suffused with a soft golden glow, the man in the black shirt and slacks could be mistaken for a clergyman.

He is, in fact, by someone who calls him “Father.” But Donald Maher isn’t a priest. He’s a Berks County attorney who practices labor and employment law, fitting subjects for the Irish-American son of a New York labor leader Maher likens to tough-guy actor James Cagney.

Law is his career. His vocation, though, is a decades-long ministry to gay Catholics, one that began in Manhattan at the height of the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s.

It was a tumultuous time, to say the least, with activists targeting institutions they blamed for impeding LGBTQ equality and progress against the disease — governments, pharmaceutical companies and, notably, the Catholic Church. In one of the most notorious incidents of the time, activists disrupted Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan; one took Communion and spit the consecrated host on the floor.

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Maher, 66, a gay man who grew up in Brooklyn and came out as a teen, favors loving outreach over shock tactics. But he is striving to ignite the passion of that era’s activism in the five-county Allentown Catholic Diocese. He sees an opportunity as the LGBTQ community is finding a bigger voice and higher visibility as part of the broader rights movement.

To that end, he has been lobbying Bishop Alfred Schlert and other leaders to make more direct public statements about the place of gay and transgender people in the church, and to allow him to mount a full-scale, publicized outreach.

Whether that happens or not is an open question. Schlert says he and Maher are equally committed to welcoming LGBTQ people into the church and nurturing their spiritual lives. Where they diverge is on fundamental Catholic doctrine about human sexuality, and the bishop can’t promote a ministry that might contradict that doctrine.

“Some of what Donald wants me to permit is above my pay grade,” Schlert said, noting that a bishop’s role is to preserve teachings that have been handed down over millennia.

Maher argues that unbudging adherence to doctrine — putting the letter of the law over human nature — means the church can never move forward.

“Our churches need to be concerned with bringing the presence of Christ to the community on all issues of social justice,” he said, sitting for an interview outside St. Catharine’s.

The cathedral is the mother church of the diocese — an apt symbol in Maher’s vision, because the church is charged with nurturing and protecting all of its children.

It isn’t, he said. And that can hurt people.

‘Love, welcome and respect’

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In America, at least, the AIDS crisis has eased because of treatments that have turned the disease from a death sentence into a chronic but manageable condition. But Maher and other activists still see members of the LGBTQ community suffering issues that long predated AIDS — discrimination and harassment that leave them far more prone than the general population to mental health issues and drug dependency.

Outreach by church leaders to the historically marginalized group could not only further societal acceptance but help reverse the decadeslong decline in church membership, Maher said, pointing to one study that found 39% of former Catholics cited the treatment of LGBTQ people as their reason for leaving.

Gay and transgender people, and their families and allies, “have been judged harshly and walked away,” Maher said.

Last year, after attending a conference on gay issues with a well-known Jesuit priest, the Rev. James Martin, Maher formed “Out in the Diocese of Allentown.” He describes the ministry — which is not sanctioned by the diocese ― as one of “love, welcome and respect” for LGBTQ Catholics and their families.

It’s not his first such effort. He founded the Gay and Lesbian Catholic Ministry at his former parish in Manhattan, St. Paul the Apostle, in the early 1990s, when he and other activists were fighting the exclusion of gay Catholics from the city’s St. Patrick’s Day parade. Through Maher’s efforts, St. Paul’s held what may have been the first “Pride Mass” in 1993, one that devolved into chaos when shouting protesters injured the priest as they tried to tear off his lapel microphone.

Jason Steidl, a Catholic theologian and visiting assistant professor of religious studies at St. Joseph’s College in Brooklyn, said Maher brought phenomenal energy and creativity to parish-level outreach.

At a time when the LGBTQ community and the Archdiocese of New York were continually clashing, “he saw the distance between the gay and lesbian communities and the church, and he wanted to reconcile those communities through himself,” Steidl said. “There weren’t too many prominent LGBTQ Catholic ministries and Donald decided to do something about that.”

Steidl said Catholics, in some form or another, have been organizing to provide pastoral care to the LGBTQ community as far back as the 1940s.

“Donald wasn’t the first and he certainly won’t be the last,” he said. “But he showed what could be possible at the parish level.”

After the 9/11 terror attacks, Maher developed post-traumatic stress disorder and entered a treatment program in Pennsylvania. He expected to return to New York but ended up relocating to Albany Township.

He brought his passion with him.

“I’ve been at this a long time,” he said. “I consider myself graced to do this and consider my voice prophetic.”

By that, he means that his vision of a church that puts the LGBTQ community on equal footing with the straight community — sanctioning same-sex marriages, for example — is inevitable.

The only sanctioned LGBTQ outreach programs in the diocese now is called “Courage,” which teaches people with same-sex attraction to support one another in a life of chastity and prayer. Another program, “EnCourage,” provides support to family and friends of LGBTQ people.

Maher said “Courage” is deficient because it asks people to deny something fundamental to their nature.

“It’s a ‘pray not to be gay’ ministry,’ he said. “A very rejecting, damaging ministry.”

‘An element of sacrifice’

Maher speaks highly of Bishop Schlert. The two have met several times, and Schlert allowed Maher to publish an Advent essay on the diocesan Facebook page, in which Maher explains his ministry and invites readers to contribute ideas for it. The post received hundreds of likes and shares.

Schlert said he finds Maher personally engaging and well-versed in church teaching and history. On one level, he said, both want the same thing — for LGBTQ people to be assured the church welcomes them, loves them and wants them to live fulfilling spiritual lives.

“I understand very much their desire, and I couldn’t agree more that they should be welcome in the church,” he said. “I’ve been a priest for 34 years and in August I will have been a bishop for four years, and I wouldn’t be doing my job if I didn’t welcome people.”

Eventually, though, that welcome meets the clear line of church doctrine — which, despite the controversy it generates, is straightforward. God created men and women to enter loving communion with one another — marriage — and to bear and nurture children.

While same-sex attraction isn’t sinful, homosexual activity is, because by nature it can’t be open to life. So LGBTQ Catholics are called to a life of chastity, as are heterosexual people outside marriage.

“Every bishop struggles with it,” Schlert said of this intersection of inclusion and doctrine. “I don’t struggle with the teaching. It’s the pastoral approach where the art comes in.”

The doctrine doesn’t solely apply to LGBTQ people living non-chaste lives, but all unmarried Catholics in that state.

“I have to tell the cohabiting heterosexual couple that communion isn’t open to them either,” Schlert said. “We’re all called to a level of chastity depending on our state in life. There is an element of sacrifice that goes with every lifestyle, every vocation. When we say those things, it’s easy to perceive ‘I’m not welcome here.’ But that’s not the reality.”

One of the most painful experiences some LGBT people suffer is rejection by their parents. Schlert has counseled many people struggling after a child has come out.

“If they’re not accepting of a gay child, I say ‘Love them,’” he said. “Don’t excise them from your family.”

‘Who am I to judge?’

The LGBTQ Catholic movement gained momentum with the 2013 election of Pope Francis, whose emphasis on pastoral leadership over the letter of doctrine seemed to open doors long believed shut. His famous answer early in his pontificate to a question about gay men pursuing the priesthood — “If a person is gay and seeks God and has good will, who am I to judge him?” — became a rallying cry.

Since then, the pontiff has elated and disappointed the community by turns. He criticized gender theory, but invited a transgender man who had been rejected by his priest to come to the Vatican. He said Christians should apologize to gay people for mistreating them, but in March approved a Vatican statement that priests can’t bless same-sex unions because “God cannot bless sin.”

Donald Maher with the Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit priest and bestselling author of “Building A Bridge,” a book on Catholic outreach to the LGBT community.

Donald Maher with the Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit priest and bestselling author of “Building A Bridge,” a book on Catholic outreach to the LGBT community. (Robert Metzger/Contributed photo)

On the “Out in the Diocese of Allentown” Facebook page, which is the main public face of his ministry, Maher makes the case for the LGBTQ community’s place in the Christian vision, mixing humor and seriousness in about equal measure.

One meme portrays Jesus saying “Guys, I said I hate FIGS.” The reference is to the homophobic banners sported by protestors from the notorious Westboro Baptist Church, contrasted with the account of Jesus withering an unproductive fig tree. The lesson of the story is that people who produce no spiritual fruit lead lives worthy of condemnation.

Other posts touch on the travails of LGBTQ people, particularly the youngest. Confronted by confusion, bullying and rejection, they attempt suicide at a shockingly high rate — more than 30%, according to one study.

Maher wants to do much more. He presented an outline of his plans to the diocese. It calls for LGBTQ education in churches and schools, parish pride events, public forums and dozens of other programs backed by the hierarchy.

Schlert said he has to proceed cautiously in endorsing programs, especially when laypeople take on the role of educators.

“My hesitancy has always been ’I have to promote the teachings of the church,” he said. “I have to have a level of confidence that they’ll be upheld.”

‘We’ll do it ourselves’

In reaching out to the diocese’s LGBTQ community, Maher is not alone. Mel Kitchen, an Upper Saucon Township woman whose eldest son came out a decade ago, founded a support group for LGBTQ families called “You Are Mine.”

Kitchen, who works in the Pride Center at Lehigh University, tried to set up a program at her parish in Center Valley four years ago, but her appeals were rejected three times in six months.

She didn’t quit. She set up a table at “Pride in the Park,” Allentown’s annual LGBTQ celebration.

“I put a sign up,” she said. “People were like ‘Catholic? LGBTQ? What?’ But some people signed up. My philosophy was ‘If you build it, maybe they will come.’ If we can’t get parishes to work with us, we’ll do it ourselves.”

Kitchen finally found a home for the ministry at the St. Francis Center for Renewal in Hanover Township, Northampton County, which is run by the School Sisters of St. Francis.

“It was important to me to find some kind of (church-related) facilities as an affirmation to folks that they were loved and wanted,” she said. “The day I called they said, ‘Absolutely you can do this here.’”

In-person monthly meetings at St. Francis ended with the pandemic, but virtual meetings continue, drawing about a half-dozen participants on average. Kitchen believes that number would grow if she were allowed to spread the word about it within parishes, perhaps with notices in church bulletins.

Like Maher, Kitchen regards the “Courage” program to be deeply flawed, not much different than the conversion therapy that seeks to “cure” same-sex attraction.

“I understand where the church is coming from where celibacy is concerned, but we don’t ask people who they’re sleeping with,” she said. “You don’t ask anybody who walks into any ministry what they’re doing (sexually). I don’t know the answer to getting people back into the pews. I do know that unless you’re out in the community and meeting people where they are in everyday life, you’re sunk.”

In Maher, Kitchen has found a kindred spirit, someone who sees LGBTQ issues as part and parcel of the social justice movement that includes Black Lives Matter and other groups.

“You start down this road of social justice and it becomes social justice for everything,” she said, “not just LGBTQ issues. They are all tied together because we are not a single-issue people.”

Maher, she added, “has the capacity to engage. He has a wonderful heart and he looks for the good in everyone. Donald should be applauded.”

Steidl, the theologian, whose forthcoming book on LGBTQ ministry includes a chapter on Maher, called the soft-spoken lawyer “relentless.”

“He’s a man of ideals, of values,” Steidl said. “I think the (St. Paul’s) ministry was a fruit of his faith, a very deep Catholic faith. For about 10 years it was one of the most active gay and lesbian ministries in the U.S. He pushed and pushed and did really incredible things while he was there.”

Maher has no plans to stop. He said he will never lack energy for the work he is doing, because he believes it is inspired by the Holy Spirit.

“I’m not going anywhere,” he said. “I’m in this for the long game.”

___

Online:

https://bit.ly/3gQTFGi

Ohio Becomes Latest State To Propose Transgender Sports Ban – CBS Pittsburgh

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Republican lawmakers in Ohio have introduced two bills that would ban transgender girls from participating in female sports teams in high school or college, becoming the latest state to take up the contentious debate.

“In most instances, when young women are forced to compete against young men in athletic competition, it places them at a fundamental disadvantage,” GOP Rep. Reggie Stoltzfus told members of the House education committee last week. “A disadvantage that threatens their athletic achievement and even collegiate scholarship prospects.”

The bills’ sponsors say it is an effort to maintain fairness and protect the integrity in women’s sports in Ohio, though none of the lawmakers have pointed to a single instance where this has been an issue in the state.

These proposals make Ohio the latest state to join the national debate over how transgender athletes can compete in high school and college sports, causing an outpouring of criticism from those in the transgender community and advocates.

If the bills passed, “trans people would lose opportunities and face higher risk factors, such as mental health struggles, substance dependency, and suicidal ideation,” Eliana Turan, the director of development for the LGBT Community Center of Greater Cleveland, told The Associated Press. “If we are going to talk about saving women and girls, let’s save all women and girls, trans females included.”

Idaho passed its law last year, and more than 20 states have considered such proposals this year. Bans have been enacted in Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi, Tennessee and West Virginia. Florida lawmakers passed a bill, and South Dakota’s governor issued an executive order.

But while GOP lawmakers across the country take up the issue, in almost every case, sponsors of the proposals cannot cite a single instance in their own state or region where such participation has caused problems, according to an analysis by The Associated Press in March.

The same is true for the sponsors of the two bills in Ohio.

When asked during a committee hearing last week how many 12- and 13-year-old girls have had scholarships revoked due to being outperformed by transgender females, GOP Rep. Jena Powell, the other chief sponsor, mentioned a case specifically in Connecticut, but none in Ohio.

“Across the nation, there are girls who used to hold championships that are now held by biological males, which strips scholarship opportunities, medals, advancement in the sport,” said Powell, a Republican from western Ohio.

The organization in charge of making those determinations in the state, the Ohio High School Athletic Association, said that is not true in Ohio. Since the fall of 2015, the association has ruled in 48 cases of transgender students applying to compete and there have been only 11 transgender female approvals.

“Those 11 approvals have resulted in no disruption of competition regarding competitive equity and they have not caused any loss in female participation, championships or scholarship opportunities,” Tim Stried, a spokesperson for the association, said in a statement. “The OHSAA is confident that our policy, which is based on medical science, is appropriate to address transgender requests and works for the benefit of all student-athletes and member schools.”

The OHSAA doesn’t track participation after approval, so it is unclear to say how many of those transgender students have gone on to compete.

Committee members last week also expressed concern for the mental health impacts that both sides of the issue may experience.

“There is so much more wound up in this particular bill than just physiological advantage,” Democratic Rep. Mary Lightbody said. “This bill will harm the mental health of some of Ohio’s most vulnerable children.”

The lawmakers supporting the passage of the proposal said that is not their intention. But advocates say regardless of intent, the proposals would have irreparable harm.

“(These bills) would hurt trans women and girls by invalidating their identities, normalize and promote transphobic bullying, and effectively prevent trans youth from partaking in the natural human right of athletic participation,” Turan said.

(Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

U.S. cities where rents are dropping — and where they’re going up: report – CNBC

People have been on the move since the Covid-19 pandemic hit. With remote work at play, many are leaving expensive cities like New York, Los Angeles and Chicago for the suburbs or for more affordable cities like Austin, Phoenix or Nashville, according to a LinkedIn report.

Rents prices across the country have been adjusting to the trends, according to a new report from Apartment Guide.

For example, the average rent a one-bedroom apartment in notoriously expensive cities like San Francisco, Manhattan and Seattle is decreasing, while cities like Kansas City, Missouri, Gilbert, Arizona and Las Vegas are seeing spikes in average one-bedroom rent prices.

“We’ve been seeing this trend playing out for a few months now, but the decline in rent prices in notoriously expensive cities stands out here,” Brian Carberry, senior managing editor at Apartment Guide tells CNBC Make It.

While the average rent on a one-bedroom is down 45% in San Francisco and 27% in Manhattan, Carberry believes at some point the prices will level off as cities begin to reopen and people look to move back for work.

“For renters, this is a prime opportunity to get into an expensive area for way less than it would have cost before the pandemic,” hey says.

To conduct the report, Apartment Guide compared rent price data from March 2020 to March 2021 using apartment listing from both ApartmentGuide.com and Rent.com.

Here are the U.S. cities where average rent for a one-bedroom is increasing and decreasing the most, according to the Apartment Guide report.

Cities where average one-bedroom rents are increasing

1. Kansas City, Missouri

Rents are up 33.5%

2. Gilbert, Arizona

Rents are up 26%

3. Las Vegas

Rents are up 25.3%

4. Riverside, California 

Rents are up 24.9%

5. Buffalo, New York

Rents are up 23.3%

6. Columbus, Ohio

Rents are up 22.1%

7. Durham, North Carolina 

Rents are up 20%

8.Detroit

Rents are up 18.6%

9. New Orleans

Rents are up 18.3%

10. Virginia Beach, Virginia

Rents are up 5.3%

Cities where average one-bedroom rents are decreasing

Hermès Makes Fitness High Fashion On WeChat – Jing Daily

What Happened: Fitness, but make it fashion. On the heels of China’s Labor Day holiday, Hermès has launched exercise tutorials on its WeChat Mini Program to promote its latest accessories. The luxury brand recorded four yoga videos, ranging from 13 to 21 minutes long, showing consumers how to incorporate its belts, square scarves, small leather goods, and hats into their routines. For example, belts can be used to stretch and perform breathing exercises, while silk scarves can act as a balancing aid. These clips build upon Hermès’ “Start the movement” marketing campaign, which launched in February, and offer viewers “an invitation to be an everyday athlete with elegance and agility.”

Hermès teaches consumers how to use its iconic products in their workout routines. Photo: Screenshots, Jiemian 

The Jing Take: Luxury flexing its athleisure muscles isn’t new. With the sportswear market predicted to reach $231.7 billion by 2024 and the pandemic accelerating the trend of at-home fitness, brands have increasingly tapped athletic giants to revamp their marketing strategies. Over the past year, Dior released retro-style kicks with the Jordan brand; Louis Vuitton dropped another NBA capsule; and Gucci teamed up with The North Face for a site-crashing collection that saw great success in China.

What’s surprising here, however, is Hermès’ approach. Rather than launching an actual fitness line or collaborating with names like Nike and adidas, the luxury house is simply taking its classic offerings and reimagining them in sports-related settings. This not only helps change consumer perception of the aloof, storied brand, but also cleverly emphasizes the quality and practicality of its products. Moreover, with Hermès’ silk business seeing the largest decline at the end of 2020, down 23 percent, and its accessories sector falling 9 percent, leveraging the wellness trend to highlight these specific products should also help stimulate sales. 

Already, Hermès touched on this fitness concept in its AW21 show, featuring contemporary dancers weaving through towers of orange boxes. Perhaps this goes to show that the new way to get consumers spending is to get them up and sweating.

The Jing Take reports on a piece of the leading news and presents our editorial team’s analysis of the key implications for the luxury industry. In the recurring column, we analyze everything from product drops and mergers to heated debate sprouting on Chinese social media.

Montana bans trans youth from sports & puts strict limits on LGBTQ education – LGBTQ Nation

Montana has enacted two anti-LGBTQ laws now that Gov. Greg Gianforte (R) has signed House Bill 112 and Senate Bill 99.

House Bill 112 bans transgender youth from participating in sporting events under their gender identity. Senate Bill 99 makes it required for schools in the Big Sky State to inform parents if they want to mention anything related to “human sexuality” in class, and will only allow the instruction for students who “opt-in” to it and other lessons related to sex education.

Related: Montana grants religious exemption to discrimination laws & hate groups are cheering

H.B. 112, alternatively called “an Act Creating the ‘Save Women’s Sports Act,’” is “a carbon copy of Idaho’s HB 500” according to the ACLU’s Chase Strangio. Idaho, a neighboring state to Montana, passed a similarly-named ‘Save Women’s Sports Act’ proposal that is currently blocked from being enacted by a federal court’s injunction.

The bill was introduced by state Rep. John D. Fuller (R) in January. It passed the House that month and after amendments, passed the Senate in April and then the House as well.

Like the Idaho law, the proposal calls for “public school athletic teams to be designated based on biological sex” and would allow for cisgender athletes to seek damages from schools that allow trans students to compete as their gender identity, due to the “direct or indirect” harm that would purportedly cause.

Fuller “felt compelled to introduce the legislation because he’s coached women’s soccer and he thinks transgender women have a physical advantage if they compete in sports consistent with their gender identity,” Montana Public Radio reported.

“That is unfair to females and women’s sports — period,” Fuller says in a soundbite played in The Session podcast when he first introduced the bill.

A part of H.B. 112 that sought to indemnify education institutions if they don’t affirm trans athletes’ identities was removed in revisions after being introduced.

With its signature, Montana becomes the seventh state to ban trans youth from participating in sports in some way. West Virginia, Alabama, Tennessee, Mississippi, South Dakota, and Arkansas have all adopted similar laws to prevent transgender girls from playing sports as their gender.

In a statement, Shawn Reagor, the program director of the Montana Human Rights Network, said that “this bill unfairly targets trans youth and puts millions of federal education dollars at risk. It is unnecessary and harmful policy that comes at a massive cost to the state. Montana has made it clear that we do not want HB 112, nor any of the other anti-LGBTQ bills the governor has signed this year.”

S.B. 99 calls for “a parent, guardian, or other person who is responsible for the care of a child” to be allowed to “refuse to allow the child to attend… a course of instruction, a class period, an assembly, an organized school
function, or instruction provided by the district… regarding human sexuality instruction.”

If any instruction has anything to do with “human sexuality” or sexually transmitted diseases, parents must be given notice of at least 48 hours. The bill explicitly defines “human sexuality education” as anything related to ” sexual orientation, gender identity, abstinence,” among other topics.

Anyone who provides abortion services, is affiliated with someone who does so, or even works with an organization that provides abortion services, is not allowed to “offer, sponsor, or furnish in any manner” instruction that can be considered related to sex or sexuality.

“S.B. 99 is a discriminatory bill that directly targets LGBTQ kids. This bill sets a dangerous precedent in secondary education that would not only limit access to sex education, but any curriculum regarding LGBTQ people,” Alphonso David, president of the Human Rights Campaign, said in a statement. “All students, no matter their gender or sexual identity, deserve the opportunity to learn about themselves and information critical to their health.”

Gov. Gianforte did not provide any statement or further information beyond announcing his decision to sign both bills into law.

He previously said last week at a press conference that anti-trans bills and laws are an issue that “evokes a lot of passion on both sides.”

Gianforte added, “I’ve met with transgender students, I’ve met with transgender parents, I’ve met with women athletes. We’ve been taking input from all sides of this.”

Advocates in Montana have fought against anti-trans proposals to varying success this year. Another bill that Rep. Fuller introduced, House Bill 113, was defeated after key legislators voted against it because they met with parents of trans youth and trans advocates. That bill would have banned gender-affirming care for trans youth.

Anshuman Jha ‘had to be extra careful’ playing gay character in new film – Sify News

“I did feel responsible as an actor when I took this character because being a heterosexual man who was playing a homosexual character, I had to be extra careful and sensitive towards the portrayal. I do not want to play Veer (his role) in a caricaturish manner, on in those stereotyped ways,” Anshuman told IANS.

“Honestly, playing a gay man with sensitivity was a genuine challenge and I did a certain amount of research work, and interacted with people. I have friends in the LGBTQ community, too, so I have a certain amount of insight. I hope the audience sees it in my performance,” he added.

The film directed by Harish Vyas is about a homosexual boy and a lesbian girl on a road trip that lets them discover the essence of love in friendship. While Anshuman plays the gay boy, Zareen Khan essays the lesbian girl.

“I think acceptance of different voices is important, and that was the most important part of the story. I remember Harish sir shared the story of the film in a few lines to me in a cab as we rode from the New York airport to our destination. He told me it is a story of a boy, and a girl and a road trip. I said ok, what else? He said they are soulmates. The boy is gay, and the girl is a lesbian. During the journey, they discover pure love and friendship that they share for each other. I was just hooked there. It was a fascinating story for me, and the dimension between the boy and the girl from the LGBTQ community also shows their side of the story, and how they struggle in our society for acceptance,” said Anshuman.

The film has been screened at various international film festivals and has also won a few awards. Anshuman bagged Best Actor (jury) at the Rajasthan International Film Festival and the film received the Best Film Audience Choice Award at the HBO South Asian Film Festival.

“Hum Bhi Akele Tum Bhi Akele” releases on Disney+ Hotstar VIP and Disney+ Hotstar Premium on May 9.

(Arundhuti Banerjee can be contacted at arundhuti.b@ians.in)

–IANS
aru/vnc

‘White bagging’: New insurer policies hurting chemotherapy drug dispersal – pharostribune.com

LOGANSPORT — The theory is that white bagging — insurance companies requiring hospitals to use a specific specialty pharmacy for intensive treatments instead of the hospitals using their own resources — will save money while not changing patient care.

Hospitals in Indiana are finding out that isn’t the reality when it comes to chemotherapy.

On April 1, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield Indiana, the state’s largest health insurer, began requiring hospitals and clinics to buy chemotherapy drugs from CVS Specialty, a unit of pharmacy giant CVS Health — or lower their prices to match CVS.

At Logansport Memorial Hospital, eight cancer patients were impacted when it went into effect.

“Not a single one of them was able to get the drug,” said Perry Gay, President and CEO of LMH. “We attempted to adhere to the policy and did everything asked of us by the specialty pharmacy, only to be left waiting for drugs that never came.”

To compensate, LMH staff used medication from their stock, formulating dosages on site.

“We said we’d rather not get paid and keep patients safe,” Gay said.

At Margaret Mary Health in Batesville, every chemotherapy patient has seen a delay in chemotherapy medication delivery, with five patients experiencing a wait of a week or more, said Liz Leising, the hospital’s Chief Nursing Officer and Vice-President of Patient Services.

One patient’s medication was delayed more than three weeks.

“We spent multiple hours and made multiple phone calls trying to get the right person on the phone,” Leising said.

Staff made eight to nine calls to both CVS and Anthem and always had to leave a message that was returned the next day.

“When this was originally put in place, we were told it would be easy as ‘call this number or fax this number and it hasn’t,” she said.

One staff member spent four hours on hold before hanging up, then spent another hour on hold the next day before getting answers.

“There really wasn’t a sense of urgency,” said Leising.

What is white bagging?

Anthem is the first insurer in Indiana to require chemotherapy drugs be provided by its own recommended pharmacist, but the process has already been done for other medications.

Hospitals or medical providers would normally buy the drugs themselves under a discount program, and then distribute them to the patient. White bagging means the insurer does not pay the medical provider for the drugs, and instead uses a specialty pharmacy which then delivers the drug to the provider to give to the patient.

The practice is similar to brown bagging, where medication goes to the patient, who takes them to the medical provider or administers them on their own or with a visiting provider.

A study by the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy states that these methods give pharmacists more ability to use their expertise, including for dosages and drug interactions.

Tony Felts, Senior Director of Communications for Anthem, Inc., in Indiana, said that the white bagging only changes the way the hospital gets the medications, not the way the patient receives them.

“It’s not an issue about safety. It’s more about the cost of the drugs that are administered,” Felts said.

CVS Specialty Pharmacy has the ability to ship the drugs 24/7, Felts said. And the chemotherapy drugs can be cheaper that way.

Are there savings?

The insurance company’s official statement reads, “Anthem’s Designated Network … is designed to address unnecessary mark-up on specialty drugs, which providers can acquire at a discount and then markup as much as 200 or 300 percent when administered to the consumer.”

“This is why specialty drugs are one of the largest drivers leading the increase in health care costs,” the statement read. “Consumers are bearing the brunt of this cost.”

Not everyone shares that belief.

Indiana State Representative Ryan Hatfield (D, Evansville), who served on the Public Health Committee and worked on legislation about white bagging, said that consumers are still bearing the costs.

Often the insurance company and the specialty pharmacy are the same company, such as Aetna and CVS, Hatfield said.

With pharmacies not owned by insurance companies, some medications are marked up 370% to 465%, but according to data from the Indiana Board of Pharmacy, the increase is more than 8,000 percent, Hatfield said.

“So they’re setting their own prices and paying themselves, and their profits have been incredible,” Hatfield said. “It’s sold as a cost-saving measure, but it’s just a cost-saving measure for the insurance companies.”

Gay said that Anthem’s numbers take the highest cost providers, but for smaller, rural hospitals, those mark ups aren’t happening.

“Guys like us who do the right thing always get killed in this,” he said.

Because rural hospitals usually don’t make large mark-ups, white bagging seems like a punishment, said Cara Veale, Chief Executive Officer for Indiana Rural Health Association and former administrative vice-president for a rural oncology clinic.

Providers have concerns

Although chemotherapy dominates the current discussion on white bagging, “there’s a lot of concern about the practice itself,” said Veale.

Kelsey Finch, an oncology pharmacist practitioner at Columbus Regional Health in Columbus, said that the medications in white bagging are “incredibly high dollar and very temperamental.”

Medications can be sensitive to light, need refrigeration or react badly when jarred and harshly shaken, and some are caustic.

“Our concern about white bagging is that we’re no longer able to monitor each hand (that handles the medication),” she said.

The specialty pharmacies also hire their own delivery vendors who may not know where they’re delivering.

“People who aren’t familiar with our hospital have been known to leave the medications unattended with the patients’ information,” Finch said.

Her hospital had seven specific documented instances of specialty pharmacy deliveries not fully completed, including a package left outside the hospital department and not with any hospital personnel.

Indiana law requires medical providers to verify it’s safe for patient use, said Finch.

“If we can’t say the medicine is safe, we have an obligation not to give it to them,” she said.

Most of those interviewed said that it’s common for chemo patients to need an adjustment in medications due to changes in weight, progress or reactions, which hospitals with labs or pharmacies can do on site.

Although Anthem is the only insurance company white bagging chemotherapy in Indiana, Tabor expects an increase in frequency and the insurance companies broadening the programs.

He’s watching what’s happening in other states — including California (which has done white bagging for a while), Georgia, Texas and Massachusetts.

Adding, not lessening, costs

Gay said there have been added costs at Logansport Memorial Hospital due to white bagging, including extra staffing without an increase in income.

And the hospital also recently made a large investment in its cancer center, including the chemotherapy formulation area, which would become redundant if all insurance companies insist on white bagging.

The NAPB study included concerns similar to the medical providers.

“Under the white bagging model, physicians and dispensing pharmacies face the unpaid expense of safeguarding and storing patients’ medication until drug administration,” it stated.

Because specialty pharmacy medications are so specific, if a patient needs a treatment modified, the formulation can’t be used on another patient.

Some of the drugs are highly toxic and require special handling to dispose of, according to the study.

In Anthem’s emailed statement, Felts said, “The safety of our consumers is paramount as we work to provide access to quality, affordable health care.”

There are alternatives

According to Felts, Anthem requires medical facilities which are not part of its Designated Network to purchase certain specialty drugs from CVS Specialty.

“However, if facilities agree to specific terms with Anthem to participate in the Designated Network, the facility will not be required to acquire the specialty medication through this program, and may continue acquiring the specialty medications directly from their own suppliers,” he said.

Logansport Memorial decided it couldn’t continue with white bagging, Gay said.

But if a hospital doesn’t do it, Anthem wants to control prices on a number of drugs on a formulary, he said.

LMH negotiated prices with Anthem to continue using its own pharmacies for chemotherapy medications.

Felts’ email said, “As with all of our partner facilities, Anthem has met with Logansport Memorial on multiple occasions. We remain hopeful that they’ll see the value to the consumer and agree to the terms of participating in our Designated Network, as many other Indiana hospitals have already done.”

Some concerned medical groups have formed Hoosiers for Safe Medicine to speak with legislators, said Veale.

But individual hospitals and medical centers are limited in what they can do together because it would look like they’re breaking anti-trust laws, Gay said.

Legislative involvement

Chemotherapy did not start the conversation on white bagging.

In March 2020, the Indiana Board of Pharmacy had a meeting to talk about the gradual increase in white bagging, said Brian Tabor, President of the Indiana Hospital Association.

“Indiana was starting to have that conversation,” he said. “The pandemic disrupted it.”

Veale said that Hoosiers for Safe Medicine recently wrote the Indiana Department of Insurance and received a reply where it declined to get involved, and some state legislators they contacted felt it was more of a contractual issue than a legislative issue.

Rep. Hatfield has brought up a few bill amendments, and there’s been about six total bills addressing white bagging, he said.

But they haven’t passed this latest session. The legislation was mostly in the last two weeks of the session as people became aware of the white bagging practice.

Senate Bill 325 would have required insurance companies to give 80 percent of rebates in cost back to the insured.

That was removed in the conference committee process, Hatfield said.

The Indiana House did put an amendment on HB 1405, a bill that covered multiple medical situations, to create a study on white bagging.

The Department of Insurance, the pharmacy board, the Department of Health and Family and Social Services Administration would create a report to find best practice guidelines.

Hatfield said the study is required to go to Gov. Eric Holcomb Dec. 31. 2022.

It’s not what he hoped for, but he hopes it will lead to action and safety guidelines.

What’s next?

Tabor said the next step for the medical coalitions is to prepare to bring its concerns to the state legislature and to look at what other states are doing.

Although the state legislature is reconvening May 10 specifically to address vetoes by Holcomb and again in the fall for a special legislative session specifically for redistricting, Hatfield doesn’t foresee white bagging to be brought up either time.

Hatfield said he still plans to raise issues and legislation on white bagging, though.

“I’ve been offended by the practice that delays care and increases the cost of care for sick Hoosiers, especially Hoosiers with cancer,” Hatfield said.

‘White bagging’: New insurer policies hurting chemotherapy drug dispersal – Terre Haute Tribune Star

LOGANSPORT — The theory is that white bagging — insurance companies requiring hospitals to use a specific specialty pharmacy for intensive treatments instead of the hospitals using their own resources — will save money while not changing patient care.

Hospitals in Indiana are finding out that isn’t the reality when it comes to chemotherapy.

On April 1, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield Indiana, the state’s largest health insurer, began requiring hospitals and clinics to buy chemotherapy drugs from CVS Specialty, a unit of pharmacy giant CVS Health — or lower their prices to match CVS.

At Logansport Memorial Hospital, eight cancer patients were impacted when it went into effect.

“Not a single one of them was able to get the drug,” said Perry Gay, President and CEO of LMH. “We attempted to adhere to the policy and did everything asked of us by the specialty pharmacy, only to be left waiting for drugs that never came.”

To compensate, LMH staff used medication from their stock, formulating dosages on site.

“We said we’d rather not get paid and keep patients safe,” Gay said.

At Margaret Mary Health in Batesville, every chemotherapy patient has seen a delay in chemotherapy medication delivery, with five patients experiencing a wait of a week or more, said Liz Leising, the hospital’s Chief Nursing Officer and Vice-President of Patient Services.

One patient’s medication was delayed more than three weeks.

“We spent multiple hours and made multiple phone calls trying to get the right person on the phone,” Leising said.

Staff made eight to nine calls to both CVS and Anthem and always had to leave a message that was returned the next day.

“When this was originally put in place, we were told it would be easy as ‘call this number or fax this number and it hasn’t,” she said.

One staff member spent four hours on hold before hanging up, then spent another hour on hold the next day before getting answers.

“There really wasn’t a sense of urgency,” said Leising.

What is white bagging?

Anthem is the first insurer in Indiana to require chemotherapy drugs be provided by its own recommended pharmacist, but the process has already been done for other medications.

Hospitals or medical providers would normally buy the drugs themselves under a discount program, and then distribute them to the patient. White bagging means the insurer does not pay the medical provider for the drugs, and instead uses a specialty pharmacy which then delivers the drug to the provider to give to the patient.

The practice is similar to brown bagging, where medication goes to the patient, who takes them to the medical provider or administers them on their own or with a visiting provider.

A study by the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy states that these methods give pharmacists more ability to use their expertise, including for dosages and drug interactions.

Tony Felts, Senior Director of Communications for Anthem, Inc., in Indiana, said that the white bagging only changes the way the hospital gets the medications, not the way the patient receives them.

“It’s not an issue about safety. It’s more about the cost of the drugs that are administered,” Felts said.

CVS Specialty Pharmacy has the ability to ship the drugs 24/7, Felts said. And the chemotherapy drugs can be cheaper that way.

Are there savings?

The insurance company’s official statement reads, “Anthem’s Designated Network … is designed to address unnecessary mark-up on specialty drugs, which providers can acquire at a discount and then markup as much as 200 or 300 percent when administered to the consumer.”

“This is why specialty drugs are one of the largest drivers leading the increase in health care costs,” the statement read. “Consumers are bearing the brunt of this cost.”

Not everyone shares that belief.

Indiana State Representative Ryan Hatfield (D, Evansville), who served on the Public Health Committee and worked on legislation about white bagging, said that consumers are still bearing the costs.

Often the insurance company and the specialty pharmacy are the same company, such as Aetna and CVS, Hatfield said.

With pharmacies not owned by insurance companies, some medications are marked up 370% to 465%, but according to data from the Indiana Board of Pharmacy, the increase is more than 8,000 percent, Hatfield said.

“So they’re setting their own prices and paying themselves, and their profits have been incredible,” Hatfield said. “It’s sold as a cost-saving measure, but it’s just a cost-saving measure for the insurance companies.”

Gay said that Anthem’s numbers take the highest cost providers, but for smaller, rural hospitals, those mark ups aren’t happening.

“Guys like us who do the right thing always get killed in this,” he said.

Because rural hospitals usually don’t make large mark-ups, white bagging seems like a punishment, said Cara Veale, Chief Executive Officer for Indiana Rural Health Association and former administrative vice-president for a rural oncology clinic.

Providers have concerns

Although chemotherapy dominates the current discussion on white bagging, “there’s a lot of concern about the practice itself,” said Veale.

Kelsey Finch, an oncology pharmacist practitioner at Columbus Regional Health in Columbus, said that the medications in white bagging are “incredibly high dollar and very temperamental.”

Medications can be sensitive to light, need refrigeration or react badly when jarred and harshly shaken, and some are caustic.

“Our concern about white bagging is that we’re no longer able to monitor each hand (that handles the medication),” she said.

The specialty pharmacies also hire their own delivery vendors who may not know where they’re delivering.

“People who aren’t familiar with our hospital have been known to leave the medications unattended with the patients’ information,” Finch said.

Her hospital had seven specific documented instances of specialty pharmacy deliveries not fully completed, including a package left outside the hospital department and not with any hospital personnel.

Indiana law requires medical providers to verify it’s safe for patient use, said Finch.

“If we can’t say the medicine is safe, we have an obligation not to give it to them,” she said.

Most of those interviewed said that it’s common for chemo patients to need an adjustment in medications due to changes in weight, progress or reactions, which hospitals with labs or pharmacies can do on site.

Although Anthem is the only insurance company white bagging chemotherapy in Indiana, Tabor expects an increase in frequency and the insurance companies broadening the programs.

He’s watching what’s happening in other states — including California (which has done white bagging for a while), Georgia, Texas and Massachusetts.

Adding, not lessening, costs

Gay said there have been added costs at Logansport Memorial Hospital due to white bagging, including extra staffing without an increase in income.

And the hospital also recently made a large investment in its cancer center, including the chemotherapy formulation area, which would become redundant if all insurance companies insist on white bagging.

The NAPB study included concerns similar to the medical providers.

“Under the white bagging model, physicians and dispensing pharmacies face the unpaid expense of safeguarding and storing patients’ medication until drug administration,” it stated.

Because specialty pharmacy medications are so specific, if a patient needs a treatment modified, the formulation can’t be used on another patient.

Some of the drugs are highly toxic and require special handling to dispose of, according to the study.

In Anthem’s emailed statement, Felts said, “The safety of our consumers is paramount as we work to provide access to quality, affordable health care.”

There are alternatives

According to Felts, Anthem requires medical facilities which are not part of its Designated Network to purchase certain specialty drugs from CVS Specialty.

“However, if facilities agree to specific terms with Anthem to participate in the Designated Network, the facility will not be required to acquire the specialty medication through this program, and may continue acquiring the specialty medications directly from their own suppliers,” he said.

Logansport Memorial decided it couldn’t continue with white bagging, Gay said.

But if a hospital doesn’t do it, Anthem wants to control prices on a number of drugs on a formulary, he said.

LMH negotiated prices with Anthem to continue using its own pharmacies for chemotherapy medications.

Felts’ email said, “As with all of our partner facilities, Anthem has met with Logansport Memorial on multiple occasions. We remain hopeful that they’ll see the value to the consumer and agree to the terms of participating in our Designated Network, as many other Indiana hospitals have already done.”

Some concerned medical groups have formed Hoosiers for Safe Medicine to speak with legislators, said Veale.

But individual hospitals and medical centers are limited in what they can do together because it would look like they’re breaking anti-trust laws, Gay said.

Legislative involvement

Chemotherapy did not start the conversation on white bagging.

In March 2020, the Indiana Board of Pharmacy had a meeting to talk about the gradual increase in white bagging, said Brian Tabor, President of the Indiana Hospital Association.

“Indiana was starting to have that conversation,” he said. “The pandemic disrupted it.”

Veale said that Hoosiers for Safe Medicine recently wrote the Indiana Department of Insurance and received a reply where it declined to get involved, and some state legislators they contacted felt it was more of a contractual issue than a legislative issue.

Rep. Hatfield has brought up a few bill amendments, and there’s been about six total bills addressing white bagging, he said.

But they haven’t passed this latest session. The legislation was mostly in the last two weeks of the session as people became aware of the white bagging practice.

Senate Bill 325 would have required insurance companies to give 80 percent of rebates in cost back to the insured.

That was removed in the conference committee process, Hatfield said.

The Indiana House did put an amendment on HB 1405, a bill that covered multiple medical situations, to create a study on white bagging.

The Department of Insurance, the pharmacy board, the Department of Health and Family and Social Services Administration would create a report to find best practice guidelines.

Hatfield said the study is required to go to Gov. Eric Holcomb Dec. 31. 2022.

It’s not what he hoped for, but he hopes it will lead to action and safety guidelines.

What’s next?

Tabor said the next step for the medical coalitions is to prepare to bring its concerns to the state legislature and to look at what other states are doing.

Although the state legislature is reconvening May 10 specifically to address vetoes by Holcomb and again in the fall for a special legislative session specifically for redistricting, Hatfield doesn’t foresee white bagging to be brought up either time.

Hatfield said he still plans to raise issues and legislation on white bagging, though.

“I’ve been offended by the practice that delays care and increases the cost of care for sick Hoosiers, especially Hoosiers with cancer,” Hatfield said.