OnQall – OnQall – OnDemand Task Services
▻https://onqall.com
OnQall – OnQall – OnDemand Task Services
▻https://onqall.com
Connaissez-vous Civvl, le Uber des expulsions ? | korii.
▻https://korii.slate.fr/biz/etats-unis-logement-crise-civvl-uber-expulsions-plateforme-huissiers-dem
« Les expulsions sont les prestations qui connaissent la plus forte croissance, en raison du Covid-19 », claironne Civvl. Cette application américaine propose de jouer les huissiers ou les déménageuses en free-lance, pour déloger des locataires en délicatesse avec leurs propriétaires. Une sorte de Uber des expulsions, qui menacent des millions d’Américain·es en raison de la pandémie.
« Le chômage est à un niveau record et beaucoup [de personnes] ne peuvent pas ou ne paient tout simplement pas de loyer et d’hypothèques. Nous sommes engagés par des propriétaires et des banques contrariées, afin de récupérer des propriétés résidentielles saisies », explique Civvl sur le site de petites annonces Craigslist.
Selon l’entreprise, des milliers d’huissières et de déménageurs sont nécessaires afin d’exécuter les procédures d’expulsion qui se multiplient dans le pays. Comme le font les autres plateformes, elle vante la flexibilité de son modèle ainsi que l’avantage de pouvoir y travailler en devenant son propre patron ou sa propre patronne.
« C’est tordu que des prolétaires en difficulté soient tentés par des prestations comme le transport de meubles ou le rôle d’huissier pour une entreprise comme Civvl, expulsant d’autres prolétaires de leur maison afin de pouvoir eux-mêmes payer leur loyer », dénonce la juriste et militante du droit au logement Helena Duncan.
Vice a d’abord cru à un canular. Mais Civvl est une application bien réelle, détenue par OnQall, une entreprise qui propose l’ubériseration de toutes sortes de tâches « en dehors des principaux centres urbains ». Elle a également développé les apps LawnFixr (entretien des pelouses) CleanQwik (nettoyage) et MoveQwik (déménagement).
(#seenthis_bug : le tag emoji n’a pas marché)
A Political Philosopher on Why Democrats Should Think Differently About Merit | The New Yorker
▻https://www.newyorker.com/news/q-and-a/a-political-philosopher-on-why-democrats-should-think-differently-about-m
Looming above America’s present struggles over injustice and inequality is the sense that certain self-mythologies are beginning to evaporate. When Barack Obama was in the White House, he often studded his speeches with a favorite pop lyric, “You can make it if you try.” He mentioned it more than a hundred and forty times, even though the facts of declining social mobility rendered that image less and less convincing. In various studies, no more than eight per cent of Americans who are born into the bottom fifth of U.S. households, as measured by income, ever reach the top fifth; more than a third stay at the bottom.
That analysis of Obama’s language is just one of the startling facts in the latest book by the political philosopher Michael Sandel, who has spent decades scrutinizing the tenets of Western liberalism, including beliefs about justice, markets, and, now, meritocracy. In “The Tyranny of Merit: What’s Become of the Common Good?,” Sandel examines how the notion of “meritocracy,” a word coined in 1958 by Michael Young, a left-leaning British sociologist, was torqued into an American shibboleth. Over time, Sandel argues, it fed a “toxic brew of hubris and resentment.” He writes, “It flattered the winners and insulted the losers. By 2016, its time was up. The arrival of Brexit and Trump, and the rise of hyper-nationalist, anti-immigrant parties in Europe, announced the failure of the project.” In the final months of Sandel’s writing, he found that the pandemic underscored the political problems he was describing. “The question now is what an alternative political project might look like,” he wrote. Among his prescriptions, he favors some popular liberal proposals, such as introducing a tax on financial transactions, but also some provocative suggestions, such as creating a lottery system for élite college admissions.
In the early days of the pandemic, we often heard the reassuring slogan “We are all in this together.” We heard it from politicians, advertisers, celebrities. The slogan was all around us. It was inspiring in a way because it reminded us of our shared vulnerability in the face of the virus. But I think many people felt that the slogan rang hollow, even in the early weeks, because we knew, and felt, and sensed that we were not truly all in this together. It soon became clear that some of us would ride out the pandemic working from home, relatively removed from the risks, while others—including those whose work enabled the rest of us to work from home—had little choice but to expose themselves to the risks that come from working in stores, and in warehouses, and delivering goods. So it quickly became clear that we were not all in this together.
I should first explain what I mean by “meritocratic hubris.” It’s the tendency of those who land on top to believe that their success is their own doing, the measure of their merit, and, by implication, that those who struggle, those who were left behind, must deserve their fate as well. It’s the tendency to forget our indebtedness to family, teachers, community, country, and the times in which we live as conditions for the success that we enjoy. The more we believe that our success is our own doing, the harder it is to see ourselves in other people’s shoes, the harder it is to feel a sense of mutual responsibility for the fate of our fellow-citizens, including those who aren’t flourishing in the new economy.
In the book, you detail some practical proposals that you’d like to see introduced to confront these problems. But, in the short term, what would you like to see Joe Biden do in the next couple of months, to give life to those ideas, that you think might help?
I would urge Biden to play out an instinct that he has already voiced when he speaks about the “dignity of work.” What the rhetoric of rising has missed is the lost dignity of work that a great many people spend their lives engaged in. Not only in terms of stagnant wages, but also in terms of social recognition. Honor. At the heart of the resentment of many working people is the sense that the work they do isn’t respected in the way it once was. Not only the economy but also the culture has left them behind. If he should be elected, as I hope he will be, he should put the dignity of work at the center of his Presidency, which could make life better for everyone, not only the well credentialled. That could be the starting point for moving beyond the tyranny of merit, toward a politics of the common good.
Julio Iglesias chante la reprise de la Ligue 1 pour Uber Eats | SportBusiness.Club
▻https://sportbusiness.club/campagne-uber-eats-reprise-ligue1
Il n’y a que le livreur qui n’aime pas le foot.
Nouvelle domesticité en marche.
Nouveau partenaire titre de la Ligue 1, Uber Eats célèbre la reprise du championnat de France, prévue vendredi 21 août, avec une campagne publicitaire baptisée “C’est bon d’aimer le foot” portée par trois personnalités du football : l’ancien joueur et actuel consultant Laurent Paganelli, le journaliste Grégoire Margotton et l’ancien arbitre Tony Chapron.
Cette plateforme de marque, signée par l’agence Lafourmi, se décline notamment avec un spot TV qui suit un livreur Uber Eats, incarné par le comédien Certe Mathurin, sillonner les rues de différentes villes de clubs de Ligue 1 avec en fond le tube de Julio Iglesias (qui a été gardien de but de l’équipe réserve du Real Madrid), “Je n’ai pas changé”.
Uber Eats a pris la suite de Conforama pour le naming de la Ligue 1, le championnat de France élite de football. L’accord a été signé pour trois saisons. La saison 2020/2021 de Ligue 1 reprend le week-end prochain mais le premier match, programmé vendredi 21 août et opposant l’Olympique de Marseille à l’AS Saint-Etienne risque d’être reporté car le club phocéen a déclaré quatre cas de covid-19 parmi son effectif.
Uber Eats et Coca-Cola livrent un repas gratuit à ceux qui travaillent le soir de Noël
▻https://www.danstapub.com/uber-eats-coca-cola-repas-travail-soir-noel
Et le coursier, est-ce qu’il travaillera le soir de Noël ?
La nouvelle domesticité en marche... au delà des « riches », elle vise les classe moyennes, i.e. celles et ceux qui ont « la chance » d’avoir un travail.
S’il y a bien un soir dans l’année qu’on n’a pas envie de passer au bureau, c’est bien le soir de Noël. Partant de cet insight, Uber Eats et Coca-Cola, accompagnés de l’agence Romance, ont imaginé une opération spéciale.
Du nom de “Noël comme à la maison”, l’opération s’adressera à tous ceux qui travaillent le soir de Noël et qui n’ont pas la chance de partager leur repas en famille. Grâce à cette expérience inédite, médecins, sages-femmes, gardiennes et gardiens de nuit, hôteliers ou encore pompiers (ils sont des milliers de Français à travailler le soir du 24 décembre) pourront se faire livrer gratuitement le repas de Noël préparé par leurs proches directement sur leur lieu de travail avec l’application Uber Eats.
“Ce service inédit “Noël comme à la maison” porte les valeurs de nos marques en rassemblant les gens, tout spécialement lors de ces événements festifs. Il permet également d’activer un nouveau canal de distribution stratégique de nos produits notamment auprès des jeunes adultes et familles urbaines. Cette campagne s’inscrit dans le cadre d’un partenariat long terme signé avec Uber Eats, à la fois marketing et commercial. L’objectif de ce rapprochement est d’améliorer la visibilité, la distribution numérique et le taux de prise de l’ensemble de nos produits sur la plateforme tout au long de l’année” commente Grégoire Sénéchal, Digital e-Commerce & Innovation Senior Manager, Coca-Cola European Partners France.
#WTF
Bon. Ceci dit, je vois que dans la pub, il y a des « profils » intéressants car l’auteur de cet opuscule se targue de pratiquer « une veille quotidienne sur l’actualité publicitaire pour (nous) partager les dernières campagnes créatives ».
Et pour celles ou ceux qui « butteraient » sur le mot ’insight’ :
▻https://www.e-marketing.fr/Thematique/social-media-1096/Tribune/est-insight-229426.htm
Hundreds of sailors fear being stranded for Pacific storm season amid Covid border closures | World news | The Guardian
▻https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/sep/07/hundreds-of-sailors-fear-being-stranded-for-pacific-storm-season
▻https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/8d710a14f7d88224f8e08d4af3058d9773ce28ab/0_166_3500_2101/master/3500.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali
The crews of hundreds of ocean-going yachts fear being stranded in the Pacific islands during cyclone season with usual safe havens in New Zealand and Australia closed because of Covid-19 travel restrictions.Traditionally yachts sail south to escape the storm season but because of strict coronavirus protocols, the borders of both countries remain closed to all but their own nationals.Representatives of the sailors have been lobbying both governments. Pacific states face instability, hunger and slow road to Covid recovery. They have now gone public, claiming that a recent decision by New Zealand not to include cyclone refuge as a humanitarian ground allowing an exemption to Covid-19 entry restrictions put hundreds of people on an estimated 300 boats at risk.John Martin, of umbrella group Sail South Pacific, said the bulk of the boats were in French Polynesia, 18 to 25 days of sailing from New Zealand. Sail South Pacific and the Ocean Cruising Club have asked the New Zealand government to reconsider. The health ministry was alerted in April and in June the ministry said there would be an exemption process, raising the sailors’ hopes.
But according to the ministry of health website, foreign vessels are not permitted to arrive in the country unless they have an exemption. Exemptions can be given if there was a substantial economic benefit to New Zealand, such as for superyachts undergoing repair or upgrades. Smaller yachts require exemption on humanitarian grounds but this does not include refuge from storm season, according to the ministry website.
“For clarity, humanitarian reasons or other compelling needs would be unlikely to include situations relating solely to financial loss, or to vessels travelling primarily for pleasure or convenience such as tourists or ‘wintering over’,” the website reads.“People in vessels travelling to New Zealand to ‘winter over’ (eg to avoid hurricane/cyclone season in the Pacific) may have other genuine humanitarian reasons or other compelling needs for coming, which would need to be demonstrated in order for these vessels to qualify for an exemption.” Martin, who has been working with marinas in the north of New Zealand to ensure self-isolation aboard could be undertaken safely and to stagger arrivals, said the late decision not to grant exemption for sailors seeking safe haven from storm season was “very frustrating” and has left many “distraught”. Sailors have few alternatives. Under its ‘Blue Lanes’ policy, Fiji allows yachts and pleasure craft to sail into Port Denarau and, after completing Covid-19 safety requirements, those aboard can go ashore. Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama has pushed the ‘Blues Lanes’ policy, inviting billionaires to “escape the pandemic in paradise”
#Covid-19#migrant#migration#nouvellezelande#australie#pacifique#marin#sante#tourisme#restrictionsanitaire
Young Australians have long felt like citizens of the world. Covid has ended that | Brigid Delaney | Opinion | The Guardian
▻https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/sep/04/young-australians-have-long-felt-like-citizens-of-the-world-covid-has-e
▻https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/fe25f3f6a27cabe3087b6526be96c553ccf0ff49/0_155_5026_3014/master/5026.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali
It is the mark of a privileged person, in the Before Times, that they never really had to think about borders. Their passport has allowed them to go pretty much anywhere, and to come and go from their home country as they pleased. Until Covid-19 hit and borders became hard, many Australians held, at least in their minds and imagination, a sort of dual citizenship. The first citizenship was Australia, a citizen of the world was the second.
If you came of age in or after the 1990s, reciprocal working visas, cheap flights, the opening up of the international job market and the subsequent ease of movement lulled lucky Australians into thinking that borders were irrelevant.
For the rich, talented, well-connected, well-educated and those under 31, visas for Australians in places such as the UK, Canada, the US and Europe were easy enough to come by. Dubbed “gold-collar workers”, so many Australians enjoyed the fruits of participating in a global economy that by 2004, a Senate committee was set up to quantify the number of Australians that had left and to investigate how their skills and experience might one day circulate back into the Australian job market and economy. By 2018 there were estimated to be around one million Australians living and working overseas. Freedom of movement was a right that was so fundamental as to be barely considered. That is until this year, when Australia became one of the only democracies in the world that has effectively banned its citizens from leaving the country. Now an Australian citizen or permanent resident is not permitted to travel outbound unless they apply to Border Force for an exemption. The criteria is strict. For sound public health reasons, we’ve built a fortress unlike anything experienced in our lifetimes This long run of hypermobility – ruinous for the environment with all those flights but enriching for those selling their skills to the highest bidder in the global marketplace – came to a dramatic halt on 25 March. What a strange thing it is to log on to Instagram these days and see your British or European friends enjoying holidays on Greek Islands or in Portugal, while we’re locked in our own country. For sound public health reasons, we’ve built a fortress unlike anything experienced in our lifetimes. Almost no one gets in and no one gets out. So far there’s been widespread public support for such far-reaching measures. And in Australia, like New Zealand, there seems to be some antipathy towards those who are stuck overseas and trying to get back in.They had their chance in March, goes the refrain from politicians, including the prime minister and New South Wales premier. Suck it up. An Essential poll has shown last week that a majority of respondents support a hardline approach on border closures. Whether this is due to concerns about more virus getting into Australia, or latent, cultural resentments about those who leave – a new manifestation of tall poppy syndrome – it’s hard to say.
#Covid-19#migrant#migration#australie#hypermobilite#sante#tradition#forteresse#immobilite#frontiere#nouvellezelande#santepublique
TLAXCALA : D’Uber à lber : deux faces du travail précaire en Amérique latine
▻http://www.tlaxcala-int.org/article.asp?reference=29318
Ce mois-ci, l’attention a été attirée sur la situation précaire des coursiers par applications (prestataires de services de livraison) en cette période de pandémie. En plus d’être plus exposé aux virus et de recevoir une rémunération misérable par les applications, comme « Uber Eats », un coursier a dit au journal : « Je livre de la nourriture en étant affamé ». Quelque chose qui rend la trame de la surexploitation plus tragique.
Cette situation limite a conduit les coursiers brésiliens à lancer un appel à la grève pour le 1er juillet 2020. Le cri « Assez » retentit face aux effets de la politique néolibérale actuelle.
Cette situation m’a ramené à un passé récent, il y a dix ans, et à une histoire d’exploitation continue de notre peuple, comme Galeano l’a déjà décrite dans Les veines ouvertes de l’Amérique latine.
En tant que guide, le petit garçon Iber n’avait pas encore besoin de se soumettre à ce travail, mais bientôt son heure allait arriver. Comme était arrivée celle de son père, qui à un peu plus de trente ans était déjà mort des suites de la silicose, une maladie pulmonaire qui frappe fréquemment ceux qui respirent l’air de la mine.
Iber, un orphelin, un potosino, issu d’une famille pauvre n’aura pas le choix s’il n’y a pas d’opportunités et si le destin continue d’indiquer cette voie à sa famille. En plein XXIe siècle, il était pleinement conscient que, si la logique du capital prévalait, son espérance de vie dans une mine serait plus ou moins de 15 ans et que, bientôt, il ne serait qu’un chiffre de plus dans les tragiques statistiques e dans le destin funèbre des mineurs de Potosí.
Le coursier affamé d’Uber et Iber le Potosino sont quelques-uns des visages de cette machine à broyer les gens et les rêves appelée capitalisme. Il n’est pas possible de penser à un monde meilleur sans interrompre cette machine, ne serait-ce qu’un jour. Aujourd’hui est l’un de ces jours !
#Nouvelle_domesticité #Travail_dangereux #Mine #Amérique_latine
TLAXCALA : Brésil : les coursiers par application préparent une nouvelle grève pour le 25 juillet
▻http://www.tlaxcala-int.org/article.asp?reference=29322
Les coursiers des plateformes de livraison prévoient un nouvel arrêt de travail national pour le 25 juillet. L’action en faveur de meilleures conditions de travail poursuivra le mouvement connu sous le nom de Breque dos Apps (Coup de frein aux apps) qui a eu lieu pour la première fois le 1er juillet et a rassemblé des milliers de travailleurs dans plusieurs villes du pays.
Parmi les revendications qui continuent d’être des lignes directrices prioritaires pour la grève, figurent une rémunération plus juste grâce à l’établissement d’un taux minimum par course plus élevé que le taux actuel, ainsi qu’un paiement équitable et standardisé entre les platesforme par kilomètre parcouru.
La suspension immédiate des blocages de livreurs sans justification, qui selon les organisateurs de la grève sont souvent effectués par des entreprises telles que Rappi, Ifood, Loggi et UberEats, est également l’une des principales revendications.
L’informalité en hausse
Au milieu de la crise socio-économique aggravée par le coronavirus, de nombreux travailleurs informels ont cherché à se faire coursiers par applications pour essayer de s’assurer une certaine source de revenus. Ce service a été considéré comme une activité essentielle pendant la quarantaine.
Selon les informations envoyées à notre journal par Rappi, la plateforme comptait environ 200 000 livreurs enregistrés en Amérique latine au mois de mars. Mais, avec le début de la pandémie, ce chiffre a augmenté de 111 %. IFood, pour sa part, a indiqué avoir reçu plus de 175 000 demandes d’inscription en mars de cette année. En février, les coursiers inscrits étaient 85 000.
Malgré l’augmentation significative du nombre de travailleurs et l’offre de main-d’œuvre plus importante qui en a résulté, les taux n’ont pas été modifiés, ce qui a directement compromis le revenu des coursiers.
Une étude récente du Réseau de études et de surveillance de la réforme du travail (Remir Trabalho) a montré que parmi les coursiers interrogés, 60,3 % ont signalé une baisse des salaires depuis la pandémie.
27,6 % ont déclaré que le revenu s’était maintenu et seulement 10,3 % ont déclaré qu’ils gagnaient plus d’argent. L’enquête a permis d’interroger 252 personnes de 26 villes entre le 13 et le 20 avril par un questionnaire en ligne.
#Nouvelle_domesticité #Brésil #Plateformes #Livraison #Grève
▷ Entregadores de aplicativo fazem greve nacional » Domiplay
▻https://br.domiplay.net/video/entregadores-de-aplicativo-fazem-greve-01-07-20-rede-fdxmv4
Grève générale des travailleurs des plateformes au Brésil
Vidéo des manifestations
Clyn App | Kenya
▻https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=381179788998847&extid=Y17lSH1SCEeWL8F8
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On-demand home cleaning service Kisafi launches in Kenya
▻https://disrupt-africa.com/2016/04/on-demand-home-cleaning-service-kisafi-launches-in-kenya
On-demand home cleaning and laundry service Kisafi has launched in Nairobi, Kenya, aiming to bring consumers convenience at the click of a button and spread across the region.
Kisafi – the name means “it is clean” in Swahili – allows homeowners to use the web or an Android app to have their laundry picked up and taken care of or their homes cleaned.
The platform has been in private beta since December but launched to the general public on Nairobi today, with launches in Tanzania, Uganda and Rwanda to follow before a rollout in West Africa at a later date.
Complete with a founding team with backgrounds at McKinsey & Co, Citigroup and Accenture, Kisafi has a quality control and assurance centre with modern commercial cleaning equipment in Nairobi, and offers a marketplace of former and current hospitality and hotel employees.
It has signed partnerships with two of the top laundry and dry cleaning service providers in Nairobi, and also has a tech-enablement suite, including body cameras for the recording of the cleaning process and a high-grade photo filing system for before and after wash clothing pictures.
Co-founder Janet Otieno said Kisafi was trying to make premium laundry and home cleaning a utility that is available to everyone, and save people time.
“Given the rate of growth of the emerging affluent and middle class across Sub-Saharan Africa, coupled with the fast pace of work and life, every minute spent on chores counts,” she said.
“We asked folks that were part of our closed beta why they love the service, and unanimously it was at least two things – ease and affordability.”
Kisafi – which has seed investment from angels in Lagos and New York – said it was aiming to take a significant portion of emerging affluent market, and has a pan-African focus.
“This is reflected in our team composition. Our founding and advisory team is made up of folks from Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa,” Otieno said.
Des marchés aux esclaves sur Instagram et autres applications | Slate.fr
▻http://www.slate.fr/story/183654/marches-aux-esclaves-instagram-applications-travailleuses-domestiques-kafala
Sur l’écran du smartphone, les photos défilent par milliers : des portraits de femmes, la plupart originaires de pays d’Afrique (Guinée, Ghana, Éthiopie, Soudan…) ou d’Asie (Philippines, Népal, Inde…), répertoriées par ethnies, avec un prix affiché : elles sont disponibles à l’achat, pour quelques milliers d’euros.
Le commerce illégal de travailleuses domestiques, qui fonctionne comme un réseau de trafic d’êtres humains, prospère tranquillement sur les applications mobiles. Sur Instagram par exemple, propriété de Facebook, on peut trouver des publications boostées par certains hashtags, proposant d’acheter une femme et ses services domestiques –la négociation aura tout simplement lieu par message privé.
D’autres applications, comme 4Sale ou Haraj, approuvées et disponibles sur Google Play et l’App Store d’Apple, proposent des offres similaires.
Marché aux esclaves
« Ce qu’ils font, c’est promouvoir un marché aux esclaves en ligne », alerte Urmila Bhoola, rapporteuse spéciale de l’ONU sur les formes contemporaines d’esclavage. « Si Google, Apple, Facebook ou toute autre société héberge des applications comme celles-ci, elles doivent être tenues pour responsables », ajoute-t-elle.
#Sisters_Underground - In The Neighbourhood ( , 1994)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vhK8o2lRy5o
#Musique #Musique_et_politique #rap #Femmes #Sororité
A rajouter sur la playlist de chanteuses féministes de @mad_meg :
►https://seenthis.net/messages/392880
’Here we go again’: Auckland fears a long lockdown as coronavirus returns | World news | The Guardian
▻https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/aug/13/here-we-go-again-auckland-fears-a-long-lockdown-as-coronavirus-returns
▻https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/ade5cd2b9d147909847565aa5249e18926682b65/69_394_2712_1628/master/2712.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali
On Thursday, the prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, announced 13 new Covid-19 cases in Auckland, all linked to the original four confirmed cases from Tuesday’s outbreak. There are now 17 active community cases. Nineteen other active cases have been diagnosed in managed isolation and are linked to the border.
Après 102 jours sans contamination, le coronavirus est de retour en Nouvelle-Zélande
▻https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2020/08/12/apres-102-jours-sans-contamination-le-coronavirus-est-de-retour-en-nouvelle-
#Covid-19 #migrant #migration #tourisme #nouvellezelande #royaumeuni #bloque #frontiere
Helensburgh couple ’abandoned’ in New Zealand during Covid-19 lockdown | Helensburgh Advertiser
▻https://www.helensburghadvertiser.co.uk/news/18639562.helensburgh-couple-abandoned-new-zealand-covid-19-
▻https://www.helensburghadvertiser.co.uk/resources/images/11678061
#Covid-19 #migrant #migration #nouvellezelande #santementale #quarantaine
COVID-19: New Zealand expats forced to seek mental health support after quarantine fees introduced | Newshub
▻https://www.newshub.co.nz/home/new-zealand/2020/08/covid-19-new-zealand-expats-forced-to-seek-mental-health-support-after-qu
#Covid-19 #migrant #migration #bloque #nouvellezelande #inde
Coronavirus : 400 New Zealanders desperate to leave India | Stuff.co.nz
▻https://www.stuff.co.nz/travel/travel-troubles/122306467/coronavirus-400-new-zealanders-desperate-to-leave-india
#Covid-19 #migrant #migration #expatries #retour #nouvellezelande
Taxpayer Victory: No Border Tax For Returning Expats | Scoop News
▻https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO2007/S00386/taxpayer-victory-no-border-tax-for-returning-expats.htm
#Covid-19 #migrant #migration #quarantaine #retour #nouvellezelande
Coronavirus: Kiwis abroad anxious, confused at plans to charge certain returnees | Stuff.co.nz
▻https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/health/coronavirus/122258348/coronavirus-kiwis-abroad-anxious-confused-at-plans-to-charge-certain-return
New Zealand to start charging some travellers for coronavirus quarantine | World news | The Guardian
▻https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jul/29/new-zealand-to-start-charging-some-travellers-for-coronavirus-quarantin
▻https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/e2d324aa7146ceccb6097bd79c8bda2dded1abef/0_285_5333_3200/master/5333.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-ali
Some travellers returning to New Zealand will have to pay the costs of their quarantine, after the government partially backed down from a controversial plan to bill all arrivals for their two-week isolation stay.The costs will apply only those who chose to leave the country after the charges are imposed and then return, or those staying in New Zealand for fewer than 90 days, the government said on Wednesday. Temporary visa holders will also be charged, but New Zealanders returning home permanently will avoid any costs. New Zealand beat Covid-19 by trusting leaders and following advice – study. The isolation stays will cost NZ$3,100 ($2,050) for the first adult in each hotel room, $950 for each additional adult and $475 for each child sharing the room. Megan Woods, the housing minister, said on Wednesday those who could not afford the fees could apply for waivers. She added: “This solution balances the rights of New Zealanders to return home, while ensuring those who choose to holiday here, or holiday overseas before returning home, are contributing to the considerable cost of managed isolation.”
#Covid-19#migrant#migration#nouvellezelande#quarantaine#retour#resident#voyageur#economie
Rétrospective interactive au Busan International Short Film
▻http://www.davduf.net/retrospective-interactive-au-busan-international
Prison Valley (2010), Fort McMoney (2013) et Dada Data (2016) projetés au 37e Busan International Short Film Festival (BISFF), en Corée. Du 27 au 31 août 2020, dans le cadre de ses premiers Interactive Shorts. Interactive films feature the innovative concept of allowing the viewer to actively participate, making choices and changing the outcome of a film. The “Interactive Shorts” program is a new program designed to allow the viewer to actively participate for a novel experience, rather than (...) #Nouvelles_narrations
#Covid-19 #migrant #migration #nouvellezelande #quarantaine #expatries
Coronavirus : Expats launch campaign against quarantine fees, Government decision likely today | Stuff.co.nz
▻https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/politics/300066730/coronavirus-expats-launch-campaign-against-quarantine-fees-government-decis
ne hotels for returning Kiwis.
The campaign comes as the Government is likely to make a decision on the proposed fees at Cabinet on Monday.
The Government has been mulling the decision for weeks, with the minister responsible Megan Woods earlier promising to have some kind of announcement ready by the end of the month. The last Cab
#Covid-19 #migrant #migration #nouvellezelande #expatries #adaptation La Nouvelle-Zélande : Eldorado pour l’après-coronavirus | lepetitjournal.com
▻https://lepetitjournal.com/auckland/actualites/la-nouvelle-zelande-eldorado-pour-lapres-coronavirus-285205