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Workers at an office in Russia; Credit: Oleg Nikishin/Getty Images AirTalk® As the workforce in the US grows older, employers are faced with delicate situations in which they might have to discuss an employee’s cognitive decline. For example, if someone is experiencing dementia, they might become slower at completing tasks or eventually be unable to do the job that they were hired for. Some employees are aware of their diagnosis, but others might need to have a very delicate meeting with their boss. How should an employer navigate this difficult conversation? And if you’re an employer or employee who’s faced this situation, how have you handled it?
Give us a call at 866-893-5722. Guest:, owner of, an employment law and HR consulting firm, based in Minneapolis; she tweets MEDIA ENCLOSURE:. Posted:Wed, 30 Jan 2019 09:50:35 -0800. Crime scene tape surrounds the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino in Las Vegas on Oct. 2, 2017.; Credit: Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images AirTalk® It’s been 16 months since a 64-year-old man opened fire into a crowd at the Route 91 Harvest Festival concert grounds on the Las Vegas strip.
The shooter killed more than 50 people, and wounded nearly 900 others from his window at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino before fatally shooting himself. There was hope that the into the tragic events of October 2017 would reveal the shooter’s motive. But the bureau’s, released Tuesday, didn’t shed light on any reasons why the Harvest Festival was targeted.
But despite never knowing what could have gone on in the mind of the man who carried out the events of that day, numerous conspiracy theories have popped up, not just about the shooter, but speculation that there was more than one gunman. Today on AirTalk, Larry finds out the latest in what was revealed during the FBI’s investigation, and consults with a historian for a deep dive of the psychology behind conspiracy theories. Guests:, host and senior producer of, the daily talk show on KNPR, our sister affiliate in Las Vegas, Nev.; he tweets, professor of history at UC Davis whose areas of expertise include the study of conspiracy theories; she is also author of the book, “” (Oxford University Press, 2011) MEDIA ENCLOSURE:.
Posted:Wed, 30 Jan 2019 09:44:45 -0800. Restoring sleep patterns could improve recovery after a serious brain injury.; Credit: yipchoonwai/Getty Images AirTalk® As more Americans each night, brain researchers are starting to call sleep deprivation a “public health crisis.” It’s known that has been linked to anxiety, depression, and may increase the risk of Alzheimer’s. But researchers are now examining how insufficient sleep may be the onset to some of these psychiatric and neurological disorders, as opposed to merely a symptom. A by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that more than one-third of adults aged 18-60 slept less than seven hours.
The report also found that sleeping less than the recommended time “is associated with increased risk for obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, coronary heart disease, stroke, frequent mental distress, and all-cause mortality.” So does lack of sleep qualify as a public health crisis? And if so, what kind of policy changes would be made to combat the crisis? What might a campaign for treating sleep deprivation look like?
Guests:, neuroscientist and associate professor at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, senior behavioral and social scientist at RAND and adjunct professor of psychiatry and psychology at the University of Pittsburgh MEDIA ENCLOSURE:. Posted:Wed, 30 Jan 2019 09:41:06 -0800. A parent holds the hand of their newborn child; Credit: China Photos/Getty Images AirTalk® Paid parental leave is having a moment. Two LA City Council members just a plan that would provide 18 weeks of 100 percent paid family leave.
Governor Newsom’s budget included a plan for six months of paid parental leave. Meanwhile, the Gates Foundation garnered some earlier in the month for cutting down its year long paid leave to six months and adding a stipend that new parents can spend on childcare costs.
Is the only industrialized country that does not mandate paid parental leave, though in California, eligible employees can take six weeks off while receiving around 60 percent of their pay. And while doctors usually recommend at least three months of parental leave to benefit the baby, the conversation is not just rooted in public health policy, but also in economics.
What length of time allows parents, especially women, to successfully reintegrate into the workforce? What kind of policy won’t de-incentivize companies from hiring women in the first place? Is there such a thing as too long parental leave? If you’re a parent, what was your experience with parental leave? Guests:, economist at AEI where she directs the AEI-Brookings Project on Paid Family and Medical Leave, health economist and interim dean of the school of public health at UC Berkeley MEDIA ENCLOSURE:. Posted:Wed, 30 Jan 2019 09:36:46 -0800.
Fourth graders at Camino Nuevo Charter Academy close their eyes and brainstorm theses for an essay assignment.; Credit: Maya Sugarman/KPCC AirTalk® Los Angeles Unified School District board approved the new contract hammered out between the district and United Teachers Los Angeles, the teacher union, yesterday. The board also endorsed a resolution that calls for a moratorium on the establishment of new charter schools within the district. Despite its passage, the charter resolution is symbolic in nature. The power to regulate charter schools lies with the state legislature and the governor. The new three-year contract for LAUSD teachers came about after a nine-day teacher walkout. Before the two sides came to an agreement, LAUSD was insistent that the district did not have the money to meet union demands. The deal that was eventually struck includes a 6 percent pay raise, the hiring of more nurses, librarians and counselors, and smaller class sizes.
Hours before the LAUSD board voted yesterday, county regulators released a statement questioning the financial sustainability of the new contract. KPCC’s education reporter Kyle Stokes joins Larry to provide the latest. Guest:, education reporter at KPCC; he tweets MEDIA ENCLOSURE:. Posted:Tue, 29 Jan 2019 10:01:53 -0800. Staarla Heaney hand rolls marijuana cigarettes at the San Francisco Patients Cooperative, a medical cannabis cooperative, July 25, 2002 in San Francisco, California.; Credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images AirTalk® California’s much-hyped, year-old marijuana industry fell woefully short of expectations in 2018 and industry leaders blame their inability to compete with the state’s robust black market, which doesn’t pay the taxes and navigate the red tape they do. So on Monday, several cannabis-industry supporting state lawmakers to slash taxes as a way to jump start California’s legal marijuana marketplace. Democrat Assemblyman Rob Bonta proposed to temporarily reduce the 15% tax consumers pay at the retail counter to 11% and eliminate the $148 per pound of pot farmers pay for three years.
Boosters of the legal pot industry said the tax proposal was a good start, but that onerous and costly regulations are also enticing growers and sellers to skip licensing and remain selling marijuana illegally. The proposal, if passed, would not lower county and city taxes. We debate the proposal. With files from the Associated Press Guests: Jerred Kiloh, president of, a Los Angeles-based cannabis industry group representing regulated cannabis retailers in California, and owner of The Higher Path Collective, a medical and recreational cannabis dispensary in Sherman Oaks, co-director of Drug Policy Research Center at Rand Corporation; expert in health economics MEDIA ENCLOSURE:. Posted:Tue, 29 Jan 2019 09:51:09 -0800. The sun setting behind the Hollywood Burbank Airport; Credit: Wikimedia Commons AirTalk® The Federal Aviation Administration is having a public scoping meeting Tuesday to hear public comments on its Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for a replacement terminal at the Hollywood Burbank Airport.
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Formerly the Bob Hope Airport, Hollywood Burbank Airport’s new passenger terminal was approved by a vote on Measure B in 2016. The plan is to rebuild the 14-gate terminal to meet current seismic standards, bigger walkways, indoor luggage carousels and more access to the disabled, all on a 355,000-square-foot layout. Residents are challenging the plan, saying that the upgraded terminal will only add more traffic, both on the ground and in the air, and more noise. That, coupled with an ongoing debate about the noise caused by lowered flight paths to and from the airport are exacerbating concerns among those who live within earshot of plane activity. Larry Mantle hosts a lively debate today, about whether these new airport upgrades will bring enough progress to outweigh resident concerns.
A general public meeting for the Hollywood Burbank Airport is held tonight, Jan 29, from 6 to 8pm at the of the Burbank Library Guests:, Mayor of Burbank Kimberly Biddle, resident of Studio City who leads the community group, MEDIA ENCLOSURE:. Posted:Tue, 29 Jan 2019 09:47:21 -0800. A Frontier Airlines plane sits on the tarmac at the Pittsburgh International Airport July 9, 2008 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Credit: Jeff Swensen/Getty Images AirTalk® Earlier this month Frontier Airlines, the Denver-based low-cost air carrier, changed its policy regarding tips given to flight attendants. Since fall of 2015, passengers who have ordered food and drinks from a digital tablet onboard Frontier flights have had the option of giving the flight attendant a tip. Under the previous policy, tips given from the tablet were collectively pooled and distributed evenly amongst the cabin crew.
But under the new policy tips given by passengers to attendants will remain with the individual flight attendants. Regarding the recent change in policy Frontier spokesman Jonathan Freed “We appreciate the great work of our flight attendants and know that our customers do as well,” and that the choice to include gratuity is “entirely at the customer’s discretion, and many do it,” he added. Frontier’s tablet based system does allow flight attendants to skip the screen at their own discretion when a customer pays In response to Frontier Airlines' change in tipping policy, the President Sara Nelson released the following statement: “Flight Attendants are certified for our safety, health, and security work. El Camino Real Charter High School in Woodland Hills, Calif., on Thursday, Oct. 6, 2016.; Credit: Kyle Stokes/KPCC AirTalk® Los Angeles Unified School District board members are gearing up for a vote Tuesday afternoon on a resolution to put a moratorium on charter schools.
A cap was proposed by United Teachers Los Angeles President Alex Caputo-Pearl just days before the LAUSD teachers strike. The school board is voting instead to put a temporary moratorium to create any additional charter schools. Charters have been a hot button issue for some time.
They were not part of teachers union negotiations with the district. Rather, it has been a topic of conversation around the teachers union and LAUSD bargaining table, and with charter parents, especially some who feel that their voices around the issue of charter schools have not been heard. Caputo-Pearl has argued that charters take valuable resources from other LAUSD schools, and stifle traditional public school enrollment. Larry speaks to KPCC Education Reporter Kyle Stokes and California Charter School President Myrna Castrejon for the latest on Tuesday’s LAUSD school board vote. Guests:, KPCC’s K-12 education reporter; he’s been following the story, president and CEO of the California Charter School Association MEDIA ENCLOSURE:. Posted:Tue, 29 Jan 2019 09:40:27 -0800. Russian teenagers use their mobile phones while sitting on a bench in a park in central Moscow on April 24, 2018; Credit: MLADEN ANTONOV/AFP/Getty Images AirTalk® With kids glued to their screens and well-circulated sounding the alarm bells of increased risks of depression, anxiety and suicide, parents have had plenty to worry about.
But a new Oxford published in Nature Human Behavior (and believed to have applied more statistical techniques) says those scary studies are wildly exaggerated. The Oxford study examined 350,000 teens and included data from a popular by San Diego State University psychology professor Jean Twenge, which said increased screen time, especially among teen girls, might have caused the 2010 to 2015 uptick in depression and suicidal thoughts. But Andrew Przybylski and Netta Weinstein at the Oxford Internet Institute arrived at a much different conclusion: screentime is about as scary as, with even less of a negative impact on adolescent mental health than wearing glasses. Why such drastically different conclusions, and how should parents respond to the conflicting arguments? We hear from both sides. Call us at 866-893-5722 with questions or comment below. Guests:, experimental psychologist and director of research at the the, a multidisciplinary research and teaching department of the University of Oxford; he tweets, professor of psychology at San Diego State University and author of “” (Simon and Schuster August 2017); she is also the lead author of the study “” and tweets MEDIA ENCLOSURE:.
Posted:Mon, 28 Jan 2019 09:36:24 -0800. Venezuela's National Assembly head and self-proclaimed 'acting president' Juan Guaido speaks to the press after attending a mass in honour to the fallen in the fight for freedom, political prisoners and the exiled, at the San Jose church in Caracas on January 27, 2019; Credit: LUIS ROBAYO/AFP/Getty Images AirTalk® The struggle for control of Venezuela turned to the military Sunday, with supporters of opposition leader Juan Guaido handing leaflets to soldiers detailing a proposed amnesty law that would protect them for helping overthrow President Nicolas Maduro. At the same time, Maduro demonstrated his might, wearing tan fatigues at military exercises.
Flanked by his top brass, Maduro watched heavy artillery fired into a hillside and boarded an amphibious tank. Addressing soldiers in an appearance on state TV, Maduro asked whether they were plotting with the 'imperialist' United States, which he accused of openly leading a coup against him. The dueling appeals from the two rivals again put the military center stage in the global debate over who holds a legitimate claim to power in the South American nation. What’s the latest from Venezuela?
And how is the White House response affecting the political situation? With files from the Associated Press With guest host Libby Denkmann Guests:, Professor of Latin American History and Chicano Latino studies at Pomona College; his expertise includes culture and politics in Venezuela. Tinker Salas is also the author of three books on Venezuela, including, “” (Oxford University Press, 2015), director of the Latin American Program at the Wilson Center; her research focus includes politics and global governance in Latin America MEDIA ENCLOSURE:. Posted:Mon, 28 Jan 2019 09:33:54 -0800. Shoppers at a mall send text messages using mobile phones September 9, 2009; Credit: JAY DIRECTO/AFP/Getty Images Itxy Quintanilla AirTalk® these are only a few trends that have emerged in today’s digital age of social media and online dating.
But the most ubiquitous of them all might be the dating trend known as “ghosting.” to the Urban Dictionary, ghosting is “the act of suddenly ceasing all communication with someone the subject is dating, but no longer wishes to date.” The phenomenon, however, has since surpassed dating and made its way into friendships and even the. So why do people choose to “ghost” their partners or friends?
And what consequences does it have on people on the receiving end? If you’ve ever ghosted someone, what led you to make that decision? And if you’ve ever been ghosted, what impact did it have on you?
Call us and weigh in at 866-893-5722. With guest host Libby Denkmann Guests: professor of communication studies at California State University, Long Beach; she tweets, clinical psychologist, adjunct professor of psychology at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and adjunct clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of Nevada School of Medicine; she tweets MEDIA ENCLOSURE:. Posted:Mon, 28 Jan 2019 09:11:57 -0800. This picture taken on December 12, 2014 shows a Confucius statue in the seaside resort in Beidaihe, Hebei province.; Credit: FRED DUFOUR/AFP/Getty Images AirTalk® UCLA has one.
Stanford has one. In fact, there are about 100 of them in the U.S. Confucius Institutes, which are non-profit educational organizations funded by the Chinese government and meant to promote positive aspects of Chinese culture. But as tensions between the U.S. And China escalate, these agencies have garnered greater scrutiny from U.S. Officials who fear that they might be undermining academic independence, or even be a hotbed for espionage.
Last year, FBI director Christopher Wray said that the FBI would these institutions. Critics of Confucius Institutes argue that they allow Chinese government backed idology to influence American Academia and that the money they bring in can be used as leverage by the Chinese government. There’s no evidence that these Institutes harbor any illegal activity and they mostly offer language and culture classes - but they are undeniably tools of soft-power.
So are they really dangerous? What’s their history and their role in the American campus? With guest host Libby Denkmann Guests: reporter for the LA Times, where he covers the national and global economy out of Washington D.C.; he has been following this; formerly the LA Times Shanghai Bureau Chief; he tweets, director of the USC U.S.-China Institute MEDIA ENCLOSURE:. Posted:Mon, 28 Jan 2019 09:00:38 -0800. US President Donald Trump speaks about the government shutdown on January 25, 2019, from the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, DC.; Credit: ALEX EDELMAN/AFP/Getty Images AirTalk® AirTalk’s weekly political roundtable recaps the headlines you might’ve missed over the weekend and looks ahead to the biggest stories of the week to come in national and state politics. Here’s what we’re watching this week:. President Trump agrees to a that would temporarily reopen the federal government for three weeks, ending the 35-day streak in the longest partial government shutdown in history.
Some lawmakersto outlaw shutdowns. With the government reopened, Trump’s State of the Union Address is also. The latest on the Mueller investigation: and the WikiLeak-ed.
The Senate Intelligence Committee Michael Cohen after he pulled out of a public hearing scheduled for February 7. in Venezuela as the power struggle continues, including its implications for U.S. Foreign diplomacy. The U.S. Sending asylum-seekers back across the southern border.
Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz presidential run With guest host Libby Denkmann Guests:, research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University; he was an adviser for Marco Rubio’s 2016 presidential campaign and served as policy director for the Romney-Ryan 2012 presidential campaign; he tweets, professor of political science at UCLA; she tweets MEDIA ENCLOSURE.