Saturday, 31 January 2026

A return to office for men only?

 Remote work disparity: Men return to office, women stay home


A return to office for men only? by Gleb Tsipursky, opinion contributor - 01/13/26 9:00 AM ET


Getty Images




A silent reshuffle is unfolding across corporate America. Office towers are refilling with men, while women continue tapping at keyboards from their kitchen tables. Far from a balanced rebound, the return-to-office push has become unmistakably gendered.

Fresh data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reveal a striking split: “the share of men who spent some time working at home decreased from 34 percent in 2023 to 29 percent in 2024, while the share of women who did so remained the same (36 percent).” The trend is clear — return to office is happening for men, not for women.


These figures sit atop an historic surge in women’s labor-force engagement. Brookings researchers note that prime-age female participation reached “77.7 percent, slightly below the highest level on record” in May 2025. Much of that momentum comes from mothers who can remain in the workforce precisely because remote options still exist.

Corporate policy explains only part of the divergence. Three structural forces amplify the effect.

One is optics. Managers still equate physical presence with ambition, and annual performance reviews still tend to reward the employee whose face is most often visible in the conference room. The message may sometimes be unspoken, but it’s unmistakable: the corner-office track still runs through the lobby turnstile.

Men, socialized to chase visible advancement, often respond to those cues by booking the earliest train and the latest return, ensuring their badges swipe first and last. Women, balancing caregiving or simply valuing autonomy, may weigh the same cues differently. Many have learned that a polished deliverable submitted at 6 a.m. from the breakfast table travels just as far as a handshake in the bullpen, and they refuse to sacrifice the flexibility that underpins that efficiency.

Moreover, male-dominated occupations in finance, tech infrastructure and heavy industry are facing louder calls to repopulate headquarters. Earnings calls routinely feature CEOs assuring investors that “culture and innovation happen in person,” language that filters down through layers of middle management as mandatory desk days. Women cluster more heavily in functions such as HR, marketing and design — roles that proved remote-friendly during the pandemic and remain so because collaboration happens in cloud-based suites rather than on whiteboards bolted to drywall. These divisions reinforce the gender split every time a new return-to-office memo hits inboxes.

Finally, social expectations. The domestic load still skews female despite modest progress since 2020. Remote work remains the most practical way to integrate school pick-ups, therapist appointments and elder-care errands into a salaried day. Employers tacitly recognize that reality by tolerating women’s flexibility while nudging men to reclaim cubicles. The result is a quiet re-segregation of labor: women secure autonomy at the cost of in-office visibility, while men win face time but surrender work-life balance — an imbalance that now shapes careers, household dynamics and ultimately the leadership pipeline itself.


Retention data in the work-from-home literature link hybrid options to higher job satisfaction and lower turnover; if women keep that benefit while men lose it, companies risk re-segregating career paths along flexibility lines. Career-progression research warns that remote workers, many of them women, already face proximity bias in the form of reduced visibility, fewer promotions and limited mentorship. A scenario in which men gain office face time and women do not could deepen those promotion gaps.

Conversely, male re-entry may backfire for firms hunting scarce talent. The Brookings analysis shows female participation now exceeds its pre-pandemic peaks, suggesting flexible roles attract a crucial share of the workforce. Requiring men to sacrifice that flexibility may push some to greener, hybrid pastures, compounding turnover.

Finally, when male remote days drop, the domestic rebalancing achieved since 2020 may erode, pulling women back into disproportionate housework — an outcome squarely at odds with corporate inclusivity pledges.


The evidence is unmistakable. Remote work in 2025 remains standard for more than a third of working women, as it was last year, yet it is rapidly slipping for men. Promotion politics, industry composition and entrenched social norms have funneled the genders down separate post-pandemic paths. 



Employers crowing about successful return-to-office mandates should look closer: they have engineered a return-to-office for men only, reshaping talent pipelines and, potentially, future leadership ranks. Until advancement metrics truly reward results over chair time and genuine hybrid options extend to all employees, this new, subtler form of workplace inequality will persist.

Redefining commitment — that is, valuing output wherever the laptop sits — is no longer an HR talking point. It is the front line of gender equity in the post-COVID labor market, and the stakes rise each time another man swipes a building badge while his female colleague logs into the morning stand-up from home.

Thursday, 29 January 2026

230m users ask ChatGPT about health

  

ChatGPT Health

Nick Iluzada

Who needs doctors when you can ask a robot if your nagging cough is just a cold or, far more likely, a rare 18th-century pulmonary disease? OpenAI says there are hundreds of millions of you doing the latter.

The AI company behind ChatGPT said that 230 million users ask the chatbot health questions every week. That’s about 29% of the app’s total user base (as of late last year). Health is such a popular topic on ChatGPT that OpenAI announced it’s launching a dedicated experience with “enhanced privacy” to store all of your health-related questions.

The new platform, ChatGPT Health, allows users to connect their medical records and wellness app info. OpenAI stresses that it’s meant “to support, not replace, medical care.” It added that ChatGPT Health is not intended to diagnose or treat illnesses. For that, you still need to be a human with a medical degree.

Tuesday, 27 January 2026

Recreational boaters must renew licences every 5 years - Victoria Times Colonist

Recreational boaters must renew licences every 5 years - Victoria Times Colonist

Recreational boaters now have to renew licences every 5 years

Under the changes, which came into effect Dec. 31, 2025, new and renewed pleasure-craft licences are only valid for five years.
web1_vka-fishing-9789
Boats docked at the Oak Bay Marina. Under vessel licence changes, which came into effect Dec. 31, 2025, new and renewed pleasure-craft licences are only valid for five years. DARREN STONE, TIMES COLONIST

If you own a boat with a motor and use it for pleasure, the federal government says you now have to renew the vessel’s licence every five years.

The licence is the identification number of a boat, similar to a vehicle’s licence plate, and is required for owners of recreational boats with at least one engine and a total of at least 10 horsepower.

Under the changes, which came into effect Dec. 31, 2025, new and renewed pleasure-craft licences are only valid for five years, down from the previous 10 years.

Current lifetime licences will be gradually replaced with licences that must be renewed every five years.

Licence holders will also be required to update their information within 30 days of a change in their name or address, instead of the previous 90 days.

Transport Canada said licences allow emergency responders and law enforcement to quickly identify the owner of a boat, which improves response times in urgent situations and supports efforts to address unsafe or abandoned boats.

The $24 fee for issuing, renewing, transferring or replacing a pleasure craft licence will be updated annually for inflation.

Transport Minister Steven MacKinnon said Canada has more coastline than any other country in the world, and there are about 12 million boaters navigating various waterways around the country.

“Recreational boating is part of who we are as Canadians, and our safety system must keep pace with the way people use our waterways today,” he said in a statement. “By modernizing the pleasure craft licensing program, we’re strengthening marine safety, improving environmental protection and ensuring we have accurate information when it matters most.”

Transport Canada said two years after the regulations take effect, wind-powered pleasure craft over six metres in length will be required to hold a licence.

Since 1999, all Canadians who operate a boat must have a pleasure craft operating card by taking an accredited boat safety course and passing a test.

Sunday, 25 January 2026

Trump ‘Effectively Halts’ All U.S. Offshore Wind Development Despite Booming Power Demand





Trump ‘Effectively Halts’ All U.S. Offshore Wind Development Despite Booming Power Demand
December 20, 2025
Reading time: 3 minutes

Full Story: Grist
Author: Tik Root









NREL/flickr



This story was originally published by Grist. Sign up for Grist’s weekly newsletter here.

The U.S. Department of Interior abruptly paused the leases for five of the nation’s largest proposed offshore wind projects on Monday, effectively halting all ongoing offshore wind development in the United States.

The five leases paused under the order are Vineyard Wind 1, Revolution Wind, CVOW, Sunrise Wind, and Empire Wind. They stretch across coastal waters from Massachusetts to Virginia, and were expected to create hundreds of new jobs. The New York Times said the projects are worth US$25 billion and will deliver enough power generation to serve 2.5 million homes and businesses. The order leaves the U.S. with just two operational offshore wind farms, one off the coast of Rhode Island and the other in the waters of New York, the Times noted.

The moves come as electricity demand in the U.S. is growing for the first time in years, driven in large part by the data centres needed to fuel the artificial intelligence boom. The Biden administration issued the leases to help meet that demand and as part of its goal of shifting the country away from fossil fuels, toward more renewable energy sources.

“This so-called ‘pause’ on offshore wind makes no sense and is an escalation of the administration’s ongoing, baseless attacks on clean energy,” Pasha Feinberg, offshore wind strategist at the U.S. Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), said in a statement. “In its ongoing effort to prop up waning fossil fuels interests the administration is taking wilder and wilder swings at the clean energy projects this economy needs.”

In a release announcing the pauses, Secretary of Interior Doug Burgum cited “national security risks,” including technological vulnerability and the proximity of the projects to the East Coast. The department also said unclassified government reports “have long found” that offshore wind projects create radar interference called “clutter.” The clutter, it said, obscures legitimate moving targets and generates false targets in the vicinity of the wind projects.

“Turbines can interfere with radar— this is absolutely nothing new,” Feinberg told Grist in an email. “All developers are required to work with [the U.S. Department of Defense] during design and construction to evaluate potential impacts and avoid or mitigate them”

U.S. national security expert Kirk Lippold, former commander of the USS Cole, told the Associated Press, records show the defense department “was consulted at every stage of the permitting process.” He said the projects would actually be a boon to national security because they would diversify the country’s energy supply. Experts say more wind production would also benefit customers.

Friday, 23 January 2026

McDonald’s is facing a lawsuit over its McRib

 

An illustration of a McRib being looked at under a magnifying glass

Niv Bavarsky

What exactly is in a McRib? The question you’ve been too afraid to ask for fear of the answer is at the center of a class-action lawsuit filed against McDonald’s. The plaintiffs are accusing the fast-food giant of deceiving the public about the contents of its cult-favorite sandwich.

Much like your one ex, the McRib comes into and out of your life with no notice and disappears for long stretches. It returned in a limited capacity in November and, perhaps like that same ex should, it is now facing scrutiny:

  • The federal case, filed in Illinois last month, alleges that the McRib contains lower-grade pork products like heart, tripe, and scalded stomach formed into a rib-shaped patty—but no actual rib meat.
  • The suit alleges that using “rib” in the name allows the restaurant to charge a premium price—as much as $7.99, per McRib Locator—for a non-premium product, creating “millions of dollars in consumer harm.”

McDonald’s told news outlets that the lawsuit “distorts the facts,” and that there are no hearts, tripe, or scalded stomach in the McRib.

What’s next? The four plaintiffs are seeking class certification for anyone who bought the sandwich over the past four years, along with damages and restitution “to prevent further deceptive advertising practices.”

Thursday, 22 January 2026

Doge improperly shared sensitive social security data, DoJ court filing reveals | The Guardian


Doge improperly shared sensitive social security data, DoJ court filing reveals | Trump administration | The Guardian

After months of denials, the Trump administration has acknowledged in a federal court filing that employees working for Elon Musk’s supposed cost-cutting operation accessed and improperly shared Americans’ sensitive social security data.

The justice department court filing, submitted on Friday in an ongoing lawsuit, reveals that a member of the so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge) signed a secret data-sharing agreement with an unidentified political advocacy group whose stated aim was to find evidence of voter fraud and overturn election results in certain states.

The Social Security Administration (SSA) told the court it had no prior knowledge of the March agreement and only discovered it during an unrelated review in November. The agency has referred two potential violations of the Hatch Act, which prohibits federal employees from engaging in political activity, to the Office of Special Counsel for investigation.

Tuesday, 20 January 2026

Meta Ray-Ban Display smart glasses paused

 UK techies hoping to ask their glasses what to make with leftover beans and bread will have to resort to institutional knowledge for now. Meta said yesterday in a blog post that it’s pausing the international rollout of its Meta Ray-Ban Display smart glasses to focus on fulfilling orders in the US amid massive popularity and limited inventory.

Meta said it’s received “an overwhelming amount of interest” in the specs that put a computer on your face without it actually looking like there’s a computer on your face.

The company released the Display glasses with Ray-Ban owner EssilorLuxottica last fall to relatively positive reviews, offering a counterpoint to the historically flop-filled category of AI wearables and smart glasses. EssilorLuxottica credited its record Q3 sales last year partly to the success of the glasses, boasting a 11.7% YoY revenue increase, to $8.1 billion:

  • The newest version of the glasses costs $799 and, in addition to an upgraded camera, it has built-in AI features and comes with a wristband to help answer calls and texts.
  • Meta is also rolling out a teleprompter feature that can display text notes.

Sunday, 18 January 2026

Sail Canada 2026 Youth Fest in Kingston

Sail Canada 2026 Youth Fest in Kingston

Scuttlebutt Sailing News: Providing sailing news for sailors · 14 days ago
by Assoc Editor · Dock Talk


Sail Canada announced that Youth Fest, a sailing event focusing on training and development now extended to U21 sailors, will make its return, August 11-15, 2026, in Kingston. 2026 Youth Fest is hosted by CORK/Sail Kingston and CORK International. The 5-day event is focused on participation, training, and development. The event includes Club 420, 29er, and ILCA 4, 6 and 7 classes. Sailors and coaches will benefit from training opportunities while receiving support from Canada's top sailing coaches and officials. The Notice of Race and registration will be available in the new year. – Full story

Friday, 16 January 2026

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Thursday, 15 January 2026

There are five official entries for the 38th America’s Cup

Scuttlebutt Sailing News: Providing sailing news for sailors · 2 days agoby Editor · Feature


There are five official entries for the 38th America’s Cup, with a massive omission among the field field. Five countries are represented, and none of them are the United States of America. If no USA team participates, it will be the first time in the event’s 175-year history.

Riptide Racing hopes to change that, and has until the late deadline of January 31, 2026 to secure sufficient funding. The team has set a fundraising goal of $50 million dollars for their first challenge, with $30 million needed to meet the entry deadline.

Team founder Chris Poole initiated his effort to enter following the announcement by American Magic (USA) that they would not compete in the 38th edition of the America’s Cup.

Details: https://www.americascup.com/

Defender New Zealand and Challenger of Record from Great Britain confirmed the Protocol for the 38th America’s Cup on August 12, 2025. The close of the initial entry period was October 31, 2025, with late entries considered up to January 31, 2026. If no USA team participates in the 38th America’s Cup, it will be the first time in the event’s 175-year history.

Current entrants:
• Emirates Team New Zealand (NZL) – Defender
• Athena Racing (GBR) – Challenger of Record
• Luna Rossa (ITA) – Challenger
• Tudor Team Alinghi (SUI) – Challenger
• K-Challenge (FRA) – Challenger

After the 2024 event, Barcelona, Spain declined hosting another edition, with the venue moved to Naples, Italy. Racing will be in the spring and summer of 2027.

Tuesday, 13 January 2026

Possible insider trading on Polymarket?

Maduro capture

XNY/GC Images

While you were enjoying the $5 payout from your scratch-off ticket, one well-timed bet by an anonymous Polymarket user locked in a $400,000+ payout. The user placed a $20,000 bet on Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro’s downfall just hours before President Trump ordered his capture, raising concerns over insider trading in a wildly unregulated market.

Last year, sportsbooks, financial platforms, and even media organizations like CNN signed deals with existing prediction markets or announced their own, further legitimizing the industry. Monthly bets placed on Polymarket and Kalshi jumped from less than $100 million in early 2024 to more than $13 billion last November.

You can bet on anything. We have $20 on you reading this sentence, but only after you speedrun the puzzle at the bottom of the newsletter. Polymarket, which currently bans users in the US (that can be circumvented with a VPN), gives bettors the ability to wager on things like the January Fed rate decision, the 2026 Super Bowl winner, the next US presidential nominees, and the fall of the Iranian regime:

  • Kalshi, which is regulated by the government and allows US users, said it doesn’t list contracts on war, but does have related bets, like whether or not Greenland will become a part of the US.
  • Polymarket, meanwhile, now offers contracts on whether the US will strike Cuba, Colombia, or Somalia.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which regulates Kalshi (and will oversee Polymarket once it’s approved for use in the US), has long been considered under-resourced, leading critics to argue that prediction platforms can be manipulated by deep-pocketed bad actors. Kalshi and Polymarket have both said that they have systems to root out market manipulation and insider trading.

Big picture: Polymarket is in hot water with gamblers who thought they’d get massive payouts from the more than $10.5 million in bets they collectively placed on a US invasion of Venezuela. The platform said that the capture of Maduro does not technically qualify as an invasion.—MM

 

Sunday, 11 January 2026

Five expert tips for the perfect start

 


Five expert tips for the perfect start

Whether you’re foiling into a start line at 30 knots or lining up in a keelboat, SailGP champion Dylan Fletcher shares key rules for getting off the line cleanly with Andy Rice in Yachting World:


Starting has always played a disproportionate part in the outcome of a race. The shorter the duration of the race, the more this is true. Dylan Fletcher knows this very well from his experience competing in SailGP, where the races often last less than 10 minutes.

Even though a reaching start against eleven 50ft foiling catamarans appears to bear little resemblance to a conventional upwind start for a large fleet of keelboats, Fletcher argues there are some fundamental principles that apply to any scenario.

“Time and distance judgement is key to any kind of start and the more you do of it the better you get,” he says. “I think that doing a lot of Moth sailing during the summer really helped my SailGP starting because in the Moth you have to eyeball it.”

Fletcher explains that in the Moth, you have no technology to tell you where the line is. Judging that approach to the line and doing it multiple times helps with any other starting, whether it’s SailGP, on a Cape 31, or an RC44. In the following five tips, Fletcher shares not only how to give yourself the best shot at a winning start, but one that puts you in the best place for your overall race strategy. – Full report

Friday, 9 January 2026

Elon Musk’s Grok under scrutiny for generating sexualized images

 

Grok

VCG/Getty Images

Grok under scrutiny for generating sexualized images of women and children. Regulators in the UK, France, India, and other countries are looking into reports that Grok, Elon Musk’s AI chatbot, allowed X users to request and share deepfakes of people—including children—in bikinis. Several US lawmakers also condemned X, while the Justice Department said it will “aggressively prosecute any producer or possessor” of child sex abuse materials. Grok posted an apology last week for generating images that “violated ethical standards and potentially US laws,” but has continued to provide them in response to users’ prompts. X says that it removes illegal content and permanently suspends accounts associated with it. Yesterday, xAI, the company that owns both Grok and X, announced it raised $20 billion in a Series E funding round

Wednesday, 7 January 2026

Ashley MacIsaac concert cancelled after AI wrongly accuses him of being sex offender | CBC News

Ashley MacIsaac concert cancelled after AI wrongly accuses him of being sex offender | CBC News

Ashley MacIsaac concert cancelled after AI wrongly accuses him of being sex offender
'I'm telling you, this is not a nice place to be,' he told CBC News
The Canadian Press · Posted: Dec 23, 2025 1:39 PM PST | Last Updated: December 24


Listen to this article
Estimated 5 minutes

Cape Breton fiddler Ashley MacIsaac said 'I'm not the first and I'm sure I won't be the last,' after a Google AI-generated summary mistakenly confused him with someone else with the same last name. (Kelly Clark/The Canadian Press)

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Cape Breton fiddler Ashley MacIsaac says he may have been defamed by Google after it recently produced an AI-generated summary falsely identifying him as a sex offender.

The Juno Award-winning musician said he learned of the online misinformation last week after a First Nation north of Halifax confronted him with the summary and cancelled a concert planned for Dec. 19.

"You are being put into a less secure situation because of a media company — that's what defamation is," MacIsaac said in a telephone interview with The Canadian Press, adding he was worried about what might have happened had the erroneous content surfaced while he was trying to cross an international border.


"If a lawyer wants to take this on (for free) ... I would stand up because I'm not the first and I'm sure I won't be the last."

MacIsaac said the summary falsely asserted he had been convicted of a series of offences including sexual assault, internet luring, assaulting a woman and attempting to assault a minor. As well, he said the Google entry accused him of being listed on the national sex offender registry, which is also untrue.

"I could have been at a border and put in jail," he said. "So something has to be figured out as far as what the AI companies are responsible for ... and what they can prevent."

MacIsaac performed at the 2013 East Coast Music Awards in Halifax. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)
First Nation apologizes

The 50-year-old virtuoso fiddler said he later learned the inaccurate claims were taken from online articles regarding a man in Atlantic Canada with the same last name.

Google Canada spokesperson Wendy Manton issued a statement saying Google's "AI overviews" are frequently changing to show what she described as the most "helpful" information.
With gigs dried up, Cape Breton's Ashley MacIsaac wants to play in your living roomFamed fiddler Ashley MacIsaac first to buy legal marijuana in Cape Breton

"When issues arise — like if our features misinterpret web content or miss some context — we use those examples to improve our systems, and may take action under our policies."

Meanwhile, the Sipekne'katik First Nation issued a public apology to MacIsaac, saying in an online post that the cancellation was based on incorrect information.

"We deeply regret the harm this caused to your reputation and livelihood," the message says. "Chief and council value your artistry, contribution to the cultural life of the Maritimes, and your commitment to reconciliation."

As for the cancelled concert, MacIsaac says he's looking forward to rescheduling the event. But he said he wanted things to settle down before setting a date.
People reading AI summaries on Google search instead of news stories, media experts warnTop AI assistants misrepresent news content, study finds

"I don't feel comfortable about going there right now because I don't think the proper information can be disseminated within a week. It's seen so many shares," he said. "I didn't want to bring any attention negatively to the community."


He speculated about how the misinformation might have prompted the cancellation of a concert scheduled for earlier this year in Mexico.

MacIsaac said he doesn't have the money to pay for a lawsuit that could take years to settle.

But when CBC News reached him by phone on Christmas Eve, he said he'd already received queries from law firms across the country interested in taking it on pro bono.

He says he's considering his options in the hopes that he can prevent other people from experiencing something similar in the future.

“I'm telling you, this is not a nice place to be," he said. "I'm sitting outside my grandmother's going in for Christmas. This isn’t a conversation I want to have today — 'Oh, yeah, somebody called me a sex offender.'”
No stranger to controversy

MacIsaac burst onto the music scene in the 1990s as a wildly talented teenager who blended traditional Celtic music with a high-energy, rocking style.

To be sure, he is no stranger to controversy.

During a 1999 concert in Halifax, he launched into a profanity-laced rant that ended the show and resulted in widespread cancellations of his gigs. And in early 1997, he attracted attention for discussing his sexual proclivities with a reporter and flashing his private parts during an appearance on a late-night U.S. talk show.
WATCH | MacIsaac buying pot in 2018:




First to buy 'in God's country': Ashley MacIsaac talks his pot purchase
October 17, 2018|
Duration0:57Fiddler Ashley MacIsaac was the first to buy legal cannabis in Cape Breton on Wednesday. He discusses what he bought.

But he hasn't had any real run-ins with the law, aside from receiving an absolute discharge and no fine in 2001 for possessing marijuana in Saskatchewan. When Judge Linton Smith granted the discharge, he told MacIsaac's lawyer, "The only condition I'd like to attach is if you could get my wife an autograph."

When cannabis was legalized in Canada in October 2018, MacIsaac was the first in line at a Nova Scotia Liquor Corp. branch in Cape Breton, which was about to become the only legal place to buy recreational cannabis on the island.


"I don't need to be a criminal anymore, and that's a great feeling," he said at the time. "And my new dealer is the prime minister!"

Monday, 5 January 2026

xAI faces backlash after Grok generates sexualized images of minors

xAI faces backlash after Grok generates sexualized images of minors

Elon Musk’s xAI saw user backlash after its artificial intelligence chatbot Grok generated sexualized pictures of children in response to user prompts.

A Grok reply to one user on X on Friday stated that it was “urgently fixing” the issue and called child sexual abuse material “illegal and prohibited.”

In replies to users, the bot also posted that a company could face criminal or civil penalties if it knowingly facilitates or fails to prevent this type of content after being alerted.

Grok posts are AI-generated messages and do not stand in for official company statements.

Musk’s xAI, which created Grok and merged with X last year, sent an autoreply to a request for comment: “Legacy Media Lies.”

Users on X raised concerns in recent days over explicit content of minors, including children wearing minimal clothing, being generated using the Grok tool.

The social media site added an “Edit Image” button to photos that allows any user to alter it using text prompts and without the original poster’s consent.

Sunday, 4 January 2026

Evicting Scout camp for 2028 Olympics >> Scuttlebutt Sailing News: Providing sailing news for sailors

Evicting Scout camp for 2028 Olympics >> Scuttlebutt Sailing News: Providing sailing news for sailors

Evicting Scout camp for 2028 Olympics

Published on December 5th, 2025

Sailing for the Los Angeles 2028 Olympics was expected to be held in Long Beach, as it had been for the 1984 Olympics, but politics moved some of the events to the Port of Los Angeles. Now they are stealing from the poor and giving to the rich:


A Scout camp and training facility that has operated for decades at Cabrillo Beach in San Pedro is being evicted at the end of this month, according to Greater Los Angeles Scouting, the umbrella organization for local troops and Cub Scout packs.

The Port of Los Angeles is terminating Scouting’s lease at the beachfront complex so that the site can be repurposed as a training center for national and international sailing teams in the 2028 Olympics, the Port said.

Tim Lebetsamer, who leads a Cub Scout pack in San Pedro, learned of the news on Wednesday night (Dec. 3) via email. “It came out of the blue,” he said.

Saturday, 3 January 2026

80th ROLEX Sydney Hobart Yacht Race

80th ROLEX Sydney Hobart Yacht Race

Min River’s historic Rolex Sydney Hobart Overall victory


Home2025Min River’s historic Rolex Sydney Hobart Overall victory



Min River has been declared the Overall winner of the 2025 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, making her owner, Jiang Lin, the first woman to ever win the race and together with her co-skipper Alexis Loison they also became the first double handed crew to lay claim to the famous Tattersall Cup – a day of historic significance in the race.
news—
31 December 2025 at 2:53 pm


After a protracted battle with seven other double-handed boats and two fully crewed yachts, Love & War and Midnight Rambler in the last 36 hours of Cruising Yacht Club of Australia’s famous race, it became apparent that it was between BNC - my::Net/LEON and Min River.

Lin and Loison were originally sitting in second place Overall. However, following a protest by the Race Committee against the double handed crew on BNC - my::Net/LEON (Michel Quintin/Yann Rigal) for a rule infringement, the latter was penalised one hour and five minutes by the International Jury. That result delivered the Overall victory to Min River.

BNC - my::Net/LEON’s time penalty dropped her to second place.

Sixty-year-old Jiang Lin admitted this afternoon, “I did not have hopes of winning. You think about all the 100-something boats, all the big boats and superb sailors out there. Not in my wildest dreams did I think this would come true for me. So no, I didn’t think about it. The best would be winning our division.” Which they did.

“It hasn’t sunk in yet. Maybe I wake up and say, ‘oh that was a dream.’”



Lin and Louison on their way to the finish - Credit: CYCA | Salty Dingo

“It is special for me definitely, so I am very happy.”

Loison added: “No, I did not expect to win, but we had a good strategy of pushing very hard. We had a lot of sail changes.”

“Many times,” Jiang Lin added.



Min River on her way to claim the first ever double-handed Overall Victory - Credit: ROLEX | Kurt Arrigo

Loison: “We forgot to sleep. It’s crazy to win, we are proud of ourselves.”

On displacing BNC - my::Net/LEON as the Overall winner, did Jiang and Loison have mixed feelings? “No. It is what it is – we are still the winners,” Jiang Lin said.

“We are having dinner together as a group tomorrow (with all the double-handed competitors). I already have confirmed I am coming. So we will have a good drink and celebrations.”

Like all other competitors in the race, the double handed duo found parts of the race quite difficult. Loison said, “Very hard first two days and last night. And a lot of good memories at the end. At the finish, we knew we were very close to very good results.”

Jiang Lin had been racing in the twilight and Sunday summer series at Balmain Sailing Club, which in 2015 named her ‘Most Improved Keelboat Sailor’, just three years after she began sailing – as a 47-year-old.

Jiang Lin has always chosen top co-skippers, French and Australians to race with, in Australia and overseas. Asked if she had already signed Loison up for the 2026 Rolex Sydney Hobart, Jiang Lin laughed and said, “Umm, maybe.”



Min River moored in Constitution Dock - Credit: CYCA | Salty Dingo



Di Pearson/RSHYR media

Thursday, 1 January 2026

How the Brits won SailGP: Dylan Fletcher’s full debrief - Yachting World

How the Brits won SailGP: Dylan Fletcher’s full debrief - Yachting World



How the Brits won SailGP: Dylan Fletcher’s full debrief


Yachting World · a day ago
by Helen Fretter · Races


Last weekend the Emirates GBR Team became SailGP season champions. Helmsman Dylan Fletcher talks exclusively to Helen Fretter to explain how

“If someone gave you a lottery ticket with a 33 % chance of winning $2m, you’d snap their hand off!” said Dylan Fletcher, helmsman of the Emirates Great Britain Team during last weekend’s SailGP Grand Finale in Abu Dhabi.

And certainly for a lot of the Mubadala Abu Dhabi Sail Grand Prix Season Grand Final – an event title which took almost as long to say as it took the F50s to get to the top mark – luck seemed to be playing a significant part in results, with zephyr-light winds and exceptionally short course plunging the season’s most consistent performers down the leaderboard.

At first watch even the final looked to come down to a ‘Hail Mary’ decision when the British team, who were third – or last – off the line split from the leading duo of Australia’s Bonds Flying Roos and New Zealand Black Foils to hook into a convenient shift and come out on top.

But, as Fletcher explains, that’s not quite how it happened.

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