Live stream: John McCain lies in state at the U.S. Capitol

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Live stream: John McCain lies in state at the U.S. Capitol

John McCain will lie in state at the U.S. Capitol and members of Congress and leadership from both sides of the aisle will honor the Arizona senator.

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Sen. John McCain will lie in state at the U.S. Capitol Friday where the public may pay their respects to the late lawmaker. Before that, he will be honored in a private ceremony in the Capitol Rotunda, starting at 11 a.m.

Speakers at the ceremony are expected to include Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, Speaker of the House Paul Ryan and Vice President Mike Pence. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is also expected to take part by laying a wreath.

Speaker Paul Ryan tweeted about the ceremony and the honor of lying in state, “It’s hard to imagine a person more worthy of the honor, and I’m pleased that Americans will have the opportunity to pay their respects to this hero and statesman.”

Friday and Saturday: What to know about Washington tributes for McCain

Rare honor: John McCain becomes 31st person to lie in state at U.S. Capitol

According to the schedule of events, at 2 p.m. ET, the public will begin a procession to pay their respects to McCain as he lies in state in the Capitol. The Capitol Police Guard of Honor will remain throughout the night.

USA TODAY is providing extended coverage of McCain’s memorial events, including Friday’s service in the Capitol and the public viewing. You can watch it live in the player above starting at 11:00 a.m. ET. 

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Senator John McCain devoted his life to serving our country.
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John McCain’s letter to a future Navy pilot arrived two days after his death. Here’s what he told him.

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The letter arrived two days after Sen. John McCain died.

Navy Ensign Sam Bongiorno opened it in shock.

“It gives me great pleasure to congratulate you on your graduation from the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy,” McCain wrote in the letter, which he signed by hand. “This is a momentous achievement of which you and your family should be proud.”

The letter was dated Aug. 20 and sent from his Phoenix office Aug. 25, the day McCain died.

It may have been one of the last letters McCain signed.

Photo courtesy Sam Bongiorno

Bongiorno, an Arizona native stationed at Luke Air Force Base as he awaits pilot training, said it was a bittersweet moment for him. He has looked up to McCain his whole life and will treasure the letter, he said, but he also knew it was probably one of the last letters to leave McCain’s office.

“It was a way for him to pass the baton on from him as a Naval aviator to me and my peers as people going into that profession,” Bongiorno said.

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U.S. Army veteran Pascual Ortiz, 63, reflects on what the late U.S. Sen. John McCain meant to him on Aug. 28, 2018.
John D’Anna, The Republic | azcentral.com

‘Special place in his heart’ for aviators

The letter was probably dictated or written by McCain himself, said James “Rusty” Mitchell, director of community initiatives team at Luke Air Force Base.

McCain often sent letters to those stationed at Luke, Mitchell said.

“His personality was such that he took special note and care, specially for people who had interaction with his office,” said Mitchell, who had closely worked with McCain since starting at the base in 2003. “He had a special place in his heart for Naval aviators.”

McCain, a Navy pilot, graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1958 and retired from the Navy in 1981 as a captain. He flew attack aircraft during the Vietnam War and was shot down over Hanoi in 1967, injured, and spent more than five years as a prisoner of war.

Bongiorno has lived in Arizona his entire life besides the five years he recently spent at U.S. Merchant Marine Academy in Kings Point, New York. He graduated from the academy in June, and then came to Luke.

He will be at Luke until November, when he will go into pilot training in Pensacola, Florida.

Bongiorno said he has wanted to be a pilot since he was 2 years old. He broke his arm, and when he went under sedation during his surgery to fix it, the doctor told him the mask was a jet pilot’s mask. “My parents told me I wanted to fly ever since.”

He has wanted to serve his country since 9/11.

Bongiorno said McCain has been one of his role models from a young age. He never met him, but admired how honorable and respected he was.

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In 1967, John McCain was a Navy pilot on an aircraft carrier. He was shot down during the Vietnam War and held as a prisoner of war. By 1973, he would return to the U.S. a hero and eventually find himself at the U.S. Capitol.

McCain and Luke Air Force Base

McCain was a staunch supporter of Luke Air Force Base, Mitchell said.

In 2003, development in the Valley was booming and quickly encroaching on the base, which needs to have lots of buffer room for security reasons. The base was lacking support from local leaders in the West Valley, Mitchell said, and there was a chance it wouldn’t have much of a future there.

McCain was instrumental in changing that, Mitchell said. At a meeting with local officials, he strongly emphasized their need to get on board and the economic importance of having the base in the West Valley.

“He was emphatic about the need for that support,” Mitchell said.

McCain also supported Luke in Washington, Mitchell said, where he served as the chairman of the Senate Committee on Armed Services.

He advocated to secure the F-35 fighter jet pilot training at Luke, while, at the same time attempting to keep the cost of the jets low, Mitchell said.

“It was incredible,” he said.

McCain’s work coalescing support among local elected officials and securing the F-35 mission was instrumental in securing the base in the West Valley for at least the next 50 years, Mitchell said.

Reach reporter Jen Fifield at 602-444-8763 or jen.fifield@azcentral.com. Follow her on Twitter @JenAFifield.

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Antonio Chavez of Phoenix, talks about Sen. John McCain. Chavez is a U.S. Army veteran of the Vietnam War and saluted McCain at the public viewing.
David Wallace, Arizona Republic

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England v India: Sam Curran removes Virat Kohli to claim ‘big’ wicket

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India captain Virat Kohli edges England’s Sam Curran to slip to fall for 46 on day two of the fourth Test at Southampton.

FOLLOW LIVE: England v India, fourth Test, day two – in-play clips, radio and text

WATCH MORE: Broad’s ‘perfect line & length’ dismisses Dhawan

Available to UK users only.

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Acer Chromebook Tab 10 review: One big step for Chrome OS

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All-day battery life • Durable design

Processor is slow for most tasks • Chrome OS is clunky without a physical keyboard

The Acer Chromebook Tab 10 is a novel step towards a Chrome OS tablet but takes a few missteps. A student is better off going with a full-fledged Chromebook.

When you hear “Chromebook,” there’s a general expectation that you’re getting a laptop. 

However, the Tab 10, Acer Chromebook’s latest release, actually falls under the tablet category. 

The Chromebook Tab 10 is for education, meant as a bulk product for student use in schools (with some availability at specialty retailers and through Acer’s Education Team). Its main competitors are a $329 iPad that Apple hopes schools will opt for, as well as traditional Chromebooks.

The Acer Chromebook 10 runs on Chrome OS, which is tuned for a keyboard and mouse. Using it without has not been a glitch-free experience, and we’re still waiting for updates to make the OS more tablet-friendly. And while the Tab 10 includes a small stylus in the box, a keyboard accessory (which we feel is necessary) costs an extra $19.99 (and that’s just for a basic one). I’m inclined to believe that no included keyboard means this is for elementary schools. An older student probably couldn’t make it through an essay, let alone a term paper, on a virtual keyboard.

The Tab 10 is not the first Chrome OS to opt for a touch display — the flagship Pixelbook is a 2-in-1 laptop with a 360-degree hinge. And the addition of Android Apps via the Play Store means that you can fill specific needs for educational purposes as well. Still, Google says that software tuned specifically for a tablet will arrive closer to the end of 2018.

The Acer Chromebook Tab 10 represents a big step for Chrome OS, but does it make sense for schools to go with a tablet like this one, rather than a laptop?

A durable design for a tough life inside backpacks

The Chromebook Tab 10 might look like an iPad with bezels, but there is no home button.

The Chromebook Tab 10 might look like an iPad with bezels, but there is no home button.

Image: zlata ivleva/mashable

Being built for an educational environment means that the device should expect some rough-and-tumble treatment. This is a big reason why the Tab 10 doesn’t really act like a consumer tablet. Acer was smart to outfit it with a hefty plastic build (what it lacks in high-end appeal, it makes up for in durability). It’s reassuring in your hands, as if it will last for a few years. Some grippy texture on the back also makes the tablet reasonably comfortable to hold.

A bevy of bezels around the 9.7-inch display give you some breathing room as you hold the device without accidentally hitting an on-screen button. Unlike the iPad, there is no home button on the Chromebook Tab 10; you’ll find an Acer logo in its place. Instead, there are onscreen controls for going home, opening the app drawer, and multitasking. To turn off the display, you have to hit the power button. Size-wise, the Tab 10 is 6.78 x 9.38 x 0.39 inches and weighs 1.2 pounds.

Acer had durability in mind with the Chromebook Tab 10, but for some reason the micro SD card slot is left out in the open with no protective door.

Acer had durability in mind with the Chromebook Tab 10, but for some reason the micro SD card slot is left out in the open with no protective door.

Image: zlata ivleva/mashable

When holding the device vertically, a USB-C port is located on the bottom right-hand side; it’s used for charging and connecting hubs to the device (such as a Belkin USB-C keyboard accessory). It’s a forward-thinking move on Acer’s part to install the port here because it offers faster data transfers and is gaining higher adoption throughout the market.

On the left side, you’ll find the power button, volume rocker, microSD card slot, and stylus. I wouldn’t consider this the most natural spot for all these tools, as they’re positioned rather high on the left-hand side. A headphone jack is located on the top.

Acer kept the design simple and gave it an indigo blue paint job.

Acer kept the design simple and gave it an indigo blue paint job.

Image: zlata ivleva/mashable

For camera capabilities, the Tab 10 comes with a 5-megapixel lens on the back and a 2-megapixel lens on the front. Neither of these is spectacular, and photos generally look grainy with heavy noise (especially from the rear camera). Speakers are found on the bottom edge and top edge and provide average sound that isn’t very well-rounded; if you’re looking for booming sound like on the iPad Pro, quite frankly, look elsewhere.

A display that suffices, as long as you’re indoors

The Chromebook Tab 10 and the 2018 iPad both have 9.7-inch displays.

The Chromebook Tab 10 and the 2018 iPad both have 9.7-inch displays.

Image: zlata ivleva/mashable

In line with its educational focus, a 9.7-inch, 2,048-by-1,536 LED-backlit display is geared more toward note-taking and reading, rather than gaming and entertainment. The display is average in its brightness and color reproduction. 

When taking notes, the display offers a decent contrast between the background and what’s being written on top of it, providing a realistic true-to-paper experience that should make the switch from pencil and paper a non-issue for most students. However, unlike some iPad models, there is no True Tone display here, which means the color tones of the screen will not adjust and react to your lighting environment. 

On the Tab 10, colors appear realistic in most conditions; they’re just not that vibrant — this is not an OLED screen after all. The tablet’s glossy finish led to some issues outside when trying to use it under direct sunlight. Even under fluorescent lights, there is some screen glare; it would’ve been nice for Acer to provide a matte display option or a screen protector accessory. 

Still… Chrome OS on a tablet?

Chrome OS on a tablet is far from being ready for a consumer or education launch.

Chrome OS on a tablet is far from being ready for a consumer or education launch.

Image: zlata ivleva/mashable

On paper, putting Chrome OS on a tablet doesn’t seem like a bad idea. However, the biggest issue here is that the software isn’t optimized for a device without a keyboard and mouse. In the long run, this might make sense from a product development standpoint, but it’s still early days and Google hasn’t yet customized or released a version that incorporates a better keyboard-free experience on tablets.

This is where the biggest road bumps occur for the Chromebook Tab 10, and in addition to the OS, the questionable choice of a RockChip processor doesn’t help its cause. While some cheaper Chromebooks opt for this processor, generally a safer bet is an Intel Celeron chip. The RockChip processor is noticeably slower. Simple utility tasks took longer; signing into the device took about 10 seconds, and opening an app often took 2-to-5 seconds. It’s a minor detail that can add up to a lot of time wasted as you wait for your tablet to load throughout the day, especially if you’re a student who relies on it to load projects and research topics.

Acer opted for an OP1 processing unit that has a dual-core Cortex-A72 and quad-core Cortex-A53, designed for battery life and connectivity. It all means that you’re essentially getting the basics, rather than super fast performance or run times. Neither Acer nor Google took steps to customize this experience. Generally, with a Chrome OS device, there are light customizations allowed to create a smooth user experience. This could be as simple as changing a line of code when booting or more advanced changes like adding custom options. 

When I used the Tab 10, I first tested Google Keep, Google’s proprietary note-taking app that comes pre-installed as part of the Google Suite (the series of apps that includes Docs, Sheets, and Mail). To get it working, I had to restore the Tab 10 twice and uninstall the app twice, as Google Keep repeatedly crashed and caused a flickering effect on the display. Once it started working, however, I was able to take several lines of notes with no issues.

Another app I tried, the MyScript Calculator, which requires quite a bit of background processing, is one of those education apps that was hit or miss on the Tab 10. I could write out several math problems, watch as they morphed into typed text, and then have the app compute the answer. It generally performed all right, but would crash after the tenth problem.

A stylus can be tucked away on the side or rest on the display of the Chromebook Tab 10.

A stylus can be tucked away on the side or rest on the display of the Chromebook Tab 10.

Image: zlata ivleva/mashable

Google recently added the Play Store to Chrome OS, and Android Apps have long been available on these devices. Access to education apps and VR experiences is a key selling point of the Tab 10, as those will undoubtedly expand the experiences the device can provide.

Unfortunately, I didn’t get a chance to try the AR and Google Expedition experiences, as those aren’t yet available and should arrive by the end of the year. Once ready, it’ll allow classrooms to be mapped out with objects in 3D, and students can interact and learn from them in real time. 

Then there’s that stylus

A stylus comes with the Tab 10, but it is tiny.

A stylus comes with the Tab 10, but it is tiny.

Image: zlata ivleva/mashable

Including a stylus in the box is a nice touch, but it doesn’t compare to the Pixelbook Pen or the Apple Pencil. Instead, it is a small Wacom EMR stylus that doesn’t require a battery and has a plastic build.

There is no pressure-sensing tip or hand detection; rather, it acts as just another way to interface with the Tab 10. Using the pen with Google Keep resulted in a low-latency experience that could have benefited from hand detection. You will likely find that there are some markings from your palm, but it didn’t distract too much from the writing experience.

The Wacom Stylus has a slot on the left-hand side of the Tab 10.

The Wacom Stylus has a slot on the left-hand side of the Tab 10.

Image: zlata ivleva/mashable

A concern with the stylus is the size. It’s a short, 3.9-inch long stick, and I found my hand cramping slightly with long note-taking sessions. It’s also quite light and tricky to grip — great for smaller students, probably not so great for the older kids.

A+ for battery

The battery life of the Chromebook Tab 10 is the most impressive thing.

The battery life of the Chromebook Tab 10 is the most impressive thing.

Image: zlata ivleva/mashable

Inside the Chromebook Tab 10 is an 8,860mAh battery that lasted longer than the guaranteed nine hours. In that time frame, I used Google Keep for notes, the Chrome browser to watch videos and respond to emails, and performed some general productivity tasks. It seems that while the processor fell short with fast speeds, it is good at conserving battery life. In standby, it lasted for close to three days with minimal use each day, which is encouraging considering the hours in a day a student spends in school.

Final thoughts

It's best to stay away until Chrome OS delivers updates that makes the tablet experience usable.

It’s best to stay away until Chrome OS delivers updates that makes the tablet experience usable.

Image: zlata ivleva/mashable

The most significant factor to consider is that this is not a consumer product; this is for education. If you’re already working in a Chrome ecosystem, it might be worth taking a chance, but expect frustrations from both students and teachers.

The main issue is that the Tab 10’s performance suffers when under a heavy load or when you put it through its paces on just one application. The lag time that occurs is probably the most frustrating aspect of the user experience, and I can foresee a teacher in a classroom acting more as tech support for these glitchy devices rather than actually teaching the students on the curriculum. Judging by my experience with the Tab 10, I’d say it’s not quite ready to be the teacher’s pet.

A wiser move is to wait for software optimizations to arrive that allow for more functionality without a keyboard, more fluidity between the apps, and more efficiency in load times.

For now, I’d choose the traditional Chromebook over the Tab 10. If you’re stuck on having a tablet in the classroom rather than a laptop, the $329 iPad is an excellent alternative.

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Here are the winners and losers of the summer 2018 box office

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Women of a certain age turned Hollywood standards upside down this summer, as Jane Fonda, Diane Keaton, Candice Bergen, and Mary Steenburgen’s comedy Book Club earned a cool $68.6 million at the North American box office, making it one of the season’s surprise hits. Cate Blanchett, 49, and Sandra Bullock, 54, also pounded the patriarchy with Ocean’s 8 ($139 million) and its all-female cast, as did Crazy Rich Asians ($86.2 million after only two weekends and counting), led by Constance Wu and Michelle Yeoh. On a smaller scale, Debra Granik’s latest directorial outing, Leave No Trace, lit up movie critics’ reviews and the specialty box office to the tune of $6 million, and Toni Collette’s Hereditary flexed its girl power to scare up an impressive $44 million, becoming distributor A24’s second-highest-grossing release to date.

Warner Bros. Pictures

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NBC denies former producer’s claim that they tried to kill Ronan Farrow’s Weinstein story

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Former NBC News producer Rich McHugh, who left the network recently, is breaking his silence on the bombshell Harvey Weinstein story he worked on with Ronan Farrow.

In a statement to CNN and The New York Times, McHugh said the decision to not run Farrow’s explosive report came from “the highest levels of NBC.”

He described the decision as “unethical” and “a massive breach of journalistic integrity.”

He continued, “at a critical juncture in our reporting on Harvey Weinstein, as we were about to interview a woman with a credible allegation of rape against him, I was told not to do the interview and ordered to stand down, thus effectively killing the story.”

Noah Oppenheim, NBC News president, denied the accusations in a statement to the Times, saying McHugh “was never told to stop in the way he’s implying.”

The network maintains the story was not ready for publication.

“The assertion that NBC News tried to kill the Weinstein story while Ronan Farrow was at NBC News, or even more ludicrously after he left NBC News, is an outright lie,” an NBC News spokesperson said in a statement to CNN and Today Friday.

NBC has run into their own problems with sexual assault allegations.

In November, weeks after The New Yorker published Farrow’s Weinstein story, NBC News fired “Today” host Matt Lauer for inappropriate sexual behavior at work. Later that month, NBC News Chairman Andy Lack faced questions of whether his job would be safe after Lauer’s dismissal. It was only the latest of a recent series of problems facing NBC while Lack has been in charge.

More: Harvey Weinstein scandal: Ronan Farrow on suit threat, Susan Sarandon on power imbalance

More: Farrow: CBS had ‘a very long window’ to respond to misconduct story

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Jose Mourinho: Man Utd boss says he is still ‘one of greatest managers in the world’

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I am one of the greatest managers in the world – Mourinho

Manchester United boss Jose Mourinho says he will be “one of the greatest managers in the world” even if he does not win the Premier League at the club.

United have lost two of their first three league games, their worst start to a season since 1992-93.

Defending his record, the 55-year-old quoted a German philosopher and said he was “the only manager to win in Italy, Spain and England”.

He also said second place last season was “one of his greatest achievements”.

“I am the manager of the one of the greatest clubs in the world but I’m also one of the greatest managers in the world,” said Mourinho.

Asked if he would still be a great manager if he did not win the title with United – who have won the English top flight 20 times, including 13 Premier Leagues – the Portuguese replied: “Of course.

“Did you never spend time reading the philosopher Hegel? He said: ‘The truth is in the whole. It’s always in the whole that you find the truth.’

“Do you ask the same question to the manager that finished third in Premier League last season or the manager that finished fourth or fifth?”

‘Respect! Respect! Respect!’ – Mourinho walks out of news conference

Mourinho’s latest comments come after a news conference during which he demanded “respect” from journalists following Monday’s 3-0 home loss to Tottenham – the heaviest home defeat of his career.

He pointed out that the three Premier League titles he had won previously with Chelsea were more than the rest of the division’s managers combined.

Before his team’s trip to Burnley on Sunday (16:00 BST kick-off), the Portuguese added: “I had great success last season and that’s probably what you don’t want to admit.

“Two seasons ago we had a fantastic season because we won the Europa League. We won it because it was our level. We are the last team in England to win a European competition.

“I have won eight titles. I’m the only manager to win in Italy, Spain and England.

“Not small titles, proper titles, and my second place last season was one of my greatest achievements in football.”

Luke Shaw scored his first senior goal against Leicester City earlier this month.

We are very, very happy with Shaw

Mourinho also praised defender Luke Shaw – a player he has criticised in the past – who was called up to Gareth Southgate’s England squad for September’s fixtures against Spain and Switzerland.

“It’s a big week for him that hangs on a very important match with Burnley,” Mourinho said of the 23-year-old left-back.

“He’s played three very good matches and that’s not easy to do when your team loses two of them. He had that balance and consistency, especially against Brighton in a bad team performance.

“If next week his manager decides to give him minutes against Spain or Switzerland that would be very good for him. At the minute, that’s a result of the hard work he and the coaches have done.

“A proper player is a player of consistency. He’s mentally and physically stronger and tactically he has a better understanding.

“We are very, very happy with him. To the national team after three Premier League matches is extraordinary for him.”

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The backbreaking work of Spain’s exploited hotel cleaners

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Maria* cleans rooms at a large Spanish hotel.

She arrives before 8am, changes into her uniform and heads to the housekeeper’s office to get her cleaning schedule.

“It really depends on the hotel’s occupation, but we usually get 16 to 18 rooms,” says Maria, who is using a pseudonym to protect her identity.

“First you open the windows to ventilate the room, and take out the rubbish. Then you make the beds and change the linen. Dust. Restock the mini-bar. Three sodas. Two beers. Water. Two chocolate bars. Then comes the bathroom. Shower. Sink. Toilet. Bidet. After that, you vacuum and wash the floor.”

Her least-favourite part is the bathroom.

“You can find anything in a hotel room, but the toilet is the worst part. You can’t even begin to imagine what we have to deal with.”

A room that guests are checking out from takes 30 minutes to clean if it isn’t dirty. Otherwise, it can take up to an hour, sometimes more. 

Coffee and ibuprofen, the chambermaid’s breakfast. My husband calls me the painkiller queen.

Maria, chambermaid

If a guest is staying another night, it’s a little easier.

“Then it only takes 15 to 20 minutes, if you don’t have to change the linen,” says Maria. “It’s impossible to finish in eight hours, so we skip lunch and work overtime for free. If you refuse, you’re fired.”

The 44-year-old is blonde and pale, with clear blue eyes and blue-painted eyelashes.

“I moved to Madrid for love,” she says. “I’m from a provincial city. I met my husband there and we fell in love. We still are.”

After marrying and moving to Madrid, she worked as an accountant for the National Lottery Administration, but became jobless when the post was computerised.

“I never had any trouble to do my fair share of work, so I applied to clean hotel rooms. Finding a job wasn’t too hard even during the crisis. At the beginning it was through temporary work agencies, now there are these outsourcing companies. How to call them? I call them exploiters,” she says.

Angela Munoz, vice president at the Madrid chapter of Las Kellys, a nationwide association of chambermaids, explains that outsourcing is widespread and harmful in the hotel industry.

The job, says Munoz, has always been hard and ungrateful. But in 2012, there was another turn of the screw when hotels began outsourcing their cleaning departments.

“A chambermaid hired directly by a four-star hotel in Madrid makes around 1,400 euros ($1,636) per month. One hired by an outsourcing company has to clean up to 400 rooms per month to make between 800 ($935) and 900 euros ($1,052),” says Munoz.

There are an estimated 100,000 chambermaids in Spain. Las Kellys has begun organising protests against their mistreatment.

Juan Rubino is an employment lawyer from Madrid. He does not represent any of the chambermaids in this story.

The law, he says, is unclear about outsourcing.

“So it’s the courts that have established precedents … The rule of thumb is that outsourcing is illegal if the hotel manages the employees. Otherwise, it’s legal in most territories.”

Rubino explains that forcing unreasonable workloads on employees goes against the law. 

“A company can’t ask for more work than an employee can possibly do. Overtime must always be voluntary, paid, and never be over 80 hours per year,” he says.

Maria* is 44 years old and has suffered severe pain because of the long hours cleaning hotel rooms [Santiago Saez/Al Jazeera]

Spain was one of Europe’s worst-hit countries in the financial crisis.

Ernest Canada, professor at the University of Barcelona and coordinator of NGO Albasud, says the economic trauma trapped chambermaids.

“The hospitality industry in Spain was heavily indebted before 2008,” he says. “Once the financial crisis hit, the banks sold this debt to international investment funds, who wanted to guarantee a return, so they put the screws on to the hotel companies. They then made cuts where it was easier: the workforce, whose salaries represent 40 to 50 percent of a hotel’s operating costs.

“In addition to that, many chambermaids became the main breadwinners in the family during the crisis, as their partners lost their jobs … They had to hold on to their jobs at any cost.”

Outsourcing companies face barriers in the two Spanish archipelagos – the Balearic and Canary islands. 

“I make around 1,400 euros ($1,636) per month, and work eight hours and no more,” says Sara, who was hired directly by a four-star hotel in the island of Mallorca.

“We clean 24 rooms per day, plus common areas, but I always go home at my scheduled time. How do I manage? Well, if I can’t clean your room so well, then your room won’t be so clean,” she says, describing a heavy workload.

Painful work

Canada, the professor, says in addition to overburdening staff, other examples of mistreatment include zero-hour contracts.

The industry’s obsession with overworking staff in an apparent bid for efficiency can lead to injuries.

Maria has learned to live with pain.

“Everything hurts,” she says. “Your hands, your legs, your arms, your back.” 

She takes several doses of ibuprofen and paracetamol a day, a widespread habit among hotel cleaners. 

“Coffee and ibuprofen, the chambermaid’s breakfast. My husband calls me the painkiller queen.”

One evening, Maria left work with acute back pain. She tried sleeping it off, but it was worse in the morning. The physician confirmed that her spinal nerve tissue was protruding from her backbone.

She bandaged her body, took some pills and headed to work. 

“I know better than to take sick leave. If you take more than one week, they will fire you,” Maria says.

Dilcia, 42, knows that better than anyone.

She was a graphic designer with 13 years of experience, but has been working at hotels since 2007, when she arrived to Spain from Honduras.

“When you’re a foreigner, you take whatever you can get,” she says. “I started at the bar of a hotel in Barcelona. After a while I started cleaning rooms. It was hard work, but we were treated right. I made around 1,400 euros ($1,636) per month, and we cleaned the rooms in teams of two. I miss those days.”

Last May, she got lower back pain.

“I couldn’t even climb the stairs to get to my door. The doctor told me I couldn’t work,” explains Dilcia. Two months later, while still recovering, she got a call. Her contract had been terminated.

Dilcia is attempting to sue the outsourcing company, Exeo, and is waiting to appear before the court.

Dilcia was made redundant while recovering from back pain, which she endured as a result of arduous hotel cleaning work [Santiago Saez/Al Jazeera]

Rubino, the lawyer, explains that companies cannot sack workers on sick leave.

“Unless there’s a disciplinary cause, the dismissal is deemed unfair, giving the fired employee the right to be compensated,” he explains. “Many of us think it should be directly illegal, because it’s an attempt against the right to physical integrity.”

Al Jazeera first interviewed Maria, the 44-year-old, during her annual leave. When she returned to work, she was fired.

“They said I’m not convenient after I demanded to be compensated for working bank holidays,” she said.

Her employer Grupo Constant declined to comment, saying the subject was not “part of the company’s communication policy”.

AC Hotels by Marriott, the hotel chain she was working in, didn’t respond to Al Jazeera’s requests for comment.

Al Jazeera sought responses from several hotel groups believed to be using outsourcing companies to some extent. Most ignored the calls and one replied issuing no comment.

Al Jazeera also tried to interview outsourcing companies such as Exeo, Externa and Grupo Eulen, but none of them responded to repeated requests for comment either.

“I’ll find another hotel job, but I’ve sent my CV to a clothing store too,” says Maria. “I’ve got the experience, so who knows?”

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Aretha Franklin funeral: Hundreds in line as nation mourns and celebrates the Queen of Soul

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Detroit Free Press staff
Published 7:43 a.m. ET Aug. 31, 2018 | Updated 8:52 a.m. ET Aug. 31, 2018

Thousands of friends, family, fans, celebrities and dignitaries will pay their final respects today to Aretha Franklin, the Queen of Soul, who died of pancreatic cancer on Aug. 16. 

Franklin will be buried in 24-karat gold plated Promethean casket made of solid bronze. The interior is finished with champagne velvet. Franklin’s title, “Queen of Soul,” and her name “Aretha Franklin” are embroidered in the casket with gold metallic thread. 

Franklin’s body arrived at Greater Grace Temple in Detroit earlier this morning in a white 1940 LaSalle hearse. The private funeral, which is being livestreamed, is scheduled to start at 10 a.m. ET.

The vintage two-door, three-speed LaSalle made by Cadillac is the same vehicle used to carry the Rev. C.L. Franklin, father of the Queen of Soul, in 1984; David Ruffin, baritone for the Temptations, in 1991; and Rosa Parks, civil rights icon, in 2005.

Speakers: Bill Clinton, Smokey Robinson, the Rev. Jesse Jackson and more

Performers: Ariana Grande, Stevie Wonder, Faith Hill, Jennifer Hudson and more

Funeral details: Key details, what to expect

More: Baptist funeral traditions

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Lines form early

Lines formed very early Friday morning outside for today’s funeral. Most mourners came dressed in church clothes and carrying folding chairs.

People who lined up last night for an early spot in line found themselves pushed to the middle of the line after police forced the crowd to reorganize from a residential street.

“I was here since 8:30 last night. We were right here, and they pushed us to the back,” said Debra Demmings, 63, of Minneapolis.

Although the service is limited to family members, friends and selected guests, you can  watch it live here on usatoday.com (above). Several broadcast networks will also carry live video

Church prepped for funeral

Police officers with dogs went through the church about 7 a.m. Shortly thereafter, nurses, musicians and some VIPs entered the church.   

Among them was Elaine Steele, the longtime spokesperson for Rosa Parks. She said Franklin was extremely supportive of Parks. 

“She was the greatest. She didn’t belong just to us, but she was from us,” Steele said. “We held our heads high and stuck our chests out wide because of her genius and her willingness to share it.” 

Network news teams from NBC, ABC, CBS and Fox News are on platforms facing the church’s side entrance along with set-ups for local news outlets. 

Stars and dignitaries will honor the Queen

Stevie Wonder and Ariana Grande are among the many performers lined up to sing at the funeral, with other names including Faith Hill, Ronald Isley, Chaka Khan, Fantasia and Jennifer Hudson.

Franklin will be honored by various high-profile speakers, including former President Bill Clinton, former U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, Motown star Smokey Robinson, the Rev. Jesse Jackson and Detroit Pistons great Isiah Thomas.

After the funeral, Franklin will be buried at Woodlawn Cemetery, alongside late family members including her father, the Rev. C.L. Franklin.

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Italian GP second practice – radio & text

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Italian Grand Prix first and second practice commentary – Live – BBC Sport


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Summary

  1. Second practice gets under way in dry conditions
  2. Perez fastest in wet first practice at Monza, Hamilton 11th
  3. Hamilton leads drivers’ championship by 17 points from Vettel
  4. F1 2019 draft calendar released – season set to finish on 1 December
  5. German GP included at Hockenheim; Suzuka signs Japanese GP contract until 2021
  6. Get involved: What do you make of the provisional schedule? – #bbcf1
  7. Select audio icon for online-only radio commentary (UK only)


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