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Finland Reports 2,800 Economic Crime Cases, Up 6%
Finland reported nearly 2,800 economic crime cases to police in 2025, a 6% increase from the previous year and the fourth consecutive year of rising reported crime. Customs recorded 43 regulation offences related to sanctions against Russia and confiscated approximately 16.5 million cigarettes, the largest volume in ten years. The Tax Administration imposed over €240 million in taxes from grey economy audits, while the National Enforcement Authority collected nearly €1.5 billion from debtors, and 3,310 bankruptcy proceedings were launched, up 9% year-on-year.
Moving Oxnard Forward v. Lopez - Campaign Contribution Limits Constitutional
The Ninth Circuit en banc affirmed the district court's summary judgment upholding Measure B's per candidate and aggregate campaign contribution limits against First Amendment challenges brought by Moving Oxnard Forward, Inc. The court held the City established a sufficiently important governmental interest in preventing quid pro quo corruption, supported by a District Attorney investigation, newspaper article, resident survey showing 77% wanted accountability, and the fact that 82% of voters approved Measure B. Applying the Randall v. Sorrell 'danger signs' framework, the court found Measure B's limits closely drawn to the City's interest. Judge Collins, joined by Judge VanDyke, dissented, arguing the City's evidence did not meet the proper threshold burden under Supreme Court authority.
USA v. California — Ninth Circuit Grants Injunction Against No Vigilantes Act § 10
The Ninth Circuit granted the United States' motion for an injunction pending appeal, enjoining California, Governor Gavin Newsom, and Attorney General Rob Bonta from applying or enforcing § 10 of the No Vigilantes Act (California Penal Code § 13654) against federal agencies and officers. The panel held that the United States is likely to succeed on the merits of its claim that § 10 violates the Supremacy Clause because it attempts to directly regulate the United States in its performance of governmental functions. The court found the other preliminary injunction factors also weigh in the United States' favor. Federal law enforcement officers operating in California are no longer subject to the state's visible identification requirement while performing enforcement duties, pending further court order.
R. v. Ventura Unified School District - IDEA Statute of Limitations
The Ninth Circuit reversed the district court's judgment in this IDEA case, holding that claims for educational services received before 2019 were time-barred. The court held that the IDEA's two-year limitations period under 20 U.S.C. § 1415(f)(3)(C) begins when parents know or should know both the school district's failure to assess and diagnose their child and that the child is being denied FAPE. The panel also vacated the remedial order establishing an educational trust and the order granting a motion to enforce the judgment, remanding for further proceedings as to attorneys' fees.
J.R. v. Ventura Unified School District - IDEA Two-Year Limitations Period Ruling
The Ninth Circuit reversed the Central District of California's judgment and held that parents' IDEA lawsuit was untimely as to educational services their child received before 2019. The panel established that the IDEA's two-year statute of limitations begins when parents know or should know (1) the school's failure to assess and diagnose, and (2) that their child is being denied FAPE. The court rejected exceptions for school district misrepresentations and withheld information, finding the parents' claims predating the limitations period time-barred. The panel reversed the judgment awarding benefits for 2012-2019, vacated the educational trust order, and remanded for attorneys' fees proceedings.
Battieste v. United States - Statute of Repose Bars Medical Negligence Claim Filed 18 Years After Surgery
The Fifth Circuit affirmed dismissal of Velma Battieste's Federal Tort Claims Act suit against the United States for medical negligence arising from an unauthorized C2 vertebra surgery performed at the VA Medical Center in Jackson, Mississippi in September 2006. The court held that Miss. Code Ann. § 15-1-36(2)'s seven-year provision constitutes a statute of repose, presenting an absolute time-bar to claims brought more than seven years after the alleged negligent act. The estate's May 2024 complaint was filed approximately 18 years after the surgery and was therefore time-barred. The February 27, 2026 opinion was withdrawn and replaced by this substituted opinion on rehearing.
Denmark Opens New AI Sandbox Round for Applications
Datatilsynet and Digitaliseringsstyrelsen have opened applications for a new round of their joint regulatory AI sandbox. The sandbox offers free, hands-on guidance on GDPR compliance and the EU AI Act for companies, authorities, and organizations developing or using AI. Each sandbox engagement runs up to four months, is tailored to the specific project, and culminates in a public report sharing lessons learned. Applications are evaluated based on societal significance, level of innovation, and project maturity.
Denmark DPA 2025 Annual Report Published
Datatilsynet (Denmark's Data Protection Authority) has published its 2025 Annual Report, covering the authority's supervisory work, new guidance documents, updated enforcement practices, oversight of municipalities, supervision of AI use, international cooperation, consultation on legislative proposals, and trends in personal data breach notifications. The report also highlights the DPA's focus on advisory services supporting both citizens and data controllers. The report was published on March 31, 2026.
Danish DPA Approves Employer Sharing Union Data
Datatilsynet issued a decision in a complaint case where a union, on behalf of its member, challenged an employer's disclosure of personal data—including union membership information—to a third party in connection with an employment dispute between the parties. The third party was a relative of the employer and a colleague in the complainant's current position. Datatilsynet found the disclosure fell within the framework of data protection rules, noting the employer shared information with an advisor who assisted in hiring the complainant and would have the necessary qualifications to assist in the employment case. The DPA emphasised that information about party representatives—including union affiliation—is typically considered relevant to disclose to advisors when defending against legal claims.
Simplified Income and Expense Records for Rural Women's Circles New Rules from 2026
The Polish National Revenue Administration (KAS) announced simplified income and expense record-keeping rules for rural women's circles (koła gospodyń wiejskich), effective from 2026. These organizations will benefit from streamlined accounting requirements under the tax authority's guidance. The changes apply specifically to this category of rural civic organizations operating in Poland.
KAS Przypomina: Przekaż 1,5% Podatku na Organizacje Pożytku Publicznego
Krajowa Administracja Skarbowa (KAS) przypomina podatnikom w Polsce o możliwości przekazania 1,5% należnego podatku dochodowego od osób fizycznych (PIT) na rzecz Organizacji Pożytku Publicznego (OPP). Mechanizm ten umożliwia podatnikom skierowanie części swojego podatku na wsparcie organizacji charytatwnych bez ponoszenia dodatkowych kosztów — kwota ta i tak trafia do budżetu państwa, a przekazanie jej OPP jest dobrowolnym wyborem podatnika.
Polish e-Tax Services: File Taxes Electronically With Twój e-PIT
The Polish tax authority (KAS) maintains an electronic tax portal at podatki.gov.pl providing taxpayers access to the Twój e-PIT service for electronic income tax filing, e-Korespondencja (electronic correspondence), and other e-Urząd Skarbowy (e-Tax Office) services. The portal covers personal income tax (PIT) for various income types including employment, contracts, rental income, and pensions, as well as business taxes including CIT, VAT, and excise duties. Additional services include taxinterpretations, binding tax and customs rulings, international tax cooperation tools, and customs information.
Joint Declaration on AI-Generated Images and Privacy
The AAIP joined over 60 global data protection authorities in issuing a joint declaration addressing AI systems that generate realistic images and videos of identifiable persons without their knowledge or consent. The declaration outlines fundamental expectations including implementation of robust security measures to prevent misuse, transparency about AI capabilities, accessible mechanisms for individuals to request removal of personal content, and specific protections for children and adolescents. The declaration was adopted under the Global Privacy Assembly Working Group on International Enforcement Cooperation, with adherence from authorities spanning six continents.
AAIP Leads 65th Bureau Meeting on Convention 108+ Data Protection
Beatriz Anchorena, Head of the AAIP and President of the Convention 108 Committee Bureau, chaired the 65th Bureau meeting of the Council of Europe's Data Protection Committee on March 18–19. The meeting reviewed Convention 108+ ratification status, which stands at 33 ratifications with 5 additional ratifications required for entry into force. Participants advanced work on Model Contractual Clauses for cross-border data flows and guidelines on AI large language models and neuroscience under the 2026–2029 Work Programme. Observers included EDPS, EDPB, Ecuador's Superintendent of Personal Data Protection, Brazil's ANPD, and Interpol.
AAIP Investigates 5 ON LINE S.R.L. for Alleged Data Protection Violations in Telephone Debt Collection
The AAIP, as the enforcing authority for Argentina's Law No. 25.326 on Personal Data Protection, has initiated an investigation into 5 ON LINE S.R.L. following complaints about alleged illegitimate processing of debtor data during telephone collection activities. The agency has notified potentially linked entities to inform them of the ongoing proceedings and remind them of their legal obligations. If violations are confirmed, the applicable sanctions include fines, warnings, suspension, closure, or cancellation of data databases.
Norway Implements EU Directive 2024/869/EU with New Workplace Limits for Diisocyanates and Lead
Norway's Arbeidstilsynet has implemented the EU's fifth amendment directive 2024/869/EU to the carcinogen-mutagen-reproductive toxic directive 2004/37/EC through amendments to the Regulations on limit values. The new rules establish exposure limits for diisocyanates (carcinogenic) and lead and inorganic lead compounds (reproductive toxic). Biological limit values for lead now specify 45 µg Pb per liter blood for women of fertile age and 150 µg Pb per liter blood for other workers. The directive applies from 9 April 2024.
New HMS Card Contract Signed With Tieto, Three Years, Starts January 2027
Arbeidstilsynet has signed a new three-year contract with Tieto (formerly Tietoevry) for the delivery of HMS cards, the work-authorisation cards required in Norway's covered industries. The contract, signed 31 March 2026, begins January 2027 and has an estimated annual value of approximately 50 million Norwegian kroner, with options to extend for up to two additional years. The new agreement will introduce a unified physical card across industries, improved security using bank-card technology, a more user-friendly ordering solution, and stricter information-security and privacy requirements.
PM's Science Council Recommends $122M Science Funding Reallocation Over 3 Years
The Prime Minister's Science, Innovation and Technology Advisory Council has published its first report recommending that the government reallocate $122 million over the next 3 years toward advanced technologies. The report proposes organising future investment around four funding pillars: primary industries and the bioeconomy, technology for prosperity, environmental sustainability and resilience, and healthy people and a thriving society. The council's advice is intended to inform the Government's Science Investment Plan, to be released around mid-year, which will set out strategic research priorities and align public investment with long-term government goals.
NZ Fuel Stocks Stable, Petrol at 51.2 Days Cover
MBIE's 22 April 2026 update reports national fuel stocks as of 19 April 2026: petrol 51.2 days, diesel 41.6 days, and jet fuel 47.4 days of cover. Stocks have decreased slightly since the previous update of 15 April (petrol 54.0, diesel 44.8, jet fuel 51.4), but MBIE states this reflects normal seasonal variation as international shipping operates without disruption from the current Middle East situation. Six ships are within the EEZ and five are en route from outside the EEZ. The next data update is scheduled for 27 April 2026.
64 High-Performing Endeavour Fund Projects Receive 12-Month Extensions
The New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment announced 12-month extensions for 64 high-performing Endeavour Fund projects effective 2026. The 2026 Endeavour Fund contestable round was paused to provide stability for the science, innovation and technology sector during the reform period, with the redirected allocation allowing strong projects to continue. Named recipients include the New Zealand Institute for Bioeconomy Science, University of Auckland, and University of Waikato, working on bioproduct production, Varroa mite control, and hydrogen storage research.
Federal Council Adopts Too-Big-To-Fail Regulations Requiring Full CET1 Backing for Foreign Subsidiaries
On 22 April 2026, the Swiss Federal Council adopted a dispatch revising the Banking Act and amended the Capital Adequacy Ordinance (CAO), targeting a gap in the too-big-to-fail regime exposed by the Credit Suisse crisis in 2023. Systemically important banks will be required to fully back the carrying value of their participations in foreign subsidiaries with CET1 capital — previously only half could be financed with debt — eliminating the automatic reduction of parent bank capital ratios from the first franc of any valuation loss. The CAO amendments establish a maximum three-year amortisation period for software capital treatment, aligned with EU regulations, effective 1 January 2027. Parliament will debate the Banking Act dispatch from summer 2026, with a proposed seven-year transition period. UBS, the only currently affected institution, would require approximately USD 20 billion in additional CET1 capital under the new requirements.
Federal Council Approves Agreement on Cantons' Involvement in Switzerland-EU Bilaterals III
The Swiss Federal Council approved an agreement between the federal government and the cantons on 22 April 2026 governing canton involvement in the Switzerland-EU Bilaterals III package. The agreement grants cantons participation rights in decision-shaping procedures and consultation on dispute settlement when their competences or essential interests are affected. Cantons will also be represented on relevant bodies including the selection committee for the Competition Commission state aid monitoring chamber, joint committees, and high-level EU dialogue forums. The agreement is conditional: it will only be signed after parliamentary deliberations on the package are concluded and remains subject to potential renegotiation if Parliament substantially amends the relevant legal bases.
Switzerland Attends UNECE Regional Forum on Sustainable Development in Geneva
Switzerland participated in the UNECE Regional Forum on Sustainable Development held on 21-22 April 2026 in Geneva, led by Markus Reubi, Federal Council delegate for the 2030 Agenda. The forum focused on SDG 6 (clean water and sanitation), SDG 7 (affordable and clean energy), SDG 9 (industry and innovation), SDG 11 (sustainable cities), and SDG 17 (partnerships). Swiss cities Geneva, Bern, and Basel, along with canton Aargau, presented their first Voluntary Local Reviews, showcasing local implementation of the 2030 Agenda. The forum serves as preparation for the High-level Political Forum in New York in July 2026.
New Guidance for Health Surveillance and Biomonitoring of Workers Exposed to Lead and Its Compounds
EU-OSHA has published new annex guidance on health surveillance and biomonitoring of workers exposed to lead and its inorganic compounds, reflecting updated regulatory requirements under Directive 2004/37/EC. The guidance explains biological limit values for lead and describes recommended practices to monitor lead in blood and carry out medical surveillance. This publication supplements the existing 'Biological monitoring at work: Guidance for OSH experts and workplaces' guidance document.
Supporting Compliance With OSH Regulations: New Web Section Gathers Key Research
EU-OSHA has launched a new thematic web section on occupational safety and health (OSH) compliance, consolidating research publications including case studies, policy briefs, reports, and discussion papers. The section covers multiple sectors including agriculture and construction, organised around two research strands: how supply chains drive OSH improvement and the role of labour inspectorates and prevention services. The resource is intended to help employers understand compliance pathways and inspector engagement.
Discussion Papers on Labour Shortages and AI Impact on OSH
EU-OSHA has published two discussion papers under its Future of Work project examining near-term implications for occupational safety and health. The first paper addresses how increasing labour shortages in Europe may create OSH pressures and outlines policy responses, while the second analyses the practical application of the EU Artificial Intelligence Act to smart OSH systems including wearables, robots, and exoskeletons.
PIPC Chairperson Delivers Cyber Diplomacy Lecture to Ambassadors
PIPC Chairperson Kyung Hee Song delivered a special lecture on cyber diplomacy to ambassadors stationed in Korea, timed to coincide with Women's Month. The engagement reflects Korea's PIPC actively conducting international outreach on data protection and privacy matters. The announcement is published on the official PIPC website as a news item.
PIPC Korea AI Transformation, Pseudonymization, Privacy Notices April 2026
The Personal Information Protection Commission (PIPC) of Korea published a page listing ten recent notices and press releases from March 5 to April 22, 2026. Topics covered include AI transformation pathways, fact-finding reviews of customer service outsourcing across five sectors, an overhaul of pseudonymization guidelines to introduce a risk-based approach, a new one-stop support center for pseudonymized data, and initiatives to strengthen privacy responsibilities and management frameworks to prevent data breaches. Additional notices address ISMS/ISMS-P certification improvements, cyber diplomacy, and transparency in AI-era privacy policy.
Christie's Fined KRW 287.2M by Korea PIPC for Data Breaches
The Personal Information Protection Commission imposed a fine of KRW 287.2 million on Christie's for data breaches. The enforcement action was taken on April 22, 2026. This marks a significant enforcement outcome for an international commercial entity under Korea's data protection framework, signalling continued regulatory attention on cross-border data handling practices.
Former Pharmacy President Adam Brosius Sentenced to 24 Months for $33M Healthcare Fraud and Kickback Scheme
Adam Brosius, 61, of Delray Beach, Florida, was sentenced to 24 months in prison on April 1, 2026 for his role in a $33 million health care fraud and kickback scheme involving compounded medications. Brosius and co-conspirators used Main Avenue Pharmacy, a mail-order pharmacy with a Clifton, New Jersey storefront, to distribute medically unnecessary scar creams, pain creams, migraine medication, and vitamins from 2014 through 2016. Brosius served as the pharmacy's director of business development before becoming its president.
Illegal Alien Charged with Healthcare Fraud, Aggravated Identity Theft
Amaurys Arias Arias, 44, a Dominican national unlawfully residing in Brockton, Massachusetts, was arrested and charged with one count of making false statements relating to health care matters and one count of aggravated identity theft. The defendant allegedly used the stolen identity of a U.S. citizen to obtain MassHealth benefits, falsely representing himself as a U.S. citizen in applications and sworn affidavits. Arias is alleged to have obtained tens of thousands of dollars in government healthcare benefits through the stolen identity, and also used the stolen identity in connection with prior arrests leading to convictions in the victim's name.
Access Your Australian Credit Report for Free Every Three Months
The OAIC has published guidance explaining that Australian credit reporting bodies must provide consumers with free access to their credit reports once every three months. Consumers are also entitled to a free copy if they have been refused credit within the past 90 days or if their credit-related personal information has been corrected. At other times, credit reporting bodies may charge a fee, provided it is not excessive.
Australian Privacy Rights, Consent to Personal Information
The OAIC has published guidance explaining the requirements for obtaining valid consent to collect, use, and disclose personal information under Australian privacy law. The guidance distinguishes between express consent (verbal or written, required for sensitive information), implied consent (requires opt-out option), and bundled consent (combined requests that may not give individuals genuine choice). Individuals may withdraw consent at any time, and organisations must make withdrawal easy and accessible.
Access Your Health Information Rights in Australia
The OAIC published guidance explaining that Australian privacy law grants individuals a general right to request access to health information held by health service providers. The guidance specifies that providers should respond within 30 days, may charge a non-excessive fee for access, and must provide written notice if refusing a request. Individuals may authorize representatives, request information in specific formats, and lodge complaints with the OAIC if unsatisfied.
FAQ on Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code 2020
The Ministry of Labour published a comprehensive FAQ on the Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions (OSH&WC) Code, 2020, addressing 8 clarification queries as of March 13, 2026. The FAQ covers state government authority for dock workers (Section 18), annual health examinations including provisions for workers above 40 years of age, contract worker welfare facilities under Section 56, mandatory experience certificates, inspector-cum-facilitators replacing traditional inspectors, and penalty rationalization distinguishing compoundable minor offences from serious safety violations under Section 86(1).
Additional FAQs on Labour Codes 16 March 2026
The Ministry of Labour, Government of India issued 21 additional FAQs on 16 March 2026 clarifying provisions of India's Labour Codes (Code on Wages 2019, Code on Social Security 2020, and OSH & WC Code 2020) effective 21 November 2025. Key clarifications include that statutory components such as employer PF and pension contributions and statutory bonus are included for arriving at the 50 percent wage calculation, but gratuity, ESI, and other retirement benefits are excluded. Overtime allowance forms part of the calculation while annual performance-based incentives do not. Fixed-term employees are eligible for gratuity upon completing one year of service from contract start date. Contract labour gratuity is payable by either the principal employer or contractor. ESI coverage applies with a Rs 21,000 per month wage threshold. Leave encashment provisions apply to workers and supervisors earning up to Rs 18,000 per month. Workers can carry forward up to 30 days of leave to the succeeding year.
William Dalrymple's Keynote on India's Civilizational Openness at EPFO RGDE Season 2
The Employees' Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) inaugurated Season 2 of the Reimagining Governance Discourse for Excellence (RGDE) programme on Civil Services Day, featuring historian and author William Dalrymple as keynote speaker. Dalrymple argued that India's historic strength lay not in conquest but in its openness to the movement of ideas, trade and culture, enabling it to shape civilizations across continents. The session saw active participation from officers across more than 150 field offices and various constituents of the Ministry of Labour and Employment, who engaged in discussions connecting historical patterns to contemporary governance challenges.
Indian Health Service Directs $700 Million in Infrastructure Funds to Tribal Water Projects
The Indian Health Service announced FY 2026 allocations of $700 million from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act to support drinking water and sanitation projects across Indian Country. The funding represents the fifth year of IIJA appropriations, which provides $3.5 billion to IHS between FY 2022 and FY 2026 for critical Tribal water infrastructure including drinking water sources, sewage systems, and solid waste disposal facilities. The allocations follow Tribal leaders' recommendations to prioritize projects that have completed planning and are ready to move directly into design and construction.
INAIL Sicily Events Certify Ministry of Defense Facilities
INAIL held two informational events in Sicily on April 9 and 21, 2026, focused on the verification and certification of plants and equipment used by the Ministry of Defense. Over 120 representatives from the four Armed Forces (Army, Navy, Air Force, and Carabinieri) participated, with events hosted in Palermo and Messina respectively. The events supported the implementation of the convention between INAIL and the Ministry of Defense, enabling military commanders—acting as employers—to use INAIL's CIVA application and technical personnel for equipment certification through the Institute's 36 territorial operational units.
New INAIL Handbook Covers Prevention in Appalti Contracting
INAIL published a new handbook on practical prevention experiences in construction and maintenance contracting (appalti di opere e manutenzioni). The publication was developed by INAIL's research departments and technical health and safety consultancy in collaboration with major market players and the Health Safety & Environment Laboratory of Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna di Pisa. The handbook systematises existing prevention practices covering the entire contracting lifecycle, from contractor selection to safety performance reporting, and is designed to support public and private clients, contractors, and prevention professionals in managing interferential risks and strengthening safety culture along the contracting supply chain.
Occupational Road Safety: Final OSH-RO@D Project Event in Rome
INAIL and partner institutions held the final conference for the OSH-RO@D research project in Rome on April 21, 2026. The multidisciplinary project studied human factors in road accidents, finding that approximately 90% of road accidents are attributable to human factors, while work-related accidents represent about 40% of fatal workplace injuries. Over 20% of accidents are linked to sleep disorders, particularly obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). The project developed wearable sensor technologies, remote driving simulation scenarios, and virtual reality training modules for driver safety.
IMF Staff-Level Agreement Sri Lanka Extended Fund Facility
Sri Lanka has reached a staff-level agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) under the Extended Fund Facility (EFF) arrangement, as confirmed by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka. The agreement, announced on April 9, 2026, follows Sri Lanka's severe economic crisis that emerged in 2022 and builds upon the initial IMF programme that commenced in September 2023. The CBSL press release marks the formal confirmation of this agreement, signaling continued international financial support for Sri Lanka's economic stabilisation programme.
Annual Economic Review 2025 Shows 5% GDP Growth
The Central Bank of Sri Lanka presented the Annual Economic Review 2025 to President Anura Kumara Dissanayake on 20 April 2026, reporting that real GDP growth reached an estimated 5% in 2025, marking the second consecutive year of expansion. The current account recorded a surplus for the third consecutive year, supported by historically high workers' remittances and improved services exports, while the primary balance also recorded a surplus for the third consecutive year, underpinned by revenue-based fiscal consolidation measures.
Financial Statements and Operations 2025 Released
The Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) has published its Financial Statements and Operations for 2025, presented to the President and Minister of Finance by Governor Dr. Nandalal Weerasinghe on April 20, 2026. The publication is a statutory requirement under Section 99(2) and 7(1)(l) of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka Act, No 16 of 2023. The report covers operational insights, IFRS-compliant financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2025, and supplementary information on the Bank's regional presence and regulated institutions.
FCCPC Clarifies No Ban on Airtime Borrowing or Data Advance Services
The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC Nigeria) has issued a clarification stating that it has not banned airtime borrowing or data advance services in Nigeria, contrary to misinformation circulating in newspapers and social media. The commission issued the DEON Consumer Lending Regulations in July 2025 to address consumer complaints about opaque charges, unexplained deductions, aggressive recovery practices, and poor disclosure in digital lending. After two compliance windows (initial 90-day period plus extension to January 5, 2026), affected operators failed to register and regularize their services. The FCCPC states any service changes are business decisions by operators, not regulatory bans.
Consumer Survey on Retail Price Discrepancies Nigeria
The FCCPC Nigeria is conducting a research study on pricing discrepancies between displayed shelf prices and actual checkout charges across retail outlets in Nigeria. The survey aims to identify the scale of pricing transparency issues to inform potential consumer protection measures. The agency is inviting Nigerian consumers to participate voluntarily through a Google Form to gather data on this issue.
Federal High Court Affirms FCCPC Powers Over Air Peace Ticket Refunds
The Federal High Court Abuja dismissed Air Peace Limited's suit challenging the FCCPC's authority to investigate consumer complaints and issue summons under the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Act, 2018. Justice James Omotosho delivered the judgment on April 20, 2026, affirming the Commission's statutory powers to receive complaints, assess matters, and conduct investigations. The case arose from passenger complaints about unrefunded ticket fares and cancelled flights. This ruling strengthens FCCPC's position as Nigeria's primary consumer protection authority in the aviation sector.
FTA Announces $657M Ferry Infrastructure Grants for Modernization
The Federal Transit Administration announced $657 million in ferry infrastructure grants under the Passenger Ferry Program, with applications due by May 11, 2026. The funding targets terminal modernization, new ferry routes, and fleet improvements to connect families to jobs and communities. Selection criteria emphasize family-friendly travel, safety accessibility, and wayfinding improvements.
$686 Million Available for Family Friendly Transit Station Grants
The Federal Transit Administration announced approximately $686 million in competitive grant funding from the Fiscal Year 2025 and 2026 budgets through the All Stations Accessibility Program (ASAP) for transit agencies to modernize rail transit stations. The Notice of Funding Opportunity (FTA-2026-001-TPM-ASAP) focuses on making stations more accessible for families with strollers, elderly users, and people with disabilities, with priority for projects that improve access to jobs, healthcare, and commercial activity. Complete applications must be submitted via Grants.gov by May 1, 2026.
FTA Announces $100.3M for World Cup Host City Transit
The Federal Transit Administration is investing $100.3 million into public transit systems within U.S. host cities preparing for the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The funding will support planning, capital, and operating expenses for matches and public events, with a 100 percent Federal share permitted. Transit agencies must obligate these funds within one fiscal year of the close of the 2026 World Cup. The funding was made possible through the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2026.
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