User:Bawolff/Edit COI Summary/15 per page (alphabetical)/32
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- Thymosin beta-4
- Timothy Ely
- Timothy W. Bickmore
- Toby Ann Stavisky
- Tom Courtney
- Tommy Sowers
- TourRadar
- Transaction Network Services
- Transparent wood composite
- UNC Kenan–Flagler Business School
- UNT Health Fort Worth
- USA Sports (2025–present)
- Ulf Mark Schneider
- Unite America
- Universal Church of the Kingdom of God
Edit request: TB-500 vs full thymosin beta-4 clarification (Doping in sports section)
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Thymosin beta-4. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
COI disclosure: I have a conflict of interest as the founder of NextPep, a peptide research and comparison platform. I'm filing this Edit Request rather than editing directly. Full disclosure at User:Karl Vorwerg.
I made a related direct edit to this article on 2026-05-12, which was reverted by another editor following the COI notice SmartSE posted on my Talk page. I accept that revert as appropriate given my COI, and I'm refiling the substance of that change here through the proper channel so an uninvolved editor can evaluate the content on its merits.
Proposed addition
editIn the Doping in sports section, the first paragraph currently reads:
Thymosin beta-4 is considered a performance-enhancing substance and is banned in sports by the World Anti-Doping Agency due to its effect of aiding soft tissue recovery and enabling higher training loads.[1] It was central to two controversies in Australia in the 2010s...
I propose inserting one sentence between the existing first and second sentence:
...higher training loads.[1] The synthetic peptide marketed and detected as "TB-500" under WADA's monitoring program is a seven-amino-acid fragment (LKKTETQ; residues 17–23 of full Tβ4; molecular weight ~889 Da) corresponding to the minimal actin-binding motif of the parent 43-residue protein, although the term is commonly used interchangeably with full-length thymosin beta-4 in the research-peptide and doping-control literature.[2][3] It was central to two controversies...
Why this improves the article
editThe article already cites Ho et al. 2012, whose title is literally "Doping control analysis of TB-500, a synthetic version of an active region of thymosin β4, in equine urine and plasma..." — the fragment distinction is in the citation title but not in the body text. A reader who doesn't click the reference doesn't learn that "TB-500" and "thymosin beta-4" refer to different molecules. The Doping section uses both terms interchangeably, which leaves the basic factual distinction inaccessible to a general reader.
Van Troys et al. 1996 (PMID 8670856) established that residues 17–23 of Tβ4 constitute the minimal actin-binding motif, which is exactly the sequence that synthetic "TB-500" replicates.
Sources
editBoth already available — no new sources are strictly required for the proposed sentence:
- Ho EN, Kwok WH, Lau MY, Wong AS, Wan TS, Lam KK, Schiff PJ, Stewart BD (November 2012). "Doping control analysis of TB-500, a synthetic version of an active region of thymosin β4, in equine urine and plasma by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry". Journal of Chromatography A. 1265: 57–69. doi:10.1016/j.chroma.2012.09.043. PMID 23084823. (already cited in the article as the third reference in the Doping in sports section)
- Van Troys M, Dewitte D, Goethals M, Carlier MF, Vandekerckhove J, Ampe C (1996). "The actin binding site of thymosin beta 4, mapped by mutational analysis". The EMBO Journal. 15 (2): 201–210. doi:10.1002/j.1460-2075.1996.tb00350.x. PMID 8670856.
Optional supplementary source
editA secondary explainer synthesising the fragment-vs-protein distinction for general readers exists at https://nextpep.app/blog/tb-500-vs-thymosin-beta-4 . I authored this; I'm disclosing the COI here and noting that the proposed clarification stands on the two primary sources above without it. Whether to include the secondary source as an additional citation is entirely at the reviewing editor's discretion — either outcome is acceptable to me, and I will not contest the decision.
Thank you for the review.
Karl Vorwerg (talk) 12:37, 12 May 2026 (UTC)
| This page must adhere to the biographies of living persons (BLP) policy, even if it is not a biography, because it contains material about living persons. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the page and its talk page, especially if potentially libellous. If such material is repeatedly inserted, or if you have other concerns, please report the issue to this noticeboard.If you are a subject of this page, or acting on behalf of one, and you need help, please see this help page. |
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| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Timothy Ely. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
I am friends with Tim Ely but do not receive any financial benefit from helping this page improve. Have been attempting to improve it for almost a decade now but reverted all changes and posted them here — because that's what we're supposed to do. EXCEPT — nothing has happened since 2019 — there isn't enough activity for anyone to make changes.
I have added a significant number of references to Tim Ely's self-published blog which gives biographical background. Hoping this begins to alleviate the problems with the page. Dsgarnett (talk) 18:17, 29 April 2019 (UTC) dsgarnett
I have been in discussions with MrOllie about this page and his concerns about my involvement. My work is on behalf of the Timothy Ely — the subject of this BLP. My goal is simply to get accurate depth onto the page — including if anyone would like to add additional opinions about Mr. Ely's work.
For clarity, I help him with his Blog as well — but this is not "for fee" work. We are old friends and I bring help to him in this kind of work. That said, I am not being paid either directly or indirectly for assisting him with his Wikipedia page. (My income sources are elsewhere.)
Please let me know if you have concerns.
Dsgarnett (talk) 00:12, 21 February 2020 (UTC)dsgarnett
- @Dsgarnett: talk page comments like this, on a low-traffic talk page, can go unseen for a very long time, as I think you're finding out. You should instead be making edit requests (click on that link to find out more), which go into a live queue and are likely to get a much faster response. There is also a wizard at WP:ERW which helps you post a request.
- I'm taking down the admin help request flag, as this matter requires no administrative action.
- Best, -- DoubleGrazing (talk) 08:16, 6 June 2026 (UTC)
I recommend adding the following as it uses independent sources which discuss Mr. Ely's work to help the Wikipedia reader understand his unique imagery:
Edit request: Orphan, paid-contributions, and résumé tags
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Timothy W. Bickmore. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: I am Timothy Bickmore, the subject of this article. Per WP:COI I am not editing it directly and am requesting that uninvolved editors review the points below. My aim is only to help resolve the three maintenance tags, not to add promotional content.
To my knowledge, I have not commissioned or paid anyone to create or edit this article, and I welcome review and cleanup by independent editors.
1. Orphan. The page could be linked from related articles such as Embodied agent, Conversational agent, Affective computing, Rosalind Picard and Justine Cassell (my doctoral advisors), where a mention would be contextually appropriate.
2. Résumé tone and neutrality (paid-contributions tag). The biography currently reads as a chronological CV and relies heavily on my CV and Northeastern pages, which are not independent of me. I'd suggest rewriting in encyclopedic prose centered on independently-reported work, using sources already available:
- "An A.I. designed to guide humans through the end of life is already among us". CNBC. 2017-11-13.
- "Virtual Nurse Helps Patients Understand Discharge Information". HealthLeaders Media.
- "Q&A: Northeastern's Timothy Bickmore on the clinical future of relational agents". Healthcare IT News. 2012-09-17.
- "Mentioning what is hard to mention in chatbot for end-of-life preparation". Tech Xplore. 2017-09-24.
Primary documents (CV, faculty page) could be retained only for routine, non-contentious facts (degrees, dates) per WP:ABOUTSELF, rather than as the backbone of the article.
3. Independent evidence of scholarly impact. The strongest independent indicator of significance here is citation impact, relevant to WP:NPROF criterion 1. Editors may wish to source and, where appropriate, cite:
- The Stanford/Elsevier "top 2% most-cited scientists" ranking (Ioannidis et al. composite citation database), currently listed in the infobox without a citation — the underlying dataset is published and citable.
- Citation metrics from independent databases such as Scopus and Web of Science (and, more cautiously, Google Scholar).
- An NSF CAREER award (Faculty Early Career Development Program, National Science Foundation), verifiable via the NSF award database, as a research honor.
To be clear, I am not requesting that my own publications be listed, as those are not independent of me; these are offered only as independent evidence of impact to help editors clean up the article in a "keep and improve" spirit.
I'm happy to supply additional independent sources and defer to editors' judgment on wording and on whether the tags can then be removed.
Heal61 (talk) 00:58, 20 June 2026 (UTC)
Request edit: sponsored legislation (2022–2025)
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Toby Ann Stavisky. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
Disclosure: I have a conflict of interest with respect to this article, as I am employed by Senator Stavisky's office. Per WP:COI and WP:PAID, I am not editing the article directly and am requesting that an uninvolved editor review and, if appropriate, add the following well-sourced content. All facts are cited to independent news coverage and the official legislative record.
Proposed addition 1 — to the "New York Senate" section, after the sentence noting her Higher Education Committee chairmanship:
As chair of the Senate Higher Education Committee, Stavisky has sponsored legislation addressing hate crimes and discrimination on college campuses. In November 2022, Governor Kathy Hochul signed a bill sponsored by Stavisky and Assemblymember Rebecca Seawright (S.6570/A.1202) requiring individuals convicted of hate crimes to undergo mandatory training or counseling in hate crime prevention and education.[4][5] In July 2023, Hochul signed legislation sponsored by Stavisky and Assemblymember Daniel Rosenthal (S.2060-A/A.3694-A) strengthening requirements for New York colleges to investigate and report hate crimes on campus, including posting campus crime statistics online and informing new students about prevention resources.[6][7] In August 2025, Hochul signed a bill sponsored by Stavisky and Assemblymember Nily Rozic (S.4559-B/A.5448-B) requiring every New York college and university to designate a Title VI coordinator to receive and investigate discrimination complaints under Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.[8][9]
Proposed addition 2 — a separate sentence in the "New York Senate" section (health/insurance legislation, distinct from the campus material above):
In December 2024, Hochul signed a bill sponsored by Stavisky and Assemblymember Linda B. Rosenthal (S.2063-A/A.38-A) requiring large-group private health insurance plans in New York to cover scalp cooling systems, which reduce hair loss during chemotherapy, making New York the first state to mandate such coverage. The requirement takes effect January 1, 2026.[10][11]
Sourcing notes for the reviewer
editEach fact leads with independent news coverage; official press releases are used only as backups. NPOV note: I deliberately avoided the "landmark"/"groundbreaking"/"first-in-the-nation" phrasing used in the sponsors' press releases. The four laws can be verified against the official legislative record:
| Year | Bill (Senate / Assembly) | Chapter | Signed | Assembly co-sponsor | Legislative record |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | S.6570 / A.1202 | Laws of 2022 (enacted via A.1202) | Nov 22, 2022 | Rebecca Seawright | nysenate.gov S.6570 |
| 2023 | S.2060-A / A.3694-A | Ch. 191 | Jul 11, 2023 | Daniel Rosenthal | nysenate.gov S.2060 |
| 2024 | S.2063-A / A.38-A | Ch. 595 | Dec 13, 2024 | Linda B. Rosenthal | nysenate.gov S.2063 |
| 2025 | S.4559-B / A.5448-B | Ch. 354 | Aug 26, 2025 | Nily Rozic | nysenate.gov S.4559 |
Two points to note:
- The 2023 and 2024 bills have different co-sponsors named Rosenthal — Assemblymember Daniel Rosenthal (Queens) on the 2023 campus-reporting bill, and Assemblymember Linda B. Rosenthal (Manhattan) on the 2024 scalp-cooling bill. These are two different legislators, not a typo.
- The claim that New York was the first state to mandate insurance coverage for scalp cooling is supported by multiple independent sources (QNS, the Medical Society of the State of New York, and ABC News), not only the sponsors' offices.
TiberNero (talk) 15:08, 8 July 2026 (UTC)
Conflict of Interest edit request
edit![]() | The user below has a request that a significant addition or re-write be made to this article for which that user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
- What I think should be changed (include citations):
The article should note that while attending college, Courtney was in the Air Force ROTC. When he sought to enter military service in 1955, the U.S. Air Force determined that his eyesight did not meet its pilot requirements. He subsequently enlisted in the U.S. Army as a private because it was only two years and he could be given a schedule that allowed for sufficient time to train for the Olympics. [Courtney, Tom. The Inside Track. Page Publishing, INC, 2018.] [Fordham Now. “Tom Courtney, Olympic Gold Medalist and Fordham Sports Great, Dies at 90.” Fordham Magazine, Fordham University, 23 Aug. 2023, now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/tom-courtney-olympic-gold-medalist-and-fordham-sports-great-dies-at-90/. ]
- Why it should be changed:
This information is supported by published sources and provides important context about Courtney's military service and athletic career. The current article omits his service in the U.S. Army and how that decision enabled him to continue training for the Olympics. Adding this sourced information would improve the article's accuracy, completeness, and biographical context.
Plhc (talk) 20:30, 31 May 2026 (UTC)
References
- 1 2 Cite error: The named reference
final findingwas invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ↑ Cite error: The named reference
Ho2012was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ↑ Cite error: The named reference
VanTroys1996was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ↑ "Governor Hochul signs Queens lawmaker's hate crimes bill into law". QNS. November 23, 2022. Retrieved July 8, 2026.
- ↑ "Governor Hochul Announces Actions to Prevent Hate Crimes and Protect New Yorkers". Office of the Governor of New York. November 22, 2022. Retrieved July 8, 2026.
- ↑ "Hochul details security grants, signs education bill to curb hate crimes". Spectrum News NY1. July 11, 2023. Retrieved July 8, 2026.
- ↑ "Queens lawmaker's bill mandating New York colleges to report hate crimes on campus". QNS. April 28, 2023. Retrieved July 8, 2026.
- ↑ Parry, Bill (September 1, 2025). "Rozic, Stavisky bill to protect students from discrimination signed into law by Governor". QNS. Retrieved July 8, 2026.
- ↑ "Senate Bill S4559B". New York State Senate. August 26, 2025. Retrieved July 8, 2026.
- ↑ O'Brien, Shane (December 17, 2024). "New York becomes first state to mandate insurance coverage for cancer hair-preservation treatment". QNS. Retrieved July 8, 2026.
- ↑ "Governor Hochul Signs Bill Requiring Health Insurers to Cover Scalp Cooling Devices for Cancer Patients". Medical Society of the State of New York. December 20, 2024. Retrieved July 8, 2026.
Edit request — April 2026 updates (COI disclosure)
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Tommy Sowers. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
I am the subject of this article and have a conflict of interest. I am requesting three specific edits below, each formatted as a direct text replacement so a reviewer can apply them mechanically. Independent sources are listed under each change.
Change 1: Lead paragraph
editReplace this text:
Tommy Sowers (born February 23, 1976) is an American entrepreneur and academic. While in the Army, he served as an assistant professor at the United States Military Academy at West Point. He taught at Missouri University of Science and Technology, and Duke University. He recently served as President and Chief Operating Officer of a private jet operator. He returned to Duke in 2024 as Faculty Lead in the Duke Initiative for Science & Society's Applied Technology Ethics program.
With this text:
Tommy Sowers (born February 23, 1976) is an American academic administrator, entrepreneur, and former U.S. Army officer. In April 2026 he was appointed Vice Chancellor for Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Economic Development and Chief Innovation Officer at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.[1] He previously served as Deputy Director of the Duke Initiative for Science & Society and as President and Chief Operating Officer of flyExclusive, which he led through a 2023 business combination that took the company public.[2] Earlier in his career, he was an assistant professor at the United States Military Academy at West Point and, in 2012, was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as Assistant Secretary at the United States Department of Veterans Affairs.
Change 2: Infobox
editIn the infobox, replace:
|title=Southeast Regional Director, National Security Innovation Network|profession=Former President of flyExclusive, Professor, entrepreneur
With:
|title=Vice Chancellor for Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Economic Development; Chief Innovation Officer, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill|profession=University administrator, professor, entrepreneur
Change 3: New subsection under "Academic career"
editAdd this subsection after the existing Duke content:
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
editIn March 2026, Chancellor Lee Roberts named Sowers Vice Chancellor for Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Economic Development and Chief Innovation Officer at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, a cabinet role with university-wide responsibility for innovation strategy, entrepreneurship programming, strategic partnerships, and technology transfer. He assumed the role on April 20, 2026.[1]
Sources to add to References
editPrimary / institutional (for confirmation only):
- "UNC-Chapel Hill names Tommy Sowers as its first Chief Innovation Officer". University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 25 March 2026.[1]
- "University Hires New Innovation Chief, Inaugural AI Officer Leaves". Carolina Alumni Review. March 2026.
For the flyExclusive business combination:
- "flyExclusive and EG Acquisition Corporation Announce Closing of Business Combination" (Press release). Nasdaq. 27 December 2023.[2]
- "flyExclusive and EG Acquisition Corporation Announce Closing of Business Combination" (Press release). BusinessWire. 27 December 2023.
Happy to provide additional independent sources or further-trimmed wording on request. Thank you. Drtommysowers (talk) 21:33, 23 May 2026 (UTC)
Edit request: September 2025 AI Discovery launch
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to TourRadar. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
I have a paid conflict of interest (employee of TourRadar). Requesting the paragraph below be added to the History section, after the existing June 2025 Moments/RISE paragraph. All claims are supported by the cited independent trade press.
In September 2025, TourRadar launched AI Discovery, a set of integrations linking its tour inventory to external artificial-intelligence and social-media platforms.[3] The release included a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server giving large language models, online travel agencies and developers access to the inventory for use in assistants such as ChatGPT, Perplexity and Gemini; a custom GPT assistant within ChatGPT for searching tours using natural language; and a Trip Recommender for Instagram Reels, built with Google's Vertex AI, that suggests tours based on a reel's content.[3][4]
[4] AleksZarz (talk) 08:28, 19 June 2026 (UTC)
Add 2022–2024 timeline entries to History section
edit![]() | Part of an edit requested by an editor with a conflict of interest has been implemented. |
- What I think should be changed:
Please add the following entries to the History timeline:
- 2022 – Acquired AGNITY Global, Inc.[5]; First Orion and Hiya joined Neustar and TNS to develop enterprise call authentication standards.[6]
- 2023 – Acquired BornTec’s managed hosting and colocation business.[7]; Acquired West Highland Support Services.[8]
- 2024 – Opened AI Labs Poland.[9]
- Why it should be changed:
To make the page up to date with TNS' recent business activities.
- References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button):
- 1 2 3 Cite error: The named reference
unc-appointmentwas invoked but never defined (see the help page). - 1 2 Cite error: The named reference
flyex-closewas invoked but never defined (see the help page). - 1 2 3 Hines, Morgan (15 September 2025). "TourRadar launches 'AI Discovery' ChatGPT, Instagram, MCP integrations". PhocusWire. Retrieved 19 June 2026.
- 1 2 "TourRadar's Fall Release focuses on AI discovery and social commerce in travel". WebInTravel. 4 November 2025. Retrieved 19 June 2026.
- ↑ "AGNITY Acquired by TNS". Bowen Inc. August 11, 2022. Retrieved 2025-07-17.
- ↑ "First Orion and Hiya join Neustar and TNS to unify enterprise call vetting and authentication practices across largest mobile carriers". The Globe and Mail. December 13, 2022. Retrieved 2025-07-17.
- ↑ "TNS acquires BornTec's managed hosting and colocation business". ChannelE2E. April 19, 2023. Retrieved 2025-07-17.
- ↑ "TNS acquires West Highland Support Services". Asset Servicing Times. November 17, 2023. Retrieved 2025-07-17.
- ↑ "TNS Opens AI Labs Poland to Expand AI Capabilities". Business Wire. September 17, 2024. Retrieved 2025-07-17.
Jfranks90 (talk) 13:10, 24 July 2025 (UTC)
References
Partly done: See page. 2024 history
Not done due to nature of source. (There's no history entry about AI Labs?) Meepmeepyeet (talk) 04:18, 5 September 2025 (UTC)
- Hi, we want to add a history entry about AI Labs. Citation 5 is the reference for it. Is more information required? Jfranks90 (talk) 15:05, 12 December 2025 (UTC)
- hi, can you please explain your comment? Citation 5 is the reference for AI Labs Jfranks90 (talk) 09:28, 29 April 2026 (UTC)
| This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
- What I think should be changed:
Please add the following entries to the History timeline:
- 2022 – Acquired AGNITY Global, Inc.[1]; First Orion and Hiya joined Neustar and TNS to develop enterprise call authentication standards.[2]
- 2023 – Acquired BornTec’s managed hosting and colocation business.[3]; Acquired West Highland Support Services.[4]
- 2024 – Opened AI Labs Poland.[5]
- Why it should be changed:
I am an employee of Transaction Network Services and have been asked to update this page.
- References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button):
References
edit- ↑ "AGNITY Acquired by TNS". Bowen Inc. August 11, 2022. Retrieved 2025-07-17.
- ↑ "First Orion and Hiya join Neustar and TNS to unify enterprise call vetting and authentication practices across largest mobile carriers". The Globe and Mail. December 13, 2022. Retrieved 2025-07-17.
- ↑ "TNS acquires BornTec's managed hosting and colocation business". ChannelE2E. April 19, 2023. Retrieved 2025-07-17.
- ↑ "TNS acquires West Highland Support Services". Asset Servicing Times. November 17, 2023. Retrieved 2025-07-17.
- ↑ "TNS Opens AI Labs Poland to Expand AI Capabilities". Business Wire. September 17, 2024. Retrieved 2025-07-17.
Jfranks90 (talk) 10:15, 29 April 2026 (UTC)
Done DiscoursesonLivvy (talk · contribs) 22:10, 16 May 2026 (UTC)
References
| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Transaction Network Services. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
- What I think should be changed:
- 2025 – Malaysian Hub opens in Kuala Lumpur
- 2026 – Select iconectiv network management, digital identity and fraud prevention solutions merged with TNS; TNS completes acquisition of BT Radianz; TNS’s Financial Markets business and Radianz combine to form Waypoint Trading Solutions.
- Why it should be changed:
Updates to business activity.
- References supporting the possible change (format using the "cite" button):
Jfranks90 (talk) 16:54, 21 May 2026 (UTC)
References
- ↑ "TNS Unveils New Malaysian Hub to Power "Complete Commerce" and Strengthen Global Growth Strategy". Finance Day. 13 May 2025. Retrieved 21 May 2026.
- ↑ "Ericsson completes sale of iconectiv". Ericsson. 22 Aug 2025. Retrieved 21 May 2026.
- ↑ "TNS Completes Acquisition of BT Radianz". Yahoo! Finance. 2 February 2026. Retrieved 21 May 2026.
- ↑ "TNS' Financial Markets Business and Radianz Combine to Form Waypoint Trading Solutions". Business Wire. April 6, 2026. Retrieved 21 May 2026.
Reply 17-JUN-2026
edit- Your proposed text appears to be missing key H:WIKILINKs which may help to facilitate a reader's understanding of the subject matter.
- In your proposed text, it was noted that iconectiv network management, digital identity / fraud prevention solutions, BT Radianz, and Waypoint Trading Solutions are not WikiLinked.
- WikiLinks provide instant pathways to locations within and outside the project that can increase readers' understanding of the topic at hand. Whenever writing or editing an article, it's important to consider not only what to put in the article, but also what links to include to help the reader find related information. Official guidance for the use of links is to avoid both underlinking and overlinking.
- To save time, please feel free to place these WikiLinks in the text already submitted above, rather than re-writing an entirely new draft; unless there are glaring absences, in which case it might be prudent to reconsider referring to that particular term.
- If you have any questions about this, please don't hesitate to ask. When ready to proceed with the requested information or any questions which you might have, kindly change the {{Edit COI}} answer parameter to read from
|ans=yto|ans=n, or place a newer {{Edit COI}} at the beginning of any new submission offered for review below this reply post.
Regards, Spintendo 00:10, 18 June 2026 (UTC)
COI edit request: Addition to Applications section
edit![]() | This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest was declined. An image would be preferable to a written description. |
I have a conflict of interest regarding this topic, as I am involved in the project described below. I therefore do not intend to edit the article directly.
I would like to propose adding a short implementation example to the "Applications" section. In May 2026, students at Nagaoka Institute of Design installed a bench-shaped lantern incorporating transparent wood under the gangi, a traditional covered walkway in snowy regions, in front of the Goze Museum Takada in Joetsu, Niigata Prefecture, Japan. The translucent wood panels were used as part of a lighting design depicting Takada goze (visually impaired female musicians) walking through a snowy arcade.
Possible sources:
- Joetsu Times, "ベンチ型あんどんの新作 長岡造形大の「木匠塾」寄贈 上越市 瞽女ミュージアムに設置" [New bench-shaped lantern donated by Nagaoka Institute of Design's Mokushōjuku: Installed at the Goze Museum in Joetsu City], 13 May 2026. https://j-times.jp/archives/136971
- Joetsu Town Journal, "夜の雁木通りに高田瞽女の姿浮かび上がる 上越市東本町1に「瞽女木行灯」" [Takada Goze figures emerge on the night gangi arcade: "Goze Mokudon" at Higashihoncho 1, Joetsu City], 14 May 2026. https://www.joetsutj.com/2026/05/14/185057
Would other editors consider this a suitable short example for the applications section? If so, I have drafted a proposed text block below that can be easily copied and pasted into the article.
Proposed text:
In May 2026, transparent wood was used in a bench-shaped lantern installed in Joetsu, Niigata Prefecture, Japan. Students from Nagaoka Institute of Design incorporated translucent wood panels into the lantern, which was placed under a gangi covered walkway in front of the Goze Museum Takada. Backlit by LEDs, the panels depict Takada goze walking through a snowy arcade."ベンチ型あんどんの新作 長岡造形大の「木匠塾」寄贈 上越市 瞽女ミュージアムに設置" [New bench-shaped lantern donated by Nagaoka Institute of Design's Mokushōjuku: Installed at the Goze Museum in Joetsu City]. Joetsu Times (in Japanese). 13 May 2026. Retrieved 15 May 2026."夜の雁木通りに高田瞽女の姿浮かび上がる 上越市東本町1に「瞽女木行灯」" [Takada Goze figures emerge on the night gangi arcade: "Goze Mokudon" at Higashihoncho 1, Joetsu City]. Joetsu Town Journal (in Japanese). 14 May 2026. Retrieved 15 May 2026.
ArchandEng Lab (talk) 09:32, 15 May 2026 (UTC)
- If this mention is going to be made, then an image file should accompany it. Text placed in an application section means nothing if those applications can't be seen with the reader's eyes. The text description leaves a lot to be desired;
wood was used in a bench-shaped lantern installed in Joetsu
. A lantern and a bench are such opposites as far as shape, size and function go, that to describe something as a "bench shaped lantern" one immediately thinks of a sofa shaped 500,000 lumen spotlight roughly the size of a small bus. And I bet, what it really looks like will be nothing like I imagined, demonstrating the raw power of an image. Regards Spintendo 02:16, 16 June 2026 (UTC)- Thank you for your feedback. I have uploaded four freely licensed images to Wikimedia Commons:
- File:Goze Mokudon bench-shaped andon lantern under gangi at Goze Museum Takada, Joetsu.jpg – installation view under the gangi covered walkway
- File:Goze Mokudon bench-shaped andon lantern with transparent wood panels, daytime front view.jpg – daytime front view
- File:Goze Mokudon bench-shaped andon lantern with transparent wood panels, night front view.jpg – night front view showing the LED-backlit transparent wood panels
- File:LED-backlit transparent wood panels in Goze Mokudon bench-shaped andon lantern.jpg – close-up of the transparent wood panels
- I think the installation view under the gangi covered walkway may be the most suitable image for the article, since it shows the object in its actual application context: a bench-shaped andon lantern placed under a traditional covered walkway. The night front view and close-up image are also available on Commons as supplementary documentation of the LED-backlit transparent wood panels.
- Because I have a conflict of interest, I will not add the text or image to the article myself. I would be grateful if independent editors could review whether the following short application example, with one appropriate image, would be suitable for the Applications section.
- Proposed text:
- In 2026, students at Nagaoka Institute of Design installed Goze Mokudon, a bench-shaped andon lantern incorporating transparent wood panels, in front of the Goze Museum Takada in Joetsu, Niigata Prefecture, Japan. Measuring approximately 40 cm high, 100 cm long, and 38 cm wide, the work uses LED-backlit transparent wood panels depicting Takada goze walking through a snowy gangi covered walkway.[1][2]
- Thank you for your feedback. I have uploaded four freely licensed images to Wikimedia Commons:
References
- ↑ "ベンチ型あんどんの新作 長岡造形大の「木匠塾」寄贈 上越市 瞽女ミュージアムに設置" [New bench-shaped lantern donated by Nagaoka Institute of Design's Mokushōjuku: Installed at the Goze Museum in Joetsu City]. Joetsu Times (in Japanese). 13 May 2026.
- ↑ "夜の雁木通りに高田瞽女の姿浮かび上がる 上越市東本町1に「瞽女木行灯」" [Takada goze figures emerge on the night gangi arcade: "Goze Mokudon" at Higashihoncho 1, Joetsu City]. Joetsu Town Journal (in Japanese). 14 May 2026.
- Suggested image:
- File:Goze Mokudon bench-shaped andon lantern under gangi at Goze Museum Takada, Joetsu.jpg
- Suggested image markup, if an independent editor decides to add it:
[[File:Goze Mokudon bench-shaped andon lantern under gangi at Goze Museum Takada, Joetsu.jpg|thumb|Goze Mokudon, a bench-shaped andon lantern incorporating transparent wood panels, installed under a gangi covered walkway at the Goze Museum Takada in Joetsu, Japan.]]- --ArchandEng Lab (talk) 08:12, 25 June 2026 (UTC)
COI edit request: Add Goze Mokudon as an application example with image
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Transparent wood composite. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. Summary of request: Add short application example with image The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review.Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
I have a conflict of interest regarding this topic, as I am involved in the project described below. I previously proposed a short application example, and an editor noted that an image should accompany the text. In response, I have uploaded freely licensed images to Wikimedia Commons and revised the proposed wording below.
I would like to request adding the following short implementation example to the “Applications” section, with one accompanying image.
Specific text to add:
In 2026, students at Nagaoka Institute of Design installed Goze Mokudon, a bench-shaped andon lantern incorporating transparent wood panels, in front of the Goze Museum Takada in Joetsu, Niigata Prefecture, Japan. Measuring approximately 40 cm high, 100 cm long, and 38 cm wide, the work uses LED-backlit transparent wood panels depicting Takada goze walking through a snowy gangi covered walkway.[1][2]
Suggested image:
[[File:Goze Mokudon bench-shaped andon lantern under gangi at Goze Museum Takada, Joetsu.jpg|thumb|Goze Mokudon, a bench-shaped andon lantern incorporating transparent wood panels, installed under a gangi covered walkway at the Goze Museum Takada in Joetsu, Japan.]]
Reason for the change:
This would add a sourced real-world implementation example of transparent wood in a lighting application. The suggested image addresses the previous concern that the application should be visible to readers rather than described only in text.
References:
References
- ↑ "ベンチ型あんどんの新作 長岡造形大の「木匠塾」寄贈 上越市 瞽女ミュージアムに設置" [New bench-shaped lantern donated by Nagaoka Institute of Design's Mokushōjuku: Installed at the Goze Museum in Joetsu City]. Joetsu Times (in Japanese). 13 May 2026.
- ↑ "夜の雁木通りに高田瞽女の姿浮かび上がる 上越市東本町1に「瞽女木行灯」" [Takada goze figures emerge on the night gangi arcade: "Goze Mokudon" at Higashihoncho 1, Joetsu City]. Joetsu Town Journal (in Japanese). 14 May 2026.
ArchandEng Lab (talk) 03:15, 29 June 2026 (UTC)
Some proposed changes
edit| This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
| − | The school offers programs for granting a bachelor of science in business administration, a master of business administration, an executive MBA, a master of accounting, a doctor of philosophy, a business certificate, and executive education programs. | + | The school offers programs for granting a bachelor of science in business administration, a master of business administration, an executive MBA, a master of accounting, a master of science in management, a doctor of philosophy, a business certificate, and executive education programs. |
- Specific text to be added: a master of science in management
- Reason for the change: this program launched August 2025
- References supporting change: https://businessnc.com/uncs-kenan-flagler-adds-masters-of-science-program/
KFGreenB (talk) 17:13, 9 July 2026 (UTC)
| − | + | 8th (tie) in undergraduate business |
- Specific text to be added: 8th (tie) in undergraduate business
- Reason for the change: updated rankings
- References supporting change: https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/business-overall
KFGreenB (talk) 17:13, 9 July 2026 (UTC)
| − | U.S. News & World Report - | + | U.S. News & World Report - 2026 |
- Specific text to be added: 2026
- Reason for the change: updated rankings
- References supporting change: https://www.usnews.com/best-colleges/rankings/business-overall
KFGreenB (talk) 17:13, 9 July 2026 (UTC)
| − | + | 21st in full-time MBA programs |
- Specific text to be added: 21st in full-time MBA programs
- Reason for the change: updated rankings
- References supporting change: https://www.usnews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-business-schools/mba-rankings
KFGreenB (talk) 17:13, 9 July 2026 (UTC)
| − | + | Online MBA |
- Specific text to be added: MBA@UNC Online
- Reason for the change: New name “Online MBA”
- References supporting change: https://www.kenan-flagler.unc.edu/programs/mba
KFGreenB (talk) 17:13, 9 July 2026 (UTC)
| − | + | U.S. News & World Report ranked the Online MBA 3rd in 2026 |
- Specific text to be added: U.S. News & World Report ranked the Online MBA 3rd in 2026
- Reason for the change: updated rankings
- References supporting change: https://www.usnews.com/education/online-education/mba?edu-2736=control
KFGreenB (talk) 17:13, 9 July 2026 (UTC)
- Specific text to be added or removed: University HQ: 1st in 2025
- Reason for the change: updated rankings
- References supporting change: https://universityhq.org/business/accounting/degrees/#best
KFGreenB (talk) 17:13, 9 July 2026 (UTC)
| − | + | Executive MBA |
- Specific text to be added: MBA for Executives Program
- Reason for the change: New name “Executive MBA”
- References supporting change: https://www.kenan-flagler.unc.edu/programs/mba/unc-kenan-flagler-executive-mba-programs
KFGreenB (talk) 17:13, 9 July 2026 (UTC)
Done updated the rankings/program Aloneinthewild (talk) 14:59, 11 July 2026 (UTC)
Some more proposed changes
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to UNC Kenan–Flagler Business School. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. Summary of request: update MAC rankings The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review.Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
- Specific text to be added or removed: University HQ: 1st in 2025
- Reason for the change: updated rankings
- References supporting change: https://universityhq.org/business/accounting/degrees/#best
KFGreenB (talk) 16:42, 13 July 2026 (UTC)
| The user below has a request that an edit be made to UNC Kenan–Flagler Business School. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. Summary of request: update U.S. News & World Report rankings for 2026 The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review.Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
| − | U.S. News & World Report | + | U.S. News & World Report (2026) |
- Specific text to be added: Business School Rankings sidebar should be updated to 2026
- Reason for the change: updated rankings
- References supporting change: The Best MBA Programs in America, Ranked
KFGreenB (talk) 16:42, 13 July 2026 (UTC)
Post-move cleanup request
edit| This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
Hey again! Thanks to all the editors who contributed to the move discussion above. In the body of the article, there are now numerous mentions of "University of North Texas Health Sciences Center," "UNTHSC," and "HSC" that need to be changed to "UNT Health Fort Worth" or "UNT Health." If any volunteer editors want to handle that, I'd very much appreciate it, but in the interest of respecting other people's time, I'd like to request two specific things:
1. Change the school's appellation in the introduction. It could be rewritten like this:
- UNT Health Fort Worth is an academic health science center in Fort Worth, Texas. It is part of the University of North Texas System and was founded in 1970 as the Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine, with its first cohort graduating in 1974. It consists of six schools with a total enrollment of 2,338 students (2022-23).
- UNT Health serves as home to several NIH-funded research programs and currently leads all Texas medical and health science centers in research growth. HSC also houses the Atrium Gallery, a nonprofit public art exhibition space which holds eight to 10 arts shows each year.
2. Change the bold text over the infobox to "UNT Health Fort Worth" and replace the old wordmark logo with the new one. I've uploaded the UNT Health logo to the Wikimedia Commons. You can view it by following this link.
I'm happy to discuss other ways to clean up the article following its renaming, but I think those two things would be a good start. Thanks! Libby.maness (talk) 16:58, 4 December 2025 (UTC)
- Whoops! I posted the request above from my personal account. I'm now logged back into my COI one. Apologies for any confusion I've created. I'll be more careful in the future. LM at UNT Health (talk) 17:44, 4 December 2025 (UTC)
- I've done part of this. The ==History== section should use the names that were relevant at the time (e.g., TCOM in the 1970s, UNTHSC in the 1990s). What year was the school's name changed in?
- Also, could you find more recent demographic information for the UNT Health Fort Worth#Student life section, and post that as a separate request? WhatamIdoing (talk) 03:59, 14 December 2025 (UTC)
- Thanks for the help, User:WhatamIdoing! The school changed its name earlier this year.
- I understand what you're saying about keeping references to the school's former name intact within the History section. Actually, speaking of, I recently wrote a draft for that section that cleans up the existing content and adds some well-sourced new content. I'm going to propose that in an edit request below, because I have it on hand. If you want to review, I would greatly appreciate it. But don't feel obligated. I know you're a volunteer.
- I will circle back on the demographic information for the Student life section. I'm going to rummage through our resources, see if we've published anything that might be useful. If I find something good, I'll put forward a request and tag you in. LM at UNT Health (talk) 15:43, 18 December 2025 (UTC)
- Thanks. WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:18, 18 December 2025 (UTC)
Done but not all by me STEMinfo (talk) 07:15, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
History section request
edit| This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
Hi! Per my discussion with User:WhatamIdoing above, I'm putting forward a History draft that I hope will significantly improve that section. This is a pretty long draft, so if editors have specific questions, I'll happily answer them. But my basic approach was to:
- Improve sourcing, where possible
- Cut existing passages that I couldn't find good sourcing for
- Trim away some extraneous information to improve the section's readability
- Add new content that's well-sourced and relevant to the average Wikipedia reader
- Add a bit of content about the university's response to Fall 2024 events
I'll hide my draft using the collapse function so that I don't take up too much room on this Talk page:
Extended content |
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UNT Health Fort Worth was founded in 1970 as the Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine (TCOM).[1] TCOM was the first osteopathic medical school to be established in Texas.[2] The college initially operated out of the Fort Worth Osteopathic Hospital as well as a small white house and its adjacent garage. In 1971, classes were moved into the converted Taverner Bowling Alley.[1] In 1975, the Texas Legislature passed Senate Bill 216. This law transformed TCOM into a state-supported medical school under the direction of North Texas State University's Board of Regents. TCOM used its state funding to break ground on several new facilities for its Fort Worth campus, which at the time was 16 acres.[3] In 1993, TCOM established its Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences and renamed itself University of North Texas Health Science Center (UNTHSC).[4] In 1999, UNTHSC opened its School of Public Health.[5] In 2004, UNTHSC opened a new Center for Biohealth facility.<[6]That same year, the university also opened its School of Health Professions.[7] In 2013, UNTHSC opened its College of Pharmacy. Its inaugural class was comprised of 82 students pursuing a PharmD. By this time, the university was comprised of five colleges and its campus had expanded to 33 acres. [8] In 2015, UNTHSC and TCU announced the creation of a joint MD school, which began matriculating students in 2018.[9] During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, UNTHSC partnered with the Tarrant County Department of Public Health to perform contact tracing. The program included 90 students working part time to interview people who tested positive for COVID and find out where they had traveled as well as who they had been in contact with.[10] In 2022, UNT Health Science Center's Physician Assistant, Health Care Management, Public Health, and Physical Therapy programs were ranked #33, #65, #90, and #97, respectively, by U.S. News & World Report.[11] That same year, UNTHSC opened its Regional Simulation Center, a facility that uses virtual reality technology in conjunction with mannequins and multi-functional spaces in order to simulate health care scenarios. The facility is used as a training tool for medical students as well as more experienced health care providers aiming to hone new skills.[12] Also in 2022, the School of Biomedical Sciences started UNTHSC's first bachelor's degree program in Biomedical Sciences.[13] In 2023, UNTHSC further expanded by opening its College of Nursing. The school was founded in part to address the shortage of trained nurses in Tarrant County.[14] In September 2024, NBC News revealed that UNTHSC had received around 2,350 unclaimed bodies from Dallas County and Tarrant County since 2019, of which more than 830 bodies were subsequently selected for dissection and study. Some of these studies occurred without the pre-death consent of the deceased or the consent of their survivors.[15] The leasing of unclaimed bodies and body parts, as well as related laboratory space, to for-profit medical device makers and others generated revenue for UNTHSC of around $2.5 million a year.[15] In response to inquiries by NBC News, UNTHSC announced the closure of the BioSkills Lab, the suspension of its Willed Body Program, and the firing of the program's leadership.[15] In November 2024, UNT Health Science Center received a cease-and-desist letter from the Texas Funeral Service Commission, which stated that it had discovered in an October 2024 inspection that UNT Health Science Center had been liquefying human remains using water cremation, which the Commission claimed to be illegal in the state of Texas. The university responded by citing a section of the Texas administrative code allowing for the practice while also indicating that it had proactively stopped water cremation in September 2024.[16] In January 2025, UNT Health Science Center was awarded tenth place in the Lown Institute's 2024 Shkreli awards, which seek to highlight profiteering and dysfunction in the healthcare industry.[17][18] In July 2025, UNTHSC renamed itself UNT Health Forth Worth.[19] References
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Thanks, LM at UNT Health (talk) 15:51, 18 December 2025 (UTC)
- I see that User:Ozzie10aaaa made some sensible edits to the article recently, so I'll ask them if they would like to review this request. LM at UNT Health (talk) 20:37, 5 February 2026 (UTC)
Done CornerLitTweak (talk) 22:49, 28 April 2026 (UTC)
- I really appreciate the help, User:CornerLitTweak! LM at UNT Health (talk) 19:06, 5 May 2026 (UTC)
Research section request
edit| This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
My History request above has been sitting for a while, which is understandable. It's a pretty dense request. For now, I'm going to move on to proposing a revision of the Research section. My draft here is shorter than the History one but some of its basic aims are the same. I've tried to:
- Find good sourcing for existing passages
- Excise passages that I couldn't find good sourcing for
- Add new information about recent research activity
- Provide readers with a decent idea of the kind of research the university performs
I'm going to use the textdiff function to place my draft side-by-side with the existing section. Here's that:
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References |
And then here is what my section draft looks like by itself:
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Major areas of research at UNT Health Fort Worth include health disparities, ophthalmology, forensics, and healthy aging. The Center for Human Identification's accredited forensic laboratory provides genetic and anthropological examinations for criminal casework and missing persons identification, local CODIS operations, and development.[1][2] The North Texas Eye Research Institute (NTERI), which opened in 1992, seeks to develop new treatments for eye disorders such as glaucoma, macular degeneration, and optic neuritis.[3][4] UNT Health's Center for Health Disparities idenitfies health disparities through research and seeks to correct them through training and community outreach.[5] In 2021, the Center for Health Disparities received a $50 million award from the National Institutes of Health to lead the coordinating center for the AI/Machine Learning Consortium to Advance Health Equity and Researcher Diversity (AIM-AHEAD) program. AIM-AHEAD seeks to apply AI and machine-learning to health records and other medical data in order to figure out novel ways of addressing health disparities.[6] In 2020, as part of the National Institutes of Health's efforts to study the biology of Alzheimer's disease among different racial and ethnic groups, the UNT Health Institute for Translational Research received a $45 million grant from the National Institute on Aging.[7] In October 2022, the Health Institute for Translational Research received another grant for $148 million in order to continue doing this research.[8][9] References
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Thanks in advance to any editors who review this request. If I can answer any questions or concerns about the content I'm proposing, please let me know! LM at UNT Health (talk) 16:19, 13 February 2026 (UTC)
- I'm going to ask User:Andrewa if they would mind reviewing this request and/or the one above it. In fact, some advice on what I should do next, since both of these requests seem a bit stuck, would be almost as helpful as a review. Whatever you have time for, Andrewa! Thanks! LM at UNT Health (talk) 16:33, 25 February 2026 (UTC)
Done CornerLitTweak (talk) 22:15, 22 April 2026 (UTC)
- User:CornerLitTweak: Thanks for reviewing and approving this request! No pressure, but if you want to take a look, there's a request to update the History section above this one that's been languishing since December of last year. Regardless, I really appreciate your help with this one. LM at UNT Health (talk) 18:14, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
- That looked good to me, the citations all check out, and the request has been hanging out for ~6 months with no other objections.
Done CornerLitTweak (talk) 22:49, 28 April 2026 (UTC)
- That looked good to me, the citations all check out, and the request has been hanging out for ~6 months with no other objections.
- User:CornerLitTweak: Thanks for reviewing and approving this request! No pressure, but if you want to take a look, there's a request to update the History section above this one that's been languishing since December of last year. Regardless, I really appreciate your help with this one. LM at UNT Health (talk) 18:14, 24 April 2026 (UTC)
Research institutes section request
edit| This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
Hello! My next request is a pretty simple one. More than a few of the institutes listed under the Research institutes heading are no longer operating. The university currently has six active institutes. They are:
- Center for Human Identification[1]
- North Texas Eye Research Institute[2]
- Institute for Health Disparities[3]
- Institute for Translational Research[4]
- Center for Anatomical Sciences[5]
- Sensory Research Institute[6]
References
- ↑ "UNTHSC's Center for Human Identification Breaks Ground on Forensic Genealogy". Fort Worth Magazine. October 12, 2023. Retrieved December 15, 2025.
- ↑ Bounds, Jeff (January 22, 2020). "13 Companies and Organizations Spawned by Alcon Alumni". Dallas Innovates. Retrieved December 15, 2025.
- ↑ Morgan, Kamal (July 25, 2023). "How a $10 million endowment will help this Fort Worth center fight health disparities". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Retrieved December 15, 2025.
- ↑ Mitchell, Mitch (September 14, 2020). "Fort Worth researchers get $45 million for Alzheimer's study in Mexican community". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Retrieved December 15, 2025.
- ↑ ArguetaSoto, Cristian (March 27, 2022). "Photo gallery: Health Science Center medical students get hands-on experience in anatomy lab". Fort Worth Report. Retrieved March 10, 2026.
- ↑ "UNT Health Fort Worth Launches Sensory Research Institute Focused on Human Sensory Systems". Fort Worth Inc. January 29, 2026. Retrieved March 10, 2026.
Would an independent editor mind updating the list? Thanks! LM at UNT Health (talk) 15:31, 12 March 2026 (UTC)
Renaming and updating HSC Health section
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to UNT Health Fort Worth. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
Hello! I wanted to ask editors to consider renaming and updating the HSC Health section. That part of the university has been renamed. It's now called the UNT Health Clinical Practice Group. I have a brief draft that renames the section and adds some stronger content that's backed up by decent sourcing. (The current version of the section lacks citations.) Here is that draft:
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UNT Health Clinical Practice Group
The UNT Health Clinical Practice Group is the clinical branch of the university that provides health care services to the general public across Tarrant County.[1] UNT Health clinicians work to treat a broad range of ailments including dementia,[2] hepatits-c,[3] and musculoskeletal pain.[4][5] References
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If editors have any questions about my proposed changes, I'm happy to answer questions below. Thank you! LM at UNT Health (talk) 14:45, 2 July 2026 (UTC)
PGA of America extension and Firethorn Productions venture
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to USA Sports (2025–present). That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
COI Disclosure: I work with Versant and am not editing directly per WP:COI guidelines.
Two developments related to USA Sports' golf portfolio that have third-party coverage:
1. PGA of America media rights extension through 2033: NBC Sports and USA Sports extended their media rights agreement with the PGA of America through 2033. The deal covers the Ryder Cup, KPMG Women's PGA Championship, Senior PGA Championship, and PGA Professional Championship, with coverage airing across USA Network, Golf Channel, NBC, and Peacock. This is the second major golf rights partnership struck between NBC Sports and Versant since the spin-off.
Front Office Sports: "PGA of America Extends Ryder Cup Deal With NBC and Versant" Sportcal: "NBC Sports, Versant, retain US Ryder Cup rights in PGA of America extension"
2. Firethorn Productions: In December 2025, Versant and Rory McIlroy launched Firethorn Productions — described as Versant's first-ever joint venture. The company will produce original content across GolfPass, Golf Channel, and other Versant properties, including documentary storytelling, branded campaigns, and live fan experiences. McIlroy's GolfPass partnership was also extended through 2038.
The Hollywood Reporter: "Rory McIlroy and Versant Are Launching a Production Company" Sports Video Group: "Versant Announces Long-Term Partnership Extension with Rory McIlroy"
The article currently covers the PGA Tour and Golf Channel rights in the Current rights section. Would editors consider whether these developments warrant inclusion? WeekdayUpdate (talk) 03:32, 15 April 2026 (UTC)
Reply 9-JUN-2026
edit
The proposed text regarding the PGA deal appears to contain WP:CLOSEPARAPHRASE material. The text is short, just 3 sentences long, however, the text still needs to be sufficiently variegated so that it adheres to our guidelines on close paraphrasing.
The proposed text concerning Firethorn Productions can be added if that company is independently notable in Wikipedia. Please provide the H:WIKILINK for the company to proceed.- When ready, kindly change
{{Edit COI}}answer parameter to read from|ans=yto|ans=n.
Thank you! Regards, Spintendo 15:00, 9 June 2026 (UTC)
- Thanks, Spintendo. To address the WP:CLOSEPARAPHRASE concern on item 1, here is fully reworded text for the PGA of America extension, drawing on the two independent trade reports. I'm advancing only this item for now; the Firethorn Productions item (your point 2) remains on hold while I work out the WP:N notability question you raised, so please disregard it in this pass.
- Proposed addition to the Overview section:
- In March 2026, the PGA of America renewed its United States media-rights partnership with NBC Sports and USA Sports, carrying forward through 2033 an arrangement that had previously been set to conclude in 2031. The renewal keeps the biennial Ryder Cup as its anchor event and also spans the KPMG Women's PGA Championship, the Senior PGA Championship and the PGA Professional Championship, with telecasts distributed across USA Network, Golf Channel, NBC and Peacock; the men's PGA Championship is not part of the agreement, as those rights are held separately by CBS and ESPN. As a result of the extension, the 2033 Ryder Cup at the Olympic Club in San Francisco will fall under USA Sports and NBC Sports coverage. It was the second golf renewal the partners completed following Versant's spin-off, after an August 2025 USGA agreement that runs through 2032.[1][2]
- I've updated the section's edit-request template to
|ans=nper your note. Thank you! WeekdayUpdate (talk) 01:21, 24 June 2026 (UTC)
Current rights: add Olympics and DP World Tour; correct WNBA citation
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to USA Sports (2025–present). That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
COI Disclosure: I work with Versant and am not editing directly per WP:COI guidelines.
Would an editor consider three small updates to bring the Current rights list into line with the article's own infobox and Overview? Each of these includes independently sourced citations:
1. Add the 2026 Winter Olympics. The Olympics appear in the infobox and are described in the Overview, but are absent from the Current rights list.
- Proposed (add bullet):
* 2026 Winter Olympics (2026) — NBC Sports–produced coverage of the Milan Cortina Games on USA Network and CNBC, sublicensed from NBC Sports[3]
2. Add the DP World Tour. It is named among the golf properties in the November 12, 2025 launch announcement in the Overview, but is missing from the list. Front Office Sports reports the deal was extended through 2030.
- Proposed (add bullet):
* DP World Tour (2026–present) — coverage on Golf Channel through 2030[4]
3. Correct the WNBA citation. The Women's National Basketball Association entry currently cites a Sports Video Group article about the League One Volleyball (LOVB) deal — not the WNBA. The correct source is the Deadline report already used in the Overview.
- Proposed: repoint the WNBA entry's citation to:[5]
- (Note: the same
name=SVGreference is also attached to the Babe Ruth League "U.S., International and World Championship on CNBC" line, where it likewise doesn't match; editors may wish to repoint that to the Sports Business Journal source already cited on the Babe Ruth entry.)
Thank you for considering these.
- ↑ Rumsey, David (March 2, 2026). "PGA of America Extends Ryder Cup Deal With NBC and Versant". Front Office Sports. Retrieved June 23, 2026.
- ↑ Donaldson, Alex (March 3, 2026). "NBC Sports, Versant, retain US Ryder Cup rights in PGA of America extension". Sportcal. Retrieved June 23, 2026.
- ↑ "NBC Olympics Announces Hosts for 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics Coverage on USA Network and CNBC". NBC Sports. November 24, 2025. Retrieved June 23, 2026.
- ↑ Rumsey, David (March 2, 2026). "PGA of America Extends Ryder Cup Deal With NBC and Versant". Front Office Sports. Retrieved June 23, 2026.
- ↑ Goldsmith, Jill (September 30, 2025). "WNBA, Versant's USA Network Set Expanded Rights Deal Through 2036". Deadline. Retrieved June 23, 2026.
WeekdayUpdate (talk) 01:18, 24 June 2026 (UTC)
Request to update headshot
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Ulf Mark Schneider. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
Hello editors! I'm here to request a few updates to the Ulf Mark Schneider article. To start, I just donated an updated headshot and am wondering if editors would be willing to change the photo in the infobox on my behalf. I won't be making any direct changes to the article because of my COI. Thank you, SiemensD (talk) 06:28, 7 July 2026 (UTC)
Question about the infobox
edit| This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
My name is Kevin Singer and I'm the communications director for Unite America. I have a question for anyone watching this page: Would it be possible to add the Unite America logo to the infobox? I notice that it's a pretty common infobox feature for organizations like ours. Is there anything I would need to do to make this happen? KS at Unite America (talk) 16:31, 29 April 2026 (UTC)
- I will do this now. MediaKyle (talk) 21:15, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
Done. I uploaded the logo as a fair use image. It might be simple enough that it could be hosted on the Commons but I'll let someone else worry about that. Cheers, MediaKyle (talk) 21:19, 3 May 2026 (UTC)
- Logo looks great! Appreciate the assist, MediaKyle. I just posted another request about removing promotional content. KS at Unite America (talk) 18:47, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
Request to remove promotional content
edit| This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
Hi, this is once again Kevin Singer, the communications director for Unite America.
The Mission section of this article has a large banner on top of it stating concerns about "promotional content."
Would it be possible to simply remove this section? I agree that the content reads as promotional. It's also considerably out of date (e.g. Unite America no longer endorses candidates).
In short, nothing in this section is accurate or encyclopedic and editors have already expressed concerns about it. Removal seems like an easy solution!
(And for context: I'm working on a few suggested updates to the History section that would specify when Unite America stopped endorsing candidates, how the mission has changed, etc. These updates would presumably address any concerns about removing all mission-related content.) KS at Unite America (talk) 18:45, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
Done, seems reasonable enough. Tessaract2 (hello) 18:47, 7 May 2026 (UTC)
Update the History section?
edit| This edit request by an editor with a conflict of interest has now been answered. |
Hi, this is Kevin Singer again, the communications director for Unite America.
In my previous request, I asked whether editors would consider removing the Mission section, which featured a prominent banner warning that the content appeared to be promotional. That request has since been implemented (thank you to Tessaract2).
I wanted to ask whether editors might also be willing to review several of the sections that follow, as they appear to raise similar promotional concerns. Some passages aren't supported by inline citations, while others rely on Unite America website content that is no longer available. My concern is that these sections may be removed in the future, even though some of the underlying material seems notable and encyclopedic.
With that in mind, I drafted a revised History section that seeks to preserve the strongest material from those sections while presenting it in a more neutral, concise fashion. Whenever possible, I cited independent news coverage rather than Unite America’s own materials. The draft also helps address what appears to be a significant gap in the article’s coverage from 2019 to the present.
History draft for consideration |
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Charles Wheelan, a Dartmouth College professor and former Congressional candidate, published The Centrist Manifesto book in 2013.[1] An affiliated federal PAC, The Centrist Project Voice, registered with the FEC in May 2014.[2][3] The organization was intended to support ideas from Wheelan's book, most notably the “fulcrum strategy” in which a small group of independent senators could control the balance of power in a closely divided chamber and push both parties toward more centrist policies.[4] The Centrist Project began endorsing candidates, including independents and major-party candidates it saw as pragmatic or centrist.[2][4] Its first endorsement was Larry Pressler, a former three-term Republican senator from South Dakota who was running as an independent for the seat vacated by retiring Democratic Senator Tim Johnson in the 2014 election.[2][5] The organization also endorsed Susan Collins, Michelle Nunn, Greg Orman, and Jill Bossi during the 2014 election cycle.[6] In 2016, Nick Troiano, a former congressional candidate, joined the organization's board as executive director.[7][8] Troiano pushed the organizations towards supporting structural election reforms, such as nonpartisan redistricting.[7] In 2017, the Centrist Project opened its national headquarters in Denver, Colorado.[9] The organization then changed its name to Unite America.[10] That same year, an affiliated state-based organization, Washington Independents, launched to support independent candidates in Washington.[11] In 2018, Unite America and its state-focused local affiliate, Unite Colorado, endorsed independent candidates for the Colorado State Legislature.[10] The organization picked Colorado because of its narrowly divided Legislature and a belief that voters there would be receptive to independent candidates.[10] That same year Unite America also supported a slate of independent national candidates for state gubernatorial offices and the U.S. Senate.[12] In March 2019, a new statewide chapter, Unite Virginia, launched to support centrist Democratic and Republican candidates.[13] In September 2019, Unite America announced more than $5 million in commitments through the Unite America Fund[14] to support election reform campaigns in Alaska,[15] Massachusetts,[16] Pennsylvania,[17] and New York.[18] The two largest donors to the fund were Kathryn Murdoch and Marc Merrill.[15] In November 2019, New York City voters approved ranked-choice voting through a City Charter amendment. The change only applied to primary and special elections for mayor, public advocate, comptroller, borough president, and City Council.[19][20] In 2020, Unite America backed Alaska Measure 2,[21] which combined a top-four open primary, ranked-choice voting in the general election, and campaign-finance disclosure changes.[22] Alaska voters approved the measure in November 2020, and the system was first used in the 2022 election.[21] A 2024 ballot measure to repeal the state's open primary and ranked-choice voting system failed.[23] In February 2024, Troiano authored a book, The Primary Solution, about how primary elections fuel political dysfunction.[24][25] That same year, Unite America backed ballot measures in six states to replace traditional primaries with nonpartisan primaries or ranked-choice voting.[7] These ballot measures all failed, including the one in Colorado.[26] In 2026, Unite America published a study of open primaries used in five states: California, Louisiana, Alaska, Nebraska, and Washington.[27] The study showed that such electoral systems reward pragmatic, moderate candidates who are more likely to enact beneficial legislation.[27] References
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I recognize that I have a conflict of interest, so I am not making any of these changes directly. I would appreciate editors’ review of the draft and any feedback on whether this approach would improve the article’s neutrality, sourcing, and compliance with Wikipedia standards. KS at Unite America (talk) 21:05, 20 May 2026 (UTC)
Reply 16-JUN-2026
edit- The COI editor described their- proposal as
a revised History section that seeks to preserve the strongest material from those sections while presenting it in a more neutral, concise fashion.
The image presented with that description is of a leaner, stronger section of text with the weaker, extraneous portions culled. - What that description doesnt state are the portions of text which were wholly created anew, text which was not culled, paired down, or made "lean" an any way, because that text wasn't in those sections to begin with.
- This isn't akin to taking a two sinked bathroom and shower, removing one sink and swapping the shower, pipes, and drain for a simpler, singular bathtub and sink with an eye towards simplicty and utility. This is expansion: turning two sinks into four, transmogrification of the shower into a walk-in sauna and whirlpool with an eye towards conspicuous consumption.
- That being said, the COI editor is urged to be frank and forthright concerning their intentions for improving the article in the future—it would be much appreciated. The reviewer stands ready to review any and all requests which follow this philosophy. Thank you! Regards, Spintendo 05:59, 17 June 2026 (UTC)
- Thank you for taking the time to provide such detailed feedback, Spintendo. Your bathroom analogy is quite entertaining. Perhaps I should have been clearer in stating my objectives for the draft. Right now the History, Reform strategy, Unity Candidates, Partnerships, and 2018 Endorsed National and State Candidates sections are a combined 1,300 words, and that includes four tables filled with unsourced data that take up at least one-third of the article's space. My History draft would replace all of that content, and it's only around 550 words with no tables. I've trimmed the total amount of content by well over half and removed promotional claims and unsourced data. The "new" material you identify is largely connective tissue which helps make the information readable—or to continue with your bathroom analogy, it's the plumbing that connects all of the fixtures.
- Now, I am not a Wikipedia editor, and if you don't feel the draft works, then that's on me. But I'm hoping the explanation above provides adequate context for what I was trying to do.
- What would be the best next step? If it's easier, we could go paragraph by paragraph.
Existing History paragraph one |
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Author and educator Charles Wheelan published The Centrist Manifesto[1] in 2013, inspired by the failed bipartisan efforts surrounding the Simpson-Bowles Commission in 2011.[2] In the book, he outlines an approach to government in which a "Centrist Party" challenges partisanship by controlling the swing vote and facilitating compromise between Democrats and Republicans.[3] Putting ideas into practice, Wheelan worked with business, political, and academic leaders from across the country to form the Centrist Project in 2014, which would eventually become Unite America.[4] References
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- And I'm proposing we replace that with the following:
Revised History paragraph one |
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Charles Wheelan, a Dartmouth College professor and former Congressional candidate, published The Centrist Manifesto book in 2013.[1] An affiliated federal PAC, The Centrist Project Voice, registered with the FEC in May 2014.[2][3] The organization was intended to support ideas from Wheelan's book, most notably the “fulcrum strategy” in which a small group of independent senators could control the balance of power in a closely divided chamber and push both parties toward more centrist policies.[4] The Centrist Project began endorsing candidates, including independents and major-party candidates it saw as pragmatic or centrist.[2][4] Its first endorsement was Larry Pressler, a former three-term Republican senator from South Dakota who was running as an independent for the seat vacated by retiring Democratic Senator Tim Johnson in the 2014 election.[2][5] The organization also endorsed Susan Collins, Michelle Nunn, Greg Orman, and Jill Bossi during the 2014 election cycle.[6] References
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- The first four sentences in the new draft roughly mirror the three sentences in the current first paragraph, but I added the detail about the affiliated federal PAC since that seems relevant. The cited Independent Voter News article confirms the notability of the PAC and the cited FEC filing confirms the registration date. The next sentences are all new (as you rightly noted) but are intended to parallel the structure of the next few sections where United America endorsements are discussed. The endorsements from the 2014 election cycle are not currently mentioned in the article, so I added them by citing news coverage (the aforementioned Independent Voter News article and a piece in the Native American Times) along with a press release which was the only source to identify all of the remaining endorsements in one place. As this was straightforward, uncontroversial factual information, a press release felt like an appropriate citation. Jill Bossi is less well known than the other candidates, but it felt like cherry-picking to exclude her.
- Does that all make sense? Please let me know and I'll work on a summary of the next paragraph (and maybe start picking out some wallpaper for the bathroom). KS at Unite America (talk) 17:54, 18 June 2026 (UTC)
- I appreciate the rewrite. As far as the sources, we cant use articles that are written as editorials or commentary. The Mort Kondracke piece written for RealClearPolitics is labeled as commentary, so we're going to have to find a replacement for that. The Kondracke source was used as a reference for the most contentious of the claims,
The organization was intended to support ideas from Wheelan's book, most notably the “fulcrum strategy” in which a small group of independent senators could control the balance of power in a closely divided chamber and push both parties toward more centrist policies
. That text spoke to intent, instead of just facts (like the sentence that mentions who endorsed who, which is relatively straightforward-type info). So to continue our bathroom metaphor, the Unite America article making claims of intent using Wikipedia's WP:VOICE is a very dicey area, frought with the danger of exposed wires and such. The contractor may have said that the construction is completed, but a closer look reveals it's not up to code. That intent needs to be buttressed by reliable WP:SECONDARY sources or placed out of Wikipedia's voice. Regards, Spintendo 09:20, 23 June 2026 (UTC)- Thank you for the feedback, Spintendo. I should note that I've been trying my best to preserve material from the existing article that feels encyclopedic. (Or to continue with our bathroom renovation analogy, I'm trying to keep a light fixture the previous owner installed.) The current description of the book and summary of the Centrist Project are drawn from the book publisher's landing page. The Mort Kondracke article, although a commentary as you note, does feel like a stronger citation than the existing one. Could we simply attribute that descriptive passage to Kondrake, like as follows:
- I appreciate the rewrite. As far as the sources, we cant use articles that are written as editorials or commentary. The Mort Kondracke piece written for RealClearPolitics is labeled as commentary, so we're going to have to find a replacement for that. The Kondracke source was used as a reference for the most contentious of the claims,
- Does that all make sense? Please let me know and I'll work on a summary of the next paragraph (and maybe start picking out some wallpaper for the bathroom). KS at Unite America (talk) 17:54, 18 June 2026 (UTC)
Alternative |
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References
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Specifying my History section request
edit| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Unite America. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. Summary of request: Update History section and remove other superfluous and unsourced sections The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review.Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
Hi, this is Kevin Singer again, the communications director for Unite America.
After receiving helpful feedback from Spintendo, I'm back with a more specific request to update the History section and consolidate claims from other sections that are superfluous and poorly sourced. These other sections could then be removed.
I'm first going to identify the passages and sections that should be updated or removed due to poor sourcing and non-encyclopedic content. (I'm not embedding the tables here because they're too large.) Then I'll provide a proposed History draft that consolidates and streamlines notable claims from all these sections & tables and ensures they're backed by reliable citations. If implemented, this update would considerably reduce the article's length.
The final two paragraphs in the current History section cover the period from 2016 to 2019 and read as follows:
Existing two History paragraphs |
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In October 2016, Nick Troiano, former congressional candidate and part of "Forbes 30 under 30" for Law & Policy, joined as executive director.[1] The organization continued to grow through 2017, attracting talent from both sides of the aisle on a mission to elect enough independents to shift the balance of power in key state and statewide elections.[2] Unite America adopted its current name in January 2018, aiming to reflect the organization's core mission.[3] Unite America announced the first-ever nationwide slate of independent candidates in February 2018.[4] In March 2019, Unite America announced that they were expanding their mission of accelerating the democracy reform movement, with strategic investments in multi-cycle campaigns and infrastructure.[5] They also announced the addition of two new board members: philanthropist Kathryn Murdoch and former independent Senate candidate Neal Simon. References
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The citations for this section include a mix of news coverage along with press releases from Unite America and the personal website for Nick Troiano.
The next section in the article, Reform strategy, covers events from this same period of time. The two sentences from this section read as follows:
Reform strategy sentences |
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In 2019, Unite America released the first State of Democracy Report in which they graded every state based on their status in five reform areas.[1] In September 2019, Unite America announced their plan to invest in their first portfolio of campaigns based on these reforms. References
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These sentences are supported by one citation to an article on an advocacy website called The Fulcrum. This section also includes a table identifying four "2019 Reform investments". Presumably these investments are supported by the same Fulcrum source. There is no cited news coverage anywhere in this section.
The next section in the article, Unity Candidates, also covers events in 2019. The three sentences in this section read as follows:
Unity Candidates sentences |
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In March 2019, Unite America announced the creation of their new statewide chapter, Unite Virginia.[1] Unite Virginia would work to reward bipartisanship and support candidates through the 2019 primary elections. The organization endorsed a bipartisan slate of candidates in Virginia.[2] References
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The two cited sources here are an NBC News article and the Unite America website. These sentences are followed by a table identifying "2019 Virginia Endorsements" and highlighting the subsequent election results. There is no cited source for the table.
The next section, Partnerships, also addresses events that occurred around 2018-2019:
Partnerships section |
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State-focused partnershipseditIn an effort to build the movement from the ground up, Unite America endorses and provides resources to independent candidates for state legislatures in a number of viable states, including Colorado, New Mexico, Maine, Alaska, and Washington.[1] Unite ColoradoeditUnite America formalized its Colorado-concentrated efforts for statehouse elections with the organization of its largest state-focused affiliate, Unite Colorado.[2] Troiano identified the state's wide-ranging political leanings and the potential for a historic independent candidate victory as the driving motivations for this strategy.[1] In 2018, Unite Colorado endorsed five independent candidates the Colorado House of Representatives and the Colorado Senate.[1] The group will endorse independent candidates running for office in New Mexico state legislature in an effort to promote competition amongst 30 of 70 uncontested New Mexico House of Representatives seats.[3] Washington IndependentseditWashington Independents, with support from Unite America, launched in fall of 2017 with the intention of supporting independent, centrist candidates in Washington. Its co-founders were Chris Vance, the former chairman of the state's Republican Party, and Brian Baird, a former Democratic Congressman (WA-3).[4] The Political Action Committee spent over $100,000 on three candidates for state office in the 2018 general election. All three lost. In spring of 2019, Washington Independents announced that it would suspend operations.[5] Unite VirginiaeditIn March 2019, Unite America launched Unite Virginia in order to focus on Virginia's off-year state legislative elections.[6] Pivoting from its strategy in the 2018 elections, Unite America chose to support moderate, reform-minded Republicans and Democrats rather than independents. More specifically, it worked with four moderate primary challengers — two on the right and two on the left. Three of the four won their races.[7] The Committee for Ranked Choice VotingeditIn 2018, Unite America endorsed the Committee for Ranked Choice Voting, an organization that pushed for the implementation of instant-runoff voting in Maine.[8][9] After a majority of voters approved a RCV citizens ballot initiative in 2016, state lawmakers called a special session to repeal the measure. In the following year, the people of Maine petitioned to override the veto, ultimately voting to restore RCV in Maine in time for the 2018 general election.[10] References
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The sourcing in this section does include a lot of news coverage, but the Unite America website is also cited numerous times. There are also passages that speak in the future tense ("The group will endorse...") about events that happened years and years ago.
The next section, 2018 Endorsed National and State Candidates, also addresses events that occurred around 2018. The section includes four sentences and two large tables. The sentences read as follows:
2018 Endorsed National and State Candidates sentences |
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Unite America announced the first-ever slate of national candidates in February 2018, including three gubernatorial candidates and two candidates for US Senate.[1] In January 2018, Unite Colorado announced a slate of independent candidates for both the Colorado House of Representatives and the Colorado Senate.[2] In addition, Unite America endorsed independent candidates for state office in Alaska, Arizona, Maine, Maryland, New Mexico, South Dakota, Vermont, Virginia, and Washington. All but four were defeated. References
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The tables (which I didn't embed) are the big issue here, as most of the cited sources are the candidates' About pages. There are no cited sources for the election results and it's not clear where that information comes from or if it's accurate.
I would like to replace the passages and tables identified above with the following five paragraphs that could all live in the History section:
Proposed History section update |
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In 2016, Nick Troiano, a former congressional candidate, joined the organization's board as executive director.[1][2] Troiano pushed the organizations towards supporting structural election reforms, such as nonpartisan redistricting.[1] In 2017, the Centrist Project opened its national headquarters in Denver, Colorado.[3] The organization then changed its name to Unite America.[4] That same year, an affiliated state-based organization, Washington Independents, launched to support independent candidates in Washington.[5] In 2018, Unite America and its state-focused local affiliate, Unite Colorado, endorsed independent candidates for the Colorado State Legislature.[4] The organization picked Colorado because of its narrowly divided Legislature and a belief that voters there would be receptive to independent candidates.[4] That same year Unite America also supported a slate of independent national candidates for state gubernatorial offices and the U.S. Senate.[6] In March 2019, a new statewide chapter, Unite Virginia, launched to support centrist Democratic and Republican candidates.[7] In September 2019, Unite America announced more than $5 million in commitments through the Unite America Fund[8] to support election reform campaigns in Alaska,[9] Massachusetts,[10] Pennsylvania,[11] and New York.[12] The two largest donors to the fund were Kathryn Murdoch and Marc Merrill.[9] In November 2019, New York City voters approved ranked-choice voting through a City Charter amendment. The change only applied to primary and special elections for mayor, public advocate, comptroller, borough president, and City Council.[13][14] References
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These five paragraphs cover the same time period and events. Nearly all of the cited sources I used are news coverage from notable media outlets. I did cite content on the Unite America website twice. In the first instance, I found countless news sources that confirmed Nick Troiano is a former congressional candidate who serves as Unite America's executive director, but only the UA website's "Our Story" page confirms exactly when he joined, so I used said page as a secondary citation in order to support a chronological accounting. In the second instance, I cited a UA press release to confirm the dollar amount and to specify that the investments came from the Unite America Fund, but all of the specific investments were covered by media outlets (which I cited).
Per my explanation above, removing the identified passages and tables and replacing them with this short summary would (I hope!) greatly improve the article. So much of the current content is poorly sourced and excessively detailed.
Hopefully MediaKyle, Tessaract2, Spintendo, or any other editor watching this talk page can review what I've put together. I tried to reach out to other editors who have been active in developing page content in the past, but those outreach messages were removed for reasons I don't entirely understand. KS at Unite America (talk) 16:30, 6 July 2026 (UTC)
- If you could purge all of the references from Unite America that would also be helpful. Since Unite America has their own page on the web, that would be a better place for the organization to make statements about its activities. Where you state
but those outreach messages were removed for reasons I don't entirely understand.
I'm not sure what happended there, but messages posted by you should not be removed by anyone (unless it was posted to an editor's own talk page, where those editors have somewhat of a free-er range of action). Regards, Spintendo 18:23, 13 July 2026 (UTC)
Edit request: Verifiability review of Victoria Climbié section against HC 570
edit{{Connected contributor (paid)}} should only be used on talk pages.
| The user below has a request that an edit be made to Universal Church of the Kingdom of God. That user has an actual or apparent conflict of interest. The requested edits backlog is very high. Please be extremely patient. There are currently 510 requests waiting for review. Please read the instructions for the parameters used by this template for accepting and declining them, and review the request below and make the edit if it is well sourced, neutral, and follows other Wikipedia guidelines and policies. |
I am a paid contributor employed by the UCKG (see my user page for full disclosure per WP:PAID). I am submitting this request in accordance with WP:COI.
I have verified the claims in the Victoria Climbié section against the cited HC 570 report (The Victoria Climbié Inquiry Report, Session 2002–03), available at publications.parliament.uk.
Of the ten claims in this section that cite HC 570, four are fully supported. The remaining six have verifiability issues set out below with specific paragraph references. I am not proposing that the Victoria Climbié section be removed. I am proposing that it accurately reflect its cited source, per WP:V.
UCKG appears once in HC 570, at paragraph 26. It does not appear in Chapter 2, Chapter 3, the Conclusion, or any of the 14 Recommendations.
Issue 1a: Police interview possession claims
editCurrent text: "During police interviews, both claimed that Victoria was possessed by evil spirits."
Problem: HC 570 does not mention police interviews. Paragraph 26 says only that Pastor Lima expressed the view that Victoria was possessed. This claim needs re-sourcing or a {{cn}} tag.
Issue 1b: Lima "suspected abuse" — misalignment with cited sources
editCurrent text: "...saying later he suspected she was being abused, but he did not notify any officials."
Problem: HC 570 paragraph 26 does not say Lima suspected abuse, only that he expressed the view she was possessed. The article also cites BBC News, "Pastor prayed for 'possessed' Victoria" (6 December 2001), reporting Lima's evidence to the inquiry: he "had suspicions the young girl was being neglected" on the second visit, and under questioning he admitted he did not call the police, hospital or social services and agreed, with hindsight, that he should have done. Two issues with the current wording: (a) it upgrades "neglected" to "abused"; (b) by placement it implies the suspicion arose around the first visit, when per the BBC source it arose only on the second.
Note on sourcing: the neglect suspicion and the admission appear only in the BBC report of Lima's inquiry evidence, not in HC 570 itself. The proposed replacement therefore cites each sentence to its actual source rather than leaving the new text under the HC 570 citation.
Proposed replacement: Pastor Lima expressed the view that Victoria was possessed by an evil spirit.[1] He saw Victoria on two occasions; on the second, with Victoria visibly very ill, he suspected she was being neglected and advised Kouao to take her to hospital.[2] He later told the inquiry he should have called the police, hospital or social services.[2]
Issue 2: UCKG listed as investigated
editCurrent text: "...investigated the role of social services, the NHS, the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God, and the police."
Problem: Paragraph 3 states the Committee's purpose was to assess recommendations, not investigate organisations. Paragraph 8 lists agencies involved; UCKG is not among them. Paragraph 35 focuses on "agencies empowered by Parliament to protect children."
Proposed change: Remove "the Universal Church of the Kingdom of God" from the list of organisations investigated, per HC 570 paras 3, 8 and 35. Pastor Lima's evidence to the inquiry is already noted elsewhere in the article and in paragraph 26.
Issue 3a: "None spotted or stopped the abuse"
editCurrent text: "...but none spotted or stopped the abuse."
Problem: Paragraph 14 records that injuries were identified by two doctors, that Victoria was admitted to hospital, and that social services and police were informed. The claim that "none spotted" the abuse is therefore directly contradicted by the cited source.
Proposed change: Replace "but none spotted or stopped the abuse" with phrasing closer to HC 570 paragraph 14. For example, language that records that injuries were identified by two doctors and that social services and police were informed, but that these interventions did not prevent her death.
Issue 3b: Compressed timeline
editCurrent text: "...advised Kouao to take the girl to the hospital, where she died of her abuse."
Problem: HC 570 paragraphs 26–27 describe a multi-stage sequence: Lima "advised them to go to hospital and called a minicab"; the minicab took Victoria and Kouao to Tottenham Ambulance Station; Victoria was then taken by ambulance to North Middlesex Hospital and transferred to St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, where she died on 25 February 2000. The current passage is cited only to the BBC ("Victoria's life of horror," 12 January 2001), which does not contain this transport detail.
Proposed replacement: "...advised Kouao to take Victoria to hospital and called a minicab. Victoria was taken via Tottenham Ambulance Station to North Middlesex Hospital, and then transferred to St Mary's Hospital, Paddington, where she died on 25 February 2000.[1]"
Issue 4: Partially sourced biographical claim
editCurrent text: Lima was later promoted to bishop and led the UK headquarters 2016–2021.
Status: The bishop fact is supported by the BBC, "UCKG: Church pastor tells boy 'evil spirit' hides in him" (11 December 2023), which describes Lima as "one of the UCKG's bishops"; this citation could be added. (For the avoidance of doubt: this source is cited solely to support the descriptor that Lima is one of the UCKG's bishops. The submission does not adopt, repeat, or rely on any other content from that article, including the subject of its headline, which is unrelated to this section.) The specific UK leadership dates 2016–2021 do not appear in any cited reference. Could the dates be sourced to a reliable, independent reference, or removed?
Closing
editI am happy to provide direct quotations from HC 570 for any of these points. Archer.UCKG (talk) 13:10, 16 June 2026 (UTC)
Sources
editFull citations for the named references used in the proposed text above:
References
- 1 2 House of Commons Health Committee, The Victoria Climbié Inquiry Report, Sixth Report of Session 2002–03 (HC 570). (Ref 24 in the article.)
- 1 2 "Pastor prayed for 'possessed' Victoria", BBC News, 6 December 2001, retrieved 23 April 2010. (Ref 111 in the article.)
Other sources referenced in the discussion above (not used as named refs):
- "Victoria's life of horror", BBC News, 12 January 2001, retrieved 23 April 2010. (Ref 23 in the article.)
- Mark, Katie (11 December 2023). "UCKG: Church pastor tells boy 'evil spirit' hides in him", BBC News, retrieved 11 December 2023. (Ref 27 in the article.)
Archer.UCKG (talk) 13:10, 16 June 2026 (UTC)

