January 2011

Akito Yoshikane: Airport Security Workers Prepare For Largest Federal Election in U.S. History

January 27, 2011

Transportation Security Administration (TSA) employees — i.e., the people that pat you down at the airport — are about to make history. When they vote to decide which union will represent them in March, it will be the largest federal labor election in U.S. history. Roughly 48,000 workers are set to vote starting March 9 on whether they will be represented by the American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) or the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU). While details are still emerging on whether the workers will be able to bargain collectively with the TSA, a successful election could help to bolster the country’s total unionization rate, which has now fallen to just 11.9 percent , as David Moberg reported for In These Times this week. Representatives from the TSA and both unions met with the Federal Labor Relations Authority last Friday to discuss terms of the election. AFGE, an AFL-CIO affiliate, has represented some workers since TSA was formed in 2001; it is the largest union in the federal government, with 600,00 workers. NTEU is the bargaining unit for 150,000 members across 31 agencies and departments. The election date is not yet finalized because the technical measures are still being ironed out by the TSA, according to Cathie McQuiston, AFGE membership and organization deputy director. “The agency is holding up finalizing the election terms because it seeks a bargaining unit description that departs from the norm,” said McQuiston . “There is no dispute over the bargaining unit positions, just the language used to describe the unit.” As it stands, TSA workers are permitted to join unions, but not allowed to bargain collectively. The labor organizing comes nearly a decade after TSA was created. Since then, unions have been trying to undo unfriendly measures that were enacted under the guise of national security. When the agency was created in 2001, Congress passed legislation allowing the Under-Secretary of Transportation to decide employment terms. A 2003 memo by that official prohibited workers from engaging in collective bargaining or using representation (i.e unions) to do so “in light of their critical national security responsibilities.” Most of the momentum has happened recently, due in part, as the Washington Post notes, to the rising productivity of the once stagnant Federal Labor Relations Authority. The agency, which oversees labor issues in the federal sector, decided in November that TSA members will be allowed to vote on union representation, paving the way for the elections. Now that employees are permitted to vote on who will be their exclusive representative, the focus has shifted to allow collective bargaining. Both unions have pressed the TSA to grant rights to do so, and are hoping for a decision before balloting begins. As the voting nears, the record-setting election is an anomaly at a time when unionization rates are continuing to fall. In 2009, unionized public sector workers outnumbered private sector employees for the first time, but the membership rate in 2010 for civil servants fell 1.2 percent to 36.2 percent. But the addition of airport security officials will boost more union members in the public sector, which totaled 7.6 million last year. The previous record for the largest federal union election was in 2006 when the NTEU prevailed over the AFGE for the right to represent 24,000 U.S Customs and Border Protection workers. NTEU won by a two-to-one margin, the union says . The unionization efforts have been opposed in the past, most notably by Senator Jim DeMint (R-S.C.). Today, the backlash has been amplified by opposition to public-sector unions. In Tuesday night’s State of the Union address, the invasive and tedious security precautions by the TSA was even the butt of a joke by President Obama. The stress of dealing with angry passengers has reportedly contributed to low morale among its workforce. The union will be expected to improve workplace standards and provide a voice for a workforce belonging to an agency under constant political scrutiny. (This post originally appeared in Working In These Times .)

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Microsoft Earnings Edge Down On Slow PC Sales

January 27, 2011

SEATTLE — Microsoft Corp. said Thursday that its net income for the latest quarter fell slightly from a year ago, and it beat Wall Street’s expectations despite the weak personal computer market. Sales of Office 2010 to consumers and businesses buoyed the results, as did the popularity of Kinect, Microsoft’s new motion-sensing controller for the Xbox 360 video game system. Microsoft’s net income for the October-December quarter was $6.63 billion, compared with $6.66 billion in the same period last year. Thanks to stock buybacks, its net income rose to 77 cents per share, from 74 cents. Analysts surveyed by FactSet were expecting net income of 69 cents per share for the fiscal second quarter. Much of Microsoft’s business depends on selling copies of the Windows operating system and Office desktop software, products that usually rise and fall with fluctuations in the personal computer market. Microsoft launched Windows 7 in the same quarter of 2009, making for a tough comparison. Revenue plunged 30 percent in the Windows division to $5.1 billion. Worldwide personal computer shipments only grew about 3 percent in the latest quarter, as Apple Inc.’s iPad and the promise of more tablet devices to come made consumers think twice about what kind of device to buy. However, the division that sells Office software and other programs saw revenue rise 24 percent to $6 billion. Big companies that put off buying new technology during the worst of the recession are more willing now to upgrade their systems. Microsoft said the division’s revenue from businesses rose 18 percent while revenue from consumers jumped 49 percent, both because of sales of Office 2010. Strength in the entertainment and devices division, which is responsible for Xbox 360, also helped make up for weak Windows sales. Microsoft says it sold 8 million Kinect controllers, helping push revenue for the segment up 55 percent to $3.7 billion. In all, Microsoft’s revenue edged up 5 percent to $20 billion, topping analysts’ expectations for $19.2 billion in revenue. The software maker rushed out its earnings report a few minutes early, just before the markets closed for the day. Shares spiked to more than $29 per share in heavy trading about 15 minutes before the closing bell, before dropping back to $28.87, a 9 cent gain for the day. They slipped 16 cents to $28.71 in extended trading. “A preproduction draft of our earnings release was discovered by one or more media sources who then published our results to the Web before market close,” Bill Koefoed, Microsoft’s general manager of investor relations, said in a statement. Microsoft posted its official numbers after consulting with the Nasdaq stock market, he said. The company is reviewing its procedures to avoid a repeat of the earnings leak. This has happened before to other companies, including The Walt Disney Co. last year. A reporter accessed the quarterly report by guessing the Web address Disney would use before the information was made public, based on the pattern used in past quarters. Microsoft did not immediately say whether the media used a similar tactic to obtain the early results. Despite a successful holiday season for Kinect, Microsoft still needs to prove it is heading in the right direction in areas where it currently lags behind market leaders. Thursday’s report included a wider loss in the online division, which is mostly made up of online advertising. Google Inc., which makes almost all of its money from online advertising, saw its earnings in the same period rise 29 percent to $2.5 billion. Devices running a new smart phone system, Windows Phone 7, went on sale during the quarter, but in its quarterly filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Microsoft did not mention its contribution to the entertainment and devices division, which also houses Xbox.

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LinkedIn Files For IPO

January 27, 2011

Developing: More information to come. LinkedIn has just filed for its IPO. As TechCrunch initially reported, and the company’s official blog confirmed, the business networking site has just submitted an S-1 filing with the SEC. The maximum proposed offering priced is $175 million, though the amount is sure to change. Private trading exchange SharesPost indicates LinkedIn’s implied value is $2.5 billion. The company reported revenue of $161.4 million in the first nine months of 2010. Number of shares to be sold and price range have not yet been decided. While some of the shares will be issued for sale, others will be sold by stockholders of the company. Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Merrill Lynch and J.P. Morgan will act as the bookkeeping managers.

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G&G Outfitters Promotes From Within for Motorsports Leadership

January 27, 2011

LANHAM, MD–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) – NASCAR Licensee G&G Outfitters announced today the promotion of 13-year G&G veteran Denise Wittmeyer to Director of its Motorsports Division. Wittmeyer and her team will continue to provide the motorsports community with high powered branded merchandise solutions that deliver measurable results for the sponsors, race teams, drivers and tracks. 

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The 10 Major Conclusions Of The Financial Crisis Commission

January 27, 2011

In a report released today, the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission found that “reckless” Wall Street firms, an abundance of cheap credit and “weak” federal regulators caused the crisis. “This financial crisis could have been avoided. Let us be clear,” chairman Phil Angelides said at the Washington press conference marking the official release of the report. “The record is replete with evidence of failures. None of what happened was an act of God.” Former California treasurer Angelides confirmed that the bipartisan panel appointed by Congress to investigate the financial crisis concluded that several financial industry figures appear to have broken the law and has referred multiple cases to state or federal authorities for potential prosecution. The report also revealed that Goldman Sachs collected $2.9 billion from the American International Group as payout on a speculative trade it placed for the benefit of its own account, receiving the bulk of those funds after AIG received an enormous taxpayer rescue, according to the FCIC. The 662-page report, available online , and as a book, offers 10 main conclusions: “This financial crisis was avoidable.” “Despite the expressed view of many on Wall Street and in Washington that the crisis could not have been foreseen or avoided, there were warning signs,” the report reads.”The tragedy was that they were ignored or discounted.” “Widespread failures in financial regulation and supervision proved devastating to the stability of the nation’s financial markets.” “Securities and Exchange Commission could have required more capital and halted risky practices at the big investment banks. It did not,” the report reads. “The Federal Reserve Bank of New York and other regulators could have clamped down on Citigroup’s excesses in the run-up to the crisis. They did not. Policy makers and regulators could have stopped the runaway mortgage securitization train. They did not. “Dramatic failures of corporate governance and risk management at many systemically important financial institutions were a key cause of this crisis.” Financial institutions acted recklessly and depended too heavily on short term loans, the inquiry found. “Compensation systems–designed in an environment of cheap money, intense competition, and light regulation–too often rewarded the quick deal, the short-term gain–without proper consideration of long-term consequences,” it reads. “A combination of excessive borrowing, risky investments, and lack of transparency put the financial system on a collision course with crisis.” The inquiry found that in the years leading up to the crisis, American households, and institutions, borrowed too much and saved too little. “When the housing and mortgage markets cratered, the lack of transparency, the extraordinary debt loads, the short-term loans, and the risky assets all came home to roost. What resulted was panic,” the report reads. “We had reaped what we had sown.” “The government was ill prepared for the crisis, and its inconsistent response added to the uncertainty and panic in the financial markets.” Key government agencies, the Treasury Department, the Federal Reserve Board, and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York were behind the curve, the report concluded. “They were hampered because they did not have a clear grasp of the financial system they were charged with overseeing, particularly as it had evolved in the years leading up to the crisis.” “There was a systemic breakdown in accountability and ethics.” Many borrowers lied about being able to pay mortgages, lenders made loans they knew borrowers couldn’t afford, the report said. “Countrywide executives recognized that many of the loans they were originating could result in ‘catastrophic consequences.’ Less than a year later, they noted that certain high-risk loans they were making could result not only in foreclosures but also in ‘financial and reputational catastrophe’ for the firm. But they did not stop.” “Collapsing mortgage-lending standards and the mortgage securitization pipeline lit and spread the flame of contagion and crisis.” The report found irresponsible lending was prevalent, and there were warnings, but “the Federal Reserve neglected its mission,” and mortgage lenders passed the risk along. “From the speculators who flipped houses to the mortgage brokers who scouted the loans, to the lenders who issued the mortgages, to the financial firms that created the mortgage-backed securities, collateralized debt obligations… no one in this pipeline of toxic mortgages had enough skin in the game.” “Over-the-counter derivatives contributed significantly to this crisis…” Speculating on devices like collateralized debt obligations fanned the flames, with everyone from farmers to corporations to investors betting on prices and loan defaults. When the housing bubble popped, these were at the center of the fallout. “The failures of credit rating agencies were essential cogs in the wheel of financial destruction…” But, the report found, those bets wouldn’t have been possible without the seal of approval from ratings agencies. “This crisis could not have happened without the rating agencies. Their ratings helped the market soar and their down- grades through 2007 and 2008 wreaked havoc across markets and firms,” the report reads.

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Bernanke: All But 1 Major Wall Street Firm Could Have Failed

January 27, 2011

WASHINGTON (By Dave Clarke and Kevin Drawbaugh) – Twelve of the 13 most important U.S. financial firms were at the brink of failure at the height of the credit crisis in 2008, according to previously undisclosed remarks made by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke in November 2009 to an investigative panel. The deeply divided Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission released the notes from its private interview with Bernanke and others on Thursday as part of a final report on the origins of the 2007-2009 crisis. The 10-member panel’s final report was endorsed only by its six Democratic members. It criticized the culture of deregulation championed by former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan and said the government had ample power to avert the crisis but chose not to use it. The report did not identify which of the 13 firms was not considered by Bernanke to be in danger of failure, but it did say that Goldman Sachs was among those Bernanke feared could be taken down amid a huge funding crisis in late 2008. “If you look at the firms that came under pressure in that period … only one … was not at serious risk of failure,” Bernanke told the commission. “Even Goldman Sachs, we thought there was a real chance that they would go under.” The Fed chairman also said: “As a scholar of the Great Depression, I honestly believe that September and October of 2008 was the worst financial crisis in global history, including the Great Depression.” The commission was set up by Congress to get at the roots of the crisis, but its final product was marred by the lack of consensus and comes after last year’s passage of the Dodd-Frank financial reform law, further blunting its impact. A competing minority report from three Republican commissioners largely exonerated Greenspan, a fellow Republican, saying, “U.S. monetary policy may have contributed to the credit bubble but did not cause it.” Through a spokeswoman, Greenspan declined to comment. A fourth Republican on the panel issued yet another report, focused mostly on U.S. housing policy in explaining the origins of the crisis. FODDER FOR BOTH SIDES In the fight between pro-reform Democrats and anti-reform Republicans, the main report and the two dissents provide fodder for both sides, while highlighting partisan fault lines that today pervade political Washington, from financial regulation, to health care, to addressing the budget deficit. The unveiling of the three reports was seen by markets as a nonevent that did not pose a fresh threat to financial firms. “The market is not really going to react — the market already has a very good idea of what happened,” said Matt McCormick, portfolio manager at Bahl & Gaynor Investment Counsel Inc in Cincinnati, which owns bank shares. One Wall Street investor, who asked not to be named, said: “We still face the same problems we did before. I don’t think we’re learning much from it. This is total rehash of stuff that has surfaced and been discussed and chewed over.” As banks have pulled back from the brink over the last 12 months and returned to profits, some senior bankers have gone on the offensive against critics. Barclays Plc’s chief executive Bob Diamond told UK lawmakers earlier this month that it was time for banks to stop apologizing for the mistakes that caused the financial crisis. “There was a period of remorse and apology for banks and I think that period needs to be over,” Diamond told a committee during 2-1/2 hours of questioning. Jamie Dimon, chief executive of JPMorgan Chase & Co said not all banks were in trouble during the crisis. “There is a huge misconception. Not all banks needed that (rescue money). Not all banks would have failed,” Dimon said on Thursday at the World Economic Forum in Davos. French President Nicolas Sarkozy clashed with Dimon at a later Davos session, telling him, “The world has paid with tens of millions of unemployed, who were in no way to blame and who paid for everything.” MOUNTAIN OF NOTES, DOCUMENTS Regardless of the policy implications, a mountain of interview notes and internal documents obtained by the panel contained some revelations. For instance, the main report says Goldman Sachs capitalized on the government’s bailout of American International Group to get even more payments from the beleaguered insurer, including $2.9 billion from proprietary trades Goldman placed for its own profit. The FCIC says that beyond the $14 billion in AIG bailout funds that Goldman distributed to clients, Goldman received an additional $3.4 billion from AIG related to credit default swaps; that the bulk of that was made possible by the AIG bailout; and that Goldman kept $2.9 billion for its own books. The crisis that peaked in the fall of 2008 pushed some of the most storied financial firms to the brink of collapse. Some, such as AIG, were bailed out by the government; others, such as Lehman Brothers, were not and vanished. Democratic commissioner Brooksley Born told a news conference that the panel made “several” referrals to authorities about potential violations of U.S. law related to the crisis, but panel members declined to give further details. The commission was set up by Congress in May 2009. The hope was that its work would rip the lid off the crisis in the comprehensive way that the Pecora Commission did in the 1930s during the Great Depression. Arthur Levitt, a former head of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and now an advisor with The Carlyle Group, said the FCIC paled in comparison to the Pecora Commission, whose findings laid the groundwork for creating the SEC. “This particular commission was so political from start to finish in terms of both its composition and leadership that it was doomed from the outset,” Levitt told Reuters. All three of the FCIC’s reports generally agree the crisis was not, as some bankers have tried to portray it, some sort of unavoidable natural phenomenon. “We conclude this financial crisis was avoidable. The crisis was the result of human action and inaction, not Mother Nature or computer models gone haywire,” said the majority report of the six Democrats. “The captains of finance and the public stewards of our financial system ignored warnings and failed to question, understand and manage evolving risks within a system essential to the well-being of the American public,” it said. (Additional reporting by Maria Aspan, Ben Berkowitz and Daniel Wilchins in New York, and Joe Rauch in Charlotte; Editing by Tim Dobbyn) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Dr. Sasha Galbraith: The New Reality — How The Davos Man Is Being Dragged Into The 21st Century

January 27, 2011

The World Economic Forum (WEF) kicked off this week in Davos, Switzerland. And while the world’s biggest “schmooze-fest” usually grabs headlines for its powerful sessions or high-profile participants, this year, the press is enamored with something else: the new quota system , whereby companies are being asked to include a woman among every five delegates. While there’s certainly been a lot of chatter around the new quota system, the reality is that there has been little action. In fact, Zoe Williams of The Guardian reported that women represent only 20 percent of Davos participants — a mere 500 out of the 2500 who attend. And I have to say I’m not all that surprised. After all, sighting a female senior executive in Switzerland is about as rare as seeing a cuckoo, and the changes at Davos seem to be moving about as fast as boardroom reforms in the U.S. But let’s look on the bright side; female participation at WEF is up and big names in business are making this happen — Kraft, Pepsi and DuPont among them. While this is only a drop in the bucket, female participation at this elite event has doubled, which is a great sign. Now for the big questions: Will this trend continue? And will this have an impact beyond WEF? Only time will tell.

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Mary Bottari: U.S. Chamber Attacks FCIC as "Job-Killing" WikiLeakers

January 27, 2011

In a response to the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission releasing its final report on the financial crisis today, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce pitched a hissy fit calling the report an “abuse of the process” that would create “job-killing lawsuits.” (So much for the new tone in Washington.) FCIC the New Wikileaks? The Chamber quickly goes to the heart of the matter: 
”The commission’s final report and its pledge to post raw materials — apparently including information obtained from companies as well as other government agencies — is an astounding abuse of process that would effectively create a government-sanctioned Wikileaks,” said Lisa Rickard, president of the U.S. Chamber’s Institute for Legal Reform. This is what the Chamber fears most of all, the FCIC’s planned release of those reckless, imprudent and downright ugly emails from the masters of the universe crowing about how well they do their jobs — fleecing America. A stack of these emails were just released by Atlantic Monthly in a stellar report on the information uncovered by an insurance firm’s lawsuit against Bear Sterns. Documents discovered in the lawsuit suggest that Bear executives cheated clients out of billions by double dipping on securities sales they knew to be flawed. The lawsuit also alleges continued accounting fraud by JP Morgan Chase (which bought Bear in 2008) in an effort to cover-up the problem. In just one example of those embarrassing emails, Bear Sterns top executives crow over selling investors a “sack of shit.” Bear deal manager Nicolas Smith wrote an e-mail on August 11th, 2006 to Keith Lind, a Managing Director on the trading desk, referring to a particular bond, SACO 2006-8, as “SACK OF SHIT [2006-]8″ and said, “I hope your [sic] making a lot of money off this trade.” The Real Job Killers The U.S. Chamber is in panic mode for two reasons. One, the FCIC details in its 576 page report who the real job killers are, reckless Wall Street financial firms and negligent government officials who took a series of specific actions that resulted in 30 million unemployed and underemployed Americans. They are also panicked because the Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform law is kicking in to high gear. Federal banking agencies are issuing new rules under the act that will clamp down on some of the reckless behavior in the big banks, mortgage services and other financial firms. Unbelievably, the Chamber is fighting hard to protect the lucrative shadow banking industry from being dragged into the sunlight, rigorously protesting the new transparency, capital and margin requirements for all over the counter derivatives traders. This week the Chamber released an amusing art work , placing the array of Dodd-+Frank rules into a graphic chart full of polka dots. As the watchdog group U.S. Chamber Watch noted: “Although the Chamber has unveiled this pointless pointillist masterpiece, (probably being secretly funded by the big banks that, left unregulated, led to the recession in the first place), it still has yet to release a substantive plan for jobs or avoiding future financial meltdowns.” Buy the FCIC report today, and call the U.S. Chamber of Commerce toll-free and tell them what you think of their foray into modern art. U.S. Chamber of Commerce Customer Service: 1-800-638-6582.

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BNP Paribas Expands Coverage of Financial and Official Institutions in North America

January 27, 2011

NEW YORK, NY–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) – BNP Paribas Corporate and Investment Banking is pleased to announce the growth of its North American Client Coverage Group and establishment of the Official Institutions Coverage team for the Americas.

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How A NY Tax Cut Backfired On The Tea Party

January 27, 2011

MINEOLA, New York (By Edith Honan and Kristina Cooke) – At his January 2010 inauguration, Tea Party-backed Republican Edward Mangano marched up to the podium, pen in hand. Even before being officially declared Nassau County Executive, he signed a repeal of an unpopular home energy tax. The move elicited chants of “Eddie, Eddie, Eddie” from supporters assembled in the auditorium of Mangano’s alma mater, Bethpage High School, 30 miles east of New York City. “This is very cool and quite an honor,” Mangano said as he gave his admirers a thumbs-up. The fiscal consequences, however, were anything but cool. The repeal set Mangano on an immediate collision course with the state-appointed fiscal overseer, the Nassau County Interim Financial Authority, or NIFA. It culminated in NIFA seizing control of the wealthy New York county’s finances on Wednesday. Nassau’s ills exemplify the growing tension across the country as dozens of freshly-elected Tea Party lawmakers, many of whom promised to cut taxes, must find ways to slash record budget gaps as revenues dwindle. “A lot of people who got elected on this type of anti-tax platform are running into the brick wall of fiscal reality,” said Matthew Gardner, executive director of the non-partisan Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy in Washington. Besides being a cautionary tale, the setback in Nassau County is a black eye for the Tea Party, the grassroots movement built around the core principles of constitutionally limited government, free-market ideology and low taxes. Indeed, a close examination reveals that the affluent area’s woes were exacerbated by missteps and miscalculations. Among other things, a Reuters review of dozens of public and private documents showed vague, circular answers to oversight panel queries and basic math errors in budget documents. In a sense, Nassau County’s predicament remains highly unusual. The oversight board created by New York State more than a decade earlier following a financial crisis gave Mangano little margin for error. But in other ways, Nassau County is not unlike many places in the United States today. A June 2010 survey by the National Association of Counties found 65 percent of the 800 counties polled reported budget shortfalls of between $100,000 and $50 million. “It’s a metaphor for what is happening in the Western world,” said Richard Ravitch, who advised New York City during its fiscal crisis in the 1970s. “People don’t want to tax but there is a point below which they don’t want to cut.” TAX REVOLT Mangano’s victory over two-term Democratic incumbent Thomas Suozzi in 2009 was one of the first major upsets that can be chalked up to the Tea Party. His campaign posters avoided the word “Republican” and instead stressed his “tax revolt” message. On that score, his opponent was an easy target. To help close a yawning budget gap, Suozzi had instated the $45 million home energy tax and indicated he would raise property taxes. The home energy tax cost households on average $7.27 each month — a fraction of most tax bills. But in an area already paying some of the highest taxes in the country, it took on symbolic importance. Mangano defeated Suozzi by fewer than 400 votes, stunning the political establishment. With his Long Island accent and a heavy frame, Mangano is often described as genial. He has made much of his blue-collar roots, including his time spent working as a janitor while a high school student. His struggle began almost the minute he repealed the energy tax. “I’m not sure that (Mangano) understood the magnitude of the fiscal problems that he faced and he had promises from the campaign that he had to keep,” said Lawrence Levy, a dean at Hofstra University and a former member of the editorial board at Long Island daily Newsday. Eliminating the energy tax “blew a bigger hole in his budget and added to the problem with really no plan to replace the revenue,” he said Within two working days of Mangano’s inauguration, a letter from NIFA landed on his desk — the opening salvo of what would fast become a testy relationship. In a two-page letter, NIFA’s chairman Ronald Stack requested a revised multi-year plan and asked Mangano how he planned to make up for the lost revenue. He never did provide an answer that satisfied them. On Wednesday, NIFA said the county’s $2.6 billion budget was out of balance by $176 million, meaning it could take control of its finances. Mangano said he would sue NIFA. HEAVEN FOR REPUBLICANS To be sure, Nassau County’s fiscal woes long predate the Tea Party. Known as the “Gold Coast” and dotted with sprawling mansions in America’s Roaring Twenties, the North Shore of Nassau County was the setting for F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby.” Following World War Two, the entire county transformed into the quintessential American suburb. Its proximity to New York City, its beaches, good schools and low crime rate led to a rapid population increase. In liberal New York, it was also a rare conservative stronghold. “When a Republican dies and goes to heaven it looks a lot like Nassau County,” former President Ronald Reagan famously said. But by the 1990s, both its economic and population growth had plateaued. At the same time, police salaries had ballooned. By 2000, a Nassau County cop could expect to earn over $100,000, including overtime. In 1999, with bankruptcy a real possibility, the state bailed out Nassau County to the tune of $100 million. NIFA was created the following year to oversee Nassau’s finances and to issue bonds and notes on the county’s behalf. Even a one percent budget gap can prompt a takeover. The county’s financial crisis helped usher in an era of Democratic rule. Suozzi was elected in 2001 and served two terms as county executive before his defeat to Mangano, a 14-year veteran of the Nassau County Legislature. Despite its troubles, the county of 1.4 million people remains one of America’s wealthiest. It has the highest concentration of affluent neighborhoods in the United States, according to Forbes. It also has a median household income of $94,856 almost twice the U.S. median — though it is also one of the country’s most expensive places to live. A shopping strip in Manhasset, known as the Miracle Mile, is a blur of Tiffany’s and Prada and is popular with celebrities including Gwyneth Paltrow and Jennifer Lopez. Although Mangano insists that politics is behind the state’s takeover, the six-member NIFA board is hardly on the same page ideologically, at least according to their voter registration. Three are registered Democrats, one is a Republican, one is a Conservative and one an Independent. The Republican, Thomas Stokes, served as Suozzi’s deputy for finance, while conservative George Marlin publicly backed Mangano during the election campaign. Lately, though, Marlin has become one of Mangano’s most outspoken critics. TALE OF TWO DEFICITS Marlin told a NIFA meeting late last year that Nassau County faced a “tale of two deficits.” “A serious and critical budget deficit that the Mangano administration inherited” and “then there’s the credibility deficit. A lack of candor has been coming from the county. Promises have been made but not kept,” he said. Some problems stemmed from sheer sloppiness. The documents reviewed by Reuters included a number of simple errors. For example, in his review of the county executive’s budget, Comptroller George Maragos, a fellow Republican, incorrectly calculated a gain as a loss in the other revenues column — a $600,000 gain was instead posted as a $500,000 loss. The comptroller’s office said the error was due to a typo. And then there was the chasm between words and actions. Despite his stated mission to slash spending, Mangano did not immediately institute a formal hiring freeze. By far the biggest savings he touted for the 2011 budget were $61 million worth of union concessions. Those never came, and by most accounts were never a serious possibility. The offending home energy tax was part of a three-year deferred-pay deal struck by Suozzi with the unions. Suozzi said the deal would give the county time to get its finances in order as the economy picked up. The thinking was that the home energy tax alongside a promised property tax increase would set up a recurring revenue stream for the county. Among other things, taking on the energy tax hampered Mangano’s ability to negotiate with the unions. “Everybody was supposed to share a little bit of the pain,” said police union President James Carver. “Now the county executive is taking away one of those legs of the three-part plan.” At the end of April, Mangano met with labor leaders at Ruth’s Chris Steak House in Garden City to inform them he would put $61 million in union concessions into his 2011 budget. Union leaders say they remember the dinner as not very substantive, quipping that the main decision of the evening revolved around what to order as a side dish. Carver said Mangano told him the budget item was a mere “place holder” while he pursued a possible Long Island casino project and his revamp of the county’s costly property tax refund system. “He gave me the impression that this was never going to happen,” said Carver, who pointed out that the $61 million reduction would be the equivalent of an 11 percent cut in police salaries. “NO PROPERTY TAX BUDGET” In September, Mangano presented his 2011 budget, which he called a “no property tax budget.” He said it would eliminate 400 county jobs and cut more than $100 million in spending. Both Comptroller George Maragos as well as the county legislature’s Republican majority leader Peter Schmitt deemed the budget was sound. But by NIFA’s calculation, it was off by at least $26 million — the one percent that would spur a control period. “A budget is a plan, it’s a dynamic plan,” the comptroller told Reuters in an interview in his Mineola office. “For NIFA to argue that a one-percent anticipated deficit in a $2.6 billion budget is cause for alarm I think is ludicrous.” But NIFA were not the only one concerned with the 2011 budget. In November, Moody’s Investors Service downgraded the county and put its finances on outlook negative, citing weak liquidity and an over-reliance on nonrecurring revenues. The rating agency singled out the energy tax repeal as problematic. For the next two months, there was constant wrangling between the two sides — with NIFA saying the county had cut taxes without making up the difference and Mangano and Maragos accusing the authority of playing politics. “I thought they were very antagonistic, very assertive … as if they’re in control, they’re running the county,” the comptroller said. Indeed, NIFA sent multiple requests to county officials beginning as early as the summer, asking for back-up for their cost savings as well as a battery of additional contingency plans. When they had questions for the comptroller that August, he was out of the country. Maragos spent nearly six weeks in his native Greece, although he had remote access to email and spoke with his office daily. PERMITTED TO GOVERN As 2010 drew to a close, handling NIFA inquiries had become a full-time job for the county executive and his staff. NIFA called a public meeting at the Long Island Marriott Hotel in Uniondale for December 30. Mangano had not been expected to attend, but in the end he did come — armed with several new contingencies. “There may come a time when I may ask for your help. That time is not now,” Mangano said ahead of the meeting. “We ask that we be permitted to govern.” Following a lengthy closed-door meeting, NIFA decided to hold off declaring a control period, and gave the county three additional weeks to provide further substantiation for the new contingencies. “In an abundance of caution, we’re giving the county one final opportunity to present its case that this budget is balanced,” Stack said, adding this would be its “last chance.” Despite the extra time, a review of all letters sent to NIFA during that period showed few concrete details. When answering questions about labor savings, the county circled back to its extra contingencies, including a land lease deal that had yet to be formally approved. When answering questions about that same land deal, the county looped back to the promised union concessions that have not materialized. Many of the other ideas required some sort of legislative action. In the end, he ran out of time. On Wednesday, NIFA took over. “As is the case elsewhere in New York State and the nation, this is the convergence of anti-tax fervor and a lack of political will to make the expense cuts necessary to balance the budget,” Stokes, the NIFA board member, told Reuters. (Editing by Jim Impoco and Claudia Parsons) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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GM Hurrying Its Electric Volt To Market

January 27, 2011

WASHINGTON — General Motors’ top car designer says the company will accelerate distribution of the Chevrolet Volt electric car so it’s sold in every U.S. state by the end of this year. Design chief Ed Welburn made the announcement Thursday in a speech at the Washington, D.C., auto show. Previously, GM had said the $41,000 Volt would be sold in every state by sometime next year. Volt sales began in December in California, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Washington, D.C., and Texas. It’s scheduled to go on sale in Michigan next. GM plans to make 10,000 Volts this year. Welburn says the company is looking at ways to increase production and expand use of the technology. The Volt can go about 35 miles on battery power before a gas generator kicks in.

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U.S. Manufacturing Profits Suggest Stronger Economy

January 27, 2011

NEW YORK/CHICAGO (By Nick Zieminski and James B. Kelleher) – U.S. manufacturing companies posted higher-than-expected results, as sharply improved margins boosted profits amid strong industrial demand and growth in emerging markets. Companies including Caterpillar Inc, Tyco International Ltd (TYC.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) and Eaton Corp reported strong sales and earnings, and investors were looking ahead for signs the industrial rebound would begin to affect the wider economy and boost employment. Caterpillar provided an encouraging sign for U.S. jobs but also showed that employment remains one of the main ways companies can control profit margins. The machinery maker, which slashed nearly 30,000 full-time and contract jobs worldwide during the recession, said it had rehired about 8,200 workers worldwide in 2010, and hired another 11,000 temporary contract workers, half in the United States. “A lot of that driven by export demand, so that was an increase in employment,” Caterpillar’s head of investor relations, Mike DeWalt, said on a conference call. “But if you look at sales, sales went up quite a bit more than that.” Caterpillar’s operating margins jumped from 2 percent a year ago to 10 percent in the fourth quarter. Other large industrial names also expanded margins. Caterpillar shares were up 1.7 percent at $97.33, an all-time high for the industrial bellwether. Caterpillar reported a stronger-than-expected quarterly profit, lifted by increased sales of its machines in Asia and Latin America and a sharp rebound in demand in North America, especially from mining customers. The company also forecast it would post a 2011 profit near $6.00 per share, which is above the market consensus. ADDING JOBS “So far so good,” said Oliver Pursche, president of Gary Goldberg Financial Services, about the earnings season for manufacturing companies. He added that corporate comments on jobs were one of the key factors he was listening for as an investor. “The more they talk about hiring, the more comfortable we’re going to be with that company. If you’re hiring people, your business is growing.” Eaton is likely to grow its workforce by a few percentage points this year as markets such as autos, aerospace and nonresidential construction recover from recession, the diversified industrial company’s CEO said. “You’ll see hiring here in the U.S. as well as around the world,” Sandy Cutler told Reuters. Eaton’s quarterly profit beat expectations on a strong truck market and higher demand for its electrical systems. The maker of hydraulics, truck transmissions and other industrial products forecast record 2011 earnings, set a stock split and announced a 17 percent dividend increase. Tyco’s quarterly earnings more than doubled, beating Wall Street expectations amid sharply higher profits at the conglomerate’s security business, which includes the former ADT Worldwide service. Tyco, which said it was close to finalizing acquisitions worth around $500 million, also raised its full-year forecast. Its shares were up 0.8 percent at $45 in afternoon trading. It was one of many stocks trading near multiyear highs. Industrial shares rose 24 percent last year, lagging only the consumer discretionary sector, according to Standard & Poor’s, which recommends investors stay “overweight” in industrials amid expectations of continued global expansion. The sector has also outrun the broader stock market in 2011, and a correction could be imminent, S&P said. As companies keyed to industrial demand continued a trend of beating Wall Street forecasts, investors took profits in some names, like Kennametal Inc and Timken Co. Tool maker Kennametal, considered a pure play on industrial production, raised its full-year forecast above Street estimates amid strong demand from industrial and transportation markets. Profit at Timken, maker of bearings and specialty steel, was helped by auto and truck production and an ability to push through higher prices. Electrical and electronics products maker Hubbell Inc also beat, as did Harsco, which provides products to metals producers. Conglomerate Danaher Corp showed sharply higher profits in its industrial components and test-and-measurement segments. It affirmed 2011 earnings targets. “We expect the global economy to continue to improve in 2011, lead by the emerging markets,” Danaher CEO Larry Culp said on the company’s conference call. WIDESPREAD OPTIMISM Optimism among manufacturing executives is widespread. Sixty-three percent are upbeat about U.S. economic prospects over the next 12 months, according to a quarterly survey by PricewaterhouseCoopers. [ID:nPnNY36849] That marked a 28-point increase over the prior quarter. Still, fewer than half — 48 percent — plan to add employees over the next year, PwC found, partly reflecting concerns about taxes, regulation and soft demand. Worries about corporate taxes, especially, may keep U.S. companies from significantly boosting capacity until the second half of 2011, said analyst Brian Langenberg of Langenberg & Co. U.S. consumers remain constrained by the housing market. A reminder that not all is well on the housing front came from the No. 1 homebuilder, DR Horton Inc (DHI.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), which posted a wider-than-expected loss. “Industrial production is increasing on a global basis,” Langenberg said. “(Manufacturers) need to increase capital spending. “When do they have to boost capacity? Now. Where? Not necessarily in the U.S.” (Reporting by Nick Zieminski and James B. Kelleher; Additional reporting by Scott Malone in Boston; Editing by John Wallace, Matthew Lewis, Phil Berlowitz) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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NeuralIQ Names Bill Stacia as Vice President for Strategy and Development

January 27, 2011

ALEXANDRIA, VA–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) – NeuralIQ, Inc. ( www.neuraliq.com ), an innovative cybersecurity developer, announces the promotion of William C. “Bill” Stacia, Jr. to Vice President for Strategy and Development. In his new role Mr. Stacia will spearhead the next release of NeuralIQ’s Event Horizon®, an intrusion intelligence platform that exposes and analyzes cyber attacks in a real-time controlled environment, then creates countermeasures with intelligence gathered from the attack.

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Steele Resources Corporation Announces New CFO: David Bridgeford

January 27, 2011

CAMERON PARK, CA–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) –  Steele Resources Corporation (the “Company”) ( OTCBB : SELR ) announced today that it has named David E Bridgeford as its Chief Financial Officer and Secretary, effective January 18, 2011. Pauline Schneider, who was serving as the Company’s interim Chief Financial Officer and Corporate Secretary resigned due to personal reasons on January 17, 2011. Mrs. Schneider will remain on the Board of Directors to provide financial oversight and recommendations.

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Grant Cardone: NADA — Auto Dealers Preparing for Great 2011

January 27, 2011

As the automobile industry appears to be improving, the National Automobile Dealer Association is getting read for its annual automotive convention. With car and truck sales predicted to be between 12-13 million cars it should be a big year for manufacturers and dealers. I personally think annual sales will exceed even the most optimistic expectations. But the winners will not be those that depend on the economy’s recovery but rather those that depend on great processes, great execution and great people. Car and truck dealers and manufacturers nationwide have been gravely impacted by the economic crisis, reducing sales of new automobiles from seventeen million to under ten million annually. Thousands of car dealerships were closed resulting in tens of thousands of lost jobs at the retail level not counting those lost because of cutbacks at the manufacturer level. Just retail auto dealers are responsible for over 1 million jobs in the U.S. so their solvency is critical to the US economic recovery! Founded in 1917, NADA represents more than seventeen thousand new car and truck dealers, both domestic and import, with more than 37,500 separate franchises. More than 91 percent of U.S. new-vehicle dealers are NADA members and a large majority is expected to attend the day event in San Francisco. I am working with NADA again this year to deliver automotive sales and management training workshops that will demonstrate exact strategies that automobile dealers must employ to get their part of the upcoming recovery. While people will be returning to car dealerships in the upcoming year, increased competition is forcing dealers to be better at the customer experience. In addition to providing sales and management workshops for their annual convention, NADA is very active on Capitol Hill supporting its members. I aggressively worked with NADA in its most recent victory passing the Brownback Amendment which excluded auto dealers from the White House’s bank reform bill. This would have limited dealers ability to provide financing to car buyers and gravely impacted the dealers’ viability and limited financing choices for automotive consumers. The Nada Convention 2011 is being held in San Francisco, CA Feb 5-7. Grant Cardone, NY Times Best Selling Author, Automotive Sales Training Expert

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Robert Gates: Congress Dumping ‘Crisis On My Doorstep’

January 27, 2011

OTTAWA, Ontario — Defense Secretary Robert Gates is accusing Congress of dumping a “crisis on my doorstep” by holding the Pentagon to last year’s spending levels and creating a potential $23 billion gap that could weaken a wartime military. “That’s how you hollow out a military,” Gates said Thursday. Gates said it looks increasingly likely that Congress will not act on the Pentagon’s 2011 budget request even as lawmakers argue over Gates’ proposal to slow the rate of increase in defense spending next year and freeze it by 2015. Gates was in Canada for North American defense talks. In an interview as he traveled to the Canadian capital, the Pentagon chief said he understands that his proposal for $78 billion in cuts in future spending has run into opposition among lawmakers. The opposition is bipartisan – from Republicans who oppose any reductions and Democrats along with some Republicans backed by the tea party who say Gates isn’t cutting enough. Rhetoric on all sides ignores “the real world that I live in,” Gates said. He warned of emergency cuts if the Pentagon is forced to live within last year’s means when it had planned for more. Congress has not acted on the $549 billion request for the budget year that began on Oct. 1. Congress last fall passed a stop-gap government spending measure that keeps budgets at the previous year’s levels. For the Pentagon, that means a budget of about $526 billion, officials say, not counting war funding. Gates said the separate request for spending on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will fall to about $120 billion for 2012 from about $159 billion this year, reflecting the planned final troop withdrawal from Iraq. Gates said lawmakers appear so eager to fight over the longer-range Pentagon spending proposal that they are ignoring the near-term effects of not passing a new budget for the current year. If the stop-gap approach is not replaced by a new budget, the Pentagon will face a money pinch that “could have an impact on training across the entire force,” and in other areas, Gates said. One example: After years of concern that the fast pace of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan prevented the Army and Marine Corps from doing a full range of training at home, they finally are in position to correct that shortcoming, Gates said. But the training may be unaffordable for the remainder of this year unless Congress replaces the stop-gap budget, known as a continuing resolution, with a new budget by March. “It’s one thing to talk about 2012 and then to express concerns about something that may or may not happen in four or five years,” he said, such as Gates’ proposal to reduce the size of the Army and the Marine Corps starting in 2015. “But I have a crisis on my doorstep. And I want them to deal with the crisis on my doorstep before we start arguing about the levels (of spending) in 2012.” The Pentagon’s proposed spending plan for 2012-16 will be part of the budget President Barack Obama submits to Congress the week of Feb. 14. The debate over defense spending next year and beyond was on full display Wednesday at a House Armed Services Committee hearing, where Republicans posed tough questions about the risks of slashing too deep and shortchanging U.S. forces. Rep. Buck McKeon, R-Calif., the committee’s new chairman, took the lead by declaring, “I will not support any measures that stress our forces and jeopardize the lives of our men and women in uniform.” Steering the 2012 defense budget through congressional criticism that it is either too ambitious or too meek is likely to be one of Gates’ final campaigns before retiring. If he quits this summer, as many believe likely, he will have been one of the longest-serving defense secretaries since the post was created in 1947. He started in December 2006, succeeding Donald H. Rumsfeld, who resigned amid heavy criticism over the Iraq war. In the interview Wednesday, Gates was vague about his retirement plans. “My lips are sealed,” the former CIA chief said when asked when he intends to leave. “I’m going to be around for a number of months,” including during the budget hearings on Capitol Hill in February and March, Gates said. Last year he said he planned to quit sometime in 2011. Gates has fashioned himself into a guardian of the U.S. military’s global pre-eminence, but he also has cautioned that military muscle can be an illusion. “Possessing the ability to annihilate other militaries is no guarantee we can achieve our strategic goals,” he told Army officers in May. In that same vein, he launched his current effort to preserve military strength while accepting that the nation’s grim financial condition means the days of big annual raises for the Pentagon are over. He demanded that the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps find $100 billion in budget savings over the coming five years, while allowing them to keep most of that savings for other needs. The military services responded with investments in a modernized fleet of Army tanks, more strike and surveillance drone aircraft for the Navy and Air Force, and more missile interceptors for use in an expanded missile defense system in Europe.

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David Isenberg: PMSC and Trafficking: Room for Improvement

January 27, 2011

One of the unpleasant aspects of the private military and contracting world concerns the way employees, especially Third World country nationals, are sometimes treated. Note that I wrote “sometimes.” What I am about to write about does not reflect the actions of the majority of contractors but it happens enough to warrant continuing concern. What I am specifically talking about is “trafficking in persons”; something done both by contractors and regular military forces. Over the past decade, Congress passed legislation to address its concern regarding allegations of contractor and U.S. Forces’ involvement in sexual slavery, human trafficking, and debt bondage. Prior to 2000, allegations of sexual slavery, sex with minors, and human trafficking involving U.S. contractors ( as in Dyncorp ) in Bosnia and Herzegovina led to administrative and criminal investigations by U.S. Government agencies. In 2002, a local television news program aired a report alleging that women trafficked from the Philippines, Russia, and Eastern Europe were forced into prostitution in bars in South Korea frequented by U.S. military personnel, which resulted in an investigation and changes to DoD policy. In 2004, official reports chronicled allegations of forced labor and debt bondage against U.S. contractors in Iraq. Needless to say these incidents were contrary to U.S. Government policy regarding official conduct. In 2000, the president signed into law two statutes responding in part to identified contractor and U.S. Forces’ misconduct in Bosnia and Herzegovina: Public Law 106-386 on October 28, and Public Law 106-523, “Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act of 2000,” on November 22. The stated purposes of the first statute are “…to combat trafficking in persons [CTIP], a contemporary manifestation of slavery whose victims are predominantly women and children, to ensure just and effective punishment of traffickers, and to protect their victims.” The second statute established “Federal jurisdiction over offenses committed outside the United States by persons employed by or accompanying the Armed Forces, or by members of the Armed Forces who are released or separated from active duty prior to being identified and prosecuted for the commission of such offenses.” Congress specifically extended this extraterritorial jurisdiction over trafficking in persons (TIP) offenses committed by persons employed by or accompanying the Federal Government outside the United States in Public Law 109-164, “Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act Of 2005,” January 10, 2006. Additional reauthorizations expanded the scope and applicability of the first statute. Public Law 108-193, the “Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2003,” December 19, 2003, gave the Government the added authority to terminate grants, contracts, or cooperative agreements for TIP-related violations. That law says: The President shall ensure that any grant, contract, or cooperative agreement provided or entered into by a Federal department or agency under which funds are to be provided to a private entity, in whole or in part, shall include a condition that authorizes the department or agency to terminate the grant, contract, or cooperative agreement, without penalty, if the grantee or any subgrantee, or the contractor or any subcontractor (i) engages in severe forms of trafficking in persons or has procured a commercial sex act during the period of time that the grant, contract, or cooperative agreement is in effect, or (ii) uses forced labor in the performance of the grant, contract, or cooperative agreement. In 2006, the Civilian Agency Acquisition Council and the Defense Acquisition Council agreed on an interim rule implementing the above stated requirement, adding Federal Acquisition Regulation Subpart 22.17, “Combating Trafficking in Persons.” There are other regulations and laws on the subject but the above should suffice to demonstrate the U.S. government recognizes this is a serious issue. To their credit many, even perhaps most PMSC, do as well. For example, the International Code of Conduct for Private Security Providers , signed last November, has, a section that says: Signatory Companies will not, and will require their Personnel not to, engage in trafficking in persons. Signatory Companies will, and will require their Personnel to, remain vigilant for all instances of trafficking in persons and, where discovered, report such instances to Competent Authorities. For the purposes of this Code, human trafficking is the recruitment, harbouring, transportation, provision, or obtaining of a person for (1) a commercial sex act induced by force, fraud, or coercion, or in which the person induced to perform such an act has not attained 18 years of age; or (2) labour or services, through the use of force, fraud, or coercion for the purpose of subjection to involuntary servitude, debt bondage, or slavery. While the sex aspect gets people attention it is the second part, “labour or services, through the use of force, fraud, or coercion for the purpose of subjection to involuntary servitude, debt bondage, or slavery” which is the more common offense. Try searching online for “TCN (stands for Third Country National] trafficking AND Iraq” and you’ll see what I mean. So with that as background how well are both governmental personnel and contractors doing in policing themselves in this area? They could be doing better, according to a new report from the Department of Defense Inspector General. It found: • While three quarters of the contracts sampled contained a Combating Trafficking in Persons clause, only little more than half had the required Federal Acquisition Regulation clause. • DoD contracting offices lack an effective process for obtaining information pertaining to trafficking in persons violations within the DoD. On the plus side: • DoD and other Federal law enforcement organizations were developing procedures to identify trafficking in persons incidents in criminal investigative databases. • Several organizations demonstrated Combating Trafficking in Persons awareness and quality assurance best practices. The Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) requires that all Federal solicitations and contracts contain clause 52.222-50, “Combating Trafficking in Persons,” (CTIP) or the clause with Alternate I modification for contracts with performance outside the U.S. The team reviewed 368 DoD service or construction contracts for work in the Republic of Iraq, the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, the State of Kuwait, the State of Qatar, and the Kingdom of Bahrain awarded in FYs 2009 and 2010. The report found 53 percent of the contracts (195 of 368) contained a proper version of the mandatory FAR CTIP clause, and 26 percent of the contracts (95 of 368) contained an incorrect citation. 21 percent of the contracts (78 of 368) did not contain any form of the FAR clause. Noncompliance with the requirement to include the CTIP clause in contracts has two negative effects. First, contractors remain unaware of the U.S. Government’s “zero tolerance” policy and self-reporting requirements regarding CTIP. Second, contracting offices were potentially unable to apply applicable remedies to correct contractor violations when the CTIP clause was not properly present. The number of contracts without any form of a CTIP clause indicates that additional effort is still necessary to ensure compliance.

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Rick Santorum: Obama’s Plans Are ‘Wasteful Government Spending’

January 27, 2011

While some supported President Barack Obama’s call, in his 2011 State of the Union address, for investments to restore America’s global competitiveness, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum dismissed the president’s proposals as “wasteful government spending.” In an op-ed today in the Union Leader , Santorum writes: “Rather than letting the American entrepreneurial spirit ignite the free-market economic engine, Obama is again choosing to depend on government to lead us to economic prosperity. But when has government ever succeeded in doing this?” The former senator, who may have his eyes on a 2012 presidential run, also accuses the president of ignoring the deficit and entitlement reform and claims that the “real employment rate” — those who are underemployed or stopped looking for work — is growing. He ends his letter with a clear statement that the president has failed: “I sat watching Tuesday night with great hope to see a new Obama: a President who recognized the message that voters in New Hampshire and across the country overwhelmingly sent just three short months ago. But instead, we saw Obama the liberal try, try again.”

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Fulton Joins Parsons’ Infrastructure & Technology Group

January 27, 2011

PASADENA, CA–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) – Parsons announced today that David A. Fulton has joined its Infrastructure & Technology group as Vice President and Senior Program Manager. Mr. Fulton is responsible for managing Parsons’ contract portfolio for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and other international development agencies.

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Haines Joins Parsons’ Infrastructure & Technology Group

January 27, 2011

PASADENA, CA–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) – Parsons announced today that Julie Haines has joined its Infrastructure & Technology group as Vice President and Client Service Leader of its International Development Practice. Ms. Haines is responsible for leading growth in the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) market and expanding Parsons’ sustainable infrastructure footprint worldwide.

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JetBlue Expects Fare, Fee Hikes To Continue

January 27, 2011

NEW YORK — JetBlue is tacking on surcharges on flights to the Caribbean to cover its rising fuel bill, and said airlines should continue to pass these costs on through higher fares. The New York airline said in a conference call after the release of its fourth-quarter earnings that it’s glad to see that airlines are raising fares to cover the price of fuel, their largest expense. JetBlue expects to pay 17 percent more for fuel in the first three months of the year than it did in the fourth-quarter. Fuel jumped 16 percent in the October-to-December period from the year before. The airline raised ticket prices by about 4 percent in the fourth-quarter and recently added a $35 fuel surcharge for flights in or out of Puerto Rico and $45 for Caribbean destinations. JetBlue hopes to get 20 percent more in fees this year. Passengers on average paid $20 apiece in extra fees in the fourth-quarter, mostly for more spacious seats. For all of last year, travelers paid $85 million to sit in seats with “Even More Legroom.” The airline was tripped up by higher costs, mostly for fuel, in the fourth-quarter. That drove net income down 18 percent. A massive winter storm in December walloped its home base of New York and slammed operations in Boston, where it is the biggest domestic airline by passengers. , JetBlue estimated that the storm cost $30 million in lost revenue. The airline canceled around 375 flights on Wednesday and Thursday after another big storm rolled into the Northeast. The New York airline earned $9 million, or 3 cents per share, in the October-to-December period. That compares with a year-ago profit of $11 million, or 4 cents per share. Revenue rose 13 percent to $940 million. Costs rose 15 percent. The results fell short of Wall Street’s expectations. Analysts polled FactSet Research expected a profit of 6 cents per share on revenue of $948.3 million. Traffic improved by about 10 percent from a year ago. Most other major airlines posted a profit in the last three months of the year – which includes the important holiday travel period – as demand improved and they were able to raise ticket prices. Only American Airlines and United-Continental lost money in the last three months of the year. For all of 2010, the airline posted a profit of $97 million, or 31 cents per share, compared with $61 million, or 21 cents per share, in 2009. JetBlue plans to expand the number of available seats it offers, or capacity, by about seven to nine percent this year. That will mostly be through continued expansion in Boston and the Caribbean, where JetBlue has been aggressively adding service while bigger airlines have pulled back. JetBlue increased flights in Boston by 30 percent in 2010 over 2009, and expects to reach 100 daily flights there by this summer. It predicts that about one-quarter of its flights will be in and out of the Caribbean this year. The company has 600 daily flights. It says its efforts to lure more business travelers, especially in Boston, are paying off. The airline made changes last year to make its flights more attractive to corporate customers, who tend to pay more. That included adding an early boarding option for those who paid more for extra legroom seats, adding more convenient flight times and offering refundable fares. In midday trading JetBlue shares rose 2 cents to $6.50.

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Tim Berry: Y’Want Jobs? Small Business? Then Fund Education

January 27, 2011

Everybody agrees that small business is good for an economy, that it promotes jobs, and so on. But what does anybody want the government to do about it? And what can governments really do about it, effectively? More small business loans , perhaps? Lower taxes ? Cut regulations ? Sure, all easy to say, but then we get into partisan politics. Who puts up the money for the loans? How do you lower taxes for business owners without getting into partisan politics? And how do you cut regulations when most of them are supposed to protect employees and customers? Tough problems, and I don’t have direct answers; in fact, what I’ve seen in about 30 years of owning my own business and helping others to start theirs, is that people starting or not starting businesses isn’t about tax rates or regulatory environments. It’s about opportunity, education, technology, infrastructure, risk, custom, and attitudes. In ” Entrepreneurship is a Passion, Not a Program ,” Kevin Swan offers a good list of things “entrepreneurship is not” (emphasis is mine): It is not a program set in place by decision makers. It is not a building you put innovation in and commercialize. It is not grown from public money. It is not developed by having a bunch of venture capital available. It is not focus on certain sectors or markets. It is not an easy way to get rich. It is not chaotically chasing after ideas and projects. I think he’s right on all points, and particularly, on those points in bold that cast doubt on public policies. To help explain, he cites Vivek Wadhwa’s ” A Better Formula: Connecting Risk Takers .” Vivek counters the cluster theories of government-sponsored entrepreneurship growing in a would-be petri dish of favored locations and industries: All of those are well-intentioned efforts to build Silicon Valley-style technology hubs, but they are based on the same flawed assumptions: that government planners can pick industries they want to develop and, by erecting buildings and providing money to entrepreneurs and university researchers, make innovation happen. It simply doesn’t work that way. It takes people who are knowledgeable, motivated, and willing to take risks. Those people have to be connected to one another and to universities by information-sharing social networks. So what — if anything — should governments, whether federal, state, or local, actually do? (That is, aside from lowering the volume on the partisan politic.) Could this be a classic quicksand problem for governments, meaning a problem they can make worse, but not better? Perhaps, but maybe there is something. Vivek has some good ideas. He recommends, for example, “work toward removing the stigma associated with failure.” And “teach entrepreneurship, not just to university students, but also to experienced workers.” And, one of my personal favorites: “Bring in skilled immigrants from all over the world” (which I think means relax restrictions, rather than actually bringing them in). In short: To boost entrepreneurship, they need to focus their energy not on infrastructure, but on people. They have to be connected to each other and be given the means to innovate and take risks. The obstacles in their path need to be removed. I like that: Remove the obstacles . And really, for those of you who haven’t started a company, or worked in a startup, or been involved in any way with a startup, I can confirm this for you: nobody’s startup business plan hangs on tax rates or employer regulations. Those aren’t the real triggers. Vivek takes it a step further, and relates it to higher education: “Reward university researchers …

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Roppel Re-Elected AHFC Board Chair

January 27, 2011

ANCHORAGE, AK–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) –  Alaska Housing Finance Corporation (AHFC) board of directors, at its annual meeting, re-elected Frank Roppel of Wrangell to serve as the board chair. Governor Murkowski appointed Roppel to the board of directors in July 2003, and he has served as chair since that time. Roppel previously served on the Alaska State Housing Authority (ASHA) and AHFC boards for 12 years in the ’70s and ’80s. He retired from Alaska Pulp Corporation in 2001. Roppel is also chairman of the Alaska Gasline Development Corporation, a subsidiary of AHFC which is dealing with construction of a natural gas line to provide gas to the major population centers of Alaska.

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Internet Pioneers Join Forces to Launch Online and Mobile Payment Service Jumio

January 27, 2011

Most Promising Payment Start-Up of 2011 Gathers World’s Leading Internet Experts From Google, Amazon and NASA

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AbTech Industries Welcomes Jonathan Thatcher as Chief Operating Officer

January 27, 2011

SCOTTSDALE, AZ–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) – Abtech Holdings, Inc. ( OTCBB : ABHD ) is pleased to announce the appointment of Jonathan Thatcher, former Director and President of Exeter Life Sciences, Inc., as the new Chief Operating Officer of AbTech Industries, Inc. (“AbTech”). As C.O.O., Thatcher will be responsible for AbTech’s day-to-day operations, financial planning and management. Additionally, he will support strategic planning and participate in acquisition and growth opportunities to support AbTech’s overall business objectives.

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ProEnergy Adds High Voltage Division

January 27, 2011

SEDALIA, MO–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) – Energy Parts Solutions, a division of ProEnergy Services, recently announced the addition of President Bill Mars. Bill will lead the efforts in expanding the company’s new High Voltage Service and Equipment division.

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ProEnergy Adds High Voltage Division

January 27, 2011

SEDALIA, MO–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) – Energy Parts Solutions, a division of ProEnergy Services, recently announced the addition of President Bill Mars. Bill will lead the efforts in expanding the company’s new High Voltage Service and Equipment division.

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China Food Services, Corp. Announces New Directors

January 27, 2011

BEIJING–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) – China Food Services, Corp. http://www.chinafoodservices.com ( PINKSHEETS : GDHI ), a food and beverage distribution services business operating in China, announce the appointment of Mr. Hua “Jack” Chih-Yang and Mr. Gao “Eddie” Zhiqiang to the board of directors of China Food Services.

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Brazil Gold Appoints Veteran Mining Exec to Advisory Board

January 27, 2011

Jose Pinedo Brings Latin American Legal and Due Diligence Expertise

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Brazil Gold Appoints Veteran Mining Exec to Advisory Board

January 27, 2011

Jose Pinedo Brings Latin American Legal and Due Diligence Expertise

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Former IBM Rational and CA Executives Join Serena Software Management and Sales Team to Drive Worldwide Growth of Orchestrated ALM

January 27, 2011

New Appointments Demonstrate Strength of Serena’s Vision for Future of Application Development

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Distinguished Technology Executive and Former EDS Officer Joins CommerceTel Board of Directors

January 27, 2011

SAN DIEGO, CA–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) – CommerceTel Corporation ( OTCBB : MFON ), an award-winning provider of proprietary mobile marketing technologies and solutions, is pleased to announce the appointment of John R. Harris to its Board of Directors.

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Gen. Wesley K. Clark Joins Torvec Board

January 27, 2011

ROCHESTER, NY–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) – Richard A. Kaplan, Chief Executive Officer of Torvec, Inc. ( OTCBB : TOVC ), announced today that General Wesley K. Clark – (U.S. Army Retired) was elected to the Company’s board of directors, effective January 28, 2011.

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DotNetNuke Corp. Names Revenue Building Veteran Bob Cortale to Senior Vice President of Sales

January 27, 2011

SAN MATEO, CA–(Marketwire – January 27, 2011) –    DotNetNuke Corp. , the company behind the most widely adopted Web Content Management Platform for Microsoft .NET, today announced that Bob Cortale has joined the company as Senior Vice President of Sales, where he will be responsible for building, developing and managing a world-class global sales force and product support organization.

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Big Brokers Make Moves To Grab Bigger Piece of CRE Capital Business

January 27, 2011

Global real estate service providers and major competitors Jones Lang LaSalle (NYSE: JLL) and CB Richard Ellis (NYSE: CBG) announced moves to further expand their respective roles in the commercial real estate capital markets. Jones Lang LaSalle said it is buying the commercial lending and servicing group of Atlanta-based Primary Capital Advisors. The pending acquisition will enable JLL to offer expanded loan servicing and lending capabilities…

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Leading Tween Virtual World Woozworld Names David Weiser as New Chief Marketing Officer

January 27, 2011

Interactive Entertainment Industry Vet Brings More Than 20 Years’ Experience

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Trading with Fib Levels

January 27, 2011

Trading with Fib Levels

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An Intraday GBP/JPY Descending Triangle is Creating Scalping Environment

January 27, 2011

An Intraday GBP/JPY Descending Triangle is Creating Scalping Environment

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EUR/USD: Trading the Advanced U.S. 4Q GDP Report

January 27, 2011

EUR/USD: Trading the Advanced U.S. 4Q GDP Report

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Australian Power And Gas (ASX:APK) Reports Over A$100m First-Half Revenue, 200,000 Customers, And Reaffirms FY11 Guidance

January 27, 2011

Australian Power And Gas (ASX:APK) Reports Over A$100m First-Half Revenue, 200,000 Customers, And Reaffirms FY11 Guidance

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Equatorial Resources Limited (ASX:EQX) 22km Of New Strike Potential Identified At Badondo Iron Project

January 27, 2011

Equatorial Resources Limited (ASX:EQX) 22km Of New Strike Potential Identified At Badondo Iron Project

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ADX Energy Limited (ASX:ADX) Tunisian Operational Update: Sidi Dhaher Well On Track For February Spud

January 27, 2011

ADX Energy Limited (ASX:ADX) Tunisian Operational Update: Sidi Dhaher Well On Track For February Spud

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A Perfect Technical and Fundamental Scenario for a EURUSD Reversal

January 27, 2011

A Perfect Technical and Fundamental Scenario for a EURUSD Reversal

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Dow hovers near 12,000, While S&P Flirts with the 1,300 Milestone

January 27, 2011

Dow hovers near 12,000, While S&P Flirts with the 1,300 Milestone

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Dovish Fed Tone Keeps U.S. Dollar Near 2 Month Low

January 27, 2011

Dovish Fed Tone Keeps U.S. Dollar Near 2 Month Low

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Novartis Q4 profit, sales of pandemic flu vaccine down

January 27, 2011

Novartis Q4 profit, sales of pandemic flu vaccine down

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Spanish government, unions sign preliminary agreement

January 27, 2011

Spanish government, unions sign preliminary agreement

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Japanese exports up 13 per cent in December

January 27, 2011

Japanese exports up 13 per cent in December

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Hyundai Net Profit Up 77.8% in 2010

January 27, 2011

Hyundai Net Profit Up 77.8% in 2010

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Japan’s 2010 Trade Surplus Up 250%

January 27, 2011

Japan’s 2010 Trade Surplus Up 250%

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