December 2011

RIM Turns Down Amazon Merger Advancements: Sources

December 21, 2011

Research In Motion Ltd. (RIM-T12.90-0.47-3.52%) has turned down takeover overtures from Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN-Q182.523.191.78%) and other potential buyers because the BlackBerry maker prefers to fix its problems on its own, according to people with knowledge of the situation.

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Japan to buy US F35 fighters for air force

December 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Saudi Press Agency) Japan selected the Lockheed Martin F-35 stealth fighter on Tuesday to replace aging jets in its air force and bolster its defense capability, the Associated Press …

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Woman gets back stolen urn with mother’s ashes

December 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) A New Hampshire woman who took an urn of her mother’s ashes to bingo games for good luck until it was stolen has gotten it back. Diane Bozzi says the urn was stolen from …

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Man calls in threats to avoid urine tests

December 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) Police say an Alaska man twice called in bomb threats to a probation office to avoid urine tests. Anchorage police spokesman Lt. Dave Parker says that 44-year-old Bryant …

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Model of jet fighter missing from Dutch museum

December 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) A large model of an American jetfighter has mysteriously disappeared from a small Dutch museum and its owners are hoping pranksters rather than scrap metal thieves are …

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French police hunt armed croissant robber

December 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) French police said Tuesday they were on the hunt for a man in his forties who has held up a series of bakeries in Paris suburbs to steal croissants and other baked goods. …

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Santa arrested for threatening Christmas tree vendor

December 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) A French Santa spent several hours in custody after threatening a Christmas tree seller who set up shop next to his grotto in Bordeaux, an official said Monday. The …

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Disgraced duke’s figure moved in Madrid wax museum

December 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) Spain’s royal family has lost one of its members, at least in Madrid’s Wax Museum. The museum has moved the figure of the Duke of Palma, who is married to King Juan …

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British sprinter raises 2012 sponsorship on eBay

December 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) A top British sprinter desperate to run in his home London Olympics next year has raised £32,550 ($50,500) in sponsorship by auctioning himself on eBay. James Ellington …

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Small plane lands safely on busy street

December 21, 2011

(MENAFN – Jordan Times) The pilot of a single-engine plane managed to safely land on a major street in the northern Colorado city of Longmont after having engine problems. John Pritchard of …

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Nike Q2 profit rises 3% to USD469m

December 21, 2011

(MENAFN) Nike’s Inc. CEO, Mark Parker, said that since higher demand for the firm’s products compensated a rise in costs, in the second quarter, profit went up 3 percent to USD469 million, from …

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Barbara Boxer’s Transportation Bill Would Drop Environmental Criteria In Much-Touted TIFIA Loan Program

December 21, 2011

NEW YORK — A bipartisan transportation bill sponsored by Sen. Barbara Boxer would dramatically expand a federal program that finances “innovative” transportation projects. But in order to secure the expansion of the Transportation Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act (TIFIA), Boxer had to introduce new rules that would strip away current criteria favoring environmentally sustainable projects, progressive transportation advocates say. Boxer’s transportation bill sailed through the Senate Environment and Public Works committee in an 18-0 bipartisan vote on Nov. 9. But critics say it came at a price for the TIFIA program, which would no longer give environmentally sustainable projects a leg up in the selection process. “At a time when the nation’s transportation system is starved for funds and there is a consensus that dollars need to be spent more wisely, it is outrageous that the one program that would be massively increased would no longer try to deliver the best bang for each buck,” said Phineas Baxandall, a senior analyst at US PIRG, a nonprofit public interest advocacy group. TIFIA has recently been touted by both Democrats and Republicans as an example of how to prop up infrastructure financing in a time of budget deficits. About $110 million a year in federal funds is turned into $1.1 billion in federally-supported loans, which then go a third of the way toward leveraging loans from private sources. Because TIFIA is a loan program, projects have to find some way of paying back the federal government. The revenue stream is most often a toll or other “user fee,” but sometimes it’s something like Los Angele’s 2008 Measure R sales tax . Although TIFIA is run through the Federal Highway Administration, its loans have been used to support everything from toll roads in Texas to light rail in Denver. The only problem: At a time when private financing is hard to come by, everybody wants in on the action. This year there were 34 requests for $14 billion in loans — 14 times more than what the program could support. A lot of cities and states wound up empty-handed. So when the Senate’s Environment and Public Works Committee met to hammer out a deal on a new transportation bill, consensus was quickly reached on vastly expanding the size of TIFIA’s annual funding from $122 million to $1 billion a year. That money could in turn support up to $10 billion in federal loans. It was something of a breakthrough in the transportation world. For years Congress has patched together short-term extensions of the transportation bill. The EPW proposal sponsored by Boxer offers a way out — and, she hopes, a way to finance LA Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s dream of building 30 years of transportation projects in a decade. But the bipartisan consensus on the transportation bill appears to have come at a price. One apparent sticking point for Senate Republicans, led by outspoken climate change denier James Inhofe (R-Okla.), the ranking member on EPW, was the 20 percent weight TIFIA puts on “the extent to which the project helps maintain or protect the environment.” That criterion, introduced by the Obama administration, gives mass transit a leg up against toll roads and highways. But it’s anathema to critics like the libertarian Reason Foundation’s Robert Poole, who argued that the emphasis on environmental sustainability “has apparently led to toll projects that add highway capacity getting aced out.” “Senator Boxer’s working in an environment where she’s got to get support from people on the other side of the aisle, and these are the types of issues she’s hammering out,” said Raffi Hamparian, director for federal affairs at the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Phineas Baxandall, a senior analyst at U.S. PIRG, said he thinks Boxer may have cut a bad deal. He argues that doing away with TIFIA’s selection criteria means the U.S. Department of Transportation will be forced to give money to any transportation project that meets bare-bones financial eligibility requirements. Under this rolling selection process, when the $1 billion annual federal credit support is gone, it’s gone for the year. Toll roads, backed by private investors looking to make a buck off of “public-private partnerships,” will be first in line, he argued, since they have plans that are “just ready to go off the shelf.” “Those companies are going to likely get the lion’s share of TIFIA funds. And those companies have a lot of power on Wall Street and make a lot of campaign donations, and just have a lot of power,” he said. Los Angeles hopes it will get some of that TIFIA money. Not so fast, Baxandall said. “Places like Atlanta and L.A. are hoping that the new bounty of TIFIA will allow them to finance public transit expansions, but they are likely to find the money already claimed by private toll road projects in places like Florida and Texas.” Others aren’t so sure that mass transit and toll roads are mutually exclusive. Although the selection criterion will be gone, environmentally friendly transportation secretaries will still find ways to make sure sustainable projects head to the front of the line, they argue. A spokesperson who is a staff member of the Senate EPW committee said, “This provision continues to enable the secretary to ensure that each project receives careful consideration. We believe that strong projects will succeed in the new program.” Roy Kienitz, who was until recently the Department of Transportation’s under secretary for policy, said he thought the program’s vastly expanded size might mean there will be plenty of space for all of the projects that meet the eligibility requirements. Although TIFIA was vastly oversubscribed this year, Kienitz said, not all of the applications were truly eligible. “Of the people who are applying, I would say at least half of them fall into the criteria of either a) they just don’t have a realistic idea of a project for a whole host of reasons or b) they may have realistic criteria for a project, but they just haven’t done their homework.” Hamparian, of LA’s Metro, is sure that his city’s project, at the least, will win if TIFIA is expanded. “We’re pretty confident that we’re in a good position to present our project for consideration for TIFIA loans,” he said. “Our bottom line is that we’ve worked very closely with Senator Boxer and we’re very supportive of the final product.” Boxer’s bill is still far from passage. More Senate committees will take a shot at the transportation bill soon, and then the GOP-controlled House will also have its say. Some observers predict the long-awaited arrival of a new transportation bill could simply get pushed off for an additional year in favor of another short-term extension.

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Kamala Isn’t Having It

December 21, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO — California’s attorney general is suing mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, demanding that the government-backed companies respond to questions in a state investigation. Attorney General Kamala Harris filed the lawsuit Tuesday in San Francisco Superior Court. Fannie and Freddie own some 60 percent of the state’s mortgages, and Harris is investigating the agencies’ involvement in thousands of foreclosed properties where they served as landlords. She also wants to find out what role the agencies played in selling or marketing mortgage-backed securities. The lawsuit demands a response to 51 investigative subpoenas, including a list of all of Fannie and Freddie’s vacant homes and the potential law enforcement hazards on those properties. Some 768,330 residential mortgages have been foreclosed on in California from January 2007 to June of this year.

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Japan’s CB keeps interest rate near 0%

December 21, 2011

(MENAFN) Japan’s central bank said that it decided to keep its interest rate between 0 percent and 0.1 percent, due to global economic conditions and the appreciation of the yen, reported AP. The …

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Amazon Reportedly Weighed Purchase Of BlackBerry Maker

December 21, 2011

By Nadia Damouni (Reuters) – Research In Motion Ltd has turned down takeover overtures from Amazon.com Inc and other potential buyers because the BlackBerry maker prefers to fix its problems on its own, according to people with knowledge of the situation. Amazon hired an investment bank this summer to review a potential merger with RIM, but it did not make a formal offer, said one of the sources. It is not clear whether informal discussions between Amazon and RIM ever led to specific price talk, or who else had approached RIM about a takeover. RIM’s board wants co-chief executives Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie to focus on trying to turn around the business through the launch of new phones, better use of assets such as BlackBerry Messaging and restructuring, two sources said. They did not want to be identified as the discussions are private. RIM and Amazon declined to comment. While RIM could strike technology licensing deals and other kinds of commercial partnerships to boost revenue, an outright sale or joint venture is not on the cards for now, they said. “They have had approaches from folks who have wanted to have discussions,” said one head of technology investment banking at a Wall Street bank. “The issue is it is hard to find a value that makes sense with a falling knife.” Battered shares in the Canadian smartphone maker jumped 10 percent in after-hours Nasdaq trade after the Reuters report. RIM’s market value has plunged 77 percent in the last 12 months to about $6.8 billion following a series of disappointing quarterly reports, delayed phone launches, weak sales of the PlayBook tablet and other missteps. The shares tumbled last week on weaker-than-expected quarterly results and the announcement of a delay in the launch of the new BlackBerry 10 phones. A RIM investor who declined to be named said the company was now essentially on the block. “This story puts RIM in play, because shareholders are going to put it in play,” the U.S.-based investor said. “It’s over. This is now a company where the activists are in charge.” Activist shareholder Jaguar Financial Corp has called for a sale of RIM as a whole or in separate parts, such as the handset business, the network services operation, or the patent portfolio. But RIM’s management has told interested parties they do not want to sell or break up the company at this juncture, the sources told Reuters. After last week’s news, the board instructed the co-CEOs to set aside any options for a sale, one person briefed on the situation said. “Selling the company or an economic joint venture is probably not in the cards right now,” said the source. “Until you stabilize the platform, people are going to be very nervous about spending $10 billion or more.” Some potential corporate and private equity suitors are holding out for RIM’s valuation to fall further, people familiar with the matter said. AMAZON, RIM STILL IN DISCUSSIONS Amazon and RIM are still discussing ways to expand their commercial ties, which currently include a service launched last year to make Amazon’s music catalog available to some BlackBerry users, according to the sources. Amazon launched the Kindle Fire tablet in November, which, along with the content the company can package with it, is seen as a potentially formidable contender to Apple Inc’s iPad and iTunes store. Amazon does not make smartphones. As for RIM, it feels it could better leverage its assets, such as the BBM instant messaging and the network operation centers that allow for messages to be processed, the sources said. RIM could also look at licensing out its QNX operating system after the late 2012 launch of BlackBerry 10, which will be the first smartphones using that software, to give handset makers an alternative to Google’s Android operating system. DISTRACTION RIM’s co-CEOs have spent months listening to ideas from investment bankers, strategic parties and private equity firms. These discussions are now viewed as distracting for management, sources briefed on the situation said. One of them said the board has backed both Lazaridis and Balsillie, but is of the view RIM needs to develop a “deeper bench” of executives. Spurred by RIM’s share drop and Google Inc’s $12.5 billion bid for Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc in August, Wall Street bankers have tried to pitch RIM to other mobile phone makers, including Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and HTC Corp, in recent months. But HTC and Samsung already have licensing agreements with Google’s Android and did not see the value in tying up with BlackBerry, people familiar with the companies said. Samsung and HTC declined to comment. (Additional reporting by Soyoung Kim in New York and Alastair Sharp in Toronto; Editing by Tiffany Wu, Paritosh Bansal and Andre Grenon, Phil Berlowitz)

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Dan Solin: The Big Flaw in 401(k) Reform

December 21, 2011

Here is the harsh reality: 401(k) plans are a false crutch for employees. They simply don’t work, if you define “work” as providing funds that will permit retirement with dignity — if at all. According to Fidelity Investments , average balances in 401(k) plans as of March 31, 2011 were $74,900. Those 55 and older had saved $233,800 on average. Given increased life expectancy, it is understandable that another study found that 61 percent of those surveyed said they were more scared of outliving their assets than they were of dying. Things are not so grim for those who “service” the burgeoning 401(k) industry. These fees abound. It would take an actuary to figure them out. They include plan administration fees, investment fees and individual service fees. The big kahuna are the investment services fees which can include sales charges (also known as loads and or commissions) and management fees. The U.S. Department of Labor summarized these fees here . There has been a lot of focus on fees. Studies have shown that plans with lower fees typically have higher average account balances. The Department of Labor has issued a new rule to improve the transparency of fees and expenses to employees in 401(k) plans. This rule (Labor Regulation 408(b)2) goes into effect April 12, 2012 and requires plan providers to disclose all fees to employers. Employers will be required to demonstrate they have a process in place to evaluate these fees and disclose them to employees. While this is a good start, it will do little to increase average balances in 401(k) plans. The typical plan offers a mish-mash consisting primarily of actively managed mutual funds (where the fund manager attempts to beat a designated benchmark, like the S& P 500 index) with a few index funds and target date retirement funds tossed into the mix. Employees are left to put together a suitable risk adjusted portfolio. Many have no idea how to do so. Here’s what real reform would look like: Every plan should be required to have a minimum of five risk adjusted, globally diversified portfolios (ranging from conservative to aggressive), consisting solely of low management fee stock and bond index funds. Employees would take a short risk capacity survey and select the portfolio suitable for them; Investment advisers to 401(k) plans should be required to state in writing that they are “3(38) ERISA investment fiduciaries”, which means they can have no conflicts of interest. They would accept 100% of the liability for the selection and monitoring of the investment options in the plan. These advisers would be required to provide investment advice to all participants to be sure they have chosen a portfolio suitable for their investment objectives and capacity for risk. These simple reforms would radically improve the expected returns of plan participants. The underlying fallacy in current efforts at 401(k) plan reform is that employees are capable of making intelligent investment choices when presented with a dizzying array of mostly poor investment options. I recently spent time with a group of nurse anesthetists whose plan we advise. It never occurred to me to ask them to give me ten needles and five choices of anesthesia (some good and some dangerous) and let me handle their next patient. Why do we assume employees can be skilled investment advisers? We need reform that makes the process of making investment selections in 401(k) plans foolproof. Current reform just doesn’t cut it. Dan Solin is a senior vice president of Index Funds Advisors. He is the New York Times bestselling author of The Smartest Investment Book You’ll Ever Read, The Smartest 401(k) Book You’ll Ever Read, The Smartest Retirement Book You’ll Ever Read and The Smartest Portfolio You’ll Ever Own. His new book, The Smartest Money Book You’ll Ever Read, will be available December 27, 2011.The views set forth in this blog are the opinions of the author alone and may not represent the views of any firm or entity with whom he is affiliated. The data, information, and content on this blog are for information, education, and non-commercial purposes only. Returns from index funds do not represent the performance of any investment advisory firm. The information on this blog does not involve the rendering of personalized investment advice and is limited to the dissemination of opinions on investing. No reader should construe these opinions as an offer of advisory services. Readers who require investment advice should retain the services of a competent investment professional. The information on this blog is not an offer to buy or sell, or a solicitation of any offer to buy or sell any securities or class of securities mentioned herein. Furthermore, the information on this blog should not be construed as an offer of advisory services. Please note that the author does not recommend specific securities nor is he responsible for comments made by persons posting on this blog.

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Justice Department Probes $3.6 Billion Verizon Deal

December 20, 2011

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Justice Department is probing Verizon Wireless’ multi-billion dollar deal to buy wireless airwaves from cable operators and let them resell its mobile service, the department said on Tuesday. Under the agreement, which was reached on December 2, Verizon Wireless will pay top U.S. cable providers $3.6 billion for the spectrum. The review follows the Justice Department’s review and opposition to AT&T Inc’s $39 billion plan to buy T-Mobile USA – a deal AT&T gave up on this week. The agreement, with a consortium that includes Comcast Corp and Time Warner Cable Inc, puts new pressure on Verizon rivals Sprint Nextel Corp and AT&T, which still needs more spectrum after ending its T-Mobile USA bid. “My understanding is that it’s the deal that we’re looking at. We’re looking at the proposed deal,” said Justice Department spokeswoman Gina Talamona, who declined to outline any specific concerns the Justice Department had. The deal was problematic because of the marketing arrangement, according to an antitrust source who is a veteran of the Justice Department. “Comcast has decided not to compete and is handing spectrum over to Verizon,” the source said. “They decided to halt the buildout. Instead of us seeing facilities-based competition, it appears that we’re seeing collaboration.” Comcast declined comment, although a source close to the transaction said that paperwork for the antitrust review had not yet been filed. A spokesman for Verizon said his company had not received any information on which it could comment. Both Verizon Wireless and AT&T, the No. 1 and No. 2 U.S. mobile providers, have said they need more spectrum to support increased consumer demand for videos and other services that soak up bandwidth. Verizon Wireless is owned by Verizon Communications Inc and Vodafone Group Plc. T-Mobile USA is owned by Germany’s Deutsche Telekom AG. (Reporting By Diane Bartz; editing by Andre Grenon)

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Teary-Eyed Success: Polluting Plant Relocates After Making Community Sick

December 20, 2011

The South Los Angeles 28th Street Elementary School community has been fighting for eight years to close down the polluting plant that was making their kids and teachers sick. On Monday, teary-eyed but triumphant, families and teachers joined Councilwoman Jan Perry to announced that they have won the fight: Palace Plating, the chrome plating facility that the city found responsible for releasing toxins, is relocating. Topping the list of toxins found in the South Los Angeles school’s sewer system was Chromium 6, the same cancer-causing toxin that Erin Brockovich fought against in Pacific Gas & Electric town, Hexley, California. Mexican-immigrant Martha Sanchez knew nothing about Chromium 6 when she and her two children moved to South Los Angeles in 1999. Soon after enrolling at 28th Street Elementary, Sanchez’s children were suffering from rashes, nosebleeds, nausea and asthma. Sanchez’s daughter told Intersections South LA , “I would get sick really easily. My nose was bleeding every night and I would vomit almost every day.” As the Los Angeles Times reports , Sanchez began knocking on her neighbors’ doors to see if other children were experiencing the same problems. She explained, “I knew if I left the problem in someone else’s hands, it would not get resolved.” By 2003, Sanchez had learned English and become chapter president of the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment (ACCE). Over the next few years, repeated environmental violations by the plant were found, and, in 2007, the city sued the plant alleging it was still not in compliance. ACCE organizer Peter Kuhns confirmed with the Huffington Post that the city and company settled the suit last month, on the terms that the plant shut down by Dec. 31 and pay $750,000 in restitution to the Los Angeles Unified School District. Kuhns said over the phone that, “this is a huge, long-fought-after victory.” He also has high hopes for what the move could mean for the rest of the country, saying “We hope this campaign serves a model for relocating similar facilities to more appropriate places, not near homes or schools, and for passing more regulatory laws.” According to Kuhn, it was no accident that the pollution-spewing facility was allowed to stand next to a school for so long. “Study after study has shown that these types of facilities are disproportionately located in low-income communities of color,” he asserted. “It’s clear they’re allowed to operate because these communities don’t have political influence.” In addition to the resolved criminal lawsuit, a civil lawsuit is pending, with 50 teachers, parents, students and community individuals alleging toxic exposure. Vincent Vallin Bennett, trial lawyer for the case, told HuffPost that the plaintiffs report continuous odors coming from the plant, burning sensations in the throat and eyes, asthma and an “enormous amount of nosebleeds.” Other plaintiffs allege cancer, death and birth deformities connected to released toxins. One woman, who taught at 28th Street and is a plaintiff in Bennett’s case, gave birth to three children with disabilities. Her eldest daughter, who was developmentally disabled, died last year at 18 years old. “The state of California has already declared Palace Plating a cancer cluster,” Bennett said. “We have a trial scheduled for August 2012, and we plan to finally win financial restitution for these families who have gone through horrifying experiences.”

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Jackie Barrie: Putting the Social Into Social Media

December 20, 2011

When you meet people in real life, whether in the boardroom, at a conference or in a networking meeting, you (hopefully) don’t walk in wearing a sandwich board or pushing a trolleyful of products and shouting ‘BUY MY STUFF!’ Equally, you don’t behave the same way as you would at home having a pillow-fight with your kids, or curled up on the sofa with your beloved or playing charades at your best friend’s dinner party. When you are representing your business, you exhibit a certain set of professional behaviors. However, you might also chat about the weather, or the journey or the football or what was on TV last night. Basically, you are sharing stuff about your life, views and feelings with other people, some of whom may be strangers. You’re usually trying to make them like you, know you, trust you and understand you. And when people like you, they buy from your business or recommend you to their friends. Mind you, part of your objective may be to filter out those who are not on your wavelength. Relax and let them go somewhere else. They’d only be hassles anyway. So, what does that have to do with your social media content strategy? Well, if social media are media that are social, i.e. media that allow for interaction, you can take the same approach. Simply share the same kind of chit-chat online as you would when face-to-face. In my own content strategy I’m quite clear about what’s appropriate to include and what’s not. Because my brand is about helping small and medium businesses to communicate better and so sell more, I’ll write about marketing, networking, social media and business writing. I’ll also link to general interest photos or videos, wordy humor and examples of great (or appalling) graphic design. [Aside: More people will click to read the world's worst whatever than the world's best whatever.] I might mention new software that I recommend, some local news to attract local followers, or an event I’ve attended to attract fellow attendees. I won’t usually engage in discussions about topics such as politics, climate change or sport, as that would dilute my brand. Note that for security reasons I draw a line between sharing my personality online and sharing my personal life. Some people draw the line in a different place. For example, they’ll talk about their kids or where they’re going that night. For me, I’ll only post a photo or write online about someone else with their permission (although I might say more face-to-face, especially over a glass of something chilled!) and, for security reasons, I’ll only tell people where I’ve been rather than where I’m going. Mixed in with status updates about business, such as press releases, hints and tips, useful links and testimonials, you can share your personal information in the hope of turning strangers into friends, fans and followers. And that’s what makes social media social.

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Union Blasts TSA Officials As ‘Arrogant,’ ‘Autocratic’

December 20, 2011

WASHINGTON — The labor union representing workers for the Transportation Security Administration blasted the agency’s top leaders Tuesday, describing their approach to labor relations as “arrogant,” “top-down” and “autocratic” as the two sides try to settle on their first contract. “I think I understand the same frustration the flying public has shown to TSA management,” said John Gage, president of the American Federation of Government Employees, which won an election to represent TSA officers this summer. “We think there should be a house-cleaning.” Speaking at a press conference at the AFL-CIO, Gage accused TSA head and Obama appointee John Pistole of refusing to give workers a fair system for settling disciplinary disputes. Gage said that rather than give workers a grievance process adjudicated by an impartial third party, the agency has instead offered only to institute grievance processes that are overseen by TSA itself, tilting the scales in management’s favor. He went so far as compare the TSA proposals to the anti-worker measures brought forth by Republicans in Ohio and Wisconsin this year. “These folks, it seems, know very little about labor relations,” said Gage, describing a third-party grievance process as fundamental. “[Pistole] has set up a company policy that makes us a company union. We won’t be a company union.” “TSA is committed to ensuring that all employees are given full due process rights and looks forward to continued discussions with AFGE related to these important issues,” a TSA spokesman said in email. Overseen by the Department of Homeland Security, the TSA had been a non-union workforce since its inception after 9-11, until Pistole authorized a union vote earlier this year. Though a government-employee union like the AFGE cannot bargain directly over wages, it can negotiate over certain workplace processes like the pay-raise and grievance systems. The union and the agency have been negotiating unsuccessfully for about six months, and the sides don’t appear close to an agreement. Gage accused the agency of trying to set up a grievance process that would conceal low morale among workers and dysfunction among management. “Don’t think this is about homeland security,” he said. “It’s about hiding a management structure that’s incompetent.” Union advocates have long described a TSA officer’s job as low-paying and thankless. The roughly 45,000 officers tend to start out around $28,000 in salary and max out around $36,000, according to several TSA workers who were at the AFL-CIO on Tuesday. And due to the sometimes invasive searches they’re tasked with carrying out, the agents are often the target of public anger. Many travelers bristled earlier this year when the agency announced that travelers would have the option of undergoing either a full-body scan or physical pat-down from a TSA officer. “It’s very stressful, and we’re on the front lines,” one pro-union security officer previously told HuffPost . “A lot of people think it’s a brand new agency, but it’s not. We need to move on and improve the system.” This article has been updated to include a comment from a TSA spokesman.

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Cutting Federal Deficit Via Building Sales Doesn’t Sit Well With Homeless Advocates

December 20, 2011

In Boston, an 11-story building near the city’s financial district beckons homeless veterans with a range of assistance programs, including medical attention, job training and temporary apartments, all under one roof. The building used to belong to the Veterans Administration, but today it’s home to the New England Center for Homeless Veterans, a nonprofit agency that moved in not long after the passage of a landmark 1987 law aimed at increasing the availability of services and facilities to help homeless people. Under that law, the McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act , nonprofit organizations that serve the homeless have the right to take over unneeded federal buildings before the government puts them up for sale. In the near quarter century since the adoption of the act, nonprofits have claimed about 500 former federal buildings. But now the benefits of that law are colliding headlong into the contemporary realities of the federal budget deficit . The Obama administration is seeking to accelerate the sale of unused federal buildings in a push to generate $15 billion in revenue and savings over the next decade. Homeless relief organizations say a swifter sales process will bypass their shot at claiming buildings, limiting their ability to help vulnerable Americans just as stubbornly high unemployment and an extended foreclosure crisis puts growing numbers of people on the street. “This idea is billed as a common-sense no-brainer, a painless way to reduce the debt,” said Jeremy Rosen, policy director at the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty, an advocacy group. “But that’s false — utterly false — when the needs are so great.” By seemingly any measure, homelessness is growing in the United States, while afflicting an increasingly broad slice of the country’s population. This week, a study released by the the National Center on Family Homelessness found that 1.6 million American children — or one in 45 — are homeless. On any given night, more than 100,000 military veterans are homeless , according to the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans. Finding affordable space for homeless service organizations to expand their programs and offer shelter has always been a challenge. These days, with demand for services soaring, agencies can scarcely afford to lose opportunities to claim free buildings or warehouses, Rosen said. “What we’re seeing is kids around the country living in cars and families living week to week in motels,” Rosen said. “This is a time when we should really be focused on finding a way to make these properties work for families.” Under the traditional system that has governed implementation of the McKinney-Vento Act, federal agencies identify unused and unneeded properties every three months. The Department of Housing and Urban Development then evaluates which may be suitable for use as a homeless shelter, free clinic, food pantry or other community space. The Department of Health and Human Services then takes applications from organizations seeking to claim the properties free of charge. The process has proven slow and cumbersome, giving federal agencies a disincentive to put properties on the list, said Danny Werfel, federal controller in the White House Office of Management and Budget. As a result many properties have languished, sitting vacant and unused on valuable land. A heating plant occupying a two-acre parcel of land in the high-rent Georgetown section of Washington, D.C., has sat unused for more than a decade, Werfel said. The plant sits near a small, privately-owned townhouse that recently fetched $900,000. The administration now has the heating plant on the market, aiming to turn its considerable value into cash that can be used to trim the federal deficit. “What’s happened with that facility is exactly what we want to prevent,” Werfel said. “We don’t want there to be a situation in which a property of that size and value is sitting on our books.” President Obama last summer ordered federal agencies to sell federal buildings and reduce energy expenses in order to save $3 billion. Since then federal agencies have generated $1.5 billion in savings through such sales, according to the White House. Now the administration is seeking to formalize an accelerated process of real estate sales, but they’re contending with legal challenges from homeless advocates. Under the approach the administration has proposed a board of experts would identify the country’s most valuable surplus properties. Much like the commission that identifies which military bases are to close , the board would send a list of valuable properties to Congress to be fast-tracked for sale. Congress would have the option to vote for or against the entire package, eliminating the possibility that a congressman or vocal constituent could lobby for one particular property or another to remain in the federal government’s hands or be sold, Werfel said. The White House also claims that its proposal would also likely expand the list of properties available to nonprofit agencies. To implement the President’s plan, cut through the red tape and politics that continue to hinder efforts to get rid of unneeded federal property across the country, legislative action is required, said Moria Mack, an Office of Management and Budget spokesperson. Congress is expected to vote on at least one bill in January. If the law does not change, a case pending in a Washington, D.C., federal court could could also prevent the administration from implementing a new approach. Nonprofit agencies, schools and other organizations would lose their first dibs on these properties, but could still put in applications for the buildings, with the federal government ultimately deciding whether to sell or give away the assets. The federal surplus building inventory currently includes 1.1 million properties , Werfel said. So far this fiscal year, the government has sold 63 properties, earning $34 million in the process. In the last four fiscal years, homeless service agencies have successfully vied for 9 buildings. In Boston, the New England Center for Homeless Veterans points to its own mammoth building as proof that the old system has played a crucial role. The nonprofit serves over 1,000 veterans each year and right now is transforming more of its emergency bed space into temporary apartments. “We understand now that’s what a lot of our veterans need to truly stabilize their lives,” said Andy McCawley, the organization’s president and CEO. “We’re fortunate because we have the space to make that change.” This post has been updated to include comment from Moria Mack, a spokesperson from the Office of Management and Budget.

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Report: BofA To Lose Most From Overdraft Fee Rules

December 20, 2011

Try as they may, Bank of America just can’t catch a break. In the latest BofA bad news, it appears that the bank has the most to lose from new fee rules aimed at limiting charges to consumers, according to a research note from Credit Suisse cited by Forbes. A new rule that requires banks get consent before charging customers overdraft fees will cost BofA $3.3 billion per year, compared to the $1.4 billion that Wells Fargo will lose per year and the $1.077 billion JPMorgan Chase stands to lose, the research note finds. The research note comes on the heels of news that BofA’s shares fell below $5 for the first time in years. The slump caps a year of fails for the company including a proposed , but ultimately scrapped , $5 debit card fee that drew criticisms from ordinary consumers, lawmakers and even President Obama . After BofA initially announced the fee, the company’s CEO Brian Moynihan defended it, saying that the bank “has a right to make a profit.” Other bank industry officials expressed similar sentiments including Frank Keating, the president of the American Banker Association, who said that financial reform rules forced banks’ hands in passing off charges to customers. BofA has already lost millions due to some of its fee practices. The bank paid $410 million in May to settle a lawsuit with consumers who claimed the bank charged them excessive overdraft fees. Wells Fargo and Citibank have faced similar suits. Though the research note finds that BofA is slated to lose more than most from the new overdraft rules, banks are still on track to net $16 billion in overdraft fees this year, Businessweek reported in October. That’s down 16 percent from their 2009 peak, thanks in large part to the new regulations. Still, customers are getting hit hard by fees; the average debit card fee remains $35, the same as it was last year , according to the Consumer Federation of America.

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John Fullerton: Getting Serious About the Euro

December 20, 2011

All eyes are trained on Europe these days. While I look on, I can’t help but yearn for the day when financial markets and financial institutions are a little less interconnected, and a lot more resilient. Whether such a system lies in the future, or only in the past, is open to question. It’s clear that the factious nature of the nation state, the shape of the financial system, the depth of debt in which the nations are locked, and the seriousness of the ecological crisis we all face make the project of global economic interdependence difficult. Europe needs to do three things if the dream of a single European currency is to be salvaged and wide-spread depression is to be avoided. First, although near-term austerity will only make matters worse, long-run fiscal discipline must be restored country-by-country. While the agreement this week is no doubt a step in the right direction, it’s hard to hold out much hope that this time really will be different. The deficits hampering many European countries are as much the direct result of the bank-induced financial collapse, and structural demographic and cultural challenges, as they are the consequence of government fiscal irresponsibility. It is hard to imagine true centralized fiscal control when national interests are at conflict with the perceived European objectives dictated by a powerful minority, perhaps a minority of one. It is conceivable, and in my judgment likely, that this is one of the many fatal flaws of the project. Countries will regret giving up the resilience provided by sovereign currencies and central banks that can control domestic monetary policy. Even if we assume for a moment there is a “fiscal fix,” there needs to be a credible recovery plan beyond near-term austerity. Second, a healthy banking sector is a prerequisite for a sustainable economic union. European banks are dangerously undercapitalized with large, unrealized losses weakening their real capital positions as the market well understands. In a vote of no confidence, the stock market values large banks at less than half their book value. Large European banks run reckless liquidity mismatches, with American money market funds funding their speculation in long-dated and now illiquid European sovereign bonds. What value is that adding to the real economy anyway? Regulators should force the banks to raise equity, diluting current shareholders as they rightly should, rather than allow the banks to simply dump assets into the already weak credit markets. If the banks fail to raise the equity, regulators should declare them insolvent, nationalize them, replace management, and sell off the parts. This will allow capital to form around new banking enterprises that are appropriately scaled and have the boring utility-like business models we need, focused on domestic and regional recovery (rather than Jon Corzine style financial speculation). Third, if the U.S. experience is any guide, the European Central Bank will need to amend its charter and get busy pumping liquidity into the system. As the chart below nicely illustrates, capital is important but liquidity is what saved the system. My apologies to the source, I simply cannot find where it came from. This of course leaves the risk of future inflation, but at least the two dominant currency blocks would remain more in sync. It is worth noting how treacherous the times we live in are when the smartest economists in the world cannot agree on whether the greatest near-term threat is inflation or deflation. A viable alternative exists to flooding the markets with liquidity and supporting sovereign debt prices to save the banks, namely, a debt jubilee of some sort, like the one being negotiated with Greece. Doing this quickly would require a banking system recapitalization that is truly hard to fathom. A lot of those US money market funds that have invested in French bank commercial paper would receive devalued bank stock in return. But history and corporate experience show that without a realistic “balance sheet restructuring,” the boot of excessive debt on the necks of society will preclude economic recovery. At the same time, risks of social unrest continue to grow due to the unfair hardship imposed on ordinary citizens for the mistakes and frauds — see Italian and Greek debt-hiding financing schemes with JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs — of their governments, and the irresponsibility of their bankers. Social unrest can quickly explode debt to GDP ratios far faster than austerity can fix them. One additional cloud lingers on the horizon, ironically discussed in Durban, South Africa, at the COP17 climate conference last week during the European summit yet drawing far less attention from the mainstream press. The shrinking biocapacity of our planet (its ability to provide a growing and more prosperous population, cheap energy, fresh water, and food, and to absorb our increasing carbon waste) is rushing in on us like a freight train. According to the latest Global Carbon Project report, C02 emissions jumped by a record 5.9% in 2010, after dropping 1.9% in 2009 as a result of the global recession. The absolute increase in 2010 of a half-billion tons of extra carbon dumped into the atmosphere is the largest ever. Source: Climate Progress As we watch our European friends struggle to negotiate collaboratively, in fits and starts, toward a new shared prosperity in the midst of crushing economic pressure, and as we watch the United Kingdom disengage over the fear that its “national interests” (i.e., its fiscal dependency on the city of London as the speculation capital of Europe) will be challenged, we had better turn our attention to reality. The looming biocapacity deficits, which will not hit countries equally, will impose a whole new meaning on the word austerity. This will dampen economic growth in the aggregate, and will usher in seismic shifts across industries. We should resolve our unsustainable debt burdens sooner rather than later, and use the crisis in Europe to pave the way for a transition to a more sustainable economy. Along the way we may learn vital lessons on the challenges of managing sovereign interests in an interdependent world.

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Scott Brown: House GOP Would Rather Play Politics Than Find Solutions

December 20, 2011

Sen. Scott Brown (R- Mass.) denounced House Republicans for rejecting a payroll tax cut deal on Tuesday, and accused his colleagues of putting politics before the needs of American families. “It angers me that House Republicans would rather continue playing politics than find solutions,” Brown said in a statement released shortly after the House voted to block the bipartisan bill. “Their actions will hurt American families and be detrimental to our fragile economy. We are Americans first; now is not the time for drawing lines in the sand.” The Senate bill would have prevented the payroll tax cut from expiring on January 1, 2012 by ensuring a two-month extension. Republicans in the House opposed to the bill argued in favor of a year-long extension or no extension at all, claiming that approving a bill for just two months would create uncertainty. Brown’s criticism followed harsh comments he made on Monday, when he called the GOP’s refusal to compromise “irresponsible and wrong.” Brown — who is up for re-election in 2012 — is preparing for what will likely be a challenging race against Democratic Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren. A recent poll spelled good news for Warren, showing her leading Brown 49 to 42 .

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Dave Johnson: NLRB Fight Shows How Far We’ve Fallen

December 20, 2011

Here is how far we have fallen: Republicans and big corporations are going to extremes, even threatening to shut down entire agencies of the government, just to keep people from knowing what their rights are . They are “investigating” the NLRB for enforcing the laws that cover employees and employers. They are pledging to block any appointees in order to prevent the agency from operating. How far have we fallen, if the fight is over just letting people know what their rights are? How much power do the big corporations have now, if these wealthy giants of the 1% feel they can even challenge our right to know what the rules are , and an entire political party exists to help them do this? The Latest Fight The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) is trying to require big corporations to put up a poster informing their employees of their rights under the law. The big corporate, anti-union organizations are fighting this as hard as they can. They are suing in court to block the rule, while Republicans in the House and Senate are using every trick in the book to stop the NLRB requirement, right down to holding Congressional investigations of the agency, and threatening to defund it, and to shut it down by crippling its Board. What The Poster Says Here are the things that the Republicans and the big corporations that fund them are fighting to keep working people from knowing: Under the law you have the right to: Organize a union to negotiate with your employer concerning your wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment. Form, join or assist a union. Bargain collectively through representatives of employees’ own choosing for a contract with your employer setting your wages, benefits, hours, and other working conditions. Discuss your wages and benefits and other terms and conditions of employment or union organizing with your co-workers or a union. Take action with one or more co-workers to improve your working conditions by, among other means, raising work-related complaints directly with your employer or with a government agency, and seeking help from a union. Strike and picket, depending on the purpose or means of the strike or the picketing. Choose not to do any of these activities, including joining or remaining a member of a union. Under the law it is illegal for your employer to: Prohibit you from talking about or soliciting for a union during non-work time, such as before or after work or during break times; or from distributing union literature during non-work time, in non-work areas, such as parking lots or break rooms. Question you about your union support or activities in a manner that discourages you from engaging in that activity. Fire, demote, or transfer you, or reduce your hours or change your shift, or otherwise take adverse action against you, or threaten to take any of these actions, because you join or support a union, or because you engage in concerted activity for mutual aid and protection, or because you choose not to engage in any such activity. Threaten to close your workplace if workers choose a union to represent them. Promise or grant promotions, pay raises, or other benefits to discourage or encourage union support. Prohibit you from wearing union hats, buttons, t-shirts, and pins in the workplace except under special circumstances. Spy on or videotape peaceful union activities and gatherings or pretend to do so. Under the law, it is illegal for a union or for the union that represents you in bargaining with your employer to: Threaten or coerce you in order to gain your support for the union. Refuse to process a grievance because you have criticized union officials or because you are not a member of the union. Use or maintain discriminatory standards or procedures in making job referrals from a hiring hall. Cause or attempt to cause an employer to discriminate against you because of your union-related activity. Take adverse action against you because you have not joined or do not support the union. Click here to see the poster . This latest fight is because the NLRB is trying to require companies to put up posters that tell workers what their rights are. That’s it. That’s what the poster does. Companies are trying to block this and are fighting with everything they have. The Lawsuit Big corporate groups have sued to block the poster requirement, saying the NLRB doesn’t have “the authority” to require them mto put up this poster, and claiming that it violates the “free speech rights” of big corporations if employees learn what their own rights are. Seriously, that’s the claim. How far have we fallen, when big corporations feel they can challenge government’s right to even inform citizens of what the laws say? They have good reason to believe that conservative-dominated courts will rule that this violates the “free speech” of non-sentient entities called corporations, over the rights of citizens! The Hill: Business group challenges NLRB over union poster rule , Business groups continue to press the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) over its proposed rule to have employers post notices informing workers of their organizing rights. On Monday, the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) will present oral arguments in federal court for their lawsuit against the proposed regulation. [. . .] Trauger said NAM filed the lawsuit because it believes only Congress has the authority to authorize the notice rule. Further, they believe it impinges on employers’ free speech rights. “We believe the NLRB does not have the authority to require all employers to post the notice in their workplace,” [NAM VP] Trauger said. Other groups are suing the NLRB over the rule, including the National Federation of Independent Business and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Crippling The NLRB At the end of this year the NLRB will not have enough board members to operate, effectively shutting down the agency. The Supreme Court, in another 5-4 decision (yes, the same 5 corporate-conservative-movement sponsored judges that always rule in favor of the big corporations), ruled in 2010 that the NLRB cannot operate without at least 3 members on the Board. This was part of an ongoing strategy to keep the Board from operating effectively, allowing illegal anti-union efforts to continue. Republicans in the Senate have since filibustered to block the Board from having enough members. Last year President Obama made two recess appointments to the Board to keep it operating, so Republicans have prevented the Senate from going into recess since then, vowing to to anything necessary to continue to block any new appointments that could keep the NLRB in operation and enforcing the law. The Washington Post explains, in Obama nominates 2 for labor board, despite GOP threat to block any appointments to the agency , President Barack Obama on Wednesday announced plans to nominate two Democrats to the National Labor Relations Board, despite a Republican threat to block any appointments to the agency. Once again: “A Republican threat to block any appointments to the agency.” The Republicans in the Senate are blocking any appointments, in order to force the agency that enforces the rules to stop doing its job. Meanwhile, in the House, Republicans are engaged in a different tactic to fight the NLRB. The Center for American Progress Action Fund explains, in House Republican Attacks on the National Labor Relations Board Hurt All Workers , House Republicans are using every tool available to them–including their budget, regulatory, and legislative-oversight powers–to wage a coordinated attack on workers’ rights by trying to eviscerate the National Labor Relations Board, or NLRB. … Over the past year, Republicans in Congress voted to slash funding for the NLRB, attempted to block enforcement of existing worker-protection laws, and even threatened to shut down parts of the federal government in order to advance their goals. The the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee is “investigating” the NLRB, to see if the Board is helping employees who are in unions, demanding the Board turn over documents to the committee by Jan. 3. The Stakes A New York Times op-ed, Crippling the Right to Organize , explains the stakes, UNLESS something changes in Washington, American workers will, on New Year’s Day, effectively lose their right to be represented by a union. … Workers illegally fired for union organizing won’t be reinstated with back pay. Employers will be able to get away with interfering with union elections. Perhaps most important, employers won’t have to recognize unions despite a majority vote by workers. Without the board to enforce labor law, most companies will not voluntarily deal with unions. What You Can Do Download and print the NLRB poster , and out it up at your workplace. Download and print this “Unions 101″ sheet , and leave copies at your workplace for people to find and read. Send people to visit the AFL-CIO’s A Quick Study of How Unions Help Workers Win a Voice on the Job online.

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Frank Farwell: Entrepreneurs’ Memoirs: A Gold Mine of Information for Self-Employed Wannabes

December 20, 2011

This holiday season give your college- or graduate-school-age children a few entrepreneurial memoirs. They provide a low-cost, entertaining mentorship for the self-employed-in-the-making. Huh? Give books to a young person in this techno-age holiday season? Are you kidding? Young people don’t read books anymore, do they? Not so fast. Entrepreneurial memoirs, whether they are displayed as printed books or on electronic tablets, are a treasure chest of information and entertainment. They fit the bill perfectly for all work-for-yourself wannabes on your holiday list, for which they can serve as on-call advisors. At around $15 per softcover book, you can buy a mountain of knowledge for under $75-$100. You’ll be providing immensely valuable information and a virtual mentor for your wannabe entrepreneur. That’s why these books are more than just books, and perhaps the best business education value on the planet, and why they make great gifts this holiday season. Check out 20 Biographies Every Serious Entrepreneur Should Read , from OnlineUniversities.com. Of the 20 recommended titles, you can learn about the formative years of Bill Gates and Microsoft in Hard Drive ; of Henry Ford and the auto giant that bears his name, in the biography, The People’s Tycoon ; and about Wal-Mart’s founder Sam Walton, in Made in America . The list also provides great behind-the-scenes books by entrepreneurs and companies you’ve never heard of, but whose stories are full of timeless, rich lessons: Raising Eyebrows , by Dal LaMagna, and Launch Fever , by Tim Taylor, are at the top of the list, followed by timeless character stories such as Mark Twain’s Ignorance, Confidence, and Filthy Rich Friends , and Ben Franklin: America’s Original Entrepreneur , a modern translation of Franklin’s autobiography that serves as an inspiration to today’s innovators. And of course there is a tale from the outspoken and brashly successful mega-entrepreneur, Richard Branson, in his invaluable and entertaining book, Business Stripped Bare . From motivation to how to (and how not to), these titles, taken as a whole offer a lifetime of lessons for today’s entrepreneurs in the making. Google 20 Biographies Every Serious Entrepreneur Should Read and go to Amazon and dial up a few titles that strike your fancy. You’ll see another few dozen books from the entrepreneurial genre pop up in the “You-might-also-be-interested-in” window. Many are outright fun reading, some are gems, and nearly all of them openly discuss what was learned from various failures. If you’re a business student on holiday, browsing a few of these entrepreneurial memoirs may teach you more real-life lessons than a semester of expensive classes. Besides learning how to work for yourself, you can reacquaint yourself with the pleasure of reading, which can develop minds in ways an I-Pad cannot. You could argue that case histories in business school courses serve the role of educating by reading. But, let’s be honest: Those Harvard Business School and other B-school case histories we hear so much about and sometimes read are…well, usually quite boring. Well-structured and carefully prepared, yes. But lifelike and fun to learn by? I don’t think so. Many of them could put the worst ADD kid in the class to sleep in 20 minutes flat. Instead, take a look at the more captivating, real-life sagas of entrepreneurs battling in the trenches, building profitable businesses, overcoming countless mishaps and bad luck–and selling out for a bundle down the road (and starting another company, or giving to charity with some of the proceeds). This genre of book brings to life the journey and lessons real-life business start-ups encounter. Some of them read like a novel yet teach like an experienced B-school professor. I’d wager they are the best way for your university or college aged child to learn the landscape of business, regardless of what his or her major and career objectives may be. You can peer inside the amazing minds and lives of Steve Jobs or Bill Gates, or ride the exciting roller coaster of a start-up company and entrepreneur no one’s ever have heard of. Either way, these biographies and memoirs invite readers into the culture of entrepreneurship, make learning fun, and prepare young people for the business face of our world. Your kids may end up in non-business professions, but they’ll be cashing a paycheck from someone’s business most of their lives. They’ll thank you some day for introducing them to a category of reading that shows the inner working of the capitalist system we are all part of and reliant upon. While you’re at it, throw in a few non-business titles that teach the landscape of business better than any classroom or DVD. My favorites are James Michener’s Hawaii , and Gay Telese’s Unto the Sons . Neither of these is touted as business books, but in them you’ll learn the bedrock of family life and apprenticeship that leads to great business dynasties and enduring, specialized skill businesses years later. Another recently published book along these lines is Mathew Parker’s The Sugar Barons , which tells the boom and bust history of the Caribbean islands and how the production of sugar catapulted England to world dominance of the oceans and world trade. The list of entrepreneurial memoirs is long and rich, and their lessons timeless and invaluable. So this holiday season, do your techno-crazy business family and friends a favor: Buy them a book. An old-fashioned, no-bells-and-whistles, have-to-engage-the-brain book. Better yet, buy them a good entrepreneurial memoir. They’ll learn how businesses are birthed and built, and how families, communities and economies are enriched in the process. They’ll also learn how, in today’s complex web of capitalism, they can best fit in. Frank Farwell is founder and past president of the WinterSilks catalog. His book, “Chicken Lips, Wheeler-Dealer, and the Beady-Eyed M.B.A.: An Entrepreneur’s Wild Adventures on the New Silk Road,” details his experiences as a start-up entrepreneur, and was nominated for the Financial Times/Goldman Sachs Best Business Book of the Year Award. Its Appendix lists the attributes of an ideal product; the book is available from Amazon, or frankfarwell.com.

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Welcome To Amazon Town

December 20, 2011

FERNLEY, Nev.—Behind the piles of smiley-faced Amazon.com Inc. boxes arriving on doorsteps this holiday season are workers like Ray and Sarann Williams.

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American National Announces Executive Promotions

December 20, 2011

DANVILLE, VA–(Marketwire – Dec 20, 2011) – American National Bankshares Inc. ( NASDAQ : AMNB ) and its banking subsidiary, American National Bank and Trust Company, has announced executive promotions following action taken today by the Board of Directors of the Bank and the holding company.

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EV Energy Partners Announces Promotion of Mark Houser to President and CEO

December 20, 2011

HOUSTON, TX–(Marketwire – Dec 20, 2011) – EV Energy Partners, L.P. ( NASDAQ : EVEP ) today announced that Mark A. Houser has been promoted to President and Chief Executive Officer, effective January 1, 2012. John B. Walker, Chairman and CEO since EVEP was founded in September 2006, will remain Executive Chairman.

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Andrea Sittig-Rolf: When Sleigh Bells Ring, Opportunity Knocks…

December 20, 2011

What’s on your wish list this year? If you’re a small business owner or sales professional, it may be a new client. If you’re a job seeker, you’ve probably added a new job to the list. Luckily, around the holiday season there’s always an uptick in networking, which is one of the best ways to land a new client or a new job. If you’re like most social Americans, you’ll likely have the opportunity to attend a few holiday parties this season, so why not turn the opportunity to party into opportunities for you, your business, and your career? Before attending holiday parties this year, you’ll want to be prepared for the opportunities that may present themselves. First, you already know the importance of having a business card that identifies who you are, but what about having a business card that actually promotes who you are? Here are some suggestions on how to create such a business card: STEP 1: It should be double-sided. On the front, include your name, contact information, expertise (i.e. job title), and headshot. Even if you’re unemployed, your former job title can easily convey your expertise. Your headshot is necessary so that when following up with the people you meet, they can easily put a name with a face and remember who you are. STEP 2: On the back, include your 5-word personal mission statement. To do this, simply complete the statement: “I help companies . . .” The fourth word should be a verb, the fifth word a noun, and you want to sum up the result you create for companies, without revealing how you get to that result. Here are a couple of examples of personal mission statements: “I help companies increase profits.” “I help companies drive sales.” “I help companies cut costs.” “I help companies increase productivity.” “I help companies increase efficiency.” Remember, networking is a little like dating… you want to create a little mystery and leave them wanting more! The party is just the first step to the opportunity. It’s an introduction. You don’t, want to go into your whole life history and spell out the details of your resume; you just want to quickly give people an idea of what you can do for them, give them your card and say, “Maybe we can talk more about this some time.” Remember, it’s a party so you don’t want to be overbearing, but you do want to take advantage of the new contacts you’ll meet during the holiday season. This special type of business card acts as a tool that will promote you when you’re not around. With the short, to-the-point mission statement on the back of the card, you’ll create curiosity that will motivate the people you meet to follow up and schedule face-to-face meetings to learn even more about how you can help them. Try this tip this holiday season and raise your glass to the new opportunities that will come your way in the new year as a result!

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Payroll Tax Cut Bill: House Rejects Senate Extension

December 20, 2011

WASHINGTON — House Republicans on Tuesday rejected a Senate bill that would have prevented a payroll tax cut from expiring on New Year’s Day, saying they wanted a year-long extension or no extension at all. House Republicans accomplished that with a convoluted motion to reject a Senate compromise that would have extended the 2 percent payroll tax break for two months, voting 229 to 193 to send the measure to a conference committee. Seven Republicans voted with Democrats, and no Democrats crossed the aisle. They were Reps. Charles Bass (R-N.H.), Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), Chris Gibson (R-N.Y.), Jaime Herrera Beutler (R-Wash.), Tim Johnson (R-Ill.), Walter Jones (R-N.C.) and Frank Wolf (R-Va.). Senate leaders also were hoping for a year-long deal, but sources told The Huffington Post that Republicans and Democrats could not agree on how to fund about half of the $200 billion needed to pay for the bill for a full year. The measure would also extend unemployment insurance benefits and would prevent a 27 percent cut to Medicare payments to doctors with a “doc fix” provision. Those also expire Jan. 1. So instead, the Senate voted 89 to 10 on Saturday for a two-month extension to buy time to bridge the gap. The upper chamber then recessed, apparently confident that Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) had the go ahead from House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) to cut a deal. But Boehner’s members rebelled against the bill, even with 39 Senate Republicans backing it, and scrambled to oppose it. At first, the GOP had set a vote on the bill, but late Monday changed it to an unusual motion to reject the Senate compromise. If they had held the first vote, and it had passed, the bill would have gone straight to President Obama. But under the new version, House leaders accomplished their goal of sending the bill to a conference committee instead, even though Senate and House Democratic leaders insist they will not appoint members to the committee . Democrats argued that the parliamentary gymnastics were just a way to prevent a clear vote on a bill that they believe would pass. “The Republican majority in this House of Representatives is refusing — it is refusing to allow a vote in this House on the Senate bipartisan compromise,” said Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.). “What are they so afraid of? It is very clear that the Republican leadership is afraid that the same bipartisanship that took place in the Senate will take place right here in the House… otherwise we’d have a vote on it.” Republican leaders insisted they were preventing a vote to pass the Senate deal because approving a bill for just two months creates uncertainty. They cited a payroll business trade organization that said a two-month extension is problematic for electronically processed payrolls. And they contended that the sides were “90 percent” of the way to a deal, even though $100 billion separated the GOP and Democrats in the Senate. The original version of the House bill also adds a string of “poison pill” riders on top of the differences over funding. Democrats initially wanted to tax the rich to pay for the bill, but dropped that surtax in the compromise. “We need to come together in a responsible manner to find common ground,” said House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.). Cantor and others argued that the Senate had only been interested in going on vacation. “We stand ready to work over the holidays to get this done,” said Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas). “That’s the question, are you willing to work over the holidays, or are you not willing to work over the holidays,” Hensarling said, suggesting that Democrats need to watch Schoolhouse Rock to figure out how Congress’ conference committees work. Democrats didn’t buy it, and none budged to the GOP side, even though at least a handful usually do. “If you’re so sure of your argument, why not vote on the Senate bill?” asked Rep, Sander Levin (D-Mich.), the top Democrat on the Ways and Means Committee. “Because everything you said is a smokescreen,” he said. The House could still hold a separate vote directly on the Senate bill if GOP leaders relent. However, they seemed intent on trying to make the president or Democratic leaders blink on their position, and restart negotiations. Democrats insisted they would not budge, leaving the Senate bill as the only standing proposal. “It is unconscionable that Speaker Boehner is blocking a bipartisan compromise that would protect middle-class families from the tax hike looming on January 1st – a compromise that Senator McConnell and I negotiated at Speaker Boehner’s own request,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said in a statement just after the vote. “I would implore Speaker Boehner to listen to the sensible Senate Republicans and courageous House Republicans who are calling on him take the responsible path, and pass the Senate’s bipartisan compromise,” Reid added. “I have been trying to negotiate a yearlong extension with Republicans for weeks, and I am happy to continue doing so as soon as the House of Representatives passes the bipartisan compromise to protect middle-class families, but not before then.” President Obama stood by the Senate’s position, speaking from the White House soon after the vote. “Let’s be clear: Right now the bipartisan compromise that was reached on Saturday is the only viable way to prevent a tax hike on Jan. 1. It’s the only one,” Obama said, arguing that the Senate put aside disagreements on the remaining issues and “went ahead and did the right thing.” “I need the speaker and House Republicans to do the same. Put politics aside, put aside issues where there are fundamental disagreements, and come together on something we agree on. And let’s not play brinksmanship. The American people are weary of it.” Moments after Obama spoke, Boehner said no, adding that Obama should call the Senate back in. “I need the president to help out,” Boehner said, when informed that the president had asked for his assistance. “Our House GOP negotiators are here and are ready to work,” he added. “Now it’s up to the president to show real leadership.” “We have done our job,” Boehner said, and named conferees to the as-yet uncalled conference. To tell Congress how you feel about the bill, weigh in via PopVox.com Nine Poison Pills In The GOP Payroll Tax Extension Bill:

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Barbara Ficarra: Companies Curb Health Care Costs With Penalties and Rewards for Employees

December 20, 2011

If you’re a smoker your company could be penalizing you by tapping into your wallet. How do companies curb health care costs? Do healthier employees lead to increased productivity? Several progressive companies believe so and have committed to providing employees with programs to help engage them in a healthier lifestyle. As part of the incentives to lead a healthier lifestyle some employers have instituted a penalty and reward system tied to the companies’ benefits. For example, smokers may incur a significant surcharge to the cost of their health insurance plan while nonsmokers could see a reduction in cost. According to an article in the New York Times , a growing numbers of companies including Home Depot, PepsiCo, Safeway, Lowe’s and General Mills are seeking higher premiums from some workers who smoke, similar to Wal-Mart’s addition of a $2,000-a-year surcharge for some smokers. Escalating health care costs In an era of economic turmoil and escalating health care costs, companies are seeking ways to curtail spending while increasing productivity. In 2011, total health care costs per active employee, on average, are expected to reach $11,176, up from $10,387 in 2010. Employers pay 36% more for health care and employees contribute over 45% more than they did five years ago. With pressures mounting for companies to curtail spending and for employees faced with uncertainties, “a decline in health could begin a vicious cycle of increasing out-of-pocket health care costs and stress,” reports Towers Watson . Employers may be facing an unproductive workforce with employee absenteeism. Employees turning away from their health It’s troubling that employees are strained to the point of turning away from and managing their own health. According to Towers Watson, 59% of employees say that managing their health is a top priority; this is down 10 percentage points since 2008. Penalties more than doubled Additionally, according to Towers Watson’s 2011/2012 Staying@Work Report, employers use of penalties more than doubled from 2009 to 2011, rising from 8% to 19%, and is expected to double again by 2012 when 38% of employers plan to have penalties in place. It’s reported that 12% of employers currently reward or penalize their employees based on outcomes. For example, target BMI or cholesterol levels, and an additional 16% are planning this tactic based approach for 2012. “Employers today view health and productivity programs as integral to their overall health benefit strategy and efforts to control health care cost inflation,” said Shelly Wolff, senior health care consultant at Towers Watson,” in a press release statemen t. As companies strive to maximize employee participation in these programs, they are opting for both rewards and penalties. And many are finding these approaches are producing significant results.” While the overall health and well-being of employees is a goal of employers, the main goal is to curb health costs. Employers are frantic to find a way to curb health care costs. “As companies strive to maximize employee participation in these programs, they are opting for both rewards and penalties,” said Wolfe in the press release. Wal-Mart and the other emerging companies feel that charging employees to pay more for unhealthy behaviors such as smoking, is the answer. Is it the answer? Whether it is the answer or not, companies are initiating this tactic. I asked Matthew Holt, founder of TheHealthCareBlog and co-founder of Health 2.0 how he feels about companies like Wal-Mart initiating an out-of-pocket surcharge to employees who smoke. “It’s OK to charge smokers a small amount more so long as there is a real program to help them quit, and that amount isn’t enough to cause hardship or to prevent them from accepting offered employer based health insurance,” he said. If employees don’t stop smoking, they will pay financially for it. [Part 3 addresses the topic of smoking .] Companies are committed to curbing health care costs; however, they are devoted to promoting healthier behaviors, either through penalties or rewards. Reed Abelson reporter for The New York Times writes: “Many programs that ask employees to meet certain health targets offer rewards in the form of lower premiums. At Indiana University Health, a large health system, employees who do not smoke and achieve a certain body mass index, or B.M.I., can receive up to $720 a year off the cost of their insurance. “It’s all about the results,” said Sheriee Ladd, a senior vice president in human resources at the system.” Source: The New York Times “One in four employees would not participate in their company’s wellness program without a financial incentive.” It’s interesting that according to the research by Towers Watson, they found “more than one-quarter of respondents say they must have a financial incentive in order to participate in a wellness program.” But as many as 23% of the respondents say “financial incentives aren’t important and their health isn’t a top priority.” Incentives According to the chart below, “$100.00 in cash” is preferred over vouchers and sweepstakes which would encourage employees to participate in a wellness program. However when the incentive offered is a “One in 10 chance to win a $1,000 airline voucher,” most preferred $100.00 reduction in annual premium. Encouraging wellness may prove more of a challenge for a workforce that seems resistant to a lifestyle change. [Source: Towers Watson] [Part 2 focuses on technology companies tapping into social networking strategies; perhaps these innovative companies can encourage individuals to manage their health and well-being.] Which of the following would most encourage you to participate in a wellness program? [Please see table here.] – Towers Watson Direct financial incentives are valued more than riskier alternatives [Source: Towers Watson] Conclusion Companies are committed to curbing health care costs. Enticing employees with cash savings and incentives is currently gaining traction, but is that sufficient enough to encourage lifestyle changes or do companies need to supplement this with supportive programs for employees? While we agree that engaging employees to take control of their health and lifestyles is a good idea there are tools available to aid and assist a healthier lifestyle which we will explore in my next article. [This is the first of a three part series focusing on behavioral economics. Part 1 delves into the role of the employer offering rewards and penalties to its employees and how incentives are important for the employee for wellness programs. Part 2 focuses on innovative technology companies diving into social media strategies, applications and science of behavior change and social influence. Part 3 lends itself to the individual, focusing on the issue of smoking with a Q&A, since some employers have initiated a surcharge.] Your turn We would love for you to share your thoughts in the comment section below. How do you feel about companies implementing a surcharge for smokers’? Do you agree with companies penalizing employees in order to cut costs? What type of incentive would encourage you to participate in a wellness program? Tell us about your companies’ wellness program. As always, thank you for your valuable time. Follow Barbara on Twitter Visit Barbara on Facebook Like Healthin30 Connect with Barbara on Linkedin Resources: Shaping Health Care Strategy – Employer Survey on Purchasing Value in Health Care -Towers Watson The Smokers’ Surcharge – The New York Times Employees Perspectives on Health Care – Part II Employee Engagement – Towers Watson Use of Rewards and Penalties to Drive Employee Health Jumps During 2012 “Employers Encourage Healthy Behaviors By Hitting Your Wallet” Originally published on HealthWorksCollective by Barbara Ficarra, RN, BSN, MPA

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Restaurant Stock Declines May Portend Economic Doom

December 20, 2011

An article in Bloomberg today argues that restaurant stocks , which have seen some steep declines in recent months, may be the “canary in the coal mine” of the economy, portending economic doom down the line. The piece notes that the Bloomberg U.S. Full Service Restaurant Index, a proprietary measure of the performance of restaurant stocks, has fallen 17% in the past five months, while the S&P 500 has dropped just 9%. The author’s theory is that consumers may be cutting back on high-end restaurant spending because their pocketbooks are just starting to be hit anew — and that the full brunt of their pullback in spending is yet to come. But when it does, as the argument goes, the economy could fall back into recession. This strain of thought positions full service restaurant spending as a leading indicator of overall economic prosperity. It’s an argument that has some merit, but it’s not foolproof. For starters, the chief example cited in the piece is Darden Restaurants, the company behind Olive Garden and Red Lobster — but Darden has been underperforming the S&P for some time , indicating that its issue may have as much to do with consumers’ breadstick fatigue as with any underlying trends in the industry. Moreover, even if it’s true that full service has taken a hit, other parts of the restaurant biosphere have remained strong — namely, quick service . Sure, fast food’s strength doesn’t necessarily bode well for overall consumer optimism. But the fast food companies whose stocks have done well, like Chipotle and Panera , have been relatively high end. So it’s possible that the restaurant trends we’re seeing have more to do with consumers’ shifts away from long, heavy meals and toward quick, snacky but delicious bites from places like Smashburger . Then again, maybe we’re just headed towards apocalypse. 2012 is coming, after all.

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Sony Handheld Sales Fall Short Of Rival

December 20, 2011

TOKYO (Reuters) – Sony Corp shifted 321,400 units of the PlayStation Vita, its new handheld game device, in Japan in its first two days on sale, research firm Enterbrain said on Tuesday. That falls short of rival Nintendo Co Ltd’s 3DS, which sold 371,000 in its first two days, Enterbrain said. Sales of the 3DS, however, slumped weeks after the launch, forcing Nintendo to slash the price and crushing its profit outlook for the year. Sony seeks to avoid suffering a similar fate by offering a big slate of 24 games for the Vita at launch. But executives admit the real challenge will come in maintaining sales over the next few years. Fans in Japan lined up to be among the first to pick up the latest portable game device, which kicked off a global rollout on Saturday. The Vita will be launched in the United States and Europe in February. Sony’s previous portable game device, the PS Portable, sold 166,000 units on the first day of sales in 2004. It has sold 73 million units to date. (Reporting by Isabel Reynolds; Editing by Chris Gallagher)

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Steven Strauss: Government Action Is Key to Driving Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Economic Growth

December 20, 2011

A general theme of the Republican presidential debates is that government is a waster of resources, net destroyer of jobs, and stifler of innovation. Interestingly, these same candidates praise the private sector’s innovation and creativity (e.g., Apple, Facebook, Google, etc.). The GOP ignores that most of our excellence in scientific innovation is attributable to government support for basic research. Currently 66% of research at American universities is funded by local, state and federal governments, with most of these funds coming from the federal government. This pattern has been consistent since WW II (1). University research should be funded by the government — it is the classic public good. It produces broad benefits to society that no one institution can capture, has very uncertain benefits and has very long time spans, hence it is not suitable for private sector support. Not one of the technology companies listed above (and many others not mentioned) would exist without the Internet. The Internet (and its predecessors) was originally a creation of the federal government. It was supported for the first 20+ years by our federal government before becoming commercially viable. It was ‘incubated’ with government support at our universities, with private sector involvement coming relatively late. Yet, I can’t think of a single time during the debates when any Republican presidential candidate acknowledged the federal government’s highly important role in funding predecessors of the Internet (and other key technologies) — when the private sector lacked the vision and initiative to make these long-term investments. Aside from anecdotal evidence, we have statistical evidence for university’s key role in economic development: The concentration of great universities in a nation is extraordinarily closely related to its economic competitiveness. It is closely associated with economic output per capita ([correlation] .74), total factor productivity (.77) and overall competitiveness (.71) based on the Global Competitiveness Index … ‘Extraordinary Value of Great Universities’, Atlantic Magazine , Richard Florida, 2011 Higher education is an American strength. List 1 (below) names the world’s top 10 science and engineering universities. All these schools are American and most are State universities. I don’t know of any other global industry where all top 10 institutions are American. Significantly, the one global industry (higher education) where America retains unquestioned dominance is driven by Government and the not-for-profit sector. America’s higher education and research sector is something all Americans can take pride in. But particular credit goes to the many politicians and bureaucrats who had the courage, and insight, to fund truly long-term projects and technologies too uncertain for a risk-averse private sector. However, as with any success, we face challenges. Just when our political leadership lacks the courage and vision to make long-term investments in science — other countries seek to copy our success by improving their performance in higher education. For example, it has been widely noted that China aims to significantly improve its higher education sector. On one level, we should applaud and support China’s pushing back the frontiers of knowledge because it benefits everyone (e.g., if a Chinese university cures cancer, we all benefit). On another level, if we, as Americans, want to: (a) continue to be a frontrunner in scientific knowledge and innovation, and (b) benefit (economically and strategically) from being at the cutting edge of innovation (e.g., jobs and other benefits that would result from curing cancer ) — we will have to ‘up our game’. I am happy to report that the spirit of creative government and willingness to make long-term commitments is still alive in America. Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg recently created Applied Science NYC, a city-sponsored initiative to build a new top tier science and engineering campus in NYC. This week it was announced that Cornell University with Technion was selected for the initiative. According to Mayor Bloomberg , the campus is expected to spawn 600 new companies over 3 decades creating at least 30,000 permanent jobs This initiative is a renewed commitment to the belief that government can, and must, play a creative role — as convener and provider of seed-funding — to keep America growing. Let me know if you agree about the role of government and universities in economic growth. More importantly, let me know whether you feel the Republican presidential contenders (e.g., Romney, Gingrich, et al) have shown any real vision about America’s economic future. I look forward to your comments. List 1: Academic Ranking of World Universities in Engineering/Technology and Computer Sciences – 2010 (Source: www.arwu.org) 1. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) 2. Stanford University 3. University of California, Berkeley 4. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign 5. Georgia Institute of Technology 6. The University of Texas at Austin 7. University of Michigan – Ann Arbor 8. Carnegie Mellon University 9. Pennsylvania State University – University Park 10. University of California, San Diego & University of Southern California (tied). About the Author: Steven Strauss was founding Managing Director of the Center for Economic Transformation at the New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC). He is an Advanced Leadership Fellow at Harvard University for 2011-2012. He has a Ph.D. in Management from Yale University. Follow him on Twitter @steven_strauss. Disclosure: Applied Sciences NYC was one of the initiatives Steven Strauss helped to create while working at NYCEDC. Sources: (1) National Science Foundation, National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics. 2011. Academic Research and Development Expenditures: Fiscal Year 2009 . Detailed Statistical Tables NSF 11-313. Arlington, VA. Available at http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/nsf11313/.

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The New Blue Collar: Temporary Work, Lasting Poverty And The American Warehouse

December 20, 2011

JOLIET, Ill., and FONTANA, Calif. — Like nearly everyone else in Joliet without good job prospects, Uylonda Dickerson eventually found herself at the warehouses looking for work. “I just needed a job,” the 38-year-old single mother says. Dickerson came to the right place. Over the past decade and a half, Joliet and its Will County environs southwest of Chicago have grown into one of the world’s largest inland ports, a major hub for dry goods destined for retail stores throughout the Midwest and beyond. With all the new distribution centers have come thousands of jobs at “logistics” companies — firms that specialize in moving goods for retailers and manufacturers. Many of these jobs are filled by Joliet’s African Americans, like Dickerson, and immigrants from Mexico and elsewhere in Latin America. But many bottom-rung workers like Dickerson don’t work for the big corporations whose products are in the warehouses, or even the logistics companies that run them. They go to work for labor agencies that supply workers like Dickerson. Last year, she found work as a temp through one of the myriad staffing agencies that serve big-box retailers and their contractors. Thanks largely to the warehousing boom, Will County has developed one of the highest concentrations of temp agencies in the Midwest. Dickerson, grateful to have even a temp job, was taken on as a “lumper” — someone who schleps boxes to and from trailers all day long. As unglamorous as her duties were, Dickerson became an essential cog in one of the most sophisticated machines in modern commerce — the Walmart supply chain. Walmart , the world’s largest private-sector employer, had contracted a company called Schneider Logistics to operate the warehouse. And Schneider, in turn, had its own contracts with staffing companies that supplied workers. The experience would change the way Dickerson saw the retail industry — particularly during the frenetic run-up to the holidays, when workers are under tremendous pressure to get products out the door and into stores. “I don’t think people know what the people in those warehouses have to go through to get them their stuff in those stores,” Dickerson says. “If you don’t work in a warehouse, you don’t know.” Dickerson quickly discovered that the work wasn’t easy, if there was any work at all. Each morning she showed up at her warehouse, she wasn’t sure whether she’d be assigned a trailer and earn a day’s pay. She says there were days that she and many temps were told simply to go home, without pay, since there wasn’t as much product to unload as expected. Sometimes Dickerson was told they didn’t have any trailers light enough for a woman, she says. But on most days the warehouse teemed with lumpers, many of them wearing different colored t-shirts to signify the different agencies they worked for. Dickerson herself would work for two different labor providers within the same warehouse in a little more than a year. The difficulty of a lumper’s day often went according to chance. A lucky lumper might be assigned a container filled with boxes of Kleenex or stuffed animals, while an unlucky lumper might pull a container filled with kiddie swimming pools or 200-pound trampolines. For the heaviest lifts, Dickerson would be assigned a partner, and the two would split the pay for the trailer, moving the massive boxes onto pallets by hand. The job was fast-paced and stressful. Dickerson says supervisors would walk along the warehouse’s bay doors, marking the workers’ progress over time. The supervisors, Dickerson and other workers say, often told them to speed it up if they wanted to be invited back. Many of the workers were temps with no job security and no recourse. And the local unemployment rate, then around 11 percent, promised a long line of potential replacements. “By the end of the day, your body hurts so bad,” says Dickerson, who was among a small minority of females working as lumpers at the warehouse. “You tell them you can’t do it the next day, … they’ll tell you, ‘We’ve got four more people waiting for your job.’” For a while, Dickerson worked according to “piece rate” — she was paid not by the hour but by the trailer — a stressful pay scheme meant to encourage her and her colleagues to work faster and faster, and one that the labor movement worked hard to abolish in many industries in the 20th century. Each paycheck was different than the last, and most of them were disappointingly low, she says. In her year at the warehouse, Dickerson says she never had health benefits, sick days or vacation days. If she didn’t unload containers, she didn’t get paid. “It all depends on how fast you work,” she says. “It’s like a race. You’re racing to get done with the trailer so you can get another one. Otherwise, you won’t get enough money.” The warehouse floor wasn’t a very welcoming place for a woman, Dickerson says. As one of the relatively few female lumpers, she says she was often fending off crude overtures from male co-workers. And then there were the bathroom issues. While it was piece rate when it benefited the boss, the clock came on for break time. Each day Dickerson had two 15-minute personal breaks in addition to her lunch, but the warehouse was so sprawling — it covered ground equal to several football fields — that it could take her five minutes to walk each way to get some air or use the bathroom, leaving her with only five minutes of personal time. “When I used to go to the bathroom, I literally had somebody counting down the minutes,” Dickerson says. It was particularly difficult when she was on her period and she felt couldn’t use the restroom when she needed to. Eventually, she was being reprimanded for too many breaks, she says. Worried about losing her job, she says she tried so hard to avoid using the bathroom that she eventually developed a bladder infection. Physically and emotionally drained, Dickerson stopped showing up at the warehouse earlier this year. “My body still is not the same,” she says. “I still have aches and I still have pains. I have migraines because of the stress I went through working at that place.” Dickerson says she’s now living in a house where the electricity and water have been shut off, sharing a cell phone with some of her neighbors. She’s on government-sponsored health care, just as she was while working at the warehouse, and she now relies on food stamps to get by. The one place she refuses to take her food stamps is Walmart. * * * * * Walmart may have been the end beneficiary of Dickerson’s sweat, but the big-box retailer wasn’t directly responsible for her low pay or her aching body. That’s one of the many benefits to an employment arrangement based on outsourcing and subcontracting: The corporation at the top indemnifies itself from any unpleasantness at the bottom, thanks to the smaller corporate players in the middle. Many American companies have woken up to this fact, with broad implications for the future of blue-collar work. “It seems to be spreading like wildfire,” Nelson Lichtenstein, a professor of American labor history at the University of California, Santa Barbara, says of such outsourcing, particularly as it relates to temp workers like Dickerson. “All of these companies, wherever they possibly can, they want to create a workforce that doesn’t work for them. The question is, Why? What is the incentive? ” “They’re smart,” he says. “They run the numbers.” Earlier this year, temporary workers at a Pennsylvania plant packing Hershey products staged a mass walkout over what they described as abusive working conditions . The workers, who were students from Asia and Eastern Europe here on J-1 guest visas for the summer, said they were required to lift 50-pound boxes throughout the day and were threatened with deportation if they couldn’t keep up. Although they packed Hershey goods, the students were employed by a staffing company twice removed from Hershey, which had more than $5 billion in revenues last year. Similar outsourcing has spread to much of the American food-packing industry . But such sub-contracting isn’t contained to warehouses and plants. In an effort to cut costs, even hotels have started quietly contracting out a considerable chunk of their back-of-the-house workforce to labor agencies. Hyatt, for example, has replaced many of its housekeepers with cheaper temp workers. Hyatt’s direct hires now work alongside many lesser-paid agency workers, some of whom work on a temporary basis for years on end, tracking the minimum wage. Such subcontracting enables corporations to essentially take workers off their books, foisting the traditional responsibilities that go with being an employer — paying a reasonable wage, offering health benefits, providing a pension or retirement plan, chipping into workers’ compensation coverage — conveniently onto someone else. Workers like Dickerson, of course, aren’t accounted for when Walmart touts that more than half of its workforce receives health coverage. Infographic by Chris Spurlock. As manufacturing jobs continue to head overseas, Americans need new sectors that can provide good, middle-class work for millions of people. Driven as it is by the consumer economy, the retail supply chain should be one of those sectors. But plenty of workers who are lucky enough to have jobs in the industry find themselves earning poverty wages. And while workers get squeezed in the name of lower prices, the overall benefits to consumers may be illusory. By many measures, the middle class is shrinking — and not just because of the Great Recession. There are simply fewer jobs that pay good wages. More than 46 million Americans — roughly one in six — are now living in poverty, the highest number ever recorded by the Census Bureau. Between 2001 and 2007, as the economy boomed, poverty expanded among working-age people for the first time ever during a period of growth. Workers on the whole made less at the end of the boom than they did at the beginning. In the case of the warehouse industry, where permanent temps are now common, many workers performing the most difficult jobs don’t even enjoy the status of basic employees. They work at the pleasure of the agencies employing them. For many of them, getting hurt or slowing down means the end of their gig with no parting compensation — similar to the arrangement detailed in a devastating expose of an Amazon warehouse by the Pennsylvania Morning Call in September. “We have the re-industrialization of America in this distribution nexus,” says Lichtenstein. “It’s a booming sector of our economy. The kind of work they do is factory labor, and they should be earning [good wages] with benefits. But instead, it’s insecure, and it’s low-wage. “This is the blue-collar working class that should be replacing the steel worker,” he says. * * * * * Until a year ago, Debora Terkelson worked in the Costco warehouse near Mira Loma, Calif. She ran one of the cigarette machines, handling boxes of smokes, until she threw her back out moving a heavy load in April 2010, she says. She worked a few months of light duty but eventually even that proved too painful. No longer able to work, she’s now collecting workers’ compensation. “I don’t think I’ll ever be able to lift again,” says Terkelson, 48. “Just doing my laundry each day is a new adventure in pain.” Her life-altering injury notwithstanding, Terkelson had it pretty good by warehouse standards, and in many ways she’s lucky to be collecting workers’ comp benefits. She says the Costco distribution center is one of the good players in the Inland Empire, an area of Southern California that encompasses San Bernardino and Riverside counties and is now home to one of the largest warehouse clusters in the world. Costco’s well-earned reputation for treating its in-store employees well carries over to its warehouse. The Costco warehouse does not rely on temp workers. It hires employees directly, it pays pretty well and it has a safety representative and even stretching classes. Despite all that, the company still manages to provide some of the lowest prices available to consumers. “We tend to not outsource even if we could save money by doing it,” says Richard Galanti, Costco’s chief financial officer. “We recognize it might cost more but we think it’s the right thing to do. … Everyone in the building feels like they’re employed.” That attitude makes Costco an outlier in the area, Terkelson says. Her son worked in a nearby shoe warehouse for a temp agency. He came home exhausted each day, with little to show for it, though she guesses the agency made pretty good money off of his work. “They hire them, and as soon as they don’t need them, they get rid of them,” she says. “They don’t care. They treat them like a slave. I’m sorry.” Despite the economic downturn, the Inland Empire is still in the midst of a long-term warehousing boom. Some of the first arrived in the 1990s, when retailers and developers took notice of the area’s relatively affordable land and lax regulatory atmosphere. Walmart, Target, Home Depot, and Lowe’s all picked up warehouse space in the area. They continue to sprout up today, creeping further eastward, some of them with footprints covering more than a million square feet. As in Joliet, locals and politicians in Southern California have hoped warehouse work might replace the decent blue-collar jobs that disappeared with much of the American manufacturing sector in the late decades of the last century. Even if we no longer manufacture much in America, we will always need workers to handle all the clothing, electronics, furniture and toys that come here from Asia. And with its proximity to the ports in and around Los Angeles, where the cheap imports from China and elsewhere tend to land, the Inland Empire seemed poised as well as anyone to net a lot of working-class jobs. There’s no doubt that retailers and logistics companies have benefited from the Inland Empire’s warehouse boom. The question is whether blue-collar workers have benefited in kind. John Husing says they have. An economist who’s consulted to local governments dealing with the logistics industry, Husing says, “for blue collar workers, the decline in manufacturing shut off their access through that sector to the middle class. In Southern California in particular, logistics has become an alternative to get to the same place.” Others are less boosterish, including Juan De Lara, an assistant professor at the University of Southern California who’s studied the logistics industry in the region. “It’s been good to many workers who get paid decent wages for higher-skilled jobs as direct employees,” says De Lara. “But it’s also been pretty terrible for the workers that work for these temporary agencies.” There are now more than 125,000 direct-hire, full-time jobs in the Inland Empire’s logistics industry. Available data makes it difficult to know just how many temp jobs there. Husing doubts it’s more than 10,000. Others believe it’s several times that number — perhaps even half of all jobs in logistics, according to Warehouse Workers United , a union-backed group that now advocates on behalf of the area’s lowest-paid warehouse workers. (Husing dismisses the group’s numbers: “The people who throw that stuff around are ideologues. They don’t want that sector to survive because they consider it to be dirty.”) The group says the number of temp jobs in the region has skyrocketed in the last two decades, thanks largely to the explosion in the number of warehouses. The industry relies so heavily on temp work that many temp agencies actually have offices inside the warehouses themselves. Sheheryar Kaoosji, an organizer with Warehouse Workers United, says a decade ago, the ratio of direct hires to temps was 80 percent to 20 in many warehouses. “Now, it’s the opposite. And it’s accelerated with the [economic] crash,” Kaoosji says. “The way that these guys work — the way a Walmart operates — every year they’re going to push costs down on each of their contractors. Every year, they’re coming back, ‘This is going to cost less.’ Every year you do that, it’s going to have an effect. The conditions are going to go down. “At this point, the wages in some of the facilities have gone down below the federal and state minimums,” he says. * * * * * With most retailers getting the same products from the same place — i.e., Asia — the supply chain has become one of the few arenas where big-box chains can compete. This competition has led to a tremendous pressure to move goods as quickly as possible. Even the word “warehouse” itself has become something of a misnomer; the idea is no longer to house goods but to keep them moving, from port to rail to tractor-trailer to store display. That’s why many warehouses have morphed into what’s called a ” cross dock “: the products come in one side of the warehouse and almost immediately go out the other, barely touching the ground. Despite modern automation, most warehouses still require bodies, and the pressure to move goods faster and faster often falls on the ones at the bottom. It doesn’t help that many of the workers toiling inside the Inland Empire’s distribution centers are believed to be undocumented workers from Mexico — a workforce that’s generally grateful for whatever pay it can get and far less likely than American citizens to report workplace abuses, for fear of deportation. There’s plenty of opportunity for exploitation. According to charges filed by the California labor department this fall, a company operating in a warehouse handling Walmart goods was allegedly breaking labor law by not providing workers with legitimate earnings statements. Officials allege most of the lumpers were being paid on a piece rate plan that many of them couldn’t understand, in what officials have described as a “concerted effort” to cheat the workers out of their wages. The state issued more than $1 million in fines. The two labor suppliers cited, Tennessee-based Impact Logistics and North Carolina-based Premier Warehousing, apparently have contracts with Schneider, which, in turn, has a contract with Walmart. Neither Schneider nor Walmart has been accused of any wrongdoing, precisely the outcome the contractor arrangement facilitates. Julie Su, the California labor commissioner, told HuffPost at the time that the layers of outsourcing can make it nearly impossible to hold big players accountable — a huge collateral benefit in addition to any cost-cutting that goes with subcontracting. “Warehouses are one example of the ever-increasing contracting out of labor,” Su said. “It’s difficult for enforcement, and in many instances it’s a deliberate effort to avoid compliance.” Six lumpers at the warehouse filed a class-action lawsuit on the heels of the state investigation. Everardo Carrillo and his co-workers say they’ve been moving Walmart goods in a warehouse where the temperature regularly climbs to over 90 degrees, walking in and out of 53-foot-long steel containers that get even hotter baking in the Southern California sun. After working for a set hourly wage, the workers claim that a year and a half ago they were switched to a piece-rate pay plan — an arrangement largely out of a bygone era. Their bosses told them they would earn “much more money” under the new scheme, which paid them according to the container, but their earnings actually fell, according to the lawsuit. The workers claim it was never made clear how their pay was supposed to break down — an allegation apparently bolstered by the state’s investigation. They claim that when they complained about their confusing paychecks, their supervisors responded by sending them home without pay or refusing to give them work the following day. The lumpers were working on a temp basis. According to the lawsuit, the majority of workers were direct hires as recently as 2006; now, three out of every four workers are temps. When asked if a Schneider executive could be interviewed about allegations from temp workers in its warehouses, a spokesperson sent HuffPost a statement, saying its labor suppliers are “separate corporate entities”: “The only legal avenue which Schneider has to enforce their compliance would be to terminate the contract with these vendors. We have no plans to terminate the contracts with our vendors; our expectation is that they will comply with all applicable statutes, regulations and orders.” Walmart, whose products the workers were handling, also kept an arm’s length from the charges. When HuffPost reported on the state investigation and lawsuit in October, a Walmart spokesman said the retailer is “not involved in this matter.” When a similar lawsuit was filed in April in Illinois — again, naming low-level companies contracted to move Walmart products — the company asserted its distance from the allegations then as well, a spokesman noting that “the facility isn’t operated by Walmart nor are the people who work in it employed by Walmart.” In an interview, Walmart spokesman Dan Fogleman declines to say how much of Walmart’s logistics work is outsourced, but he says the company has 147 distribution centers across the country, the majority of them owned and operated by Walmart itself. Indeed, the jobs at Walmart’s smaller, more regional distribution centers are known to be good, highly coveted jobs. When asked why the company would outsource the work at some of its largest and most important facilities, Fogleman says there are times when a third-party can simply do it better, faster and cheaper. “Since the early days of our company, the ability to move products quickly and efficiently has really been a driver for our success,” Fogleman says. “We’re looking for every opportunity to improve our efficiencies. Sometimes that means doing it ourselves; sometimes we’re using partners to achieve that. … We’re an advocate for our customers. We’re doing everything we can to provide them with low prices.” As for the allegations from contracted workers in the Inland Empire and elsewhere, Fogleman says, “We have serious concerns when our contractors or sub-contractors are cited for those types of violations. We hold all of our contractors to the highest standards.” A promotional video for Impact Logistics, a company recently fined by the California labor department. Ana Sanchez, a 46-year-old from Mexico, says immigrants like her in the Inland Empire inevitably find themselves looking for work at the warehouses. In 2007, Sanchez herself took a job through a labor agency wrapping and labeling boxes on pallets inside a warehouse she says moved products for Sears and K-Mart, among others. Sanchez was surprised to learn that the work there was as strenuous as it was back in Mexico. She started at $6.75 an hour and says her wage climbed to more than $8 over time, though it was outstripped by a growing workload. Sanchez’ gig required carrying a roll of shrink wrap that, when full, weighed around 50 pounds, and slapping labels on boxes at a dizzying pace; she went through between 5,000 and 8,000 labels on a typical day, she says. “I would often get the heaviest loads of work because I was so fast,” Sanchez says. “Whenever there was a rush order they would call on me because I was two rolls quicker than the other girls.” The job also required a lot of stooping over in tight spaces. One day in 2009, Sanchez threw out her back while working on a rush order. She hoped to be put on light duty or trained for a new, less intensive job, but she says she was being passed back and forth between the company that ran the warehouse and the labor company that she technically worked for. Soon she was fired for allegedly botching an order, she says. “When you go in to work for a warehouse you give it your all,” she says. “When you get hurt, they treat you as though it doesn’t matter.” Sanchez hasn’t been able to do manual labor for two years. So what does she do for money? “I have a lot of friends and relatives who place orders for me to cook tamales,” she says with a shrug. To some people in the Inland Empire, the warehouses have come to represent a dubious bargain. Some good salaries have certainly come with the logistics industry; a directly hired forklift operator, for instance, can expect to make a decent living. But there weren’t supposed to be so many temporary positions with measly wages and no benefits. In fact, critics say that temp salaries weren’t even figured into the economic projections trotted out by industry boosters and developers who sold the public on the logistics industry. What they did include were the theoretical salaries of unionized warehouse workers and even airplane pilots. The Inland Empire’s thousands of warehouse jobs may also have come at a cost to public health. What used to be dairy fields and vineyards two decades ago are now warehouse tracts. Buffeted by mountains to the north and east, and absorbing winds coming from Los Angeles to the west, the Inland Empire has a geological gift for trapping particulate pollution. The area boasted some of the worst air in the country before the logistics boom; residents say it’s now even worse. Mira Loma Village, a community of 101 stucco townhouses populated mostly by Latino families, has been hemmed in by warehouses on all sides, with several thousand trucks rolling past the community each day. According to a study done by researchers at the University of Southern California, kids in Mira Loma have abnormally weak lung capacity and slow lung growth. And more warehouses are on their way. “I see it. I smell it. I can feel it,” says Laura Borrayo, 42, a Mira Loma resident whose backyard is often coated in a layer of soot from the truck traffic. She says some of the neighborhood children have developed asthma due to the bad air. Citing some of the worst diesel pollution in the country, Mira Loma residents have filed a lawsuit to stop the latest logistics project — an additional 24 warehouses, covering 1.4 million square feet and expected to bring another 1,500 trucks per day, according to the L.A. Times . Residents say the project will occupy what has become the last shred of their buffer zone against the warehouses, taking away their view of the mountains in the process. The lawsuit has put the project on hold for the moment. Among the residents in Mira Loma Village opposed to more warehouses is Terkelson, the Costco warehouse employee. “I’ve lived in this area for years. When I was a kid, it was beautiful out here,” Terkelson says. “But everything went downhill. People don’t even realize what they’re breathing. The soot, it’s nasty. I don’t wash my car no more, because it doesn’t do no good.” Residents haven’t had much luck fighting warehouses in the past, having been cast as opponents of much-needed jobs. Riverside County has an unemployment rate hovering around 14 percent. Penny Newman, director of the Center for Community Action and Environmental Justice, which filed the Mira Loma lawsuit, says the kinds of jobs brought by the warehouses aren’t worth the costs. “There was a lot of fanfare about goods movement being the economic engine of the future,” says Newman. “We’ve discovered that these are not the kinds of jobs anyone should have under the conditions they’re facing. … They’re temp jobs and they’re low-paying and the conditions are bad.” “The money is made by others,” Newman says. * * * * * For a lot of the goods that enter the U.S. through the Inland Empire, the next stop is the greater Joliet area, among the largest rail hubs in the country. Within a day’s drive of two-thirds of the country, Joliet itself is now home to not one but two massive “intermodal terminals” — the two modes being rail and truck — receiving freight from the West Coast that’s then hauled to the area’s warehouses and, later, to stores across the U.S. For one former Teamster who found himself unemployed last year, the growth of the logistics industry in Will County looked like his ticket back into the middle class. Last year this Joliet native, who’s in his 50′s, responded to an ad in the local paper; a labor agency was bringing on workers to move goods for a major retailer. The firm promises to save its clients on labor costs while simultaneously boosting worker efficiency. (Due to ongoing litigation, neither the worker nor the company will be identified.) Demonstrating just how booming the logistics industry is in Joliet, the man says the firm was actually sending vehicles out into the community as part of a mobile hiring effort, a bit of proactive recruitment that’s hard to find in this economy. He was quickly hired, probably due to his past experience, and to what he pitched as his greatest strength: “I don’t miss days.” The fact that this man found himself working as a warehouse temp speaks to his diminished opportunities. He’d been a Teamster for 12 years, driving a truck for a bread company that was eventually shut down, and then for a waste-management company that was relocated to the other side of Chicago, making the commute untenable. It was the kind of good living that’s now hard to find. Aside from whatever highly desired jobs remain at the area’s lingering refineries, he sees little work outside of the area’s new warehouses. “That’s all that’s out here,” he says. His trucking experience landed him a pretty cherry gig at the warehouse. He worked primarily as a “spotter,” pulling loaded trucks from the bay doors and parking them for the drivers who would take them away to other, smaller distribution centers. He was paid $12 per hour to start, about a buck more than most other new hires, he says. Though he was merely a temp without job security, he considered himself pretty lucky. “I kind of liked the job,” he says. “It wasn’t a bad job.” But about six months in, he says he started to understand how everything worked by design. He was shocked by the warehouse’s turnover rate, as new workers constantly came and went, often leaving under bad terms. He guesses the average worker lasted three months, many of them eventually being “pointed out.” As in many of Joliet’s warehouses, he and his colleagues were working under a demerit system, receiving points for being tardy, missing shifts or not “making rate.” Once you hit 10 points, you’re gone, he says. He now argues that workers don’t last in part because they’re not supposed to. New workers, after all, are cheaper workers. And he also says the little-known temp agencies are there largely to facilitate the churn. “That’s part of the trick — to put as many people between [the retailers] and the actual workers, so they don’t have to deal with the actual workers,” he says. “They don’t have this headache. … They put these temp services between them and the people.” The former Teamser’s duties evolved at the warehouse, and eventually he found himself filling online orders to be shipped directly to customers’ homes. Working off an order list, he was expected to pick 500 boxes during his 12-hour shift — tight but doable. The problem, he says, is that sometimes the products weren’t where they were supposed to be, which cut into his efficiency rate. He says he was supposed to hit a perfect 100 percent each day, but sometimes he dropped into the 90s due to missing products. He clashed with a supervisor over the issue. “How do you expect me to be perfect when the system isn’t perfect?” he asks. One year into his job, he says he was canned after barely missing his rate three days in a row, earning three consecutive writeups — a fireable offense. He wasn’t shocked. Having just hit his one-year anniversary, he had become expensive, at least by warehouse standards. His pay had risen to $14 an hour — still not a living wage for the area by some measures, but more than many lumpers will ever see. He had also just started to accrue paid vacation time. Or at least he thought he had. According to a lawsuit the man filed earlier this year, his company had agreed to give employees one week of paid vacation after they’d worked for the company for a full year. When he was terminated, he was told he’d come up a mere 40 work hours short of earning vacation. But the man says management’s tally ignored the considerable overtime he’d worked during the peak season. The company wouldn’t relent, so he and a colleague sued. In addition to the vacation issue, they sued the company for not paying workers for a minimum of four hours on days when they were sent home early or without any work at all, as an Illinois law now mandates. The company has denied the allegations. Like many warehouse workers interviewed for this story, the former Teamster has spent a lot of time wondering how much money the agency made off of his work merely for supplying him. The way he sees it, the reliance of Walmart and others on temp agencies is the reason most of the warehouse jobs will never lead to stable living, just the financial anxiety of someone who’s temping in perpetuity. “You can’t build on working at these warehouses,” he says. “I can’t say, ‘Sweetheart, let’s get married. Let’s have a baby.’ Because I don’t know how long it’s going to last. I know I’m working now, but will I be working six months from now? And how much money are they going to screw me out of?” * * * * * The Chicago area has long been home to warehouse jobs, and the vast majority of them used to be decent, blue-collar jobs, says Mark Meinster, international representative with the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America Union, or UE , which is leading an organizing effort of warehouse workers in Joliet. Meinster says that over the last two decades the jobs have changed along with the retail industry. With a growing focus on efficiency and cost-cutting within the supply chain, what had been secure and well-paying union jobs are now often low-paying temp jobs, he says. A UE-backed group called Warehouse Workers for Justice interviewed workers at more than 150 area warehouses in 2009, finding that despite plenty of good managerial positions, about 63 percent of the workers in local warehouses are temps earning less than direct hires. One in four avail themselves of food stamps or welfare, and more than a third have to work a second job to make ends meet. (Warehouse Workers for Justice has no affiliation with the California group Warehouse Workers United.) “As late as the mid ’90s, you saw many warehouse jobs that paid a living wage,” says Meinster. “In Chicago, we define that as $15.87 an hour. Now, we’re finding that the average wage is somewhere around $9 an hour. Only 4 percent of the workers get sick days. Many are on government assistance. Sixty-two percent earn below the federal poverty line.” John Grueling isn’t so bearish. As the head of the Will County Center for Economic Development , a nonprofit development corporation that did much to attract the industry to Joliet, Grueling says the logistics industry has brought some much-needed jobs to the area as manufacturing has declined. Although he admits that the proliferation of temps is something that concerns him, he says the good jobs outweigh the bad. “The competition is so severe that they’re going to do what they have to do, and in some cases, what they can get away with it,” Grueling says of the companies operating in the warehouses. “But we think the industry as a whole is very healthy for us.” (Grueling says his group no longer tries to lure logistics operations with juicy tax breaks the way they used to.) Whatever the savings may be, there’s another benefit to the subcontracting model for the likes of Walmart: the splintered workforce among all the temp agencies creates a tremendous obstacle to unionization. Plenty of workers who aren’t necessarily conspiracy theorists consider it a form of strategic disorganization emanating from down on high. Unionization drives are easily scuttled. When it became apparent that temps were organizing at a Joliet warehouse for vacuum manufacturer Bissell two years ago, the workers soon found themselves out of a job . Fragmented though they are, dozens of warehouse workers have managed to file class-action lawsuits alleging wage theft in the last couple of years, many of them with the help of a Chicago lawyer named Chris Williams, co-founder of the Working Hands Legal Clinic, which litigates on behalf of low-wage workers. Williams wrote a piece of legislation called the Day and Temporary Labor Services Act , an attempt by Illinois to wrap its hands around its booming and shadowy temp labor industry. The law requires that labor agencies register with the state and also provide workers with written forms explaining what kind of work they’ll be doing and how much they’ll be paid for the assignment. Such rudimentary protections are needed, Williams says. He and other worker advocates have discovered fly-by-night temp agencies operating out of area garages, convenience store parking lots and, in one case, a Super 8 motel room. In a lawsuit filed last month, 18 workers at the Walmart-contracted warehouse accused a temp company called Eclipse of not paying them the minimum wage and failing to pay them for all the hours they worked. One worker, Roberto Gutierrez, says he worked 21 hours in his first week and was paid a mere $57. On his paystub the company says Gutierrez worked only 12.5 hours, though by their math he still doesn’t seem to have been earning the minimum wage. According to another lawsuit, one of the temp agencies charged applicants for their own employment background checks; when the cost was deducted from their first checks, it pushed their pay below the minimum wage. Such lawsuits are fast becoming a cost of doing business for the temp companies. “There’s a huge problem with people being shorted,” says Williams. “In aggregate, it’s millions and millions in savings” for the companies. So far, most of the energy from gadflies like Williams has been devoted to the Walmart supply chain. Like others, Williams argues that Walmart has trailblazed the temp-worker model within the retail world, and that other major retailers are simply following its path, as they often do. None of the lawsuits involving the Walmart warehouse have touched Walmart itself. But the way Illinois’ temp labor law was written, a company at the top of a contracting tree could feasibly be held accountable for abuses at the bottom. In one case, Williams discovered that there were four companies separating Walmart from the workers who were handling Walmart goods at the warehouse. “I believe Walmart is experimenting,” Williams says. Of the area’s warehouses generally, he adds, “You’ll see temp agencies that supervise temp agencies that deal with temp agencies. It just adds another level of distance.” According to worker Demetrie Collins, the presence of temp companies has been growing just as the conditions and pay have been deteriorating. Collins says he earned a pretty good wage running a forklift at one of the warehouses five years ago. Then, after a break from work and a prison stint for a drug charge, he says he returned to the warehouses to see temp workers everywhere. He got on as a lumper at a warehouse but was fired earlier this year, he says. Unemployed, he now volunteers at Warehouse Workers for Justice. “Hell yeah, there’s more temp agencies,” says Collins. “Used to be they’d pay you good. But now, the warehouses are paying you shitty, and there’s nothing you can do about it. Fire them today, temp services gonna replace them tomorrow. They can treat the workers however they wanna treat them.” The downsides of temping go well beyond lower wages and fewer benefits. Many workers have to call in to the warehouse each morning to see if they still have a job for the day, essentially making them job seekers-in-perpetuity. The supplication can be demoralizing. One former lumper told HuffPost his temp status once cost him a loan — from a payday lender. The lender apparently thought he posed too great a risk, seeing as he had no guarantee on his employment from week to week. Meinster, of the UE, says the temp system creates an entire tier of workers who are basically second-class. “Despite the fact that these workers are paid poverty-level wages, we estimate that about a trillion dollars comes through Chicago on an annual basis,” says Meinster. “That’s about $6 million per warehouse worker. Each worker is responsible for moving $6 million worth of goods through that supply chain. These are the workers who, collectively, if they don’t show up for a day, these companies would stand to lose a lot of money. “That’s something these companies need to pay attention to,” he says. * * * * * A few months ago, the former Teamster heard about 50 job openings at the warehouse for Central Foods, a food wholesaler based in Joliet. The positions were similar to ones at the warehouse where he’d temped, but the pay and benefits seemed to be from another world. The Central Foods jobs were union jobs, starting out at a livable $16 an hour, with good health coverage, an annual raise, a 401(k) and a chance to make as much as $24 an hour after a few years, he says. “What was the difference?” the former Teamster asks rhetorically. “No temp service.” Unfortunately, word about the direct-hire jobs had apparently spread throughout Joliet, with the competition so fierce that it made the local news. “Here they have health benefits and a pension,” one man told the Joliet Herald-News in wonderment. “I never had a job that could do that for me.” Another applicant bemoaned all the temp warehouse jobs on his resume. “It makes me look like a job hopper, but I’m not,” he said. When the former Teamster arrived to apply, scores of eager jobs seekers were already there, with a line coming out the door and snaking around the corner. Ultimately, more than a thousand people threw their hats in the ring, many of them boasting previous warehouse experience. The former Teamster waited nearly three hours to put in his application and make his trusty pitch: “I don’t miss days.” Must be a great gig if you can get it, he thought.

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Sandy Harris: What Wall Street Doesn’t Want You to Know About Your 401(k)

December 20, 2011

The year is 1946. It is a very special year. The President declares the end of World War II. The U.N. meets for the first time. The President sets up the Central Intelligence Agency. The US Supreme court rules race separation on buses is unconstitutional. Congress passes a law to promote maximum employment and production which is supposed to be a continuing policy and responsibility of the Federal Government. Seems a long way from what Congress is doing these days! Some guy named Frank Sinatra releases his first album, and this is the beginning of the birth cycle of the biggest group of citizens to ever be known in the U.S., namely, the Baby Boomers! In our last blog, we told you Congress was looking to find ways to tax the multi-billion dollar 401(k) market, and it seems to be with Wall Street’s help. Those that have employer sponsored 401K retirement plans or a pension plan from their employer are not always being told the truth about their funds. There is an ongoing movement in Wall Street to help the large companies with these plans to modify payment structures so that pension plans become piggy banks, tax shelters, and profit centers for the companies through exploiting loopholes, ambiguous regulations, and new accounting rules. In her book Retirement Heist: How Companies Plunder and Profit from the Nest Eggs of American Workers , Pulitzer Prize author Ellen Schultz documents exactly how Wall Street is doing this to Main Street. The Wall Street Journal recently reported that those with 401(k) plans lost an average of $41,000.00 from those plans over a 6-8 week period. What the article didn’t tell you is that the growth percentage needed to recover the lost funds can be over 38%! Many baby boomers don’t have that much time to make up losses like that. (Brokers don’t tell you this!) In a recent report by Diane Sawyer of ABC News, it was reported that the day’s average one (1) day 401(k) loss was $4,000.00. When a Wall Street broker is asking you “What is your risk tolerance”, you should replace “risk” with “loss”; he is asking you: “How much money are you willing to lose?” These days you’d have more fun going to Vegas. According to a recent survey by Sun Life Financial Inc, “Although the recession officially ended in 2009, average Americans feel that the downturn has not ended for them, which is substantially eroding their trust in their retirement future.” Further, the October 20, 2011 survey said that one in five working Americans plan to never retire because they don’t feel they can afford it. On the other hand, we see owners of annuities and long-term care insurance who feel more confident about their ability to retire. They have more confidence because they know they can’t lose their savings to the whim of the stock market. Neither will they have to foot the whole bill if they wind up needing care for a chronic condition that can cost upwards of $6000 a month. We know that these days the biggest concern is stability and safety, as well as having enough income during retirement so we don’t outlive our funds. The answer may not be the same for everyone, but a fixed or indexed annuity can be the solution. These financial products do not lose money. For a long time, the Wall Street brokers told their clients this product was inferior because it would not make a lot of money. Since the GAO report of June 2011 stating these annuities are a safe financial tool to have in one’s portfolio, some brokers started recommending them. What happened? They realized that these annuities are strong financial tools to make sure you don’t lose your hard-earned funds that have taken you a lifetime to put in place. However, even if you have your life savings in a financial vehicle that can’t lose money, a chronic condition that requires years of care can wipe them out. No matter who you are, a doctor, in the entertainment business, a bus driver, or just regular folk, these events are not covered by regular health insurance, or if your are old enough, not by Medicare either. If you had an accident or stroke that required you to need care in your home or in a facility for several months or years that your existing insurance didn’t cover, what would you do? How would this sudden expense affect your lifestyle? Eight to ten hours a day of home care can easily cost $6000 a month, and a MetLife survey said long-term care costs are continuing to rise faster than the medical inflation rate. There was a program called “CLASS ACT” in the new health care reform act which was supposed to cover these costs, but only for working people. Non-working spouses were not covered. This program didn’t receive funding in the 2012 budget and is officially closed. Thankfully, there is insurance that will cover this. In fact, there are state-approved long-term care insurance policies that allow Americans to protect some or all of their assets if they have to turn to Medicaid to pay for extended care after using the insurance to pay first. Most states have this public-private partnership which allows dollars to stay in the state budget for education, public works and to lower taxes by providing an incentive for Medicaid to pay last for long-term care, not first. Can we help you put a program together that rescues your savings from the stock market and protects them from extended chronic care? Absolutely! All you have to do is ask. In some cases, this insurance program can be free! Occasionally we encounter men, in particular, who feel strongly they don’t need to insure for this expensive care and figure they can take care of everything. They don’t think ahead to the lifestyle changes they are forcing the rest of the family to endure if they do need extended care. Here is an example of what we are talking about: Ralph Smith felt that way. He owned a successful insurance agency for many years that sold a lot of long-term care insurance through Phyllis Shelton. His son and daughter both worked in the agency. Whenever his son would ask when his dad was going to buy the product, Ralph just said “I don’t need it, David. I will always take care of your mother.” Today both Ralph and his wife have advanced Alzheimer’s. David’s sister moved in with them to be the caregiver, leaving her job at the agency and her husband Bill to manage their home. She and David haven’t spoken for over a year due to severe disagreements about how to handle the situation.* The only way to control the outcome of a long-term care event is to plan ahead. If you wait until it happens, you will likely not have the mental or physical capacity to call the shots, and someone else has to painfully call them for you. The younger you are when you plan, the more choices you will have. *Names changed to protect anonymity Sandy Harris is the President of The Harris Group, a national insurance services company, specializing in Long-Term Care insurance and financial security retirement planning. His website is TheHarrisInsuranceGroup.com Phyllis Shelton is the President of LTC Consultants, a 20 year old Nashville-based consulting company specializing in long-term care insurance consumer education and agent training. She is the author of The ABC’s of Long-Term Care Insurance and her website is GotLTCi.com

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After Deal Collapse, A New Partner For T-Mobile?

December 20, 2011

By Maria Sheahan FRANKFURT (Reuters) – Deutsche Telekom may be forced into a tie-up of its sub-scale U.S. wireless unit with Sprint Nextel after a $39 billion deal with AT&T collapsed. AT&T said on Monday it had dropped its bid for T-Mobile USA, bowing to fierce regulatory opposition and leaving both companies scrambling for alternatives. While Deutsche Telekom is now walking away with a $6 billion breakup package, its chief executive Rene Obermann has lost a lot of time and will now have to invest in the U.S. market or find a new way to exit the country, an option analysts regard as unlikely. T-Mobile USA “is just crying out for a merger with Sprint. That’s the only long-term solution for Deutsche Telekom,” Will Draper, head of telecoms research at Espirito Santo, said. T-Mobile USA, a growth engine in its early days but now a run-down asset, is badly lacking in the spectrum it needs to build a network capable of handling the vast data volumes that U.S. consumers and businesses use on smartphones. Bleeding money and losing customers, it ranks fourth among U.S. carriers behind AT&T, Verizon and Sprint. Obermann offered no detailed plan of how the company will bounce back from the collapse of talks with AT&T, only assuring investors he was working on a long-term plan for T-Mobile USA. “In the long term, we need more spectrum and network capacity. We are working on that. But we will not speculate about any inorganic steps or deals,” he told reporters during a conference call. He also said it was incomprehensible to him that U.S. regulators blocked a transaction that would have made a decisive contribution to the U.S. National Broadband Plan. Deutsche Telekom shares were down 1.3 percent at 8.77 euros at 1339 GMT, one of the biggest decliners in the blue-chip DAX index on investor concern the company is back at square one with its American problem child. Before talks with AT&T were announced in March, sources said Deutsche Telekom was looking at a potential deal with Sprint. Reportedly, it was considering a sale of T-Mobile USA to Sprint in exchange for a stake in the combined company. But instead of pursuing a tie-up with Sprint, Obermann bet all his chips on a deal with AT&T. Now the company can go back to Sprint or pursue network partnerships with regional operators such as Leap Wireless International Inc. It could also offload some non-core assets to fund investments in the United States. “Whilst a merger with Sprint is probably the best long-term strategic option in the United States, there would be pain for Deutsche Telekom in the near term, starting with the need to invest in Sprint/T-Mobile USA,” Espirito Santo said. SPECTRUM SQUEEZE Adding to its woes, Deutsche Telekom missed out on spectrum sales in the United States while it was busy negotiating the T-Mobile mega-merger, leaving it even more vulnerable. Carriers like AT&T, Verizon Wireless and Vodafone, have clamored for access to more airwaves to stave off a looming spectrum crunch that would mean clogged networks, more dropped calls and slower connection speeds for wireless customers. “For the operators the main issue for the coming years will be to obtain enough frequencies… and to roll out 4G networks,” said Heinrich Ey, Global Research Sector Head Telecommunications & Media at RCM, part of Allianz Global Investors. As part of the breakup with AT&T, Deutsche Telekom will receive mobile spectrum in cities such as Los Angeles, Dallas and Boston, in addition to about $3 billion in cash. While that will go toward helping T-Mobile USA grow, Obermann said it will not solve the long-term problem. “One imaginable option would be a network partnership with Clearwire,” LBBW analyst Stefan Borscheid said, adding he would also not rule out that Deutsche Telekom could find a financial investor willing to take T-Mobile USA off its hands. Analysts have said a collapse of the deal could also be a catalyst for the sale of Deutsche Telekom’s stake in Britain’s biggest mobile company Everything Everywhere, unless it manages to clinch a deal with another U.S. operator. (Additional reporting by Georgina Prodhan and Harro ten Wolde; Editing by Erica Billingham and Mike Nesbit)

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‘We Are The 99 Percent’ Chosen As Year’s Top Quote

December 20, 2011

By JOHN CHRISTOFFERSON, Associated Press NEW HAVEN, Conn. — A Yale University librarian says the slogan “We are the 99 percent” by Occupy Wall Street protesters is the year’s most notable quote. Fred Shapiro has released his sixth annual list of the most memorable quotations of the year. (CLICK HERE FOR THE LATEST OCCUPY UPDATES) Shapiro picks quotes that are famous, important or revealing of the spirit of the times. The quotes aren’t necessarily the most eloquent or admirable. The “99 percent” slogan stems from a movement against economic disparity and perceived corporate greed. Protests began with Occupy Wall Street in Manhattan in September and spread around the country. Billionaire investor Warren Buffett made the list for his complaint that he and his rich “have been coddled long enough” by Congress. Politicians, including former Rep. Anthony Weiner, made their usual strong showing as well. The list: 1. “We are the 99 percent.” – slogan of Occupy movement. 2. “There is nobody in this country who got rich on his own. Nobody. You built a factory out there – good for you! But I want to be clear. You moved your goods to market on the roads the rest of us paid for. You hired workers the rest of us paid to educate. You were safe in your factory because of police forces and fire forces that the rest of us paid for.” – U.S. Sen. candidate Elizabeth Warren, speaking in Andover, Mass., in August. 3. “My friends and I have been coddled long enough by a billionaire-friendly Congress.” – Billionaire Warren Buffett, in a New York Times op-ed on Aug. 15. 4. “I believe in evolution and trust scientists on global warming. Call me crazy.” – Presidential candidate Jon Huntsman in an Aug. 18 tweet. 5. “Oops.” – Presidential candidate Rick Perry after unsuccessfully attempting to remember the third federal agency he would eliminate during a Nov. 9 debate. 6. “When they ask me, `Who is the president of Ubeki-beki-beki-beki-stan-stan?’ I’m going to say, `You know, I don’t know. Do you know?’” – Then-presidential candidate Herman Cain in an interview by Christian Broadcasting Network on Oct. 7. 7. “I am on a drug. It’s called `Charlie Sheen.’ It’s not available because if you try it once, you will die. Your face will melt off and your children will weep over your exploded body.” – Actor Charlie Sheen in a February interview with ABC News. 8. “Oh wow. Oh wow. Oh wow.” – Apple co-founder Steve Jobs’ last words on Oct. 5, as reported by his sister Mona Simpson in her eulogy. 9. “I can’t say with certitude.” – Then-U.S. Rep. Anthony Weiner on June 1 when he was asked whether a lewd photograph was in fact him. 10. “Instead of receiving the help that she had hoped for, Mr. Cain instead decided to provide her with his idea of a stimulus package.” – Lawyer Gloria Allred on Nov. 7 discussing Herman Cain’s alleged sexual harassment of her client.

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Congress Moves Towards Standoff Over Expiring Provisions

December 20, 2011

WASHINGTON — Partisan to the core, Congress careened toward a holiday-season standoff Monday on legislation to prevent a Social Security payroll tax increase for 160 million workers on Jan. 1. “It’s time to stop the nonsense. We can resolve these differences and we can do it in a way that provides certainty for job creators and others,” said Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. A House vote was set for Tuesday to seek negotiations on a compromise to renew the cuts through 2012, a rejection of the bipartisan two-month extension that cleared the Senate over the weekend. In an acid response, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid accused Boehner of risking a tax increase for millions “just because a few angry tea partyers raised their voices.” The Nevada Democrat ruled out new negotiations until the two-month measure is enacted. That left the two parties approaching Christmas-week gridlock over an effort to pass core elements of President Barack Obama’s jobs program – renewal of the tax cuts and long-term unemployment benefits – that Republican and Democratic leaders alike say they favored. It was the latest and likely the last such partisan confrontation in a year of divided government that brought the Treasury to the brink of a first-ever default last summer, and more than once pushed the vast federal establishment to the edge of a partial shutdown. This time, unlike the others, Republican divisions were prominently on display. The two-month measure that cleared the Senate, 89-10, on Saturday had the full support of the GOP leader, Sen. Mitch McConnell, who also told reporters he was optimistic the House would sign on. Senate negotiators had tried to agree on a compromise to cover a full year, but were unable to come up with enough savings to offset the cost and prevent deficits from rising. The two-month extension was a fallback, and officials say that when McConnell personally informed Boehner and House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of the deal at a private meeting, they said they would check with their rank and file. But on Saturday, restive House conservatives made clear during a telephone conference call that they were unhappy with the measure. “I’ve never seen us so unified,” Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, said as he left a two-hour, closed-door meeting Monday night where Republicans firmed up their plans. He said the payroll tax cut that has been in effect this year failed to create any jobs, but favored extending it for another 12 months because “it’s tough to raise taxes when you’re in a down economy.” But House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi said Republicans were “walking away from a tax cut.” And Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, a member of the party leadership, accused Boehner of “claiming to support something and then sending it to a legislative graveyard where it never sees the light of day.” Not surprisingly, the White House weighed in on the side of Obama’s Democratic allies. Spokesman Jay Carney said Boehner was for the two-month stopgap bill “before he was against it” – a claim that the House speaker flatly denied. Speaking to reporters at the White House, Carney added, `’It is not our job to negotiate between him and Senate Republicans.” “We are witnessing the concluding convulsion of confrontation and obstruction in the most unproductive, tea party-dominated partisan session of the Congress in which I have participated,” said Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, second-ranking member of the Democratic leadership. Ironically, until the House rank and file revolted, it appeared that Republicans had outmaneuvered Obama on one point. The two-month measure that cleared the Senate required him to decide within 60 days to allow construction on a proposed oil pipeline that promises thousands of construction jobs. Obama had threatened to veto legislation that included the requirement, then did an about face. The president recently announced he was delaying a decision on the pipeline until after the 2012 elections, meaning that while seeking a new term, he would not have to choose between disappointing environmentalists who oppose the project and blue collar unions that support it. The provision relating to the Keystone XL pipeline first surfaced in the House, where Boehner and the leaders had used it as an incentive to persuade conservatives to approve an extension of the payroll tax cut that many claimed had failed to create jobs. Several Republican officials said that on the Saturday conference call, Boehner told members of the rank and file that if they wanted to approve the Senate measure, they could point to the Keystone provision as a victory. These officials added, though, that the speaker called the two-month measure poor policy, and refrained from recommending one course over another. The Senate-passed bill, as well as one that cleared the House last week, also would avert a threatened 27 percent cut in payments to doctors who treat Medicare patients. There was no controversy on that provision, or much of one on anything but the duration of an extension. Democrats gleefully distributed evidence of GOP disagreement, including comments from Sen. Scott Brown of Massachusetts, Richard Lugar of Indiana and others urging the House to approve the two-month measure. But first-term House Republicans were unmoved. “What they (the Senate) sent us over was an insult to the American people,” said Rep. Ann Marie Buerkle, R-N.Y. “I don’t care about political implications” of letting taxes go up Jan. 1 for 160 million Americans, said Rep. Tom Reed, R-N.Y. “We will stay here as long as it takes in order to do what’s right for the American people. That means working on Christmas, New Year’s and other days. It’s time to get the job done.” Professing a lack of concern about higher taxes was not a widely held position inside the party leadership, though. For both parties, the political implications seemed to matter hugely. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee announced it was sending automated phone calls into households in 20 targeted GOP-held districts demanding that lawmakers support the two-month extension, lest taxes go up. Not to be outdone, the National Republican Congressional Committee issued a statement headlined “Vacation, All House Dems Ever Wanted” and claiming that Democrats wanted to raise taxes on the middle class. It was unclear how much attention the political maneuvering would draw in a nation where consumers were in the final shopping countdown toward Christmas and the next national election was nearly a year away. ___ Associated Press writers Alan Fram and Laurie Kellman contributed to this report.

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TerraSpark Geosciences Appoints Philip E. Neri Vice President of Marketing and Product Strategy

December 20, 2011

HOUSTON, TX and BOULDER, CO–(Marketwire – Dec 20, 2011) – TerraSpark Geosciences LLC® announced today the appointment of Philip E. Neri as Vice President, Marketing and Product Strategy. In addition to managing all marketing activities, Mr. Neri will lead product strategy and direct product management for Insight Earth®, TerraSpark’s benchmark 3D seismic interpretation platform.

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Cargill Resumes Ground Turkey Production After Salmonella Incidents

December 20, 2011

SPRINGDALE, Ark. — An Arkansas meat processing plant that was linked to a salmonella outbreak this year is producing ground turkey again, meat Giant Cargill Inc. said Monday. The move comes after the Minnesota-based company improved safety measures in response to the outbreak that left one person dead and prompted the recall of millions of pounds of turkey. Cargill said it brought back about 50 of the 130 workers who were laid off from the plant in October because the northwest Arkansas plant wasn’t producing ground turkey. More than 70 other workers had already rejoined the company after the layoffs. The company recalled 36 million pounds of ground turkey in August after the Agriculture Department said the meat was linked to a death in California and dozens of illnesses. Cargill halted production at the Springdale plant and briefly resumed processing turkey. Then, in September, the company announced a second recall after a test showed salmonella in a sample from the plant. Now, Cargill said it has restarted one of four ground turkey production lines at the Springdale plant after the Agriculture Department approved a set of safety measures. The other three lines will start up in the coming weeks. Cargill said it has since created a sampling and monitoring program and put more and better bacterial reduction steps into place at the plant. The Arkansas plant has about 1,200 employees and – at full production – processes 7 million pounds of finished turkey products each week ranging from whole birds to turkey breasts to ground products.

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With End Of Puerto Rico Tax Break, Corporations Look Offshore

December 20, 2011

On either side of a two-lane road and surrounded by the lush green mountains of Villalba in central Puerto Rico, stand a pair of manufacturing plants owned by Medtronic Inc. (MDT), the world’s biggest maker of heart-rhythm devices. Medtronic does more than half of its $16 billion in annual sales of pacemakers, defibrillators and other devices in the U.S. It manufactures the equipment at this facility, legacy of a defunct U.S. tax break designed to encourage investment on the poverty-stricken island. Yet, Medtronic credits the income to a mailbox in a Cayman Islands office building.

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Lucid Imagination Names Search and Open Source Expert Paul Doscher CEO

December 20, 2011

REDWOOD CITY, CA–(Marketwire – Dec 20, 2011) – Lucid Imagination , the commercial company for Apache Lucene and Apache Solr search technology, today named search and open source expert Paul Doscher the company’s new chief executive officer. Doscher brings nearly 30 years of technology management experience to Lucid Imagination, including a focus on open source and search technologies at Exalead S.A. and Jaspersoft Corporation. Doscher will lead Lucid Imagination to its next phase of growth, as the world’s leading commercial open source platform that accelerates and simplifies the development of highly accurate, scalable and cost-effective search applications. As the big data trend looms large, Lucid Imagination is uniquely positioned to help organizations quickly uncover trends hidden in unstructured data, and learn from that data in real time to fuel faster and more appropriate business decisions.

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Swedish Carmaker Saab Files for Bankruptcy

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) The Swedish carmaker Saab on Monday filed for bankruptcy, its Dutch owner Swedish Automobile said. The board of Swedish Automobile said that Chinese group Youngman …

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EU- ECB Steps Up Efforts to Help Contain Eurozone Debt Crisis

December 20, 2011

(MENAFN – Qatar News Agency) The European Central Bank (ECB) said on Monday it bought 3.36 billion euros (2.58 billion dollars) of bonds from heavily indebted eurozone members last week, stepping up …

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ScaleArc Raises $5.33 Million to Fund Expansion

December 20, 2011

Names Former Juniper Networks Executive as President and COO

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AusTex Oil Limited (ASX:AOK) Completes Management Reserve Estimates for Snake River Project in Northern Oklahoma

December 20, 2011

http://www.abnnewswire.net/rss2/menafn/abn_menafn_en.asp AusTex Oil Limited (ASX:AOK) says today that following on from the recent production success in Northern Oklahoma, AusTex Oil Limited is …

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Asian Activities Report for December 21, 2011: Shandong Zhongrun (SHE:000506) to Invest in Canadian Zinc Corporation (TSE:CZN)

December 20, 2011

http://www.abnnewswire.net/rss2/menafn/abn_menafn_en.asp Shandong Zhongrun Investment Holding Group Co. Ltd (SHE:000506) says today that its wholly-owned subsidiary Zhongrun International Mining …

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Vector Resources Limited (ASX:VEC) Significant Gold Resource Increase at Lightning Deposit

December 20, 2011

http://www.abnnewswire.net/rss2/menafn/abn_menafn_en.asp Western Australian focussed resources company Vector Resources Limited (ASX:VEC) (“Vector” or “the Company”) is pleased to announce a …

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