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Will success spoil Crown Heights? Posted On Sunday, 05 Jun 2011 By Everything Real Estate – Crain’s New York Business . Under REAL ESTATE NEWS. Will success spoil Crown Heights? Nizjoni Granville has called Crown Heights home for 30 years, but her time there may be running out. … Laura Shin – Blue Wolf Capital Partners :Charles P. Miller, 50, has joined the private equity firm as a partner , responsible for originating opportunities and managing portfolio companies. …

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Greg David on NY’s costly construction unions. Posted On Sunday, 05 Jun 2011 By Everything Real Estate – Crain’s New York Business . Under REAL ESTATE NEWS. Greg David – In 2009, with the economy weakening, developers and builders asked the city’s construction unions for help in …. Laura Shin – Blue Wolf Capital Partners :Charles P. Miller, 50, has joined the private equity firm as a partner , responsible for originating opportunities and managing portfolio companies. …

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Private Real Estate Investors Lending in Phoenix , Arizona …

June 4, 2011

http://www.lendinguniverse.com Find private real estate investors and lenders in Phoenix, Arizona to fund hard money loans residential, commercial land and.

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Raul A. Reyes: Supreme Court Misses the Mark on Legal Arizona Workers Act

June 3, 2011

On May 26, the Supreme Court upheld the Legal Arizona Workers Act of 2007. Now any business in the Grand Canyon State that knowingly or intentionally hires undocumented workers can lose their business license. If they are caught with a second offense within three years, they can be shut down. The law also requires employers to use E-Verify to check whether prospective hires are authorized to work. As an attorney and firm believer in the need for comprehensive immigration reform, I found the Court’s decision troubling. It signals that states can continue to experiment with anti-illegal immigration initiatives. Eight states already have laws similar to Arizona’s Legal Worker Act. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures , this year there have been 279 bills in 44 states focusing on penalties for businesses that hire illegal immigrants. But a patchwork of local immigration laws on is no substitute for a coherent national policy. While punishing employers for hiring illegal workers is a good idea, Arizona’s law has not been shown to reduce illegal immigration. In 2008, the first year it was in effect, state income tax collection dropped 13%. But sales tax revenues on food and clothing remained fairly steady. The Arizona Republic , economists, and researchers have all concluded that the law has sent unauthorized workers into the underground economy, not back to Mexico. The law shifted people into informal employment, resulting in a drop in much-needed tax revenue. In upholding Arizona’s law, the Court also approved the mandatory use of E-Verify. With this program, employers check the names of prospective employees against a database maintained by the Social Security Administration and the Department of Homeland Security. One problem with E-Verify is that it often does not detect unauthorized workers. A 2009 study by the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services found that E-Verify cleared 54% of illegal immigrants to work. In his majority opinion , Chief Justice John Roberts noted that E-Verify clears 98% of new hires to work. Yet the system poses a real hurdle for those incorrectly identified as unauthorized to work. This could be almost anyone, from those who have married, divorced or changed their name, to those unlucky enough to be the victim of a clerical error. The Government Accounting Office (GAO) estimates that taking E-Verify national would result in 164,000 workers a year being incorrectly tagged as not eligible to work. Arizona’s law allows only eight working days to fix errors before a person must be fired. By the way, good luck with that. The GAO has called the process of fixing errors in the federal government database “formidable.” Although the government promotes E-Verify as “Fast, Easy, and Free,” it places a significant burden on small businesses. Bloomberg estimates that if E-Verify were to go national, small businesses would have to spend $2.6 billion in time, training, and productivity to become compliant. E-Verify can be a hassle for big corporations, too. In 2008, Intel reported that 12% of its workforce was incorrectly tagged as ineligible to work. In his dissenting opinion , Justice Stephen Breyer was rightly concerned by an unintended result of Arizona’s law. Employers, faced with the risk of penalties or the loss of their business, will be reluctant to hire those who look or sound foreign-born. This opens the door for discrimination against Latinos, legal residents, or anyone who doesn’t “look” American. In the wake of the Court’s ruling, the Obama Administration must ensure that the anti-discrimination provisions of employment laws are zealously enforced. The government must also invest in improving E-Verify’s accuracy. Still, the program is a compliance tool, and was never intended to be enforcement option. It is not going to create jobs; its consequences may be the opposite. Unfortunately, the Court’s decision shows disregard for immigration policy, economic reality, and civil rights.

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Bryce Covert: Debt Collection Agencies Gone Wild

June 2, 2011

As Elizabeth Warren says , “Nothing will ever replace the role of personal responsibility.” Just as the FDA doesn’t prevent overdoses, the point of consumer protection regulations isn’t to come to the rescue of people who simply don’t want to pay back the money they owe. But debt collection agencies have started using outrageous tactics to get payments on debt. These companies buy up bad debt from lenders — credit card companies, phone companies, health care providers, you name it — for cheap and then hunt down the money owed in order to turn a profit. And in doing so, some act more like organized crime than private businesses. They harass consumers with threats and obscenities. Complaints about debt collectors filed with the Federal Trade Commission, the agency tasked with regulating these operations, rose by about 17% in 2010, which is nearly three times the number of complaints filed in 2002. They account for 27% of all those lodged with the FTC. And of the 54,147 consumers complaining to state level authorities in South Carolina, 4,182 said debt collectors had threatened violence. In 2005, 8,000 consumers told the FTC that debt collectors had used obscene or profane language, according to ” Up To Our Eyeballs .” But it’s not always just about outright harassment. It’s also a mind game. A former debt collector has anonymously blogged about some of the tactics he used, describing how he would “sound educated enough to perform some sort of legal action” by dropping four important phrases: office, file, client, and flat refusal to pay. This careful use of language was often enough to scare consumers into coughing up some money. Debt collectors put people in jail . The Minneapolis StarTribune reported that “the use of arrest warrants against debtors has jumped 60 percent over the past four years, with 845 cases in 2009.” The Wall Street Journal found similar numbers: More than a third of all U.S. states allow borrowers who can’t or won’t pay to be jailed. Judges have signed off on more than 5,000 such warrants since the start of 2010 in nine counties with a total population of 13.6 million people, according to a tally by The Wall Street Journal of filings in those counties. This has resulted in people being jailed for owing as little as $85, while the rising number of cases has clogged law enforcement computer systems, making it harder for police to work on hard crimes. And in a sign of the times, debt collection agencies have started using social media as a weapon. One man reported that he checked in at a restaurant on foursquare, tipping the debt collectors off to his location, and they repossessed his car while he ate. They also sign up for accounts on Facebook and friend debtors — and while Brad Klein, president of the Arizona Collector’s Association, points out that they can’t misrepresent themselves or send messages or comments without violating laws, they use it to find phone numbers and home addresses. Meanwhile, they can send emails without violating the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act . Why is the industry deploying such aggressive, quasi-legal tactics to hunt down debt? Because it’s a very lucrative business. The industry as a whole made $11.7 billion in revenue last year. Portfolio Recovery Associates, a debt buyer, alone made $44 million on $281 million in revenue, a 16% net margin. This is because that company pays about 2.5 cents for every dollar of bad debt it purchases, but it makes back about 7.5 cents. That profit has jumped from $402,000 in 1998, mostly because so many more lenders are selling bad debt in order to write it off. Even the business community sees this as a golden opportunity: in the third quarter of 2005, private equity firms and venture capitalists invested $1.6 billion in it. Those who take out loans and lines of credit are responsible for paying back what they owe. But the debt collection industry has run amok in the practices it deploys to get repaid. We need some cops on the beat to rein them in. Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0 .

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Scott Gerber: 14 Stellar Websites for Wannabe Entrepreneurs

May 9, 2011

Q: What websites are most helpful for aspiring entrepreneurs? –Sally, Arizona The following answers are provided by the Young Entrepreneur Council . Founded by Scott Gerber , the Y.E.C. is a nonprofit organization that provides young entrepreneurs with access to tools, mentorship, community and educational resources that support each stage of their business’s development and growth. The organization promotes entrepreneurship as a solution to youth unemployment and underemployment.

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Scott Gerber: Startup Bibles: Top Entrepreneurs Pick Their Favorite Books

May 3, 2011

Q: What is your favorite business book and why? –Sally, Arizona The following answers are provided by the Young Entrepreneur Council . Founded by Scott Gerber , the Y.E.C. is a nonprofit organization that provides young entrepreneurs with access to tools, mentorship, community and educational resources that support each stage of their business’s development and growth. The organization promotes entrepreneurship as a solution to youth unemployment and underemployment.

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As Other States Cut Back, Oregon Gives More

April 27, 2011

While some states have been cutting unemployment insurance for the long-term unemployed, Oregon has made its benefits more generous. People laid off through no fault of their own are eligible for up to 99 weeks of aid in 25 states . But last month, Oregon lawmakers gave the long-term unemployed an additional six weeks of benefits. That means that in Oregon, where the unemployment rate stands tall at 10 percent, so-called “99ers” — people who’ve burned through all 99 weeks without finding work — can now theoretically become “105ers.” Last week was the first payable week of the brand-new Oregon Emergency Benefits program . Portland resident Harold Treinen told HuffPost he’d started receiving the benefits last week after joining the ranks of the 99ers about a month ago. “It’s saving me, is what it’s doing,” said Treinen of the new program. Treinen, a 57-year-old financial analyst, said he was laid off in in March 2009 and had relied on unemployment insurance during his fruitless job search. When his benefits stopped last month, he found himself in survival mode. “I had like a two or three week gap. You just have to shut everything down. You have to say, ‘I can’t do anything.’” The Congressional Research Service estimated that as of last October, 1.4 million Americans had been out of work for 99 weeks or longer. For those who receive maximum aid, the benefits cycle like this: The state initially provides up to 26 weeks and the federal government provides the rest through two programs. The first is Emergency Unemployment Compensation, which provides up to 53 weeks of benefits broken into four “tiers,” and the other is the Extended Benefits program, which provides the final 20 weeks. (Recent efforts to provide more weeks of federal benefits have stalled.) The programs can combine to provide fewer than 99 weeks depending on a state’s unemployment rate. The Oregon Employment Department expects 17,000 Oregonians to qualify for the Oregon Emergency Benefits program, which is funded with $30 million from the state’s unemployment trust fund, according to spokesman Craig Spivey. The program will last until July 2 or whenever the money runs out. The extra benefits in place today actually represent the third time Oregon lawmakers have given an extra boost to the super-jobless, with previous programs in 2010 providing up to 6 or 13 weeks of aid. At the same time Oregon is taking steps to increase aid, other states are effectively cutting it. Several are allowing the federal Extended Benefits program to expire by choosing not to update the arcane “trigger” used to determine a state’s EB eligibility. A high unemployment rate is one condition; the other is that the rate must be 10 percent higher than in either of the two previous years. When it reauthorized the federal unemployment benefit programs in December, Congress invited states to modify their triggers to encompass an additional previous year, since unemployment rates in most states have risen dramatically from what they were three years ago but have held relatively steady over the past two years. North Carolina, Tennessee, and Wisconsin let the program die on April 16, and the Arizona State Legislature has adjourned for the year without taking up the issue. Arizona, Pennsylvania, and Washington, D.C. are expected to “trigger off” EB come May. Lawmakers in Michigan and Missouri acted to preserve EB, but at the same time they cut state benefits to 20 weeks, making them the only states that provide fewer than 26 weeks for newly unemployed people. Twenty weeks will be all that remain once the federal programs expire in January, unless Congress decides to reauthorize them, which is an open question. Treinen, for his part, said he’s been participating in monthly networking sessions with other unemployed workers organized by Working America, an affiliate of the AFL-CIO , where he’s had some interview coaching and a chance to polish his resume. He suspects his age is a significant barrier to finding a new job. “Because I’m middle aged — you can’t prove it, but there’s definitely a bias there, even though you would think experience would carry some weight,” he said. “There’s no way to prove it. It’s sad for a lot of reasons. I’m a team player.”

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Jan Brewer Reverses Course On Restoring Transplant Funding

April 1, 2011

PHOENIX – Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer has proposed that the state restore Medicaid coverage for transplant patients — which was reduced amid much controversy last fall. Brewer announced the change Thursday as part of a major revamp of the state’s Medicaid program. The plan, which includes enrollment freezes, would help save a projected $500 million to help close a $1.1 billion shortfall in the state’s overall budget. The Arizona governor signaled her desire to restore the funding in a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius. The Arizona Republic reports : Her letter reads in part, “Finally, I also propose the restoration of optional transplant services that were eliminated as part of the state’s FY 2011 budget. I have long said that restoration of these services is only possible through a comprehensive plan that reforms Arizona’s Medicaid program and ensures its long-term financial viability. I believe this is that plan. Therefore, I am asking the legislature to authorize the restoration of optional transplant services.” Brewer said her proposal is comprehensive enough to put the Medicaid program on solid long-term footing, so she is asking the Legislature to restore the cuts in coverage for transplants. Approximately 100 people lost eligibility for receiving transplants under the cuts, which took effect Oct. 1. Democratic Rep. Anna Tovar says the coverage’s $1.2 million cost is affordable and should have been restored long ago.

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Supreme Court Skeptical Of Arizona Campaign Finance Law

March 28, 2011

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court appeared poised Monday to strike down a provision of a campaign financing system in Arizona that gives extra cash to publicly funded candidates who face privately funded rivals and independent groups. Such a decision would be another blow to public campaign financing, once thought of as an antidote to the corrupting influence of money in politics. President Barack Obama has been the most prominent example of politicians who have abandoned public financing because they can raise far more money privately. The justices heard arguments in a challenge to the Arizona system that gives candidates who opt for public financing up to two times their base amount when they’re outspent by privately funded rivals or targeted by independent group spending. The court’s conservative-leaning justices, who have issued a string of decisions upending campaign finance laws in the past five years, appeared skeptical of the Arizona law because it, in their view, is designed to level the playing field for all candidates. The court has said such leveling often runs afoul of the First Amendment. Among the recent rulings were last year’s Citizens United decision that removed most limits on election spending by corporations and organized labor, and a 2008 decision that voided the federal “millionaire’s amendment” to increase contribution limits for congressional candidates facing wealthy opponents. Both decisions were ideologically split 5-4 votes in which the conservative justices prevailed. On Monday, several justices seized on the contention that the law discourages candidates and independent groups from spending money when they know it will result in more money going to the candidate they oppose. “Just as a common-sense matter, if I’m someone with the capacity and will to make an independent expenditure, why don’t I think twice?” Justice Anthony Kennedy asked. Bradley S. Phillips, the Los Angeles-based lawyer defending the law, said it encourages more competition by ensuring that publicly funded candidates have the chance to run credible races. Phillips said the system is strictly voluntary. Candidates decide whether to take public funds, and if so, they agree not to raise any private money. William Maurer, the Seattle-based lawyer for the challengers, said elections are a “zero-sum game,” and that what benefits one candidate, harms the opponent. Tying disbursements of campaign funds to the activities of privately funded candidates means “each time they speak, the more work that they do, the more their opponents benefit,” Maurer said. The law was enacted by voters in the aftermath of a public corruption scandal in Arizona in the 1990s. Four other states, Maine, New Mexico, North Carolina and Wisconsin, have similar “trigger” provisions that affect some political races, and could be vulnerable if the Supreme Court strikes down the Arizona provision. Another state, Connecticut, changed its law to eliminate its trigger after a federal appeals court struck it down. Los Angeles and New York are among big cities that also provide public money to candidates. Retired Justice Sandra Day O’Connor sat through part of the argument dealing with a law from her native Arizona. O’Connor looked more favorably on campaign finance restrictions than does her successor, Justice Samuel Alito. Alito seemed to suggest that giving a publicly funded candidate campaign money in one lump sum – so that the amount of money does not depend on an opponent’s campaign activity – could resolve the potential First Amendment problems in Arizona’s law. Justice Elena Kagan seemed strongly supportive of the Arizona law. “I think the purpose of this law is to prevent corruption,” Kagan said. “That’s what the purpose of all public financing systems are.” But there appeared to be five votes to rule otherwise. Doug Kendall, head of the liberal interest group Constitutional Accountability Center, attended the argument and said afterward that the court seemed ready to “gut an effort by Arizona to expand speech while combating the worst public corruption scandal in the state’s history.” A decision should come by summer. The cases, joined together at the high court, are Arizona Free Enterprise v. Bennett, 10-238, and McComish v. Bennett, 10-239.

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John McCain Flunks Made In America 101

March 6, 2011

GOP Sen. John McCain is in need of a tech lesson. In an appearance on ABC’s “This Week,” the senator from Arizona said that iPads and iPhones are “built in the United States of America.” But every techie knows that they are, in fact, built in China.

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Arizona Budget Cuts Target Potentially Life-Saving Care For Transplant Patients

March 6, 2011

PEORIA, Arizona (Reuters) – A pacemaker and defibrillator fitted to carpenter Douglas Gravagna’s failing heart makes even rising from the couch of his Phoenix-valley home a battle. But it is not congestive heart failure that is killing him, he says. It is a decision by Arizona Governor Jan Brewer to stop funding for some organ transplants as the state struggles to reduce a yawning budget deficit. “She’s signing death warrants — that’s what she’s doing. This is death for me,” says Gravagna, 44, a heavy-set man who takes 14 medications to stay alive. Gravagna is among 98 people denied state Medicaid funding for potentially life-saving transplants and at the forefront of a harrowing battle over the state’s public finances. The measure enacted last October by Brewer trimmed spending on Medicaid, the federal-state health insurance program, to help close a projected 2012 budget deficit of $1.15 billion. It eliminated coverage for transplants including lung, heart, liver and bone marrow after weighing the success and survival rates for certain transplant procedures. Two patients on the Medicaid waiting list have since died, although it is unclear if transplants would have saved them. In a statewide speech, the Republican governor singled out the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System, as the Medicaid program is called in the desert state, as the greatest drain on state coffers. “At the deficit’s core is the explosive growth in Medicaid spending which, over the last four years, has soared by almost 65 percent and now consumes 29 percent of our state budget,” she said. “If we are to regain control of state spending, we must reform Medicaid and free Arizona from the fiscal manipulation of the federal government,” Brewer said. CUTTING RATES TO PROVIDERS Medicaid, which covers about 60 million Americans — poor adults and children, people who are elderly or have disabilities — is one of the top expenses for states. It makes up about 16 percent of state budgets, said Judith Solomon at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. It pays for more than 40 percent of all births in the United States and is the primary bill-payer for nearly two-thirds of the country’s nursing home residents, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. In Texas the proposed budget would cut rates to Medicaid providers, including doctors, dentists, hospitals and nursing homes, by 10 percent, making it more difficult for patients to find healthcare providers who accept Medicaid. Other states, among them Nevada, Illinois, Mississippi, Nebraska, Colorado and South Dakota, have also proposed provider rate cuts. Proposed cuts range from limiting prescription and doctor visits in California to eliminating adult vision and dental services in Georgia, the center says. Brewer has proposed dropping about 250,000 Arizonans — mostly childless adults — from the program. Most states are not proposing to trim Medicaid rolls because the new federal health reform law requires that they maintain current Medicaid coverage. But the U.S. Health and Human Services Department has said Arizona can drop coverage because the state is providing it through a temporary waiver, and the new law does not require extending that. ‘OTHER PLACES TO MAKE CUTS’ Taking an ax to transplant funding is backed by many Republicans in Arizona, some of who sympathize with Brewer. “It’s a very difficult unenviable position to be in for her,” said Kathy Boatman, a conservative Tea Party activist in the Phoenix valley. “It’s not fun, it’s unpleasant, but when expenses have outpaced income, that’s what you have to do.” But opponents, including state Democrats, the families of desperately sick patients like Gravagna and some doctors say savings can be made without putting lives on the line. “There are other places to make cuts. We’ve cut taxes on the very rich, we have corporate tax loopholes,” said Bruce Madison, a doctor who spoke at a rally to restore transplant funding in Phoenix on Saturday. Madison received a life-saving heart transplant six years ago. State Representative Anna Tovar, a Democrat and former kindergarten teacher, received two transplants to combat a rare form of leukemia. She says Arizona stands to lose more than $3 million a year in federal matching funds for Medicaid to save $1.4 million a year by restricting transplants. “When you look at the big scheme of things, saving $1.4 million for 96 lives is not money well spent,” said Tovar, who has introduced four bills seeking to restore Medicaid funding for transplants. As he grows sicker after being denied a liver transplant last year, Francisco Felix, 32, says any savings from denying him the operation are in some measure a false economy. “If I got a transplant, I could get back to work … pay my taxes, and help Arizona to get back on its feet,” he said at the rally. (Additional reporting by Corrie MacLaggan; Editing by Xavier Briand) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Brewer’s Proposed Health Care Cuts Could Slam Hospitals As Patients Lose Funding

February 28, 2011

When 62-year-old John Schoenhoft’s abnormal heartbeat landed him in a Cottonwood, Arizona, hospital for three days in August, he had no insurance, his hours as a home health caregiver had been cut and his wife was out of work. Taxpayers picked up his $30,000 bill under Arizona’s Medicaid system. Whether it would cover a future occurrence will depend on Governor Jan Brewer’s plan to strike as many as 280,000 adults from Medicaid, the health-care program for the poor funded by the state and federal governments, to help bridge a $1.2 billion budget gap for the year that begins July 1.

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Intel to Build $5B Chipmaking Facility Near Phoenix

February 22, 2011

Intel Corp. will spend more than $5 billion to build a new chip manufacturing facility at its site in Chandler, AZ. Intel President and CEO Paul Otellini made the announcement Friday during a visit by President Barack Obama to Intel’s Hillsboro, OR facility. Named Fab 42, the Arizona plant will be the most advanced high-volume semiconductor manufacturing facility in the world. Construction will begin in the middle of this year and is expected to…

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Intel to Build $5B Chipmaking Facility Near Phoenix

February 22, 2011

Intel Corp. will spend more than $5 billion to build a new chip manufacturing facility at its site in Chandler, AZ. Intel President and CEO Paul Otellini made the announcement Friday during a visit by President Barack Obama to Intel’s Hillsboro, OR facility. Named Fab 42, the Arizona plant will be the most advanced high-volume semiconductor manufacturing facility in the world. Construction will begin in the middle of this year and is expected to…

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Intel to construct Arizona cutting-edge microchip factory

February 20, 2011

Intel to construct Arizona cutting-edge microchip factory

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Largest Nevada Casinos Lose $3.4B During Fiscal 2010

January 31, 2011

LAS VEGAS — Nevada’s largest casinos lost $3.4 billion during the fiscal year that ended June 30, cutting costs by nearly $4.5 billion to help narrow losses from an even worse stretch in late 2008 and early 2009, state gambling regulators said Monday. During the year that ended June 30, 2009, the largest casinos in the Silver State lost nearly $6.8 billion. The Nevada Gaming Control Board said in its Gaming Abstract on Monday that the 256 casinos that grossed at least $1 million in gambling revenue combined for nearly $21 billion in total revenue, including money earned from hotel rooms, restaurants, bars and other sources. That was down more than 5 percent compared with just over $22 billion taken in by 260 large casinos in fiscal 2009, regulators said. The report said 76.2 percent of the total gambling revenue came from 68 casinos owned by publicly-traded companies. The casinos paid $777.6 million in taxes – 7.8 percent of their gambling revenue, the report said. Gambling revenue made up nearly $10 billion, 47.5 percent of casinos’ total revenue. Most of the cost cuts – nearly $4 billion – came from general and administrative expenses, which were 25.8 percent less in fiscal 2010 than in fiscal 2009. Casino, food and other expenses were also down, while room and bar expenses rose. The largest 148 casinos in Clark County, Nevada’s most populous county which includes Las Vegas, lost $3.36 billion and generated $18.2 billion in total revenue, the report said. On the Las Vegas Strip, casinos lost $2.57 billion on revenue of $13.3 billion. In Washoe County, which includes Reno, 31 casinos combined to lose $27.5 million on revenue of $1.5 billion. Only large casinos in Elko County, Laughlin – a Colorado River resort town 100 miles south of Las Vegas near the Arizona border – and other places not classified by region showed profits.

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Editorial: Tragedy at Arizona

January 10, 2011

Editorial: Tragedy at Arizona

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Brown & Brown, Inc. Elects Charlie Lydecker as Regional President

January 6, 2011

DAYTONA BEACH, FL and TAMPA, FL–(Marketwire – January 6, 2011) – The Board of Directors of Brown & Brown, Inc. ( NYSE : BRO ) today announced that Charles H. (“Charlie”) Lydecker, CPCU, CIC, AIM, has been elected as Regional President responsible for a number of the Company’s retail operations in the state of Florida and for certain of its retail operations in Arizona, New Jersey, New York, Texas and Virginia.

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The Housing Mess Hits One New York Town Hard

December 7, 2010

Many mature housing markets, such as those in the northeastern U.S., have been spared the dramatic drops in prices seen in Florida, Nevada, Arizona and other areas that experienced massive overbuilding during the recent real estate boom and bust.

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Video: Mittelstaedt Sees Demand for Supply Chain MBA Grads: Video

October 21, 2010

Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) — Robert Mittelstaedt, dean of the W.P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University, talks about prospects for MBA graduates. Mittelstaedt says 100 percent of his majors in supply chain management received jobs by the end of the summer after graduation. He speaks with Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Veterans Funding Passes With Overwhelming Majority As Republicans Abandon Tough Talk On Voting Against Spending

July 28, 2010

WASHINGTON — House Republicans who have spent months demanding spending cuts blanched Wednesday at their first opportunity to actually make them, instead joining Democrats in treating a bill to pay for veterans programs in 2011 as politically sacrosanct in an election year. The veterans measure is the first of a dozen spending bills for the upcoming 2011 budget year to come up for a vote. Democrats, meanwhile, were doing some ducking and weaving of their own to avoid time-consuming floor debates and politically difficult votes on other measures. It’s of little surprise that Democrats picked the Veterans Affairs bill as the first in the appropriations pile to bring to a vote. It passed by a 411-6 vote. Only a handful of others are likely to get as far before the November election, even though all 12 are supposed to pass both the House and Senate and be signed by the president before Oct. 1. Last year at this time, the House had passed all 12 bills. House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, offered the only amendments to cut the veterans bill but withdrew them as soon as Democrats started making political hay out of them. Boehner wanted to cut the Veterans Affairs Department’s rapidly growing policy office as well as its congressional lobbying operation and skim $45 million from the VA’s $3.3 billion request for computer systems, which the agency itself admits was too high. Still, Democrats howled. “I couldn’t believe it. You’re coming into an election and you’re taking money away from veterans,” said Veterans Committee Chairman Bob Filner, D-Calif. “I guess that’s their definition of supporting the troops.” A spokesman for Boehner said the GOP leader withdrew the amendments so that other Republicans could have a chance to offer theirs. But Boehner only did so after Democrats made it plain they were eager to award him votes and go on the attack. Veterans programs are hardly hurting. The VA’s so-called discretionary budget – the portion adopted by Congress each year – has risen 70 percent over the last five years and would receive a 7 percent boost for next year. Lawmakers say such increases are required by the large number of wounded veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan. Republicans instead offered various ideas to increase veterans spending, including proposals for renewable energy projects at VA hospitals, health care for women veterans, and a paralympics sports program for disabled veterans. By contrast, Republicans had lots of ideas for cutting transportation and housing programs in anticipation of a floor debate on Thursday, including cuts to Amtrak, the Washington-area Metro system, and across-the-board cuts to agencies. “Wait until tomorrow,” Boehner said. Republicans also complained about a $701 million border measure that passed shortly afterwards. They argued that $500 million for 1,200 additional border patrol agents and for other steps to try to control the U.S.-Mexico border wasn’t paid for with cuts to other programs. Still, Republicans didn’t force a roll call vote that would have put GOP lawmakers on record against the measure. It instead passed by voice vote, along with a $129 million measure to speed processing of patent applications. The underlying $77 billion veterans measure is the easiest for Congress to pass each year because of the popularity of the programs and the high regard that the public holds for the military. This year’s bill includes money to reduce a backlog in processing health claims, additional funding for community health centers and big increases to treat conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and traumatic brain injury. On the other side of the Capitol, the notoriously balky Senate has made it plain it doesn’t have much time to burn on routine spending bills. As a result, House Democratic leaders appear to have little enthusiasm for taking difficult votes and taking weeks of debate to pass bills that the Senate doesn’t have time for. The Senate Appropriations panel has approved half the bills, but it doesn’t appear that the full chamber will debate any until mid-September at the earliest. “We’re trying to move some of them and see what the Senate does,” said House Appropriations Chairman David Obey, D-Wis. “The Senate seems to be moving on a different track than we are, but at least they’re moving.” The once-bipartisan House committee have become bitterly polarized as Republicans have sought to force Democrats to cast politically difficult votes. For example, Obey postponed debate and action on the bill to pay for homeland security programs after Republicans signaled they would offer amendments to block the Obama administration’s attempts to nullify Arizona’s controversial immigration law. A federal judge on Wednesday put the most significant portions of the Arizona law on hold.

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Video: Vicente Fox Discusses Arizona Immigration Law: Video

July 28, 2010

July 28 (Bloomberg) — Former Mexican President Vicente Fox talks about Arizona’s immigration law and the impact on Mexican-U.S. relations. A federal judge barred the state from enforcing part of the law, while denying the U.S. government’s request for a preliminary injunction. Fox speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Arizona Payday Lenders Leave State After Voters, Legislature Let High-Interest Loans Expire

July 9, 2010

PHOENIX — Another payday lending company’s decision to leave the state shows the expiration of a law that allowed high-interest loans is working, Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard said. Advance America Cash Advance Centers Inc. announced plans this week to close all 47 of its locations in Arizona, along with 75 locations in several other states. The Spartanburg, S.C., company made millions “off of a business model that preyed on vulnerable borrowers,” Goddard said in a news release Friday. “They could have amended their business practices like other companies and charged lawful rates, but they chose to fold their tent here,” Goddard said. “That’s just what Arizona voters hoped would happen when they rejected this industry at the polls.” Payday lenders write checks for short-term loans while charging fees that can amount to interest rates of more than 400 percent on an annual basis. A decade-old law allowing the high-interest loans expired June 30, and lending companies unsuccessfully tried to persuade voters or the Legislature to extend it. State law now caps the annual interest rates for loans at 36 percent. Advance America spokesman Jamie Fulmer said last month that the end of payday lending could force customers looking for cash to turn to unregulated Internet loans. “The consumers who find themselves between paychecks with some type of unbudgeted or unexpected expense should be very concerned about the options left,” Fulmer said. Goddard announced a program last month to pursue payday companies that continued operating as usual after the law changed. His “Operation Sunset” plan includes a task force, public education campaign and consumer hot line. According to the state Department of Financial Institutions, there were about 600 payday loan stores in Arizona last month. Cincinnati-based Check ‘n Go said last month that it plans to close all 34 of its locations in the state. Besides its Arizona locations, Advance America said late Thursday that it is closing 55 stores in Washington and Colorado, two states that also changed their loan laws recently. The company’s shares fell as much as 6.3 percent in early trading Friday before closing up 1 cent to $3.83.

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Video: Martin Proposes Restructuring Arizona’s Debt for Budget: Video

July 2, 2010

July 2 (Bloomberg) — Arizona Treasurer Dean Martin talks about his state’s budget and U.S. immigration policy. Martin speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Martin Proposes Restructuring Arizona’s Debt for Budget: Video

July 2, 2010

July 2 (Bloomberg) — Arizona Treasurer Dean Martin talks about his state’s budget and U.S. immigration policy. Martin speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Gary Rivlin: Payday Lenders Exit Arizona — In Theory At Least

June 29, 2010

Today — June 30th – is the day that the payday lenders are supposed to close up shop in Arizona. But rather than celebrate, consumer advocates are braced for what might be coming next. They’ve seen what’s happened in North Carolina, they see what’s going on in Ohio. And maybe they follow the Payday Pundit , the alter-ego of Steven Schlein, the man the $40-billion-a-year payday industry pays handsomely to put lipstick on the pig. Last week, the Pundit quoted an article in The Wall Street Journal noting that there were nearly 600 stores in Arizona making cash advances against people’s next paychecks but changes in Arizona law “could effectively put them out of business” come July 1. “Take heart,” Schlein wrote in his role as the Pundit. “The industry has proven pretty resilient.” * The payday lending industry didn’t exist at the start of the 1990s but by 2001 there were more than 10,000 of these storefront bankers lending money $200 or $400 at a time to those living on the economic fringes. North Carolina was the first state to fight back against these lenders permitted by local law to charge fees that worked out to an annual interest rate of around 450 percent. The state legislature in North Carolina had been smart. They were willing to invite the payday lenders into the state but the law they wrote would expire unless it was renewed within four years. The payday lenders had sold their product as a once-in-a-blue-moon emergency product but in reality people were o wing money to one of the 1,000 payday stores that had opened around the state for months at a time. It was in mid-2001 that North Carolina tried ending its experimentation with payday lending yet it wasn’t until March of 2006 that the last of the big payday chains actually closed up shop. The payday lenders made the right economic choice by continuing to operate in the state, even if also a morally dubious one. North Carolina meant about $20 million in profits for the payday lenders and if the last three big chains standing – Check Into Cash , Check ‘n Go, and First American Cash Advance – didn’t quite collectively book that much money each year, the trio was adding millions annually to its coffers. And for operating in defiance of the law for nearly 5 years? The three paid a collective fine of $700,000. * To begin with the punch line. “Like mosquitoes adapting to a new bug spray,” wrote Thomas Suddes, a columnist for the Cleveland Plain Dealer . Ohio not once but twice tried pulling the plug on its payday lenders but they’re still making payday loans – even if they don’t use the term “payday” when describing them. The payday lenders first came to Ohio at the start of 1996. It was in 2007 that elected officials in Ohio started holding hearings where anybody who had something to say about the business – whether a store operator, a customer, a former employee, or just Joe or Jo Citizen – could be heard. The Attorney General held public forums around the state. In the Ohio House of Representatives, the Republican chairman of the Financial Institutions Committee held several hearings, including one that lasted seven hours. The result? In the spring of 2008, the House voted overwhelmingly in favor of imposing a 28 percent rate cap on the payday lenders and the Senate followed suit shortly thereafter. And then the day after Ohio Governor Ted Strickland’s signature made the bill a law, the payday lenders filed paperwork to put a referendum on the ballot that would reverse it. That gambit only proved that Ohioans were anything but ambivalent about payday loans. In November 2008, by nearly a two-to-one margin, voters in Ohio rejected the payday industry’s appeal to let them continue making loans at rates that worked out to 391 percent per year. Yet Ohio is pretty much a replay of North Carolina. The smaller players have tended to close shop but the chains are using one of a couple of workarounds. A favorite if for no other reason than its diabolical creativity: Charge only 28 percent interest on loans of a couple of hundred dollars – except now borrowers are paying a $15 application fee and also $10 for a credit check. And some of the more aggressive lenders are paying their customers with a check so they can charge them an extra fee to cash it. How else could they continue making 400 percent or so on their money? The Ohio House has passed a bill that would curb the fees lenders can charge its customers but the Senate has yet to take any action . * Payday came to Arizona in 2000. But like North Carolina, the Arizona legislature added a sunset provision. The payday enabling legislation expired after 10 years, i.e., now. In 2008, the payday lenders bankrolled an initiative they dubbed the “Payday Loan Reform Act.” They spent $14.8 million trying to convince Arizonans to vote for a measure that would allow them to keep operating in the state, according to David Higuera of Arizonans for Responsible Lending . (Interestingly, the industry’s ad campaign in support of their referendum called on voters to “crack down on payday lenders ,” as if theirs was an initiative supported by payday’s foes.) But despite spending so much money, the payday lenders lost that vote, just as they failed at subsequent attempts to convince the legislature to allow them to continue operating in the state. The jig is up today – June 30th. But there are other alternatives for the innovative fringe lender in Arizona, like loans against a person’s car. A lender can charge about 200 percent on a car title loan, not 400 percent (but then they hold a pretty valuable piece of collateral, the title on a person’s car), and already operators representing about half the payday stores in the state have applied for a license to make these loans, said Jean Ann Fox, a long-time staffer for the Consumer Federation of America who happens live in Arizona. And then there’s the lender offering prepaid cards that include an overdraft feature that allows people to borrow against money they don’t yet have — at rates equal to a payday loan. Arizona’s Attorney General has issued a stern warning to any payday lender thinking of continuing to make payday loans after today. And Arizona, unlike Ohio, has limits on the fees a lender can add to the cost of a loan. Fox, who has been monitoring the payday industry since the mid-1990s, is confident that Arizona won’t be as bad as North Carolina or Ohio even as she agrees that the payday lenders are a crafty and resilient bunch.

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Supreme Court Blocks Public Financing In Arizona Elections

June 8, 2010

PHOENIX — The U.S. Supreme Court derailed a key part of Arizona’s campaign financing system on Tuesday, preventing the state from giving extra money to publicly funded candidates facing privately funded rivals and changing the election rules in the thick of primary season. The court stopped Arizona from disbursing so-called matching funds at least until it decides whether to hear the opponents’ full appeal. As they await a final ruling that may not come until the fall or even later, candidates and their advisers are reworking their strategies, with publicly funded candidates having to compete with fewer dollars. “This ruling is obviously going to have a direct impact on candidates’ strategy,” Arizona State University political science professor Patrick Kenney said. “They (the court) could have let that sit until that race is over.” The court’s brief order may have the greatest impact on the GOP gubernatorial primary, in which Gov. Jan Brewer, who is running with public financing, is facing a challenge from Buz Mills, a millionaire businessman largely using his own money in his first bid for office. Under Arizona’s system, candidates who opt for public financing can get matching funds up to two times their base amount when they’re outspent by privately funded rivals or targeted by independent groups’ spending. Critics say the funds chill free-speech rights of privately financed candidates and their contributors by inhibiting fundraising and spending. State officials and advocates of public campaign finance systems saying the matching funds help combat contributions-for-favors corruption and encourage more people to run for office. Lower courts that considered Arizona’s matching funds split on their constitutionality. In the governor’s race, Brewer has received her $707,000 base allotment but stood to get $1.4 million in matching funds. That’s because Mills has already spent roughly $2.3 million, mostly on television advertising for his largely self-funded campaign. Blocking matching funds helps Mills and hurts Brewer and Martin, Kenney said. But Brewer still has the incumbent’s advantage of name recognition that Mills must overcome, he said. Mills, who earned his fortune building cell phone towers, said he didn’t know how the ruling would affect his campaign or how much he’d end up spending. “We’re in this to win this race … whatever it takes to get there,” he said. Brewer said in a prepared statement that she was troubled by the Supreme Court’s action, saying it changed the rules in the middle of the election. Her campaign spokesman Doug Cole said Brewer’s basic allotment isn’t enough to pay for substantial television advertising. Cole said the campaign will have to rely more heavily on Internet videos and social media. Republican State Treasurer Dean Martin, planning to file within days for public funding, insisted that he won’t be hurt by the order. He said Brewer and he will have the same amount of money and that Mills hasn’t gained traction despite his spending. “Arizona will be able to have its first elections in 10 years without having the government place its thumb on the scales in favor of publicly financed candidates,” said Bill Maurer, an Institute for Justice attorney helping represent opponents of matching funds. Supporters argued that blocking matching funds disrupts campaigns already under way and will result in less free speech. “It’s going to result in much less speech, much less information in the marketplace of ideas,” said Todd Lang, executive director of Arizona’s public campaign finance system. Nearly half of the state-office candidates who qualified to run in the primary were running with public funding. Candidates qualify by collecting $5 contributions from voters, the number depending on the office sought. At least two other states, Connecticut and Maine, have similar provisions in their public campaign finance systems, but Tuesday’s Supreme Court order only affects Arizona. The Supreme Court issued another campaign finance-related ruling in January, when it upheld the First Amendment rights of corporations and labor unions to spend money on campaign ads. ___ Associated Press writers Mark Sherman and Jonathan J. Cooper contributed. Sherman contributed from Washington.

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Democratic Draft of Immigration Legislation Emphasizes Border Security

April 29, 2010

By Laura Litvan April 29 (Bloomberg) — Democratic leaders in the Senate are drafting immigration legislation that would aim to bolster security at U.S. borders before later providing a way for illegal immigrants to become U.S. citizens. A proposal being drafted by a group that includes Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada and Senator Charles Schumer of New York would require that more money first be poured into boosting the number of border officers and U.S. Immigration and Customs enforcement agents, according to a draft provided by a person familiar with their negotiations. More resources would also be provided to prosecute and try drug smugglers and those who cross into the country illegally. “Proponents of immigration reform acknowledge that we need to meet clear and concrete benchmarks before we can finally ensure that America’s borders are secure and effectively deal with the millions of illegal immigrants already in the United States,” according to the draft outline. Work on the Democratic legislation comes after efforts toward a bipartisan measure involving Schumer and South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham fell apart. Graham and other Republicans say Democrats are pushing too fast on legislation that needs more time before it can gather enough support with Republicans, and that a fast track promoted by Reid appears more geared toward boosting the Hispanic vote in an election year. Other senators working on the legislation include Senator Robert Menendez , a New Jersey Democrat and chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee , and Senator Dianne Feinstein , a California Democrat and a senior member of the Senate Judiciary Committee. Appetite for Action President Barack Obama this evening said there might not be the “appetite” in Congress to take on a big issue such as immigration after the recent completion of health-care legislation. He said he wants to see a working group of lawmakers start to lay important groundwork for action. “I don’t want us to do something just for the sake of politics that doesn’t solve the problem,” Obama said. “‘I think we need to start a process at least to open up a smarter better discussion than the one that is raging right now.” Calls for action from Hispanic groups, labor unions and Democratic lawmakers supporting an immigration overhaul have increased since Arizona Governor Jan Brewer last week signed a tough new immigration measure into law. The Arizona statute would make it a state crime to be in the U.S. illegally and require local police to determine the immigration status of anyone an officer suspects of being in the country without proper documentation. Arizona Law Members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus joined others in calling for action yesterday. They said the Arizona law shows how states may fill the void with measures that challenge civil liberties. The Arizona law creates a “clear, pivotal moment” that should give momentum to an overhaul of the nation’s immigration policies, said Representative Luis Gutierrez , an Illinois Democrat and a member of the Hispanic caucus. He was joined by members of House caucuses representing black and Asian-American Democrats, as well as members of the Progressive caucus. Reid, who is up for re-election in a state where 15 percent of voters are Hispanic, has taken the lead. He acknowledges that any measure doesn’t yet have enough support to clear the chamber. The outline of legislation does not provide specific border-security benchmarks. It says that additional personnel and resources, including high-tech ground sensors on the U.S.- Mexico border and other equipment, will be provided. A bipartisan commission will offer additional recommendations. Verification Systems The legislation would also require the Social Security Administration to administer a new system of biometric cards that could be used to prevent hiring of illegal immigrants in U.S. workplaces. It would replace existing verification systems six years after enactment. The draft legislation would boost civil penalties for employers who knowingly hire illegal immigrants by 300 percent. The measure would create a new federal commission that would adjust caps for work visas for skilled and other workers based on whether too few, or too many, immigrants are arriving to meet the needs of the U.S. economy. The proposal also changes the high-skilled immigration system, allowing employment by foreign students with advanced degrees from U.S. institutions in certain fields, such as engineering and technology. The proposal attempts to provide a way for the estimated 10.8 million people in the U.S. with no legal status to become citizens. First they could be provided with a “lawful immigrant status” that lets them to work and travel outside the U.S. Later, eight years after current visa backlogs are cleared, they could petition to become permanent U.S. citizens, under the proposal. To contact the reporter on this story: Laura Litvan  in Washington at   or llitvan@bloomberg.net .

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Mexico Issues Travel Warning for Arizona Over Law

April 27, 2010

By Jonathan J. Levin and Catherine Dodge April 27 (Bloomberg) — Mexicans in Arizona should carry documentation and “act carefully” after the state passed a law requiring local police to determine the immigration status of anyone suspected of being in the country illegally, Mexico’s Foreign Ministry said. The ministry said the warning is directed toward Mexicans living, studying or planning to travel to the southwestern U.S. state, which shares a border with northern Mexico, according to the e-mailed statement sent today. It comes as members of U.S. President Barack Obama’s administration said they have concerns about the new law and may seek to overturn it in court. “There is an adverse political environment for migrant communities and all Mexican visitors,” Mexico’s ministry said. “It’s important to act carefully and respect the local laws.” The Arizona law makes it a state crime to be in the U.S. without proper documentation. The state has an estimated 460,000 residents living there illegally, the seventh highest total in the country, according to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Opponents say it will lead to discrimination and racial profiling by law enforcement authorities. Arizona Governor Jan Brewer , who is running for re- election, signed the bill into law on April 23, saying it would address problems of violence along the border with Mexico and crime due to illegal immigration while protecting individual rights. ‘Murderous Greed’ “We cannot sacrifice our safety to the murderous greed of drug cartels,” Brewer said. “We cannot delay while the destruction happening south of our international border creeps its way north.” Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said during congressional testimony in Washington today that her agency has “deep concerns” about the law and that it will “detract from and siphon resources that we need to focus on those in the country illegally who are committing serious crimes.” U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said today that the Justice Department may go to court to challenge the statue. The law, which goes into effect 90 days after the Arizona legislative session ends, states that police must investigate if they have “reasonable suspicion” that someone is undocumented, according to Gabriel Chin, a professor of Law and Public Policy at the University of Arizona in Tucson. Police officers may face lawsuits if they fail to do so, he added. ‘Angered and Saddened’ “It’s very hard for me to see how this law can be enforced without discrimination,” Chin said in a telephone interview today from Tucson. “It seems to be inevitable.” Mexican President Felipe Calderon said April 26 that his country’s citizens are “angered and saddened” by the Arizona law, which he said “doesn’t adequately guarantee respect for people’s fundamental rights.” About a quarter of Arizona’s 6.6 million residents are of Hispanic descent, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. U.S. Democratic Party leaders said last week that an overhaul of immigration law could advance through Congress this year if Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid can pick up enough support to muscle it through the Senate first, according to April 22 remarks by Reid and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Pelosi told reporters that she will find the votes for the measure in the House — where Democrats have 254 of 435 seats — if the Senate can clear it. Senator Lindsey Graham , a South Carolina Republican who has been working with Democrats on an immigration overhaul, said rushing legislation this year would be a mistake because it doesn’t have the votes yet to pass. “The worst thing we could do is bring up immigration reform and have it crash and burn politically,” he told Napolitano. “If immigration comes up this year, it’s absolutely devastating to the future of this issue.” To contact the reporters on this story: Jonathan Levin in Mexico City at jlevin20@bloomberg.net ; Catherine Dodge in Washington at cdodge1@bloomberg.net

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States Target Payday Lenders

April 8, 2010

PHOENIX — When Jeffrey Smith needed some quick cash to pay a medical bill, he turned to a payday loan store near his home outside Phoenix. He eventually took out a string of payday loans and fell into a vicious cycle in which he would call out sick from work so he could drive all over town to pay off loans and take out new ones. The experience left him in bankruptcy, lying to his wife and fighting thoughts of suicide. Stories like Smith’s and a growing backlash against payday lending practices have prompted legislatures around the country to crack down on the businesses. In the most severe case, Arizona lawmakers are on the verge of shutting down the entire industry in the state. A law took effect in Washington this year capping the amount of payday loans and the number that a borrower can take out in a year. And in Wisconsin, lawmakers are locked in a heated battle over whether to regulate the industry. Payday lenders say they are providing an important service, especially in a dreadful economy where people are short on cash. Detractors say the industry preys on desperate people with annual interest rates that routinely exceed 400 percent. “It’s sort of like a twisted person that’s standing on the street corner offering a child candy,” Smith said. “He’s not grabbing the child and throwing him into a van, but he’s offering something the child needs at that moment.” Payday loans are short-term, high-interest loans that are effectively advances on a borrower’s next paycheck. For example, a person who needs a quick $300 but doesn’t get paid for two weeks can get a loan to help pay the bills, writing a postdated check that the store agrees not to cash until payday. The borrower would have to pay $53 in finance charges for a $300, two-week loan in Arizona – an annual interest rate of 459 percent. Payday loan stores are ubiquitous in Arizona, especially in working-class neighborhoods of Phoenix where the businesses draw in customers with neon lights and around-the-clock hours. Payday lenders in Arizona several years ago were granted a temporary exemption from the state’s 36 percent cap on annual interest rates. The exemption expires June 30, and the industry says the interest cap is so restrictive that it will have to shut down entirely. Bills that would have kept the industry alive languished in the House and Senate, and the year’s third and final attempt was pulled Tuesday amid a lack of support. Consumers frustrated with the economy “look for a dog to kick” because they’re angry with the financial institutions they blame for the Great Recession, said Ted Saunders, chief executive of Dublin, Ohio-based Checksmart, a payday lender that operates in 11 states including Arizona. “They want to find a villain,” Saunders said. And opponents “have done a good job of painting a big X on my back.” Payday lending opponents say the industry depends on trapping some borrowers in a cycle of debt where they continually renew their loan or take out new ones because they can’t afford to pay the debt while still covering their daily expenses. Eventually, the fees can surpass the value of the initial loan so the lender profits even if the borrower defaults. Industry proponents say the market has shown a need for short-term, small-dollar loans that aren’t generally available from banks or credit unions, especially with traditional lenders being more conservative in the down economy. They say the industry supports working families that otherwise wouldn’t have access to credit in an emergency. Supporters also say taking a payday loan is cheaper than paying a late fee or bouncing a check to cover emergency costs like fixing a car or keeping the electricity turned on. The voting public doesn’t seem to be buying the argument. In 2008, voters in Arizona and Ohio soundly rejected industry-backed measures that would have allowed payday lenders to continue charging high annual interest rates. A group in Montana is collecting signatures for an initiative asking voters to decide whether to cap interest rates at a level that would doom the industry. “It’s just a fairness issue,” said state Sen. Debbie McCune Davis, a Phoenix Democrat who led the fight at the Legislature against payday loans. “I think when people work for a living they’re entitled to have financial instruments that are ethical in the way that they operate.” Industry backers say the election results aren’t a good guide because many voters have no experience with payday loan services. “Our customers, they don’t have much of a voice in these fights,” said Steven Schlein, a spokesman for the industry lobbying group Consumer Financial Services Association of America. Arizona wouldn’t be the first state to kick out payday lenders. North Carolina let lapse a temporary law authorizing payday loans, and the District of Columbia repealed its law allowing them. Ohio tried to cap interest rates at 28 percent, but some payday lenders have survived by using a state law allowing them to charge loan origination fees. The payday loan industry has succeeded in fighting back attempts in Congress to crack down on their business thanks to an expensive lobbying effort. When Arizona’s law expires, executives have said they’ll try to keep open some of their 650 stores in the state by stepping up their other lines of business, including car title loans, check cashing and prepaid debit cards. “The payday statutes will evaporate out of the books, (but) the demand doesn’t go away,” industry lobbyist Lee Miller said. “Capitalism abhors a vacuum. Entrepreneurs will come forward and try to find a profitable way to meet that demand.” ___ Associated Press Writer Paul Davenport in Phoenix contributed.

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Video: Verschoor Says Arizona Doesn’t Need to Shut Down Schools: Video

March 12, 2010

March 12 (Bloomberg) — Arizona State Senator Thayer Verschoor talks with Bloomberg’s Margaret Brennan about the outlook for funding the state’s educational system. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Sold! Kennedy Wilson Closes out Signature Los Angeles Condominium Project

February 8, 2010

Wilson’s Residential Investments and Multifamily groups have over $500 million in capital available for further acquisitions of distressed residential condominium projects and for portfolio debt acquisitions in California, Nevada, Arizona and Washington.

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Banks Sell Off Toxic Mortgage Assets To Debt Collection Companies. What About The Second Lien?

February 7, 2010

into the gear box. FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE PR Log (Press Release) – Feb 07, 2010 – -Phoenix Arizona- Real Estate professionals all over the United States are fighting uphill battles when dealing with junior mortgage liens in short sales. Just as

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Yankees Trade for Pitcher Javier Vazquez, Sending Melkey Cabrera to Braves

December 22, 2009

By Mason Levinson Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) — The New York Yankees acquired right- handed starting pitcher Javier Vazquez from the Atlanta Braves for outfielder Melky Cabrera as part of a five-player trade. Relief pitcher Boone Logan also joined the Yankees, while reliever Mike Dunn and minor-league pitcher Arodys Vizcaino moved to Atlanta, the Yankees said in a news release. New York also sent an undisclosed amount of cash to the Braves. Vazquez, who pitched for the Yankees in 2004, joins CC Sabathia , A.J. Burnett and Andy Pettitte in New York’s rotation. Phil Hughes and Joba Chamberlain also may be used as starters or out of the bullpen. Vazquez went 15-10 with a 2.87 earned run average last season, his 12th in Major League Baseball. Over the last 10 campaigns, he’s thrown at least 200 innings every year except 2004, when he had 198 with New York and became an All-Star. In the 2004 playoffs, Vazquez allowed four home runs, including three in an American League Championship Series loss to the Boston Red Sox. In Game 7, he surrendered two homers to Johnny Damon , including a grand slam, as Boston became the first major-league team to rally from a 3-0 deficit to claim a playoff series. He was traded to the Arizona Diamondbacks in January 2005 in the trade that brought five-time Cy Young Award winner Randy Johnson to New York. The 33-year-old Vazquez finished fourth in 2009 voting for the Cy Young Award, which goes to the league’s best pitcher. He had 238 strikeouts while allowing 44 walks. For his career, he has a 142-139 record and a 4.19 ERA. Montreal Start Vazquez spent his first six seasons with the Montreal Expos, played with Arizona in 2005 and the Chicago White Sox from 2006 through 2008 and joined Atlanta last season. He had a limited no-trade clause in his contract with the Braves that kept them from sending him to any team in either league’s West division without his permission, and will make $11.5 million next season before becoming a free agent, according to MLB.com. Cabrera’s departure opens a spot in the Yankees’ outfield, perhaps signaling a return of Damon, who’s played the last four seasons in New York, or the addition of someone like All-Star Matt Holliday . Both are free agents. The Yankees also may go with Brett Gardner , who had 26 stolen bases in 108 games last season. Damon’s exit seemed likely earlier this month when New York acquired All-Star center-fielder Curtis Granderson from the Detroit Tigers as part of a three-team trade that switched Cabrera to left field. Johnson Returns The Yankees also have reached preliminary agreement with Nick Johnson to be their designed hitter, pending results of a physical exam, according to reports in media including the New York Times. Johnson was traded to Montreal for Vazquez. Cabrera, 25, has played his entire five-year major-league career with the Yankees, batting .269 with 36 home runs and 228 runs batted in. He hit .274 with a career-high 13 homers last season, batting .271 with four RBI in the playoffs as New York won its 27th World Series title. Logan, a 25-year-old left-hander, appeared in 20 games for Atlanta last season, going 1-1 with a 5.19 ERA. He played the three previous seasons with the White Sox. Dunn, 24, made four appearances for New York last season, posting a 6.75 ERA in four innings of relief. Vizcaino, 19, was 2-4 with a 2.13 ERA in 10 starts for Class A Staten Island last season. To contact the reporter on this story: Mason Levinson in New York at mlevinson@bloomberg.net .

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Home prices continue slide from 2008

December 21, 2009

price declines in Arizona continue to be among the steepest in the country, a analysis reported Monday. The real estate research firm found Arizona prices, including distressed sales, declined by 17.3 percent in October 2009 compared with the same time

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Arizona Plan Administrator To Quit

November 28, 2009

James Hacking administrator of the Arizona Public Safety Personnel Retirement System will leave on Aug 31 2010

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Arizona Plan Administrator To Quit

November 28, 2009

James Hacking administrator of the Arizona Public Safety Personnel Retirement System will leave on Aug 31 2010

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Giants’ Lincecum Is Favored to Repeat as National League Cy Young Winner

November 18, 2009

By Erik Matuszewski Nov. 19 (Bloomberg) — Tim Lincecum of the San Francisco Giants is favored to repeat as the National League’s Cy Young Award winner, according to Internet gambling Web site BetUS.com . Lincecum had a 15-7 record with a 2.48 earned-run average and led the NL with four complete games, two shutouts and 261 strikeouts. The 25-year-old Lincecum is listed as a 1-2 favorite to be named his league’s best pitcher when the award is announced today, according to Costa Rica-based BetUS. Randy Johnson was the last Major League Baseball pitcher to claim consecutive Cy Young awards, winning the NL honor four years in a row from 1999 through 2002. Greg Maddux and Sandy Koufax are the only other pitchers to win back-to-back Cy Young awards in the NL. Chris Carpenter of the St. Louis Cardinals, the 2005 Cy Young winner, is the second choice. His odds of 1-1 mean a winning $100 bet would return $100 along with the initial stake. The 34-year-old Carpenter, who was limited to four starts in 2007 and 2008 because of elbow problems, went 17-4 this season and led the NL with a 2.24 ERA. Javier Vazquez of the Atlanta Braves has 8-1 odds to win the NL Cy Young, according to BetUS, while Dan Haren of the Arizona Diamondbacks is listed at 10-1 and Adam Wainwright of the Cardinals is at 12-1. Vazquez went 15-10 with a 2.87 ERA, while Haren was 14-10 with a 3.14 ERA. Wainwright tied for the major-league lead in wins, recording a 19-8 record with a 2.63 ERA. Zack Greinke of the Kansas City Royals was a 1-5 favorite for the AL Cy Young and received 25 of 28 first-place votes to win the award two days ago. To contact the reporter on this story: Erik Matuszewski in New York at matuszewski@bloomberg.net

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China’s Suntech to set up plant in Arizona

November 17, 2009

China’s Suntech to set up plant in Arizona

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Recovery.Gov Lists Stimulus Jobs Saved In Districts That Don’t Exist

November 16, 2009

Here’s a stimulus success story: In Arizona’s 9th Congressional District, 30 jobs have been saved or created with just $761,420 in federal stimulus spending. At least that’s what the website set up by the Obama Administration to track the $787 billion stimulus says. There’s one problem, though: There is no 9th Congressional District in Arizona; the state has only eight Congressional Districts.

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But of course they are against it…. : Straight Talk About …

November 2, 2009

In particular, the 10% credit risk retention requirement may be inappropriately applied to all loan sale transactions regardless of whether the loan purchaser intends to permanently hold the loan , according to Courson. … Oh, and the FDIC is going to lose $2.5 Billion on it. That’s going to leave a mark. Tom VanderwellCalculated Risk: Bank Failures 107 through 115: Nine Failed Banks in Arizona, California, Illinois and Texas From the FDIC : U.S. Bank, NA, […] …

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Arizona System Invests 120M In Two Funds

November 1, 2009

The Arizona Public Safety Personnel Retirement System has committed about 120 million to two firms

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Golf player Matteson wins Arizona Open in play-off

October 27, 2009

Golf player Matteson wins Arizona Open in play-off

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Video: Buteau Says Yankees, Close Games Drive TV Ratings: Video

October 26, 2009

Oct. 26 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Mike Buteau reports on the TV ratings for baseball’s playoffs and the outlook for the World Series between the Yankees and Philadelphia Phillies. The Yankees drew more viewers for their Game 6 victory on Fox last night than the New York Giants drew for their game versus the Arizona Cardinals on NBC’s Sunday Night Football. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Elderly Couple "Royally Duped" By Health Care Company: Plan Wasn’t Insurance At All

October 25, 2009

Mary Lloyd’s husband was lying in the intensive care unit of an Arizona hospital when she got a good look at their new health insurance card for the first time. Then she got the shock of her life. The card read: “This is NOT an insurance card.”

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Investors swoop on troubled market

October 16, 2009

came to the Arizona sunbelt to buy his dream getaway property and ended up picking up three more distressed homes as prices fell to half of 2006 levels. Corporate investor Bob Schulman has set his sights on Las Vegas where his new fund is buying stylish

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