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The Center for Public Integrity: Oil Companies May Have Avoided Paying Billions To Government

April 15, 2011

The Huffington Post is a sponsor of the Center for Public Integrity iWatch News by Aaron Mehta Even as leaders grapple with the nation’s fiscal troubles and urge expanded drilling for natural resources, their failure to remedy decades-old systemic shortcomings at the Interior Department may have allowed billions of dollars in royalties from oil and natural gas companies to slip away, increasing the burden on taxpayers. By law, energy companies must pay one-sixth to one-eighth of the value of oil and gas obtained on public lands and in federal waters off the nation’s coasts. In practice, government auditors and Interior’s inspector general believe the industry is paying less than it legally should. Exactly how much less is anybody’s guess, but it is believed to be at least hundreds of millions — and possibly tens of billions of dollars. So flawed and complicated are Interior Department operations and records that even auditors from the Government Accountability Office, the watchdog arm of Congress, have been unable to figure out exactly how much has been lost to taxpayers. “This is something that is a struggle for us,” Franklin Rusco, the director of the GAO’s team of natural resources and environment investigators, told iWatch News . This much is clear, added Rusco: “Interior can’t provide reasonable assurance that it is collecting all the royalties that it should.” The government’s failures are all the more striking against the backdrop of heightened attention and political showdowns over government spending and taxes. “It’s outrageous that even during a fiscal crisis, Interior fails to pursue taxpayers’ fair share of royalties,” said Mandy Smithberger, an investigator for the Project on Government Oversight , a Washington-based government watchdog group that has examined other issues involving the royalty system. Despite at least three decades of demands for improvement from Congress and the GAO, the Interior Department repeatedly has failed to heed basic recommendations for fixing the complicated and ill-funded process, which largely relies on companies to volunteer pricing information on which royalty payments are based, according to recent audits and the testimony of Interior Department officials reviewed by iWatch News . Those reports and interviews show that the federal government is hampered by staffing and technology inadequate to track and confirm what the companies disclose, as well as antiquated royalty collection laws and poor communication within the federal bureaucracy. One Interior Department agency, for instance, lacks any way of keeping up to date on the activity of wells and the amount of energy produced in the Gulf of Mexico, where the government grants companies the lucrative privilege of exploring and drilling. Lack of such real-time data is critical because royalties are based in part on current oil and gas prices. Without information on industry revenue, the Interior Department has no way of knowing whether oil and gas companies are paying their fair share. It also can’t tell which producers may be underpaying the most, and thus warrant scrutiny. And only half of the money paid to the government during each of the past three years has been audited by the department for accuracy. The Obama administration acknowledges some of the failures but says it is working on remedies. Interior spokeswoman Kendra Barkoff said that an “aggressive” reorganization of Interior precipitated by the BP oil spill one year ago already has increased oversight of the gas and oil industry in the past nine months. That includes oversight of royalty collections by the Office of Natural Resources Revenue. Even so, the government insists significant underpayments are eventually detected due to a “sophisticated accounting and detection system,” Barkoff said in a written response to questions from iWatch News. “The department does not believe that material amounts of royalties are ultimately uncollected.” The oil and gas industry, while acknowledging weaknesses in the royalty collection system, says that it is paying its fair share. The American Petroleum Institute, the leading trade association for the oil and gas industry, says in a statement on its website that it is “committed to working with all parties to improve any perceived inadequacies in the system.” Industry groups did not respond to multiple iWatch News requests for comment. Royalty payments from companies that drill on public lands and waters account for the federal government’s second-largest source of income; only taxes generate more revenue for Uncle Sam. In 2009, the energy industry paid an estimated $9 billion in royalties on sales of oil and gas obtained from federal lands and waters. If taxpayers are missing just 3 percent of royalties — a conservative estimate from sources contacted by iWatch News — the missing amount would be into the hundreds of millions of dollars annually. “These are publically owned resources and we should be getting a fair value for them,” said Autumn Hanna, who analyzes environmental spending for Taxpayers for Common Sense, an independent policy group in Washington. “These are things the federal government owns that we have a right to — and that corporations are making billions of dollars off of.” Oil companies treated ‘like royalty’ Politicians in both parties acknowledged concerns about the royalty program’s shortcomings in statements to iWatch. “It is important that the government collect what is fairly owed and that the necessary systems are in place to collect these funds as stipulated by the contractual terms in all federal oil and gas leases,” said Thad Cochran of Mississippi, a Republican member of a Senate appropriations subcommittee overseeing the Interior Department. Cochran is among a number of Republicans and Democrats seeking to expand drilling on the nation’s public lands and along its coastlines. Cochran said he is urging colleagues to “embrace policies to maximize royalties paid to the U.S. Treasury, not only by ensuring that royalties due under existing leases are paid in full but also by increasing all domestic energy production consistent with environmental laws.” Massachusetts Democrat Ed Markey, a member of House energy and natural resources committees, argues for a royalty crackdown on oil and gas companies — especially when the nation faces a budget deficit. “We need to reclaim the tens of billions of dollars in royalties from oil companies drilling for free on public land,” he said, “and use those funds to reduce the deficit.” Added Markey: “Our government should be extracting all the royalties rightfully owed to the American people, not expressing fealty to the oil companies and treating them like they are royalty.” Some lay blame for the persistent shortcomings in royalty collections on the influence of the energy industry. In 2010 alone, the oil and gas industry reported spending more than $146 million to lobby the federal government. During the 2009-2010 election cycle, it donated close to $28 million to federal campaigns, data compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics show. While the money has gone mostly to Republicans, cash has also flowed to the Democratic party of President Barack Obama, whose administration backs a limited expansion of drilling in the Gulf of Mexico. Dave Alberswerth , a former senior advisor at the Interior Department during the Clinton administration, said the industry has a key role in maintaining a broken system. He calls the influence of the oil and gas industry “enormous.” “They have so much influence it’s just scandalous,” said Alberswerth, now a policy advisor at the Wilderness Society, an environmental advocacy organization. “It’s impossible to dislodge them.” Both Albersworth and the GAO’s Rusco cite a lack of staffing as a major issue with the royalties system. “Part of the reality is that [Interior] simply does not have enough people going around to do enforcement and inspections” said Albersworth, whose organization supports a proposal in the department’s fiscal 2012 budget request that would impose a small fee on oil and gas companies to pay for more inspectors. A history of problems Interior Department Inspector General Mary Kendall warned in an April 2010 report to Congress that the government has “failed to carry out effective oversight and management to ensure all royalty income is collected.” And in February 2011, the GAO identified the troubles as serious enough to put it on the watchdog’s bi-annual “High Risk” report; it warned that the department’s royalty collection shortcomings placed it among programs at a “high risk for waste, fraud, abuse mismanagement or in need of broad reform.” Like many breakdowns in government, this one has been brewing for years. In January 1982, a federal commission investigating alleged royalties fraud and theft of oil from public lands criticized the government for not “fulfilling a public trust.” The study, ” Fiscal Accountability of the Nation’s Energy Resources ” — commonly known as the Linowes report for its economist-chairman, David F. Linowes — began pointedly: “Management of royalties for the Nation’s energy resources has been a failure for more than 20 years.” The report went on to cite “disarray” in recordkeeping and “serious inadequacies” in how the government managed the royalty program. “The Nation can no longer afford mismanagement of royalties for its energy resources,” it warned. “The stakes are too high.” Even then it was unclear how much was being lost. The 1982 report estimated “about one hundred million to several hundred million dollars a year,” but acknowledged that was only a guess. “The exact amount of money the Federal government, the States and the [Indian tribes] lose each year is unknown.” More recently, the government decided to shut down a program that allowed oil and gas companies to make “in-kind” royalty payments. Companies had been allowed to pay in oil or gas, which the government could resell or stash away in the federal Strategic Petroleum Reserve. But in 2008 the Interior Department’s inspector general documented a “culture of ethical failure” that described how government staff running the in-kind program socialized with oil and gas industry employees, routinely accepting gifts from them and even engaging in drug use and sexual relations with them. A spokesman for the in-kind program told iWatch News that Interior Department employees are still tying up loose ends, such as unresolved royalty imbalances. Vietnam, New Guinea have better collection systems A series of GAO reports over the past decade detail the Interior Department’s struggles with royalty collection, including one in 2008 where the GAO reported that a study of 104 royalty collection systems globally found that the U.S. federal royalty program brought in less revenue than all but 11. Among countries with more effective systems: Papua New Guinea, Vietnam and Norway. The problems have their roots in the process itself. Each company is responsible for keeping track of the amount produced each month from federal lands or waters, then reporting that production to Interior, along with a total for how much the company owes in royalties. The assessment is based on the total value of that month’s production, including the price — a number that fluctuates daily, making it hard to lock down a figure. Interior auditors check the information but only a fraction of reports are subjected to a rigorous audit in which the company’s production and revenue reports are compared against information from other sources. There is no blanket oversight of production facilities, and surprise inspections are rare. While testifying on the department’s fiscal 2012 budget request before a House appropriations subcommittee on March 17, officials from Interior acknowledged GAO’s concerns. The department’s requested budget addresses them by calling for, among other items, more staff and technology, said Greg Gould, director of the natural resources revenue office. The planned enhancements — additional “production meter” inspectors and a feasibility study on the use of automated production metering systems — could go a long way in detecting underpayments, the GAO’s Rusco told iWatch News. At the appropriations hearing, Gould was repeatedly asked how much the government is losing in royalty revenues. He never answered the question. But he did acknowledge that the government has identified at least some of the money it was owed. “Over the last 5 years our audit and compliance program has detected and collected more than half a billion dollars in companies’ initial underpayments” Gould testified. He also indicated that when it comes to collecting oil revenues, a little addition to the federal budget can go a long way. For every dollar spent on audits, he said, four came back to the government.

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The Latin American Iron And Steel Conference Announce New Speaker: Aristides Corbellini, Steel Department Director of VALE (NYSE:VALE)

April 13, 2011

The Latin American Iron And Steel Conference Announce New Speaker: Aristides Corbellini, Steel Department Director of VALE (NYSE:VALE)

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IRS Funding Cut Days Before Report Shows $330 Billion In Uncollected Taxes

April 11, 2011

WASHINGTON — As part of the budget deal hashed out on Friday evening, lawmakers agreed that no additional federal funds would be used to hire new IRS agents. Then on Monday, the Government Accountability Office publicly released a study showing that, as of the end of fiscal year 2010, roughly $330 billion in federal taxes had never been paid — an amount that, if collected, would represent nearly nine times the amount of savings as the budget itself. The dual developments aren’t shocking. Despite evidence that a single dollar spent on enforcing the tax code could result in up to ten dollars in revenue, politicians, naturally, are reluctant to align themselves with tax collectors. And yet, the sacrificing of funds for IRS agents in the continuing resolution deal underscores a particular problem that seems bound to confront fiscally conscious lawmakers. “Cutting back on IRS enforcement could easily cost the treasury much more in revenue than it saves,” said Chuck Marr, Director of Federal Tax Policy at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. The GAO report, which looks specifically at the issue of passport holders who have failed to pay their full share of taxes, underscores Marr’s point. Titled “Federal Tax Collection: Potential for Using Passport Issuance to Increase Collection of Unpaid Taxes,” the study labels poor enforcement of tax laws and the tax code as a “high-risk” hole in government policy. In fiscal year 2008, passports were issued to about 16 million individuals. Of those, more than 224,000 owed more than $5.8 billion in unpaid federal taxes. A good chunk of the evasion, the GAO concluded, was committed by individuals with “substantial personal assets” including multi-million-dollar homes and “luxury cars.” One passport recipient bought a house for $2 million and another property for $1.5 million despite owing $1 million in federal taxes. “If you look, you can find records of most capital gains income,” said Rob Shapiro, former U.S. Undersecretary of Commerce. “People deposit it in their bank accounts or the institutions may issue reports if it is capital gains on stock transactions. So it is not hard to pick it up if you have the manpower to look for it. And again, given that the salary of an IRS agent is at least as high as the average salary in America, the fact that there is a ten-to-one ratio for the returns on auditing tells you that [tax evasion] is coming from the high-income brackets.” Regardless of who the worst evaders are, the GAO concludes that “IRS enforcement of federal tax laws is vital,” not just to pinpoint the offenders but to promote “broader compliance.” And what do the study’s authors cite as a compelling reason to beef up IRS functions? A “federal deficit” that “continue[s] to mount.” Indeed, several close observers of the budget debate have wondered exactly how lawmakers can shudder at going after tax evasion while simultaneously preaching fiscal responsibility on the stump. Marr, for one, noted that Congress has already disbanded a tax reporting provision in the president’s health care reform law that would have resulted in stronger compliance. That was scuttled for politically obvious reasons: the paperwork it placed on small businesses was deemed well beyond burdensome. But the decision to deny funding for more IRS agents doesn’t have such an easy-to-distill an explanation. “Hiring more IRS agents would have allowed the Obama administration to enforce its agenda, insofar as its agenda is to make sure that people don’t cheat on their taxes,” wrote Jonathan Cohn in The New Republic . Obama has made buffing up the IRS a relative hush-hush plank of his tax reform agenda. Upon entering office he advocated for more funds for the agency, and as part of his 2012 budget, he proposed a 9.4 percent increase so that it could hire roughly 5100 new employees. The proposal, which pivoted off of previous studies that reached similar conclusions as the GAO’s, was met with somewhat frenzied pushback from conservative circles — the specter of black-suited tax collectors roaming the streets undoubtedly on the mind. And almost immediately, the suggested increase in IRS funds became a target of cut-happy legislators.

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Mark Roozen Joins STACK Media as Senior Content Manager

April 11, 2011

NEW YORK, NY–(Marketwire – April 11, 2011) – Mark Roozen, an experienced strength and conditioning specialist, owner and founder of Performance Edge Training Systems (Colorado Springs), and former Director of Certification and member of the Board of Directors of the National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA), has joined STACK Media, the nation’s leading producer and distributor of sports training, performance, and lifestyle content for active sports participants. As STACK’s Senior Content Manager, Roozen will be responsible for developing editorial strategies and content concepts to serve the needs of athletes, coaches and others concerned with safe and effective athletic training.

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Stifel Financial Corp. Announces Retirement of Scott B. McCuaig

April 7, 2011

ST. LOUIS, MO–(Marketwire – April 7, 2011) – Stifel Financial Corp. (“Stifel”) ( NYSE : SF ) announced today the retirement of Scott McCuaig as President, Co-Chief Operating Officer, and Director of its broker-dealer subsidiary, Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated, effective April 1. Mr. McCuaig is also retiring from his role as a Senior Vice President and Director of Stifel Financial Corp. and from similar roles with other Stifel Financial subsidiaries and affiliates. 

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Obama Rejects Tax Increase On Big Business

April 6, 2011

WASHINGTON — As Congress grinds closer to shutting down the federal government and the White House floats proposals to cut social services for working families, big business is gearing up to try to win yet another budget battle: overhauling the corporate tax code. However the current budget tussling between President Obama and congressional Republicans ends, corporate titans and their lobbyists appear poised for a big victory at the expense of the American middle class. President Obama said he hopes to eliminate many corporate tax loopholes during his State of the Union address, but he also pledged to cut the overall corporate tax rate — a joint policy the White House has billed as “revenue neutral,” meaning it will neither increase or decrease overall corporate tax receipts. The administration has not yet outlined which loopholes it wants to close or how far it wants to push down the tax rate. Buoyed by the prospect of a business-friendly tax overhaul, however, the Business Roundtable and other high-powered corporate lobbyists are using tax reform negotiations to push for more offshore tax breaks and official federal forgiveness for tax avoidance schemes. They got a big boost on Tuesday when House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) pledged to actively reduce corporate taxes in his fiscal 2012 budget proposal, which would also do away with or fundamentally change key social services, including Medicare. Ryan’s sweeping budget plan generated fierce opposition from congressional Democrats. But it may spark renewed enthusiasm for using the December released bipartisan deficit commission report as a starting point for long-term budget negotiations. The corporate tax reform proposed by the commission would permanently push popular offshore tax shelters beyond the reach of Uncle Sam — very bad news for legislators, economists and average citizens hoping to see big companies play a bigger role in helping to narrow the budget gap. A bipartisan group of senators is already engaged in talks based off the report, and, in the wake of Ryan’s budget proposal, Third Way , a centrist Democratic think tank with close ties to Wall Street, is pressing lawmakers to hammer out a compromise largely based on the commission’s recommendations. The push for lower corporate tax rates comes during a flush time for corporate America. Overall corporate taxes as a share of GDP are hovering around one percent, the lowest share of GDP since World War II. “At a time when cuts to access to college, cuts to scientific research are on the table, it makes no sense to take corporate taxes off the table,” said Chuck Marr, Director of Federal Tax Policy for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a left-leaning think tank focused on economic issues. “The country is just starting this process of deficit reduction, and there are going to be some wrenching choices.” A senior Treasury official defended Obama’s push for a revenue-neutral corporate tax overhaul in a recent meeting with reporters, contending that the main threat to today’s economy isn’t low corporate tax rates, but the possibility that higher tax rates will force companies to decamp abroad. The Treasury official requested anonymity in order to speak candidly about rationales for the department’s economic policy proposals. Both Obama and congressional Republicans have repeatedly emphasized that the official tax rate for big corporations of 35 percent is high relative to other nations, but the actual tax bills companies pay are much lower, thanks to the use of special exemptions, tax havens and other sweeteners sprinkled throughout the tax code. According to a 2007 study by George W. Bush’s Treasury Department, the average American company actually pays a tax rate of just 13.4 percent — lower, for example, than France, Portugal, Spain, Japan, Canada, and Switzerland, and less than half the average rate paid in the United Kingdom and Australia. This, despite the fact that, according to the study, the U.S. had one of the highest official rates in the industrialized world. Tax experts say that no meaningful corporate tax overhaul, revenue neutral or otherwise, can allow companies to continue stashing money in offshore tax havens– a creative accounting tactic that allows big firms to avoid paying $50 billion in taxes every year, according to the U.S. Treasury. Gauging the specific amount of taxes lost to offshore accounts is difficult, however, and reform advocates say the number could be even bigger. “Anybody who tells you that they do know is probably full of it,” said Jack Blum, a Washington attorney who chairs Tax Justice USA, a tax code reform group. “The problem is that people don’t report what they don’t pay in tax, so it’s very, very hard to tell how much money we’re losing. For a long time administrations went out of their way to make certain that no data was collected.” For years, progressive lawmakers and tax policy advocates have targeted tax havens as hotbeds of federal budget abuse. Companies can register profitable enterprises at an address in the Cayman Islands– even if it actually does business on Wall Street — and voila: so long as companies leave their profits in the Caribbean, their taxes can be “deferred” indefinitely. “It’s the number one issue, more important than anything I can think of,” said Bob McIntyre, a long-time tax reform advocate who works as Director of Citizens for Tax Justice, a non-partisan research organization dedicated to progressive taxation. According to a 2008 report by the Government Accountability Office, 83 of the 100 largest U.S. companies operate subsidiaries in nations that the government watchdog considers tax havens. All types of firms indulge, from telecommunications giants to retailers to banks. Wall Street is particularly aggressive; at the time the GAO report was issued, just six American banks were operating more than 900 such sub-companies. The few lawmakers with the audacity to propose a crackdown on offshore havens say that it would be politically impossible to secure without bestowing other tax benefits on companies. Last year, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and then-Sen. Judd Gregg (R-N.H.) pushed legislation to overhaul the entire tax code for both individuals and corporations. The effort would have ended deferred tax shenanigans, but in order to bring any Republicans on board, the bill had to be revenue neutral, according to Jennifer Hoelzer, a Wyden aide closely involved with the talks. “When you start talking about raising revenue, that just enters in more controversy than you need at the moment,” she said. Although the Wyden-Gregg legislation went nowhere last year, it included some provisions that could be used to build political support for another tax reform push. Under that plan, average voters would get a tax break, giving them a stake in a debate that is otherwise simply a battle between muscular corporations and other firms unable to more fully exploit tax perks. “When we do something big like tax reform . . . people need something to show for it at the end of the debate,” Hoelzer said. “For us, when we did both corporate and individual reform at the same time, the average tax filer gets a tax break at the end of it. You want to give people a reason to root for something.” A major concern for those hoping to require corporations to help narrow the deficit is a plan being floated by the Business Roundtable, a lobbying group representing CEOs of the largest American companies. The Business Roundtable plan would make all international revenue from U.S. firms, including money stashed in Caribbean tax shelters, becomes permanently nontaxable. The Business Roundtable declined to comment for this story, but its website claims that moving to a permanently untaxed foreign income system– known as a “territorial” plan among tax experts — is vital to making American business competitive with firms in other countries. Many economists beg to differ. “Those offshore affiliated corporations have no economic reality,” said University of Texas Economist Calvin Johnson. “Cayman Islands is a suburb of Greenwich, Connecticut and ought to be treated that way. It has no independent life or meaning.” The Obama administration is already backpedaling in the face of this lobbying push. In a Tuesday hearing before a Senate subcommittee, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said that the administration would consider granting a one-time tax holiday for corporations who stash money in tax havens, if it were part of a “comprehensive” tax reform project. Geithner did not specify what else should be included in such a comprehensive overhaul, but reiterated that the administration is committed to a “revenue-neutral” plan. A bipartisan group of six senators is currently attempting to cut a deal on narrowing the deficit. The group includes Sens. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.), Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), Mark Warner (D-Va.), Tom Coburn (R-Okla.), Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) and Mike Crapo (R-Id.). A spokesperson for Chambliss said the group has no proposal yet and is still working out legislative language. None of the other senators would comment. But a source close to the talks, who requested anonymity because negotiations are ongoing, said that corporate tax reforms would be based on recommendations from Obama’s Fiscal Responsibility Commission . The Commission called for eliminating four categories of corporate tax breaks, while exempting offshore tax havens by adopting the “territorial” tax policy now being pushed by the Business Roundtable.

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Xact Data Discovery Assigns Thomas Bishop as Director of eDiscovery Sales With Management Responsibilities of Newly Acquired Dallas, TX Branch

April 5, 2011

MISSION, KS–(Marketwire – April 5, 2011) – Xact Data Discovery (XDD), an international leading provider of data discovery and management services to law firms, corporations and government agencies, recently assigned Thomas Bishop as Director of eDiscovery Sales to manage all business operations for its newly acquired Dallas, TX branch. Tommy will play a hands-on role directing employees engaged in account management, production and technical disciplines.

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Caroline Dowd-Higgins: Use the Side Door To Enter This Tough Job Market

April 5, 2011

With the new realities of this job economy you can’t rely on posted positions to land career opportunities. Innovation, creativity and strategic thinking are the most sought after competencies by employers, so use these skills to get into organizations where the front door is clearly locked. A side door entry is possible and will distinguish you as a resilient career builder that found an alternative route. Some employers don’t want to post openings because they will be flooded with applicants, many of whom are just fishing for any opportunity. Hiring managers have gone back to the basics of hiring who they know and who they trust based on network referrals. You need to be seen and heard on the inside of organizations in order to get noticed and to be taken seriously. Since the hidden job market represents up to 90% of positions that are never posted, you can use these strategies to get yourself into organizations and to become recognizable as a valuable hire. The Informational Interview is a tried and true technique that works for students and professionals alike. By requesting information from a person in an organization, preferably someone with whom you have some common ground, you are non-threatening. Nothing is worse than outright asking your contact for a job. But people love to talk about themselves and by using the informational interview you will have an opportunity to learn about the person, the organization, and to describe your strengths and potential value-add when the conversation eventually shifts towards you. Treat it as a real interview — be well prepared and at your professional best. The key is getting inside the organization so you can be seen and heard by people in the know and to assess the culture and company mission to see if it’s a good fit for you. If an opportunity does become available, you will be someone already in the pipeline. If you made a good impression, your resume will rise to the top of the pile. With a job shadow opportunity you can walk proudly into an organization because you have been invited inside to see the inner workings and experience the firm culture in-person. This can be a follow-up step to the informational interview. A job shadow experience will get you exposure to different people in the organization and illustrate that you are a savvy career seeker. Be careful not to exploit the generosity of your contact since they still have work to do on your given shadow day. Don’t offer your professional opinion unless asked and be sensitive about over staying your welcome. Less is more when invited to observe — take the lead of the professional who responded to your request and respect their schedule. Volunteer your way into the company . This is a great way to research career fields you have no experience with. If you are pursuing a career transition, or simply have not landed your dream position, being an unpaid professional can allow you see things from the inside to help you find the right match. Volunteering has been a standard practice for students and now with the returnship model for non-students, volunteering is a career development strategy for all. The trendy new returnship is for seasoned professionals and provides a way for you to test-drive an organization to determine if it’s a good fit. Do set realistic time limits and clear expectations with your new volunteer employer so you are not exploited while giving away your time and talents. If they have not heard about the returnship concept, offer it as new career development tool being used by the likes of the Sara Lee Corporation and Goldman Sachs. Is your LinkedIn profile representing you to your best advantage? Headhunters and recruiters troll social media sites for talent and LinkedIn is one of the leading sites where you can put your professional best out there for the world to see. Join groups, participate in discussions, solicit recommendations, and consider upgrading to the business level (19.95/month) to expand your network and access leads on candidate searches. This is a virtual door into an organization and can also make introductions for informational interviews, job shadow opportunities, and good old fashioned network building in-person. Create your own buzz by writing a blog or online articles in your respective industry. Being recognized as a specialist in your field in print (or online) will establish you as someone with credibility. You will ramp up your recruiting potential and hiring managers may even find you based on your written work. It’s equally important to scrub your social media sites and online presence to make sure your image is 100% professional and ready for prospective employer consumption. What’s on the web about you is fair game, whether you authored it or not. It’s easy to get down about the job search when opportunities are rarely, if ever posted. But you can take this opportunity to enter organizations through an alternative door and distinguish yourself amongst the masses as one who is industrious and willing to go beyond the job boards to find opportunities. The job search is still a full-time endeavor and whether you are an entry-level hire, a seasoned professional or a career changer, meeting people face-to-face is always the best way to make a lasting positive impression. You need an opportunity to tell your personal strengths story and explain your value-add proposition. So if the front door is locked — find a side door and use your creativity and strategic thinking to get inside and show your professional best. Check out the first segment of my new video series with valuable career & professional development advice. Caroline Dowd-Higgins authored the book “This Is Not the Career I Ordered” and maintains the career reinvention blog of the same name ( www.carolinedowdhiggins.com ) She is also the Director of Career & Professional Development at Indiana University Maurer School of Law.

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GATE Hires Veteran Markets Executive to Expand Market Technology Footprint

April 4, 2011

NEW YORK, NY–(Marketwire – April 4, 2011) –  GATE Technologies, a global financial technology company creating market infrastructure for buying and selling illiquid and alternative assets, announced that Sam Aizenberg has joined the company in the newly created position of Director of Application Development.

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Poll Suggests Americans Growing Increasingly Pessimistic On Economy

March 30, 2011

WASHINGTON — For all the talk of recovery, Americans are growing increasingly pessimistic about the economy as soaring gas costs strain already-tight budgets. So far, people aren’t taking it out on President Barack Obama, a new Associated Press-GfK poll shows. Even so, the survey highlights a central challenge Obama will face in his campaign for re-election. The president will have to convince a lot of voters who are still feeling financial hardship that things are getting better. Obama’s approval ratings have held steady at around 50 percent over the past month. But the disconnect between negative perceptions of the economy and signs that a rebound are under way could provide an opening for Republicans at the outset of the 2012 campaign. In the survey, just a sliver of Americans – 15 percent – said they believed the economy had improved over the past month, compared with 30 percent who had thought that in January. Only a third were optimistic of better times ahead for the country, down from about half earlier this year. And 28 percent thought the economy would get worse, the largest of slice of people who have expressed that sentiment since the question was first asked in December 2009. “It’s in a poor state,” said Billy Shirley, 74, a Democrat from Commerce, Ga. “Everything’s going to the bad. Everyone’s spending more on gas, food, everything. The prices on everything are going up, and that’s hurting the nation.” Recent economic indicators paint a more positive picture: The unemployment rate, though still high at 8.9 percent, has been declining, and consumer spending and personal income were both up last month. The gross domestic product was growing at an annual rate of 3.1 percent as last year ended. Americans are acutely focused on their financial well-being, even as turmoil in the Middle East commands international attention. And the foreign unrest is directly affecting them by boosting oil prices. More Americans – 77 percent, up from 54 percent last fall – now say gas prices are highly important to them. Obama’s job-performance ratings haven’t suffered as people’s attitudes about the economy have shifted over the past month. Half still approve of how he’s doing his job, and half say he deserves to be re-elected. His rating on handling the economy was unchanged: 47 percent approved. In fact, twice as many people said Obama “understands the important issues the country will need to focus on during the next two years” as said that about Republicans in Congress. That’s not to say that Obama is escaping responsibility for the economic situation. Annale Iltis, 26, of Sarasota, Fla., faults big business, the federal government and, to a lesser extent, the president. “I do a bit,” she said, “but at the same time he has good ideas. He just doesn’t have the backers in the House and the Senate to get them done.” The self-described independent voter, who supported Obama in 2008 and says she would do so next year, is concerned that deep budget cuts that Congress is considering will hurt the fragile economic recovery. “It seems stable now but I fear it’s going to go downhill quickly,” she said. Henry Kugeler, 49, of Chicago, likened the situation to the fable about the crawling tortoise that wins the race against the speedy hare, saying: “Right now, the country is the tortoise. I don’t think the economy is getting worse. The recovery that’s happening is real, but it’s incredibly slow.” The Democrat doesn’t blame Obama or other politicians, saying: “They haven’t helped but I don’t know that they’ve hurt.” Obama inherited an economy in recession. Republicans angling for the chance to challenge him next fall have been blaming him for the slow recovery and arguing they could do better. Presidential advisers are hopeful that the positive economic trends continue, giving Obama an opportunity to make the case for keeping him in office rather than risk an economic backslide. As the slow-to-start GOP nomination fight starts in earnest this spring, the poll shows that candidates clearly have work to do. More than or nearly half of Republicans surveyed say they don’t know enough about the following potential contenders to even express an opinion about them: Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour, Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels, former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum and Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann. Roughly two-thirds of Republicans expressed favorable views of former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, while former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney got slightly lower marks. Even though many of the candidates aren’t well-known, about half of Republicans say they are satisfied with their choices. The poll comes just as Republicans and Democrats on Capitol Hill wrestle over the federal budget, and there could be a partial government shutdown without further action by Congress. The Republican-controlled House has approved some $60 billion in spending cuts. The Democratic Senate is looking at $33 billion. Without agreement, some Republicans say they won’t approve funding to keep the government operating. The issue of federal spending isn’t just something lawmakers talk about. It’s clearly weighing on the public. Roughly half in the survey said they expected enormous federal budget deficits to cause a major economic crisis for the country for the next decade, and most said they worry that mounting federal debt will hamper the financial future of their children and grandchildren. In the shorter term, people in the poll view everyone negatively when it comes to handling the deficit, but lawmakers get worse marks than the president. Only about a third of those surveyed approve of how Republicans and Democrats are dealing with the issue, while 41 percent approve of Obama on the matter. People also are evenly divided on which party would best handle the deficit. The Associated Press-GfK Poll was conducted March 24-28 by GfK Roper Public Affairs and Corporate Communications. It involved landline and cell phone interviews with 1,001 adults nationwide and had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 4.2 percentage points. ___ Associated Press Polling Director Trevor Tompson, Deputy Polling Director Jennifer Agiesta and News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report. Online: http://ap-gfkpoll.com

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Front Porch Center for Technology Innovation and Wellbeing Explores How Innovative Technology Can Empower Older Adults to Live Well

March 29, 2011

Davis Park Appointed as Director

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RALLY Marketing Group Expands Client Services Team

March 29, 2011

SEATTLE, WA–(Marketwire – March 29, 2011) – RALLY Marketing Group , an Integrated Marketing and Promotions Agency, is pleased to announce the addition of Oliver Weisert as Group Account Director, and Scott Mitchell as an Account Executive to the agency’s client services team.

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DigitalGlobe Names Robert Keosheyan Director of Corporate Communications and Public Relations

March 29, 2011

LONGMONT, CO–(Marketwire – March 29, 2011) – DigitalGlobe ( NYSE : DGI ), a leading global content provider of high-resolution earth imagery solutions, has appointed Robert Keosheyan to the newly created position of Director, Corporate Communications and Public Relations. Keosheyan is responsible for developing and managing the company’s external communications, including public relations.

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Visual IQ Appoints Analytics Expert to Enhance Scientific Modeling for Cross Channel Marketing Attribution Solutions

March 28, 2011

Dr. Payman Sadegh Joins Company as Director of Research & Development, Marketing Analytics

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Rod Shrader: Cutbacks Give Rise To Health Care Innovation

March 25, 2011

There is no shortage of debate over the new health care legislation. Its provisions are far reaching and — when implemented — will usher in enormous change in the way health care is delivered in this country. I leave it to the politicians to sort out the ideological, financial, and structural issues involved. Looking at what is coming from the perspective of an entrepreneur, however, reveals a lot that is interesting about what happens at the intersection of entrepreneurship and change. When there is large-scale change, entrepreneurs pay close attention, because to an entrepreneur, change means opportunity. As the person who leads the Entrepreneurship Program at UIC’s College of Business Administration, I have seen this phenomenon time and again. It is something we strive to make a part of the mindset of our next generation of young entrepreneurs. The health care legislation will bring change on a massive scale. Opportunity will follow. I was thinking about this recently when I learned of a new business started by three recent graduates of the MBA program offered by the Liautaud Graduate School of Business at UIC. Care Team Connect is an Evanston-based firm that combines new technology with a deep understanding of what chronically ill patients need after being discharged from a hospital to dramatically reduce the number of people who have to be quickly readmitted. The business came about because one of our MBA alumni, Ben Albert, experienced first-hand the gaps in the post-discharge health care delivery model after his grandfather suffered a series of strokes. Leveraging his 12 plus years as a health care technology executive to start the company, he circled back with other alumni, Carrie Kozlowski, OT, VP of Services & Marketing, and Bill Brody, Director of Marketing, to help grow the organization as the implications of the health care legislation took hold. It was not an unusual story because UIC is also home to a major health center where the products of health-related research are often commercialized. The three realized that the new health care legislation would test the ability of Medicare to keep costs under control without sacrificing quality. Hospital industry critics have long noted the large number of patients who are quickly readmitted to a hospital for the same reason they were admitted in the first place. In the past, such readmissions were treated — and hospitals were reimbursed — as new admissions. The new regulations will sharply reduce payments to hospitals for people who are readmitted within 30 days of discharge. That one change was enough to launch Care Team Connect. The stakes are high. Research shows that approximately 20 percent of Medicare patients are readmitted to the hospital within 30 days of discharge, costing Medicare approximately $26 billion over the next ten years. It is estimated that three-quarters of those readmissions could be prevented through effective follow-up programs, the heart of what Care Team Connect offers. Care Team Connect works with hospitals to develop cost-effective evidence-based transition of care programs to prevent these unnecessary readmissions, while improving patient outcomes. The technology platform features a system of risk stratification for each patient, ranging from low risk of returning and needing little follow-up service to high risk of returning unless an intervention program is developed and followed. The risk assessment drives patient-specific care plans that key hospitals in to what protocols should applied to which patients by the most appropriate resources. Care Team Connect set up shop in Evanston, attracted venture capital support and began to grow the business rapidly. An early adopter of the Care Team Connect system was Vanguard Health Systems, headquartered in Nashville, with four hospitals in the Chicago region. The intersection of entrepreneurship and change in the health care industry has brought about other startups by my former students. Matt Norris, Michael McCoy and Dr. Amir Bastawrous began HeartSounds, Inc., which uses sound separation technology developed at UIC in a device that can hear from outside the body — with great precision — the sounds of the heart and the blood moving through it. The potential cost savings of this innovation are estimated in the billions of dollars annually. HeartSounds was a Chicago Innovation Award winner in 2009. I have seen student entrepreneurs at UIC develop and launch businesses connected to such advancements as brain cancer and orthodontic braces. And this is the output of just one university — I know the list would be lengthened considerably when the contributions of young entrepreneurs at other universities in the Chicago region are added. There is plenty of downhearted news about young people entering the job market. But it is also a fact that these are times of great change. To a person with an entrepreneurial mindset, that spells opportunity.

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The Million-Dollar Weapon

March 25, 2011

By Sharon Weinberger Center for Public Integrity In the opening days of the assault on Libya, the United States and the United Kingdom launched a barrage of at least 161 Tomahawk cruise missiles to flatten Moammar Gadhafi’s air defenses and pave the way for coalition aircraft. In fiscal terms, at a time when Congress is fighting over every dollar, the cruise missile show of military might was an expenditure of nearly a quarter of a billion dollars. Each missile cost $1.41 million, close to three times the cost listed on the Navy’s website. Raytheon Corp. is the manufacturer of the Tomahawk Block IV, a low-flying missile that travels at 550 miles per hour. During a decade of war in Afghanistan, Iraq, and now Libya, the Pentagon has increasingly relied on the Tomahawk. A year ago, Raytheon boasted of its 2,000th Block IV delivery to the Navy. The 20-foot missile is particularly attractive for the military in current conflicts because it can be launched from submarines and surface ships at a safe distance and can be used to take out air-defense systems that could pose a threat to manned aircraft. William Hartung, director of the Arms and Security Initiative at the New America Foundation and author of the book Prophets of War , said the use of the Tomahawk helps explain, in part, the high cost of the operations in Libya. “The no-fly zones in Iraq averaged about $1 billion or so per year, while the Libyan operation cost $100 million or more on the first day, largely due to the use of cruise missiles,” Hartung said. “I would stop short of calling it a boondoggle, as it does seem to be getting the job done, just at a very high cost,” Hartung told the Center for Public Integrity. Some members of Congress are nervous about yet another war, cost being one of their complaints. “It is hard to imagine that Congress, during the current contentious debate over deficits and budget cutting, would agree to plunge America into still another war,” said Rep. Dennis Kucinich, an Ohio Democrat, in a statement. “Our nation simply cannot afford another war, economically, diplomatically or spiritually.” Tomahawks have high accuracy rate The Tomahawk was first used operationally in the 1991 Gulf War, when 288 cruise missiles were fired at Kuwait and Iraq to destroy Iraqi forces. The Navy claimed the missiles, which were used to target everything from air defense sites to Saddam’s presidential palace, had an 85 percent accuracy rate. The low-flying cruise missile was used again, in 1998, against Serb forces, and over 325 Tomahawks were launched against Iraq that same year in Operation Desert Fox. During the Iraq war in 2003, the number of Tomahawks used more than doubled compared to the first Gulf War, with over 725 of the cruise missiles launched at Iraq, according to Richard Myers , then chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. The Tomahawk, which is guided to its target by GPS, has tended to work well for fixed sites, like air defense systems, but perhaps less well for so-called fleeing targets, which depends on precise and up-to-date intelligence. In August 1998, President Bill Clinton ordered U.S. Navy vessels in the Arabian Sea to strike suspected Al Qaeda sites in Sudan and Afghanistan in retaliation for the Africa embassy bombings. “Though most of them hit their intended targets, neither Bin Ladin nor any other terrorist leader was killed,” the 9/11 Commission wrote in its final report. “[Former National Security Advisor Sandy] Berger told us that an after-action review by [CIA] Director [George] Tenet concluded that the strikes had killed 20-30 people in the camps but probably missed Bin Ladin by a few hours.” In some cases, it’s hard to judge the Tomahawk’s record: Amnesty International claims 41 civilians were killed by a U.S. Tomahawk strike against Yemen in 2009, but neither U.S. nor Yemeni officials ever confirmed the attack, which was reportedly directed against Al Qaeda sites. In Libya, the government claimed the recent Tomahawk strikes killed 48 civilians , though those reports have not been confirmed. Missile cost nearly tripled since 1999 From the standpoint of helping set up the no-fly zone, the Tomahawk’s use has been a success, according to U.S. officials. The most current version of the Tomahawk has some noted improvements, most significantly its ability to be reprogrammed in flight via two-way satellite communication. It that sense, the Tomahawk is roughly similar to an unmanned drone aircraft, except that it doesn’t ever come back. It’s not clear, however, how often its ability to be reprogrammed is actually used. “In the real world, you’re just not going to have the sort of precise intelligence that would tell you, after you launch a Tomahawk and it’s halfway there, that now there’s a bus full of widows and orphans” and it needs to be diverted, said John Pike, the director of GlobalSecurity.org. “That just doesn’t happen.” The cost of the Tomahawk has long been an issue. The Navy, according to a public fact sheet on its website, places the price tag of a Block IV missile at $569,000, but that’s in fiscal year 1999 dollars. However, Rob Koon, a spokesman for the Navy, on Wednesday placed the current price tag at $1.41 million. A spokesman for Raytheon, citing current operational use of the Tomahawk, directed all questions about the Tomahawk to the Navy. Whether the increasing use of the Tomahawk will translate to more orders is unclear. The Navy declines to discuss inventory numbers, citing operational security, but in February 2010, Raytheon announced that it had delivered its 2,000th Tomahawk Block IV missile to the Navy. The company’s trademarked motto is “Customer Success is Our Mission.” With $25 billion in revenues and $1.84 billion in profits companywide in 2010, Raytheon is one of the five largest defense contractors and has benefited from the military’s increasing reliance on cruise missiles. Missile sales have also been paralleled by its lobbying effort. Raytheon, now the world’s biggest producer of guided-missiles, spent just shy of $7 million on congressional lobbying in 2010, compared to $2.32 million a decade earlier, according to the Center for Responsive Politics’ OpenSecrets.org. Raytheon has liberally sprinkled campaign contributions across Congress, including more than $2.1 million in 2009-2010. The contributions were balanced between parties, with 53 percent going to Democrats and 46 percent to Republican candidates, according to OpenSecrets. Even in an era of staggering weapons costs, the price tag for a Tomahawk stands out because it’s only used once. So, is the Tomahawk worth well over $1 million a shot? “They are expensive rounds, but they give you the potential to attack heavily defended targets up front,” said Barry Watts, a senior fellow at the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. “How do you value not putting a bunch of pilots in harm’s way?”

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Bernard Starr: Sub-Prime Mortgages and Harry the Snake

March 22, 2011

Sub-prime mortgages still plague the housing market. Real estate watch-dog Housing Wire , citing statistics compiled by Realty Trak , recently reported that “Lenders filed a record 3.8 million foreclosures in 2010, up 2% from 2009 and an increase of 23% from 2008.” But 2011, they said, “could be even worse.” As the government ponders penalties, the banks and lenders continue to seek a scapegoat. In a twist of logic comparable to the man who kills his parents and then pleads for mercy as an orphan, the big banks, whose greed and reckless lending brought us the crash of 2008-2009, are now attempting to wiggle out of responsibility by casting themselves as the victims, not the home buyers who were duped. On March 3, 2011 the New York Times reported that attorneys for the banks claim that helping homeowners facing default is “like taking money that should be paid to the Treasury and using it for an unappropriated social program.” And the Bank of America, the nation’s largest mortgage servicer, “is already readying what will be among the industry’s main arguments: that it is unfair to reward homeowners who are delinquent or underwater but cannot point to specific errors in their case” These statements echo the rant of financial commentator Rick Santelli who blamed the victims. Back in 2009 on CNBC ‘ he charged that bailing out sub-prime mortgage holders was “…promoting bad behavior.” He added, “reward those who can carry the water not those who drink the water.” Other critics of homebuyers have likened a bailout to raising taxes on the whole population to cover the losses of gamblers in Las Vegas. Shouldn’t home buyers have known, say the accusers, that they couldn’t afford a $400,000 home on a family income of $50,000 — $60,000? Some did know. A predatory bank tried to convince Alex and his wife that they could afford a $330,000 home on their graduate student stipends. They resisted and purchased a starter home for $120,000. But the vast majority of sub-prime buyers were persuaded to make purchases well beyond their means by unscrupulous lenders who would stop at nothing to close a deal. These buyers were putty in the hands of the “tin men” (and women). “Tin men” is a nickname, for fast-talking unethical salesmen known for their skill at selling ice cubes to Eskimos. At one time they confined their activities mostly to selling home items door to door or through seductive cold-call sales pitches, but now they can be found in many industries — including real estate sales and mortgage lending. The original tin men sold aluminum siding — thus the moniker — and they are brilliantly portrayed in the 1987 film Tin Men starring Danny DeVito and Richard Dreyfuss “Tin men,” as we shall soon see, played a major role in the sub-prime mortgage debacle. First, the back story. I initially met real-life tin men when I worked as an encyclopedia salesman during my college years. Tin men from different industries drifted in and out of the office where I worked. Their pitches and “cons” were hilarious. A number of the classic examples are in the film. Here’s a simple one that I love: A salesman is selling aluminum siding to a couple. He surreptitiously drops a ten dollar bill on the floor out of the couple’s sight. Then he says, “Excuse me a second,” reaches down to the floor, and comes up with the bill. “Oh, this must be yours,” he says to the couple, handing it to them. Since they know he could just as well have slipped it into his pocket, the salesman’s act of “honesty” inspires the customers’ confidence — a message of trust that gives a big boost to closing the deal The tin men loved to exchange stories of their stings. Like vaudevillians, they had names for their routines. In “Inside-Outside Man” a salesman shows up for an appointment; he could be selling siding, a raised dormer, or any home product. He arrives at the family’s house in a stretch limo. When the husband and wife open the door they look surprised to see the limo. The salesman explains: “The Vice President of the company is in town for a sales conference and wanted to sit in on my presentation. Would you mind?” Of course, they don’t mind at all; they’re flattered. The “Vice President” emerges from the limo. He is dressed to perfection and casts an imposing presence — a central casting senior executive. At one point in the “pitch” the salesman shows the family a much more expensive product than they had originally looked at, and says “This is very expensive and the other product is almost as good.” The “Vice President” jumps in and says: “Give it to them for the same price.” The salesman shoots back, “But we’ll lose money on the deal.” The Vice President responds, “That’s all right. ‘Faker’ Industries will pay for it as part of our promotion. Give it to them” The salesman looks stunned. Are you surprised that this quickly becomes a done deal? Frank, the manager of the encyclopedia office, told me the premier tin man story “My People.” Frank once worked for a carpet company that advertised “two rooms of carpeting for $79.” There was no such product. The “bait and switch men,” who got easy entry into homes with the advertised offer, were supposed to switch-sell to higher priced carpeting. But one time, the company got stuck with lots of the ad-priced orders. So they sent in the next tier of tin men — the “conversion salesmen” — to convert the $79 contracts to higher ones. The best conversion man in the business was known as “Harry the Snake.” He closed a more expensive contract every time. Frank couldn’t figure out how he did it. He asked the Snake if he could go out with him on one of his pitches. The Snake agreed. “Meet me on Church Avenue and Ocean Parkway tomorrow morning at 9 AM. Wear overalls and bring some tools and a tape measure. When we get into the home just start measuring the floors. Oh, and by the way, I’m Tony and you’re Vito.” (The family they were visiting was Italian. On other days they might be Morris and Abe or Juan and Jose.) Frank and the Snake had no trouble getting into the home in Bensonhurst Brooklyn the next morning. The lady of the house was thrilled that the carpet installers were actually there so soon after the incredible sale. Once inside, “Tony” and “Vito” started measuring. Then at one point “Tony” (Harry the Snake) headed for the door and said, “C’mon, Vito, let’s get outta here. I can’t do this to a nice Italian family.” The puzzled woman asked, “What’s the matter?” Tony answered, “When they sold you this carpeting, they showed you the junk; they didn’t show you the good stuff.” He then pulled out a swatch of carpeting from his pocket. “This is the junk they sold you.” He pulled on it and it disintegrated. Then he showed her a swatch of the “good stuff.” Again, no surprise that the higher priced deal was soon closed. Let’s fast forward to the sub-prime mortgage orgy. “Harry the Snake” must have felt that he died and woke up in tin man’s heaven. Now he’s a mortgage broker at a respected bank — one of the icons of corporate America. And he’s the inside man — suit, tie, and title: VP, Director of Finance. Let’s listen in as the Snake talks to Mr. and Mrs. Jones. The Joneses neighbors, the Smiths, whose income is the same as theirs, about $52,000 a year, just bought a house financed by Harry the Snake’s bank. They were surprised; The Joneses didn’t think their neighbors could afford a house, but there were the Smiths packing and getting ready to move. Can Mr. and Mrs. Jones afford to do the same thing? The Snake assures them they can. “Yes, indeed, you can afford to buy this $380, 000 house.” (The finance industry’s rule of thumb is that the price you can afford is about 2.5-3 times gross income). He tells them that home values will surely keep going up and that the word “down” will soon be gone from our vocabulary. And he assures them that his distinguished bank will put its money where its exuberance is and finance the deal. The Snake shows them that the figures work — with virtually no down payment and just interest only payments for the first three years: “And in three years when payments on the principle kick in and the adjustable rate mortgage (ARM) will be recalibrated to interest rates at that time [and as much as two percentage points higher for buyers like the Joneses with credit scores below 620], that won’t be a problem. The value of the house will rise so much, and probably your income as well, that you will be able to raise money from the increased equity to cover all the costs.” How could they resist this opportunity to latch on to the American dream, especially when it is backed by the full faith and credit of one of America’s great banks — and Harry the Snake? When you are tempted to point the “j’accuse” finger at “irresponsible” sub-prime homebuyers think about all the Joneses across America and how they were shamelessly victimized by the army of Harry the Snakes — and their banks and lenders who cheered them on. NOTE: This is a revision and update of a blog that I wrote in 2009 at UPI’s R&S section.

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CoStar’s People of Note (March 13-19)

March 18, 2011

This week’s People of Note includes the following markets: Atlanta, Chicago, Denver, Kansas City, Los Angeles, New York City, Portland and Washington, DC. DENVER Sullivan Joins Jones Lang LaSalle By Nina Thilert Mary Sullivan joined Jones Lang LaSalle as a senior managing director. Sullivan will work with Senior Managing Director John Jugl Jr. to expand the company’s capital markets platform, including investment sales, real estate investment…

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Time To Celebrate The Success Of TARP Again, While Ignoring The Totality Of The Taxpayer Bailout

March 17, 2011

It seems it’s time for this old song and dance again: Six banks repaid nearly half a billion dollars in funds they received from the government bailout of Wall Street, the Treasury Department said, bringing the total bank repayment under the Troubled Asset Relief Program to 99%. The Treasury on Wednesday said the banks repurchased TARP investments with proceeds to taxpayers totaling about $475 million. TARP was created in 2008, with its Capital Purchase Program set up for banks hurt in the financial crisis. Through the repayments announced Wednesday, as well as dividends and interest, taxpayers have recovered about $244 billion of the $245 billion in TARP funds disbursed to banks, the Treasury said. The Treasury currently estimates that bank programs within TARP will ultimately provide a lifetime profit of nearly $20 billion to taxpayers. From the Treasury’s lips to your eyeballs, courtesy of the Wall Street Journal and others. We’ve been through this before, yes? Back in July of last year, it was, ” Thus ends the much-maligned ‘Wall Street bailout .’” Except it didn’t end . In early March, it was, ” There is now broad agreement that the bailouts worked, stabilizing the financial system and preventing an even deeper crisis .” But the agreement wasn’t broad enough, for an ample number of reasons . But now TARP is almost paid back, we’re told, and taxpayers have earned $20 billion, to boot. Don’t spend it all in one place, America! Because as it turns out, you’re still out a LOT of money. And, courtesy of the Real Economy Project at the Center for Media and Democracy, I have some charts and graphs that should finally make this clear : While it is true that many TARP bailout programs have ended, Center for Media and Democracy research shows that money is still due to taxpayers under the TARP. More importantly, the research shows that the U.S. Treasury Department’s ten TARP programs represent less than seven percent of the $4.7 trillion disbursed by the U.S. government in an effort to aid the financial services industry. Far more money has been disbursed by the Federal Reserve to prop up the financial system than by the U.S. Treasury and those loans are still outstanding. The first graph shows that non-TARP expenditures, largely by the Federal Reserve, dwarf those of the TARP. It is absurd to declare ‘mission accomplished’ while counting only one small portion of the bailout. While the Federal Reserve aid was disbursed mostly in the form of loans, that money has not been paid back yet, and in the housing sector this disbursal of funds continues in what we like to call a “stealth bailout.” Our unique timeline of the bailout derived from government data pulled on a quarterly basis, clearly shows the initial infusion of some $2.7 trillion in emergency funds into the financial system, followed by a second infusion of funds into the mortgage and housing markets, largely through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and without a vote or any Congressional oversight. It represents the largest intervention in the housing market in history, yet it is not getting any of the scrutiny that has been applied to the TARP from policy experts, policymakers or the press. As I’ve been saying for a long while, TARP is just a fraction of the overall taxpayer intervention in the financial collapse, and we are far from recouping 99 percent of that. The above charts, obviously, have not been updated since last year, but Mary Bottari, the director of the Real Economy Project, told me Thursday, “My guess is that we are not too far off these numbers still,” adding, “TARP was never the big enchilada. It was always the Fed, and the Fed’s exposure still remains in the housing sector, where they have pumped billions in an effort to prop up the housing market.” The Real Economy Project tracks the total Wall Street bailout cost on this page at SourceWatch , which exhaustively runs down that enchilada. Sorry to rain on the parade, everybody! [Would you like to follow me on Twitter ? Because why not? Also, please send tips to tv@huffingtonpost.com -- learn more about our media monitoring project here .]

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Ora Introduces Larry Amdahl as New Director of Clinical Operations for Dry Eye

March 15, 2011

ANDOVER, MA–(Marketwire – March 15, 2011) – Ora, Inc. announced today that Larry Amdahl joined its team as the Director of Clinical Operations for Dry Eye. In his new role, Larry will be responsible for overseeing both the tactical execution of clinical programs and the planning and process evolution of Ora’s Dry Eye Operations group.

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Ora Introduces Larry Amdahl as New Director of Clinical Operations for Dry Eye

March 15, 2011

ANDOVER, MA–(Marketwire – March 15, 2011) – Ora, Inc. announced today that Larry Amdahl joined its team as the Director of Clinical Operations for Dry Eye. In his new role, Larry will be responsible for overseeing both the tactical execution of clinical programs and the planning and process evolution of Ora’s Dry Eye Operations group.

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Ora Introduces Larry Amdahl as New Director of Clinical Operations for Dry Eye

March 15, 2011

ANDOVER, MA–(Marketwire – March 15, 2011) – Ora, Inc. announced today that Larry Amdahl joined its team as the Director of Clinical Operations for Dry Eye. In his new role, Larry will be responsible for overseeing both the tactical execution of clinical programs and the planning and process evolution of Ora’s Dry Eye Operations group.

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Pepper Rock Resources Appoints New President and Directors

March 14, 2011

LOS ANGELES, CA–(Marketwire – March 14, 2011) – Pepper Rock Resources Corp. ( OTCBB : PEPR ) (the “Company”) is pleased to announce the appointment of Mr. Don Nicholson as Company President and welcomes him to the Board of Directors. The Company is further pleased to report the appointment of Mr. W. Scott Lawler, Esq. and also welcomes him as a Director of the Company.

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India Globalization Capital Announces a Change in Its Board of Directors

March 11, 2011

BETHESDA, MD–(Marketwire – March 11, 2011) – India Globalization Capital, Inc. ( NYSE Amex : IGC ), a company competing in the rapidly growing materials and infrastructure industry in India, announced today that its Board of Directors accepted the resignation of Director Suhail Nathani, effective March 15, 2011. Mr. Nathani submitted his request to resign from the board due to his increased role in matters involving governments and regulatory bodies.

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Obama News Conference Scheduled To Address Rising Oil & Gas Prices

March 11, 2011

(AP) – The White House says President Barack Obama will address rising oil and gasoline prices at a news conference on Friday. Fuel prices have been rising amid continued turmoil in Libya, an oil-producing country. News that police opened fire to break up a protest Thursday afternoon in Saudi Arabia also has sparked fears that the unrest could spread to that country. Saudi Arabia is the world’s largest oil exporter. Oil prices soared $3 per barrel in just 12 minutes after the news broke in Saudi Arabia. At the pump, gasoline is averaging $3.52 a gallon – 41 cents more than last month. Obama’s news conference is scheduled for 11:15 a.m. Eastern time. It will be his second full news conference of the year. Later, the president and first lady will welcome their hometown, Stanley Cup-winning Chicago Blackhawks to the White House. Following that get-together, first lady Michelle Obama, National Hockey League Commissioner Gary Bettman and USA Hockey Executive Director Dave Ogrean will preside over a street hockey workout and clinic on a rink set up on the South Lawn. The clinic for local youngsters is part of a new collaboration between Mrs. Obama’s Let’s Move! initiative, the NHL and USA Hockey to encourage kids to lead active and healthy lives.

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GOP Congressman Silent On Minimum Wage Question

March 8, 2011

Democrats circulated a video on Tuesday of Rep. Denny Rehberg (R-Mont.), who is challenging Democratic Senator Jon Tester in 2012 for his seat, tight-lipped when asked to state the minimum wage in his state. In the clip, the congressman is pressed repeatedly to identify the rate. In Montana, the minimum wage was recently raised to $7.35 per hour, which is 10 cents higher than the national rate. A spokesman for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee said the video suggested Rehberg is “out of touch.” “Congressman Rehberg is more out of touch than we ever could have imagined,” DSCC Director Eric Schultz said in a statement . “This is not the first time Congressman Rehberg has shown a disdain for the working men and women of his state. Time and again he has voted against giving Montanans a livable wage. But today he has sunk to a new low.” It didn’t take long for Rehberg’s team to hit back. The congressman’s camp pointed to the fact that the Republican lawmaker voted in favor of raising the minimum wage in 2007 to help advance a proposed increase to be enacted into law. “It’s certainly troubling that the Montana Democrat Party and Jon Tester’s campaign have hired someone who apparently doesn’t know what the minimum wage is in Montana,” Jed Link, a spokesman for Rehberg, wrote in an email , presumably referring to the man who asked the congressman about the issue. “That said, being ignorant of the law doesn’t mean you aren’t still entitled to its protections. If this young man isn’t being paid in accordance with the law by the Montana Democrat Party or Jon Tester’s campaign, Congressman Rehberg’s office will help him in any way it can.” According to the Clark Fork Chronicle , Rehberg is the 14th wealthiest member of Congress. He’s also cast votes on multiple occasions against Democratic-backed measures aimed at raising the minimum wage. When asked to state the rate in the clip that surfaced on Tuesday, Rehberg responded, “I don’t know. What is it.” WATCH:

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Traction Hires Nellie Newman to Lead Client Services

March 8, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO, CA–(Marketwire – March 8, 2011) – Nellie Newman has joined Traction, an advertising agency and innovation consultancy in San Francisco, as Director of Client Services. The agency has experienced rapid growth in the wake of being named the Interactive Agency of the Year in 2009 by BtoB Magazine and the runner-up for that award in 2010, and services clients such as Adobe, Shutterfly, and Intuit.

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New NexPlanar CTO to Lead Advanced CMP Pad Product Development

March 8, 2011

Former Applied Materials Director Hired to Develop Next Generation CMP Pads for Specific Semiconductor Applications

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Transocean Ltd. Board Nominates New Director

March 2, 2011

ZUG, SWITZERLAND–(Marketwire – March 2, 2011) – Transocean Ltd. ( NYSE : RIG ) ( SIX : RIGN ) today announced that the Board of Directors is recommending that the company’s shareholders approve at the 2011 Annual General Meeting the election of Steve Lucas as a Class III Director for a three-year term. Mr. Lucas is the retired Group Finance Director of National Grid plc and has previously served in a variety of finance roles with the Lattice Group plc., the BG Group plc and Royal Dutch/Shell.

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Dart Energy Limited (ASX:DTE) Appoints Mr Simon Poidevin As Non-Executive Director

March 2, 2011

Dart Energy Limited (ASX:DTE) Appoints Mr Simon Poidevin As Non-Executive Director

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TechLaw Solutions Names John Olsson as Director, Discovery Solutions

March 1, 2011

WASHINGTON, DC–(Marketwire – March 1, 2011) – TechLaw Solutions is pleased to announce that John Olsson, JD, has been selected for the role of Director, Discovery Solutions. In this capacity John will work with clients and prospects evaluating case needs from early stage legal hold and data assessment through processing, review and production.

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Simon Johnson: No Smoke Without Mirrors — Disinformation About the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

February 28, 2011

In Washington, before lobbyists try hard to destroy something, they first spread a great deal of disinformation about it. Thus the “End Users’ Coalition” (a front for the derivatives dealers) promotes its lobbying points as fake research. And “fiscal conservatives” attempt to distract from the fact that our largest banks brought us to the brink of budget disaster — this is their preparation for demolishing all vestiges of financial reform. On a closely related front, there is now a concerted effort to undermine the newly formed Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), mostly by spreading disinformation about its supposed lack of accountability. This disinformation approach contains the standard elements of exaggeration, misdirection, and distraction (all quotes are via Fred Barnes ): Slogans: “If you like TSA at the airport, you’ll love these guys” (Congressman Spencer Bachus). This is a major step towards dictatorship. “Its powers are very, very vast…. Who in the world would consider it appropriate to have one person appointed–one person!–to set the rules for the entire financial industry. It’s a tremendous overreach. It’s incredible to think about” (Senator Bob Corker) And it would be a one-person dictatorship. “”It would be dangerous to the American economy if Elizabeth Warren were put in that job by a recess appointment, thwarting the will of Congress…. [She would be] accountable to no one” (Senator Richard Shelby) Naturally, none of this is remotely close to the facts — an important principle of disinformation is that it should create an alternative reality which, through repetition by apparently disparate and supposedly credible people, becomes regarded as containing an element of truth. Elizabeth Warren, the interim head of the new agency, has in fact consulted widely with members of Congress (from both sides), as well as with the industry. There is a great deal of accountability, down to the level of explaining exactly how the agency will be structured and the principles that will guide its operation. She has also shared with members of Congress the details of key personnel appointments, as well as the responsibilities that various people will have. Legislators have every right to ask tough questions about the details – and this is exactly what they have been doing. The oversight mechanisms at work here are exactly the same as for existing regulators — the CFPB is largely a consolidation and streamlining of their powers. Of course, we might worry that legislative oversight of regulators in the past helped bring us to the brink of financial and fiscal disaster, but that is another matter (e.g., see Inside Job , which just won the Oscar for Best Documentary.) A particular bone of contention is the role of Elizabeth Warren herself. She is currently Assistant to the President (i.e., a White House role), as well as a Special Advisor to the Secretary of the CFPB. She is not Director of the CFPB — nor is she currently the nominee for that position. Some members of Congress are clearly positioning themselves for a bruising confirmation hearing — and sending signals that they will fight hard against any potential appointment of Professor Warren, presumably mostly on procedural grounds. But everything about her current role, the timing of when and how the agency is established, and the confirmation hearings is exactly as laid down by the Dodd-Frank Act. And remember that Ms. Warren was, until recently, head of the Congressional Oversight Panel for TARP — in other words, she had a prominent role overseeing part of the executive branch. She understands the need to be scrupulous and careful about process in the current situation. Her appointment calendar is posted on-line. By my count, she has met with more than 50 members of Congress in one-on-one meetings since September. Elizabeth Warren stands for transparency. After decades of abuse, consumers of financial products deserve prices that are clearly stated up front, risks that are plainly visible, and absolutely nothing buried in the fine print. This kind of transparency allows people to comparison shop in an effective way; it will also spur market competition and encourage the kind of innovation that really benefits consumers. It’s time to end the deception that comes packaged with complicated agreements wrapped around hidden fees and all kinds of nasty surprises. And please remind all members of Congress, regarding their oversight role during 2000-08, that despite everything Countrywide did, including the horrible way it treated consumers and the many apparent deceptions in its practices, Angelo Mozilo walked away a rich man. According to the research of Professors Sanjai Bhagat and Brian Bolton, as CEO between 2000 and 2008, Mr. Mozilo received over $90 million in salary and bonus and sold Countrywide stock worth over $500 million. (You must read the Bhagat and Bolton paper.) Let’s have the substantive discussion, in the open — before Congress and elsewhere. Which way do we go next: Elizabeth Warren’s way, with transparency for all; or Angelo Mozilo’s way, with vast fortunes for a very few people and great misery for many? This is not about being pro- or anti-market. This is about what kind of market you want: transparent or opaque; honest or based on deceit. But rather than discussing the merits of the debate — and the real issues at stake — instead we are treating to phony procedural complaints and fake claims regarding how the Constitution is supposedly being undermined. “No smoke without fire” is the principle that reasonable people often apply to stories they hear. If enough people are talking about an issue in a particular way, there must be some legitimate grounds for concern. But, as any former official can tell you, while this presumption may be reliable in everyday life, it plays into the hands of politicians who wish to mislead you. All the smoke around the CFPB is designed purely for mirrors; there is no merit to any of the accusations. This is the first stage in a careful and orchestrated campaign to undermine and eventually destroy the agency, with the ultimate goal of allowing some irresponsible elements in the financial industry to go back to the disgusting ways of 2000-08. This post originally appeared at The Baseline Scenario .

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NVISION Laser Eye Centers, La Jolla Hires New Co-Medical Director

February 21, 2011

NEWPORT BEACH, CA–(Marketwire – February 21, 2011) – Dr. Thomas Tooma, Medical Director of NVISION Laser Eye Centers, announced today that Dr. Glenn Cook has been hired as Co-Medical Director for the La Jolla Center .

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Obama’s Big Budget Cut Proposals Target The Poor

February 10, 2011

WASHINGTON — As Democrats and Republicans wrangle over fiscal austerity and the shape of the 2012 federal budget, the White House is targeting programs in the $4 trillion budget that benefit low-income Americans. It’s a sop to moderates and conservatives, and it’s likely to infuriate voters who put President Barack Obama in the White House. In the past week, the Obama administration has signaled that it will propose significant cuts to community service block grants and an energy assistance program that helps poor people stay warm in the winter and cool in the summer. A White House source familiar with the budget process told HuffPost that the president will propose cutting $2.5 billion from the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program , or LIHEAP, which received $5.1 billion in federal funds in 2009. That program distributes money to states, which then distribute it to social service agencies to help families heat or cool their homes. The National Energy Assistance Directors’ Association , a group that represents state aid officials in Washington, said Wednesday that the bad economy has forced more low-income households to rely on LIHEAP. About 8.3 million households used it in fiscal 2010, up from 7.7 million and 5.8 million during the previous two years, and the association expects eligible applications to rise to 8.9 million this year. NEADA director Mark Wolfe told HuffPost that the administration’s proposal would cut off 3.5 million households. “It’s just a cruel proposal,” Wolfe said. “What this would do is take some of the most vulnerable families in the country off energy assistance.” HuffPost readers: Used LIHEAP to heat your home? Tell us about it — email arthur@huffingtonpost.com . Wolfe said he assumed the White House had “drawn a circle” around education-aid programs like Pell Grants and Head Start. “My guess is that the administration sees a course of programs they want to protect,” he said. “But why offer this up before the Republicans suggest cuts. Why volunteer us? Why volunteer LIHEAP?” The White House declined to address these concerns on the record, though a source noted that energy prices are lower now than when Congress increased LIHEAP funding for 2009. Although energy prices have indeed declined since then, Bob Greenstein, the director of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a progressive think tank, pointed out that the overall economy hasn’t improved much since then. Price drops don’t offer much relief to people still looking for jobs. “The unemployment rate is higher and there are lot more people that have low incomes today than during fiscal 2008 when this was written,” Greenstein said. “I’m certainly surprised and disappointed at this cut.” And this isn’t the only program for low-income people that the White House has put on the chopping block, at a time when the administration and Congress chose to extend tax cuts for upper income and wealthy Americans. Community service block grants, which fund community organizers in poor neighborhoods, are also facing cuts. During the 2008 campaign, Obama emphasized that his own resume included a stint as a community organizer. White House budget director Jacob Lew said in a New York Times op-ed Sunday that Obama would propose cleaving block-grant allocations to $350 million from $700 million. “These are grassroots groups working in poor communities, dedicated to empowering those living there and helping them with some of life’s basic necessities,” Lew wrote. “These are the kinds of programs that President Obama worked with when he was a community organizer, so this cut is not easy for him.” David Bradley, director of the National Community Action Foundation, that works with Congress and local governments on behalf of programs for low-income people, said he was surprised that the president, a former community organizer, would go after programs that represent such a tiny part of the massive federal budget. “The question is why? Why pick on this program? It makes a statement, particularly when you’re able to say, ‘Here’s a program I really care about,’” Bradley said. “Once the Obama administration throws a poverty program in the water, it starts a feeding frenzy.” Bradley said the the White House has thrown chum into the waters swirling around the budget-cut debate. He said the Obama administration’s move simply emboldened Republicans to propose even deeper cuts to the same programs. In the wake of the White House proposal, Republicans said yesterday that they would seek $405 million in cuts to community service block grants as part of their proposed continuing resolution , a stopgap budget measure that would fund the federal government for the rest of the year. Even before word of the block grant and LIHEAP cuts, the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty worried that the White House will abandon a waning homeless prevention program created by the stimulus bill. The White House has also stepped on other programs for poor folks. In August, it pushed Congress to pass a child-nutrition bill — a priority of the First Lady’s — that was paid for in part with cuts to future funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, better known as “food stamps.” At the time, the Food Research and Action Center, a national anti-hunger organization that lobbies on behalf of food stamps and other programs, estimated that a family of four will receive $59 less per month starting in November 2013 as a result of the $2.2-billion cut, which came on the heels of another $11.9-billion cut to food stamps that was folded into a state-aid bill. More than 100 House Democrats protested and promised to block the child nutrition bill because of the cuts, but the White House persuaded them to fall in line. With mounting evidence that the White House is willing to sacrifice low-income assistance as it jockeys for position in budget and election battles, it may be hard this time around to convince congressional Democrats to support the proposed block grant or LIHEAP cuts. The 11 Democratic members of Congress from Massachusetts sent Obama a letter on Monday opposing cuts to the block grants. And one prominent Democrat has already voiced his displeasure with the LIHEAP proposal. “I understand that difficult cuts have to be made,” Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.) wrote in a letter to the White House on Wednesday. “But in the middle of a brutal, even historic, New England winter, home heating assistance is more critical than ever to the health and welfare of millions of Americans, especially senior citizens. I request that the administration preserve LIHEAP funding at least to the Fiscal Year 2010 funding at $5.1 billion when it submits its FY12 budget proposal to Congress.” In Massachusetts, eligible applications to LIHEAP increased 21.1 percent in 2009, and that represents a population of voters likely to be as disgruntled about the White House’s proposal as Kerry.

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Dan Solin: Clueless

February 9, 2011

I’m sure Pat Dorsey is highly intelligent and very competent. He is the director of equity research for Morningstar, which is a big job that gives him access to vast resources about the stock and bond markets. As he noted in an article published January 17, 2010 in Money Magazine ‘s Investor’s Guide 2010 entitled “10 stocks that can keep running,” the analysts he works with at Morningstar cover 2000 stocks. Wow. With such an impressive background and extensive resources, I am sure many investors paid close attention to Mr. Dorsey’s 2010 predictions about stock market trends. His primary observation was that we were in the “first phase of a bull market” where “smaller and junkier stocks tend to lead the way.” However, he confidently predicted that “…speculative frenzy eventually gives way to the fundamentals, and that should bring your focus back to high-quality blue-chip stocks this year.” He was very negative on “lower-quality small stocks” noting they could “get killed if reality falls short of high expectations.” Many investors no doubt dumped their small stocks and focused on blue chips. After all, Mr. Dorsey is the director of equity research at Morningstar. Presumably he can accurately predict whether large or small stocks will outperform in a given year. Not exactly. In a thoughtful analysis not available to the investing public, Weston J. Wellington, vice president of Dimensional Fund Advisors noted that US small stocks had their best year since 2003. The S&P Small Cap 600 index was up 26.31%, compared to an increase of 15.06% in the S&P 500. It gets worse. Wellington did an analysis of the ten blue chip stocks recommended by Mr. Dorsey and found they had an average return of 6.3% , significantly under-performing the S&P 500 index. Let’ see if I got this right. Mr. Dorsey was dead wrong in his prediction that blue-chips would outperform small stocks in 2010. His selection of blue-chips did not come close to the returns that were yours for the taking by investing in the comparable index. Yet investors continue to rely on the financial media which features pundits of all stripes, confidently predicting the direction of the markets and advising you to buy this or that stock. It’s all errant nonsense, akin to voodoo, designed to separate you from your money and to continue the transfer of wealth from you to those who “manage” your money. Mr. Dorsey, and his colleagues who pretend to be able to predict random, future events, may be clueless. You don’t have to be. 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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Dart Energy Limited (ASX:DTE) Appoints Mr Peter Clarke As Non-Executive Director

February 8, 2011

Dart Energy Limited (ASX:DTE) Appoints Mr Peter Clarke As Non-Executive Director

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Online Retailer, LocoX.com, Hires Mike Lyons as Director of Marketing

February 7, 2011

CARLSBAD, CA–(Marketwire – February 7, 2011) – LocoX.com, a leading online retailer for motocross gear, motocross parts and life-style clothing, is proud to announce the addition of industry veteran, Mike Lyons as Director of Marketing. Lyons’ 13 years of consumer marketing and brand building experience will be crucial in continuing LocoX.com’s growth worldwide.

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CFPB May Crowdsource Payday Lender Crackdown

February 3, 2011

WASHINGTON — The new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rolled out a preliminary version of its website on Thursday, and with it a few indications about the agency’s plans to crowdsource prospective regulations that may soon target shady payday lenders. The CFPB hopes to use its website at consumerfinance.gov to collect data not just from banks, but from consumers, in order to monitor trends in various lending markets. While they’re still devising specific plans, the agency hopes to have an active public presence, with a simple, closely-watched platform for borrowers to submit complaints. Elizabeth Warren, an adviser to President Barack Obama who is charged with setting up the bureau, told HuffPost in October that she hopes to use crowdsourcing to enhance the regulator’s impact. One of the agency’s crowdsourcing initiatives may involve payday lenders and check-cashing shops. Because these businesses are often small operations, they can be difficult for federal officials to track, appearing in a neighborhood only to disappear a few weeks later. Citizens could organize to take photos of new payday lending or check cashing products, and upload those photos to the CFPB website. That could help notify other members of the neighborhood about potentially-troublesome local companies, as well as helping the regulator build a list of shops to investigate. As Warren said in a speech at the University of California at Berkeley in October, “Through crowd-sourcing technology, consumers can deal collectively with those who would take advantage of them–and can reward those who provide excellent products and services.” Payday lenders provide short-term, high-interest loans to consumers that critics say are designed to be difficult to repay, often encouraging consumers to repay one payday loan with another. This can lead to a vicious — and expensive — cycle of debt. Members of the U.S. military are a particular target for high-interest lenders. A 2006 Department of Defense report concluded that payday lending was having a negative effect on military readiness and troop morale. The CFPB is yet to formally detail any specific programs, but the bureau hopes to submit new consumer-protection ideas to the public on its website and allow borrowers to voice approval or disapproval through an online voting system. The bureau’s website stresses the struggles facing borrowers. A “Protecting You” page features three stories from borrowers who have had problems with their bank, emphasizing that the CFPB hopes to respond to similar cases. The new website’s design represents a considerable change of tone from the consumer-complaint resources available from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, previously the ostensible go-to for borrowers. The OCC’s consumer call center, based in Houston, has long been criticized by state banking regulators and public-interest groups for being inattentive to consumer complaints. In December 2007 testimony before the House Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit, Ed Mierzwinski, Consumer Affairs Director for the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, noted that some state regulators referred to the call center as “OCC’s black hole in Houston.” The OCC, which declined to comment for this story, rolled out its helpwithmybank.gov website in 2007 in response to criticism that its call center is clunky, but many consumer advocates say the regulator remains clunky and unhelpful. The banking horror stories on the CFPB’s site are reproduced below: Karen, 32, is an airport security supervisor from Pennsylvania. When she refinanced her mortgage, her broker promised her a low fixed-rate loan but instead gave her two more expensive loans. Why? She didn’t know it at the time, but giving her both a large adjustable-rate first loan and a second smaller loan increased the fees she paid to the broker. Karen told the lender what she had in savings and her income, but the broker changed the numbers on her form. (Some brokers changed numbers in order to make borrowers eligible for higher loan amounts than they could otherwise qualify for–and to close a deal for a bigger mortgage that will give the broker bigger fees.) The broker scheduled Karen for a late-night closing and did not give her the closing documents at the time of closing, so she was not aware of these changes. The consumer bureau will work to prevent similar abuses, in part by enforcing the requirement in the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act that mortgage lenders document and verify a borrower’s income or assets before making a loan to ensure that the borrower can afford to repay it. Robin, 55, is a seventh-grade science teacher from Georgia. Her credit card company increased the rate on her existing credit card balance from 10.90% to 17.90%, even though she paid her account on time every month. The increase has been particularly difficult for her family because her husband’s landscaping business has been hard hit recently by the financial crisis. The consumer bureau will enforce the Credit CARD Act, which President Obama signed in 2009 to ban credit card issuers from arbitrarily raising rates on existing balances and other unfair practices. The CFPB will also be responsible for updating the credit card rules moving forward. Andrew, 62, is a retired Baltimore police officer and Vietnam veteran who manages a fitness center for seniors. Andrew had both a primary checking account and a separate “veteran’s account” in which he received $123 in benefits each month. In 2009, his bank made a mistake that caused confusion about a replacement debit card for one of his accounts. The bank had also automatically enrolled Andrew’s veteran’s account, including transactions using the debit card, in “overdraft” protection that he never asked for–a practice that has since been prohibited. When Andrew used the replacement card–expecting it to withdraw from his primary checking account–he was hit with hundreds of dollars in overdraft fees on his veteran’s account. Andrew discovered the bank’s error and explained the situation, but the bank was willing to refund only part of the fees. The consumer bureau will examine big banks to ensure that they are following the rules that now require banks to give consumers a real choice of whether to join overdraft protection programs for ATM and debit card transactions. The CFPB will update those rules to respond to changes in the marketplace over time.

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Former Specter Staffer Broadens Leadership of Fuel Cell and Hydrogen Energy Association

February 3, 2011

WASHINGTON, DC–(Marketwire – February 3, 2011) – The Fuel Cell and Hydrogen Energy Association (FCHEA) announced today that James Warner has joined the newly-constituted advocacy organization as its Director of Policy.

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Vicor Technologies Names Dr. Steve Watts Director of Sports Medicine

February 2, 2011

BOCA RATON, FL–(Marketwire – February 2, 2011) – David H. Fater, CEO of  Vicor Technologies, Inc. ( OTCBB : VCRT ), today announced that Steve A. Watts, MD, was named Director of Sports Medicine, a new part-time position. Vicor Technologies ( http://www.vicortech.com ) is a biotechnology company focused on the development of innovative, non-invasive medical devices using its patented, proprietary PD2i ® nonlinear algorithm and software. Vicor is currently in the process of commercializing diagnostics that enable physicians to accurately risk stratify specific target populations for future pathological events, including cardiovascular disease patients for death resulting from arrhythmia or congestive heart failure, diabetics for the presence of diabetic autonomic neuropathy (DAN), and trauma victims for imminent death absent imm

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AbTech Industries Welcomes Jonathan Thatcher as Chief Operating Officer

January 27, 2011

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

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PM Digital Names Richard Chavez Senior Director of SEO and John Iozzia Vice President of Business Development

January 26, 2011

NEW YORK, NY–(Marketwire – January 26, 2011) – PM Digital ( www.pmdigital.com ), a New York-based online marketing agency that was named Internet Retailer’s Fastest Growing SEM Agency of 2010, today announced the addition of Richard Chavez — previously the Director of SEO at iCrossing — as Senior Director of SEO and John Iozzia — previously a Senior Business Development Executive at Performics — as Vice President of Business Development. Both are newly-created positions.

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Joe Cunning Joins Kraig Biocraft Laboratories Business Advisory Board

January 24, 2011

Kraig Adds Renowned Textile Expert and Former DuPont Textiles Research Director to Its Advisory Board

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1st Global Financial Corporation Appoints New President Johnny Bannister and John Hartnett as New Director of Ireland and European Operations

January 21, 2011

LAS VEGAS, NV–(Marketwire – January 21, 2011) – 1 st Global Financial Corporation ( PINKSHEETS : FGBF ) announced today that it has appointed Johnny Bannister as its new President and Chief Executive Officer, and John Hartnett as Director with special responsibility for Ireland and Europe operations.

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Astro Pak Names Ronald Pentecost EH&S Director

January 19, 2011

COSTA MESA, CA–(Marketwire – January 19, 2011) – Astro Pak Corporation, the leading provider of passivation , precision, high purity and chemical cleaning, today announced the appointment of Ronald Pentecost as Director of Environmental Health and Safety (EH&S). Mr. Pentecost will be responsible for overseeing and ensuring organizational compliance with current safety regulations and promoting the protection of all project personnel, including customers.

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Accuity Brings on Director of Government Services

January 19, 2011

SKOKIE, IL–(Marketwire – January 19, 2011) – Accuity, the leading worldwide provider of payment routing data, AML screening software and services, is pleased to announce that Mr. Paul F. Soczynski has joined the company in the newly-created position of Director of Government Services.

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Rose Financial Services Names Clay Carney Director of Finance and Accounting Services and Fletcher C. Bauman Vice President of Business Development

January 13, 2011

ROCKVILLE, MD–(Marketwire – January 13, 2011) – Rose Financial Services (RFS), the Premier U.S. Based Finance and Accounting Outsourcing Firm, is pleased to announce the addition of Clay Carney as Director of Finance and Accounting Services and Fletcher C. Bauman as Vice President of Business Development . 

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RALLY Marketing Group Taps Award Winning Thought Leader as Creative Director

January 13, 2011

SEATTLE, WA–(Marketwire – January 13, 2011) –   RALLY Marketing Group is pleased to announce that  Keith Goldberg has joined the agency as Creative Director . In this role, Keith will lead RALLY’S creative department and build on the agency’s success delivering integrated campaigns that use traditional, digital, and experiential marketing to create customers for leading brands.

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Craig Pirtle Joins The Peninsula Group as Director of Sales & Distribution

January 12, 2011

WASHINGTON, DC–(Marketwire – January 12, 2011) – The Peninsula Group, LLC (“Peninsula”) announced today that Craig Pirtle has joined its management group as Director of Sales & Distribution. His responsibilities will extend throughout the enterprise to encompass the development and direction of a nationwide — and worldwide — sales network for Peninsula’s longevity products.

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Feds SUE NYC, Say City Committed Medicaid Fraud

January 12, 2011

NEW YORK — The federal government sued the city of New York on Tuesday for Medicaid fraud, accusing it of overcharging the program tens of millions of dollars for 24-hour services for patients who need help with shopping, grooming and other personal care. The government in a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Manhattan sought civil penalties and damages against the city, saying administrators over the last 10 years routinely reauthorized 24-hour continuous personal care services for applicants without obtaining the required local medical evaluation. According to the lawsuit, state law requires that anyone found eligible for the program receive assessments from a doctor, a social worker, a nurse and – when 24-hour care is necessary – from a designated local medical director. The lawsuit said city administrators sometimes overruled the local medical director when the director decided continued care was inappropriate. In a release, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said the allegations “unfortunately reflect a systemic failure to responsibly administer the Medicaid program.” Bharara added: “It goes without saying that ultimate medical decisions about patient care should be made by doctors and nurses, not government bureaucrats, and they should be based first and foremost on the best interests of the patient.” The city Human Resources Administration, which administers the program in the city, responded to the lawsuit in a statement by noting that the city helps nearly 42,000 frail and elderly New Yorkers with their daily needs through the program and takes its responsibilities seriously. In the lawsuit, the government said about 17,500 people have received 24-hour personal care services from the city since 2000. It said the current annual cost of the services ranges from $75,000 to $150,000 per individual. Sometimes, the city’s conduct has caused patients to receive more services than necessary or warranted by their condition, costing taxpayers millions, the lawsuit said. The federal government cited one instance in which a medical doctor determined that a 65-year-old woman did not need 24-hour services, only to be overruled by a city administrator who authorized the services anyway. In another instance, the city caused a 75-year-old patient to get less care than needed by keeping the person in the 24-hour care program even though the local medical director said the patient needed to be in a psychiatric facility, the lawsuit said.

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