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Jennifer Openshaw: Janitorial Jobs & the Presidential Candidates

January 17, 2012

A lot of parents are scratching their heads: Should my kid really take a job as a janitor? How much lower can you go? Last night on Fox, I watched the South Carolina debates and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich respond to criticism he had received suggesting poor kids work as janitors — “kiddie janitors” — in their schools. The story unfolds in a New York Magazine article by Joel Klein here . We’re not here to debate the candidates, but the topic is a valid one. Many affluent parents have shared with me the debate they’ve had with their private school headmasters over “menial” jobs. The headmaster believes there’s nothing wrong while some parents and students believe it’s beneath them. But it’s all really a matter of perspective — and what you do with what you’re given. For instance, I worked at the age of 14 as a maid in a motel, making the $2.65 per hour minimum wage. I did it to earn extra money and start saving for college since the tuition would fall primarily on me. And, yes, I can still make beds the Holiday Inn way! Go Where the Flocks Don’t But seriously, this is a tough economy, and if a student needs money and there’s an opportunity, why not consider it? Oddly, some of the best paying jobs are those we wouldn’t ever consider — many of them union jobs. Did it ever occur to you, whether it’s you or your kids, that you might go where the flocks don’t? If money is so important, or even a certain type of experience, why not pursue those avenues that few do? Your chances of success will be much higher — and the pay might, too. We don’t believe in just taking a job just for the paycheck, but rather, make an experience of it. Whether a student is working at McDonald’s or as a school janitor, there are lessons to be learned — like how to run a business. Even one of my business school colleagues from UCLA now runs an actual janitorial business, cleaning the floors for colleges and office buildings. They are creating their own destiny. A Self-Enterprising School This isn’t about race. Some schools are operating programs on campus — whether it’s the cafeteria or a bank — that directly provides students skills. And schools are considering entirely new models — why not one that makes the employees — or at least some of them — the students? Why not teach them how an enterprise is run, customer service, accounting and the like? Wouldn’t they be ahead of other students once they hit college or the working world? Sure, you could argue that child labor laws and other rules we need to change — that it’s a cobweb of issues — but it’s an interesting idea. As parents and as Americans, we need to instill the values of hard work, commitment, and follow-through. Now more than ever, though, we need to also teach valuable, real-world business skills. The role of janitor may not be such a bad place to start both to serve in a job and to ultimately create jobs.

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Diamond Resorts CEO Breaks Cover In Anger On ‘Undercover Boss’

January 16, 2012

Back for a third round of bosses going undercover in their own companies to see what is and isn’t working, Diamond Resorts International CEO Stephen J. Cloobeck was up first on the season premiere of ” Undercover Boss ” (Sun., 8 p.m. EST on CBS). He took on four jobs at various properties that the relatively new company owns and learned more than he expected. The company motto, as Cloobeck was so proud of saying, is simply the word “Yes.” He doesn’t want a client to ever hear those words, and so he was at a complete loss when working alongside Sarah at the call center. Not only was she saying “No,” but she didn’t fully understand the software package she was using, nor was she prepared with how to handle certain customer situations. Cloobeck was so beside himself, he broke character and revealed his true identity to her. Sarah was terrified she was going to lose her job, but Cloobeck tried to assure her he saw it as a training issue and not her fault. She continued to worry, though, until he brought her to his summer resort for the official reveal. There, he set her up with a Hawaiian vacation and paid off her student loans so she could graduate with her business administration degree. The three other people he met and worked with also reaped the rewards of his generosity. Amanda at the front desk got an offer to work in Italy — she admitted she wanted to work there — as well as cash to help pay her mother’s medical expenses. Painter Greg got a new hybrid truck, better equipment at work and a cash bonus as well. Finally, Cloobeck connected personally with Randy’s story, who worked as a repairman at one of his resorts. Randy had sold a business and wound up losing big on the deal, with his wife and him both working two jobs now. So Cloobeck paid off their mortgage, allowing them both to quit a job, and gave him a cash bonus, too. Most importantly, he felt that he learned some important things about the little things that he was losing sight of with his focus on building the brand and growing the business. He absolutely felt it was a worthwhile experience, TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

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Improved Hiring Forecasts May Not Be All Good News For Workers

January 13, 2012

The hiring outlook seems to be improving, according to some forecasts. What that means for the actual wages has yet to be decided. A number of reports in recent days have suggested that hiring is on its way up in the new year. According to Bloomberg Businessweek , some economists believe the U.S. will see more jobs created in 2012 than any year since 2006 , before the economy began to turn sour. Experts polled by the Associated Press said the economy would add 2.1 million jobs this year — more than in 2010 or 2011. The National Federation of Independent Businesses recently posted one of their strongest hiring forecasts since the financial crisis. And the auto industry looks to be in an especially strong position, with factory payrolls poised to grow by 10 percent this year , according to the Los Angeles Times . But it’s still unclear if this projected job creation will help to restore the middle class, which has been squeezed in recent years by declining wealth and static incomes. Some of the new jobs appear to come with an expiration date, including the 70,000 seasonal workers that Home Depot is hiring in anticipation of spring shopping. Seasonal positions can lead to permanent employment — but often they don’t, as seen with the recent spike in jobless claims believed to have been caused by holiday workers returning to the unemployment line. And in many cases it appears that there’s a trade-off between putting people to work and paying them what was once considered the standard wage. General Electric was able to add jobs in the U.S. after reaching an agreement with union workers to drop their starting salary to $13 an hour, according to Businessweek . Many new manufacturing hires are looking at hourly wages $10 to $15 below those of current employees — and they may not catch up for years, if at all , according to The New York Times . At a time when the median salary for American workers is only $26,364 , and millions of people are struggling to afford the basic necessities , this lack of wage growth could prove politically disastrous for President Obama in the November election — as could the unemployment rate, which is widely expected to remain high through the end of the year. While the jobless rate has slowly been falling in recent months, more than 13 million Americans remain out of work, and according to Gallup polls, the electorate is more worried about the state of the economy and the labor market than anything else.

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Too Little, Too Late: Microsoft’s Ballmer Strains for Consumer Relevance

January 10, 2012

LAS VEGAS — Listening to Microsoft Chief Executive Steve Ballmer last night hyperventilate about the company’s supposedly stupendous future as purveyor of the planet’s life-altering experiences was not unlike watching a heavyset, middle-aged guy strutting through a pulsating club, telling all the slinky, 20-something women how hot he looks in a Speedo. Ballmer was giving the keynote address at the Consumer Electronics Show, the ultimate showcase for gadgetry. The people crammed inside a giant ballroom at the Venetian Hotel took in the spectacle of Ballmer’s famously cornball cheerleading and Tweeted away and captured video clips — most of them using iPhones and various Android models. You could find plenty of Microsoft products in the crowd, yes, but predominantly on the PCs schlepped around by people whose companies issue them as a matter of policy. For more than a decade, Microsoft has been vowing to expand from its preserve in the business world — the supplier of products that scream work — into a hipper consumer company that produces things people might actually be inclined to buy with their own money. As HuffPost’s technology editor Bianca Bosker has pointed out on more than one occasion, this transformation has gone approximately as well as British Petroleum’s labors to burnish its image as a lover of handicapped dolphins. The very fact that Ballmer was, for the last time, giving the keynote at a show whose name is about consumer electronics served as reminder of this mostly failed campaign. To be fair, Microsoft has had some notable successes in this realm. The Xbox has become the gaming platform of choice. A demo last night of new voice-controlled features going into that gizmo drew a healthy share of oohs, as well as vows to go home and get one for the children (even as one had to worry that many of those children — now served up voice control in place of text — are destined to be illiterate.) The latest version of Microsoft’s operating system, Windows 8, due out next month, does indeed look robust and interesting, turning the old home-screen into a buffet of apps that can be managed by pinching and zooming. “I think people will be kind of impressed about how it kind of lights everything up,” Ballmer said, in what for him passes as understatement. The new Windows smartphones seemed like an interesting take on that product, bringing together all the streams of communication — text messages, Facebook chats, e-mails, Twitter updates — into one central repository, sorted out by the people with whom one is communicating. Yet as Ballmer displayed these various wares on two giant screens during his uncomfortably-contrived tete a tete with Ryan Seacrest — the television host whose saccharine ubiquity now rivals that of non-dairy creamer — the scent of desperation hung thick. These are late days to be making a serious play for the smartphone, a device that is in many ways already a commodity. New products may not be enough in an era in which technology is increasingly about the ecosystem of services that surround products — the Kindle as conduit for Amazon’s electronic books, the iPad as platform for countless apps, Google and its full suite of cloud-based software offerings. Among the tech cognoscenti, Microsoft’s very name conjures up the opposite of innovation, with memories of its heavy-handed efforts to use its monopoly hold on the desktop in the 1990s as a portal to similar dominance on the Web. In many minds, Microsoft is seen as a company whose success has less to do with cool products than its unfair wielding of market share to stifle competition. That’s a hard residue to shake. Ballmer has long been seen as the salesman who is trying so hard you can see him sweat. As he called Seacrest “dude,” and indulged every fifty-cent adjective in the vernacular of hype — “stunning,” “amazing” and “exciting as heck” — he presented himself as a guy who knows he probably can’t close the deal, but is certainly not going to be accused of making less than maximum effort. “What’s next?,” Seacrest asked Ballmer as the event mercifully ended. “Windows 8!” Ballmer hollered, before repeating it twice for good measure. The lights came back on along with the music. The crowd filtered into the Las Vegas night, as people switched on their iPhones and their Droids to set up dinner and drinks.

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1793 Penny Fetches $1.38M At Fla. Auction

January 8, 2012

ORLANDO, Fla. — A once-cent copper coin from the earliest days of the U.S. Mint in 1793 has sold for a record $1.38 million at a Florida auction. James Halperin of Texas-based Heritage Auctions told The Associated Press on Saturday that the sale was “the most a United States copper coin has ever sold for at auction.” The coin was made at the Mint in Philadelphia in 1793, the first year that the U.S. made its own coins. Heritage officials said in a news release that the name of the buyer was not revealed but that he was “a major collector.” One of the coin’s earliest owners was a well-known Baltimore banker, Louis E. Eliasberg, Sr. “Mr. Eliasberg was nicknamed, `the king of coins’ because before his death in 1976 he assembled a collection that consisted of at least one example of every coin ever made at the United States Mint, a feat never duplicated,” Halperin said in the news release. The final bid for the coin last week was one of the largest sales at the Florida United Numismatists coin show and annual convention, which runs through Sunday. Halperin said a five-dollar gold piece from 1829 also was sold. Halperin said there remain a few hundred 1793 coins in different condition, but that the one auctioned off Wednesday night is rare because it wasn’t in circulation. Officials say it shows no wear on its lettering, its Lady Liberty face or the chain of linking rings on its back. The news release said the coin is known as a “Chain Cent” because its chain of linking rings was supposed to represent the solidarity of the states. The design was changed to a wreath after some critics claimed it was symbolic of slavery. Halperin said the auction had more than $64 million in transactions. The show runs through Sunday.

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‘Insourcing American Jobs’: Obama Tells U.S. Businesses To Bring Jobs ‘Back Home’

January 7, 2012

By Caren Bohan and Jeff Mason WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Barack Obama kicked off an effort to encourage U.S. businesses to keep jobs at home instead of outsourcing them overseas, as he rolled out a new election-year theme on Saturday aimed at courting middle-class voters. In his weekly radio and video address, Obama previewed an event he will hold next week with business executives to highlight the advantages of investing in the United States. “We’ll hear from business leaders who are bringing jobs back home and see how we can help other businesses follow their lead,” Obama said. The White House forum on “Insourcing American Jobs” will be held on Wednesday. Executives from more than a dozen companies will attend, including padlock maker Master Lock, furniture company Lincolnton Furniture, software application developer GalaxE Solutions, and chemicals company DuPont. The emphasis on keeping U.S. jobs at home is in line with a populist economic message championed by Obama that could play well with union workers, whose support the Democratic president will need to win re-election in November. The White House sees an increasing trend of companies deciding to “insource” jobs and invest in U.S.-based plants and factories, according to a White House official. It wants to encourage more businesses to follow that trend, the official said. The practice of U.S. companies moving jobs to foreign countries such as India and China, where labor is cheaper, is a source of concern to many U.S. workers. The issue resonates strongly in Midwest industrial states such as Ohio and Michigan that have been hard hit, not only by the 2007-2009 economic crisis, but also by years of shrinkage in the manufacturing jobs sector. Many of those states are battlegrounds that are vital to Obama’s re-election hopes. Republicans vying to challenge Obama in November, including front-runner Mitt Romney, have hammered him over his economic stewardship. They contend that his regulatory policies, including new rules for Wall Street and the overhaul of the healthcare system, have discouraged investment. They also say his fiscal stimulus measures have not succeeded in bringing down high unemployment. But the White House was encouraged by the December jobs report, released on Friday, which showed a drop in the jobless rate to 8.5 percent, its lowest level in nearly three years. “We’re heading in the right direction. And we’re not going to let up,” Obama said. (Reporting By Caren Bohan)

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Las Vegas Hilton Officially Changes Its Name

January 3, 2012

LAS VEGAS — The Las Vegas Hilton hotel-casino officially changed its name to drop its hotel chain moniker on Tuesday after a license agreement expired at the start of 2012. Workers changed the hotel marquee to reflect the new name for the property east of the Las Vegas Strip: The Las Vegas Hotel & Casino. Its new motto: “Same Fame. New Name.” It’s the second time Elvis Presley’s former haunt has changed its name. Billionaire investor Kirk Kerkorian opened the property in 1969 as the International Hotel, then sold it to the Hilton chain. It became the Las Vegas Hilton in 1971. The hotel-casino sought to end the agreement last year as the property contended with financial troubles. It defaulted on a $252 million loan in 2010 and used operational expenses to make payments during three months last year while it tried to restructure debt. Casino name changes are uncommon, though not unprecedented in Sin City, said Michael Green, a College of Southern Nevada history professor who specializes in Sin City’s history. “Generally, the icons of the past, the name isn’t changed – it’s blown up,” Green said Tuesday. “Name changes like that are not too common, especially because most hotel-casinos do develop some cachet with their customers.” Other casinos that have changed their names include the Aladdin becoming Planet Hollywood, and the MGM Grand becoming Bally’s, Green said. It’s more common for casinos to make small adjustments to their names rather than wholesale changes, he added. Green said the hotel-casino, in addition to Presley performing more than 800 sold-out shows, was distinctive in Las Vegas history for its location off the Strip, and a youth hostel that served as a precursor to other family-friendly resorts in the adult destination. The change means the property won’t be connected with Hilton’s hotel loyalty program, though hotel officials say it’ll keep its player rewards program and amenities. It is owned by investors including Colony Capital LLC. ___ Oskar Garcia can be reached on Twitter at . http://twitter.com/oskargarcia

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Big Year Awaits In Atlantic City

January 1, 2012

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — You know that all-in moment, when you push most of your pile of chips out onto the table, and wait to see where the little white ball lands, or which card flips from the deck, to know whether you’re a winner or a big loser? 2012 is looking a lot like that for Atlantic City. Pummeled by a five-year losing streak brought on by unrelenting competition from casinos in neighboring states and worsened by the sluggish economy, Atlantic City is anxious for the new year to arrive, and with it, the $2.4 billion Revel casino-hotel that should bring new gamblers and new money to the resort. Hard Rock International expects to break ground for its own new smaller “boutique” casino at the opposite end of the Boardwalk, and this will be the first full year that Gov. Chris Christie’s Atlantic City rescue plan – including state supervision of safety, cleanliness and planning in the casino and shopping zones – will be in place. Yet pitfalls lurk as well: the ramping up of New York City’s Aqueduct casino, the continuing financial fragility of the casino formerly known as the Atlantic City Hilton, which has only committed to stay in business through Halloween, and the almost inevitable psychological blow of Pennsylvania passing Atlantic City to become the nation’s second-largest gambling resort in terms of revenues, which should happen sometime in 2012. “It’s a crucial year,” said Tony Rodio, president of the Tropicana Casino and Resort. “I think it’s the beginning of a turnaround; I really do.” The opening of Revel, set for May 15 but likely to happen sooner than that, will be the best thing that has happened to Atlantic City since the Borgata Hotel Casino & Spa opened in 2003. The resort will likely be Atlantic City’s last huge casino-hotel for quite some time. CEO Kevin DeSanctis said Atlantic City should not look at his project as the savior of the city – though that’s exactly how many are viewing it. “Revel is not a silver bullet. That’s never what we set out to be, or frankly, what we are now,” he said. “Revel is another tool in the toolbox for Atlantic City to be successful. We’re adding product to a market that desperately needs it. This market needs to re-establish itself as a regional destination. We will give people another reason to give Atlantic City another try. “I hear people say, `I don’t go to Atlantic City; I go to the Borgata,’ ” DeSanctis said. “That’s clearly a problem. When we open, it will help expand that to `Borgata and Revel.’ As other folks put a little more capital investment into their properties, that will have a positive effect.” Christie wants that to happen, too, and he thinks many casinos will be forced to follow Revel’s lead. “It is an extraordinary facility and it is going to draw tens of thousands of people to Atlantic City just to see it,” the governor said. “And when they do get there, I hope what they’re going to find is a cleaner, a safer Atlantic City. I’m anticipating 2012 to be a comeback year for Atlantic City. “Now it has been on the decline for years so we are not going to come back entirely in 2012, so let’s set appropriate expectations here,” Christie said. “But I think you should start to see a turnaround.” Revel will add 5,000 full-time jobs to a market desperate for them, and has put thousands of construction workers to work at a time when little else was being built. The casino-hotel also plans to make an aggressive play for conventions and group meetings, and will have a 5,000-seat concert hall capable of attracting the biggest names in entertainment. A big question leading up to Revel’s opening has been whether the mega-resort will bring new business to Atlantic City, or merely siphon it off from existing casinos who can ill afford to lose any customers. DeSanctis expects some combination of the two to occur. Michael Pollock, managing director of Spectrum Gaming Group, an Atlantic City-area casino consulting firm, said it would not be surprising to see one or two casinos have to close in 2012 due to the cutthroat competition in the industry amid a still-weak economy. ACH, the casino formerly known as the Atlantic City Hilton, appears to be on the shakiest ground. In November, state regulators approved a plan for the casino to stay open with a fresh infusion of capital from its owners, Los Angeles hedge fund Colony Capital LLC, and a cancellation of its debt. But the casino has committed to staying open only through the end of October, and it’s going after the smallest of small fish in a market that prizes whales. It recently got permission to use table game gambling chips worth as little as 25 cents – the first time Atlantic City has let any casino use a chip worth less than $1. Resorts Casino Hotel also has yet to turn a profit in the first year of new ownership, although it expects to at least break even by the end of 2012. Atlantic City’s casino revenue peaked in 2006 at $5.2 billion; it has since fallen to $3.6 billion at the end of 2010, mostly due to casinos opening in neighboring Pennsylvania and New York, and the poor economy. Many expect revenues for 2011 to be in the range of $3.2 billion. Atlantic City desperately needs new money, Pollock says. “The spigot had been turned off on new capital investment and it’s crucial that that spigot get turned back on again,” he said. “Atlantic City was on its way toward reinventing itself with a new business model” when the bottom fell out of the economy. The Seminole Indians, through their Hard Rock franchise, say they are ready to do just that. They plan to break ground by July 15 on Atlantic City’s first so-called “boutique casino,” a smaller, less expensive gambling hall authorized under a pilot program to jump-start the stagnant casino market here. The first phase of the project, with 208 hotel rooms. will cost about $465 million, and eventually grow to 850 rooms. New Jersey’s state government adopted a number of reforms for Atlantic City in 2011 that will have the chance to bear fruit in 2012. It beefed up the Casino Reinvestment Development Authority and put it in charge of revitalizing the resort, including making sure its streets are clean and safe. But the reform likely to have the most immediate impact is the formation of the Atlantic City Alliance, a private casino-financed nonprofit corporation that will spend $30 million a year for the next five years to promote Atlantic City to the rest of the world. That’s money the casinos were required to pony up to the state’s racetracks in return for keeping slot machines out of racetracks, until Christie intervened and killed the arrangement, much to the delight of the casinos. “What did Revel do in its first year, and what did we do with the $30 million we suddenly had at our disposal to market Atlantic City?” said Rodio, the Tropicana president. “That’s what we’ll be debating next New Year’s Eve.” ___ Associated Press writer Beth DeFalco in Trenton contributed to this report. ___

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Why Countries Can’t Spend Their Way To Prosperity

December 30, 2011

America has a terrible saving problem and a slumping economy. But our national mantra, underscored by last week’s payroll-tax cut, is spend, spend, spend. Countries can’t spend their way to prosperity. This demand- side voodoo-economics approach is driving us further into hock. The right mantra should be save, save, save.

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Procrastinating Shoppers Gave Retailers A Boost In Lead Up To Christmas

December 28, 2011

NEW YORK — A mall trade group says that last minute shoppers gave merchants a solid lift during the final week before Christmas. Sales at stores opened at least a year rose 0.9 percent for the week ended Saturday compared with the previous week and was up 4.5 percent compared with the same period a year ago, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers-Goldman Sachs Weekly Chain Store Sales Index, released Wednesday. The index serves as a sales proxy to 24 major stores including Macy’s Inc. and Costco Wholesale Corp. ICSC expects that holiday sales for the November and December combined will be in line with its forecast of 3.5 percent.

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The Worst Holidays Since The Great Depression

December 23, 2011

From 24/7 Wall St.: Retail sales this holiday season are expected to rise 3.8 percent to a record of $469.1 billion, according to the National Retail Federation. While the increase is less than last year, it is a significant improvement from the slow holiday seasons the last few years. How does 2011 compare to other years? While probably not among the best, it’s also certainly not among the worst, according to 24/7 Wall St.’s analysis of the worst holidays since the Great Depression. People are tempted to spend less when times are tough. Fewer presents are exchanged and people travel less. Those without work often despair. And the joy that is supposed to accompany the end of each year does not exist for many people. 24/7 Wall St. compared 2011 against each holiday season since the Great Depression. We looked at unemployment, GDP expansion (or contraction), GDP per capita, and the Consumer Price Index. These are good indications of whether a holiday season was merry or not. High inflation erodes the ability of people to buy goods and services. Slow GDP expansion or contraction means that consumer spending is likely to be in retreat. The effects of unemployment are obvious. Not surprisingly, many of the worst holiday periods coincide with deep recessions. This is certainly true for the harsh times during the downturns of the early 1970s and early 1980s. The 1982/1983 recession had a record number of months in which unemployment was more than 10 percent. People may look back on 2011 as a difficult holiday season for a number of Americans, but it was not among the worst, as history shows. These are the Worst Holidays Since The Great Depression, according to 24/7 Wall St. :

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Cities With The Most Money To Spend On Christmas Gifts

December 21, 2011

Looking for an expensive Christmas gift? Track down family and friends living in the Washington, D.C. metro area. D.C. tops the list of cities with the most money to spend on Christmas gifts, according to an index developed by Richard Florida and the Martin Property Institute, cited by The Atlantic . The top 20 list also includes New York, San Francisco and other large metro areas. The cities in Florida’s list may be where shoppers are spending the most on gifts, but consumers everywhere are likely to spend more on Christmas presents this year. The National Retail Federation upped its holiday sales forecast earlier this week to a 3.8 percent boost or a record-breaking total of $469 billion. In response to the demand, some stores are offering extended hours to give consumers ample time to shop. Toys ‘R Us is staying open for 112 hours straight in the lead up to Christmas, CNNMoney reports and 14 Macy’s stores will stay open from Wednesday to Saturday — or 83 hours straight, — according to the Chicago Tribune . And if Black Friday is any indication, the extended hours may help boost retailers. After stores like Target, Best Buy, Macy’s and Walmart opened earlier on Black Friday — or even on Thanksgiving day — sales on the largest shopping day of the year were up 9.1 percent, according to the NRF . But some weren’t happy with the earlier openings. Workers at Target and Best Buy started petitions aimed at convincing their employers not to open at midnight on Black Friday because it would limit the amount of time they could spend with family on Thanksgiving day. These are the cities with the most money to spend on Christmas shopping, according to Richard Florida and the Martin Property Institute:

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

December 20, 2011

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

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EU Finance Chiefs To Discuss IMF Loan Aimed At Boosting Crisis Firewall

December 19, 2011

BRUSSELS — European Union finance ministers have to figure out Monday how they will split up the euro200 billion ($261 billion) in extra loans they have promised the International Monetary Fund Monday in an effort to boost the eurozone’s crisis firewall. Reaching the euro200 billion target may become difficult after the U.K., the largest economy among the 10 EU states that don’t use the euro, said it won’t contribute any additional funds to the IMF. Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria have also ruled out sending any additional money to the Washington-based fund. Earlier Monday, Poland’s finance minister Jacek Rostowski said his country plans to lend around euro6 billion ($7.8 billion) to the IMF by committing reserves of the National Bank of Poland. Denmark, which will take over the EU presidency from Poland in January, has said it will contribute euro5.4 billion, while Sweden, another non-euro state, has promised to contribute an as yet unspecified amount. In their afternoon conference call, the ministers will also compare notes on a first draft for a new treaty meant to tighten fiscal discipline within the eurozone, which was circulated Friday, said Kacper Chmielewski, spokesman for the Polish delegation to the EU. Of the 27 EU states, only the U.K. has said it will definitely not join the new accord, while the nine other non-euro states have indicated their support as long as their parliaments agree. The preliminary deals to set up a new treaty and provide up to euro200 billion in new loans to the IMF were the main outcomes of an EU summit 10 days ago, which has so far failed to convince financial markets that Europe can exit its escalating debt crisis. Investors were disappointed that the eurozone did not agree to commit more money to its own bailout funds or open the door for large-scale intervention by the European Central Bank. Many economists have called on the ECB to spend much more money buying up government bonds in an effort to lower the borrowing costs of struggling states like Italy and Spain and boost economic growth. However, ECB President Mario Draghi again dampened hopes for a bigger role of the ECB in an interview published in the Financial Times Monday. “The important thing is to restore the trust of the people – citizens as well as investors – in our continent,” Draghi was quoted as saying. “We won’t achieve that by destroying the credibility of the ECB.” The ECB chief, who will speak in front of a committee of the European Parliament later Monday, also broke a taboo by acknowledging for the first time the possibility of a country leaving the eurozone – although he immediately stressed that a euro exit would not be a solution to any country’s financial troubles. “Leaving the euro area, devaluing your currency, you create a big inflation, and at the end of that road, the country would have to undertake the same reforms that were due to begin with, but in a much weaker position,” he said. ___ Vanessa Gera in Warsaw, Poland, and Meera Selva in London contributed to this story.

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In Scrooge’s Economy, Santas Back In High Demand

December 16, 2011

Even with unemployment high and older workers facing job discrimination, one business is actively recruiting the post-50 set: Santa Claus contractors. In August, Houston-based Sepia Photo Promotions began passing out fliers in malls, churches and schools, searching for the 5,000 workers, including 800 Santas, it would train to serve in U.S. malls this year. Sepia received 8,000 applicants, 70 percent of whom had never worked in the Santa industry before, according to CEO Jeff Angelo. Despite retailers’ troubles, it’s a pretty good time to be Claus. A mall Santa makes between $8,000 and $12,000 a season, depending on whether he has a real beard, according to Timothy Connaghan, aka Santa Hollywood, who runs Los Angeles’ School 4 Santas. By contrast, a seasonal retail clerk paid $10 an hour and working full-time for 40 days would make about $2,300. In 2008, when retailers slashed expenses, some Santas found themselves out of work, according to Connaghan, who is also the official Santa of the Hollywood Christmas parade. This past year, attendance at his School 4 Santas — $239 for a 16-hour, two-day course — was back up. Hiring at corporate and private events has also recovered. About half of the Santas currently in malls have been flown in from different parts of the country (mainly the Southeast and Southern California, where retirees are found) and put up in hotels by photo companies, Connaghan said. “There’s a huge demand for Santas,” said Steve Patterson, an independent Santa from Denver with a real beard. “I am so darn busy that I have two people that work with me, and and it’s nearly a part-time job just taking the requests.” Patterson charges around $350 to $400 for an appearance, but he noted that in L.A. or New York, the fee would be closer to $600. A product development specialist for most of the year, he frequently turns down lucrative Santa gigs. “I get paid well to be a Santa … but my bread and butter is paid for by my work in product development,” Patterson said. “I like making kids happy. … [Being] Santa is one of the few politically correct things men can do and be joyous about the execution of their craft.” THE SANTA INDEX Some people even think that Santas are more in demand when retail sales are down. In 1985, Westaff, the company that furnished most of America’s mall Santas in the ’80s, began publishing the “Santa Index,” which it claimed measured the health of the economy based on how many Santas retailers hired each year. The theory was that the more Santas stores hired, the worse the economy was doing, as Santas were part of a desperate attempt on the part of retailers to rev up falling sales. Westaff sold its Santa business to Cherry Hill Photo Enterprises in 1997, currently one of the largest Santa placement companies in America, alongside Sepia. While the Santa Index would seem to explain this year’s demand, Connaghan said that a mediocre economy doesn’t guarantee a good year for Santas, pointing to 2008, when some malls stopped employing Kris Kringle completely. Today, even with retailers scrambling for shoppers, not all Santas are winning. The Macy’s in Portland, Ore., recently outraged locals when it replaced its veteran real-bearded Santas for two new fake-bearded Santas. “There’s a lot of competition between the photo companies,” said Connaghan of the Macy’s incident. “A company comes in with a new contract and thinks they can replace the old guy who has been there for 14 years, who they’re paying $30,000, with someone new for $15.” ‘CAN’T JUST HIRE ANYONE’ A bad economy also means more people want to be Santa. Angelo, the Sepia CEO, said that in the past few years his company has seen more overqualified applicants. “A story will come out about a Santa who makes $40,000 a year,” Connaghan explained. “But it’s a guy who has been doing this for 40 years! Then I get a phone call: ‘I just got laid off in trucking and I’m a big man and I got my own beard. Can you get me a job?’ I want to help, but it’s Dec. 8 and I can’t do anything!” “In this economic time, I know there are a lot of people out there saying, ‘I need the extra money.’ Many of them will soon find out [being Santa] is not their ball of wax,” he said. Long hours, crying children and holidays spent at hotels aside, new Santas also have to jump through hoops to break into the business. Angelo’s company begins recruiting in August to make time for an intensive training program. Santas who miss the application period, and who don’t have prior experience or clients, are mostly out of luck. To work with any of the national chains, Santas also need insurance, available through one of the professional Santa organizations like the Fraternal Order of Real Bearded Santas, Amalgamated Order of Real Bearded Santas or Society of Santa. These societies perform yearly background checks on members, according to Patterson. “You can’t just hire anyone,” said Patterson ominously. “I know of instances that have happened because someone didn’t hire a professional but just stuck somebody in a Santa suit. … You’re taking an unnecessary risk.” BEING SANTA For wannabe Santas hoping to score a last-minute job, Craigslist is another option. But the pay and prospects aren’t quite as enviable. Peter McClean of Long Beach, Calif., hopes to make $25 an hour playing Santa this year. Unemployed since he had his trucking license canceled for failure to make child support payments, he hopes that this year his “Santa Pete” character might bring in a little extra money. McClean’s father, “Santa Bob,” played the role for a long time in the area. “I’m trying to make the best of things and make my own opportunities,” McClean said. The reason playing Santa is lucrative, Patterson noted, isn’t because there’s such incredible demand from retailers, but rather because it’s a difficult job to do well. “There’s a huge number of people who are simply unwilling to take that emotional risk of embarrassing themselves in front of a large group of people,” he said. “It’s like being an actor.” To do the job well, Patterson said, “You must be genuinely interested in furthering the goals and the myth of Santa Claus.”

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Who’s The Real Winner In Zynga’s IPO?

December 16, 2011

The big winner in Zynga’s IPO, the largest by an Internet company since Google went public , isn’t the shareholders or the employees or even the executives. It’s Facebook. Zynga, which pioneered a new class of social games, is the first company that has piggybacked Facebook with a multibillion-dollar initial public offering. Early on, Zynga co-founder and CEO Mark Pincus saw the potential for Facebook-connected games that were free, allowed friends to engage each other and could be played on any device with an Internet connection. He created applications powered by Facebook’s network and today oversees a company estimated to be worth $7 billion. “There hasn’t been another developer that has built a large business on Facebook’s platform and gone public in this way. It’s a big first for the Western social gaming world,” said Justin Smith, founder of research and data firm Inside Network. That means Zynga’s success is also Facebook’s, experts say. They note the gaming company’s coming-out party on Nasdaq validates Facebook’s platform as one on which companies can build their fortunes by developing a new breed of web services. The IPO also highlights the next chapter in Facebook’s trajectory: The social network has evolved beyond photo uploads and status updates to offer a robust ecosystem of music, movies, news and lifestyle offerings, all in one place and all connected by an online network of friends. Developers have made more than $2.5 billion creating apps for Apple’s iDevices, according to Apple . Google gave rise to a new generation of companies, such as Demand Media, that succeeded because Google’s search engine sent millions of users their way. Now, Facebook is spawning a new breed of companies that thrive because of the connection-driven, sharing-stimulated online world Facebook has created. Zynga’s rise shows that Facebook, like Google and Apple before it, can support an industry hitched to its platform and help carry web firms to the big leagues. Five years ago, Zynga didn’t exist. Today the company is worth more than Hyatt Hotels, Hasbro and JetBlue. “Zynga is the biggest proof positive that you can build a huge and successful company on Facebook’s platform,” said Josh Williams, president and chief science officer at Kontagent, a company that provides user analytics for app developers. “For Facebook, Zynga’s IPO is great.” Zynga went from startup to Internet success story on the back of Facebook’s enormous user base. By developing applications on Facebook, such as FarmVille and Mafia Wars, Zynga leveraged the social network’s reach to sign up new members, collect information about its players and let individuals play online games with real-life friends. Zynga declined to comment, citing the legally mandated quiet period before and after its IPO. Before Facebook changed its policies, Zynga expanded its own audience by aggressively marketing (or spamming, some say) its games through players’ profiles. The company now claims three of the top five most popular apps on Facebook and over 223 million active players, three times more than its closest rival , according to AppData. The lion’s share of Zynga’s revenues come from the sale of virtual goods through its games. Facebook users generate 94 percent of Zynga’s revenues, according to estimates by Strene Agee analyst Arvind Bhatia , and Zynga warned investors in its S-1 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, “We generate substantially all of our revenue and players through the Facebook platform and expect to continue to do so for the foreseeable future.” “You have to think that without Facebook users, there is no Zynga,” said Gartner analyst Brian Blau. “It’s a very intimate relationship. You could compare it to a parent and child, it’s so close.” Financial analysts warn that Zynga’s coziness with Facebook makes it vulnerable to the whims of the social networking giant and caution that any change in Facebook’s terms could put Zynga’s financial health at risk. Yet Facebook needs Zynga nearly as much as Zynga needs Facebook, others counter. “It’s a symbiotic relationship. It’s not parasitic,” said P.J. Mcnealy, a digital media consultant and founder of Digital World Research. “Facebook becomes stickier as more people play games, and a lot of that content is coming from Zynga.” Companies like Zynga have helped Facebook evolve, transforming it from the Internet equivalent of a mom-and-pop shop peddling sweets to a mega-mall offering movie theaters, arcades and boutiques that lure crowds to stay longer and spend more. Facebook apps encourage users spend more time on the social network, which in turn allows the site to serve up more ads. Apps also provide new sources of income: Facebook takes a 30 percent cut on all sales through Facebook Credits, a virtual currency that must be used for all purchases on the site, such as the tractors players buy in Zynga’s FarmVille. Williams of Kontagent estimates that Facebook has netted more than $300 million from Zynga sales, and SEC filings reveal that Facebook forged a deal with Zynga guaranteeing that it would send minimum numbers of users to Zynga games. “You can only spend so much time looking at people’s pictures,” said William. “Thanks to apps, people are coming back more frequently and spending more hours on the site, which means Facebook is able to generate more revenue via advertising,” he said. In turn, Zynga and other app developers can tap into Facebook’s population of more than 800 million users, as well as the social network’s payment system, marketing opportunities and viral potential. As Zynga’s trajectory suggests, the payouts can be huge. Among other advantages, Williams noted that Facebook enables app developers to target people based on their demographic information and to acquire users more cheaply than they could elsewhere. The Facebook Credits system also saves small companies the trouble of implementing their own payment solutions, Williams said. Zynga’s success in building social games on Facebook will open the floodgates, encouraging even more apps in industries such as media, education and health, experts predict. “Zynga has been the largest company to capitalize on Facebook. Everyone else pretty much used it for marketing purposes, and no one really leveraged Facebook for revenue quite the way Zynga has,” said Billy Pidgeon, an analyst at consulting company M2 Research. “They wrote the manual on how to do that, but now the competition is coming in.” Facebook has been making the hard sell to companies beyond the gaming sector, such as Nike and News Corp. “The app that’s able to set that expectation that everything’s social up-front, that’s the app that’s going to win because that’s the app that I’ll see my friends using,” Bret Taylor, Facebook’s chief technology officer, told developers at Facebook’s f8 conference in October . The number of Facebook apps from media companies has surged in recent months. Following Facebook’s f8, at which the company unveiled a “new class of social apps” that allow for “frictionless” sharing , the Washington Post , Hulu, Spotify and the Guardian have all released new and improved Facebook apps that broadcast every action a user takes on the app. “Facebook is clearly putting effort into providing opportunities for media companies to plug more deeply into Facebook,” said Smith of Inside Network. “They’re pushing forward into the media world, outside of purely gaming, to make Facebook an even more important platform for other types of media companies.” Smith also expects to see mobile versions of Facebook apps that are not only tailored to smaller screens but also take advantage of smartphone capabilities, such as location information, to deliver new experiences. In theory, a concert venue could build an app that lets users locate Facebook friends attending the same performance. Or parents might be able to use an app to map their children’s whereabouts and send messages through Facebook. Although Zynga and Facebook profit from one another, so far they aren’t evenly matched. There’s only one Facebook, and while Zynga has plans to launch its own gaming site that would operate independently of the social network, it’s still closely married to Mark Zuckerberg’s creation. On the other hand, there could, with time, be dozens of Zyngas. Facebook no doubt hopes that will happen. “Facebook needs to have a really active developer ecosystem. When you have one developer out there that’s much bigger than all the others, you have a problem,” said Blau, the Gartner analyst. “For Facebook to ensure they have a viable business, they have to attract lots of other developers. It’d be great if they had 10 Zyngas.”

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The Top 10 Franchises Of The Year

December 16, 2011

Despite the fact that we’re still riding the economic roller coaster, franchises continue to see impressive growth. Though the mainstays like McDonald’s are still holding strong, young, innovative businesses are posing a challenge to typical operations. Every year, Entrepreneur sets out to rank the top franchises in the U.S. in its Franchise 500. While this year’s top 10 contains many familiar faces, including a repeat winner in the number-one spot, a growing number of new ideas and business models staked their claim on the ranking. With 13,725 new units added and a 16 percent growth over last year, it’s clear that the appeal of franchising still looms large for franchisors and franchisees alike. Here’s a look at this year’s Franchise 500 Top 10 ranking. Check out the complete list here .

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Krugman: Ron Paul-Style Economics Would Lead To Depression

December 16, 2011

Apparently the desperate search of Republicans for someone they can nominate not named Willard M. Romney continues. New polls suggest that in Iowa, at least, we have already passed peak Gingrich. Next up: Representative Ron Paul.

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Bankrupt American Airlines Owns A Townhouse That May Be Worth Millions

December 15, 2011

Buried deep in American Airlines’ Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing is a striking asset — a town house in one of London’s most expensive residential streets that property experts say could be worth up to $30 million. The five-bedroom house in London’s high-end Kensington district is a throwback to the airline’s expansion two decades ago and stands a 10 minute walk from the former home of Princess Diana, with gentry and diplomats as neighbors. UK regulatory filings show the house has been used as a residence for senior executives, including the current chairman and chief executive Thomas Horton, since the airline bought it in the early 1990s. Listed as “London Residence LON6526,” the five-floor house is one of eight owned properties declared by parent company AMR Corp when it asked for protection from creditors on November 30, sagging under $30 billion of liabilities. The plush residence in Cottesmore Gardens — recently named Britain’s 10th most expensive address by property firm Zoopla — could become a thorn in the airline’s side as it fights its way through bankruptcy. Corporate restructuring usually involves sacrifices by staff, retirees and creditors. Robert Mann, an airline consultant with RW Mann & Co, who is a former fleet planning executive at AMR, said the ownership of the house is far from the biggest problem the airline is facing but added it would raise eyebrows and should probably be sold. “As part of an overall debt-clearing exercise, yes it probably should be sold and leased back if they really want to stay there. If you can realize 17 million bucks, you ought to do it.” Confirming ownership of the house, American Airlines said it is used by the senior official in charge of its international business “and for corporate functions from time to time.” Contacted last week, it initially declined to say whether it planned to keep the house, but in response to further Reuters queries said its ownership of the property was being reviewed. “AMR can confirm that it’s a property it purchased in the 1990s when property values were lower,” the airline said. “However, as we work through our Chapter 11 reorganization, we are focused on achieving a competitive cost and debt structure and will, of course, review our use and ownership of this and all our real estate as part of that process.” A union representing 30,000 workers at American Airlines and American Eagle expressed outrage over the property. “In the current economic downturn, many Americans have lost their houses. In this bankruptcy, AMR’s executives should lose their house,” said James C. Little, president of the 200,000-member Transport Workers Union of America, which is on the airline’s creditors’ committee. “However, the typical pattern for this company is workers keep it afloat through concessions, bring in outside work and boost productivity while managers pocket hundreds of millions in bonuses and live posh lifestyles. This would have been Marie Antoinette’s favorite airline.” Many large companies own or rent property for executives posted overseas, though AMR’s filing lays considerable stress on efforts to cut costs before filing for bankruptcy. In its request for Chapter 11 protection, AMR said it had already shed billions of dollars in cumulative annual costs over the past 8 years to cope with the “relentless pressures of ever intensifying competition and rising fuel prices.” The airline said it had pursued “every effort short of Chapter 11 to reform its cost structure.” DISCREET ENCLAVE Lined by cars such as Porsches and Range Rovers, Cottesmore Gardens in west London is a quiet side street. The airline’s house would be worth between 12.5 million pounds and 16 million pounds if it came to the market today depending on the internal state of repair, said Kit Allen, a director of house sales at property consultancy Savills . A source at international real estate group Knight Frank said the house could fetch as much as 20 million pounds. “This is a very discreet enclave that is ideal for high-profile residents wanting to live in relative anonymity,” said the source, who asked not to be named. The street houses a private school and the most recent electoral records show the Cottesmore Gardens set includes an earl, the former chief executive of one of Europe’s largest companies and a prominent former investment banker. Disgraced Canadian media tycoon Conrad Black was a neighbor until 2005 when he reportedly sold for 13 million pounds. A Reuters reporter who visited the property on December 1, found no one at home. A few steps lead up to imposing black double doors below a renovated facade in immaculate condition. The property appears to be a normal family home, with a high-spec kitchen in the basement and a living room, complete with chandelier, on the first floor. AMR Corp filed for creditor protection after failing to win a deal with pilots to pare labor costs. Employees were notified on the day of the bankruptcy filing that future retirees can no longer get a lump sum distribution because the pension plan is underfunded. The airline has started rejecting leases for aircraft and is trying to relieve itself of two real estate leases including one for a terminal at Chicago Midway airport. Apart from the group’s Texas headquarters, its credit union and a handful of reservation offices, nearly all the airline’s offices and airport facilities are leased rather than owned. (Additional reporting by Kyle Peterson in Chicago, Paul Hoskins and Tom Bill in London; Writing by Chris Wickham and Tim Hepher; Editing by Janet McBride) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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UK’s Thomas Cook to close 500 hotels to cut debt

December 15, 2011

(MENAFN) Thomas Cook’s Chief Executive, Sam Weihagen, said that since the company planned to reduce debt, the world’s oldest travel firm would close 500 hotels in addition to 200 shops, reported …

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UK’s Thomas Cook sells asset for USD95m

December 13, 2011

(MENAFN) In its bid to cut debt burdens, London-based Thomas Cook Group Plc sold its shares in Hoteles y Clubs de Vacaciones SA to Grupo Iberostar’s Hoteles y Apartamentos S.L. for USD95 million, …

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Abu Dhabi Hotel Tones Down Blinged-Out Christmas Tree

December 12, 2011

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates — An opulent Abu Dhabi hotel which went overboard with an $11 million Christmas tree last year is now opting for a more modest display. The Emirati capital’s National newspaper reported Monday that this year’s tree at the Emirates Palace hotel is decorated with foil ornaments wrapped with cloth ribbons, and with custom-made balls designed to represent the country’s former pearl trade. The beachfront hotel was criticized for bad taste last year when it loaded a 43-foot (13-meter) tree with ornaments that included gold, diamonds and sapphires. It later said it regretted “attempts to overload” the Christmas tree tradition. Although officially Muslim, the United Arab Emirates has a large foreign population and features many Christmas displays.

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Occupy Denver To Disrupt Loveland Walmart

December 12, 2011

Occupy Denver is planning a rally to disrupt the large Walmart Distribution Center in Loveland on Monday. The rally is intended to show solidarity and support for the simultaneous protests planned to shut down West Coast ports from San Diego to Alaska coordinated by other occupy movements, according to CNN . (SCROLL DOWN FOR LIVESTREAM VIDEO) In a press release , Occupy Denver had this to say about the Walmart rally: On 12/12 Occupy Denver will be rallying at the Walmart Distribution Center, 7500 Crossroads Boulevard, Loveland, Colorado, in order to illustrate the problems with a globalization solely based on the interests of multi-national corporations and total disregard for human values or human beings. Occupy Denver will be joined by Occupy Salt Lake City as well as seven labor unions, according to Occupy Denver’s Facebook page . Occupy SLC made this statement about the Walmart disruption on their website : As West Coast Occupations shut down their ports and the East Coast Occupations shut down their waterfront on December 12th, 2011, Occupy Denver has given a call for occupations to organize mass mobilizations across the nation to support these actions. Occupy Salt Lake will stand in solidarity with Occupy Denver and others by disrupting the distribution system of Walmart, an excessively oppressive corporation that is actively destroying communities throughout our nation. Occupy Denver protesters plan to meet at 8 a.m. at Civic Center Park for caravans to the site, according to their Facebook page . Below is the full press release from Occupy Denver. For more information visit OccupyDenver.org . Considering the coordinated attacks on the Occupations and attacks on workers: Occupy Denver stands in solidarity with our brothers and sisters who will be protesting the abuses of the economic apparatus of the 1% on Dec 12. The wanton pursuit of profit at the expense of human values by multinational corporations with no local grounding has destroyed communities throughout the world, disregarded workers’ natural rights, eliminated production jobs in the United States and sweatshops abroad, and lowered the standard of living for all, only to enrich the wealthy by manipulating the laws and base corruption. At the same time, coordinated nationwide police attacks have turned our cities into battlegrounds in an effort to disrupt our Occupy movement, which is protesting this state of affairs while our politicians are neglecting the very serious issues we are raising. We call on every occupation to organize a mass mobilization on December 12 in support of the actions taken across the US, especially those on the West Coast against Goldman Sachs and other bankers. On 12/12 Occupy Denver will be rallying at the Walmart Distribution Center, 7500 Crossroads Boulevard, Loveland, Colorado, in order to illustrate the problems with a globalization solely based on the interests of multi-national corporations and total disregard for human values or human beings.

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Meltdown

December 7, 2011

CAPE CORAL, Fla. — They sent her off with a lavish retirement party — dinner and drinks at a local yacht club, overlooking the inky waters of the Caloosahatchee River. They thanked her for her more than two decades of service in the office of a local real estate company and they wished her well. She was 63 years old and looking forward to the rewards of a lifetime of work, moderate living and diligent savings. She had stashed away nearly $400,000 in her retirement savings account, a sum that seemed sufficient to produce the income needed to make the payments on her modest home in this community alongside the Gulf of Mexico. She envisioned occasional vacations, entertaining friends on her patio, and seeing a show every now and again. But 10 years later, she is sitting inside the Cape Coral United Way house, amid hungry people waiting to pick up groceries at a food bank. She is about to see a career counselor, hoping for insights on how a woman might reenter the work force at age 73 with minimal computer skills, a rusty resume and a local unemployment rate above 11 percent. The stock market crash that accompanied the financial crisis of 2008 wiped out half her retirement account. She is current on her mortgage, but only because her son has been making the payments. She worries that she might yet slide into the weeds of foreclosure. Eileen — who asked that her last name be withheld, citing embarrassment — could pass for any retiree you might encounter on a cruise ship or at the Grand Canyon. She wears a crisp white blouse over Bermuda shorts and sandals. Her silver hair is cut short and neat. Yet here she is among the homeless and near-homeless, her gaze steely, as a clerk calls names to pick up donated cans of green beans and chicken noodle soup. “It’s humiliating to be in this position,” she says, her composure giving way abruptly to tears. “There’s a value that is inbred by your parents. You contribute to society. You don’t take from it.” Eileen has landed at the confluence of two precarious currents tearing at the foundation of this waterfront community on Florida’s southwestern coast and, more broadly, the American economic landscape. The gears of the foreclosure machinery grind on as millions of formerly middle-class suburbanites continue to slip into poverty — each reinforcing the other. Since the real estate bubble burst, replacing the finer points of no-money-down mortgages with details of the bankruptcy code, Cape Coral and the city of Ft. Myers across the river have become leading centers of foreclosure. As of August, more than one in 10 homes in the greater metropolitan area was in some stage of the process, according to CoreLogic, a housing data research firm. Nearly 17 percent of homeowners were delinquent on their mortgage payments by 90 days or more. “I’d like to think we’ve been through the ugliest part of the foreclosure process,” says Marc Joseph, a local realtor. “But we’re nowhere near out of the woods.” Not coincidentally, Cape Coral has emerged as a conspicuous example of another wrenching American trend — the growth of the suburban poor . Between 2007 and 2010, the share of people living in poverty in the suburbs of Cape Coral, a city of about 150,000, leaped from 11.3 percent to 18.6 percent, according to analysis of Census data by Elizabeth Kneebone, a senior research associate for the Metropolitan Policy Program at the Brookings Institution. Only Modesto, Calif., another community assailed by foreclosure, suffered a larger percentage increase during those years. A full accounting of the human costs of this reckoning runs beyond the material facts of diminished incomes and homes lost to foreclosure. It encompasses the anxiety and bewilderment that now dominates life in many households. That includes the soaring demand for aid. Local relief organizations such as Community Cooperative Ministries, Inc., which runs the food bank at the United Way House, have grown accustomed to a steady influx of people who had never before in their lives asked for help. In 2007, the year the recession officially began, United Way received 19,000 calls on its 211 hotline, a kind of 911 call center for people who need food and help paying their bills. Last year the hotline fielded 59,000 calls. A full accounting also includes those hunkered down inside deteriorating houses effectively lost to the messy filing cabinets of the financial system — people who have not made payments to the bank in years, yet have received no orders to vacate. They occupy the surreal purgatory of the mortgage crisis, a morally ambiguous realm in a nation where the very concept of ownership seems to have been compromised. To the outsider, they are freeloaders occupying properties at no expense, but they speak of daily fears of eviction and a dispiriting sense of rootlessness, their futures colored darkly in uncertainty. And a full accounting must include the spectacle of a senior citizen who began working as a teenager, who thought she would by now be sitting on her lanai drinking in the musty Florida breeze, yet instead needs charity to keep herself fed. “It’s devastating,” Eileen says. “I did everything I was supposed to do.” HOUSE OF CARDS Ever since the boom in American real estate gave way to a crippling bust, I have used Cape Coral as a journalistic laboratory to explore the consequences. On my first trip here, four years ago , I confronted a community in which declining housing prices were insinuating themselves into basic expectations about the future. The school district was scrapping plans to construct new buildings. The city was putting off a plan to expand the sewer system. On my second trip two years later , the mess left behind by the real estate disaster had seeped into the fiber of the community. Code enforcement officers found themselves picking through the detritus left behind by families abandoning homes lost to foreclosure — human excrement, boxes full of unpaid bills, furniture left curbside. Joseph, the real estate agent, had begun running foreclosure bus tours, serving up distressed real estate as something like an amusement park adventure for opportunistic buyers. But on my most recent trip here late last month, the mess seemed to have crystallized into something permanent. More than its physical imprint of dilapidation, the decline has brought financial pain to the doors of people who did not even participate in the upside, back when real estate was synonymous with growing local spending power. Even people like Eileen are now suffering. Eileen did not partake in the orgy of real estate speculation that has made Cape Coral an involuntary poster child for homes surrendered to banks. She is living in the same 1,900-square-foot, single-story stucco home she built 18 years ago. Her mortgage balance is just $43,000. Unlike many of her neighbors, she did not tap her home equity for a newer car or a boat. She did not sign off on an exotic mortgage to trade up for a larger lot on the water with a swimming pool. She watched such things happening all around her with a mixture of scorn and alarm. “I saw all these young people buying all these beautiful homes on the water,” she recalls. “I thought, ‘I can’t afford to get something like that. How can they afford it?’ It was not obvious to me, and I knew there had to be a consequence. It’s a house of cards. It’s going to come tumbling down.” But even as she avoided participating in the events that turned Cape Coral into a financial wasteland, her prudence did not render her immune to the consequences of its collapse. In every direction, houses once full of retirees and families with children have gone lifeless, with weeds overtaking some formerly well-tended yards, and trash piling up in empty driveways. She is not clear on the particulars — who landed in foreclosure, who walked away, who moved, who died. But the effect is palpable: Her neighborhood is pockmarked by abandonment. “It’s been happening up and down the street,” she says. “It’s tragic. Young people raising families, they need a home. It’s home to their kids. They’re in school. They lose everything when they walk away. It’s a very, very sad thing.” Eileen is adamant that she will hang on to her own home, yet she is also cognizant of the arithmetic. Her monthly mortgage payment is only $600, yet her retirement savings now produces less than $1,000 a month in income. “Every month,” she says, “I struggle to make that payment.” So she applies for jobs, bracing for rejection. Online applications for secretarial work yield come-ons for commission-only positions selling insurance. An administrative job she sees advertised at a nearby hospital attracts 1,500 applicants. She is taking classes on how to use spreadsheets and word processing software, but she cannot dismiss the sinking feeling that even additional skills will not transcend the crudest facts of her situation. “Look at me,” she says. “I’m an old lady. Nobody wants to bring an old lady in.” LIFE BEYOND WINTER Sprawling across a flat peninsula, Cape Coral has for decades beckoned as a developer’s paradise, with tens of thousands of buildable lots arrayed on a network of canals filtering into the Gulf. From the Midwest to the Northeast, the winter-averse have descended, availing themselves of waterfront access at discount prices. By the dawn of the 2000s, this process was accelerating dramatically, fueled by a credit bubble that made mortgages nearly as easy to secure as scratch-off lottery tickets. Speculators poured in, smelling easy winnings. Between 2000 and 2004, the median house price in the Cape Coral-Ft. Myers metro area soared by 70 percent, reaching $192,100, according to the Florida Association of Realtors. In 2005 alone, the price jumped by another 45 percent to $278,000. But these increases rested on the assumption that new people would continue to pour into the area and snap up the properties then being constructed seemingly at the rate of Lego pieces. When the markets figured out that much of the appreciation was the result of speculators flipping properties to other speculators, local real estate suddenly looked like a Ponzi scheme and prices commenced plunging. By 2008, the median home was selling for $153,000. In 2009, it dropped to $88,000, less than one-third of its value only four years earlier. Thousands of homeowners who had bet on being able to refinance their mortgages before their low introductory rates jumped sharply higher instead saw their equity wiped out, triggering a wave of foreclosures. Speculators walked away, leaving their bad investments to the elements. At the worst of it, in the summer of 2009, nearly 14 percent of all houses in the metropolitan area were in foreclosure, according to CoreLogic. At the offices of the realty companies that remain, marketing efforts filled with golden sunsets and yachts have given way to signs promising full lists of distressed property. Outside Lehigh Acres, a spread of suburban development carved from former pasture east of Ft. Myers, the model homes once draped in banners for national homebuilders are largely abandoned. A hot-pink stretch Hummer sits parked in front of one such home, now the headquarters of a limousine company. Some now see signs of a turnaround. By the middle of this year, the median home was again selling for more than $100,000 — a fraction of the market’s peak, yet up from its nadir. And sales volume has exploded: More 16,000 homes changed hands in Lee County, which contains Cape Coral and Ft. Myers, in both 2009 and 2010. The county is on track to hit similar numbers this year. But much of this volume represents speculators returning to scoop up distressed assets. Few foresee an end to the ceaseless drip of foreclosed homes landing on the market, even as the pace of foreclosure has slowed. The slowdown has more to do with bottlenecks in the court system than improving economics, say realtors and housing experts. Following disclosures that many lenders did not properly handle the paperwork during the real estate bubble, many banks lack the documents needed to establish title and foreclose on a given property. Faced with a flurry of lawsuits from state attorneys general charging them with unlawful foreclosures, and under fire from some judges who accuse them of unjustly seizing homes, mortgage companies are generally moving much more slowly to take possession of homes when the owners stop making the payments. Where a foreclosure in Lee County once took an average of six to nine months to complete, the process now runs nearly two years. Indeed, banks now find it so difficult to complete foreclosures that they are pursuing alternatives — not least short sales, in which a house is sold for less than the outstanding balance on its mortgage. Four years ago, homeowners who owed more than their homes were worth were generally eager to unload their properties via short sales, but banks were reluctant to go along, resistant to selling at a loss. Today that dynamic has reversed. Cognizant that they can remain for years before foreclosure becomes final, so many people here now live in houses without making payments that the banks offer them $10,000 and $15,000 checks to sell their properties short. Whatever happens next seems certain to involve more distressed property landing on markets, though likely in a trickle as opposed to a surge. Realtors engage in a parlor game, trying to calculate the size of the so-called shadow inventory — homes that banks have taken or will take through foreclosure, but which are not listed on the market. So long as this inventory remains, so will downward pressure on prices and the financial strain that has become as much a feature of life here as palm trees and golf carts. “There’s so many people that haven’t even been addressed,” says Joseph, the real estate agent. “There’s still a big shadow out there.” PURGATORY IN PARADISE Lisa Chandler is living in that shadow. More than two years ago, in April 2009, the duplex she was renting fell into foreclosure. A judge gave her 30 days to vacate. For Chandler, 40, this was an emergency. She had been unemployed since almost two years earlier, when the construction supply company where she worked fell on hard times and laid her off. A single mother of two boys, she went from earning more than $40,000 a year to subsisting on a $250 weekly unemployment check, supplemented by $400-a-month in food stamps and $200-a-month in child support. She was pregnant with her third boy. She needed a new place to live, fast. She soon found a four-bedroom, two-story house with a swimming pool and jacuzzi in an older, established part of Cape Coral. The owner told her that he, too, was behind on his mortgage payments, but expressed confidence that he could ultimately work something out with the bank. He let her rent it for a mere $600 a month, with the proviso that the property was entirely her problem: If something broke, she was on her own. “It sounded like a good deal,” she says. Two weeks after she moved in, the foreclosure paperwork arrived in the mail, and she prepared herself for another forced exit. Then, nothing happened. Months passed without clarity. More than two years later, little has changed. “I think my particular house is kind of lost in the system,” she says. Last April the bank sent two people to the house with clipboards and cameras. They took photos and made a note that she was occupying the property, but nothing more came in the mail. She recently checked the website of the Lee County Clerk’s Office and discovered that the house was officially foreclosed in September 2010, yet no eviction notice has come. She stopped paying the rent more than a year ago, when her unemployment benefits ran out. When she bumped into her landlord recently, he expressed surprise that she was still in the house, but seemed not to care. Meantime, Chandler has grappled with the consequences of living in a home she cannot maintain. Back when her baby was only a few weeks old, one of the toilets developed a leak that she did not detect until it produced a $1,000 water bill. When she could not pay, the city shut off her water. After a month of shuttling in buckets of water from neighbor’s homes, she persuaded the city to restore the flow while putting her on a payment plan, she says. Then the central air conditioning system gave out. She added a window unit to a small bedroom downstairs, where she and her boys now typically cluster, exploiting their lone refuge from the heat. While her sons watch television, she sends out fresh job applications. She pressed her laptop against the wall to tap the one spot where she can sometimes cadge a free internet connection from a neighbor’s Wi-Fi network. Her house feels like what it is — a tenuous shelter of indeterminate duration. Upstairs, clothes lie strewn across the bedroom floors. A bed sits parked in the living room downstairs, amid half-open boxes of books and clothes. Behind a sliding door, the pool and hot tub are choked with neon-green algae and mud, since she cannot afford the chemicals needed to clean them. The garage is full of odd pieces of furniture and bric-a-brac she picked up from an older couple who walked away from their home and moved into their RV. She has sold some of this stuff at garage sales to raise funds — tools, a picnic table, a workbench. She sold a lawn mower for $200. Since then, a city code enforcement officer has begun threatening her with a fine if she does not trim the green haze of grass and weeds — a potential nesting ground for snakes and rodents — encasing the property. “He says, ‘You shouldn’t even be living here,’ ” she says. “You’re squatting.” If only she had an alternative, she says, she would have moved out long ago. “I don’t want to stay here until I have to leave,” she says. “I’d like to move, but I can’t. I don’t have any money.” The local utility recently informed her it would shut down her electricity for lack of payment. She managed to keep the lights by calling in a payment by phone, despite the fact that her bank account lacked the funds. “I wrote a bad check,” Chandler says. “I knew I didn’t have the funds, but I said, ‘Let me try it. If it goes through, I have electricity for another day.’ ” Then she called 211, where an operator referred her to the United Way House. When she arrived, Community Cooperative Ministries agreed to pay her electric bill for a month. How long will she stay in this home seemingly claimed by no one? Where will she go if she must? She contemplates these questions while her 18-month-old son cheerfully explores the wooden children’s table and chairs painted with farm animals set in a corner of the United Way House. At home, he lacks such amenities. “My plan?” Chandler asks. “My plan is to get a plan. I’m just trying to get through, and I’m hoping they don’t come knocking on the door.” THE SHADOW LENGHTENS By all indications, several more years could pass before a knock comes. Cape Coral is so saturated with delinquency, and the banks are grappling with so much legal scrutiny, that the foreclosure process is lengthening further. “The bank can only take back so many homes at a time,” says Bobby Mahan, a real estate broker whose company, Selling Paradise, has become largely focused on the trade in distressed property. “Everybody who knows anything says this shadow inventory isn’t going to clear out until 2016.” On the other side of the river in Ft. Myers, a woman who once earned a six-figure salary selling real estate says she has not made a payment on her own five-bedroom house for more than four years. Yet she is still there, inside a gated community. Her lender, Bank of America, sent her a delinquency notice back when she first stopped paying, she says, but has yet to complete the foreclosure. The real estate agent, who shared her story on condition she not be named, says she was laid off in the midst of the unraveling in 2007. She now works part-time answering the phones at a retail business and does some real estate sales on the side, not enough to afford her nearly $5,000 monthly mortgage payment. “I want out of this house,” she says. “At this point, it’s just depressing. It would be nice to get on with my life. But it wouldn’t be fair to my neighbors to just walk away. The house is going to go to hell. There would be mold. I’m in a holding pattern.” Last month, she called Bank of America to check on the status of her file and see if she could pursue a short sale, she says. “This idiot tells me that they don’t have access to my file,” she says. Apparently, the bank lost the paperwork and has been unable to track it down. The representative promised to call back, she says, but three weeks later, her phone has yet to ring. Sometimes, though, finality comes even when it is unwanted. Four years ago, Asheley Mass, a 30-year-old single mother, paid $184,000 for a three-bedroom home in Cape Coral, taking on mortgage payments of $1,220 a month. At the time, she was able to manage that sum easily. She worked as a permitting and office manager at a local civil engineering firm, earning nearly $60,000 a year. But when construction dried up, so did her hours and her annual bonus. Last August, she was laid off. Mass tried and failed to secure relief from her bank through a mortgage modification, she says. Initially, she was turned away because she was current on her mortgage, making the payment by tapping her rapidly diminishing savings. A representative told her only the delinquent were securing relief. But when she stopped making payments, the bank offered to cut her burden by only $20 a month. In January, she gave up altogether on making payments, intent on putting aside as much cash as possible to start over in a rental. Last month, she found herself in a courtroom in downtown Ft. Myers, where she hoped to plead her case to the judge. This was the first house she had ever owned. It was home to her 11-year-old daughter. She had refurbished the kitchen. She wanted to keep it, if only the bank would share the loss and give her a lower payment. The lawyers for the bank and the judge all seemed familiar with one another in a clubby sort of way, she says. They exchanged inside jokes and spoke in shorthand as they processed a fat stack of files. They acted as if they were surprised that she had bothered to attend a hearing that seemed merely pro forma, another box to check on the paperwork. And the judge appeared amused and unmoved by her speech, she says. “I tried to tell him what had happened, how my hours had been cut and how I’d lost my job,” Mass says. “He said, ‘Well, when you signed the note, it didn’t say I promise to pay unless I lose my job.’ He was very sarcastic and treated me like another person trying to put one over on the system.” It was as if they occupied two separate worlds: these men of the court, moving their files through the pipeline, closing the books on failed investments — and her, an oddball just for showing up, confronting the loss of her home. “It feels awful,” she says. “This was my first house, and it hurts.” THE NEW NORMAL When the unraveling began here, a sense of hope endured that it was perhaps a momentary pause. Housing prices were plummeting, as they would soon nationally, but people told themselves that the Florida story would again prevail, exerting its magnetic pull on regions familiar with snow tires. Houses would be filled with retirees and younger people seeking bargains. Fear would give way to the next wave of upward mobility. But so much time has elapsed with the damage still rippling out that a sense of resignation has entered the local conversation. Among those focused on providing aid, the mission has evolved from one of handing out temporary relief. Now, they talk long-term strategies to assist a community in which poverty has become indisputably entrenched, albeit papered over for a time by easy money. “This is the new normal,” says Jorge Acevedo, pastor of the Grace United Methodist Church. “The old normal wasn’t normal.” Back in early 2006, Grace Church bought a failed grocery store in a low-income pocket of Cape Coral. The plan was to turn the building into a community center for after school programs, support groups for those struggling to overcome drug and alcohol problems, and other church gatherings. The church envisioned operating a modest food pantry that would feed perhaps 1,000 people a year. Last year, it fed about 10,000 people. This year, it is on track to feed more than 20,000. Acevedo and Wes Olds, the pastor for the campus that includes the community center, have launched a dialogue with university economists to try to settle on job creation strategies. They have begun classes to help people obtain GEDs, and coach job applicants on resume writing and interviewing strategies. They are reaching out to area businesses to foster a sense of community in the interest of spurring growth, functioning as much like members of an economic development authority as spiritual advisers. “We never dreamed this is what we’d be doing,” says Acevedo. “This is nothing that Wes and I studied at seminary.” On a recent Wednesday evening at the community center, as people wait for donated bags of groceries, some pick up donated bags of pet food. The pet ministry, as it is known, was launched in recognition that when people sink into poverty, they often give away their pets, facing a choice between feeding the children or feeding the dog. In a darkened wing of the former supermarket, dozens of bicycles line one wall. Volunteers attached to the bicycle ministry bring in abandoned models and donated parts, putting them in working order and handing them out to people who have lost cars and require transportation to get to work or school — no minor matter in a sprawling metropolis with minimal public transportation. The church is now pursuing the development of a community garden on a quarter-acre patch of the parking lot. The idea is to add homegrown fruits and vegetables to the typical goods donated to the food bank, where sugared cereals and glazed donuts take up shelf space. The garden project is also aimed at teaching congregants techniques they can use to grow food for themselves at home. The church is working to develop the garden with a group called Educational Concerns for Hunger Organization, or ECHO, which is accustomed to helping poor people in malnourished corners of the globe. “They have been doing this in Africa,” says Olds. “Now, there’s a need to do this right here.” At the back of the community center, a thrift store offers many of the goods needed to outfit a home — high chairs, clothing, appliances. It is also the scene of a love story that seems perfectly emblematic of the age, a romance forged in foreclosure. Two years ago, Stacy Linder, 42, broke his wrist, causing him to miss three months of work as a driver for Federal Express. Without his wages, he found himself unable to make the mortgage payments on his three-bedroom house, beginning a painful slide into foreclosure. Distraught and in need of fellowship, he began volunteering at the Grace Church thrift store. He found himself drawn to the store manager, Donna Wenzlaff, who had lost her own home to foreclosure after she was laid off from a local bank. Kindred spirits, the couple was soon engaged. They now spend much of their time sifting through the household goods that arrive at their loading dock — some donated, others scavenged from houses lost to foreclosure. “It’s strange,” Linder says. “You see truckloads pulling in here with furniture and things, and you think about the heartbreak of the people who left it behind. You know what they’ve gone through. It’s amazing what people have had to walk away from.”

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BYE BYE, OCCUPY: SF Encampment Cleared In Overnight Raid

December 7, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO — More than 100 police officers gave protesters at the Occupy encampment in San Francisco five minutes to gather belongings before authorities took down about 100 tents and arrested 70 people as the camp was dismantled in an overnight raid. A few officers remained at daybreak Wednesday as trash crews raked up paper and plastic bottles, removed chairs and other belongings that accumulated at the camp over the past two months and pressure-washed the sidewalks. (CLICK HERE FOR LIVE UPDATES) Dozens of police cars, fire engines and ambulances surrounded the campsite at Justin Herman Plaza and blocked off the area during the raid, which began shortly after 1 a.m. Police did not immediately release how many people were in the plaza at the time, but campers put the estimate at 150. “Most of the protesters went peacefully,” but one officer received minor injuries when two people threw a chair that cracked his face shield, said officer Albie Esparza. They were arrested on suspicion of felony assault. Dozens of others were arrested for illegal lodging in the plaza and failure to disperse. In all, 70 people were taken into custody. Richard Kriedler with Occupy S.F. said some protesters were also injured, but he didn’t have the details. “This is a very emotional town. We have anarchists, we have very emotional people that this is not going to go over well with, and this could have been handled a lot better,” he said. “A much more simple way to do it would have been direct contact with the mayor and city officials here with us, and even though they’ve been invited many times, they didn’t come.” Jack Martin, of San Francisco, said he was trying to leave the plaza when he was zip-tied, taken to a police station, cited and released. Officers trashed his tent and personal belongings, he said. “I lost everything I owned,” Martin, 51, said as tears welled up in his eyes. “Everything I owned is gone. My medicine, my paper for my Social Security.” He yelled at officers: “I was trying to get out of your way!” Asked what he planned to do next, Martin replied, “Occupy, occupy, occupy, occupy.” Kris Sullivan, 31, from Akron, Ohio, said many campers were sleeping and were taken by surprise. Sullivan, who said he had been at the camp for about two months, got his tent out but lost his pillow, mattress, blanket and another tent. “They didn’t even give much time for anyone to get out. They handled it really badly. They could have given us a warning or some sort of eviction notice,” he said. The tent city was set up in mid-October to protest bank bailouts and economic injustice. Gene Doherty, 47, an Occupy protester who was not present during the raid but watched it on a live streaming website, said the Occupy protesters planned a noon rally at the site and still had several “mobile occupations” throughout the city. “We will come back and reoccupy,” Doherty said. “A large segment of our community has no other options. They don’t have a home to go back to; this was their home.” Protesters will continue to “send a message that this is our right to protest, our right to assemble, and to talk about the economic injustices in the world,” he said. Anthony Kramer, 21, of St. Louis, said he had been in camp about five days. He vowed to return. “We’re not going to give up that easily,” Kramer said as he stood on the sidewalk with his orange sleeping bag under his arm. ___ Associated Press radio reporter Ed Donahue in Washington contributed to this report.

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NBA Lockout Costs Miami-Dade County Millions

November 29, 2011

MIAMI — Miami-Dade County forks over $6.4 million to the Miami Heat to operate the AmericanAirlines Arena every year. That was part of the contract when the arena, which is technically owned by the county, was built. The Heat run the place, and the county pays for their services. The basketball team would have played 41 games there during the 2011-12 season. Would have played, were it not for the season-shortening NBA lockout. Instead of 41 home games, the Heat will likely play only 33 games in downtown Miami once the season kicks off on Christmas Day. That means the county will miss out on as much as $2.4 million in hotel room and ticket taxes. It also means, according to the county, that the Heat will collect the full yearly allotment of operating subsidies for an arena that was barely used in November. Some sort of escape clause for lockouts or other season disruptions “would have been a good thing to have,” said Katy Sorenson, a former county commissioner who has long been critical of the arena deal. Sorenson added, “This county’s not famous for great deals on sports arenas.” John Heffernan, press secretary for Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Gimenez, acknowledged that the arena contract has no such lockout clause. But he defended the deal by pointing out that the AmericanAirlines Arena “operates year-round, hosting events that extend beyond professional basketball.” Not so much this month, at least according to the arena’s online calendar of events. Taylor Swift played on Nov. 13. Jay-Z and Kanye West promoted their album “Watch the Throne” a few days later. That was it for November. December, with two events listed online, doesn’t look much busier. The mayor’s office estimated that during a full season of 41 home games, the county would have taken in $492,000 to $738,000 in ticket taxes, and $8.2 million to $12.3 million in hotel taxes. While the full schedule for the post-lockout season hasn’t been announced yet, the Heat will likely play eight fewer home games. The cost to the county in lost tax revenues: somewhere between $1.7 million and $2.4 million, based on the average per-game taking. Brad Humphreys, who holds the chair in the economics of gaming at the University of Alberta, has studied the economic effects of sports season disruptions. While the county’s tax revenues may decrease, he said there will likely be no overall hit to the region’s economy. Why? When Humphreys and a colleague looked at the 1994 baseball strike and the two NFL strikes in the 1980s, what they found was that sports fans practice what economists call “substitution.” “People basically have a budget for entertainment spending,” Humphreys said. “And if you take away one option, it’s not that they save that money; it’s that they simply spend it on some other entertainment option. So if they’re not going to NBA games, they’re going to movie theaters or plays or something else.” Meanwhile, hoteliers, restaurateurs and food vendors near the AmericanAirlines Arena are losing money. (The Heat would like to banish food vendors from the arena’s neighborhood.) As for Miami-Dade’s operating subsidy, it doesn’t seem likely the Heat, which declined to comment for this article, will be cutting the county a break anytime soon. In the first 10 years of the arena’s operation, Miami-Dade sent the Heat $64 million in operating subsidies . The contract stipulates that at some point the team in turn is supposed to start sharing profits from the arena, but that hasn’t happened yet, and some doubt it ever will. Under the contract, income must first be used to pay off the arena’s construction costs. Humphreys said he’s an economist, not a moralist, but he thinks the NBA does not go far enough in acknowledging that cities and states have spent millions building or paying to operate the arenas where the league plays. “They should recognize that part of the reason they have $4 billion to divvy up is that they have convinced local governments to subsidize their arenas,” said Humphreys. “And they should have some sort of obligation to keep that economic activity going.” Some recognition of the Heat’s responsibility to Miami “would be nice,” Sorenson said. “That would indicate some sense of civic responsibility and some sense of contributing to the public good. But I don’t really think that’s what the deal was all about.”

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NBA Won’t Have To Jump Through Hoops To Win Back Fans

November 29, 2011

NBA attendance could catch up to pre-lockout numbers faster than it takes LeBron James’ pregame chalk toss to settle. That’s because fans seem to easily forget sports labor disputes. Fans are so willing to pardon, they almost give banks hope that customers will erase the memory of that little meltdown in 2008. “It’s always a quick recovery,” said Dave Berri, a Southern Utah University sports economist and author of the book and blog, ” The Wages of Wins .” “Fans do not hold a grudge.” Now that the NBA owners and players have reached a tentative agreement to end the lockout and begin a shortened 66-game season on Christmas Day, the question emerges how quickly recession-beaten and disenchanted spectators will return to the game. Despite an average of $48 a ticket and a wave of bad press about both sides during the bargaining, the comeback is expected to be swift. The last three major-league stoppages show that the relief of seeing our favorite sports after an absence overwhelms any sense of betrayal. It’s no contest, really. The National Hockey League’s locked-out, canceled season of 2004-05 generated an immediate surge in attendance the next year players took the ice. In 2005-06, 25 of 30 teams reported increased attendance, with the Pittsburgh Penguins’ patronage growing by more than 33 percent, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported. “My own personal observation is that hockey never even broke stride,” said Rod Fort , a University of Michigan sports economist who wrote extensively about hockey’s rapid recovery. The NHL will have to count on its loyalist base again when its contract with the players expires before next season. “Fans are rightfully indignant during the lockout, and we hear nationwide claims they are finished spending another dollar on the sport they love,” Fort said. “And as soon as play starts, they’re back in full force.” If the NBA’s last play interruption in 1998-99 is any barometer, fans won’t be gone long. The 1997-98 season, featuring the Chicago Bulls’ last NBA title with Michael Jordan, produced a per-game crowd average of 17,135. The lockout-shortened season’s average shrank slightly to 16,738 and began climbing again to 16,870 in 1999-2000. The one permanent loss the NBA suffered was in the broadcast arena. Driven by Jordan’s cross-culture appeal, the 1997-98 finals earned an all-time high Nielsen rating of 18.7, meaning it was viewed by 18.7 percent of American households with television. The ratings plummeted to 11.3 for the championship series between the Knicks and Spurs during the lockout-shortened 1998-99 season, and have never recovered. Much of that, however, could be attributed to Jordan’s second retirement. A public relations expert whose firm once represented former Knicks players Allan Houston and Jalen Rose predicts less spectator resistance this time around for the NBA. Ronn Torossian , president of the 5W agency, gives fans 60 days — tops — to fully resume their patronage. “Pro sports in this country is a religion, and it’s not going anywhere anytime soon,” he said. We asked the NBA how quickly it expected to restore its attendance, but a spokeswoman said the league could not comment until the new agreement was officially ratified. At least the NBA didn’t jettison its postseason, like Major League Baseball did in 1994. After a labor impasse wiped out the World Series, some historians declared that national pastime was saved by the home run race between Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa in 1998. Berri and Fort dismiss that as a myth of Casey at the Bat proportions. Many observers make the mistake of comparing post-strike attendance to 1993 (70,257,938 total, 30,964 per game), but that was the year the Colorado Rockies and Florida Marlins entered the league. The novelty and additional games in made-for-football stadiums resulted in the biggest crowd surge since 1946, Berri explained, so any season soon after would pale in comparison. The truth is, per-game attendance in 1996 (26,510), the first full season after the strike, had climbed back to 1992 levels (26,529). Baseball has lingering attendance and TV ratings problems, but tracing them to a board-room standoff 17 years ago may be a little far-fetched. (The sport reached a five-year collective bargaining agreement last week to avoid lockouts and strikes for the time being.) To end its latest labor war, the NBA will have the advantage of opening on Christmas Day, a holiday the league has adopted as its regular-season showcase. That means an expectant national TV audience. Fans will be able to open gifts and watch a triple-header featuring a rematch between 2011 NBA finalists Miami and eventual champion Dallas. Berri said he believes the ratings will soar higher than last year’s Christmas telecast. For the record, ABC’s airing of the Lakers and Kobe Bryant against the Heat and James on Dec. 25, 2010, attracted a 6.4 rating, a 45 percent increase over the previous season. An improvement will be a slam dunk. “America is a very forgiving place and Americans don’t have a long memory,” Torossian said.

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‘The Office’ Dunder Mifflin Paper Now An Actual Product!

November 28, 2011

After seven and a half seasons of teasing us with their product, Dunder Mifflin will finally give the general public the opportunity to use their famed paper. Comcast, the parent company of “The Office” broadcaster NBC, has licensed for production a line of paper stock from the world’s largest (fictional) Northeastern Pennsylvania-based mid-sized paper company. Staples will produce and sell the product on its Quill.com, meaning fans of the show can print out their own love letters to Jim Halpert on the paper he’s made a career of pushing. That Comcast decided to go with Staples may raise some eyebrows amongst hardcore fans of the show; after all, Staples is one of Dunder Mifflin’s biggest competitors, and where Dwight briefly worked while on a sojourn from his beloved company. Another question to ponder: will the pages display the classic, recalled watermark that involved a duck and a mouse in a very obscene way ? For more, click over to the Wall Street Journal .

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PHOTOS: Artist Takes The Occupy Movement Underwater

November 26, 2011

First New York, then other cities around the world. Now the Occupy movement has spread underwater and it doesn’t even involve humans. Taiwanese artist Vincent J.F. Huang has created an installation that uses marine animals to examine the burgeoning protest movement. “The Atlantis Project,” which is on exhibit at Artspace in Sydney, Australia, features a number of marine animals “occupying” models of famous world landmarks. Through the course of the exhibit, the aquarium’s coral will continue to grow “until the life-sustaining resources of the aquarium are fully consumed,” and the coral loses its pigment . The aquarium and the life it contains are a microcosm, according to a press release. “The project metaphorically represents the limitations of earth’s resources.” The project’s connection to the occupy movement is also explained: Outrageous affairs are occurring and infuriated marine creatures are occupying icons of human civilization underwater. The spectacles of corruption and aberration in modern Atlantis are exposed! Art imitates life and Occupy Wall Street in other ways beyond this project as well. ARTINFO’s Ann Binlot observed parallels between the current movement and Philip Glass’ opera “Satyagraha,” about Mahatma Gandhi. Earlier this month, an Occupy Wall Street committee reached out to artist Mark di Suvero , whose sculpture “Joie de Vivre” is located in New York’s Zucotti Park. View photos of The Atlantis Project installation below, courtesy of Vincent J.F. Huang: —

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Egypt’s Economy Suffers With Latest Outbreak Of Political Violence

November 26, 2011

CAIRO — Drivers passing Tahrir Square in downtown Cairo curse the protesters. On radio shows, callers question whether the youth activists and others involved in the new wave of demonstrations over the past week are nationalists, selfish children or saboteurs. Political differences aside, what has become clear is that the latest clamor against Egypt’s military rulers is pummeling the country’s already flailing economy at a crucial time when many hoped winter tourism would pick up. A financial crisis is looming, say analysts. “We’re not far off,” said Neil Shearing, chief emerging markets economist with Capital Economics. “There’s enough money left in the coffers to get through the year, but not much beyond that. Crunch time is two to three months away.” It took 30 years to engineer the revolution that ousted former President Hosni Mubarak in February. But it only took months to push the 7 percent annual growth rate of recent years to an anemic forecast of only about 1 percent this year. The difficulties keep mounting. The stock market tanks daily and foreign reserves have fallen by almost 40 percent so far this year. The drop is linked to the protests that have persisted since Mubarak’s fall, and more specifically, the wide gap between the expectations of the population after the uprising and the reality of what the government could deliver. From iconic Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the revolution, to the city’s middle income neighborhoods and slums, the sobering realization that the hopes for democracy have not translated into a better standard of living is leaving Egyptians increasingly frustrated – with the military rulers, with the interim government that resigned a few days ago and, perhaps more troublingly, with each other. “The move toward democracy is something that should be a beacon for the rest of the region,” said Shearing. “But we’ve clearly reached a point … where there needs to be some political stability because the financing risks are severe.” As of October, the country’s net foreign reserves had fallen to $22 billion from $36 billion at the end of 2010. At least part of that money has gone to supporting the Egyptian pound, which economists worry could face severe depreciation if officials don’t shore up the country’s finances. At the famed pyramids of Giza, when horse rides, papyrus prints and tours failed to entice some tourists, a young guide turned to the unorthodox. “Girls?” offered 23-year-old Samir Adham, flashing a sly grin. “Hashish?” He apologized when he realized the offer was made to a reporter. “No one comes any more,” he explained. “What can I do? I have to make a living,” he said, bemoaning the hammering of Egypt’s vital tourism industry, one of the country’s top money-earners, since the revolution. The troubles confronting Adham and others in the tourism sector are a window into the country’s broader challenges. Egypt’s tourism sector has accounted for roughly 10 percent of gross domestic product and employs Egyptians in a range of supporting industries – from guides and camel touts to hotel workers and artisans. “Most shops have either let go of most of their employees or cut their salaries by at least 50 percent,” said Khaled Osman, who owns a shop near the pyramids employing about 20 people. Since the revolution, the unemployment rate has climbed to almost 12 percent in the third quarter of 2011, compared to just shy of 9 percent a year earlier. If the uprising that pushed Mubarak from power marked the start of the industry’s demise for the year, then the latest protests in Tahrir Square have further cemented the losses. The most recent clashes began as protesters returned to the square calling for the military to hand over power immediately to a civilian government. Among their complaints was that the ruling generals were no different than Mubarak and that they had run the economy into the ground. The images of activists and security forces hurling rocks at each other through a thick fog of tear gas is hardly encouraging tourists. The unrest hasn’t sat well with investors either. The cost of government borrowing has gone up and the central bank on Friday was forced to raise interest rates for the first time in roughly three years. Borrowing costs will likely climb even more after ratings agency Standard & Poor’s on Thursday drove Egypt’s sovereign debt rating deeper into junk status, citing what it said was “an ongoing high, and recently increased, risk of challenges to political institutions that will possibly involve further domestic conflict.” “These challenges could arise if populist demands for greater political participation are thwarted, or from demands for improved living standards from different sectors of the population no matter who is governing Egypt,” the agency said. The impact of the uncertainty is clear at Cairo’s airport, where officials report that passenger traffic has fallen off sharply since the start of the latest clashes a week ago. Some flights arrive with fewer than 30 passengers. In Luxor, home to some of the country’s most prized archaeological sites, tourism officials said hotel occupancy rates have plunged to under 10 percent. The downturn there is especially troubling because the winter months are typically when tourists head to southern Egypt, and Luxor and Aswan rely overwhelmingly on tourism revenues. The declines are mirrored in Cairo, where five-star hotels sit largely empty. Only Red Sea resorts such as Hurghada and Sharm el-Sheik are still going strong, with occupancy rates of about 70 percent, according to Amani El-Torgoman, tourism operations manager at Travco, one of the region’s largest travel companies. But even there, it has come at a price. “We’re running after clients with best offers and last minute offers,” said El-Torgoman, noting that most properties had cut their rates by as much as 50 percent to lure in visitors with all-inclusive packages that can go for as little as $50 per night. While the latest clashes in Cairo have yet to be reflected in tourism figures, officials expect the hit to be hard and to build on top of an already declining interest on the part of Europeans, the bulk of visitors. Irina Tyurina, a spokesperson for the Russian Association of Tourist Agencies, said the sales had dropped by 57 percent over the past six months compared to the same period of last year. The so-called “Classic tours,” which involve trips through Cairo and then down to southern Egypt, are all but dead, said Travco’s El-Torgoman. “If things continue like this, there are a lot of people who will go out of business,” she said. “A lot (of smaller companies and shops) can’t afford paying the salaries or even sustaining small losses.” The same argument carries across other sectors of the economy and into the daily lives of Egyptians who complain that the only thing that has come from the ouster of Mubarak has been even more of an increase in prices, coupled with a surge in crime and the headaches that come with the daily protests in Cairo. Already nearly half the population of more than 80 million lives near or below the poverty line set by the World Bank of $2 a day. “Why can’t they see that they’re destroying the country,” railed Mohammed El-Sharkawy, an accountant who moonlights as an electrician to make ends meet. The activists say “they want democracy and freedom, but don’t understand that it comes with responsibility.” > ____ > Associated Press correspondents Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow, Nicole Winfield in Rome, Kirsten Grieshaber in Berlin and Alexander Besant in Cairo contributed.

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Bill Robinson: High-Tech Startup Focus: iZettle — the New, Better Square — Coming Soon to America?

November 20, 2011

There’s a brutal, bloodbath-type clash looming. And it’s going to be held in a very big market : how people pay for things and how small business and individuals might accept charge cards on their phones. While PayPal was the progenitor for Internet-based payment processing, a new breed of high-tech startup is emerging which will likely disintermediate PayPal out of business. In the U.S., investor darlings Square receive all of the press attention and $100 million in VC funding at a $1 billion valuation. With their neat little card-swiping plug-in for smartphones, Square has created a bit of a phenomenon in that everybody with a smartphone can now be a self-contained, Visa processing merchant. Good idea; good for ‘mom & pops’ and good for small business. Twitter founder Jack Dorsey is also the diabolical mind behind Square and heavily involved in both companies; he’s CEO of Square and recently returned to Twitter to “lead product development,” whatever that means. With all of the deflating noises of Groupon and Zynga, however, is it possible Square might find themselves going the way of PayPal; downhill? This could happen, particularly if the technology that the banks and credit card companies use should shift suddenly, say from the magnetic stripe or ‘magstripe’ (the dominant card technology in the Americas) to the ‘smart chip’ used on all cards in Europe, Asia and elsewhere. But whether or not Square turns out to be the powerhouse it says it is, there’s stiff competition emanating from abroad for this payment-card, iPhone-swiping company. And it’s coming from Stockholm, Sweden. Swedes, all Europeans, really, have been using their phones to buy Cokes from vending machines and wirelessly pay parking meters for a decade or more now; they develop, launch, commercialize and take up technology faster than Americans. Witness SMS texting. And the Scandinavians seem even faster at technology adoption than their other Euro-brethren. Somewhat more quietly, but no less powerfully, iZettle , a Swedish startup has raised $11 million in funding to go after the smartphone payment processing market in Europe. Jacob de Geer is the CEO/co-founder of iZettle and a very well educated, articulate entrepreneur. As with most Swedes, his English is excellent. He spent some time with me recently talking about his background, previous startups of his and iZettle. “I went to the Stockholm School of Economics,” de Geer began wistfully, “and was thinking I’d be a banker or consultant. But then I saw Google and all these great companies starting up and I realized, I couldn’t look my kids in the eyes if I was a banker or consultant.” So in 1999, de Geer joined a Stockholm-based startup called TradeDoubler as employee number one. This first company gave de Geer a good foundation for his later company development, as it was an Internet affiliate marketing firm which went public on the Stockholm exchange in 2005. De Geer worked at TradeDoubler until 2007, giving him a good eight-year stint in a company which was marketing widely on the Internet platform. It is perhaps this experience which would most foreshadow the good things — or companies — for de Geer ahead. De Geer then started not just one but two companies in 2007: Ameibo, a “legal” movie sharing company de Geer co-founded and ran as CEO; and Tre Kronor Media a communications agency he also co-founded. Both companies were acquired in 2010; a rare double-headed success for de Geer. All of these varied learning experiences gave de Geer the unusual qualifications and springboard he needed to conceptualize and start iZettle. De Geer recalled, “After Tre Konor, I had more or less decided to get a ‘real job’ and not start something new… I promised my wife,” he said somewhat sheepishly, as we all do. “The only problem was,” he said like a man who had originally intended to fulfill his wife’s request but got sucked back in, “my wife was also an entrepreneur. She came back from a trade fair and said to me, ‘I lost out on so much business because I couldn’t take credit cards.’ So I started Googling and found Jack Dorsey and Square; I suggested she get a Square.” Here’s where things get complicated in a tech chasm way. Europe and America were originally divided by the GSM/CDMA partition on cell phones, which meant if you lived in Europe and traveled to the U.S. or Asia on business you needed a tri-band phone. And, if you were American but traveled abroad you likely needed another phone entirely which could take a sim card. The credit/debit card markets are much the same: separated. In the Americas, the more mature, out-dated magstripe cards are the dominant if not exclusive technology for swiping a payment. In Europe and Asia — virtually everywhere else, they use a smart chip technology which is a little, gold square on the front of every debit and credit card which you insert, not swipe. This is also known as “EMV” (Europay, Mastercard, Visa). The smart chip cards are a lot ‘smarter,’ carry more info, are more secure and last longer than the clunky, easily scammed and easily worn magstripe cards. There are many more millions of smart card users worldwide than magstripe users, though this doesn’t seem to have dawned on the geniuses at Square. I give iZettle a big advantage for these reasons. Theoretically, if the banks and credit card companies move to this safer and better smart card technology, as I believe they will, then Square is out of business. So the irony of de Geer’s wife’s going to Square first is dripping. When de Geer and Mrs. de Geer tried to get a Square sent over to them for trade fair use; Square denied them. “Unfortunately, you’re in the smart chip card part of the world — we only do magnetic stripes.” Really? Well, we’ll just see about that. So like any irritated and frustrated customer, de Geer set out to build a better mousetrap; in this case, one that would catch a mouse in Sweden. “Europe is a complex, multicultural environment with many languages,” de Geer said, “a comprehensive solution was required. Besides, the magstripe technology was very basic, it wasn’t encrypted and anyone could read it.” As the fundamentals of iZettle percolated inside de Geer’s entrepreneurial head, de Geer said he was pretty sure that the U.S. magstripe platform would not changeover to the EMV side. “From the U.S. perspective this is all a numbers game; why change?” Though de Geer and I disagreed about whether the U.S. would come over to smart chip technology (I believe it certainly will) I did convince him it was a distinct possibility due to the banks’ and credit card companies’ interest in fraud prevention. “This is all driven by the card networks,” de Geer observed, “all the markets are in transition.” With regard to Square, de Geer is typical diplomatic Swede, “I think we can co-exist… we’re in two different markets. Markets in Europe are so different; you have to localize your service. But Square will continue on its fantastic journey.” Hmmm… I’m not so sure; especially when the EMV cards are so much better on multiple fronts. It almost seems like a fait accompli that the U.S. will join the rest of the planet on EMV. As if to make my case, de Geer went on, “The difference between EMV and the magstripe is astronomical. The hardware security of iZettle versus Square is different worlds.” “For iZettle and Europe, the ‘user experience’ has to be amazing — that’s so important for us. In order to be successful in Europe, though, we needed a global approach.” iZettle is a fantastic development for small business and sole proprietors, who previously in Sweden had to pay about $4,000 just for the antiquated swiping terminal and the whole host of other fees that take a bite out of them. And in the area of pricing, cost to the end user, the ‘swiper’ if you will, iZettle is by far the more favorable with Square vacillating wildly recently, “waiving” some fees for customers; a sure sign of trouble, and in some instances Square “holding” merchant funds for a month or more. The holding of small businesses funds for any period of time will kill Square outright. Another big advantage of iZettle is that no sensitive financial or other data is ever stored on the device, a dynamic that I’m not sure is true of Square. The one area where I find iZettle deficient and Square superior is in the devices they can be used upon. iZettle is only iPhones and iPads for now. Square can be used on iPhones, iPads and Androids; Droids being the increasingly popular Apple alternative in America with over 50 percent of the market share of smartphone sales. According to de Geer, “The real early metrics for us were that Sweden today is 9 million people where today we have 200,000 traditional ‘acceptance terminals’ at shops, restaurants, parking meters and the like. Yet we have more than 1.5 million iPhones… that was the magnitude of opportunity, to turn those iPhones into personal ‘acceptance terminals.’” The potential was perfectly clear to me through that statement. Let’s have a little test, shall we? Have a look at the Square YouTube video and then the iZettle YouTube video. Which one would you use after watching the video alone? I know which one I would use; hands down. (Check the comments under each video.) The one wildcard in this classic struggle may prove to be Google Wallet. Some think this latest Google development will completely take over the market, especially if they can become the payee, too, and accept cards. I’m not so sure. Google has proved pretty inept at taking over any markets whatsoever since their original search triumph. I don’t know who, iZettle or Square, will win this thing or even if there will be a thing. But I bet there is a thing and a big one because just like VHS versus Betamax, there’s got to be a winner when different technologies empower different people to different things on different platforms. I’ve also sided with the underdog. I think I like the odds of a 30-employee Swedish startup with $11 million more than I like a great, big, over-hyped U.S. tech company with $100 million and an absurdly otherworldly valuation. Stay tuned. This could get messy.

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Berlin to impose new tax on hotels in 2013

November 20, 2011

(MENAFN) Berlin Mayor, Klaus Wowereit, said that due to a new planned tax on hotels in Berlin, starting January 2013, hotels in the city would increase prices by 5 percent, reported Arab …

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Berlin to impose new tax on hotels in 2013

November 20, 2011

(MENAFN) Berlin Mayor, Klaus Wowereit, said that due to a new planned tax on hotels in Berlin, starting January 2013, hotels in the city would increase prices by 5 percent, reported Arab …

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With Film Incentive Capped, Michigan’s Movie Jobs Face An Uncertain Future

November 18, 2011

Sean Doerr knows Detroit. He’s been poking around the city since he was 14, exploring its forgotten buildings and learning the names of architects long gone. Now 21 and a senior at the College for Creative Studies, he’s seen Detroit’s parks, its factories, its greasy spoons and everything in between. In the last couple years, Doerr has picked up some part-time work as a location scout for movie producers. The work suited someone with Doerr’s knowledge of the city, and the timing was right, because in 2008, Michigan’s film industry began to boom. “You could definitely tell the city was more vibrant, because there were film crews everywhere,” Doerr said in an interview. “It really seemed to inspire a lot of people.” The film crews were in town thanks to Michigan’s original film incentive program, launched in 2008 under former Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm. It was the most generous such program in the country — the state was providing a rebate of up to 42 percent of a production’s expenditures. Soon, television and movie studios were flocking to Michigan. No one expected filmmaking to replace the hollowed-out auto industry or bring the state up to full employment, but at the outset, at least, the movie business seemed to gesture toward two of Michigan’s biggest labor-market concerns: how to keep the young creative class from leaving the state and how to keep members of the large industrial workforce employed. But the momentum didn’t last long. In October of this year, the new state budget capped the film incentive at $25 million a year — a sharp drop-off from 2010, when there was no cap and the state approved $115 million in rebates. With less money to go around, studios are now taking their big-budget pictures elsewhere. “It just instantly deflated,” said David London, president of Parliament Studios, a Michigan video production company founded in 2009. “A lot of people who had kind of pinned their hopes on this industry were just left out to dry.” ‘AN INCREDIBLE TRICKLE-DOWN BOOM’ Blame for the reduction of the film incentive is usually laid at the feet of Republican Gov. Rick Snyder, who succeeded Granholm in January. Snyder could not be reached for comment for this article. But he has said that he views the tax credits as a form of “picking winners and losers” among industries, which he has called an inappropriate role for government to play. Soon after taking office, Snyder began arguing that the percentage-based film incentive was leading the state to give back more in rebates than it was taking in. A study released in 2010 by the state Senate Fiscal Agency seemed to bear this out, concluding that Michigan was getting back only 17.5 cents in taxes for every dollar it spent on studio incentives . But advocates for the incentive program, including people employed in Michigan’s entertainment infrastructure, say the SFA’s narrow focus on tax dollars missed the true business benefits accruing elsewhere. For one, service industries, including hotels, restaurants and car rental facilities, were getting more customers thanks to the influx of filmmakers. In 2008 and 2009, one study found, film crews booked almost 50,000 hotel rooms in metro Detroit and introduced a combined $10 million in revenue and food and beverage spending . Meanwhile, jobs were popping up for Michigan residents, supporters say. Sets needed to be built, lights rigged, makeup applied. There was work for painters, carpenters, electricians, stylists, location scouts and actors — or anyone interested in becoming one of the above. “The film industry in Michigan was causing an incredible trickle-down boom,” said Mort Meisner, president and director of Michigan’s Center for Film Studies. The precise effect of movie-studio cash on the state’s private sector is difficult to quantify, but one widely cited study, from the accounting firm Ernst & Young, found that every dollar spent on film incentives generated nearly six dollars in economic activity for Michigan businesses . The same study found that in 2009 and 2010, film projects had created a total of 6,491 full-time equivalent jobs in Michigan. This was far from enough to fix the state’s unemployment problem — in those same years, the jobless rate in Michigan hovered between 13 and 14 percent , well above the national average. Opponents of the film incentive, including the Michigan-based Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a conservative think tank, contend that job growth created by movie production was too modest to justify what the state was giving away in tax dollars. But advocates for the film incentives say the job growth seen since 2008 was merely a promising beginning, and could have increased if given the chance. Meisner’s organization, the Center for Film Studies, houses one of the numerous training programs that emerged for Michigan residents looking to get involved in the movie industry. According to Meisner, the center has trained and placed hundreds of people in movie-related jobs. Its past students include “laid-off carpenters, electricians and autoworkers,” he said, as well as recent high school graduates “who didn’t have the aptitude, desire or financial means to go to college.” And while the film incentive spurred commercial activity and brought some momentum to Michigan’s torpid labor market, there were also other, less tangible benefits. “It gave the entire region something to hope for, something to look up to,” said Parliament Studios’ London. Michigan isn’t often cited as one of America’s cultural centers, and some of the best-known depictions of the state in film take place against a backdrop of economic calamity (“Roger & Me”) or urban burnout (“8 Mile”). The film incentive was bringing stars to Michigan on a regular basis — stars like Clint Eastwood, George Clooney and Courtney Cox, all of whom have filmed movies in the state since 2008 — and with them a sense of energy and artistic cachet. “Finally we had something cool, something high-profile, something with culture,” said Dayna Polehanski, owner of Detroit Casting Company. “Finally, something we could be proud of.” ‘WHATEVER HAPPENS, HAPPENS’ In February of this year, shortly after Gov. Snyder signaled that he was planning to curb the film incentive in the annual state budget, movie houses started walking away. Marvel Studios, for example, backed out of plans to film some scenes for its tentpole feature “The Avengers” in Michigan, ultimately taking that project to Ohio instead , which offers a film tax credit of up to 35 percent . Marvel also passed on Michigan for its “Iron Man 3″ shoot. The company is planning to take that project to North Carolina next year, and the project will reportedly employ more than 1,500 locals as extras or crew members . Other movies that dropped plans to film in Michigan following Snyder’s announcement include ” Freelancers ,” starring rapper 50 Cent; ” Starbright ,” starring James Earl Jones and Kathy Bates; and an untitled project from “The Bourne Identity” director Doug Liman that had proposed to hire 2,200 people . “Freelancers” and “Starbright” reportedly took their productions elsewhere because it was unclear whether they’d be awarded the amount in incentives they asked for. “Everybody who was about to cast, who was about to make films, just kind of bolted,” said Jenny Feterovich, a managing partner at Parliament Studios. Meanwhile, the Michigan Film Office, which handles studio requests for film incentive funds, is making do with its new, limited budget. The Film Office now faces hard choices about which projects to sign off on, but it has had some time to prepare for these restrictions. Though the $25 million cap was only enacted for the fiscal year beginning October 1, the MFO kept itself to $25 million in fiscal 2011 as well, and approved 21 projects during that time. Among the projects it did not approve was the Doug Liman film, which had alone requested almost $23 million in incentives . “I think there’s this perception that somehow the film industry in Michigan has died,” Michelle Begnoche, communications adviser at the Michigan Film Office, said. “If you look at what we’ve done with the resources we’ve had, we still had a fairly good year.” At the moment, the Michigan Film Office is holding off on considering studio applications for incentives for next year. It will begin looking at those requests if and when the state legislature passes a bill currently being heard in the Michigan House of Representatives. The bill, which could go to Gov. Snyder for a signature by the end of the year, proposes criteria for how the Film Office can allocate its $25 million. It would require that productions spend at least $100,000 in Michigan, and stipulates that projects that employ Michigan personnel would be eligible for greater funding than projects that don’t. These conditions, say the bill’s supporters, will help Michigan turn film activity to its economic advantage. But the bill does not raise the $25 million spending cap, and people attached to Michigan’s film industry have expressed little optimism that business will rise again to its previous levels. “Whatever happens, happens,” said Polehanski, the casting company owner, adding that she expects to lose “tens of thousands” of dollars this year as a result of the incentive cap. “I love having this career,” she said, “but I have resigned myself to the fact that it might completely go away.”

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IRSA Inversiones y Representaciones (NYSE: IRS) Affiliate Agrees to Purchase Investment in Supertel Hospitality

November 16, 2011

NORFOLK, NE–(Marketwire – Nov 16, 2011) – Supertel Hospitality, Inc. ( NASDAQ : SPPR ), a real estate investment trust (REIT) which owns 101 hotels in 23 states, today announced that it has entered into a purchase agreement for the issuance and sale of convertible preferred stock to Real Estate Strategies L.P. (“the Investor”), an investment vehicle indirectly controlled by IRSA Inversiones y Representaciones Sociedad Anónima (“IRSA”), an Argentina-based company. Subject to the approval of the shareholders of Supertel and IRSA’s satisfaction with certain debt refinancing of Supertel, Supertel will issue and sell two million shares of a newly-created series of preferred stock for $20 million to the Investor. The Investor will also have the option, to be exercised prior to closing, to purchase up to an additional one million of preferred shares for $10 per share.

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Growing Number Of Boomers Plan To Work Into Retirement Years: Poll

November 10, 2011

WASHINGTON — So much for kicking back at the lake house, long afternoons of golf or pretty much anything baby boomers had dreamed about in retirement. For many, the plan now calls for logging more hours at the office and renewed worries about money, according to a new poll. The Associated Press-LifeGoesStrong.com poll found a baby boom generation planning to work into retirement years – with 73 percent planning to work past retirement, up from 67 percent this spring. A majority of boomers also are shaky about their nest eggs. In all, 53 percent of boomers polled said they do not feel confident they’ll be able to afford a comfortable retirement. That’s up from 44 percent who were concerned about retirement finances in March. “I’m not confident at all,” says 63-year-old Susan Webb of West Liberty, Iowa. Webb – one of the 77 million boomers born between 1946 and 1964 – had long hoped to retire at 65 from her job as a real estate broker. Not anymore, not since the economic downturn that led to depressed housing prices, wild stock market swings and an unemployment rate hovering at or above 9 percent for all but two months since May 2009. Webb and her husband, who’s 67, are both still working full time. They hope to ratchet back to part time at some point, but plans for a scenic lake house where they can go fishing and spend time with their two grandchildren will likely mean selling their current home – not part of the original plan. At 50, Cheri Hubbs of Norfolk, Va., is on the younger side of the boomer spectrum. Even so, she knows she’ll work in retirement. “I just feel like I’m going to work until the day I die,” says Hubbs, an administrative assistant. Hubbs had little saved for retirement when she went to see a financial planner a few years ago. Now, she and her husband are socking away as much money as they can. She’s also cut back drastically on her little luxuries – trips to the nail salon and Starbucks. In the poll, 41 percent of boomers said they are expecting to have to scale back their lifestyle in some way in retirement and 31 percent believe they will struggle financially. Retirement expert Olivia Mitchell says working longer and cutting back are two practical ways for boomers to save more. “It’s a kind of downscaled consumer society that I see in the next five years at least,” said Mitchell, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School and executive director of the Pension Research Council. “Consume less and tighten the belt.” Downsizing is part of the plan for software designer Greg Schmidt of Carlisle, Mass. Schmidt, 53, says there’s no doubt he’ll be working longer, likely into his 70s. With a daughter in high school and twin 12-year-old boys, he’s got college tuitions to worry about as well as an aging father and father-in-law. He plans one day to move to a smaller home, maybe in the mountains of Vermont. Almost one-quarter of boomers in the poll – 23 percent – said retirement will mean they’ll have to move. For Schmidt, the stock market is another source of anxiety. “I am most concerned that we’re going to be entering a different time and equities aren’t quite as valued,” he said. “I am afraid I’m a little heavy into equities.” The span between the two AP-LifeGoesStrong.com polls coincided with a 10 percent drop in the Dow Jones industrial average, which recovered most of those losses by climbing this week to above 12,000 before plunging again Wednesday amid concerns about Europe’s debt crisis. In all, 62 percent of the boomers polled lost money on at least one of four core parts of retirement savings: _A workplace retirement savings plan, 42 percent. _Personal investments outside of an IRA/workplace savings, 41 percent. _An IRA (individual retirement account), 32 percent. _Real estate, 29 percent. The AP-LifeGoesStrong.com poll was conducted Oct. 5-12 by Knowledge Networks of Palo Alto, Calif. It involved online interviews with 1,095 baby boomers, as well as companion interviews with an additional 315 adults of other age groups. The survey has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.6 percentage points for baby boomers and 4.8 percentage points for all adults. Knowledge Networks used traditional telephone and mail sampling methods to randomly recruit respondents. People selected who had no Internet access were given it for free. ___ AP Polling Director Trevor Tompson, Deputy Polling Director Jennifer Agiesta and News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report. ___ Online:

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Arthur Bruzzone: ‘Jobs,’ [Willie Brown] Said

November 10, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO, CA — At this writing, they’re still counting votes to declare San Francisco’s next Mayor. Quite a task with the convoluted rank choice system in place for the first time in a SF mayor’s race. But it’s clear where it’s heading. On Election Night I was admitted into Willie Brown’s big bash at the Palace Hotel along with several hundred others. At the door leading to the hotel’s Palace Court, on the left, greeting every guest even the ones who came just for the fabulous food platters, was Willie Brown — still the city’s most imposing political figure, among the nameless, nerdy new generation of city politicos. Joining former SF Mayor (and former California House Speaker) Willie Brown at the door, sitting in a chair on the right, was Rose Pak – the powerful Chinatown business and political leader. Very appropriate. They greeted the guests. More like the guests were entering the inner core reactor of San Francisco politics ruled by the two people at the entrance, on the left and right. Willie and I have had our run ins, when I was chair of the San Francisco Republican Party. But I later did a fascinating 30 minute TV interview with him . He’s referred to me as “esoteric”. He was being polite. So I asked Willie, “What should be the first priority of the new mayor?” “Thank his supporters,” former Mayor Brown replied, predictably. “Ok, how ’bout the next day?” “The new mayor should spend time thanking the voters and his supporters.” I pressed him, as I did in our on air conversation. “Ok, Mr. Mayor, how about in the new mayor’s second week.. what should be his first priority?” Willie Brown knew I wasn’t giving up. So he blurted out one word: “JOBS!” And repeated it. At that moment he wasn’t just advising the next mayor of San Francisco. That was for the Governor, and for the incumbent president. Because when it’s all said and done, the issues of the 2011 San Francisco mayor’s race, the tax measures winning around the San Francisco Bay Area, even the protests in Oakland, will not create one single job. The protesters may punish the banks, the new taxes may shore up fiscally dysfunctional Bay Area governments. But the urgent concern of almost all of the early Occupy protestors, and the chief concern of families across the state and country, is summarized in that one short word. The word that came barreling from the mouth of the once most powerful politician in California, who is still sought after by Democratic leaders around the country, will in the end be the decisive issue of the 2012 race: “Jobs!”

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Michael Rose: Indie Filmmakers Storm the Beach at American Film Market

November 7, 2011

Lobby at American Film Market, courtesy AFM Take heart all ye hopeful, dreaming toilers in the fields of feature film production. Hearing a no from a studio doesn’t mean you’re dead in the water. Even George Clooney is told no. But when Warner Bros. took a pass on his latest film, The Ides of March , Clooney refused to give up. Instead of jumping off a bridge or the dock at his home on Lake Como, he sauntered down to the annual American Film Market (AFM) and started to pitch his project to an endless succession of buyers from around the world. Within a short time he and his writing partner had cobbled together $12.5-million in presales from international distributors which was enough to pay for his film. Clooney’s is only one of the success stories that keep people coming back to the Loews Santa Monica hotel every year for the AFM. This nine-day event attracts attendees from over 35 countries who have brought over 415 films to screen and numerous other projects in various stages of development to this year’s market. They hope to entice some of the 8,000-plus buyers, distributors, exhibitors, financiers, sales agents and DVD companies to take their projects to the next level. The AFM was once the home of B grade movies designed solely for the Asian and South American markets. But today, it’s attracting a range of films including “Best Picture” Academy Award winners that come here to test the waters and move their projects forward. Much of the sales action takes place in the hotel suites that are booked by companies and used for a continuous stream of meetings with buyers. But there’s also a lively secondary market in the hotel lobby that’s conducive to informal chance encounters and a great place to compare notes with your colleagues. The organizers suggest that first time attendees map out a strategy for navigating the AFM. The first step is to grab copies of the free trade publications that print special AFM editions. These list the companies that are attending and what films they’ve brought. You want to create a “list of target companies” that seem to be “best suited for your project.” They recommend that this list be about 30-50 companies and then make an A and B list. Figure out who the right executives are at each of these companies, usually someone who’s responsible for acquisitions, development and production. Then using the AFM directory, available at the Loews information desk, contact the company and try to set up a 15-minute meeting with those executives. You’ll probably get a meeting during the latter part of the event when things are winding down. You want to make sure you use an executive’s name and not just say, you’d like a meeting with someone in development, otherwise you might sound like you’re too lazy to do your homework. Once you have your meetings set up, it’s time to refine your pitch. You may want to bring someone with you to do the pitch if you don’t feel you’re quite up to it. Unless you’re George Clooney, it’s unlikely you’ll get a sale out of this first meeting. What you want is for them to be interested enough in both you and your project to set up a follow up meeting. Make sure you have business cards, a project synopsis, a budget overview, a list of any investors, ideas about production incentives, any actors or other creatives who have signed on and a script, if you have one. But they caution you not to leave that behind without first discussing this with your lawyers. Conferences at the AFM, courtesy AFM The AFM also offers an orientation session for first times. Once you register you’ll be invited. In addition to the market there are a number of professional seminars at a parallel conference that delve into financing, marketing, the art of the pitch, producing and getting distribution. The good news from the finance conference was that there is plenty of money available for quality projects like The King’s Speech and not just the blockbuster studio pictures. But the key is “you still have to make a good movie at the end of the day,” said Jared Underwood, Senior Vice President of Entertainment at Comerica Bank. Robert Hayward, chief operating officer of Summit Entertainment summed it up, “if it’s a really good project, then it gets done.”

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Sheraton plans to extend chain in Sri Lanka

November 6, 2011

(MENAFN) A Sri Lankan official said Sheraton Hotels and Resorts plans to build a hotel in Colombo on a land that was originally offered to a Chinese firm, Reuters reported. The Economic minister …

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Richard Barrington: Making Bank Transfer Day Work for You

November 2, 2011

Remember, remember, the 5th of November. So goes an English children’s rhyme, which commemorates Guy Fawkes Day. Guy Fawkes was a would-be rebel who plotted unsuccessfully to blow up the English Parliament in the 17th century. The 5th of November, 2011 may also be a day of revolution, albeit of a more commercial nature. That date has been dubbed “Bank Transfer Day,” an occasion for bank customers to show their dissatisfaction with bank policies by transferring their accounts to credit unions. Over 60,000 people have reportedly pledged to make this change. Is it something you should consider? Choice is power The popular dissatisfaction with banks has many sources, but it has been galvanized into action by rising bank fees. Free checking accounts are becoming more rare, and a few banks have made high-profile announcements of monthly fees for debit cards. What alternative do consumers have? The “Bank Transfer Day” movement is touting credit unions, whose non-profit nature makes a striking counterpoint against the perceived greed of banks. If you are considering dumping your bank, whether out of protest or simple economic self-interest, here are two facts to keep in mind: There are over 7,000 FDIC-insured banks. These institutions range from small, local organizations to multi-national corporations. With such a broad field, any sweeping assumption about bank policies is bound to be inaccurate. While credit unions are also plentiful, your eligibility to join a credit union is determined by your location, employment, or organizational affiliations. In other words, opting for a credit union will limit your choices. The point is, as a consumer you have the right to look for free checking accounts , not to mention the highest interest rates on CDs, savings accounts and money market accounts . But your chances of success increase with the number of choices available to you. Don’t limit your choices to credit unions. Consider both banks and credit unions as you shop for the best deal, and your choice will help demonstrate the banking polices you support. The original article can be found at Money-Rates.com : ” Making Bank Transfer Day work for you ”

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Carl Gibson: The Corporatocracy Is the 1 Percent

November 2, 2011

In October of 2003 Steve Jobs first learned that he had pancreatic cancer. His doctors and family members urged, even pleaded with him to have surgery, but he opted instead to try alternative and natural remedies. It was a decision he would later regret. America is faced with a similar dilemma. Recently, an article by Llewellyn Rockwell , a former Ron Paul chief of staff, antagonized the federal government elite as the “1 percent” that’s wronged the other 99% of Americans. Rockwell eschews the “impoverishing…taxes, regimentation” of the state while encouraging the Occupy movement to leave the other 1 percent alone — CEOs and bankers — as they are “Some of the smartest, most innovative people in the country.” Rockwell’s writing has a lot of truth to it. The federal government is certainly complicit in the oppression of the 99%. And the people are rightly upset. Congressional approval is now in the single digits , which is the lowest in recorded history for CBS/ New York Times pollsters. The Federal Reserve’s first audit showed trillions in secret bailouts to the same Wall Street banks foreclosing on our homes and laying off thousands , as well as trillions in bailouts to banks outside of the United States. And if that wasn’t enough, it appears that the Fed is letting Bank of America dump $74 trillion in derivatives into taxpayer-insured FDIC accounts. President Obama’s support for Occupy Wall Street seems hollow when such rampant greed and corruption is allowed to continue under the nose of our supposed regulators. But antagonizing the state as the sole culprit for our grievances is disingenuous. The state enables the unrestrained greed of corporate and financial titans to push millions into poverty worldwide . Toothless agencies, staffed with former executives of the companies they’re supposed to be regulating, were complicit in the BP oil disaster by letting the companies write their own rules. Corporations are now breaking apart pieces of the Earth’s mantle to draw natural gas, free to pollute water supplies without fear of government regulation. President Obama’s re-election team just hired a senior adviser who formerly lobbied for TransCanada — the same company pushing the White House to approve their Keystone XL oil pipeline that would pillage the land for oil destined for other countries. Even Sen. Dick Durbin admits that banks ” frankly own the place .” Our government has become a subsidiary of industry. The truth in Rockwell’s piece lies in his description of the corporate 1 percent that he praises as “smart and innovative.” Indeed, these men are smart, but their intelligence should be seen as cold and calculating, not praised. Corporations don’t care about helping America succeed. Corporations as they exist now exist solely for profit, not public good. If the government stands in the way of their profit potential, they can legally purchase new politicians through unlimited, undisclosed campaign donations . If the salaries of their employees or even the planet stand in the way, they’ll eliminate them to appease an economic system that values unsustainable growth over all else. This system of collusion and oppression is why Americans of all colors and backgrounds are occupying. In a recent segment on Democracy Now!, Glenn Greenwald noted that mere legislative demands from Occupiers would be insufficient to address the grievances of the 99 percent taking the world by storm. If Congress is so rife with corruption that they’ll even vote down creating 300,000 jobs for teachers and first responders to protect millionaires from even a .05% tax increase, then the system is beyond saving through conventional means. The real battle must be waged nonviolently in the streets, even in the face of excessive oppression by an emerging police state . The cancer eating America alive right now is a corporatocracy where cozy relationships between the power elite dictate policy for the 99%. Americans must surgically remove the corporate cancer from government through direct action and the voting booth, and cultivate new leaders from within the movement. When the people lead, our leaders will have no choice but to follow.

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Foreclosure-Mocking Law Firm Issues Apologies For Costumes

November 2, 2011

BUFFALO, N.Y. — The head of a foreclosure law firm whose employees mocked victims of the mortgage crisis at a Halloween party last year apologized Wednesday to an outraged advocate for the homeless who said the firm showed “a disgusting lack of sensitivity.” Pictures from the Steven J. Baum law firm’s 2010 Halloween party turned up last week in The New York Times, which said it received them from an unidentified former employee. The pictures show people dressed to look homeless and a sign reading “Baum Estates” near part of the office decorated to resemble a row of foreclosed homes. Another picture features a tattered green tarp over what appears to be a hovel for the homeless. The Baum law firm in suburban Buffalo is one of the largest-volume mortgage foreclosure firms in New York. Last year, it handled nearly 40 percent of the 46,572 foreclosure actions brought in New York courts, the New York Law Journal reported in February. Amid an investigation by the U.S. attorney’s office in Manhattan, Baum agreed last month to pay $2 million and change its practices after admitting to errors in legal filings that it blamed on the high volume of mortgage defaults and foreclosures it handles. New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman also is investigating the firm’s practices, a person familiar with the investigation said, speaking on condition of anonymity because active investigations are not discussed publicly. After denying to the Times that employees had mocked those who had lost their homes, the firm has in recent days acknowledged the costumes were inappropriate and apologized for last year’s Halloween party. The news comes as foreclosures continue to create a drag on the American economy and protests have erupted around the nation to protest what activists say is rampant corporate greed and influence on government that maintains a crippling disparity between rich and poor. “I again want to sincerely apologize for the inappropriate costumes worn by some of our employees at our Halloween Party in 2010. It was in extremely poor taste and I take full responsibility,” Steven J. Baum said in an emailed statement to The Associated Press on Wednesday. “I know people were extremely offended and people have every right to be upset with me and my firm.” Baum later met with Dale Zuchlewski, executive director of the Homeless Alliance of Western New York, who had sent a letter demanding an apology and offering to educate employees on the plight of the homeless. “Your firm and its employees profit at the misfortunes of others and are an active participant in making people homeless in the first place,” Zuchlewski wrote. “Allowing employees to participate in a company sponsored function such as this shows a disgusting lack of sensitivity. … Mocking others is a former of bullying that simply cannot be tolerated in our society.” After the meeting, Zuchlewski said Baum reported that he didn’t know about the party at one of the firm’s offices, but that he took responsibility. “He offered no excuses, apologized several times and has offered to have himself and his employees volunteer for homeless causes on a regular basis,” Zuchlewski said.

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Mafia Takes Over Publicly Traded Company

November 1, 2011

As Occupy Wall Street protestors chant about the criminals in the boardroom, actual thieves — including men associated with the mafia — have spent years quietly running FirstPlus Financial Group (FPFX), a Texas-based company and a one-time subprime lender that boasted former Vice President Dan Quayle as a board member, and used NFL Hall of Famer Dan Marino in its ads. On Tuesday, Nicodermo S. Scarfo, a made man within the Lucchese organized crime family, was arrested at his home. He’s one of 13 men charged with the illegal takeover of the publicly traded company, among other racketeering charges. “The defendants gave new meaning to ‘corporate takeover,’ ” said U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman.

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Businessman Robert Pritzker Dead At 85

October 28, 2011

CHICAGO — Businessman Robert Pritzker, who led a global industrial conglomerate and whose family founded the Hyatt chain of hotels, has died. He was 85. Pritzker died Thursday evening in a Chicago nursing facility after suffering from Parkinson’s disease, his executive assistant Becky Spooner said Friday. Pritzker founded and was chairman and president of the Marmon Group, an international conglomerate of manufacturing and service companies. His business acumen helped Marmon Group revenues grow into the billions of dollars and through hundreds of acquisitions over 50 years, company officials said. The company was sold to Berkshire Hathaway in 2008. In 2002, at age 76, Pritzker acquired several caster, medical device and hardware companies to form Colson Associates. Pritzker was the brother of Jay Pritzker, who was founder and chairman of the Hyatt Hotel chain and among the richest people in the United States when he died in 1999 in Chicago. Pritzker was born in Chicago on June 30, 1926. He graduated from the Illinois Institute of Technology with an industrial engineering degree in 1946 and later became chairman of the school’s board of trustees. The school now has a Pritzker Institute for Medical Engineering. Throughout his career Pritzker taught management and engineering courses at IIT, the University of Chicago and Oxford University. He also was chairman of the National Association of Manufacturers and worked with the National Academy of Engineering. Pritzker is survived by his wife, Mayari, five children, 10 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

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Walmart Scales Back Health Care Benefits For Part-Time Employees

October 21, 2011

NEW YORK — Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the nation’s largest private employer, is scaling back health care coverage for future part-time workers while raising premiums for some full-time workers. The discounter says that rising health care costs are forcing it to eliminate healthcare coverage for future part-time workers who work less than 24 hours a week. New part-time employees who average 24 hours to 33 hours a week will not be able to include a spouse as part of their health care coverage. However, their children will qualify under their plan. The company also says full-time workers who are smokers will see their premiums substantially rise. Wal-Mart, based in Bentonville, Ark., defines full-time workers as anyone who works 34 or more hours per week. The company employs more than 1.4 million workers.

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Lydia Fisher: Financial Occupation

October 21, 2011

“Financial occupation” is what a Greek journalist said Greece was under. I suppose the journalist means, held hostage by world bankers. Wonder how many Americans feel the same, burdened by debt — be it underwater mortgages, student loans, or credit card debt, not to mention public debt. Greece, among other dire prospects, faces liquidation of national assets? Think about that — what’s left? Within an interconnected global financial system, a poke in any one part may bring the rest of the financial spider web down. What to do when a country is way overextended relative to its growth prospects? A Greek default would ripple through Eurozone banks to the U.S. banking system. No doubt, Greece mismanaged its affairs. Politicians overpromised, overspent. For a small country, the debt’s a staggering near half trillion , with no visible growth engine in sight to service the debt. No means to borrow in capital markets. Imagine one year Greek bonds way north of 100 percent! Greece, it’s people, are at the mercy of the world’s bankers, leaders — relying on loan “handouts,” just to pay its bills, if at all. It’s people are imprisoned in chains of debt. Some innocent and some not so innocent, now feel the brunt, as austerity pushes through the front doorstep. I came across this from a friend as it relates to the economic crisis — “culpability of few, responsibility of all.” All the more, the responsibility for vigilance in the face of the seemingly invisible that sooner or later manifests itself. We live in a world of financial warriors. They can take anyone hostage — through loans, through financial speculative attack like short selling raids, through credit default swapping. The empire building “Too Big to Fails,” even come to the rescue. With provisions and creative solutions — as in the case of Greece, to find transactional ways to defer debt into the future. Creativity or “kicking the can?” No wonder, headlines pulsate with financial misdeeds against humanity. The silver lining in the ongoing crisis is that it challenges the world — about the world being owned by few. Maybe we’ll get it all out there for a healthy dialogue and movement for economic justice, for work democracy for all people, for peace and harmony. What’s the real problem here at home? It’s obviously not political democracy. Is it the free market enterprise economic system? Or, is it those at the levers? It’s people who distort systems — when they lose their sense of ethics and morality. Two economic systems can start from two different premises (for example state-ownership or private ownership) and end up in the same place through human distortion of their theoretical principles. Take the former Soviet Union. The centrally planned, state-owned economy crumbled, under the weight of big government. As we look into the future, what’s the trade here? What kind of economic system have we morphed into when byzantine banks are bailed out, propped up, now partially owned by us? Are we growing a byzantine government bureaucracy that may crowd out private enterprise? What then of progress and freedom, our ability to shape our destiny? Well-being and self-esteem come with self-reliance, a sense of ownership and participation. It’s naturally human to be motivated when we have independence, fulfillment and a sense that we are advancing, have an opportunity to make not only a living wage, but a little more to treat ourselves and our families. It makes for a healthier, happier, society all in all. There are think tanks, consulting firms, eager Americans, already working, ready and able to help, to construct an economy that aspires to benefit all. It takes leadership and will. Concentration of wealth and power is a symptom of crony capitalism. Did we play by the rules of capitalism? There’s accountability already embedded in our economic system. Manage well, you succeed. Manage poorly, you fail. What happened to the notion of a level playing field allowing many to compete? What did we do? The proper role of government in a free-enterprise system is to police market participants at arm’s length, not join their ranks and choose winners and losers. That’s a line we crossed a long time ago… Think Bear Stearns, AIG, Lehman, Countrywide, to name a few, all the way back to the Fed-orchestrated bank bailout of Long-Term Capital Management in 1998. Without Washington enablers dismantling the boundaries and paving the road, the bankers would have been bridled, hemmed in (if they couldn’t regulate themselves in the first place). After all, the dismantling of Glass-Steagall unleashed the building of the “Too Big To Fails.” Will history look upon them as dinosaurs? Bigness, of course, brings wealth and power, and with power, more wealth for more power. No surprise, then, the income inequality and the rise of what some call a “plutocracy.” A former World War II French Resistance fighter, Stephane Hessel, has written a book titled Time For Outrage . Millions of copies sold worldwide. Hessel has this to say: “If you want to be a real human being — a real woman, a real man — you cannot tolerate things which put you to indignation, to outrage,” he says. “You must stand up. I always say to people, ‘Look around; look at what makes you unhappy, what makes you furious, and then engage yourself in some action.” Otherwise? Ask Greece.

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If EU Bans Ratings Agencies From Evaluating Bailout Countries, Who Will Investors Turn To For Terrible Advice?

October 20, 2011

The Wall Street Journal reports today that the EU is “leaning toward proposing a ban on the issuing of sovereign credit ratings for countries in bailout talks.” The EU’s internal market commissioner, Michel Barnier, says that he thinks “it’s legitimate to have a special treatment when a country is in negotiation or is covered by an international solidarity program with the IMF,” and, indeed, new IMF chief Christine Lagarde has signaled that she believes it’s appropriate for the EU to “prevent ratings for bailout countries.” As the EU has been “tightening rules on rating agencies progressively since the financial crisis,” according to the Journal , with a new set of proposals on the matter scheduled to be made in early November, odds are decent that this will emerge as the consensus view. However, there are dissenting opinions, and, as Reuters’ Ryan McCarthy points out, they are “hilarious” : “If ratings are banned, it will make it difficult for investors to assess the risk when a country returns to the bond market.” That’s from economist Marchel Alexandrovich, and if you want to know why he should consider taking that act on the road, let’s flash back to this piece from Shahien Nasiripour from September of 2009 — one year after the global financial crisis: Analysts at the three biggest credit rating agencies who gave positive, investment-grade ratings to AIG and Lehman Brothers up until their collapse have not been fired or disciplined, the heads of the agencies admitted at a Congressional hearing today. Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s, and Fitch Ratings all maintained at least A ratings on AIG and Lehman Brothers up until mid-September of last year . Lehman Brothers declared bankruptcy Sept. 15; the federal government provided AIG with its first of four multibillion-dollar bailouts the next day. At the hearing today, the exchange between [Representative Jackie] Speier and the agency chiefs was particularly contentious. “You had rated AIG and Lehman Brothers as AAA, AA minutes before they were collapsing. After they did fail, did you take any action against those analysts who had rated them?” Speier asked. “Did you fire them? Did you suspend them? Did you take any actions against those who had put that kind of a remarkable grade on products that were junk?” McDaniel answered first. “No, we did not fire any of the analysts involved in either AIG or Lehman,” he replied. “LOL,” is what I believe the Internet would tend to say to all of this. The Wall Street Journal reports, “There was no immediate comment from Fitch, S&P or Moody’s.” Yeah, I wouldn’t think so! [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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If EU Bans Ratings Agencies From Evaluating Bailout Countries, Who Will Investors Turn To For Terrible Advice?

October 20, 2011

The Wall Street Journal reports today that the EU is “leaning toward proposing a ban on the issuing of sovereign credit ratings for countries in bailout talks.” The EU’s internal market commissioner, Michel Barnier, says that he thinks “it’s legitimate to have a special treatment when a country is in negotiation or is covered by an international solidarity program with the IMF,” and, indeed, new IMF chief Christine Lagarde has signaled that she believes it’s appropriate for the EU to “prevent ratings for bailout countries.” As the EU has been “tightening rules on rating agencies progressively since the financial crisis,” according to the Journal , with a new set of proposals on the matter scheduled to be made in early November, odds are decent that this will emerge as the consensus view. However, there are dissenting opinions, and, as Reuters’ Ryan McCarthy points out, they are “hilarious” : “If ratings are banned, it will make it difficult for investors to assess the risk when a country returns to the bond market.” That’s from economist Marchel Alexandrovich, and if you want to know why he should consider taking that act on the road, let’s flash back to this piece from Shahien Nasiripour from September of 2009 — one year after the global financial crisis: Analysts at the three biggest credit rating agencies who gave positive, investment-grade ratings to AIG and Lehman Brothers up until their collapse have not been fired or disciplined, the heads of the agencies admitted at a Congressional hearing today. Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s, and Fitch Ratings all maintained at least A ratings on AIG and Lehman Brothers up until mid-September of last year . Lehman Brothers declared bankruptcy Sept. 15; the federal government provided AIG with its first of four multibillion-dollar bailouts the next day. At the hearing today, the exchange between [Representative Jackie] Speier and the agency chiefs was particularly contentious. “You had rated AIG and Lehman Brothers as AAA, AA minutes before they were collapsing. After they did fail, did you take any action against those analysts who had rated them?” Speier asked. “Did you fire them? Did you suspend them? Did you take any actions against those who had put that kind of a remarkable grade on products that were junk?” McDaniel answered first. “No, we did not fire any of the analysts involved in either AIG or Lehman,” he replied. “LOL,” is what I believe the Internet would tend to say to all of this. The Wall Street Journal reports, “There was no immediate comment from Fitch, S&P or Moody’s.” Yeah, I wouldn’t think so! [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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Jim Wallis: The "Un-Economy"

October 20, 2011

In an international meeting last week with economists, business executives, non-profit organizational leaders, and theologians, my colleague Stewart Wallis of the New Economics Institute succinctly summed up the problems of the current global economy: it’s unfair , unsustainable , unstable , and is making many people unhappy . These issues of the “un-economy” were at the heart of our discussions at the World Economic Forum, and the Occupy Wall Street encampment I just visited in New York City. Unfair. Since the Occupy Wall Street movement began, the talk about inequality has been greater than I can remember it being for a very long time. This has been the elephant in the room in our discussions about the economy that nobody wanted to say out loud. In the last hundred years, there have been two peak periods of great inequality in American society–just before the Great Depression, and in 2008, right before our current Great Recession. And in the mysterious and secret global transactions between investment bankers and hedge fund traders, the profits continue to grow. From 1973 to 1985, the financial sector peaked at 16 percent of domestic corporate profits. In the 1990s it reached postwar period highs by going between 21 and 30 percent. But this decade it hit 41 percent. These profits weren’t from products, and weren’t always from finding the best use for capital, but from money making more money for a new class of super rich financial traders. And now, when their risk taking, greed, and selfishness created a mess for so many others, we bailed them out and left everyone else to suffer in the economic wilderness of unemployment, home foreclosures, pension losses, deep middle class insecurity, and shamefully, rising poverty rates. Opportunity is a lost hope for many, as social mobility in America is now less than in Western Europe. And if you search the scriptures, you’ll find that God not only cares about poverty, but especially, unfairness and inequality. That’s what the young people at Wall Street are angry about. Unsustainable. If everybody had a Ferrari, the planet could not survive. And the earth groans as the ethics, or non-ethics, of endless growth are measured only by corporate shareholders in quarterly profit and loss statements. “Short-termism” was a term I heard over and over in the broad conversations about values at the World Economic Forum. A global economy based on dirty energy and creating unjust regimes, angry populations, endless terrorism and war, and dangerously warming the planet (apologies to those presidential candidates who have disavowed science) is clearly unsustainable. Add to that an advertising industry that systematically, psychologically, and even spiritually turns “wants” into “needs,” is a formula for human and ecological disaster. It’s time to move from a narrowly defined shareholder economy to a stakeholder economy that includes workers, consumers, the environment , and future generations  – all in our economic calculations and decision-making. Unstable. Another conversation that is taking place alongside the values discussion, both at the World Economic Forum and at Occupy Wall Street, is about the dangerous and growing conflicts over the resources of food, water, land, and energy. Conflicts, both present and future, will not be over ideology alone, but over survival in the face of resource scarcity or resource mal-distribution. Contrast that to the two principles of God’s economy: There is enough, if we share it. Much of the most hopeful talk at the Occupy movement sites is about new economic approaches based on local, cooperative, and sustainable models of market activity. My god-daughter, Korla Masters, is engaged in the mushrooming urban gardening movement in my home town of Detroit, and she tells me that if only half the vacant land in the city were cultivated, it could provide up to three quarters of the need for vegetables and fruits in the Motor City–imagine non-petroleum based food economies with little transport involved. Unhappy. Being rich doesn’t make you happy. Of course, happiness and well-being are connected to a modicum of economic security that we all need. But “enough is enough” is proven to be a better guide to a happy life than the maxim “greed is good.” The logic and metrics on a manic consumer economy is that you are never supposed to be satisfied with what you have, but that you always demand more .  That endless striving and never ending desire is not making people happy, but rather is highly pressured into a lifestyle of constant stress. In Detroit, we are seeing the burgeoning urban gardens producing several things: jobs, good and clean food, and a sense of community–all of which are ingredients for a happy life. So here’s our mission . 1. Don’t expect the Occupy Wall Street movement and sites across the nation and world to produce a set of demands. They are instead raising some fundamental questions about the un-economy, and creating the space for a new cultural and political conversation about it. It’s our job now to push that conversation forward — an especially good role for the faith community as our biblical values and theological assertions are integrally involved in these matters. It’s time to put our faith values forward in the midst of what could become a new global conversation about what a fair, sustainable, stable, and happy economy might look like. 2. Don’t worry about endorsing the Occupy Wall Street movement (all the diverse elements involved wouldn’t even endorse each other!), but rather engage it. I asked a young African American man I met at Occupy Wall Street what churches could do to help. He suggested three things: inspiration, consultation, and presence. I think that’s a very good guide. Worship services are already being held at many of the sites led by local clergy of many faiths. Take a potluck meal down to the site as a chance to sit, eat, and talk with the people there. Take your youth group, or members of your congregation down there after church just to see, meet, and listen. Offer the occupiers support–material and spiritual–along with prayer and love. Jim Wallis is the author of Rediscovering Values: On Wall Street, Main Street, and Your Street — A Moral Compass for the New Economy , and CEO of Sojourners . He blogs at www.godspolitics.com . Follow Jim on Twitter @JimWallis .

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Death row dog missing from Oregon pet hotel

October 20, 2011

Death row dog missing from Oregon pet hotel

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