oregon

Huffington Post…

— Geothermal energy developers plan to pump 24 million gallons of water into the side of a dormant volcano in Central Oregon this summer to demonstrate new technology they hope will give a boost to a green energy sector that has yet to live up to its promise. They hope the water comes back to the surface fast enough and hot enough to create cheap, clean electricity that isn’t dependent on sunny skies or stiff breezes – without shaking the earth and rattling the nerves of nearby residents. Renewable energy has been held back by cheap natural gas, weak demand for power and waning political concern over global warming. Efforts to use the earth’s heat to generate power, known as geothermal energy, have been further hampered by technical problems and worries that tapping it can cause earthquakes. Even so, the federal government, Google and other investors are interested enough to bet $43 million on the Oregon project. They are helping AltaRock Energy, Inc. of Seattle and Davenport Newberry Holdings LLC of Stamford, Conn., demonstrate whether the next level in geothermal power development can work on the flanks of Newberrry Volcano, located about 20 miles south of Bend, Ore. “We know the heat is there,” said Susan Petty, president of AltaRock. “The big issue is can we circulate enough water through the system to make it economic.” The heat in the earth’s crust has been used to generate power for more than a century. Engineers gather hot water or steam that bubbles near the surface and use it to spin a turbine that creates electricity. Most of those areas have been exploited. The new frontier is places with hot rocks, but no cracks in the rocks or water to deliver the steam. To tap that heat – and grow geothermal energy from a tiny niche into an important source of green energy – engineers are working on a new technology called Enhanced Geothermal Systems. “To build geothermal in a big way beyond where it is now requires new technology, and that is where EGS comes in,” said Steve Hickman, a research geophysicist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park, Calif. Wells are drilled deep into the rock and water is pumped in, creating tiny fractures in the rock, a process known as hydroshearing. Cold water is pumped down production wells into the reservoir, and the steam is drawn out. Hydroshearing is similar to the process known as hydraulic fracturing, used to free natural gas from shale formations. But fracking uses chemical-laden fluids, and creates huge fractures. Pumping fracking wastewater deep underground for disposal likely led to recent earthquakes in Arkansas and Ohio. Fears persist that cracking rock deep underground through hydroshearing can also lead to damaging quakes. EGS has other problems. It is hard to create a reservoir big enough to run a commercial power plant. Progress has been slow. Two small plants are online in France and Germany. A third in downtown Basel, Switzerland, was shut down over earthquake complaints. A project in Australia has had drilling problems. A new international protocol is coming out at the end of this month that urges EGS developers to keep projects out of urban areas, the so-called “sanity test,” said Ernie Majer, a seismologist with the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. It also urges developers to be upfront with local residents so they know exactly what is going on. AltaRock hopes to demonstrate a new technology for creating bigger reservoirs that is based on the plastic polymers used to make biodegradable cups. It worked in existing geothermal fields. Newberry will show if it works in a brand new EGS field, and in a different kind of geology, volcanic rock, said Colin Williams, a USGS geophysicist also in Menlo Park. The U.S. Department of Energy has given the project $21.5 million in stimulus funds. That has been matched by private investors, among them Google with $6.3 million. Majer said the danger of a major quake at Newbery is very low. The area is a kind of seismic dead zone, with no significant faults. It is far enough from population centers to make property damage unlikely. And the layers of volcanic ash built up over millennia dampen any shaking. But the Department of Energy will be keeping a close eye on the project, and any significant quakes would shut it down at least temporarily, he said. The agency is also monitoring EGS projects at existing geothermal fields in California, Nevada and Idaho. “That’s the $64,000 question,” Majer said. “What’s the biggest earthquake we can have from induced seismicity that the public can worry about.” Geologists believe Newberry Volcano was once one of the tallest peaks in the Cascades, reaching an elevation of 10,000 feet and a diameter of 20 miles. It blew its top before the last Ice Age, leaving a caldera studded with towering lava flows, two lakes, and 400 cinder cones, some 400 feet tall. Although the volcano has not erupted in 1,300 years, hot rocks close to the surface drew exploratory wells in the 1980s. Over 21 days, AltaRock will pour 800 gallons of water per minute into the 10,600-foot test well, already drilled, for a total of 24 million gallons. According to plan, the cold water cracks the rock. The tiny plastic particles pumped down the well seal off the cracks. Then more cold water goes in, bypassing the first tier, and cracking the rock deeper in the well. That tier is sealed off, and cold water cracks a third section. Later, the plastic melts away. Seismic sensors produce detailed maps of the fracturing, expected to produce a reservoir of cracks starting about 6,000 feet below the surface, and extending to 11,000 feet. It would be about 3,300 feet in diameter. The U.S. Bureau of Land Management released an environmental assessment of the Newberry project last month that does not foresee any problems that would stop it. The agency is taking public comments before making a final decision in coming months. No power plant is proposed, but one could be operating in about 10 years, said Doug Perry, president and CEO of Davenport Newberry. EGS is attractive because it vastly expands the potential for geothermal power, which, unlike wind and solar, produces power around the clock in any weather. Natural geothermal resources account for about 0.3 percent of U.S. electricity production, but a 2007 Massachusetts Institute of Technology report projected EGS could bump that to 10 percent within 50 years, at prices competitive with fossil-fuels. Few people expect that kind of timetable now. Electricity prices have fallen sharply because of low natural gas prices and weak demand brought about by the Great Recession and state efficiency programs. But the resource is vast. A 2008 USGS assessment found EGS throughout the West, where hot rocks are closer to the surface than in the East, has the potential to produce half the country’s electricity. “The important question we need to answer now,” said Williams, the USGS geophysicist who compiled the assessment, “is how geothermal fits into the renewable energy picture, and how EGS fits. How much it is going to cost, and how much is available.”

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Some Renewable Energy Advocates Place High Hopes On A Volcano

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Huffington Post…

It’s not a good week to be a grocery store. First, a Safeway in Honolulu got raked over the coals for arresting a pregnant woman who ate a sandwich while shopping and forgot to pay for it. Now, a woman in Portland says two grocery stores balked when she tried to buy groceries using coins.

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Portland Store Refuses To Let Woman Pay With Quarters (VIDEO)

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Brazil Earns Credit Upgrade Due To Sound Policies

June 20, 2011

RIO DE JANEIRO (Stuart Grudgings) – Moody’s Investors Service upgraded Brazil’s sovereign credit rating on Monday, giving a vote of confidence to the government’s efforts to prevent Latin America’s largest economy from overheating. Moody’s lifted Brazil a notch further into investment grade status to “Baa2″ and retained its positive outlook, underlining the resilience of its economy compared to some European countries that are suffering debt crises and downgrades. The agency said it awarded the upgrade because Brazil’s policies had successfully dampened overheating pressures that threatened to derail the economy after torrid growth of 7.5 percent last year. It also said the South American nation was less vulnerable to credit risks than many others because of its solid banking system. The authorities were acting to defuse an overheated economy through a combination of fiscal and monetary measures, Moody’s said. But with the pressure on politicians to spend, some analysts questioned Moody’s decision despite promises by President Dilma Rousseff to curtail spending. Kathryn Rooney Vera, senior emerging markets strategist at Bulltick Capital Markets, said Moody’s move was a “bit premature,” given Rousseff’s relatively timid cuts to spending. There have been calls for the government to make bolder cuts to the bureaucracy and public employee benefits. Brazil’s central bank has raised interest rates four times this year to 12.25 percent and taken other steps to curb strong credit growth. Rousseff has also pledged budget cuts of more than $30 billion to curb public spending last year that contributed to 6.55 percent inflation. Monthly fiscal numbers have shown improvement this year. On Moody’s ratings, Brazil is now one notch above India and Ireland. In another sign of improving economic stability in Latin America, Moody’s awarded Colombia its second investment-grade rating in two months in May. Moody’s move follows an upgrade for Brazil by ratings firm Fitch and Standard and Poor’s decision to raise its outlook to positive on its “BBB-” rating, the lowest rung in investment grade territory. “I think investors realize that in terms of returns and in terms of GDP ratios and fiscal balances, many emerging market countries are doing better than the developed world,” said Clyde Wardle, emerging markets FX strategist with HSBC in New York. “There is a lot to continue supporting Brazil.” Alexandre Tombini, Brazil’s central bank chief, said Moody’s decision was a recognition of the “effectiveness of the current economic policy in keeping and consolidating stability.” Brazil’s real reversed losses after Moody’s announcement to rise 0.3 percent to 1.591 reais to the dollar. CREDIT RISKS SEEN LOW Mauro Leos, Moody’s Brazil analyst, said the agency had maintained its positive rating because there was scope for more improvement in the fiscal accounts in the coming year. “There is still a lot that needs to be done on the Brazil fiscal side. We would like to see … the fiscal results to be better during booming times,” he said. “If that were to be the case, that would allow Brazil eventually to go higher in the Baa category and possibly into an A rating down the road.” Brazil first won investment grade status in 2008 after years of solid growth and fiscal discipline, banishing its reputation as a crisis-prone basket case. Moody’s said the Brazilian banking system appeared resilient enough to weather any potential credit shocks. Concerns about a credit bust in Brazil have grown as consumers have gone on a debt-fueled spending spree in recent years and are now facing sharply higher interest rates. Banks’ high capital ratios provide “a sturdy first-line-of-defense against any such event,” Moody’s said. (Additional reporting by Jeb Blount in Rio and Alexandra Alper in New York; writing by Stuart Grudgings; Editing by Todd Benson and Kenneth Barry) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Tang Sales Double In 4 Years

June 20, 2011

Tang sales have almost doubled in the past four years . The powdered drink now grosses about $1 billion annually. Despite Tang’s association with astronauts , much of the brand’s recent success can be attributed to placing the drink in emerging markets such as Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, the Philippines and the Middle East. In order to stay relevant in these markets, Tang has expanded beyond its well-known orange flavor and now comes in much more exotic flavors such as tamarind, soursop, horchata, ponkan (a citrus fruit) and lemon pepper. Last year, Tang sold the equivalent of 20 billion drink servings . But, to put that in perspective, Coke sells that much in under a month.

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Student Housing Gains Respect » Commercial Real Estate » FeedRE

May 31, 2011

The 28-year commercial real estate broker specializes in the sale and joint venture of retail, office and ground up development in Southern California. Algermissen… Investors Jump Back Into Rebounding Hotel Market …

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Google To Invest $100 Million In World’s Largest Wind Farm

April 18, 2011

NEW YORK – Google Inc said on Monday it and two Japanese partners will pay General Electric Co about $500 million for a majority equity stake in the world’s largest wind farm, under construction in Oregon. The $2 billion Shepherds Flat project, near Arlington, Oregon, is due to be completed next year. It will stretch over 30 square miles of north-central Oregon and generate enough energy for 235,000 U.S. homes. The site’s developer is Caithness Energy. Measured by its 845-megawatts of capacity, the site is the world’s largest wind farm, Google and GE said. GE said the collaboration was part of its strategy of drawing private investment to the U.S. wind market. GE and Google are partnering with the U.S. unit of Japan’s Sumitomo Corp and a unit of Itochu Corp. Google, Itochu and Sumitomo will together own 56 percent of the total project, reducing GE’s equity stake to 34 percent. Caithness will own the balance, GE Energy Financial Services spokesman Andy Katell said. The site will eventually use GE 338 turbines and will provide electricity to Southern California Edison, a unit of Edison International. Google said its investment totaled about $100 million. Sumitomo jointly owns a Texas wind farm with GE and owns wind farms in Japan and China. Itochu partnered with GE on an Oklahoma wind farm. Google has invested more than $350 million in the clean energy sector. Earlier this month, it invested in a solar project near Berlin. (Reporting by Nick Zieminski, editing by Bernard Orr) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Latest on Freddie Mac Apartment Loans — Loan Modification Self Help

April 15, 2011

HFO Partner Greg Frick talks with Oregon Law Group Partner Joel Kaplan about Freddie Mac Apartment Loans . http://www.youtube.com/v/rFSCrQk-8-s?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata Related posts:Latest on Freddie Mac Apartment Loans News Update: …

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Behind Facebook’s Big Freebie

April 9, 2011

This week, Facebook did something that would be unthinkable for most tech companies: it created a product cheaper, more efficient and more environmentally sound than the industry standard, then provided explicit instructions detailing exactly how to build it. Under an initiative dubbed the Open Compute Project , Facebook released designs for the technology powering its new data center in Prineville, Ore., which Facebook says is 38 percent more efficient and 24 percent cheaper to run thanks to its custom engineering. Facebook framed the effort as a means of encouraging collaboration in the tech industry, advancing “best practices” in the construction of data centers and upholding its commitment to openness. But the PR-speak belies a high-stakes bet placed by the world’s largest social network that could have far reaching implications for its balance sheet and those of its competitors. To most of the social networking site’s 500 million-plus users, Facebook is entirely virtual — an intangible but interactive screen of likes, pokes, chats and status updates that exists only in the ether. Though Facebook produces neither sneakers nor iPods nor any other physical good, the company owns a factory in the form of its Prineville data center. The racks of servers in central Oregon not only power the online experience that keeps users coming back for more, they also manufacture Facebook’s key moneymaker: its advertising. Now, Facebook is giving away the blueprints for that factory, in what appears to be a gamble that the move will help it leverage the expertise of thousands of engineers worldwide to further refine its data center technology, lower the cost of powering its site and, in so doing, squeeze extra dollars out of its ads. Because the cost of creating and serving up a Facebook ad has little direct correlation with the ad’s price, any savings in the expense required to deliver that content, via more efficient data centers and servers, translates directly into extra profit for the company. Even the slightest improvements to its factory can translate into more dollars for Facebook. Google, which has carefully safeguarded the secrets to its hyper-efficient data center, has an army of engineers it can task with improving its servers. On the other hand, Facebook, which is growing but still small — with several thousand employees to Google’s more than 20,000 staffers — has far more limited means. By opening up its data center designs, Facebook is now able to solicit suggestions from thousands of experts worldwide and potentially tweak its technology quickly with fewer people. “When they make this know-how available publicly, Facebook can effectively crowdsource its expertise because it leverages a much larger community than they have available to them internally,” said Stephen O’Grady, principal analyst at Redmonk . “As smart as the Facebook community is, they’re not necessarily going to be as smart as the whole rest of the industry, which now has access to this technology.” Sharing its blueprints may gain Facebook not only free manpower, but cheaper equipment. The company’s bet, analysts say, is that giving away intellectual property will help it foster an ecosystem of competing vendors that will drive down the cost of parts. “They’re hoping to catalyze a competitive vendor ecosystem so that they can put things out and get competitive bids for the servers that they need,” said Forrester analyst Rich Fichera. “In order to do so, they have to open [the technology] up enough that it is of interest to others besides themselves.” There are also less tangible benefits to opening up the company’s technological know-how, such as currying goodwill among the tech community, which looks favorably on information sharing. Experts note that the Open Compute Project, by lowering barriers to entry, could potentially provide a boost to future Internet startups looking for a way to save money on data center costs. Though Facebook runs the risk their IP freebie fails to reap the financial rewards it may hope to see, by disseminating the designs in the first place, the company is sending a strong signal on what it sees as its own competitive advantage: software, brand and users, but not hardware. “[The Open Compute Project] really is a big deal because it constitutes a general shift in terms of what how we look at technology as a competitive advantage,” O’Grady said. “For Facebook, the evidence is piling up that they don’t consider technology to be a competitive advantage. They view their competitive advantage in the marketplace to be their users.”

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Missouri Unemployment Benefits Extension To Be Dropped

March 31, 2011

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — Thousands of people in Missouri who have been unemployed for more than a year soon will lose their jobless benefits, marking a significant victory for Republican fiscal hawks who are crusading against government spending. When eligibility ends Saturday, Missouri will become the only state to voluntarily quit a federal stimulus program that offers extended benefits. Michigan, Arkansas and Florida also recently took steps to cut back on money going to the unemployed, although they targeted state benefits instead. “We have to take a stand and say, `When is enough enough?’ and send a message to the federal government, and hopefully shame them into doing the right thing and quit spending money that they don’t have,” said state Sen. Jim Lembke, a Republican from St. Louis. Lembke has led a coalition of four filibustering senators who have blocked legislation necessary to reauthorize Missouri’s participation in a federal program offering long-term unemployment benefits. It’s been a stunning setback for a bill that had passed the Republican-led House 123-14 two months ago and had the support of GOP Senate leaders and Democratic Gov. Jay Nixon. As a result, more than 34,000 unemployed residents in Missouri could miss out on $105 million in benefits over the next nine months. Unlike some other stimulus programs, Missouri’s unclaimed money would not be redistributed by the federal government to other states. It simply would remain unspent. At issue is a provision in the 2009 federal stimulus act that allowed residents in states with high unemployment rates to receive up to 20 additional weeks of federally funded jobless benefits after exhausting the 79 weeks authorized under other federal laws. At least three dozen states, including Missouri, enacted laws to participate. Although their unemployment rates were high enough to qualify, seven other states – Arkansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Montana, Oklahoma and Utah – never passed laws to join in, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. Maryland is now pursuing participation, but many of the other states seem content to remain out of the program. Much like his Missouri counterparts, Utah Senate President Michael Waddoups said the states need to set an example of self-sufficiency. “Somebody has to start pulling back from the federal government somewhere,” said Waddoups, a Republican from Taylorsville. That federal backlash is particularly strong in Missouri, where voters were the first in the nation to pass a measure challenging the new federal health care mandate and where Republican senators also are holding up federal stimulus money for education. Missouri’s unemployment rate has remained above 9 percent for nearly two years. Yet it is poised to become the first state to take the additional federal unemployment money, then later voluntarily stop doing so, according to officials at the federal Labor Department and the National Employment Law Project, a New York-based advocacy group for employment rights that has been urging Missouri to remain in the program. Several other states could have been in the same situation. But the governors of Massachusetts, Michigan and Oregon all signed laws within the past week continuing participation. Michigan’s action came with catch, also cutting state jobless benefits from 26 to 20 weeks starting in 2012. The Florida House has passed a similar state benefits reduction. Arkansas’ legislature this week gave final approval to a bill shaving off one week of eligibility for state jobless benefits. In Missouri, about 10,000 people would immediately be cut off from additional jobless payments, according to the state department of labor. And extended unemployment benefits would be denied to about 24,000 additional residents who otherwise are projected to become eligible. St. Louis resident Peter Gordon, who has been unemployed for a little over a year, is among those who could miss out. A former patient care coordinator at a hearing aid company, Gordon has been searching for jobs over the Internet but said he can’t travel far because he can’t afford to license his car. He fears he could eventually be evicted from his apartment. “They can provide money for government programs to take care of the elite and rich,” Gordon said. “But when it comes to a small person like me – people who are just trying to make ends meet – it seems like the rights are being taken away.” Kimberly Clark, a laid off union organizer, says her post-tax unemployment benefit of $275 a week already is consumed by her rent, utility and phone bills. She’s been searching for work since November 2009, and she’s only a couple of months away from needing the extended benefits that Missouri is poised to reject. “The mentality is we’re just creating a bunch of lazy people, and that is not true,” said Clark, 48 of St. Louis. The National Employment Law Project says its supporters sent 15,000 emails in a roughly 24-hour period from Tuesday to Wednesday urging Missouri senators to allow a vote on the legislation reauthorizing the extended jobless benefits. But Sen. Brian Nieves, a Republican from Washington, Mo., who is popular among tea party activists, said he has no intention of compromising his position. “The people have been crystal clear for about the last two years in saying that they expect us to at least start the process of weaning ourselves off of the federal government,” Nieves said. ___ Associated Press writers Wes Duplantier in Jefferson City, Josh Loftin in Salt Lake City, Brian Witte in Annapolis, Md., Sean Murphy in Oklahoma City, Emily Wagster Pettus in Jackson, Miss., Nomaan Merchant in Little Rock, Ark., Melinda Deslatte in Baton Rouge, La., and Matt Gouras in Helena, Mont., contributed to this report.

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American Assets Trust Pays $129M for First & Main Bldg

March 21, 2011

American Assets Trust, Inc. (NYSE: ATT) has completed the acquisition of First & Main, a newly constructed, 364,735-square-foot, 16-story, LEED Platinum certified office building located in downtown Portland, Oregon at 100 SW Main Street. The purchase price was approximately $129.4 million, or almost $355 per square foot, which was paid for with the proceeds from the company’s initial public offering. This property commanded the highest price…

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Ellen Brown: How Wisconsin Can Turn Austerity Into Prosperity: Own a Bank

March 7, 2011

Public sector man sitting in a bar: “They’re trying to take away our pensions.” Private sector man: “What’s a pension?” – Cartoon in the Houston Chronicle As states struggle to meet their budgets, public pensions are on the chopping block, but they needn’t be. States can keep their pension funds intact while leveraging them into many times their worth in loans, just as Wall Street banks do. They can do this by forming their own public banks, following the lead of North Dakota — a state that currently has a budget surplus. Public workers are not going quietly into that good night of state budgets balanced at the expense of union benefits. After three weeks of protests in Wisconsin, convictions remain strong and pressure is building. Fourteen Wisconsin Democratic lawmakers said Friday that they are not deterred by threats of possible arrest and of 1,500 layoffs if they don’t return to work. President Obama has charged Wisconsin’s Governor Scott Walker with attempting to bust the unions. But Walker’s defense is: “We’re broke. Like nearly every state across the country, we don’t have any more money.” Among other concessions, Governor Walker wants to require public employees to pay a portion of the cost of their own pensions. Bemoaning a budget deficit of $3.6 billion , he says the state is too broke to afford all these benefits. Broke Unless You Count the $67 Billion Pension Fund . . . That’s what he says, but according to Wisconsin’s 2010 CAFR (Comprehensive Annual Financial Report), the state has $67 billion in pension and other employee benefit trust funds, invested mainly in stocks and debt securities drawing a modest return. A recent study by the PEW Center for the States showed that Wisconsin’s pension fund is almost fully funded, meaning it can meet its commitments for years to come without drawing on outside sources. It requires a contribution of only $645 million annually to meet pension payouts. Zach Carter, writing in the Huffington Post, notes that the pension program could save another $195 million annually just by cutting out its Wall Street investment managers and managing the funds in-house. The governor is evidently eying the state’s lucrative pension fund, not because the state cannot afford the pension program, but as a source of revenue for programs that are not fully funded. This tactic, however, is not going down well with state employees. Fortunately, there is another alternative. Wisconsin could draw down the fund by the small amount needed to meet pension obligations, and put the bulk of the money to work creating jobs, helping local businesses, and increasing tax revenues for the state. It could do this by forming its own bank, following the lead of North Dakota, the only state to have its own bank — and the only state to escape the credit crisis. This could be done without spending the pension fund money or lending it. The funds would just be shifted from one form of investment to another (equity in a bank). When a bank makes a loan, neither the bank’s own capital nor its customers’ demand deposits are actually lent to borrowers. As observed on the Dallas Federal Reserve’s website , “Banks actually create money when they lend it.” They simply extend accounting-entry bank credit, which is extinguished when the loan is repaid. Creating this sort of credit-money is a privilege available only to banks, but states can tap into that privilege by owning a bank. How North Dakota Escaped the Credit Crunch Ironically, the only state to have one of these socialist-sounding credit machines is a conservative Republican state. The state-owned Bank of North Dakota (BND) has allowed North Dakota to maintain its economic sovereignty, a conservative states-rights sort of ideal. The BND was established in 1919 in response to a wave of farm foreclosures at the hands of out-of-state Wall Street banks. Today the state not only has no debt, but it recently boasted its largest-ever budget surplus . The BND helps to fund not only local government but local businesses and local banks, by partnering with the banks to provide the funds to support small business lending. The BND is also a boon to the state treasury. It has a return on equity of 25-26% , and it has contributed over $300 million to the state (its only shareholder) in the past decade. This is a notable achievement for a state with a population less than one-tenth the size of Los Angeles County. In comparison, California’s public pension funds are down more than $100 billion — that’s billion with a “b” – or a third of the funds’ holdings, following the Wall Street debacle of 2008. It was, in fact, the 2008 bank collapse, not overpaid public employees, that caused the crisis that shrank state revenues and prompted the budget cuts in the first place. Seven States Are Now Considering Setting Up Public Banks Faced with federal inaction and growing local budget crises, an increasing number of states are exploring the possibility of setting up their own state-owned banks, following the North Dakota model. On January 11, 2011, a bill to establish a state-owned bank was introduced in the Oregon State legislature ; on January 13, a similar bill was introduced in Washington State ; on January 20, a bill for a state bank was filed in Massachusetts (following a 2010 bill that had lapsed); and on February 4, a bill was introduced in the Maryland legislature for a feasibility study looking into the possibilities. They join Illinois , Virginia , and Hawaii , which introduced similar bills in 2010, bringing the total number of states with such bills to seven. If Governor Walker wanted to explore this possibility for his state, he could drop in on the Center for State Innovation (CSI), which is located down the street in his capitol city of Madison, Wisconsin. The CSI has done detailed cost/benefit analyses of the Oregon and Washington state bank initiatives, which show substantial projected benefits based on the BND precedent. See reports here and here . For Washington State, with an economy not much larger than Wisconsin’s, the CSI report estimates that after an initial startup period, establishing a state-owned bank would create new or retained jobs of between 7,400 and 10,700 a year at small businesses alone, while at the same time returning a profit to the state. A Bank of Wisconsin Could Generate “Bank Credit” Many Times the Size of the Budget Deficit Economists looking at the CSI reports have called their conclusions conservative. The CSI made its projections without relying on state pension funds for bank capital, although it acknowledged that this could be a potential source of capitalization. If the Bank of Wisconsin were to use state pension funds, it could have a capitalization of more than $57 billion – nearly as large as that of Goldman Sachs . At an 8% capital requirement, $8 in capital can support $100 in loans, or a potential lending capacity of over $500 billion. The bank would need deposits to clear the checks, but the credit-generating potential could still be huge. Banks can create all the bank credit they want, limited only by (a) the availability of creditworthy borrowers, (b) the lending limits imposed by bank capital requirements, and (c) the availability of “liquidity” to clear outgoing checks. Liquidity can be acquired either from the deposits of the bank’s own customers or by borrowing from other banks or the money market. If borrowed, the cost of funds is a factor; but at today’s very low Fed funds rate of 0.2%, that cost is minimal. Again, however, only banks can tap into these very low rates. States are reduced to borrowing at about 5% — unless they own their own banks; or, better yet, unless they are banks. The BND is set up as “North Dakota doing business as the Bank of North Dakota.” That means that technically, all of North Dakota’s assets are the assets of the bank. The BND also has its deposit needs covered. It has a massive, captive deposit base, since all of the state’s revenues are deposited in the bank by law. The bank also takes other deposits, but the bulk of its deposits are government funds. The BND is careful not to compete with local banks for consumer deposits, which account for less than 2% of the total. The BND reports that it has deposits of $2.7 billion and outstanding loans of $2.6 billion. With a population of 647,000, that works out to about $4,000 per capita in deposits, backing roughly the same amount in loans. Wisconsin has a population that is nine times the size of North Dakota’s. Other factors being equal, Wisconsin might be able to amass over $24 billion in deposits and generate an equivalent sum in loans – over six times the deficit complained of by the state’s governor. That lending capacity could be used for many purposes, depending on the will of the legislature and state law. Possibilities include (a) partnering with local banks, on the North Dakota model, strengthening their capital bases to allow credit to flow to small businesses and homeowners, where it is sorely needed today; (b) funding infrastructure virtually interest-free (since the state would own the bank and would get back any interest paid out); and (c) refinancing state deficits nearly interest-free. Why Give Wisconsin’s Enormous Credit-generating Power Away? The budget woes of Wisconsin and other states were caused, not by overspending on employee benefits, but by a credit crisis on Wall Street. The “cure” is to get credit flowing again in the local economy, and this can be done by using state assets to capitalize state-owned banks. Against the modest cost of establishing a publicly-owned bank, state legislators need to weigh the much greater costs of the alternatives – slashing essential public services, laying off workers, raising taxes on constituents who are already over-taxed, and selling off public assets. Given the cost of continuing business as usual, states can hardly afford not to consider the public bank option. When state and local governments invest their capital in out-of-state money center banks and deposit their revenues there, they are giving their enormous credit-generating power away to Wall Street.

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‘Wal-Mart Of Weed’ Slated To Open

February 26, 2011

A retail store billing itself as “the Wal-Mart of weed” will open its doors in Sacramento tomorrow, the Sacramento Bee reports . The 10,000-square-foot weGrow outlet, advertised as a one-stop shop for legal growers seeking supplies and training, claims the honor of being the industry’s first-ever national franchise. Look for outposts of the self-proclaimed “first honest hydro store,” which started as a solo warehouse operation in Oakland last year, to sprout up in Arizona, Colorado, Oregon, and even New Jersey in the coming months. The Ganja Galleria doesn’t sell any actual pot–it just sells supplies, provides classes, and offers an on-site doctor to help customers choose their favorite strain. According to the Bee , the store’s founder chose its opening location strategically. And he has no qualms being forthcoming about its purpose: “I just thought it was a statement to have something close to the state Capitol,” said Dhar Mann, who founded the original iGrow in January 2010. “It’s a statement of how progressive the industry has become. We’re all about coming out of the shadows.” With California, 14 other states and the District of Columbia legalizing marijuana for medical use, the hydroponics industry is exploding. But, unlike weGrow, most hydroponics outlets avoid any mention of marijuana, billing themselves only as generic suppliers for people growing anything from peppers to rosemary. weGrow’s presence has led CBS news to ask an essential question : Is medical marijuana going mainstream?

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Sara Ackerman: State Banks: A New, Old Idea To Increase Growth In Your Community

February 17, 2011

Every year billions of state tax dollars are taken from their respective states and deposited into the Wall Street “Too Big To Fail” banks. These same banks use municipal deposits to give loans to out-of-state big businesses, often shifting wealth from local communities; a huge loss of potential that could be better used encouraging local businesses and creating more jobs. With increased attention to where and how municipalities deposit their operating funds due in large part to the Move Your Money project, many are beginning to wonder: why can’t that money stay local? If community banks could accept public deposits, we could keep local money in the communities where it originated. Unfortunately, community banks are often unable or unwilling to accept large public deposits due to high collateral limits, making the venture unprofitable. That is where the idea of a public state bank–or partnership bank–comes into play. The movement to create a publicly owned state bank has been on the rise this year as multiple states including Washington, Hawaii, and Oregon have already introduced bills in their respective states, with more expected to follow. The idea of a state bank is not new, but rather models after the Bank of North Dakota created in 1919 which today runs at a profit and allows for the state of North Dakota to make significant investments in agriculture, economic development, and student loans- all at no cost to the state. So what has caused a resurgence of an idea nearly one hundred years old? It is in large part due to the remarkable success experienced by North Dakota as the rest of the nation suffers through the global financial crisis. After the economic downturn sent shockwaves felt throughout the world, North Dakota ran counter-cyclical, leaving many to wonder what insulated the state from all the turmoil. While most municipal governments found record deficits, North Dakota found record surpluses and while most communities grappled with high unemployment, foreclosures, and bank failures, North Dakota remarkably survived the brunt of the attack unscathed. Undoubtedly, the fact that North Dakota’s economy which is primarily based on agriculture and oil was a major contributor, but many are also pointing to North Dakota’s state-owned bank as a major impetus to their success. The Bank of North Dakota was created by a non-partisan populist movement in 1919 after farmers were fed up with out of state bankers limiting their access to credit. Farmers, whose livelihood primarily rests on factors outside of their control, revolted against their dire situation in creating the Bank of North Dakota. While the Bank of North Dakota was not an immediate success, over time the bank would serve as a tool to increase capital for local businesses and farms. A common misconception of state banks is that they compete with private banks. This however, is not the case. While the Bank of North Dakota has the legal right to accept private deposits, in practice only 1 percent of their total deposits come from individuals and businesses (many of the current proposals will potentially go one step further and outright ban the ability for state banks to accept private deposits). Rather, a public bank mainly serves as a “bankers’ bank,” allowing a small, community bank to make larger loans by sharing the risk and buying down the interest rate or buying loans from community banks which increases lending for small businesses and agriculture. Small businesses, which account for 70 percent of the nation’s workforce, have been particularly hurt by the credit crunch. In a recent survey of small business owners in Oregon, 67 percent reported problems with accessing capital to expand and 75 percent supported the creation of a state bank. Easing community banks ability to supply loans will not only increase profits for the bank but also help small businesses grow and create jobs. Additionally, a state bank could provide additional services to banks including currency exchange, check clearing, and providing liquidity. Thus, the relationship is more akin to a partnership, encouraging and strengthening community banks and allowing them to compete against the Wall Street behemoths. The benefits of state banks however, go further than just community banks. Since public banks have no shareholders to please, they have more freedom in choosing where they allocate their capital. Start-ups and small businesses that may provide long-term economic growth to a community are often passed over by Wall Street for investments that are more profitable to their immediate bottom-line. Yet a state bank would be able to leverage earned income through more lucrative activities to help subsidize economic growth in local communities. An additional plus of the state bank movement is that it could be a potential source of revenue for the state. The Bank of North Dakota was able to return over $350 million to the state’s General Fund in the last decade, which came in handy when the state faced a $40 million budget shortfall at the turn of the century. A state bank may or may not be the solution for your state, but it is an interesting experiment that some state legislators feel is worth a try. During this legislative session, it will be exciting to see which bills are successful and which fall short. Nevertheless, the creation of a state bank is a new, old idea that is worth a strong consideration.

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Bank Watch: Fed’s Require Quick Action from Three Banks

January 6, 2011

The Federal Reserve is requiring a quick turnaround from a Tennessee-based bank; while the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) has taken issued prompt correction actions directives against two Oregon banks. BankEast in Knoxville, TN, received notification from the Federal Reserve Bank of a prompt corrective action directive (PCA) that additional capital is needed to be raised to restore the bank’s capital. A PCA is an action by federal regulators…

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PremierWest Bancorp & PremierWest Bank Announces the Retirement of Michael D. Fowler, Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer and Appointment of Douglas N. Biddle as Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer

January 6, 2011

MEDFORD, OR–(Marketwire – January 5, 2011) – PremierWest Bancorp, Medford, Oregon ( NASDAQ : PRWT ), the holding company of PremierWest Bank.

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David Isenberg: When the Going Gets Tough the Tough Looks For a Taxpayer Bailout

December 5, 2010

It appears that when the going gets tough for some private military contractors, even if it is a result of their own wrongful actions, the tough turn to the taxpayers to bail them out, according to a post on The Pop Tort, which is a project from consumer advocates at the Center for Justice & Democracy . It has long been known that the Pentagon legally covers dozens of military contractors doing dangerous jobs at home, such as making anthrax vaccine or disposing of mustard gas. But the immunity for harm granted KBR, which has brought us such creative innovations as gang rapes and carcinogenic burn pits in its mission to make U.S. troops the best supported in human history, appears to be far broader — and potentially costlier to taxpayers — according to documents released by U.S. Rep. Earl Blumenauer last Wednesday. Thanks to the Oregonian , the largest newspaper of Oregon, a state I once had the pleasure of living in for some years, we know that a Feb. 18, 2010, letter from KBR managers reported that the total cost of soldiers’ claims against the contractor could exceed $150 million. “KBR does not believe that the company is liable for any damages,” KBR’s Michael Morrow wrote to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. But he wrote that KBR continues to incur research and legal fees, and would bill the government for allowable costs not paid by insurance. Remember that a deposition filed last summer in U.S. District Court in Portland revealed that on the eve of the Iraq invasion, a KBR attorney won a secret clause ensuring that U.S. taxpayers, and not KBR, would pay in the event of any death or injury. Oregon Congressman Blumenauer also sought a list of contracts with similar immunity provisions from the Pentagon. On Nov. 24, Undersecretary of Defense Frank Kendall released a list of more than 120 contracts issued by the Army, Air Force, Navy and other defense agencies since 2004. They are posted on Blumenauer’s website . According to PopTort the list of contractors include major airlines American, Continental and United, as well as military contractors Raytheon Missile Systems, General Dynamics, L3, Lockheed Martin, BAE, and Boeing. Other indemnified companies include Mason and Hanger, a company which stores and transports containers of the nerve agent VX, and several firms that maintain facilities to destroy chemical agents. To date, at least one case has resulted in lawsuits or taxpayer fees. In December 2008, Emergent BioDefense Operations Lansing Inc. sought $1.5 million from the Army for 14 lawsuits arising from its manufacture of the anthrax vaccine. The Pentagon deemed many of the claims ineligible and paid $646,000 in two of the lawsuits.

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Video: Under Armor, Nike Outfit Top College Football Teams

December 3, 2010

Dec. 3 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Michele Steele reports on Nike Inc.’s and Under Armor Inc.’s battle on the college football gridiron as the athletic apparel makers outfit the teams in this weekend’s SEC title game and the contest between the University of Oregon and Oregon State University.(Source: Bloomberg)

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David Isenberg: Exposing Troops to a Carcinogen Is Not Part of Supporting the Troops

November 13, 2010

I truly did not intend to write about KBR for two consecutive days in a row. But as the saying goes, when it rains, it pours. We have a new development in the Qarmat Ali lawsuit which I last wrote about on October 22. This is the case where U.S. National Guard troops from Indiana, Oregon, South Carolina, and West Virginia were exposed to sodium dichromate, a known and highly potent carcinogen at the Qarmat Ali water treatment facility in Iraq. The ever laudable Ms. Sparky already has an excellent post about this and I’ll get back to that later. But as The Oregonian first reported: Documents exchanged in an Oregon lawsuit suggest that Kellogg, Brown and Root managers had medical tests proving workers at an Iraqi water treatment plant had “significant exposure” to a cancer-causing chemical, and managers worried about KBR’s liability as a result. The minutes of an Oct. 2, 2003 meeting about blood and urine tests from workers at the Qarmat Ali plant contradicts KBR’s long-standing claims that there was no medical evidence of harm. The documents also indicate KBR’s top health, safety and environmental manager knew plant workers continued to use the toxic chemical long after health alarms were raised. While piles of the corrosion fighter containing hexavalent chromium blew in the desert wind, the workers inside mixing the material wore gas masks. You can find the minutes here . Now bear in mind that ever since the law suit was filed against KBR it has steadfastly denied any wrongdoing and stated there is no proof of health problems from exposure to hexavalent chromium at Qarmat Ali. This, despite the fact that hexavalent chromium is recognized as a human carcinogen via inhalation [Note: Hexavalent chromium refers to chemical compounds that contain the element chromium in the +6 oxidation state. Virtually all chromium ore is processed via hexavalent chromium, specifically the salt sodium dichromate.]. Now I ask you to go and read the entire minutes in their entirety just so people don’t say I am cherry picking selected excerpts to prove a point. That said, consider the remarks at the very beginning. These are said by Chuck Adams, who was KBR’s HSE Manager for Team RIO [Restore Iraqi Oil] South. We are here to talk about the problem and share information so that we are all on the same page Around May-June we identified what chemicals were present Around July realized that Sodium Dichromate was in more places than supposed to be, basically open to atmosphere, scattered all over the water treatment plant Sodium Dichromate has been banned in the USA, no longer used for Water injection Sodium Dichromate has been identified as a high carcinogen Started doing testing to assess potential problem. Results showed high levels of Chrome III and Chrome VI Air samples results did not show threat Urine and blood sample showed elevated of chromium, meaning that there was a significant exposure Started doing some sealing in the area but people were breaking the seals. Wet back to do re-sealing Cannot allow personnel to be exposed, the company will be liable if let this happen. Now think about that last point for a moment. How, in good conscience can anyone at KBR now claim that there is no proof of health problems from exposure to hexavalent chromium when six years ago its own Health, Safety Environmental Manager was warning of the liability to the company if it continued to allow people to be exposed to it? I mean you don’t have to be Mr. Spock to see the illogic in that. Unless, of course, you are KBR, in which case it whines, oops, I mean argues, that the culprit is clear: it is the fault of the plaintiff’s lawyers who “improperly are attempting to influence public opinion, and the opinion of potential jury pools, by selectively disclosing only a few documents out of the many thousands of documents produced in this case.” I am reminded of the old classic truth, “When the law is against you, argue the facts. When the facts are against you, argue the law. When both are against you, call the other lawyer names.” I’m guessing that it is only a matter of time until KBR starts arguing that the lawyers for the National Guardsman are engaging in lawfare , which is defined as a form of asymmetric warfare waged via the use of domestic or international law with the intention of damaging an opponent. But you can read KBR’s full response here. Now as I’ve noted in the past part of KBR’s defense is to channel the Nuremberg Defense, i.e., it was just following orders. Putting aside the fact that this is germane to regular soldiers and the law is hazy on its applicability to contractors and that it is an ethically deplorable rationale, there is at least a grain of truth in it, which it brings us back to Ms. Sparky’s post. Many of her readers are particularly well informed, as they have often worked as contractors themselves. They point out that: KBR had a Contracts Administrator to communicate to DCMA [Defense Contracting Management Agency] Contracting Officers to ask what they should have done about the situation – clarify. Where is that communication KBR ? What did DCMA tell the company to do ? There are pieces missing, but this memo should lead to a few depositions being taken from those in attendance – some of whom have probably already claimed they knew nothing. and A Contracting Officer would still need to make a determination about this chemical. Who was the contracting officer in charge of that contract ? We want to know their name (s) Where is his or her deposition? Indeed, increasingly it seems a case of what did KBR know and when did it know it. Perhaps we should start calling this case Qarmat Aligate It is a good thing that KBR isn’t a member of the trade group that used to be called IPOA ). Otherwise IPOA might have to rethink its traditional talking point that thanks to contractors “Iraq and Afghanistan are the best supported, best supplied military operations in history.”

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State Of Oregon Joins Class-Action Suit Against Apollo Group

October 19, 2010

NEW YORK (Dow Jones)–The state of Oregon has joined a securities fraud class-action lawsuit against Apollo Group Inc. (APOL) and several of its executives, alleging the for-profit college operator misled investors about its revenue between 2007 and 2010. The Oregon Public Employees Retirement Fund lost $10 million as Apollo’s stock price dropped in the wake of the company’s disclosure of a Securities and Exchange Commission inquiry and heightened scrutiny of the entire for-profit college sector, according to a statement released by Oregon Attorney General John Kroger and Treasurer Ted Wheeler.

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Data Age Announces New Representative for Western Region

September 22, 2010

LARGO, FL–(Marketwire – September 22, 2010) –  Data Age Business Systems (Data Age), a leading provider of Financial Transaction Software Solutions, announced that it has appointed Mr. TJ Heyns for its West Region operations. TJ will oversee the regional sales process from California. The region also includes Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Montana, Hawaii, and Alaska. He reports to the company’s National Sales Manager, Kristy Bauer.

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Video: Faucette Rates RIM `Sector Perform’ on Market Share: Video

September 16, 2010

Sept. 17 (Bloomberg) — James Faucette, equity analyst at Pacific Crest Securities in Portland, Oregon, talks about Research In Motion Ltd.’s financial results. The maker of the BlackBerry smartphone reported second-quarter revenue and profit that beat analysts’ estimates on rising demand for advanced phones that can surf the Web and manage e-mail. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Faucette Rates RIM `Sector Perform’ on Market Share: Video

September 16, 2010

Sept. 17 (Bloomberg) — James Faucette, equity analyst at Pacific Crest Securities in Portland, Oregon, talks about Research In Motion Ltd.’s financial results. The maker of the BlackBerry smartphone reported second-quarter revenue and profit that beat analysts’ estimates on rising demand for advanced phones that can surf the Web and manage e-mail. (Source: Bloomberg)

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David Isenberg: Strike Two on "Just Following Orders" Defense

September 9, 2010

To paraphrase Yogi Berra it’s déjà vu all over again for KBR. In my Aug. 31 post I wrote about a significant pro-veteran ruling in the Oregon KBR Qarmat Ali litigation. This is the case where Oregon National Guard troops allege KBR’s liability for negligence and for fraud arising out of plaintiffs’ exposure to sodium dichromate and resultanthexavalent chromium poisoning while assigned to duty at the Qarmat Ali water plant in 2003. Paul Papak, the federal district judge rejected the motion by KBR and co-defendants to dismiss the suit for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction and rejected it. I noted that the end result was that the “we were just following orders” defense is looking even lamer than ever. Now it turns out another judge, ruling on another KBR issue, its running of burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan, has ruled the same way. Sick soldiers deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan filed claims against the corporations because of “alleged failures of the military contractors to treat water and dispose of waste in a manner required” by their contract with the US military. Today federal court judge Roger W. Titus ordered that claims against military contractors, KBR (Kellogg Brown and Root) and Halliburton, may proceed. In his 41-page opinion Judge Titus dismissed the jurisdictions of the defendants and is allowing limited discovery to go forward. In its ruling the Court stated, “In tension with the exercise of caution supported by these legal defenses is the legitimate concern that the judiciary may prematurely close courtroom doors to soldiers and civilians injured from wartime logistical activities performed by hired hands allegedly acting contrary to military-defined strictures. Courts must be prepared to adjudicate cases that ultimately expose defense contractors to appropriate liability where it is demonstrated that they acted outside the parameters established by the military and, as a result, failed to exercise proper care in minimizing risk to service members and civilians.” The judge notes the defendant’s objections to proceeding with the case based on 1) that Plaintiffs’ claims are nonjusticiable under the political question; 2) they are entitled to “derivative sovereign immunity” based on the “discretionary function” exception to the federal government’s waiver of immunity in the Federal Torts Claims Act and 3) are preempted by the “combatant activities” exception in the FTCA. But he then writes: In tension with the exercise of caution supported by these legal defenses is the legitimate concern that the judiciary may prematurely close courtroom doors to soldiers and civilians injured from wartime logistical activities performed by hired hands allegedly acting contrary to military-defined strictures. Courts must be prepared to adjudicate cases that ultimately expose defense contractors to appropriate liability where it is demonstrated that they acted outside the parameters established by the military and, as a result, failed to exercise proper care in minimizing risk to service members and civilians. These rival considerations drive Plaintiffs’ opposition to Defendants’ motion. Plaintiffs emphasize the preliminary nature of this lawsuit and the narrow tailoring of their tort claims to wartime logistical activities negligently performed by Defendants in breach of their duties under LOGCAP III. They argue that discovery relating to their claims is necessary and can be limited so as to avoid separation of powers and competency concerns and to minimize any potential interference with, and detraction from, the war efforts. For the reasons provided below, the Court agrees with Plaintiffs that their claims, based on their as yet unproven factual allegations, may be justiciable at this time. An initial phase of carefully limited discovery is therefore appropriate in order to frame the issue with sufficient facts so that the Court may make an informed decision. Now, this should not be taken that the Oregon National Guardsman will ultimately win in court. It is far too soon to be making such a prediction. For example, in explaining his decision the judge refers to various “Baker” factors. The Baker factor refers to a 1962 case in which the Supreme Court set forth six independent guidelines to aid a court in identifying a political question. 1. A textually demonstrable constitutional commitment of the issue to a coordinate political department; or 2. A lack of judicially discoverable and manageable standards for resolving it; or 3. The impossibility of deciding without an initial policy determination of a kind clearly for nonjudicial discretion; or 4. The impossibility of a court’s undertaking independent resolution without expressing lack of the respect due coordinate branches of government; or 5. An unusual need for unquestioning adherence to a political decision already made; or 6. The potentiality of embarrassment from multifarious pronouncements by various departments on one question For example, in regard to the first factor the judge is not ruling on whether the plaintiffs can meet their burden of proof motion. Rather he is asking whether the key inquiry posed by the first Baker factor of the political question doctrine is whether the Court can adjudicate this case without second-guessing the reasonableness of the military’s operations and decisions. Judge Titus says that “Based on Plaintiffs’ narrowly tailored claims, the Court believes it can, albeit with significant restrictions on the scope of the inquiry.” In regard to second Baker factor the judge wrote: The negligence standard is very flexible and depends heavily on the circumstances in each case. As of now, the Court does not know the precise nature of Defendants’ allegedly negligent actions nor their attendant circumstances. Only after discovery develops the facts surrounding any unauthorized acts by Defendants can the Court evaluate whether workable standards exist. Accordingly, the second Baker factor does not exclude this lawsuit from judicial review at this time. In looking at the fourth and sixth factors the judge wrote: Again, because Plaintiffs’ allegations pertain only to Defendants’ allegedly unauthorized performance of waste disposal and water treatment services, it is doubtful that the exercise of jurisdiction by this Court will somehow disrespect or embarrass the executive or legislative branches. In fact, subjecting defense contractors to potential tort liability for actions not approved by the military arguably expresses respect for the executive branch. [My emphasis] In a rulemaking to implement policy regarding contractor personnel authorized to accompany U.S. Armed Forces deployed outside the United States, the Department of Defense (“DoD”) explicitly advised military contractors that they could be subjected “to prosecution or civil liability under the laws of the United States and the host nation” for the “inappropriate use of force.” Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement; Contractor Personnel Authorized to Accompany U.S. Armed Forces, 73 Fed. Reg. 16,764, 16,767 (Mar. 31, 2008). When contractors expressed concern about their defenses in tort litigation, DoD made clear that it thought the rule “adequately allocates risks, allows for equitable adjustments, and permits contractors to defend against potential third-party claims.” Id. at 16,768. The DoD explained: [T]he clause retains the current rule of law, holding contractors accountable for the negligent or willful actions of their employees, officers, and subcontractors. . . . Contractors will still be able to defend themselves when injuries to third parties are caused by the actions or decisions of the Government. However, to the extent contractors are currently seeking to avoid accountability to third parties for their own actions by raising defenses based on the sovereignty of the United States, this rule should not send a signal that would invite courts to shift the risk of loss to innocent third parties. Consistent with the DoD’s position, the Court will not, at this early stage, allow contractors “to avoid accountability to third parties for their own actions” based on the political question doctrine, or as discussed below, based on the sovereignty of the United States. Id. (emphasis added). But perhaps the most intriguing part of the opinion comes when the judge discusses the Derivative Sovereign Immunity defense. As a general matter, the United States as a sovereign is immune from suit except under those limited circumstances in which it has waived that immunity. Judge Titus writes: The costs, however, of blanketing government contractors with the sovereign’s cloak of immunity at this early stage of the litigation are significant. In this case, Plaintiffs seek compensation for injuries resulting from exposure to burn pit emissions and contaminated water, which they allegedly would not have suffered absent what they claim were the Defendants’ decisions to breach LOGCAP III without the necessary military permission and to otherwise disobey military directives. Assuming the truth of these allegations, refusing such victims compensation and allowing Defendants’ allegedly unauthorized conduct to go unredressed would be contrary to the most fundamental tenets of our legal system. See Westfall, 484 U.S. at 295. In addition to shifting the risk of loss onto innocent plaintiffs, inappropriately extending official immunity to defendants would discourage them from properly assessing the risks involved in their actions and taking proper precautions. See 73 Fed. Reg. at 16,768 (“However, to the extent contractors are currently seeking to avoid accountability to third parties for their own actions by raising defenses based on the sovereignty of the United States, this rule should not send a signal that would invite courts to shift the risk of loss to innocent third parties. The language in the clause is intended to encourage contractors to properly assess the risks involved and take proper precautions.”). Thus, the costs of immunity to the hundreds of named Plaintiffs and to future government-defense contractor relationships are obviously considerable. Based on this preliminary balancing of interests, it cannot be said at this juncture that the public interest demands that the Westfall absolute immunity protect Defendants to the same extent it protects federal officials. Plaintiffs contend, and the Court agrees, that this case can proceed while “insulat[ing] the decisionmaking process from the harassment of prospective litigation.” See Westfall, 484 U.S. at 295. So long as the military’s decisionmaking process remains insulated and the government is freed from the “costs of vexatious and often frivolous damages suits,” id., the benefits to government efficiency are outweighed by the interests of the Plaintiffs in securing compensation for injuries resulting from Defendants’ allegedly unauthorized acts and of the public in holding Defendants accountable for any such wrongful conduct that may be proven.

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Kimberly Freeman Brown: On Labor Day, Partnerships That Work For a Clean Energy Economy

September 5, 2010

By American Rights at Work Executive Director Kimberly Freeman Brown and BlueGreen Alliance Executive Director David Foster This Labor Day, America is facing a dizzying array of problems, none more acute than the twin crises of how poorly we treat our workers and how appallingly we treat our planet. In case anyone believes these issues are distinct and need to be addressed separately, let’s remember some of this year’s grisly headlines: * ” Massey Accident, Worst Since 1970, Claims 29 Miners ” * ” Families bid farewell to 11 men killed in Gulf rig explosion ” * ” 5 workers killed in explosion at Middleton, Conn., power plant ” While the environmental and labor disasters at Massey Energy’s Upper Big Branch Mine, the BP oil rig, and the Kleen Energy natural gas plant have topped the news, the everyday struggles of working people have continued unabated. Struggles such as the construction worker forced to work more hours for less pay, building outdated structural designs in dangerous conditions. Or the tomato picker breaking her back in a hot, pesticide-soaked field, gathering vegetables destined for a supermarket shelf. Or the factory worker forced into an ever-faster production line that spits out toxic byproducts, putting his health and safety at risk with little or no healthcare benefits. These conditions are the reality faced by millions of America’s workers. But we do not have to accept them as the cost of doing business in this country. There is a better way. Years ago, labor and environmental advocates realized that in order to preserve our environment and create jobs in America, investing in a clean energy economy was critical. Today, green jobs are growing, and America’s workers must benefit from the full potential and promise of the green economy. There are a select number of forward-thinking employers already paving the way toward a green economy . They are collaborating with their employees as equal partners, respecting their decision to join unions, and creating good, green, union jobs — where workers receive family-sustaining wages, fair benefits, safe workplaces, and retirement security. Green builders such as Oregon-based Gerding Edlen Development are paving the way. Having led the first LEED-Platinum certified renovation of a building on the National Register of Historic Places, Gerding Edlen sees its highly-trained, union workforce as key to its success. As CEO Mark Edlen says, “Union workers bring the skill set, creativity, and workplace safety the company needs to execute such complex projects: that’s why Gerding Edlen uses union labor.” Not surprisingly, the firm has topped the Oregon Business Journal’s annual list of the best green companies to work for two straight years, and has been voted one of Oregon’s most admired companies at least four years in a row. In the agriculture industry, Eurofresh is transforming vegetable production through its sustainable growing practices. Food safety is a top priority at the Arizona-based company, which credits the union-led orientation and training programs for raising production standards. All of its produce is greenhouse-grown, reducing land and water use, and is certified pesticide residue-free — protecting the health of consumers, workers, and the environment. Perhaps most exciting of all, the new clean energy economy is bringing good manufacturing jobs back to the United States. United Streetcar, a subsidiary of Oregon Iron Works, is building the first American-made modern electric streetcars in almost 60 years. And the company is doing more than easing congestion and reducing pollution through its streetcars through good, green jobs in Oregon — its dedication to using U.S. suppliers is reigniting an entire industry. United Streetcar today produces the first modern streetcars to comply with “Buy America” provisions: 70 percent of its trams’ components are domestically produced, and the company is striving to use entirely U.S.-made components. As a result, orders with United Streetcar create or save jobs at vendors across America, from manufacturers of fiberglass and flooring to seats and wheel sets. All of these environmentally-responsible innovators are exciting, and they are made possible by the skill and expertise of America’s union workers. Together with their forward-thinking employers, these employees are proving that we can build a win-win economy in which businesses thrive, the planet prospers, and workers share in the success they help create. This Labor Day, as the country reels from one labor and environmental disaster after another, the United States needs the leadership of pioneering employers like these — visionaries who recognize that in the 21st century, respect for workers, respect for the planet, and respect for the bottom line are, in fact, one and the same. Kimberly Freeman Brown is Executive Director of American Rights at Work Education Fund, an educational and outreach organization dedicated to promoting the freedom of workers to form unions and bargain collectively, which just released its new report The Labor Day List: Partnerships that Work . David Foster is Executive Director of the BlueGreen Alliance , a national partnership of nine U.S. labor unions and two of America’s largest environmental organizations — uniting nearly nine million members and supporters — that is dedicated to expanding the number and quality of jobs in the clean energy economy. # This article was published originally in The Hill ‘s Congress Blog .

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David Isenberg: Veterans 1, KBR 0

August 31, 2010

It is time once again to tune in to the latest epsiode, oops, I mean development, of the long running farce, oops, I mean legal case, involving KBR and Oregon National Guard soldiers. Yeterday there was significant pro-veteran ruling in the Oregon KBR Qarmat Ali litigation. I have previously written about this and open air burn pits KBR ran on dozens of U.S. bases in Iraq and Afghanistan in February , April and June . In a 29-page ruling the federal district court in Oregon considered the motion by KBR and co-defendants Overseas Administration Services, Ltd. and Service Employees International, Inc. to dismiss the suit for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction and rejected it. U.S. Magistate Judge Paul Papak wrote that on March 3, 2003 – before combat operations began in Iraq – the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers entered into a “Restore Iraqi Oil” (RIO) contract) with KBR. Under it, KBR and its subsidiaries agreed to provide services to the U.S. military in connection with efforts to restore the infrastructure underlying the Iraqi oil industry. Also under the RIO contract, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers issued various “task orders” for KBR to perform. Combat operations in Iraq began on March 19, 2003. On March 20, 2003, the Corps of Engineers issued “Task Order 3,” which governed the services to be provided by KBR and its subsidiaries at Qarmat Ali and other facilities. Under Task Order 3, the U.S. military would declare a given worksite to be “benign” before KBR would begin operations there. A lot depends on what you mean by “benign.” In a footnote the judge wrote: The parties dispute the meaning of the term “benign” for purposes of Task Order 3. According to the deposition testimony of Robert Crear (retired Brigadier General of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers) and of Gordon Sumner (retired U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Contracting Officer and regional director of contracting), “benign” referred to freedom from combatant activity and from nuclear or chemical weapons, and did not foreclose the possibility of environmental hazards, including hazardous (but not weaponized) chemicals. Support for this interpretation can be found in the provisions of Task Order 3, which suggest that pronouncement of a site as “benign” did not, for example, foreclose the need for environmental assessment. Nevertheless, defendants take the position that a “benign” designation necessarily meant freedom from known hazards, including environmental hazards, and support for defendants’ position may also be found in the language of Task Order 3, which indicates that a facility must be cleared of environmental and industrial hazards before it may be pronounced “benign.” Because I do not find this issue to be material to the analyses I am called upon to undertake in connection with the political question doctrine, the government contractor defense, or the combatant activities exception, the parties’ dispute over the definition of “benign” need not be resolved at this stage of these proceedings. In the underlying facts portion of his ruling the judge wrote: Task Order 3 provides that KBR was responsible for providing the Corps of Engineers with an environmental assessment of any facility in which it undertook operations. The obligation to provide such assessments included the obligation to report and evaluate any environmental hazards. According to Sumner’s and Gen. Crear’s deposition testimony, KBR was not merely permitted but required under Task Order 3 and the RIO contract to take all necessary precautions to safeguard personnel who might potentially be exposed to environmental hazards at worksites, including the wearing of protective gear and/or the closing down of operations at any unsafe site. In his analysis the judge noted that the defendants argue that this court lacks subject-matter jurisdiction by operation of the political question doctrine, by operation of the so-called “government contractor defense,” and by operation of the combat activities exception to the Federal Tort Claims Act. For background on this see my January post . The judge proceeded to detail other cases where district courts have found the political question doctrine inapplicable to tort actions brought against government contractors in the military context. In regard to KBR’s claims that various legal tests argue in favor of applying the political question doctrine he wrote that he found their arguments unpersuasive. He wrote, “the matter fundamentally at issue here is defendants’ performance of its contractual obligations to the government and to the plaintiffs rather than the advisability of any governmental policy-related decision.” But the guts of the decision, which is undoubtedly giving all PMC legal counsels’ nighmares, is this: Defendants here assert that their “provision of engineering and logistical support services at Qarmat Ali” took place pursuant to the specifications of a contract with the government, and that they did not exceed their authority under those specifications. On this basis, defendants argue that they were merely “executing the will of the United States” and are entitled to the benefits of derivative sovereign immunity. The evidentiary record belies both of defendants’ assertions. The rationale underlying the government contractor defense is easy to understand. Where the government hires a contractor to perform a given task, and specifies the manner in which the task is to be performed, and the contractor is later haled into court to answer for a harm that was caused by the contractor’s compliance with the government’s specifications, the contractor is entitled to the same immunity the government would enjoy, because the contractor is, under those circumstances, effectively acting as an organ of government, without independent discretion. Where, however, the contractor is hired to perform the same task, but is allowed to exercise, discretion in determining how the task should be accomplished, if the manner of performing the task ultimately causes actionable harm to a third party the contractor is not entitled to derivative sovereign immunity, because the harm can be traced, not to the government’s actions or decisions, but to the contractor’s independent decision to perform the task in an unsafe manner. Similarly, where the contractor is hired to perform the task according to precise specifications but fails to comply with those specifications, and the contractor’s deviation from the government specifications actionably harms a third party, the contractor is not entitled to immunity because, again, the harm was not caused by the government’s insistence on a specified manner of performance but rather by the contractor’s failure to act in accordance with the government’s directives. Assuming without deciding that the Ninth Circuit would apply the government contractor defense to the provision of the kinds of services KBR contracted to provide in Iraq under RIO and Task Order 3 – analysis of the RIO contract and of Task Order 3 fails to establish that the defendants’ actions alleged to have caused plaintiffs’ injuries were taken in direct compliance with any “reasonably precise” government directive. Quite to the contrary, defendants were contractually obliged to perform an environmental assessment of Qarmat Ali and to report any environmental hazards to the Army Corps of Engineers. Defendants were under no contractual obligation to put their employees or third parties providing security in connection with defendants’ operations into situations involving the risk of environmental harm, to refrain from requiring employees or third parties to use appropriate protective gear and clothing when placed into such situations, or to withhold material information regarding such risk from persons placed into such situations. Moreover, assuming arguendo that the government’s specifications regarding defendants’ obligations in connection with operations to be performed in an environmentally contaminated worksite were sufficiently precise to trigger the defense, plaintiffs have offered evidence tending to establish that the defendants violated those contractual duties, by failing to report the contamination at Qarmat Ali and by permitting the Oregon National Guard to perform duties at the site without appropriate protective gear. Because defendants did not conduct operations at Qarmat Ali in accordance with precise government specifications and without independent discretion as to the manner in which the operations were to be performed, defendants are not entitled to the government contractor defense. See Hanford Nuclear, 534 F.3d at 1000. Defendants’ motion to dismiss is therefore denied to the extent premised on the government contractor defense. In other words, the “we were just following orders” defense is looking even lamer than ever.

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Northwest Pipe Announces Addition to Board of Directors

August 31, 2010

VANCOUVER, WA–(Marketwire – August 31, 2010) –  Northwest Pipe Company ( NASDAQ : NWPX ) announced today that James E. Declusin, former CEO of Oregon Steel Mills, Inc. and Evraz Inc. NA, has joined its board of directors.

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Naomi Wolf: Banks Complicit in Fraud — Is it Systemic?

August 25, 2010

Well, just when I thought my ‘ Banks Siding Against the Customer in Bank Fraud ‘ story couldn’t get any more shocking — it did. I had assumed that when I posted the account this week of how WaMu and now Chase were apparently systematically stonewalling customers — myself included — who had experienced bank fraud, I might hear from a handful of other consumers. I had hoped thus to see if, indeed, as the insider emails that were handed to me by accident by a WaMu official seem to indicate, this practice is systemic, deliberate and driven — as actuary (and bank fraud victim) Geoff Kischuk pointed out to me — by a great deal of profit…for the banks. I was unprepared, however, for the sheer volume of the stories that readers across America have sent me detailing experiences in which banks collude with fraud, cover it up, protect the identity of the scammer, even from police, or even manipulate customers’ bank accounts themselves. These cover-ups are indeed systemic, highly profitable for the banks, and getting worse. The stories are heart-wrenching: fraud, and banks’ collusion with it, ruining young people’s credit at twenty-one — no matter how many efforts they make to clear the record; bed-bound, frail elderly being harassed by banks to pay for fraud the banks know has been perpetrated by scammers; and small businesses finding, as actually Geoff Kischuk himself did, that forty, fifty or sixty thousand dollars have vanished electronically from their business accounts — and that they must then fight tooth and nail simply to close the accounts, even as fees rack up. I had thought I was alone in experiencing a bank — WaMu, and now Chase — that refused to release video of the one writing forged checks on my account, to the police. When I was handed the inside emails by accident, I saw that their fraud department had actually made note of the person’s appearance — one that confirmed details I had given to the police — even as they were telling the police the video did not exist! But to my horror I heard from several other consumers that their banks had done the same thing, even in the face of a police investigation. I had thought I was alone in having a bank that kept passing fraudulent checks even after I had placed a fraud alert on the account — but several other consumers wrote in confirming that not only had a bank employee opened false accounts in a relative’s name — but after they had called the bank on it, the bank kept clearing their stolen checks! Well, I certainly now felt less alone — but far more outraged and alarmed, on behalf of all of us, especially those most economically vulnerable; for the big picture, put together, looks far, far uglier than even my own disturbing experience had prepared me to see. There now appears to be a major business of banks profiting to the point of colluding with fraud (bank fraud and identity theft is over a billion-and-a-half dollar “business” every year); this is made even more alarming because it is so insidious — many banks now manipulate customers’ withdrawals in time sequence and give customers a misleading balance figure that does not show their recent withdrawals. Thus, in both ways, the bank can and does hit the customer with far more overdraft fees. This is not a mini-industry, as I reported earlier this week; I now see this is a mega-industry. ‘Go green!’ urges your bank. But an IT expert wrote me warning that I should let people know that they should not use Windows to do online banking unless they are very computer-savvy: “Banks and mutual funds encourage you to do your finances online because it benefits them but it puts your account at risk,” he cautioned. He directed me to this Washington Post investigation . “This terrifying link explains technologically what happened to Kischuk, to me and so many others: hackers can easily wipe out tens of thousands of dollars from your account, and even cover their tracks; and, since the banks are making so much money from this and other forms of fraud, it is not in their interest to alert you to how easily this is done, once you are banking online.” Many others who wrote to me have also been charged by their banks for the fraud that the banks know was committed against them. ‘Economike’ encountered fraud — and his bank charged him the legal fees incurred, as well as hundreds of dollars for the fake duplicate ATM card involved. ‘Indyfem’ writes that “A few years ago…someone stole my checkbook from WaMu and wrote a check to themselves for $500.” She notes that the signature looked nothing like hers, and where the amount was supposed to be written in (‘Five hundred and no/100 dollars’) the forger wrote ‘Basketball.’ B UT WAMU cashed the check and then refused to reimburse her. ‘Peacein09′ notes that Chase is now giving him problems in this regard; and indeed, a whole website, Chasesucks.org , has arisen to detail Chase’s mistreatment of customers in these and comparable ways, and to warn them of new scams. ‘Jerrygates’ writes that “WaMu and JPMorganChase have destroyed my confidence in banking…permanently.” He adds,”I do corroborate her [that is, my] citation as sound and truthful. I have been there.” ‘Peacekitten’ had to fight for years to get back the “thousands and thousands over a period of years” wiped out from her account at Wells Fargo. I thought I was the only one who had ever had to fight to close a corrupted account — but many other consumers had had the same experience. ‘TNLcaller’ also found that “my bank wouldn’t let me close the account” after fraud had been identified. Another reader wrote to me that when she tried to close an account with twenty dollars in it at CitiBank, “they fought me tooth and nail to NOT CLOSE the account…” ‘Davmyy’ wrote that a Wells Fargo (notice any recurrent names, everyone?) banker whom his son knew opened two accounts in his son’s name without his son’s permission, committed fraud, and his son not only got no action from the bank regarding the fraud, which they were not contesting, but later saw the same employee in a new position in another branch! This to me, in a sense, is the most chilling of the accounts I received, since it dovetails with my own otherwise-inexplicable experience of the bank actively protecting their own employees at WaMu who had kept cashing forged checks on my account for months after I had alerted the bank to the fraud. It may explain the weirdly relaxed tone of ” sure, we know that someone messed with this customer’s account, whatever, have a nice weekend ” in the insider WaMu emails I received and that Chase is now trying to shrug off. It is stories like this that illustrate the nature of corruption and how it spreads within an organization; you start with passively benefiting from others’ wrongdoing — but if the money is good enough, you develop subtle systems that slowly let you collude more actively in the wrongdoing, the profit, and…the cover-up. Could it be that policy-approved ‘passive’ stealing or proxy stealing — by enabling fraud to continue, and encouraging customers to switch to an easily hacked bank medium without warning them — is so systemic that banks have, consciously or not, developed a culture of protecting actual thieves in their ranks — thieves who might blow the whistle on all these practices, if called out? A secondary but still major issue I discovered through readers’ alerts — that of people’s accounts being manipulated by the banks themselves to raise their level of overdraft fees — is so prevalent that that legal firm Zimmerman Reed devotes a whole part of its practice to it now. According to their website , banks are routinely reordering your charges on ATM or debit cards so that the largest comes first, even if you made it last: that is, if you have a hundred dollars in your account, and make purchases of ten, fifteen, thirty, fifty and ninety dollars, the bank will switch the order so that instead of facing one $40 overdraft fee, you face four. ‘Iric’ writes that Chase gave him a balance showing an amount that left out his withdrawals made many days before; he reasonably enough believed the money was there; then they processed the withdrawals, out of order, hitting him for fees. ‘Thmsnnn’ wrote that “I have had similar experiences with delayed credit posts to my account”; this customer has been charged hundreds if not thousands in extra fees in the course of five years. ‘Trgrampictures’ notes that “Wachovia systematically holds deposited checks for up to fourteen days” and that “B of A delays and then accelerates transactions that result in overdraft fees….Wachovia intentionally holds checks too in an effort to initiate overdraft fees.” Others note that they have not been able to get their banks to show them the rates on their accounts. ‘Harry Wallace’ notes that banks can increase mortgage payments by a few dollars on the anniversary date, but that banks are stealthily raising mortgage payments by twenty or thirty dollars several times a year; he notes that when one makes payments on the principle of a mortgages, it may not be recorded. “And the bank won’t show records unless you are in court.” ‘Joe Dex’ notes that every time you put in to modify a loan, the bank gets $500 — which explains why banks ask you to resubmit the application four or five times. And so on. Other readers astutely point out something I can confirm in my recent visit to Europe: pretty much every EU bank customer now uses an ATM card with a chip, PIN number and photograph that make it almost impossible for a third party to misuse it (indeed US bank debit cards, without those security systems built in, are not accepted in many places in Europe for that reason, even if it is drawn on a global bank with local branches). Why do we not have access to such secure debit cards here? Why indeed: look to the bank lobby, that influences our legislation in a way it cannot in Europe. Banks in Europe lose, along with the customer, when there is fraud; banks here? It’s a billion plus dollar party annually, and the banks have invited themselves. What is the takeaway? Many readers directed me to the movement away from big banks, Moveyourmoney.org , and to the benefit of small local credit unions. That is powerful; but just as powerful is knowing the aggregate of all these stories; as awful as it is to learn the truth about the big picture, it is good to warn others — and best of all to know that none of us is alone. It will take quick action to prevent this situation from worsening, especially as banks are now frantically working to skirt new regulations put into place over the past year and a half. Consider potential legislation in Oregon , proposed by the Oregon Bankers Association last session and sent by an industry insider, that would have given fraudulent powers of attorney the benefit of the doubt in fraud claims unless the customer — rather than the bank — could prove fraud had occurred. Needless to say, this is a near impossible task for average consumers. Surely Oregon isn’t the only state where banks have similar ideas (a similar policy also exists in California, per CA probad code Sec. 4303, which allows third parties to rely on anything that appears to be notarized — an easily forged act).

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How Far $1 Million Goes In America’s Real Estate Markets: Trulia (PHOTOS)

August 23, 2010

Home buyers with $1 million to spend: are you location-blind? If so, here’s a collection of million-dollar properties in cities around the country. We’ve already shown you what $400,000 will get you in major American metro areas. Now check out what $1 million buys in cities like New York, Scottsdale, Arizona and Honolulu. The options range from a five-bedroom abode with a covered porch that overlooks a golf course and a master suite with two large walk-in closets to a Hawaiian beach front condo. Courtesy of Trulia , one of the most comprehensive real estate sites one the web, below we’ve compiled some of the most appealing properties you can buy for $1 million. Want to see what $1 million will get you in Bend, Oregon compared to what $1 million buys in Providence, Rhode Island? See below, and visit Trulia for more information on these and other homes:

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Susan Buchanan: State’s Oyster Growers Weigh Options in Claims Process

August 10, 2010

This article was published in “The Louisiana Weekly” in the Aug. 9, 2010 edition. Oyster growers seeking compensation for losses after the spill worry that payments will hinge on whether damages were from fresh-water flows ordered by Governor Bobby Jindal or the presence of oil. For troubled producers, it may take years for beds to recover from too little salinity in some areas and tar and other spill byproducts elsewhere. Growers have at least two compensation options, said Mike Voisin, seventh-generation owner of Motivatit Seafoods, Inc. in Houma. “Damage claims will be submitted to BP and the Feinberg fund first. If claims are rejected there, they can be presented to the Coast Guard for compensation under the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund — set up under the Oil Pollution Act.” The spill trust fund originally provided up to $1 billion for oil removal and other damages, but is now capped at $2.7 billion. About 30%-40% of the state’s oyster areas can be harvested after recent reopenings, but the number of usable oysters there is lower than before the spill, Voisin said. Motivatit harvests 10,000 acres of oysters in central and western Louisiana, and has suffered moderate damage from oil in some spots. The company’s sales are down by 50% or more from last year. Rusty Gaude, LSU AgCenter fisheries agent for Plaquemines, St. Bernard and Orleans parishes, said “it’s well documented that oysters require certain conditions, including the right amount of salinity in the water, for survival,” He said seven conduits, built for varied reasons before the spill, were opened in early May “to push water out and theoretically keep oil from the inland estuaries.” In reefs east and west of the Mississippi, salinity levels dropped below a range of 5-15 parts salt per thousand parts water needed for oysters to survive, according to scientists. “Independent lease holders are doing their own damage assessments now,” Gaude said. Louisiana oyster reefs are worked mostly under private leases. And the state’s Dept. of Wildlife and Fisheries plans to start conducting a damage survey soon. Gaude said that before-and-after documentation on the beds will probably be needed for the BP and Feinberg claims processes. “For lease holders, efforts to get claims payments could be settled quickly or they could drag on for years.” After Governor Jindal ordered the diversion of fresh water from the Mississippi River into nearby salt marshes, gates were open at the following conduits in May and remain ajar: Davis Pond Diversion in St. Charles Parish; Caernarvon Diversion and Violet Siphon in St. Bernard Parish; and Bayou Lamoque Diversion,West Pointe A la Hache, Naomi Siphon and Whites Ditch Siphon in Plaquemines. Louisiana oysters normally thrive in estuaries that have all the comforts of home, but if something goes wrong, they won’t develop or reproduce. A good habitat has the right amount of salinity, temperatures of 50-79 degrees, firm bottoms and continuous water circulation to bring in food and oxygen. When asked if BP has a policy for oyster growers seeking damages from fresh water, BP spokesman Mark Proegler responded “as BP has said from the beginning, we will pay all legitimate claims. We are in transition to Mr. Feinberg, a process that should be completed in August. While the transition continues, we will be and are paying claims.” Last week, BP had paid $303 million in claims to date. In an August 3 announcement, BP gave examples of businesses included in its claims process. On the list were “fisherman, shrimpers, oyster harvesters, etc., and charter boat operators who have been affected by the oil.” The word “oil” is worrying some oyster growers, who fear that fresh-water damage might keep them from being compensated by BP or the $20 billion, Feinberg fund. Independent administrator Ken Feinberg is expected to take over the BP claims process in the third week of August. Meanwhile, for anyone considering suing the state for opening fresh-water conduits, Voisin’s view is “the state did the right thing. It kept the oil out of the beds on the east side of the Mississippi.” Johnny Smith, owner of Captain Johnny Smith Oyster Packing Plant in New Orleans, said 40% to 50% of oysters produced in Louisiana are from east of the Mississippi River, and many of them were damaged by the fresh water diversion. “Another 30% of the beds are just west of the Mississippi, and a lot them had tar and oil. About 20% of beds in the state are further west, heading toward Lake Charles, and they might be all right if we don’t have a hurricane pushing tar and oil in there.” His plant has been temporarily closed since June 25 because oysters are so scarce. Smith said “dispersant-treated oil that feels like peanut-butter goo may be contaminating some of the beds west of the Mississippi.” Beds with oil-contaminated shells can’t reproduce and could be lost for many years. He said “in my opinion, beds affected by the fresh-water diversion could recover in 3 to 5 years, and probably faster than the beds that were contaminated by oil and tar.” From April to October, Louisiana oyster farmers move closer inland to the beds they own on land leased from the state, Smith said. Managing an oyster business requires that farmers plant oysters on various sites, hoping weather, salinity and tides will cooperate in at least some of those spots. Growers build reefs on their leased grounds by dropping old shells and limestone to provide habitat for the oysters’ reproductive cycle. Private-lease oysters, caught between April and October, supply Louisiana with half the year’s production, he said. Louisiana also holds thousands of acres of wild, public reefs, where anyone with required, commercial fishing licenses can harvest oysters. The public season roughly runs from October to April. This summer, wholesalers and retailers scaled back operations as supplies dwindled. “We’ve been able to deliver oysters in the shell to all our long-time, oyster-bar customers since the spill, though not always as many as they need,” said Al Sunseri, president and co-owner of P&J Oyster Co. in New Orleans. “An old family friend is shucking oysters from East Plaquemines Parish for us. Our business is in a state of transition because the farms west of the Mississippi–that we get 95% of our oyster to shuck from–have been closed for two months.” P&J has laid off more than half its staff recently. “Our skeleton crew of two drivers and two processing personnel are working much shorter hours, while my brother, my son and I come in about two hours later than usual,” Sunseri said. At one time, he started his day at 2:30 in the morning. The company, which dates back to 1876, has been a fixture on Toulouse St. in the French Quarter since 1921. Sunseri offers some reasons for oyster shortages. “Beds in Area 1 in Lake Borgne have been open, but they were heavily harvested in May and June,” he said. “Area 6 is currently open for harvest but has experienced large mortalities due to the opening of the Caernarvon freshwater river diversion. Areas 1,4,6,7 and parts of 9 and 10 are open now.” To the southeast of Port Sulphur, west of the Mississippi, beds in Bay Batiste and Wilkinson Bay both had oil, he noted. C.J. Gerdes, co-owner of Casamento’s Restaurant in New Orleans, said “we expect to open for the season on Sept. 8, our usual time after being closed for the summer. We’re taking a wait and see as to whether we’ll have Louisiana oysters, which we usually get from P&J and Louisiana Seafood Exchange. We may start with big sacks of oysters from Louisiana Seafood Exchange that come from Apalachicola, Florida, which for an out-of-state product is about as close you can get to Louisiana oysters.” The restaurant tried oysters from Oregon, California and Virginia but they didn’t taste like local varieties. Gerdes, like others, said that while more fishing areas are open now, oysters in some of those locations, especially in Barataria Bay, were hurt by fresh water. And he said “four or five oyster areas were open a month ago but the oyster men were working for BP, cleaning up oil, so you couldn’t get much from those places. It was a Catch-22.” Tommy Cvitanovich, owner of Drago’s Seafood, said prices he pays for oysters have escalated and business is down since the oil spill. “We’ve absorbed the price increase and haven’t passed it on to our customers” at the firm’s two restaurants, located in Metairie and downtown New Orleans. He plans to submit a loss claim to BP for the difference. In the New Orleans office of Atlanta-based Inland Seafood, sales manager Robby Hare said “we haven’t had any Gulf oyster gallons to sell for five weeks. In this same week a year ago, our office sold 106 gallons worth $4,000. Our oysters in gallons are from Mississippi and Louisiana and are shucked at plants near the docks.” Inland Seafood sells to restaurants, institutions and supermarkets. “We are able to get Gold Band pasteurized oysters from Motivatit Seafood,” Hare said.”We can also buy oysters from Apalachicola, Florida. We tried selling Pacific oysters, but they had a different taste and consistency and weren’t as desirable here.” Because of the drop in oyster availability, prices per sack charged by boat owners to processors have risen about 45% since late April, Smith said. Oysters in open areas aren’t necessarily usable, he said. “In many places, growers are having to hunt for them, making their day less productive. They can’t catch enough usable stuff to pay for the fuel and labor to make the trip.” The state plans to conduct an impact study in addition to its routine research. “We take oyster samples every month, all year long, to assess condition in the beds,” said Randy Pausina, New Orleans-based head of fisheries for the Louisiana Dept. of Wildlife and Fisheries. “At this time of year, for example, oysters can be subject to high temperatures, heavy rainfall and tropical storms. We’re working on a longer term, post-spill oyster study under NRDA,” or Natural Resource Damage Assessment conducted by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. That study will consider ways to return natural resources to pre-spill conditions and to replace lost resources, he said. Randy Lanctot, executive director of the Louisiana Wildlife Federation, said “I think there will be benefits to the coast of keeping river diversions wide open for the past three months. But they will not be known for sure until after the water has fallen. Then we’ll be able to see how much land was created.” Whether large discharges of fresh water and sediment stimulated marsh growth won’t be know until next spring, he said. The Louisiana Wildlife Federation advocates “no, net loss of oyster-growing capacity” for state waters, and supports meshing that policy with the state’s plan for coastal protection and restoration, Lanctot said. Some growers may have to move their harvests from places that have been productive for them, however, Lanctot said. “For oyster leaseholders, who have built productive beds over many years, that can be troublesome.” He said the state should provide reasonable assistance to fishing-community members who will need help making transitions.

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Susan Buchanan: State’s Oyster Growers Weigh Options in Claims Process

August 10, 2010

This article was published in “The Louisiana Weekly” in the Aug. 9, 2010 edition. Oyster growers seeking compensation for losses after the spill worry that payments will hinge on whether damages were from fresh-water flows ordered by Governor Bobby Jindal or the presence of oil. For troubled producers, it may take years for beds to recover from too little salinity in some areas and tar and other spill byproducts elsewhere. Growers have at least two compensation options, said Mike Voisin, seventh-generation owner of Motivatit Seafoods, Inc. in Houma. “Damage claims will be submitted to BP and the Feinberg fund first. If claims are rejected there, they can be presented to the Coast Guard for compensation under the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund — set up under the Oil Pollution Act.” The spill trust fund originally provided up to $1 billion for oil removal and other damages, but is now capped at $2.7 billion. About 30%-40% of the state’s oyster areas can be harvested after recent reopenings, but the number of usable oysters there is lower than before the spill, Voisin said. Motivatit harvests 10,000 acres of oysters in central and western Louisiana, and has suffered moderate damage from oil in some spots. The company’s sales are down by 50% or more from last year. Rusty Gaude, LSU AgCenter fisheries agent for Plaquemines, St. Bernard and Orleans parishes, said “it’s well documented that oysters require certain conditions, including the right amount of salinity in the water, for survival,” He said seven conduits, built for varied reasons before the spill, were opened in early May “to push water out and theoretically keep oil from the inland estuaries.” In reefs east and west of the Mississippi, salinity levels dropped below a range of 5-15 parts salt per thousand parts water needed for oysters to survive, according to scientists. “Independent lease holders are doing their own damage assessments now,” Gaude said. Louisiana oyster reefs are worked mostly under private leases. And the state’s Dept. of Wildlife and Fisheries plans to start conducting a damage survey soon. Gaude said that before-and-after documentation on the beds will probably be needed for the BP and Feinberg claims processes. “For lease holders, efforts to get claims payments could be settled quickly or they could drag on for years.” After Governor Jindal ordered the diversion of fresh water from the Mississippi River into nearby salt marshes, gates were open at the following conduits in May and remain ajar: Davis Pond Diversion in St. Charles Parish; Caernarvon Diversion and Violet Siphon in St. Bernard Parish; and Bayou Lamoque Diversion,West Pointe A la Hache, Naomi Siphon and Whites Ditch Siphon in Plaquemines. Louisiana oysters normally thrive in estuaries that have all the comforts of home, but if something goes wrong, they won’t develop or reproduce. A good habitat has the right amount of salinity, temperatures of 50-79 degrees, firm bottoms and continuous water circulation to bring in food and oxygen. When asked if BP has a policy for oyster growers seeking damages from fresh water, BP spokesman Mark Proegler responded “as BP has said from the beginning, we will pay all legitimate claims. We are in transition to Mr. Feinberg, a process that should be completed in August. While the transition continues, we will be and are paying claims.” Last week, BP had paid $303 million in claims to date. In an August 3 announcement, BP gave examples of businesses included in its claims process. On the list were “fisherman, shrimpers, oyster harvesters, etc., and charter boat operators who have been affected by the oil.” The word “oil” is worrying some oyster growers, who fear that fresh-water damage might keep them from being compensated by BP or the $20 billion, Feinberg fund. Independent administrator Ken Feinberg is expected to take over the BP claims process in the third week of August. Meanwhile, for anyone considering suing the state for opening fresh-water conduits, Voisin’s view is “the state did the right thing. It kept the oil out of the beds on the east side of the Mississippi.” Johnny Smith, owner of Captain Johnny Smith Oyster Packing Plant in New Orleans, said 40% to 50% of oysters produced in Louisiana are from east of the Mississippi River, and many of them were damaged by the fresh water diversion. “Another 30% of the beds are just west of the Mississippi, and a lot them had tar and oil. About 20% of beds in the state are further west, heading toward Lake Charles, and they might be all right if we don’t have a hurricane pushing tar and oil in there.” His plant has been temporarily closed since June 25 because oysters are so scarce. Smith said “dispersant-treated oil that feels like peanut-butter goo may be contaminating some of the beds west of the Mississippi.” Beds with oil-contaminated shells can’t reproduce and could be lost for many years. He said “in my opinion, beds affected by the fresh-water diversion could recover in 3 to 5 years, and probably faster than the beds that were contaminated by oil and tar.” From April to October, Louisiana oyster farmers move closer inland to the beds they own on land leased from the state, Smith said. Managing an oyster business requires that farmers plant oysters on various sites, hoping weather, salinity and tides will cooperate in at least some of those spots. Growers build reefs on their leased grounds by dropping old shells and limestone to provide habitat for the oysters’ reproductive cycle. Private-lease oysters, caught between April and October, supply Louisiana with half the year’s production, he said. Louisiana also holds thousands of acres of wild, public reefs, where anyone with required, commercial fishing licenses can harvest oysters. The public season roughly runs from October to April. This summer, wholesalers and retailers scaled back operations as supplies dwindled. “We’ve been able to deliver oysters in the shell to all our long-time, oyster-bar customers since the spill, though not always as many as they need,” said Al Sunseri, president and co-owner of P&J Oyster Co. in New Orleans. “An old family friend is shucking oysters from East Plaquemines Parish for us. Our business is in a state of transition because the farms west of the Mississippi–that we get 95% of our oyster to shuck from–have been closed for two months.” P&J has laid off more than half its staff recently. “Our skeleton crew of two drivers and two processing personnel are working much shorter hours, while my brother, my son and I come in about two hours later than usual,” Sunseri said. At one time, he started his day at 2:30 in the morning. The company, which dates back to 1876, has been a fixture on Toulouse St. in the French Quarter since 1921. Sunseri offers some reasons for oyster shortages. “Beds in Area 1 in Lake Borgne have been open, but they were heavily harvested in May and June,” he said. “Area 6 is currently open for harvest but has experienced large mortalities due to the opening of the Caernarvon freshwater river diversion. Areas 1,4,6,7 and parts of 9 and 10 are open now.” To the southeast of Port Sulphur, west of the Mississippi, beds in Bay Batiste and Wilkinson Bay both had oil, he noted. C.J. Gerdes, co-owner of Casamento’s Restaurant in New Orleans, said “we expect to open for the season on Sept. 8, our usual time after being closed for the summer. We’re taking a wait and see as to whether we’ll have Louisiana oysters, which we usually get from P&J and Louisiana Seafood Exchange. We may start with big sacks of oysters from Louisiana Seafood Exchange that come from Apalachicola, Florida, which for an out-of-state product is about as close you can get to Louisiana oysters.” The restaurant tried oysters from Oregon, California and Virginia but they didn’t taste like local varieties. Gerdes, like others, said that while more fishing areas are open now, oysters in some of those locations, especially in Barataria Bay, were hurt by fresh water. And he said “four or five oyster areas were open a month ago but the oyster men were working for BP, cleaning up oil, so you couldn’t get much from those places. It was a Catch-22.” Tommy Cvitanovich, owner of Drago’s Seafood, said prices he pays for oysters have escalated and business is down since the oil spill. “We’ve absorbed the price increase and haven’t passed it on to our customers” at the firm’s two restaurants, located in Metairie and downtown New Orleans. He plans to submit a loss claim to BP for the difference. In the New Orleans office of Atlanta-based Inland Seafood, sales manager Robby Hare said “we haven’t had any Gulf oyster gallons to sell for five weeks. In this same week a year ago, our office sold 106 gallons worth $4,000. Our oysters in gallons are from Mississippi and Louisiana and are shucked at plants near the docks.” Inland Seafood sells to restaurants, institutions and supermarkets. “We are able to get Gold Band pasteurized oysters from Motivatit Seafood,” Hare said.”We can also buy oysters from Apalachicola, Florida. We tried selling Pacific oysters, but they had a different taste and consistency and weren’t as desirable here.” Because of the drop in oyster availability, prices per sack charged by boat owners to processors have risen about 45% since late April, Smith said. Oysters in open areas aren’t necessarily usable, he said. “In many places, growers are having to hunt for them, making their day less productive. They can’t catch enough usable stuff to pay for the fuel and labor to make the trip.” The state plans to conduct an impact study in addition to its routine research. “We take oyster samples every month, all year long, to assess condition in the beds,” said Randy Pausina, New Orleans-based head of fisheries for the Louisiana Dept. of Wildlife and Fisheries. “At this time of year, for example, oysters can be subject to high temperatures, heavy rainfall and tropical storms. We’re working on a longer term, post-spill oyster study under NRDA,” or Natural Resource Damage Assessment conducted by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. That study will consider ways to return natural resources to pre-spill conditions and to replace lost resources, he said. Randy Lanctot, executive director of the Louisiana Wildlife Federation, said “I think there will be benefits to the coast of keeping river diversions wide open for the past three months. But they will not be known for sure until after the water has fallen. Then we’ll be able to see how much land was created.” Whether large discharges of fresh water and sediment stimulated marsh growth won’t be know until next spring, he said. The Louisiana Wildlife Federation advocates “no, net loss of oyster-growing capacity” for state waters, and supports meshing that policy with the state’s plan for coastal protection and restoration, Lanctot said. Some growers may have to move their harvests from places that have been productive for them, however, Lanctot said. “For oyster leaseholders, who have built productive beds over many years, that can be troublesome.” He said the state should provide reasonable assistance to fishing-community members who will need help making transitions.

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Video: Tonkin Sees `Remarkable’ Sales Growth at Kia, Hyundai: Video

August 3, 2010

Aug. 4 (Bloomberg) — Ed Tonkin, chairman of the National Automobile Dealers Association, talks with Bloomberg’s Susan Li from Portland, Oregon, about U.S. auto sales in July and the outlook for the market. Nissan Motor Co. and Hyundai Motor Co. led U.S. gains in July among major automakers as sales for most large competitors in the market cooled. Nissan, Japan’s third-largest automaker, said sales rose 15 percent and Seoul-based Hyundai reported a 19 percent increase. Other increases included 21 percent for Kia Motors Corp., and 3.3 percent for Ford Motor Co. Deliveries fell 3.2 percent at Toyota Motor Corp., the world’s biggest carmaker. (Source: Bloomberg)

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GM’s Chevy Volt Electric Car Will Cost $41K

July 27, 2010

DETROIT — General Motors Co. said Tuesday its Chevrolet Volt electric car will cost $41,000 when it goes on sale in November. While the price is about $8,000 more than its closest rival, the Nissan Leaf, GM said it will offer a $350-per-month lease deal that’s essentially equal to the Leaf’s. That will put the battery-powered Volt within reach of many people, GM said. Both cars also are eligible for a federal tax credit that will cut their prices by $7,500. The Volt’s price would fall to $33,500 while the Leaf’s would drop to $25,280 from $32,780. Some states, such as California, Georgia and Oregon, offer additional tax breaks that lower the price further. The Volt, a 4-door sedan, runs on battery power for up to 40 miles but has a small gasoline engine to generate electricity once the battery runs down. The gas engine can generate power to run the car another 300 miles. That’s a big selling point because some drivers worry about the battery going dead during trips. This so-called “range anxiety” dogged GM’s experimental EV-1 electric car in the 1990s. To give the car wider appeal, drivers must know “they’re not going to get stranded,” said Joel Ewanick, GM vice president U.S. marketing. Nissan’s Leaf, which goes on sale in December, can go up to 100 miles on a charge. The car doesn’t have a gas engine and must be recharged once its battery is depleted. Nissan spokeswoman Katherine Zachary said the Leaf itself emits no pollution and is designed for people whose daily travels are within its range. GM’s $350-a-month lease deal is for 36 months with $2,500 down. Nissan’s lease plan is $349 a month over the same period with $1,995 down. The lease deals are particularly appealing because they are close to those offered with conventional cars. But depending on how far they drive, drivers would not have to pay for gasoline. GM said it would cost about $1.50 worth of electricity to fully recharge the Volt each night. GM earlier this month offered an eight-year, 100,000 mile warranty on the Volt’s battery to allay fears that owners could get stuck with the hefty price of replacing the power pack. Nissan matched that warranty Tuesday, a day that saw competing electric car announcements from the two automakers. GM will sell the Volt first in California, then move to New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Washington, D.C., Michigan and Texas. Orders are being taken at 600 Chevrolet dealers in those states. But in 12 to 18 months, dealers nationwide should offer the cars. Nissan said Tuesday that 17,000 people have placed orders for the Leaf so far in the U.S. Buyers in California, Washington, Oregon, Arizona and Tennessee will get the first Leaf deliveries in December. The Leaf will go on sale in other markets through 2011 and be available nationwide by the end of next year.

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Jeff Merkley For Warren: I’ve Told The White House To Appoint Her

July 24, 2010

The gathering of online and progressive activists at the Netroots Nation convention this year has produced a fairly overt and direct campaign to get Elizabeth Warren appointed as the first head of the newly created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Of the speakers addressing the recently passed regulatory reform bill, nearly every one has said the Harvard professor is best suited to head the board that she originally conceived. AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, for example, called Warren the only choice to head the consumer agency. Since this remains a political appointment, such advocacy matters only to the extent that it influences the president, the man who will ultimately make the choice, as well as the Senate, the body who will likely have to vote on Warren’s candidacy. On the latter front, Warren’s defenders got a bit of a boost on Saturday, with Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) making a forceful case for her appointment and disclosing that he’s been lobbying the administration on this front “I support Elizabeth Warren,” the Oregon Democrat said in an interview with the Huffington Post. “I have advocated for the administration to back her. She has both the clarity of the need for an agency that has as its top mission protecting citizens against tricks, traps and scams, and she has the ability to articulate that vision. She has the leadership skills and the knowledge of the financial world. She has the full set of requirements to be an effective leader. So I certainly hope the administration will [take my advice].” With an appointment to the consumer board coming, in all likelihood, in the near future, Merkley’s endorsement is one of the first publicly offered by a sitting Senator. Indeed, there has been as much concern raised over Warren’s confirmation prospects as there has been advocacy on her behalf. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) said recently that he wasn’t sure if Warren would get the 60 votes necessary for confirmation. For Merkley, the case for Warren is not just about the individual attributes she’d bring to the post, but also the various shortcomings of the just-passed regulatory reform legislation. A leading proponent of stricter rules to clamp down on the financial services industry, Merkley acknowledged feeling trepidation that the final legislative product left too much power to the judgment of the regulators. Having a strong advocate in a key post, in short, had become a vital ingredient to the legislation’s success. Warren, he said, would be that type of regulator.

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Joseph Casias: Walmart Fired Me For Using Medical Marijuana

June 29, 2010

DETROIT — A man who uses medical marijuana to treat symptoms of an inoperable brain tumor and cancer claims in a lawsuit filed Tuesday he was wrongfully fired from a Walmart store in Michigan after testing positive for the drug. Joseph Casias was fired last year after five years on the job in Battle Creek despite being legally registered with the state to use the drug, according to the lawsuit against the world’s largest retailer in state court. Casias, 30, said he didn’t use marijuana at work or come to work under the influence. Scott Michelman, a staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, said the lawsuit aims to test the extent that Michigan’s law protects employees. “No patient should be forced to choose between adequate pain relief and gainful employment, and no employer should be allowed to intrude upon private medical choices made by employees in consultation with their doctors,” Michelman said. Michigan voters approved medical marijuana use in 2008. Federal law still prohibits the sale and cultivation of the drug. Bentonville, Ark.-based Wal-Mart Stores Inc. said in a statement that it is an “unfortunate situation all around.” It said it is sympathetic to Casias’ condition but said it is an issue of customer and employee safety. “The doctor prescribed treatment was not the relevant issue. The issue is about the ability of our associates to do their jobs safely,” the company said. “As more states allow this treatment, employers are left without any guidelines except the federal standard.” Casias’ drug test was given after he injured his knee at work in November, but the positive result on the urine test only indicated drug use in recent days or weeks, according to the lawsuit in Calhoun County Circuit Court. Casias said the injury had nothing to do with marijuana use; he simply stepped the wrong way. Fourteen states provide protections for patients who use marijuana as recommended by a doctor. While still illegal under federal law, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder announced last year the Obama administration would relax prosecution guidelines. Some state courts, however, haven’t upheld employee protections. In April, the Oregon Supreme Court ruled that an employer is not required to accommodate the use of medical marijuana, saying state law is trumped by federal law. And in recent years, state supreme courts in Montana and California have ruled that medical marijuana laws don’t protect employees from being fired for using the drug. The ACLU argues, however, said Michigan’s law more explicitly protects employees from being disciplined for legally using medical marijuana. It said that includes Casias’ case, but not those who use the drug at work, for example. Casias’ cancer has been in remission for nine years, but the married father of two’s medical condition interferes with his ability to speak and causes pain. He said the use of medical marijuana, which was recommended by his oncologist after the law took effect, has decreased his pain without nausea that accompanied a previous medication. “For some people, working at Wal-Mart is just a job, but for me, it was a way of life,” Casias, of Battle Creek, said in a statement. “I came to Wal-Mart for a better opportunity for my family and I worked hard and proved myself. I just want the opportunity to continue my work.” The ACLU and its Michigan branch represent Casias along with attorney Daniel W. Grow in the lawsuit against Wal-Mart and a store manager.

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Obama Says BP Agrees on $20 Billion Escrow Fund for Gulf Oil-Spill Damages

June 16, 2010

By Roger Runningen and Nicholas Johnston June 16 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama said BP Plc will put $20 billion into an oil spill compensation fund over four years that will be independently administered by lawyer Kenneth Feinberg . The fund won’t cap BP’s liability for cleanup costs and economic damage, Obama said after he and some of his top advisers met with BP executives at the White House. It also won’t supersede the rights of individuals or states to sue the company, he said. In addition, BP will contribute $100 million to support oil workers who lost jobs because of the spill from a BP well in the Gulf of Mexico, the biggest in U.S. history. “I am absolutely confident BP will be able to meet its obligations,” Obama said. “BP is a strong and viable company, and it is in all of our interests that it remain so.” BP Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg said after emerging from the meeting that the London-based company is suspending dividend payments for the rest of the year. He also issued an apology to the American public for the disaster. “We made it clear to the president that words are not enough,” Svanberg said outside the White House. “We understand that we will and we should be judged by our actions.” Shares Rise BP’s American depositary receipts were up $1.04, or 3.3 percent, to $32.44 at 2:54 p.m. in New York trading. The shares are down 46 percent since the April 20 explosion aboard the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig that killed 11 workers and triggered the oil spill. The agreement was announced after the more than three-hour meeting between administration officials and company representatives, who also included Chief Executive Officer Tony Hayward , Lamar McKay , president of BP America Inc., Robert Dudley , BP managing director, and company lawyers. Feinberg will act as an independent third party to judge claims and authorize payments to Gulf Coast residents affected by the oil spill. Obama also named Feinberg in June 2009 to oversee executive pay at companies that received aid from the Treasury Department’s $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. Congressional Pressure He is managing partner of law firm Feinberg Rozen LLP in Washington. Feinberg, 64, has spent his career resolving legal claims, including settlements for those affected by the defoliant Agent Orange in Vietnam, the Dalkon Shield birth- control device, and the 2007 Virginia Tech shootings that killed 32 people. The amount for the fund is in line with what Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid , a Nevada Democrat, had suggested that BP set aside to compensate residents and businesses affected by the spill, which is threatening the shorelines and economies of four states. The government yesterday increased its estimate of the amount of oil gushing from a damaged BP well to 35,000 to 60,000 barrels a day. Based on the low end of the estimate, BP well may have leaked 1.99 million barrels so far. That exceeds the 262,000 barrels spilled by the Exxon Valdez in 1989 and the U.S. record 300,000-barrel spill by a tanker off the Oregon coast in 1968, according to statistics from the American Petroleum Institute. ‘Worst Environmental Disaster’ Obama has called the BP leak “the worst environmental disaster America has ever faced.” BP has spent about $1.6 billion on containing and cleaning up the spill so far. The company’s spending for cleanup and liabilities may reach $40 billion, Standard Chartered Plc estimated last week. BP’s payments accounted for about 14 percent of all dividends in the U.K.’s benchmark FTSE 100 stock index last year. Fitch Ratings yesterday lowered BP’s credit score by six grades to BBB, two levels above junk, on concern costs will escalate. To contact the reporters on this story: Roger Runningen in Washington at rruningen@bloomberg.net ; Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net

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Google Wi-Fi Data Collection Discussed by Law Enforcement in 30 States

June 16, 2010

By Karen Freifeld and Joel Rosenblatt June 16 (Bloomberg) — Google Inc. ’s collection of data via Wi-Fi networks was the subject of a conference call among law enforcement officials from 30 U.S. states, according to Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal . “We’re looking to establish where, when, why, for how long and for what purpose there was this collection of information on wireless networks,” Blumenthal said yesterday in an interview. The call included representatives of the states’ attorneys general. The discussion reflects widening concern among law enforcement over the way Google handles user information. The company said last month it mistakenly gathered data from open wireless networks while it was capturing images of streets and houses for its Street View service, a product that lets users view photographs of an area online. Blumenthal has demanded that Mountain View, California- based Google inform his office of any data gathered from his state’s residents and businesses without permission, the attorney general said this month. Google owns the world’s largest search engine . “This was a mistake, but we don’t believe we did anything illegal,” Google said in an e-mailed statement. “We’re working with the relevant authorities to answer their questions and concerns.” Illinois was among the states that joined in last week’s call led by Blumenthal. Illinois in Talks “We did participate in a conference call with other attorneys general regarding Google,” said Robyn Ziegler, a spokeswoman for Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan . Additional information wasn’t immediately available, she said. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission said last month that it is reviewing Google’s data gathering. An Oregon judge has ordered the company turn over similar data collected in that state, including any e-mails, files or digital phone records, according to court documents. Also this month, Google said it was turning over to regulators in Germany, France and Spain data it mistakenly collected from unsecured Wi-Fi networks. Those countries are investigating Google’s data-gathering practices after the company said in May that its cars used to photograph roadsides for its Street View mapping service inadvertently recorded information. Prosecutors in the German city of Hamburg opened a criminal investigation. Authorities in Italy, Canada and the Czech Republic also have begun inquiries. The Oregon case is Vicki Van Valin v. Google, 10-00557, U.S. District Court, District of Oregon (Portland). To contact the reporters on this story: Karen Freifeld in New York at kfreifeld@bloomberg.net ; Joel Rosenblatt in San Francisco at jrosenblatt@bloomberg.net .

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Obama Says Gulf Coast to Be Restored, Vows BP Will Pay for `Recklessness’

June 16, 2010

By Catherine Dodge and Nicholas Johnston June 16 (Bloomberg) — As devastation from the worst U.S. oil spill mounts, President Barack Obama vowed that BP Plc will pay for all damage caused by its “recklessness” and that the government would commit to restoring the Gulf Coast. “We will fight this spill with everything we’ve got,” Obama said last night in his first address to the nation from the Oval Office. “We will make BP pay for the damage their company has caused. And we will do whatever’s necessary to help the Gulf Coast and its people recover from this tragedy.” Almost two months into the environmental disaster, Obama sought to reassure Americans as BP’s blown-out well continues spewing crude into the sea, threatening livelihoods and economies in the coastal states. Underscoring his message, Obama named U.S. Navy Secretary Ray Mabus , a “son of the Gulf” and former governor of Mississippi, to oversee the region’s recovery. The president also appointed a former Justice Department inspector general, Michael Bromwich , to recast the criticized federal agency that oversees oil drilling as a “watchdog” instead of a “partner” with the oil industry. Obama drew on the flood of crude as a rallying call for action on “clean energy” legislation to ease the nation’s dependence on oil. White House Meeting He said he will tell BP Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg in a White House meeting today that the London-based company must set aside “whatever resources are required to compensate the workers and business owners who have been harmed as a result of his company’s recklessness.” Susan MacManus , a political scientist at the University of South Florida in Tampa, said the speech would do little to ease concerns of the region’s residents. “They were looking for more tangibles and evidence that some of the organizational issues have been worked out,” she said in an interview. “They were hoping to have more tangibles on specific relief and deadlines.” Ross Baker , a political science professor at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey, said Obama accomplished what he needed to and called the speech a “turning point.” “He showed flashes of anger and he was certainly compassionate and understanding,” Baker said. “He rose to the occasion.” 60,000 Barrels The oil gushing from the well is threatening the shores of four states, and the government yesterday raised the estimate of the leak rate to 35,000 to 60,000 barrels a day. It was the fifth increase in the official estimate of the leak, which began at 1,000 barrels a day. The spill began after the drilling rig Deepwater Horizon sank April 22, two days after the well it was drilling for BP exploded, killing 11 workers. Based on the low end of the estimate, the BP well may have leaked 1.99 million barrels so far. That exceeds the 262,000 barrels spilled by the Exxon Valdez in 1989 and the U.S. record 300,000-barrel spill by a tanker off the Oregon coast in 1968, according to statistics from the American Petroleum Institute. Obama called the BP leak “the worst environmental disaster America has ever faced.” The president said in the coming weeks, BP should be capturing as much as 90 percent of the oil spewing into the Gulf and that relief wells to be finished later this summer are “expected to stop the leak completely.” More Damage to Come “But we have to recognize that, despite our best efforts, oil has already caused damage to our coastline and its wildlife,” he said. “There will be more oil and more damage before this siege is done.” BP said in an e-mailed statement that the company shared the president’s goals of shutting off the well, cleaning up the Gulf and mitigating the economic impact. The British bank Standard Chartered Plc estimated BP’s liabilities in the spill at about $40 billion. By comparison, Exxon Mobil Corp. paid $4.8 billion in cleanup costs, fines, punitive damages and interest for the 1989 incident. BP fell yesterday to its lowest price in 13 years, down 48 percent from the day the oil rig blew up. The cost to protect $10 million of BP debt for a year reached $695,000, according to CMA DataVision. It was $29,000 on April 30. The yield on BP’s $750 million of 1.55 percent notes due in 2011 rose to 8.796 percent yesterday and the price dropped 2.1 cents to 92.25 cents on the dollar, the lowest on record, according to Trace, the bond-price reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. The bonds traded the most ever, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Ratings Cut Fitch Ratings cut BP’s credit rating six notches yesterday to two levels above junk on concern over the potential cost of cleaning up the spill and meeting future liabilities. Standard and Poor’s downgraded BP by one level last week. Obama, seeking to dispel criticism his administration responded too slowly to the spill, said 30,000 personnel and thousands of ships and vessels have been deployed. “From the very beginning of this crisis, the federal government has been in charge of the largest environmental cleanup effort in our nation’s history,” he said. The administration has been criticized by members of both political parties, including Democratic strategist James Carville and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell , who said the administration “hasn’t lived up to” Americans’ expectations in its response. Opposition Senator Lamar Alexander , a Tennessee Republican, said in a statement, “The president should spend more time focusing on cleaning up and containing the oil spill and less time trying to pass a national energy tax that will drive jobs overseas looking for cheap energy.” Obama’s address came about six hours after he returned from a two-day visit to the Gulf Coast, talking with state and local officials and business owners in Mississippi, Alabama and Florida. It was his fourth trip to the region. The spill has closed as much as 37 percent of the Gulf of Mexico to fishing, cut offshore drilling in the nation by half and polluted 140 miles (225 kilometers) of shoreline from Louisiana to Florida. It also may create political turmoil for the administration. “Everybody knows the president isn’t at fault for the leak, but they have to blame somebody,” said Stuart Rothenberg , publisher of the nonpartisan Rothenberg Political Report in Washington. Americans “are unhappy with a lot of stuff. They are unhappy with the economy; they are unhappy with the debt; they are pre-existing in a bad mood.” Approval Ratings Even though 71 percent of Americans in a USA Today/Gallup poll conducted June 11-13 say Obama hasn’t been tough enough in dealing with BP, his overall approval ratings haven’t suffered, according to Gallup’s daily tracking poll . Historians said it’s difficult to compare the spill to past crises that have beset presidents, such as Hurricane Katrina under President George W. Bush and the Iran hostage crisis during President Jimmy Carter ’s administration. The spill doesn’t pose the same national security threat as the hostage crisis and there was more immediate and obvious devastation and loss of life from Katrina, said Bruce Buchanan , a political scientist at the University of Texas in Austin. “This is loss of livelihood and slow torture,” said Buchanan. “It’s quite unique.” To contact the reporters on this story: Catherine Dodge in Washington at cdodge1@bloomberg.net ; Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net ;

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Chinese Data Show Recovery on Track, Challenging Government’s Yuan Stance

June 11, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 12 (Bloomberg) — China’s gains in retail sales , consumer prices and industrial production countered the government’s assessment that the recovery isn’t “solid,” and put more pressure on policy makers to let the yuan rise. Inflation accelerated to an annual 3.1 percent pace in May, surpassing officials’ target for the full year, retail sales gains quickened to 18.7 percent and industrial production jumped 16.5 percent, government reports showed yesterday in Beijing. The central bank said in a June 8 statement China still doesn’t have a “solid” recovery in domestic demand. The indicators build the case for a stronger currency to help alleviate price pressures and quiet criticism that Premier Wen Jiabao ’s government has a mercantilist policy that’s hurting the global recovery. American lawmakers said they’ll go ahead with legislation targeting the yuan peg just as U.S. and Chinese leaders prepare to meet at a Group of 20 summit this month. “China’s recovery is clearly on track and overheating risks are still building as inflation accelerated and money and investment growth remains strong,” said Kevin Lai , a Hong Kong- based economist at Daiwa Capital Markets. “The government should move on the currency as soon as possible before pressure from the U.S. intensifies again.” Asian stocks gained for a second day yesterday on optimism that the region’s rebound, led by China, is proving resilient so far to the European debt crisis that the World Bank said this week may cause “double-dip” recessions in some countries. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose 1.3 percent as of 5:55 p.m. Hong Kong time. Yuan Bets Bets on the yuan to strengthen against the dollar increased after U.S. officials stepped up calls for China to end the peg of 6.83 that was adopted in July 2008 to shield exporters from the global recession. The yuan’s 12-month non-deliverable forwards rose 0.4 percent to 6.7558 per dollar as of 5:40 p.m. yesterday in Hong Kong. The increase in consumer prices was the biggest in 19 months, while a separate report on producer costs showed the largest jump in 20 months, at 7.1 percent. The M2 gauge of money supply rose 21 percent in May from a year before after a 21.5 percent gain in April, the central bank reported. Lending growth exceeded economists’ estimates, separate figures showed. Banks extended 639.4 billion yuan ($94 billion) of new loans in May, compared with the median forecast of 600 billion in a Bloomberg News survey of economists. Rising Rates Money-market rates rose after the figures. The yield on the one-year onshore interest-rate swap, a fixed-cost paid to receive a floating one, climbed three basis points to 2.3 percent. Meantime, China failed to draw enough bids at a sale of treasury bills for a third time this year amid speculation banks sought higher returns to protect against inflation. The finance ministry issued 11.45 billion yuan of the 15 billion yuan of 91- day securities on offer at an average yield of 1.9062 percent, according to traders at BOC International Holdings and Agricultural Bank of China, who asked not to be identified. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said at a congressional hearing on June 10 that a more flexible yuan would allow China to pursue “a more effective, independent monetary policy, which is particularly important now, with China’s economy facing a risk of inflation in goods and in asset prices.” Property Prices Data on June 10 showed property prices rose at a near- record pace, with costs jumping 12.4 percent across 70 cities from a year earlier. Government efforts to crack down on speculation have had an impact on sales, which tumbled 25 percent in May from the previous month. This week’s economic data suggest that China’s growth rate peaked in the first quarter, settling in at 9 percent or more in coming quarters, some economists said. China’s economy will probably expand at “slightly over” a 10 percent annual pace this quarter after the 11.9 percent surge in the first quarter, Barclays Capital estimates. The pace will slow to 9 percent in the final three months of the year, Peng Wensheng , head of China research for Barclays in Hong Kong, wrote in a note yesterday. Industrial production growth eased from a 17.8 percent year-on-year rate in April. Urban fixed-asset investment rose 25.9 percent on that basis in the first five months of the year, compared with 26.1 percent in January-April. The World Bank, in an economic outlook published June 9, forecast 9.5 percent GDP growth for the year, compared with 3.3 percent for the U.S. and 0.7 percent for the euro region. Band Widening Barclays forecasts China will raise deposit rates from the third quarter and borrowing costs from the fourth to help contain inflation, and anticipates a widening in the yuan trading band. “The exact timing is difficult to forecast and goes beyond economics,” Peng wrote in the note, referring to the political oversight of the yuan decision. China’s export gains have spurred the ire of U.S. lawmakers, who pushed Geithner at a Senate Finance Committee hearing on June 10 to apply greater pressure to his counterparts. Shipments abroad climbed 48.5 percent in May, helping yield a $19.5 billion trade surplus for the month. U.S. government figures show America with a $71 billion trade deficit with China for the first four months of the year, up 5.7 percent from the same period of 2009. “There is now a long trail of broken promises that can no longer be ignored,” Senator Ron Wyden , an Oregon Democrat, told Geithner. Lawmakers led by Senators Charles Schumer , a New York Democrat, and Lindsey Graham , a South Carolina Republican, are pushing legislation that would let companies seek import duties to compensate for an undervalued currency. Global ‘Distortions’ The Treasury chief noted in the hearing that China did let the yuan rise 21 percent against the dollar in 2005-08. Geithner said in his testimony that “the distortions caused by China’s exchange rate spread far beyond China’s borders and are an impediment to the global rebalancing we need.” China probably has until the end of the month to strengthen its currency before Congress acts, Rebecca Patterson , the head of foreign exchange at the private banking unit of JPMorgan Chase & Co., said in a Bloomberg Radio interview on Surveillance with Tom Keene . Acting within that time frame would address the peg before President Barack Obama is scheduled to meet with Hu Jintao , his Chinese counterpart, and other members of the G-20 nations. Indian and Brazilian officials have joined the U.S. in recent months in urging a shift in yuan policy. “The frustrations with China’s trade practices are growing by the moment,” Graham, the senator, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital with Al Hunt ” airing this weekend. -Li Yanping, Zhang Dingmin. With assistance from Thomas R. Keene in New York, Bob Chen in Hong Kong and Judy Chen. Editors: Chris Anstey, Paul Panckhurst. To contact the reporter on this story: Li Yanping in Beijing at yli16@bloomberg.net

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Chinese Data Show Recovery on Track, Challenging Government’s Yuan Stance

June 11, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 12 (Bloomberg) — China’s gains in retail sales , consumer prices and industrial production countered the government’s assessment that the recovery isn’t “solid,” and put more pressure on policy makers to let the yuan rise. Inflation accelerated to an annual 3.1 percent pace in May, surpassing officials’ target for the full year, retail sales gains quickened to 18.7 percent and industrial production jumped 16.5 percent, government reports showed yesterday in Beijing. The central bank said in a June 8 statement China still doesn’t have a “solid” recovery in domestic demand. The indicators build the case for a stronger currency to help alleviate price pressures and quiet criticism that Premier Wen Jiabao ’s government has a mercantilist policy that’s hurting the global recovery. American lawmakers said they’ll go ahead with legislation targeting the yuan peg just as U.S. and Chinese leaders prepare to meet at a Group of 20 summit this month. “China’s recovery is clearly on track and overheating risks are still building as inflation accelerated and money and investment growth remains strong,” said Kevin Lai , a Hong Kong- based economist at Daiwa Capital Markets. “The government should move on the currency as soon as possible before pressure from the U.S. intensifies again.” Asian stocks gained for a second day yesterday on optimism that the region’s rebound, led by China, is proving resilient so far to the European debt crisis that the World Bank said this week may cause “double-dip” recessions in some countries. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose 1.3 percent as of 5:55 p.m. Hong Kong time. Yuan Bets Bets on the yuan to strengthen against the dollar increased after U.S. officials stepped up calls for China to end the peg of 6.83 that was adopted in July 2008 to shield exporters from the global recession. The yuan’s 12-month non-deliverable forwards rose 0.4 percent to 6.7558 per dollar as of 5:40 p.m. yesterday in Hong Kong. The increase in consumer prices was the biggest in 19 months, while a separate report on producer costs showed the largest jump in 20 months, at 7.1 percent. The M2 gauge of money supply rose 21 percent in May from a year before after a 21.5 percent gain in April, the central bank reported. Lending growth exceeded economists’ estimates, separate figures showed. Banks extended 639.4 billion yuan ($94 billion) of new loans in May, compared with the median forecast of 600 billion in a Bloomberg News survey of economists. Rising Rates Money-market rates rose after the figures. The yield on the one-year onshore interest-rate swap, a fixed-cost paid to receive a floating one, climbed three basis points to 2.3 percent. Meantime, China failed to draw enough bids at a sale of treasury bills for a third time this year amid speculation banks sought higher returns to protect against inflation. The finance ministry issued 11.45 billion yuan of the 15 billion yuan of 91- day securities on offer at an average yield of 1.9062 percent, according to traders at BOC International Holdings and Agricultural Bank of China, who asked not to be identified. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said at a congressional hearing on June 10 that a more flexible yuan would allow China to pursue “a more effective, independent monetary policy, which is particularly important now, with China’s economy facing a risk of inflation in goods and in asset prices.” Property Prices Data on June 10 showed property prices rose at a near- record pace, with costs jumping 12.4 percent across 70 cities from a year earlier. Government efforts to crack down on speculation have had an impact on sales, which tumbled 25 percent in May from the previous month. This week’s economic data suggest that China’s growth rate peaked in the first quarter, settling in at 9 percent or more in coming quarters, some economists said. China’s economy will probably expand at “slightly over” a 10 percent annual pace this quarter after the 11.9 percent surge in the first quarter, Barclays Capital estimates. The pace will slow to 9 percent in the final three months of the year, Peng Wensheng , head of China research for Barclays in Hong Kong, wrote in a note yesterday. Industrial production growth eased from a 17.8 percent year-on-year rate in April. Urban fixed-asset investment rose 25.9 percent on that basis in the first five months of the year, compared with 26.1 percent in January-April. The World Bank, in an economic outlook published June 9, forecast 9.5 percent GDP growth for the year, compared with 3.3 percent for the U.S. and 0.7 percent for the euro region. Band Widening Barclays forecasts China will raise deposit rates from the third quarter and borrowing costs from the fourth to help contain inflation, and anticipates a widening in the yuan trading band. “The exact timing is difficult to forecast and goes beyond economics,” Peng wrote in the note, referring to the political oversight of the yuan decision. China’s export gains have spurred the ire of U.S. lawmakers, who pushed Geithner at a Senate Finance Committee hearing on June 10 to apply greater pressure to his counterparts. Shipments abroad climbed 48.5 percent in May, helping yield a $19.5 billion trade surplus for the month. U.S. government figures show America with a $71 billion trade deficit with China for the first four months of the year, up 5.7 percent from the same period of 2009. “There is now a long trail of broken promises that can no longer be ignored,” Senator Ron Wyden , an Oregon Democrat, told Geithner. Lawmakers led by Senators Charles Schumer , a New York Democrat, and Lindsey Graham , a South Carolina Republican, are pushing legislation that would let companies seek import duties to compensate for an undervalued currency. Global ‘Distortions’ The Treasury chief noted in the hearing that China did let the yuan rise 21 percent against the dollar in 2005-08. Geithner said in his testimony that “the distortions caused by China’s exchange rate spread far beyond China’s borders and are an impediment to the global rebalancing we need.” China probably has until the end of the month to strengthen its currency before Congress acts, Rebecca Patterson , the head of foreign exchange at the private banking unit of JPMorgan Chase & Co., said in a Bloomberg Radio interview on Surveillance with Tom Keene . Acting within that time frame would address the peg before President Barack Obama is scheduled to meet with Hu Jintao , his Chinese counterpart, and other members of the G-20 nations. Indian and Brazilian officials have joined the U.S. in recent months in urging a shift in yuan policy. “The frustrations with China’s trade practices are growing by the moment,” Graham, the senator, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital with Al Hunt ” airing this weekend. -Li Yanping, Zhang Dingmin. With assistance from Thomas R. Keene in New York, Bob Chen in Hong Kong and Judy Chen. Editors: Chris Anstey, Paul Panckhurst. To contact the reporter on this story: Li Yanping in Beijing at yli16@bloomberg.net

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Geithner Says China&rsquos Yuan Peg Hurts Global Recovery

June 11, 2010

By Ian Katz June 11 (Bloomberg) — Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said China’s exchange-rate policy prevents a balanced global recovery and urged a stronger yuan to help contain inflation in the world’s third-largest economy. “The distortions caused by China’s exchange rate spread far beyond China’s borders and are an impediment to the global rebalancing we need,” Geithner said in testimony to the Senate Finance Committee. China’s commerce ministry said hours later that the yuan’s peg to the dollar remains unchanged and the country’s policy was made clear to the U.S. in talks last month. The U.S. has been trying to push China to let the currency rise, with Geithner hewing to a diplomatic approach and so far resisting efforts to impose trade sanctions. China adopted the peg during the financial crisis to shield its exporters, fueling complaints from trading partners and U.S. lawmakers that the world’s biggest exporter has an unfair advantage. Reports yesterday from the U.S. and China highlighted concern that trade imbalances that reached record levels prior to the global crisis may be reemerging. Chinese exports climbed 48.5 percent in May from a year earlier, the most in six years after adjusting for distortions from the Lunar New Year holidays. U.S. imports of Chinese goods exceeded exports to China by $71 billion, a 5.7 percent increase in the bilateral trade gap from the year-earlier period, the report showed. ‘Frustrations’ Rising “The frustrations with China’s trade practices are growing by the moment,” Senator Lindsey Graham , a South Carolina Republican who has co-sponsored legislation targeting China’s currency policy, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital with Al Hunt” airing this weekend. The rising tension comes just as optimism that the world’s fastest-growing major economy is withstanding the threat of Europe’s debt crisis spurs gains in stocks worldwide. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose 1.4 percent as of 10:13 a.m. in Hong Kong today, after the U.S. Standard & Poor’s 500 Stock Index jumped 3 percent overnight. Yesterday’s hearing in Washington featured senators blaming China for failure to protect intellectual property rights and giving unfair preference to its companies in procurement practices. “There is now a long trail of broken promises that can no longer be ignored,” Senator Ron Wyden , an Oregon Democrat, told Geithner. “At least five of your predecessors have been slow- danced by the Chinese,” he said. “What are you going to do to change that” and prevent getting “slow-danced off the dance floor” he said. Geithner’s Dance Geithner responded that China did let the yuan advance 21 percent against the dollar in the three years to 2008. He also reiterated his view that it’s in China’s own interest to loosen controls on the currency. A Chinese Ministry of Commerce press official said today China will stick to its currency reform principles of making independent decisions and pursuing a gradual and controlled process. The official reiterated the government’s view that the currency isn’t the cause for the trade gap. Geithner said that a more flexible yuan would allow China to pursue “a more effective, independent monetary policy, which is particularly important now, with China’s economy facing a risk of inflation in goods and in asset prices.” China’s Inflation China’s inflation rate increased to 3.1 percent in May, exceeding the government’s target for the full year, a government report showed today. Data yesterday showed property prices rose at a near-record pace, with costs jumping 12.4 percent across 70 cities, the statistics bureau said. Senators repeatedly criticized China’s business practices and Geithner said it’s important U.S. companies have fair access to the growing Chinese market. Senator Charles Grassley , the top Republican on the committee, said the Chinese need to “grow up and be citizens of this world.” China became a member of the World Trade Organization in 2001. “Instead of doing everything it can to comply with the letter and spirit of its World Trade Organization obligations, the Chinese government appears to be looking for ways to evade those rules,” Grassley said. The Senate will vote “soon” on a measure aimed at getting China to raise the value of the yuan, Senator Charles Schumer of New York told Geithner at the hearing. Graham said in the interview that the measure has “huge” support in Congress and President Barack Obama “runs the risk” of being overridden by lawmakers if he attempts to veto it. Looming Vote “Despite the administration asking us not to do it,” lawmakers will proceed with the legislation “to provide specific consequences for countries that fail to adopt appropriate policies,” said Schumer, a Democrat and lead sponsor of the legislation. He said this week the Senate would vote within two weeks. Geithner, in response, said “I recognize, and I think it’s very important for China to understand,” that Schumer’s legislation “has very broad support” from Democrats and Republicans. Since July 2008 Premier Wen Jiabao ’s government has kept the yuan around 6.83, per dollar. In April, Geithner delayed the release of a twice-yearly report on whether China or any other country is manipulating its exchange rate. Under questioning, Geithner said he hasn’t decided when to release the currency report. “Once we get through the G-20 meeting we’ll take some stock,” he said, referring to a Group of 20 nations leaders’ summit in Toronto June 26-27. Geithner told the Senate panel that “reform of China’s exchange rate is critically important to the United States and to the global economy.” To contact the reporter on this story: Ian Katz in Washington at ikatz2@bloomberg.net

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BP May Sell Prudhoe Bay Stake as Spill Costs Mount

June 3, 2010

By Joe Carroll June 3 (Bloomberg) — BP Plc may have to sell some of its most-valued assets, including a stake in the biggest U.S. oil field, to pay cleanup costs, fines and legal damages from the largest offshore spill in U.S. history. The 26 percent stake in Prudhoe Bay on Alaska’s North Slope and other BP assets could attract suitors such as China National Petroleum Corp., Occidental Petroleum Corp. and Hess Corp., said Douglas Ober , chief executive officer at Petroleum & Resources Corp. in Baltimore, the oldest U.S. oil fund. “BP is going to have to look to other assets to pay for this mess they’re creating,” said Ober, who oversees a combined $1.6 billion at the fund and Adams Express Co. “They won’t be able to use any of that cash flow to expand production or add to reserves, and that’s really going to put them in a bind.” BP lost 31 percent of its market value since an April 20 fire in the Gulf of Mexico killed 11 workers, sank a $365 million rig and triggered subsea leaks that have spewed millions of gallons of crude into the Gulf. The company has spent more than $1 billion trying to stanch the leaks and remove oil from the ocean. Ober sold all of his BP stock after 15 refinery workers perished in a 2005 explosion at the company’s Texas City, Texas, plant. Asset sales by BP are more likely than a takeover of the company because it’s too soon to estimate how much the spill and its aftermath will end up costing, said Gianna Bern , founder of Brookshire Advisory & Research Inc. in Flossmoor, Illinois, and a former BP crude trader. ‘Think Twice’ “A potential investor would think twice because this is unprecedented and it would take a decade to sort out liability and any potential litigation,” Bern said. BP, the largest oil and natural-gas producer in the U.S. region of the Gulf of Mexico, is facing criminal and regulatory probes into the causes of the disaster at its deep-sea Macondo well drilled with Transocean Ltd.’s Deepwater Horizon rig. U.S. senators Ron Wyden of Oregon and Charles Schumer of New York said the company should suspend dividend payments until cleanup and liability costs are determined. A payout would be “unfathomable” until the obligations are tallied, they said. The company paid $10.5 billion in dividends last year, according to its annual report. BP’s latest attempt to contain the leaks stalled yesterday when a saw blade attached to a subsea robot snagged while cutting the pipe from the well. BP wants to sever the pipe to install a device that will divert the crude to a ship on the surface. The plunge in BP shares since the disaster wiped out 42.2 billion pounds ($61.8 billion) in market value, or more than the economic output of Nigeria, Vietnam or the Czech Republic. The stock climbed as much as 20.3 pence, or 4.7 percent, to 450.05 pence, and traded at 444.05 pence at 10:34 a.m. in London. The company’s long-term issuer default rating and senior unsecured rating was cut to AA from AA+ at Fitch Ratings today, with a ratings watch negative. The downgrade reflects “concern that BP is still facing substantial additional risks in relation to the oil spill,” the ratings agency said in a statement. Biggest Crude Source Prudhoe Bay and other Alaskan fields were BP’s largest source of crude in the Western Hemisphere in 2009 after the Gulf of Mexico, according to a public filing. Alaskan fields provided one in every 14 barrels of oil BP pumped worldwide last year. BP operates or own stakes in 20 other fields on the North Slope, as well as four pipelines. In addition to Prudhoe Bay, rival companies may target the company’s holdings in oil-rich nations such as Azerbaijan and Angola, analysts said. China National’s PetroChina Co. and other Chinese state oil companies, backed by $2.4 trillion of foreign currency reserves, have embarked on a string of overseas purchases to feed oil to the world’s fastest-growing major economy. State-run Chinese companies spent a record $32 billion last year acquiring energy and resources assets overseas. China’s appetite for crude this year is expected to grow at 15 times the rate of demand in the U.S., the world’s largest energy market, the International Energy Agency in Paris said in a May 12 report. For the first time, China is expected to burn one in every nine barrels of oil produced in the world this year, IEA figures showed. China’s Financial Strength “China is always sniffing around for reserves,” said Ober, whose biggest holdings in the petroleum fund are Chevron Corp., Exxon Mobil Corp. and Occidental. “It wouldn’t necessarily have to be one of the western supermajors because there are other companies who could muster the financial strength to make a deal for these assets.” Richard Kline , a spokesman for Los Angeles-based Occidental, said neither Chief Executive Officer Ray Irani nor President and Chief Financial Officer Stephen I. Chazen were available to comment. Jon Pepper , a spokesman for New York-based Hess, declined to comment. BP spokesman Mark Salt said Chief Executive Officer Tony Hayward will hold a call with investors tomorrow to address concerns about the dividend and the plunging share price. Credit Suisse analysts yesterday said cleanup costs and legal settlements and claims ultimately may reach $37 billion, or almost nine times the costs incurred by Exxon when its Valdez tanker ran aground in Alaska’s Prince William Sound in 1989. Ober said he has steered clear of BP shares for the last five years because of concern the safety lapses that led to the Texas City refinery disaster remained unresolved. “That was a pretty nasty thing that happened and it demonstrated that they needed to get their safety record in order,” Ober said. “Clearly, they still have some work to do on that front.” To contact the reporter on this story: Joe Carroll in Chicago at jcarroll8@bloomberg.net .

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BP Resumes `Top Kill’ Work to Stop Gulf Oil Spill Bigger Than Exxon Valdez

May 28, 2010

By Jessica Resnick-Ault and Jim Polson May 28 (Bloomberg) — BP Plc resumed pumping thousands of barrels of mud into a damaged oil well in a bid to halt a Gulf of Mexico oil spill that is bigger than the Exxon Valdez disaster and may be the largest in U.S. history. The attempt, known as a “top kill,” restarted at 7 p.m. New York time yesterday, U.S. Coast Guard Chief Bob Laura said by telephone from the spill Joint Information Center in Robert, Louisiana. The effort, begun May 26, was suspended the same day at 11 p.m. for checks and to make some changes to the procedure. “What we do believe we’ve done is successfully pump some drilling mud into the well bore,” Doug Suttles , BP’s chief operating officer for exploration and production, said yesterday at a press conference in Robert. BP will keep pumping the mud for another 24 to 48 hours, he said. “We will continue the efforts as long as there’s a possibility of success.” A successful top-kill would bring a temporary end to a leak that has poured an estimated 23 million gallons of oil into ocean and soiled 100 miles (161 kilometers) of coast. The slick stemming from a fatal April 20 drilling rig explosion threatens the Gulf fishing and tourism industries and has so far cost BP $850 million. “It will be Friday night or Saturday at the earliest before we know definitively that the well has been killed,” Robert MacKenzie , a Houston-based analyst for FBR Capital Markets, wrote yesterday in a note to clients. Exxon Valdez The well has been leaking oil at an estimated rate of 12,000 to 19,000 barrels a day, Marcia McNutt, head of a U.S. government panel studying the flow, said yesterday. At the midpoint of that rate, the well has exceeded the 262,000 barrels spilled by the Exxon Valdez in 1989 and the U.S. record 300,000-barrel spill by a tanker off the Oregon coast in 1968, according to statistics from the American Petroleum Institute . The company will inject material originally intended for another well-blocking solution known as a “junk shot.” Adding the items to the mud may help BP to seal leaks so that enough pressure can be exerted on the column of oil to block the flow. Some of items are fibrous and small, and others are larger rubber balls, Suttles said. The first phase of the top kill effort used less than 15,000 barrels of drilling mud to try to fill the well, Suttles said. The company had 50,000 barrels available for use and has made sure there are additional supplies on hand for when pumping resumes, he said. ‘Arm Wrestle’ The top kill process uses drilling fluid to “arm wrestle” the gusher of oil and natural gas back into the well, said Robert Dudley , managing director for the London-based company. The procedure will serve as a temporary block on the damaged well until another well can be drilled and used to permanently plug it with cement. BP rose 28.8 pence, or 5.9 percent, to 520.8 pence yesterday in London trading. Based on the midpoint of the best estimates released by the Flow Rate Technical Group, the well may have leaked about 527,000 barrels from the day the rig sank, April 22, through May 26, more than double the size of the Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska. The amount of oil being spilled will help determine BP’s liability for the leak. Live Video Feed A live video feed provided by BP showed brown fluid flowing from the site. The feed alone cannot indicate the success of the effort to block the well, Suttles said. Ultimately, the effort will be considered successful when mud has fully blocked oil from leaking and the well has been capped with concrete. The well began leaking after an April 20 explosion and fire on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig, which resulted in the deaths of 11 workers. BP leased the rig from Geneva-based Transocean Ltd. , the largest deep-water driller. Transocean rose as much as 9.1 percent yesterday. The shares gained $1.13, or 1.9 percent, to $59.71 at 4:01 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Halliburton Co., which provided services on the rig, rose $1.11, or 4.3 percent, to $26.99. Cameron International Corp., which provided equipment for the rig, rose $2, or 5.5 percent, to $38.08. Anadarko Petroleum Corp., which owns a 25 percent stake in the well, rose $2.23, or 4.2 percent, to $55.57. Congress Hearings An underwater oil plume from the spill may have spread 22 miles northeast toward Mobile, Alabama, researchers from the University of South Florida found in a preliminary report. Tests conducted aboard the school’s Weatherbird II vessel showed the highest concentrations of “dissolved hydrocarbons” were 400 meters (1,312 feet) underwater. Congress has scheduled at least 20 hearings on the Deepwater Horizon and offshore drilling since the rig exploded, and the Minerals Management Service and Coast Guard held another day of hearings in Louisiana on the reasons for the accident yesterday. President Barack Obama yesterday extended by six months a moratorium on new deep-water drilling permits that began after oil started to spill from BP’s well. The president also canceled a proposal to drill for oil off the coast of Virginia and planned drilling by Royal Dutch Shell Plc of exploratory wells in the Arctic off Alaska. The head of the Minerals Management Service, the federal agency that oversees offshore drilling, resigned yesterday, according to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar . Cost to BP The spill has so far cost BP a total of $850 million, or about $23 million a day, Suttles said yesterday. Average daily profit last year was $45 million a day, according to data compiled by Bloomberg . The accident “threatens to be the worst oil spill disaster in history,” BP investor Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority claimed in a Delaware Chancery Court lawsuit filed against BP directors on May 21 in Wilmington. Directors violated their duties to the company, causing “enormous economic harm for failure to act in the interests of BP and its shareholders” and exposing the company to liabilities in the billions of dollars, Septa lawyers contend. The lawsuit lists potential damage claims of about $2.5 billion to the Gulf fishing industry; $3 billion to tourism; $700 million in remediation efforts so far; $6 million a day in continuing costs and “incalculable damages to BP’s reputation.” To contact the reporter on this story: Jim Polson in New York at jpolson@bloomberg.net

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BP’s `Top Kill’ Operation Stops Flow of Oil for Now in Biggest U.S. Spill

May 27, 2010

By Jim Polson May 27 (Bloomberg) — BP Plc made progress in efforts to stop the leak from its Gulf of Mexico well, the U.S. Coast Guard said, as a federal panel issued a new estimate indicating the offshore oil spill has become the largest in U.S. history. The well has been leaking oil at a “best initial” estimated rate of 12,000 barrels to 19,000 barrels a day, Marcia McNutt, head of a U.S. governmental panel, said today. At the midpoint of that rate, the well has exceeded the 262,000 barrels spilled by the Exxon Valdez in 1989 and the record 300,000- barrel spill by a tanker off the Oregon coast in 1968, according to statistics from the American Petroleum Institute. The company may have stopped the flow of oil from the well after pumping mud-like drilling fluid into it, U.S. Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen said. Pumping will continue another 24 hour to 48 hours, Jon Pack, a BP spokesman, said in an e-mailed message sent about 5:30 p.m. New York time today. “Everybody is cautiously optimistic, but there’s no reason to declare victory yet,” Allen, National Incident Commander for the spill, said in an interview on WWL radio in New Orleans today. “They’ve had some success overnight” injecting heavy fluids into the well, part of a procedure known as “top kill,” he said. Success of top kill would bring to an end a leak that has poured an estimated 22 million gallons of oil into the Gulf and soiled 100 miles (161 kilometers) of coast. BP rose 28.8 pence, or 5.9 percent, to 520.8 pence at 4:35 p.m. in London trading. Double the Valdez Based on the midpoint of the best estimates released by the Flow Rate Technical Group, the well may have leaked about 527,000 barrels from the day the rig sank, April 22, through yesterday. That is more than double the Exxon Valdez’s 262,000- barrel spill in Alaska. The amount of oil being spilled will help determine BP’s liability for the leak. The top kill process uses drilling fluid to “arm wrestle” the gusher of oil and natural gas back into the well, Robert Dudley , managing director for the London-based company, said. ‘Ongoing’ Operation A live video feed provided by BP showed brown fluid flowing from the site. “The operation is ongoing, we’re not giving a commentary on it,” David Nicholas , a BP spokesman in Houston, said in a telephone interview. The well began leaking after an April 20 explosion and fire on the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig, which resulted in the deaths of 11 workers. BP leased the rig from Geneva-based Transocean Ltd. , the largest deep-water driller. Transocean rose as much as 9.1 percent today. The shares gained $1.13, or 1.9 percent, to $59.71 at 4:01 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Halliburton Co., which provided services on the rig, rose $1.20, or 4.7 percent, to $26.99. Cameron International Corp., which provided equipment for the rig, rose $2, or 5.5 percent, to $38.08. Anadarko Petroleum Corp., which owns a 25 percent stake in the well, rose $2.23, or 4.2 percent, to $55.57. “It will be Friday night or Saturday at the earliest before we know definitively that the well has been killed,” Robert MacKenzie , a Houston-based analyst for FBR Capital Markets, wrote today in a note to clients. “They are in the process of mixing more mud or perhaps even a junk shot to pump before they switch to cement to seal the well.” Junk Shot BP has said a “junk shot” injection of rubber scraps may be used as needed to seal leaks in the well piping so that enough pressure can be exerted on the column of oil and gas. An underwater oil plume from the spill may have spread 22 miles northeast toward Mobile, Alabama, a research vessel from the University of South Florida found in a preliminary report. The Weatherbird II’s initial tests show the highest concentrations of “dissolved hydrocarbons” were 400 meters (1,312 feet) underwater. Congress has scheduled at least 20 hearings on the Deepwater Horizon and offshore drilling since the rig exploded, and the Minerals Management Service and Coast Guard held another day of hearings in Louisiana on the reasons for the accident. Drilling Delay President Barack Obama today extended by six months a moratorium on new deep-water drilling permits that began after oil started to spill from BP’s well. The president also canceled a proposal to drill for oil off the coast of Virginia and planned drilling by Royal Dutch Shell Plc of exploratory wells in the Arctic off Alaska. The head of the Minerals Management Service, the federal agency that oversees offshore drilling, resigned today, according to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar . The spill has cost BP a total of $760 million, or about $22 million a day, the company said May 24. Average daily profit last year was $45 million a day, according to data compiled by Bloomberg . The federal government has spent more than $100 million responding to the spill and will be reimbursed by BP, Coast Guard Rear Admiral Mary Landry said yesterday. To contact the reporter on this story: Jim Polson in New York at jpolson@bloomberg.net

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Senate Dems Will Fight For Volcker Rule In Conference Negotiations: Merkley

May 24, 2010

The Senate approved its Wall Street reform package on Thursday night without including a critical amendment, cosponsored by Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) and Carl Levin (D-Mich.), that would bar banks from trading for their own profit with taxpayer backed money. But the fight isn’t over. Democratic leaders will push to include Merkley-Levin during conference committee negotiations between the House and Senate, according to Merkley. “Our Democratic leadership has said they would aggressively pursue the ideas that are in Merkley-Levin in conference,” Merkley told HuffPost and local Oregon reporters after the amendment failed to get a vote on the Senate floor. “The process is not done.” During conference committee negotiations, the two chambers blend their respective bills, with each side generally fighting for their own provisions. The conference committee is often a shooting gallery for lobbyists, who are able to pick off unwanted provisions under the cover of the opaque deliberations. These negotiations could be different, however, with key Democrats calling for the talks to be televised on C-SPAN. The failure of the Senate to include the amendment is not an indication that it doesn’t have broad support in the chamber. Quite the opposite: the lengths to which Wall Street lobbyists went to make sure it didn’t get a vote is a strong indication they were worried it would pass. Merkley speculated that the amendment was ultimately denied a vote because “it would probably pass and Wall Street doesn’t want it to pass.” He said his whip count had the amendment at well over 50 votes with many others leaning in support of it. Just before the amendment was brought up for a vote, Wall Street lobbyists persuaded the GOP to withdraw the amendment that was attached to it, thus snuffing it out. The bill as written includes language with the same intent as Merkley-Levin, known as the Volcker Rule, but would allow regulators to override the ban on trading. Conference committee negotiators could tighten the language by citing the spirit of the underlying bill. If it’s not done now, said Merkley, proponents will likely have to wait until the next crisis to raise the issue. “If we have another crisis in the next 24 months, people will be taking a second look at what we’re passing now. And if everything goes smoothly for five years, we probably won’t have any momentum until the next crisis occurs,” he said.

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Mall Maestro Caruso Eludes Retail Slump, Ponders Run for Los Angeles Mayor

May 21, 2010

By Daniel Taub and Nadja Brandt May 21 (Bloomberg) — Mall developer Rick Caruso plans to take his success in retail to distressed shopping centers, apartments, luxury hotels, airports and maybe a run for Los Angeles mayor. The Grove, Caruso’s town square-like shopping center in Los Angeles that attracts 17 million shoppers a year, had few vacancies through the recession, he said. Sales at the Americana at Brand, his first retail-residential complex, have grown since its 2008 opening. Caruso plans to use profits to buy distressed properties he can rehabilitate. Caruso’s Los Angeles-based company, closely held Caruso Affiliated, last month announced a $750 million debt-and-equity venture with TPG Capital, David Bonderman ’s buyout firm, to make retail and mixed-used purchases. The venture has looked at about 100 properties in cities including San Francisco, Seattle and Portland, Oregon, and intends to announce a retail acquisition in Orange County, California, within 30 days, he said. “There’s a lot of junk that we won’t touch, that I don’t think you can fix,” Caruso, 51, said in an interview at Bloomberg’s Los Angeles offices. While there’s “a ton of money on the sidelines” for properties worth saving, many buyers are passive investors while Caruso is interested in redevelopment, he said. Caruso is expanding beyond retail centers while considering a mayoral candidacy in cash-strapped Los Angeles. He is building luxury apartments outside Beverly Hills, planning a beach resort in Montecito, California, and seeking to develop stores and restaurants at Los Angeles International Airport. ‘Guest Experience’ “Why can’t the airport experience actually be pleasant?” Caruso said. LAX travelers should have a “guest experience” similar to the Grove, and to shopping choices at London’s Heathrow Airport, he said. “We’re going to come up with a pretty compelling proposal,” Caruso said, declining to discuss details. “Hopefully we start in L.A. and it will be the first of many.” Caruso hopes to open his first luxury resort, the redeveloped Miramar Beach Resort and Bungalows in Montecito, near Santa Barbara, by 2013. “I like beach resorts. I love the water,” Caruso said. “If you find a great property that’s tough to duplicate, you have inherent value.” Caruso faces a challenge making his entry into high-end lodging pay off. He purchased Miramar in 2007, the height of the commercial real estate market, for an undisclosed amount. Hurdles in getting entitlements to redevelop the planned 192- room hotel have delayed groundbreaking, and construction won’t start before next year. Hotel Comeback? Luxury hotels have been hurt by a decline in business and leisure travel during the U.S. recession. The average daily rate among hotel chains with the costliest rooms fell 16 percent in 2009 from a year earlier to $242.99, according to Smith Travel Research Inc. in Hendersonville, Tennessee. A recovery of the U.S. hotel industry isn’t likely until 2011 because room rates are down and commercial real estate values have plunged, Fitch Ratings Ltd. said in December. In California, hotel foreclosures climbed 27 percent in the first quarter. “It’ll prove to be a very good investment,” Caruso said. “Luxury hotels will come back.” Caruso, who has nine shopping centers in the Los Angeles area, has thrived in retail while other mall owners were hurt by the recession. Vacancies at the largest U.S. malls reached 8.9 percent in the first quarter, the highest rate since at least 2000, New York-based real estate research firm Reis Inc. said. Grove Shoppers At the 20-acre Grove , adjacent to Los Angeles’s historic Farmers Market, the average shopper spends $179, about triple the industry average, Caruso said. Net operating income has risen over the past 18 months, and the facility is “99 percent leased,” he said. Caruso said he adds touches to encourage shoppers to stay longer . The Grove has a free trolley, and the open-air Americana in Glendale has grassy slopes for relaxing. “Many of his projects are anything but plain vanilla,” said Jim Sullivan , managing director at real estate researcher Green Street Advisors in Newport Beach, California. “His projects are fun places to go.” Caruso has had his stumbles outside of retail. At the Americana, opened in 2008 during the housing-market collapse, he has struggled to sell its 100 condominiums. Buyers are being enticed with discounts and half-price association dues for two years. “It was a really tough time to come out,” Caruso said. While Caruso Affiliated is responsible for management and sales, the condos’ backer is Barrow Street Capital LLC. “We did not have anything at risk financially,” Caruso said. Nicholas Chermayeff , co-chief executive officer of Stamford, Connecticut-based Barrow Street, declined to comment. Mayoral Run? A Republican who has served as board president at the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power and the Los Angeles Police Commission, Caruso has flirted for years with a mayoral run. “I’m leaning towards it” when Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa is termed out in 2013, Caruso said. “I have to make a decision probably sometime next year.” The city needs to do a better job keeping and attracting businesses, rework its pension system and encourage development, he said. He also imagines a monorail along Interstate 10 from downtown Los Angeles to the coast going up faster than a planned “subway to the sea,” which could take decades to build. Caruso’s chances of winning would depend in part on the competition, said Sherry Bebitch Jeffe , a senior fellow at the school of policy, planning and development at the University of Southern California. “There is a long list of tested Latino leaders who probably will be looking at the office,” Jeffe said. Caruso, who is married with four children, said family and business obligations will factor in to the decision. He also will weigh the Los Angeles mayor’s limited powers. “I’ve got to get convinced that, if I did it, that I can actually make a meaningful difference,” Caruso said. “If the city is so structurally hamstrung that I’m going to go waste four years of my life, I don’t want to do it.” To contact the reporters on this story: Daniel Taub in Los Angeles at dtaub@bloomberg.net ; Nadja Brandt in Los Angeles at nbrandt@bloomberg.net .

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Senate Passes Reforms Designed to Prevent Worst U.S. Collapse Since 1930s

May 21, 2010

By Alison Vekshin and Phil Mattingly May 21 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. Senate approved a sweeping overhaul of Wall Street regulation that would create a consumer protection agency, strengthen oversight of derivative trading and ban proprietary trading at banks. The Senate’s 59-39 vote yesterday sends the legislation into negotiations designed to reconcile differences with the House bill approved in December. “When this bill becomes law, the joyride on Wall Street will come to a screeching halt,” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid , a Nevada Democrat, said after the vote. The bill contains measures that would have a profound impact on the U.S. financial industry, creating a mechanism for liquidating large failing financial firms and a council of regulators to monitor companies for threats to the economy. Among the strongest provisions is a plan to force banks to wall off their derivatives-trading operations, the subject of fierce lobbying by the industry and opposition from regulators including Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke . Derivatives language will be one of the matters discussed by House and Senate negotiators. Another will be the proposed consumer protection bureau, which the Senate has placed inside the Fed and would have powers to write and enforce rules banning abusive lending. House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank , the Massachusetts Democrat who shepherded a financial-overhaul bill through his chamber last year, said in an interview yesterday that he intends to make sure the final bill has a free-standing Consumer Financial Protection Agency, reflecting President Barack Obama ’s original proposal. $150 Billion Fund Negotiators will have to reconcile differences over a pre- paid $150 billion fund created by the House bill to cover the government’s cost of unwinding a failing firm. The Senate bill requires the industry to repay the government only after a firm collapses. Frank said yesterday he would not push to keep the industry-financed pre-paid fund in the bill. “The two bills are very similar, and the House is ready to go to conference to work out the remaining issues,” Frank said in a statement. “I am confident that we can have a bill ready for President Obama’s signature very soon.” Congressional Democrats moved to overhaul governance of U.S. financial companies in response to the 2008 financial crisis that followed the collapse of the subprime mortgage market. The Senate and House measures aim to prevent a repeat of the $700 billion taxpayer-funded bailout that helped firms including American International Group Inc. and Citigroup Inc . weather the worst recession since the 1930s. ‘Hardly Perfect’ Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd , a Connecticut Democrat, said the bill is “hardly perfect” and will be improved in the House-Senate negotiations. Dodd said he planned to consider strengthening language to ban proprietary trading by U.S. banks. The issue was raised in an amendment offered by Democrats Jeff Merkley of Oregon and Carl Levin of Michigan that wasn’t considered during debate of the bill on the Senate floor. Dodd said he wants to present a revised bill to the Senate before July 4. Republicans criticized the Senate bill, saying it failed to deal with government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which were seized by the government in 2008. The Republicans also said the consumer financial protection bureau the bill would establish amounts to a massive new bureaucracy. ‘Section-by-Section’ “We hope that we have a conference where we all are participants and that we’re dealing with trying to reconcile the bill section-by-section and come out with a good piece of legislation, but we’ll have to see about that,” Senator Richard Shelby , the banking committee’s top Republican who voted against the bill, said about the House-Senate talks. Senate Republicans largely stuck together in opposing the bill. Four voted with the Democrats, including Senator Charles Grassley , who became the first Republican to break ranks when he voted for the derivatives bill in committee. “It was important and essential to engage in fundamental reform of financial institutions at this moment,” Senator Olympia Snowe, a Maine Republican who backed the bill, told reporters after the vote. “The American people have to have the confidence that we’re rectifying many of the issues that really contributed to putting our economy on the precipice.” The Obama administration welcomed the vote. “The House and Senate have now each passed strong bills that protect consumers, limit risk-taking by large institutions and address the problem of ‘too-big-to-fail,’” Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in a statement. Obama’s Outline The Senate measure adopts priorities Obama outlined last June for strengthening financial rules. It allows the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to take apart failing financial firms in an orderly way if their collapse could threaten the economy. The legislation would push most of the $615 trillion in over-the-counter derivatives to be processed, or cleared, with a third party. Derivatives are contracts whose value is derived from stocks, bonds, loans, currencies and commodities, or linked to specific events such as changes in interest rates or the weather. The derivatives language, offered by Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman Blanche Lincoln, also contains one of the most contentious issues of the Senate debate — the measure that would require commercial banks to wall off their swaps-trading operations. To contact the reporters on this story: Alison Vekshin in Washington at avekshin@bloomberg.net . Phil Mattingly in Washington at pmattingly@bloomberg.net .

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Budget Process May Be Bypassed by Democrats in Face of Spiraling Deficits

May 14, 2010

By Brian Faler      May 14 (Bloomberg) — Democrats will likely skip the annual task of writing a budget for the U.S. government this year amid lawmakers’ unwillingness to endorse a plan sure to include huge deficits . With the midterm elections looming and primary results showing voters in a sour mood, Congress will probably forgo laying out tax-and-spending plan for the fifth time in the last 12 years. “It’s still on the outer range of possible” that a budget will be produced, “but increasingly less plausible,” said Representative Earl Blumenauer , an Oregon Democrat on the House Budget Committee . “With each passing day it gets a little less likely.” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi , a California Democrat, and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer , a Maryland Democrat, signaled yesterday they are prepared to write separate spending measures rather than lay out a five-year fiscal plan. Republicans said Democrats are shirking a basic congressional responsibility. Representative Paul Ryan , the top Republican on the House Budget Committee, said Democrats are refusing to make the “hard choices American families and small businesses must make every day.” He called that “alarming as spending, deficits and debt continue to spiral out of control.” 10-Year Deficits The government is projected run $10 trillion in deficits over the next 10 years, with interest payments on the debt forecast to quadruple to more than $900 billion annually. Moody’s Investors Service has said it might eventually cut the government’s bond rating if the fiscal outlook doesn’t improve. “Failure to adopt a budget resolution when fiscal resolution is needed most would send the worst possible signal,” said Bob Bixby , head of the Washington-based Concord Coalition . “It would say to investors in Treasury securities, foreign and domestic, that the federal government is still in denial about its fiscal problems and has no plan to address the situation anytime soon.” The past failures by Congress to pass a budget occurred under either Republican or divided control of Congress, and coincided with election years. “You have the problem, always, of people not wanting to cast difficult votes in an election year,” said Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad , a North Dakota Democrat. Political Ads “It isn’t the vote people fear, it’s the television ad” by a lawmaker’s election opponent on budget issues, said Steve Bell, former Republican staff director of the Senate Budget Committee . “Given the discontent of the electorate,” Democrats “know how powerful and damaging such ads can be,” he said. The Senate Budget Committee adopted a plan last month that anticipated cutting the deficit to $545 billion by 2015 from the current $1.5 trillion. House Budget Chairman John Spratt said he hasn’t given up telling colleagues that adopting a plan would show constituents that Democrats are trying to put the government’s books in order. Still, he said the prospects of Congress reaching agreement on a budget are “iffy.” Spratt, who is among lawmakers facing a serious re-election challenge, said “there are those who have tough seats who, probably some of them would like not to have a budget.” He also said lawmakers could limit spending this year without a budget, by means such as adopting a cap on the government’s discretionary spending. “There are other ways to skin this cat,” he said. Democrats have been unable to agree, though, on what the Obama administration called a modest proposal to freeze discretionary spending unrelated to national security issues. To contact the reporter on this story: Brian Faler in Washington at bfaler@bloomberg.net

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Abuse Victim Lawsuit Treats Vatican As Business

April 23, 2010

MILWAUKEE — A lawsuit from the U.S. aims to place blame for priest sexual abuse at the highest levels of the Roman Catholic Church by claiming the Vatican controls leadership, fundraising and doctrine down to the lowest levels. The lawsuit filed Thursday in U.S. federal court claims top leaders at the Vatican knew about allegations of sexual abuse at St. John’s School for the Deaf outside Milwaukee and called off internal punishment of the accused priest, the Rev. Lawrence Murphy. The lawsuit was filed on behalf of an Illinois man by St. Paul, Minn.-based attorney Jeff Anderson, who also has a pending lawsuit against the Vatican in Oregon for a man who claims he was abused at his Catholic school in the 1960s. Among the pieces of evidence in the Wisconsin suit is a 1995 letter from one of Murphy’s alleged victims detailing the problems at St. John’s. It was addressed to the No. 2 person in the Vatican, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, who was then secretary of state. It was written a year before it was first believed the case was brought to the attention of the Vatican. The lawsuit intends to prove the Vatican is a global business empire, practicing in “commercial activity” in Wisconsin and across the U.S. and holding “unqualified power” over each diocese, parish and follower. The Vatican’s U.S.-based attorney, Jeffrey Lena, said in a statement Thursday that the lawsuit was a publicity stunt with no merit and it rehashes theories already rejected by U.S. courts. The Vatican previously has said that diocese officials and civil authorities knew about the allegations some 20 years before the Vatican was ever notified. Because of that, Lena said, it cannot be held liable for Murphy’s abuse. Some legal experts questioned the Wisconsin lawsuit’s prospects. Nicholas Cafardi, a canon lawyer and former dean at the Duquesne University School of Law, disputes the argument that the Roman Catholic Church is an international commercial business. “He’s alleging an employment relationship between individual priests and the Holy See,” Cafardi said. “I’m sorry, but diocesan priests in the United States are not employees of the Holy See. … If a court were to accept that, they would be creating a new Catholic Church, not the one that exists now.” Professor Joseph Dellapenna at the Villanova University School of Law doubts courts will treat the Wisconsin diocese as a wholly owned subsidiary of the Vatican. He noted a number of dioceses around the country have filed for bankruptcy because of abuse cases, and the courts have treated them as separate, independent entities. The biggest issue could be overcoming the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, which sets the rules for U.S. legal action against sovereign nations, including the Vatican. Dellapenna said the suit’s claims of misrepresentation and fraud are barred by the act. Another U.S. appeals court has ruled the act also bars its claims of emotional distress, he said, though Wisconsin’s 7th Circuit could decide differently. But Washington, D.C., attorney Jonathan Levy, a specialist in international law who has tried suing the Vatican Bank over Holocaust claims, said Anderson could succeed in taking advantage of exceptions to sovereign immunity. “I’d say he’s got some new and exciting theories in there why the Vatican should be held responsible for its bad acts,” Levy said. Anderson said the suit is unique because it’s seeking injunctive relief, not just money, by compelling the Vatican to open its files on abuse cases. “They have been hiding behind legal shields, and we have been successful so far in the courts in cracking those shields,” he said. “We intend to use this case and others like it to wedge open those cracks.” He said the plaintiff had pledged to donate any monetary award to a fund to be shared by Murphy’s victims. The lawsuit is the latest move in the case of Murphy, who died in 1998. He was accused of sexually abusing some 200 boys at the deaf school from 1950 to 1974. He was put on a leave of absence when the allegations were revealed in the early 1970s. The lawsuit claims Murphy was still allowed to serve in ministry and work with children in another Wisconsin diocese into the early 1990s. Murphy’s case drew renewed attention after the recent release of documents called into question the actions of a Vatican office led by then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger. Before the disclosure of the 1995 letter to Sodano, it was believed the Vatican first learned of allegations against Murphy in a July 1996 letter from Milwaukee Archbishop Rembert Weakland. That letter was sent to the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, the powerful Vatican office Ratzinger led from 1981 to his election as pope in 2005. That office told the archbishop to move forward with a canonical trial against Murphy in March 1997. But then the office urged a different course after receiving a letter from Murphy. The Rev. Federico Lombardi, a Vatican spokesman, has said they suggested restricting Murphy from ministry rather than holding a full-blown canonical trial, citing Murphy’s age, failing health, and a lack of further allegations. The Wisconsin bishops ordered the proceedings halted, but in the end, Murphy died while still a defendant in a canonical trial, which could have led to Murphy being laicized, or stripped of the priesthood. Sodano has long been accused in news reports in U.S. Catholic publications and other outlets of stalling a Vatican probe of the Rev. Marcial Maciel, the discredited founder of the Legionaries of Christ. The order has admitted that the late Maciel fathered at least one child and molested young seminarians. Anderson provided a copy of a receipt showing the registered letter to Sodano had reached the Vatican. The man wrote Sodano again and got no response, according to Anderson. Lena said that at the time, it was a local matter regarding a local priest and the victim had already communicated with the local bishop. Under those circumstances, Lena said it is “entirely appropriate” under canon law for the local diocese – not the Holy See – to respond. ___ Associated Press Writers Steve Karnowski in Minneapolis, Patrick Condon in St. Paul, Minn., and Nicole Winfield in Vatican City contributed to this report. Eric Gorski reported from Denver.

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