pittsburgh

Costar…

The PNC Financial Services Group, Inc. announced this week that it plans to construct a 40-story headquarters building dubbed The Tower at PNC Plaza on the southeast corner of Fifth Avenue and Wood Street in Pittsburgh, PA. Once complete in 2015, the 800,000-square-foot, $400 million building at the same intersection where PNC has been headquartered for more than 150 years will serve as the company’s executive offices. Tentative plans call for…

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PNC to Build New $400M Pittsburgh Headquarters

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Costar…

In The Pipeline is a column on significant land sales, transactions and trends affecting office, industrial, flex, multifamily, mixed-use, hotel and public works developers. Send us news leads about your new project — and sign up to be added to our distribution list to receive future In the Pipeline columns by e-mail. Read previous columns and articles. PNC to Build New $400M Pittsburgh Headquarters The P

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In The Pipeline: Construction and Development News for May 22 – 28

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Michael Lewis: The Greek Debt Crisis Is ‘Made For A Jonathan Franzen Novel’

September 7, 2010

In a Q&A preview for his upcoming piece in Vanity Fair , best-selling financial scribe Michael Lewis compares the Greek debt crisis to a Jonathan Franzen novel. To put it differently, Lewis said that the global credit crisis offers something like a study in various types of overreaching, underachieving and unhappiness. (In baseball parlance, Lewis says the Greeks are the Pittsburgh Pirates of Europe.) Here’s more from the Q&A: VF Daily: From a financial standpoint, would you agree that happy countries are all alike and unhappy countries are each unhappy in their own way? Michael Lewis: [Laughs.] Yes, Greece is made for a Jonathan Franzen novel. There are no happy countries any more. Financially speaking, unhappy countries do seem to all be different in their own way. The thing that interests me (in what looks like is going to become a series) is that the raw event seems to be the same in each place: make credit available for people who would never have qualified for it before. How each of the cultures responds to this credit tells you so much about the society in general. Later in the piece, when asked by the interviewer whether or not the world would be better off without Goldman Sachs, Lewis answers yes, but doesn’t stop there. The world, Lewis said, would be better “without the idea that Goldman Sachs embodies… If you look at the story of Goldman Sachs in the last six or seven years, you’ll see that they made an awful lot of money getting people to do stuff that never should have been done.” Lewis has long been critical of Goldman, but he has maintained that the firm was emblematic of a larger problem on Wall Street: the blurred line between client interests and profits. Responding to the April news of the SEC’s civil fraud charges against Goldman Sachs, Lewis told CBS News “Other Wall Street firms will be implicated and other deals at Goldman Sachs will come to light. The SEC essentially launched what amounts to a culture war.” (Goldman settled the charges for a record $550 million. ) Read the entire interview at Vanity Fair .

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Leo W. Gerard: America’s Choice: Leave a Legacy of Hell or Bequeath Clean Air

September 1, 2010

At the turn of the 20 th Century, smoke meant jobs. When noxious fumes spewed from factory stacks, workers brought home paychecks. Industries hired. The future was bright as molten iron flowing from a blast furnace. In industrial Pittsburgh’s heyday, the smoke was so dense streetlights remained lit at noon. White-collar workers changed soot-covered shirts mid-day. The region’s residents suffered high rates of asthma and emphysema. In 1948, an inversion trapped industrial pollution in a small town south of Pittsburgh, killing 20. Smoke also meant death and disease. Now, however, good-paying industrial jobs need not exact untimely death from workers and their families. In fact, it’s the opposite. Development of clean renewable energy generators — the likes of wind turbines, solar cells, biomass — would create family-supporting industrial jobs in America and would reinforce traditional manufacturing jobs in the U.S., including those in steel mills, solar-cell fabrication plants and wind-turbine factories, such as those built by Gamesa in Pennsylvania. Labor unions and environmental groups are pressing for passage of policies like a Renewable Electricity Standard (RES) and comprehensive climate-change legislation that would promote transition to a clean-energy economy. To prod lawmakers to act, the BlueGreen Alliance, a partnership of those labor unions and enviromentalists, conducted a three-week, 17-state, 30-city barnstorm during August in an energy-efficient, American-made, carbon-neutral bus . At events in each city, BlueGreen activists told attendees, “The Job’s Not Done,” and urged them to tell their U.S. Senators it’s not a choice between clean air and jobs. The choice is leaving a legacy of environmental hell or bequeathing climate unchanged. In an 1868 edition of the Atlantic Monthly , writer James Parton described with awe the atmosphere created by industrial Pittsburgh’s iron and glass works, its foundries and its coke ovens: On the evening of this dark day, we were conducted to the edge of the abyss, and looked over the iron railing upon the most striking spectacle we ever beheld. The entire space lying between the hills was filled with blackest smoke, from out of which the hidden chimneys sent forth tongues of flame, while from the depths of the abyss came up the noise of hundreds of steam-hammers. There would be moments when no flames were visible; but soon the wind would force the smoky curtains aside, and the whole black expanse would be dimly lighted with dull wreaths of fire. It is an unprofitable business, view-hunting; but if any one would enjoy a spectacle as striking as Niagara, he may do so by simply walking up a long hill to Cliff Street in Pittsburg, and looking over into — hell with the lid taken off. Beautiful as he found it, Parton added this: The first feeling of the stranger is one of compassion for the people who are compelled to live in such an atmosphere. When hard pressed, a son of Pittsburg will not deny that the smoke has its inconveniences. Pittsburgh took measures to clean its air. Smoke no longer turns the city’s days to night. But the town, like every other, still suffers the effect of pollution. It is the greenhouse-gas pollution causing global climate change, which is associated with extreme weather events like the Katrina hurricane that killed 1,800 five years ago, floods this summer that killed 1,600 in Pakistan and 1,100 in China and unprecedented heat and uncontrolled wildfires that killed thousands this year in Russia. Even former Republican presidential candidate John McCain and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce concede climate change is real. They’re just towing the usual Republican Party line of “no” to anything proposed by Democrats or the Environmental Protection Agency to correct it. The Chamber, for example says it supports strong action on climate change , including cutting greenhouse-gas emissions, but it opposed legislation that would cut greenhouse-gas emissions. The Chamber, at one point, called for the EPA to hold ” the Scopes monkey trial of the 21st century ” to debate whether climate change is man-made. The Chamber’s position prompted high-profile members to quit, including Apple and public-utility companies Pacific Gas & Electric, PNM Resources, and Exelon. Another big name company, Nike, resigned from the Chamber board of directors. It explained the defection: Nike believes that climate change is an urgent issue affecting the world today and that businesses and their representative associations need to take an active role to invest in sustainable business practices and innovative solutions to address the issue. It is not a time for debate but instead a time for action, and we believe the Chamber’s recent petition sets back important work currently being undertaken by EPA on this issue. Like Nike, Senators should do what’s right — pass a Renewable Electricity Standard and a comprehensive climate change bill. They need to stop thinking about their re-election and start thinking about their grandchildren. They need to pass climate legislation that would support American jobs and avert hell.

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Black & LEED Gold: Pittsburgh Penguins’ Sustainable Arena Delivers

August 12, 2010

The Pittsburgh Penguins have already made NHL history this season – and the first puck has yet to drop. Hunt Construction Group has completed construction of the CONSOL Energy Center in Pittsburgh, the new home of the Penguins. It is the first NHL…

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Fortune’s Stanley Bing: The Mad-As-Hell Flight Attendant

August 10, 2010

I’ve got to say that I’m of two minds on this whole crazed flight attendant thing. On the one hand, you’ve got to feel for the guy. He’s dealing every day with pretty horrible working conditions, chief among which is the pervasive sphincterosity of passengers these days. Not all passengers, mind you. But enough. Like, last week I was on a AA flight out of NYC, heading for LA, and believe you me it was very important to me that the flight take off as scheduled. I had business is what I’m saying. Given the extraordinarily fragile nature of takeoffs at Kennedy, we didn’t need some schmuck gumming up the works. But here was this butthead on the bulkhead complaining that there was something wrong with his seat. Did you know that a seat put out of service can cancel an entire flight? I’ve seen it happen. I’ve seen them cancel a flight because the accordion door on a bathroom didn’t shut just right. And here was this bonehead willing to wreck the plans of 250 people because the seat didn’t meet his ass’s specifications. No, passengers blow. You’ve got the guys who can’t get off the BlackBerry, or the drunks who demand to be overserved, or the people who think their babies are cute even when they’re screaming their heads off… for… SIX… HOURS. So you know the guy from Pittsburgh who drove JetBlue’s Steven Slater completely around the bend was most probably a butthead from start to finish. Didn’t listen to instructions, first thing. If there’s one thing that makes a flight attendant crazy, it’s having his or her tiny bit of authority challenged, flaunted, ignored. Then he cursed at the flight attendant, in public. Moron. Then he took down his fat baggage, which reportedly hit the increasingly angry Slater on the head. As an aside, have you seen the bloated, engorged steamer trunks that some people think of as carry-on luggage these days? How many jerks had this 20 year veteran endured? How had his working conditions declined over the years? How many times had he seen even minimum standards of cordiality and humanity ignored? America is angier, ruder, stupider than it’s ever been, and airplanes, in addition to being inherently dangerous little metal tubes in the ether, are now essentially no more than flying buses, with all the elegance and comfort that entails. Every day, Mr. Slater had to witness the decline and fall of the empire. That takes its toll. Finally, he morphed into a Howard Beale of the runway and took the short chute out. Took a few beers with him, too. Hard not to like the guy. At the same time, I must say that the current batch of flight attendants has buried within its ranks some of the meanest and rudest people I’ve ever been trapped with. And I have to ask myself, just how officious, snotty and impolite was Mr. Slater to the Pittsburgh passenger BEFORE this incident occurred? Maybe not at all. Maybe that’s unjust. But let me tell you a little story. About two months ago, my wife and I were flying on JetBlue and a taut, nasty, bossy little gate agent decided to try to cram a big piece of luggage in the already-full compartment about our heads. He crammed it and jammed it and mashed it and crashed it and then he hauled our perfectly-ensconsed stuff out of its space in a most enraged fashion, hitting my wife on the head with her own luggage, at which point she asked for his name. He then blew up at her and threatened to take us both off the plane. He was subsequently calmed down by several of his associates and left the aircraft in a huff. This was about a week after I was on a flight on another airline where a very starchy flight attendant spread snark across a whole continent down an entire row of terrified passengers. She was wearing a button that said, “I DON’T CARE WHAT YOUR NAME IS, EITHER.” So when I hear about a flight attendant throwing a hissy fit… well, I just don’t know. My sympathies naturally gravitate to the guy who’s telling management to Take This Job and Shove It. On the other hand, who wants to be imprisoned at 35,000 feet with a demented, resentful burn-out?

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Fortune’s Stanley Bing: The Mad-As-Hell Flight Attendant

August 10, 2010

I’ve got to say that I’m of two minds on this whole crazed flight attendant thing. On the one hand, you’ve got to feel for the guy. He’s dealing every day with pretty horrible working conditions, chief among which is the pervasive sphincterosity of passengers these days. Not all passengers, mind you. But enough. Like, last week I was on a AA flight out of NYC, heading for LA, and believe you me it was very important to me that the flight take off as scheduled. I had business is what I’m saying. Given the extraordinarily fragile nature of takeoffs at Kennedy, we didn’t need some schmuck gumming up the works. But here was this butthead on the bulkhead complaining that there was something wrong with his seat. Did you know that a seat put out of service can cancel an entire flight? I’ve seen it happen. I’ve seen them cancel a flight because the accordion door on a bathroom didn’t shut just right. And here was this bonehead willing to wreck the plans of 250 people because the seat didn’t meet his ass’s specifications. No, passengers blow. You’ve got the guys who can’t get off the BlackBerry, or the drunks who demand to be overserved, or the people who think their babies are cute even when they’re screaming their heads off… for… SIX… HOURS. So you know the guy from Pittsburgh who drove JetBlue’s Steven Slater completely around the bend was most probably a butthead from start to finish. Didn’t listen to instructions, first thing. If there’s one thing that makes a flight attendant crazy, it’s having his or her tiny bit of authority challenged, flaunted, ignored. Then he cursed at the flight attendant, in public. Moron. Then he took down his fat baggage, which reportedly hit the increasingly angry Slater on the head. As an aside, have you seen the bloated, engorged steamer trunks that some people think of as carry-on luggage these days? How many jerks had this 20 year veteran endured? How had his working conditions declined over the years? How many times had he seen even minimum standards of cordiality and humanity ignored? America is angier, ruder, stupider than it’s ever been, and airplanes, in addition to being inherently dangerous little metal tubes in the ether, are now essentially no more than flying buses, with all the elegance and comfort that entails. Every day, Mr. Slater had to witness the decline and fall of the empire. That takes its toll. Finally, he morphed into a Howard Beale of the runway and took the short chute out. Took a few beers with him, too. Hard not to like the guy. At the same time, I must say that the current batch of flight attendants has buried within its ranks some of the meanest and rudest people I’ve ever been trapped with. And I have to ask myself, just how officious, snotty and impolite was Mr. Slater to the Pittsburgh passenger BEFORE this incident occurred? Maybe not at all. Maybe that’s unjust. But let me tell you a little story. About two months ago, my wife and I were flying on JetBlue and a taut, nasty, bossy little gate agent decided to try to cram a big piece of luggage in the already-full compartment about our heads. He crammed it and jammed it and mashed it and crashed it and then he hauled our perfectly-ensconsed stuff out of its space in a most enraged fashion, hitting my wife on the head with her own luggage, at which point she asked for his name. He then blew up at her and threatened to take us both off the plane. He was subsequently calmed down by several of his associates and left the aircraft in a huff. This was about a week after I was on a flight on another airline where a very starchy flight attendant spread snark across a whole continent down an entire row of terrified passengers. She was wearing a button that said, “I DON’T CARE WHAT YOUR NAME IS, EITHER.” So when I hear about a flight attendant throwing a hissy fit… well, I just don’t know. My sympathies naturally gravitate to the guy who’s telling management to Take This Job and Shove It. On the other hand, who wants to be imprisoned at 35,000 feet with a demented, resentful burn-out?

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Video: Goodfriend Discusses Outlook for Fed Monetary Policy: Video

July 21, 2010

July 21 (Bloomberg) — Marvin Goodfriend, professor of economics at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, talks about the outlook for Federal Reserve monetary policy.¶ Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke testifies today before the Senate Banking Committee. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Swine Flu May Have Infected Every Second Schoolchild in U.S., Study Finds

February 22, 2010

By Jason Gale Feb. 22 (Bloomberg) — Swine flu may have infected at least 63 million people in the U.S. last year, according to a study in Pittsburgh, where almost every second schoolchild probably caught the pandemic virus. Blood tests on Pittsburgh residents found 45 percent of people aged 10 to 19 years had antibodies against the new H1N1 flu strain . About 22 percent of people across all groups developed immunity to the virus by early December and a quarter of those born in the 1920s may have already had protective antibodies before the pandemic resulting from prior flu infection, researchers at the University of Pittsburgh found. The findings, reported online yesterday in the Public Library of Science , suggest a fresh wave of swine flu infections isn’t likely unless the virus mutates or people become more susceptible to infection. A World Health Organization advisory panel is holding a teleconference tomorrow to discuss whether the first influenza pandemic in 41 years has peaked. “With current estimates of seroprevalence and continued increases in population due to vaccination, a significant change in viral antigens or a change in population immunity would be required for further disease spread,” Ted Ross, associate professor of microbiology at the university, and colleagues wrote. “We cannot rule out the possibility that geographical pockets of limited immunity may be present in which a third wave may yet occur.” Symptom-Free Cases At least 15,921 people have died from swine flu as the fast-moving pandemic spread to 212 countries and territories since its discovery in North America in April, the WHO said in a Feb. 19 statement . The global tally underestimates the actual number as many deaths are never tested or recognized as influenza related, the Geneva-based agency said. In yesterday’s study, researchers looked for infection- fighting antibodies against the 2009 pandemic flu strain in 846 anonymous blood samples collected in November and early December from people in southwestern Pennsylvania’s Allegheny County ages 1 month to 90 years. The tests identified people who caught the virus, including those who didn’t develop a fever, cough or other flu-like symptoms. The researchers compared the results against tests on blood samples collected in 2008, of which 6 percent contained antibodies that protected against swine flu, probably as a result of infection from a related influenza strain. Children and adolescents in the 10- to 19-year age group had the highest prevalence of swine flu antibodies, while 29 percent of blood samples from children younger than 9 years tested positive. Residents in the 70- to 79-year age group had the lowest prevalence rate of 5 percent. When the researchers extrapolated their findings across the county’s 1.2 million residents, they found swine flu antibodies in 21.5 percent of people, including more than 70,000 school-age children. “Extrapolating these results further to the entire US population, we estimate that 63 million persons became infected in 2009,” the authors wrote. To contact the reporter on this story: Jason Gale in Singapore at j.gale@bloomberg.net

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Swine Flu May Have Infected Every Second Schoolchild in U.S., Study Finds

February 22, 2010

By Jason Gale Feb. 22 (Bloomberg) — Swine flu may have infected at least 63 million people in the U.S. last year, according to a study in Pittsburgh, where almost every second schoolchild probably caught the pandemic virus. Blood tests on Pittsburgh residents found 45 percent of people aged 10 to 19 years had antibodies against the new H1N1 flu strain . About 22 percent of people across all groups developed immunity to the virus by early December and a quarter of those born in the 1920s may have already had protective antibodies before the pandemic resulting from prior flu infection, researchers at the University of Pittsburgh found. The findings, reported online yesterday in the Public Library of Science , suggest a fresh wave of swine flu infections isn’t likely unless the virus mutates or people become more susceptible to infection. A World Health Organization advisory panel is holding a teleconference tomorrow to discuss whether the first influenza pandemic in 41 years has peaked. “With current estimates of seroprevalence and continued increases in population due to vaccination, a significant change in viral antigens or a change in population immunity would be required for further disease spread,” Ted Ross, associate professor of microbiology at the university, and colleagues wrote. “We cannot rule out the possibility that geographical pockets of limited immunity may be present in which a third wave may yet occur.” Symptom-Free Cases At least 15,921 people have died from swine flu as the fast-moving pandemic spread to 212 countries and territories since its discovery in North America in April, the WHO said in a Feb. 19 statement . The global tally underestimates the actual number as many deaths are never tested or recognized as influenza related, the Geneva-based agency said. In yesterday’s study, researchers looked for infection- fighting antibodies against the 2009 pandemic flu strain in 846 anonymous blood samples collected in November and early December from people in southwestern Pennsylvania’s Allegheny County ages 1 month to 90 years. The tests identified people who caught the virus, including those who didn’t develop a fever, cough or other flu-like symptoms. The researchers compared the results against tests on blood samples collected in 2008, of which 6 percent contained antibodies that protected against swine flu, probably as a result of infection from a related influenza strain. Children and adolescents in the 10- to 19-year age group had the highest prevalence of swine flu antibodies, while 29 percent of blood samples from children younger than 9 years tested positive. Residents in the 70- to 79-year age group had the lowest prevalence rate of 5 percent. When the researchers extrapolated their findings across the county’s 1.2 million residents, they found swine flu antibodies in 21.5 percent of people, including more than 70,000 school-age children. “Extrapolating these results further to the entire US population, we estimate that 63 million persons became infected in 2009,” the authors wrote. To contact the reporter on this story: Jason Gale in Singapore at j.gale@bloomberg.net

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Nucor Passes U.S. Steel as Top American Steelmaker by Sales Amid Recession

January 26, 2010

By Edmond Lococo Jan. 26 (Bloomberg) — Nucor Corp. returned to profit after three straight quarterly losses and moved past U.S. Steel Corp. as the largest American steelmaker by value of 2009 sales. The global recession cut revenue at each company by about 53 percent last year. Nucor today said 2009 sales fell to $11.2 billion, from $23.7 billion, while U.S. Steel sales dropped to $11 billion from $23.8 billion as it posted a fourth straight quarterly loss. It’s the first time since at least 1990 that Nucor sales topped U.S. Steel’s, according to Bloomberg data. The U.S. industry ran at an average 51 percent of capacity last year as the recession cut demand for the metal used in cars, construction and appliances. Prices dropped to a five-year low in June. Capacity averaged 54 percent at Nucor and 48 percent at U.S. Steel excluding its European operations, the companies said today. “We do not expect U.S. capacity utilization in the steel sector to increase much above the 60 percent to 65 percent level in 2010,” Michael Willemse , a Toronto-based analyst at CIBC World Markets, wrote in a report today. U.S. Steel predicted another loss for the current quarter, and its shares fell $5.23, or 9.3 percent, to $515 at 10:44 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading . Nucor , which said first-quarter earnings will be hurt by an inventory valuation adjustment, declined 40 cents to $43.73. Earnings Results Nucor’s fourth-quarter net income fell to $58.9 million, or 18 cents a share, from $105.9 million, or 34 cents, a year earlier, the Charlotte, North Carolina-based company said today in a statement. Sales dropped 29 percent to $2.94 billion. Fourth-quarter profit excluding some one-time items was 19 cents a share. The average estimate was 7 cents a share in a Bloomberg survey of 14 analysts. U.S. Steel’s fourth-quarter net loss of $267 million, or $1.86 a share, compared with net income of $290 million, or $2.50, a year earlier, the Pittsburgh-based company said today in a statement. Sales dropped 25 percent to $3.35 billion. Excluding certain one-time items, the loss was $1.84 a share. U.S. Steel was projected to report a fourth-quarter loss excluding some items of $1.51 a share, the average estimate of 13 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. To contact the reporter on this story: Edmond Lococo in Boston at elococo@bloomberg.net

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Her Brother Dead For Lack Of A Battery, Pittsburgh Woman Returns To Washington

December 17, 2009

Since she lost her brother in March, Georgeanne Koehler’s vocation has been to tell people how he died: slumped over his steering wheel because his defibrillator battery ran out. William Koehler, who worked as a pizza deliveryman and would have turned 58 in the spring, couldn’t afford to replace the battery because he lost his insurance when he lost his job as an electronics technician in 2003. No insurer wanted anything to do with his arrhythmia. That’s why Georgeanne Koehler, a 63-year-old hospital worker in Pittsburgh, found herself standing in front of the Capitol steps on a frigid Thursday in Washington, D.C. — her third visit in three months. “I’m here to talk about my brother,” she said, holding a small piece of poster board with his photo. “Without health insurance, he couldn’t get necessary cardiac care to keep him alive. This is the face of uninsured Americans whom we loved most dearly. Without meaningful reform, there will be many more. We just don’t know their names yet.” After her brother died, Koehler started building walls from paper bricks, which she planned to tear down after the president signed reform into law. Then she began attending rallies, to which she always carried a bag filled with her brother’s EKG charts. She told the Huffington Post that she’ll talk to anyone about health care reform, that she goes door to door in her Pittsburgh neighborhood and even chats up strangers at bus stops. Koehler first traveled to Washington in October , when she attended a labor-organized rally outside a conference for industry trade group America’s Health Insurance Plans. She returned on Dec. 7, to attend a press conference with Senate Democrats. She visited Washington on Thursday to promote her own “No More Empty Chairs” holiday health care campaign. An empty folding chair at her side, Koehler made a brief speech in front of the Capitol before an audience of just 10 health care and labor activists and one reporter. “This Christmas we’re going to have an empty chair at the dinner table,” she said. Koehler didn’t seem to mind that so few people came to her event, or that the Capitol Police wouldn’t let her unfold the chair. She focused on telling her story and the stories of people she’s met since she became a health reform activist. “Once this is all done we’ll see where I’m at with the grieving,” she told HuffPost after personally delivering a bag of letters to the office of Rep. Allyson Schwartz (D-Pa.), where a staffer encouraged her to keep telling her story. “I’m very appreciative of Mrs. Koehler’s visit to Washington to share her family’s heartbreaking story and to deliver so many messages from Pennsylvania in support of health care reform,” said Schwartz in a statement to HuffPost. “Mrs. Koehler’s advocacy, and the advocacy of so many other Pennsylvanians, is invaluable and it is stories like hers that compel us to pass meaningful, affordable health coverage for all Americans.” And Koehler met with Sen. Arlen Specter (D-Pa.) in his office, dropping off a letters in a bag decorated with a snowman in a green jacket. “I know what happened to your brother,” said Specter, a former Republican just like Koehler. “I’m really sorry. It’s a tragedy.”

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Browns Send Steelers to Fifth Straight Loss With Second Win of Season

December 11, 2009

By Dex McLuskey Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) — The Cleveland Browns won for only the second time this season to send the Pittsburgh Steelers to their fifth straight defeat and extend the longest losing streak in six years for the National Football League champions. Phil Dawson opened the scoring with a pair of 29-yard field goals at Cleveland Browns Stadium before Chris Jennings ran 10 yards for his first career touchdown and the only score by a Cleveland running back in more than a year. The Steelers could only muster two field goals from Jeff Reed in response. Ben Roethlisberger was sacked eight times by a Browns defense that allowed 216 yards of offense. It was the most sacks for Cleveland since Oct. 20, 2002, when it also got eight against Houston. Roethlisberger found himself on the losing team for the first time in 11 starts against the Browns, who ended a 12-game losing skid to their division rival. On a night when temperatures dipped to around 15 degrees Fahrenheit (-9.5 Celsius) and the wind swirled, Cleveland quarterback Brady Quinn completed six of 19 pass attempts for 90 yards, while Roethlisberger went 18-for-32 and 201 yards. The Browns, who had lost seven consecutive games since beating Buffalo on Oct. 11, improved to 2-11 with their first win in 10 home games, while the Steelers dropped to 6-7. Cleveland remains last in the American Football Conference North Division, while the Steelers are third. Cincinnati leads with a 9-3 record and Baltimore is second on 6-6.

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Andre Agassi Is Sick of Himself; Ivy League Basketball Lore: Sports Books

November 9, 2009

Review by David M. Shribman Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) — Andre Agassi has written a book with many familiar sports-memoir elements (overbearing father, fancy women, drugs, money, cultural alienation) with an added twist: hatred for his sport, tennis. “ Open: An Autobiography ” ( Knopf , $28.95) is a vivid portrait of the internal battle faced in some measure by every athlete: the pain of physical torment, the torment of mental pain. Though on the surface this is a story about Grand Slam victories, endorsements, an obsession with image and with winning, mostly it’s a story of pressure and rebellion, plus really horrible hair which was actually a wig. “I ask myself: You’re going to wear a hairpiece? During tournaments?” Agassi writes about his thinning hair. “I answer: What choice do I have?” Every memoir needs a theme, and this one’s is Agassi’s persistent desire to change — to change his approach, his profession, his life, himself. “The idea of stagnating, of remaining this Andre for the rest of my life, that’s what I find truly depressing and shameful,’’ he writes. The whole book is a cri de coeur, and this may be one of the few cases where the reader concludes that the examined life is not worth living. At one point the tormented Agassi says: “I can’t imagine all these people trying to be like Andre Agassi, since I don’t want to be Andre Agassi.’’ In the end, of course, he’s stuck with himself, and so is Steffi Graf . Now they have two children and he has a semblance of stability. What a relief to him — and to every exhausted reader of his memoir. ‘The Catch’ Sports literature is full of Greatest Plays, Games that Changed the Sport, and Greatest Games Ever. So nobody should be surprised by the publication of Gary Myers’s “ The Catch ’’ ( Crown , $26), which is about a single play said to have changed two dynasties and transformed the National Football League: the pass from Joe Montana to Dwight Clark that allowed the San Francisco 49ers to defeat the Dallas Cowboys in the NFC Championship game on Jan. 10, 1982. This volume is better written and more artfully structured than a lot of the books in the Greatest genre, and it also has a claim on the truth. “Franchises, careers, lives and dynasties all changed with one play,’’ Myers writes. When the 49ers completed the Sprint Right Option, as this storied play was called, the 49ers went on the upswing, the Cowboys fell to earth, Bill Walsh was ascribed genius status, Tom Landry would soon reach emeritus status. That’s a big burden for one play from the 6-yard line, but the San Franciscans were down by 6 points and only 58 seconds remained. The Catch changed all that, and more, as this book argues. ‘Outside the Limelight’ There’s nothing perfect about the way men’s basketball is played in the Ivy League, of course, but that doesn’t mean the Ancient Eight hasn’t made a contribution to the game. That’s the point of Kathy Orton’s “ Outside the Limelight ’’ ( Rutgers , $24.95), which bills itself as the first book about Ivy basketball, which might be correct if only John McPhee hadn’t given us “ A Sense of Where You Are ,’’ his 1965 portrait of Bill Bradley at Princeton, which still reigns as perhaps the greatest college-basketball book ever written. That said, Orton, a Washington Post sports writer, makes a game effort of illuminating the inside game of a sport that has been remarkably monotonous in its outcome. In the 54 years of formal Ivy League play, Penn or Princeton has won or tied for the championship 46 times, including 19 times in the last 21 years. In the last two years, just for variety, Cornell has won it outright. “Ivy League basketball is at turns wildly entertaining, utterly exasperating, fiercely competitive, gut-wrenchingly emotional, artistic, and unsightly — sometimes within the course of a single game,’’ Orton writes. That’s why I probably wasn’t alone in rooting for Cornell in its NCAA tournament first-round appearance last winter. Not that it mattered. Missouri beat the Big Red, 78-59. ( David M. Shribman is executive editor of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. The opinions expressed are his own.) To contact the writer of this column: David M. Shribman at dshribman@post-gazette.com .

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SPi Healthcare Expands Sales Team With the Appointment of Director of Sales for the East Coast Region

September 30, 2009

NASHVILLE, TN–(Marketwire – September 30, 2009) – SPi Healthcare, a leading provider of medical transcription services, announced today the appointment of Ms. Stephanie Wallace as Director of Sales for the East Coast region. In her new role, Ms. Wallace will be responsible for expanding SPi’s footprint on the East Coast by building broader and deeper relationships with hospitals, clinics and physician groups in that region. Ms. Wallace has two decades of experience in the medical transcription and healthcare information industry. Her cross-functional, domain knowledge includes roles in sales and marketing, business development, project management, operations and consulting. Prior to joining SPi, Ms. Wallace held senior management roles at The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Diskriter, CTech Solutions and Landmark Transcription.

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Marshall Auerback: The G20 Summit: Hijacked by Neo-Liberalism

September 29, 2009

We’ve said it before and we’ll say it again. As a matter of national accounting, the domestic private sector cannot increase savings unless and until foreign or government sectors increase deficits. Call this the tyranny of double entry bookkeeping: the government’s deficit equals by identity the non-government’s surplus. So, if the US private sector is to rebuild its balance sheet by spending less than its income, the government will have to spend more than its tax revenue. The only other possibility is that the rest of the world stops saving on a massive scale — letting the US run a current account surplus. But that is highly implausible and socially undesirable, since it means we export our economic output, rather than consume it domestically. And if the government deficit does not grow fast enough to meet the saving needs of the private domestic sector, national income will decline, which, given the size of the private sector’s debt problem, will generate a huge debt deflation. This is the foundation of modern monetary theory. Would that the IMF and the G20 understood these basic facts. The anodyne communiqué from last weekend’s Pittsburgh summit makes clear that this is not the case. Western policy makers appear determined to consign us to years of additional economic misery because of the continued embrace of a flawed market fundamentalist economic paradigm. So far, instead of trying to revive the productive economy, most of the G20′s resources have consisted of mouth-to-mouth resuscitation for a dying financial sector. This has not “worked” to the extent that last weekend’s communiqué advertised. The best analogy to describe the current state of our financial system is that we have placed scaffolding over a decaying building, but done little to repair the underlying structure. What happens when the economic scaffolding is removed via “exit strategies,” as the G20 participants have advocated? For many generations, we didn’t face the unprecedented financial fragility we are experiencing today. But there are good reasons why we avoided this until recently. We have spent the past quarter century eviscerating what was fundamentally a robust structure originally devised during the New Deal, a system which basically saved the US capitalist system and served the interests of its citizens very well until it was hijacked by a bunch of corporate predators under the guise of deregulation and neo-liberalism. To read the communiqué from the Pittsburgh summit is to gain insight into an ideology which views government, not as a stabilizing influence protecting us from private sector rent seeking monopolists. Rather it’s an unwanted stepchild, brought out on display as a necessary evil, and destined to be shoved away as soon as we get back to a “normal” economic state of affairs, where the government minds its own business and lets the magic of the “free market” operate. Hence, the emphasis by the Pittsburgh summiteers on ” sustained, strong and balanced growth “, the usual code words designed to encourage budget surpluses, more private sector savings and shift from public to private sources of demand. There is little understanding that if households and firms try to net save (save more out of income flows than they tangibly invest) incomes collapse, and desired private net saving is thwarted. The private “excess saving” cannot exist without a budget deficit or a trade surplus. Many people make this mistake. At best, we can talk about planned private saving being in excess of planned private investment, but other than that, we are violating double entry bookkeeping principles. And consider this: in 1998, 1999 and 2000 (increasing each year), the US government “virtuously” ran budget surpluses. And guess what happened? The private sector became more heavily indebted than before as the fiscal drag squeezed liquidity and destroyed aggregate demand and incomes. Along with our misconceived embrace of financial deregulation, the combined result was sharply rising unemployment and a major recession in 2001-02 with unemployment rising sharply and the automatic stabilizers pushing the budget back into deficit. Unfortunately, that was the yellow flag for what was to follow, a warning signal blithely ignored by our economically illiterate policy makers. Instead, we perpetuated a massively leveraged financial system via Frankenstein financial products such as collateralized debt obligations, and credit default swaps. We squeezed private sector incomes via constrictive fiscal policy, thereby inducing the debt-fueled consumption that is now regularly decried by our officialdom and the commentariat. The bottom line is that if we want habitual private sector savings, we need habitual government deficits. And government deficits are not an aberration; they are the norm. Our first (and possibly greatest) Treasury Secretary, Alexander Hamilton, called the national debt a “national blessing.” Similarly, Paul Krugman and L Randall Wray have argued that it was World War II and the subsequent cold war that ended the depression, which created the foundations for a significant expansion of government debt, which in turn set the stage for the “Golden Age.” The government deficit reached 25 percent of GDP during the war, providing a massive amount of private sector saving in the form of safe financial assets that strengthened balance sheets. From 1960 onward, the baby boom drove rapid growth of state and local government spending, so that even though federal government spending remained relatively constant as a percent of GDP, total government spending grew rapidly until the 1970s. This pulled up aggregate demand and private sector incomes, and thus consumption. This is unsurprising: The private sector cannot create “net nominal wealth” because every private financial asset is offset by a private financial liability. Over the long term, the maximum that a government can hope to collect in the form of taxes is equal to its purchases of goods of services. There is no hope of running long-term budget surpluses because the government cannot possibly collect more than the income it has created as it paid out dollars. When the government attempts this, as it did during the Clinton Administration, the public finds that its net financial assets would be less than its tax liability, requiring households to dip into its “reserves” of accumulated savings, which gradually become depleted. In the absence of other factors, demand slows and the government almost invariably falls back into deficit. If an external creditor is added (such as China or Japan) it merely delays or extends the process, since for a time, countries running current account surpluses with the US can use their surplus dollars to accumulate additional US dollar financial claims. But in the absence of any increase in US government spending (which is the only source of NEW NET FINANCIAL ASSETS), the end result is still a massive accumulation of private sector debt, which is what got us into this mess in the first place. By contrast, assuming a non-convertible, freely floating fiat currency, a government can never be insolvent even if its tax revenue declines significantly. Its balance sheet can never become precarious in the same way that a household balance sheet can. In the abstract, this always sounds controversial to those uncomfortable viewing the world within a financial balances construct. It also helps to explain the intellectual incoherence at the heart of the G20 communiqué and the Obama Administration’s economic policies, which has been dominated by Wall Street interests. So it’s worthwhile considering some historic examples, which illustrate the point better. During WWII, the US government generated huge deficits and bond issues. The record expansion of government deficits not only facilitated the war effort, but created full employment. (As an aside, it is always interesting to pose the following question to “deficit terrorists”: if government budget deficits are so awful, and so egregious for the long term performance of an economy, then why run them at all during wartime, when presumably we need the economy to be functioning in an optimal manner?) After the war, the Fed was concerned with potential inflationary pressures and raised interest rates. President Truman, a hard money man par excellence, drastically cut defense spending from $90.9bn to $10.3bn and the US accumulated huge fiscal surpluses. Post war surpluses, combined with Fed tightening, contributed to a recession in 1949. Unfortunately, it took the “military Keynesianism” brought on by the Korean War to shift Truman away from his aversion to deficit spending, which was continued by Eisenhower, and sustained via his national highways building program. During that period, unemployment decreased. Similarly benign effects on unemployment were manifested in the wake of the Kennedy tax cuts and those of Reagan in the early 1980s. Today, budget deficits are the highest as a percentage of GDP, but they are overstated to some degree, because they include the TARP measures to stabilize the financial system which brought the global economy to its knees in 2007/08. Classic Treasury expenditures deal with the purchase of real goods and services; Federal Reserve functions deal with the purchase and sale of financial assets. And yet, the focus of policy makers is quickly reverting to “exit strategies” and a reduction of budget deficits, where the Pittsburgh communiqué pledged to “prepare our exit strategies and, when the time is right, withdraw our extraordinary policy support in a co-operative and co-ordinated way, maintaining our commitment to fiscal responsibility.” If only that were true. The only way one could politically justify a government running a sustained surplus would be to make the case that unemployment created a more functional way of ensuring high profits (via wage discipline) than full employment. Put in those terms, it’s not a particularly compelling message, but it has the virtue of being consistent with modern monetary theory. Oddly enough, the G20 communiqué devotes considerable attention to the government’s “exit strategies”, which came in response to the destructive private sector financial practices which created this catastrophe. There has been less attention directed to the underlying causes themselves. Thus the IMF, in its latest “Global Financial Stability Report”, suggests that restarting securitization markets is “critical” to a wider economic recovery, and that current US and European proposals to force banks that originate loans to hold on to the first 5% of losses in all securitizations, were not sufficiently flexible and might backfire. In the words of Credit Lyonnais Asia strategist, Christopher Wood: [The IMF] is yet again doing the world a disservice by acting as a lobbying group for the securitised debt peddlers. It is clearly fundamentally correct that the agents of securitisation should be made to retain some ‘skin in the game’ after the terrible damage they have inflicted. It is true that the collapse of securitisation represents a massive deflationary risk for the global economy. But that does not mean that the answer is to allow a new free-for-all in securitisation assuming, charitably, there is demand for the securitised product. (“Greed and Fear”, 24 Sept. 2009, CLSA, Asia Pacific Markets) The IMF, the G20, indeed virtually all policy makers — including the Obama Administration — will make themselves far more relevant when they emphasize that full employment and prosperity can only be achieved to the extent that governments are prepared to spend up to a level justified by non-government saving. That does not mean unconstrained government spending. But the spending ought to be set with regard to results desired and competencies to execute plans — not out of some pre-conceived notion of what is “affordable”. Our federal government can afford anything that is for sale in terms of its own currency. And if it spends too much after getting us to a state of full output, it can get inflationary. But let’s get to that state of affairs first before we start worrying about perpetuating the flawed model of the past. That got us transitory prosperity and wage gains. And it promises years of economic misery if we do not move beyond neo-liberal economic fairy tales. Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0.

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Sam Gustin: Louder Than Bombs: LRAD ‘Sonic Cannon’ Debuts in U.S. at G20 Protests

September 25, 2009

Pittsburgh police on Thursday used an audio cannon manufactured by American Technology Corporation (ATCO), a San Diego-based company, to disperse protesters outside the G-20 Summit — the first time its LRAD series device has been used on civilians in the U.S. An ATC sales representative confirms to DailyFinance that Pittsburgh police used ATC’s Long Range Acoustic Device (LRAD). “Yes, we sold one LRAD unit to a government agency — I don’t know which one — which was used in Pittsburgh,” the representative said. American Technology Corp.’s stock was trading up over 15 percent in heavy activity late Friday. ATC’s website calls the company “a leading innovator of commercial, government, and military directed acoustics product offers” that offers “sound solutions for the commercial, government, and military markets.” The New York Times Friday reported that Pittsburgh officials believed this to be the technology’s first use against civilians. The paper did not identify the manufacturer of the audio cannon. “The police fired a sound cannon that emitted shrill beeps, causing demonstrators to cover their ears and back up,” the paper reported. Similar “non-lethal” products designed by ATC have been used at sea by cruise ships to ward off pirates. The company’s LRAD series has a variety of featured benefits, including “Longer stand-off distances for increased asset protection, larger coverage with fewer personnel, and determination of intent of groups or individuals from extended distances.” The product line can also transmit “bird distress calls to repel targeted birds from crops, buildings, and airports.” Read the rest at DailyFinance.com.

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Video: G-20 Crackdown On Banker Pay?

September 25, 2009

G-20 summit in Pittsburgh cracks down banker pay and tighter capital requirements. (Bloomberg News)

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G20 Protest Photos: Vote On Your Favorite (SLIDESHOW)

September 24, 2009

Protesters have taken to the streets of Pittsburgh in opposition to the Group of 20 summit taking place Thursday and Friday. The protests have turned violent, the AP reports, with demonstrators rolling trash bins towards police, and officers firing tear gas back. Read more here. Check out this slideshow of protesters and vote on your favorite protest tactic. Any creative ones that stand out to you, or have you seen these all before? And are you going to any G-20 protests? Send us your photos! We will publish the best ones of the HuffPost. Get HuffPost World On Facebook and Twitter!

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G20 Protesters Ordered To Stop March By Pittsburgh Police

September 24, 2009

PITTSBURGH — Police are throwing canisters spewing smoke after ordering several hundred protesters to stop their march in opposition of the Group of 20 summit in Pittsburgh. The march does not have a city permit and police have declared it an unlawful assembly. They played an announcement over a loudspeaker telling people to leave or face arrest or “other police action.” Several hundred protesters, many advocating against capitalism, had been trying to march toward the site of the summit. The group broke into smaller groups after being confronted by police. One group was seen pushing a trash bin down a street. THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below. PITTSBURGH (AP) – Police are ordering several hundred protesters to stop their march in opposition of the Group of 20 summit in Pittsburgh. The march is not sanctioned by the city and police have declared it an unlawful assembly. They are playing an announcement over a loudspeaker telling people to leave or face arrest or “other police action.” Several hundred protesters, many advocating against capitalism, are trying to march toward the site of the summit. Police in riot gear are standing guard near the protesters.

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G-20 Numbers Ninnies Have No Place in This War: David Reilly

September 23, 2009

Commentary by David Reilly Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) — Here’s one thing that leaders of the Group of 20 nations don’t need to work on when they meet in Pittsburgh this week — accounting rules. There is no surer way to give investors short shrift, or lay the groundwork for future financial crises, than to politicize accounting. Nor do investors need bank regulators sticking their noses into this area. If regulators want to ensure that banks are better able to withstand losses, they have the power to do so on their own. Unfortunately, politicians and regulators from a number of countries are using the G-20 meeting and other discussions about how to overhaul financial regulation as chances to twist accounting to suit their own needs, not those of investors. The mistaken idea is to have accounting serve regulators and bank executives, as well as investors. This is a continuation of the political pressure that has been brought to bear over the past year on the two main bodies that set accounting rules, the Financial Accounting Standards Board in the U.S. and the London-based International Accounting Standards Board , which sets rules used by companies in more than 100 countries. Both boards, by the way, are supposed to be independent organizations and were set up to be insulated from political meddling. Last fall, the European Union arm-twisted the IASB into rules changes at the behest of banks. This spring the U.S. Congress browbeat the FASB into changes that watered down the impact of using market prices to value hard-hit securities. Turn the Screw Since then, politicians, banks and bank regulators have kept turning the screws. Countries within the EU have seen the G-20 summit as a way to put the IASB on a short leash. Banks in the U.S. are hoping the U.S. government will do the same. The political heat has gotten so high that a remarkable back and forth has taken place between bodies connected to the IASB. The IASC Foundation, an independent, non-profit organization that oversees the standard setter, wrote a letter Sept. 15 to President Barack Obama , who will chair the Pittsburgh G-20 meeting. The missive attempted to appease banks and regulators, saying the board is working on rule changes that reflect suggestions from the G-20 earlier this year. It also noted that the IASB would take more note of the considerations of regulators and other “stakeholders.” Main Objective This was followed yesterday by a statement from a group of securities regulators, including the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission , that work with the IASB. The statement took a starkly different view, reiterating that the primary objective of financial reporting is to provide information “for present and potential investors,” with no mention of “stakeholders”. It added that “accounting standards should not be allowed to become a surrogate for robust bank risk management or effective bank supervision.” That constitutes a sharp rebuke to bank regulators who have argued that the basis for accounting should be changed to reflect wider societal and banking goals. Over the past two weeks, both Sheila Bair , chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., and Federal Reserve Governor Elizabeth Duke have echoed that view. Bair issued a veiled warning when she said “I strongly caution” the FASB to carefully consider possible changes to accounting rules that would require banks to use market prices when valuing loans that they hold. Duke, meanwhile, pushed the notion that accounting should “directly link reported financial condition and performance with the business model and economic purpose of the firm.” Duke’s Confusion Duke confuses the goals of capital — a buffer managed by regulators to help banks withstand losses — and accounting. In her view, the information investors receive should reflect management’s goals and the wider role a business plays in markets. That approach would stand the centuries-old purpose of accounting on its head. As Jack Ciesielski , editor of the Analyst’s Accounting Observer, said in a blog post responding to Duke, “Accounting is supposed to present economic information in a neutral, objective fashion so that investors can make informed decisions about where to place capital.” Duke’s statements also ignore that accounting rulemakers and bank regulators have different public policy missions. FASB Chairman Robert Herz outlined these in a June speech : accounting rulemakers are concerned with providing “relevant, transparent and unbiased financial information,” while bank regulators focus on “the safety and soundness of individual financial institutions, protection of customer deposits, and on the overall stability of the financial system.” Sometimes those goals conflict. That is the case today, especially when it comes to questions of how banks should value things like loans and debt securities. When that happens, “It is not appropriate to subordinate or subvert external reporting to investors to the needs of the regulators or vice versa,” as Herz said. This is just what some politicians and bank regulators now are trying to do. Better to make a clear distinction between the numbers provided to investors and the figures regulators use to gauge the soundness of banks and the wider financial system. Mixing them up will do more harm than good. ( David Reilly is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.) To contact the writer of this column: David Reilly at dreilly14@bloomberg.net

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Eric Lotke: The G-20 Summit: Lessons from Pittsburgh

September 21, 2009

The G-20 Summit is in Pittsburgh later this week. Leaders from the 20 countries that collectively represent two-thirds of the world’s population, 80 percent of world trade and 90 percent of global gross national product, will meet to discuss the global economy and terms of trade. It is fitting that they meet in Pittsburgh. Steel City is renowned for the slump in its dominant industry, followed by what President Obama called a ” world-class ” transition to a diversified economy, including higher education, bio-tech and clean energy. The good news is true enough — credit where due — but the praise misses half the story. Yes, some manufacturing jobs in Pittsburgh were replaced by high-end jobs in education or medicine. But many were replaced by jobs in hotels and food services — jobs that never paid as well and proved even more vulnerable in the recent downturn. Some manufacturing jobs were never replaced at all. That helps explain why the city’s population is declining, especially among youth, who seek opportunity elsewhere. Two lessons from Pittsburgh are important for the United States and the G-20 Summit. We discuss them in our new report, Pittsburgh, G-20, and the New Economy — Lessons to Learn, Choices to Make . The first lesson is the importance of the real economy. America grew up as an industrial superpower, from mass-produced automobiles to the Arsenal of Democracy. But our once-robust system of economic production — the invention, design and manufacture of products — has been steadily eroded. In its place has come an economy based on asset bubbles and foreign borrowing. That economy was never sustainable and is no longer available. We need to dispel the notion that America has moved beyond the production of goods. From cars to computers to refrigerators, a country needs things. If we don’t make those things here, then someone else gets our money. Too many modern Americans associate manufacturing with horse carts and buggy whips. We think of dirty old industries that economic evolution will naturally replace with high-end services in America and low-wage workers in other countries. We don’t appreciate that manufacturing still constitutes 12 percent of U.S. gross domestic product, 60 percent of U.S. exports and 70 percent of private sector research and development. If we hope to move beyond the production of goods, we need to think what would replace it. We tried over the past thirty years to replace goods-producing jobs (down 54 percent) with service-providing jobs (up 34 percent). It hasn’t worked so well. First, because our deficit in goods far exceeds our surplus in services — $840 billion versus $160 billion– so our accounts are out of balance. Second, service jobs don’t pay as well. Even in the broad category of “services” — which includes high-end professionals like doctors, lawyers and investment brokers — service-providing jobs have an average weekly wage of $610 compared with $810 in the goods-producing sector. Service jobs pay 75 cents for every dollar paid a production job . Retail jobs pay 50 cents. Source: BEA and Campaign for America’s Future. This change helps explain the ” lost decade ” in the latest Census Bureau data. Median household income dropped a thousand dollars in the ten years before 2008, the only ten year period in census records in which incomes failed to rise. It’s easy to predict that 2009 will be even worse. The second lesson from Pittsburgh is the connection between the production of goods and their sale. Trade, that is. Many countries find it appropriate to enact protectionist and mercantilist polices to their individual advantage. The U.S. generally does not, however, citing its ideological commitment to free trade. As a result, steel manufactured in Pittsburgh is competing against steel manufactured in China with devalued currency, government subsidies , deeply suppressed labor rights, and lower (cheaper) environmental and safety standards. Many products imported into America violate safety standards that U.S. manufacturers are required to obey, like lead-based paint in toys and pesticides in foods . American producers bear the cost of higher standards for the benefit of American citizens. Other countries avoid these costs with minimal consequences in the U.S. market. The G-20 Summit in Pittsburgh provides an opportunity for Americans to look at what’s happening, and ask hard questions. It provides opportunity to move beyond shibboleths of free trade and protectionism , and to question the true functioning of the market. Obama’s decision to apply tariffs to remedy the ” market disruption ” of tires from China is a first step in this new direction. The Summit also provides an opportunity to examine American patterns of production and consumption. Even when the economy was growing, America ran a current account deficit in excess of $700 billion every year. We borrowed $2 billion every day to cover the difference. That might have worked well for the countries we bought and borrowed from — but it worked less well for America. It was never sustainable, anyway. As the G-20 leaders plan a recovery from the global downturn, they should not assume that the United States will remain the world’s consumer — spending more than we earn, and paying for it with personal and national debt. The G-20 must chart the process by which the global economy that emerges from the crisis is more balanced, and less dependent on U.S. consumption. Growth must be sustainable in Pittsburgh as well as Beijing. ——- This piece originally appeared at the Campaign for America’s Future.

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CoStar’s Retail News Roundup: Aug. 23 – 29, 2009

August 24, 2009

This week in the Retail Roundup, CoStar reports on expansions or new concepts at Buffalo Wild Wings and Life Time Fitness; new retail development news in Denver and Pittsburgh; acquisition, merger, loan, sale, or IPO activity at Centro, RK Associates…

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