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Why You Should Buy American

by Stylelist Home on March 13, 2012

Huffington Post…

Home decor arrives on Capitol Hill Tuesday, when Newell Turner, editor-in-chief of House Beautiful , and Sen. Kay Hagan (D-N.C.) will hold a Washington press conference to encourage consumers to buy American-made home products in order to stimulate the economy and boost job growth. Though 227,000 jobs were added to the economy in February, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics , the national unemployment rate still stands at a staggering 8.3 percent. Turner, Hagan and leading members of the furniture manufacturing industry hope to expand the American-made home furnishings business to create more U.S. jobs. Worldwide, home decor is a multibillion-dollar market. The domestic furniture industry itself is relatively small, but Hagan says it has a notable impact on American jobs, especially in her home state of North Carolina. “Our state has a rich history in the furniture industry, and I am working to do everything I can to support and keep those jobs here in America,” Hagan tells Stylelist Home in an email. “Many Americans buy American products as a way to support our economy as it recovers, and furniture is no exception.” “There’s no better time than ever to promote American industries,” Turner says. Moreover, he adds, “There’s nothing more important than creating a home that makes you feel good and safe.” To strengthen his call for American support of domestic products, Turner is planning to discuss the findings of a new survey conducted by Ipsos Public Affairs, which questioned 1,000 adults about their furniture preferences and shopping habits. Some 91 percent of participants said they would choose to buy American-made furniture over products manufactured abroad. However, almost half of those surveyed either had recently bought foreign-made products or were unsure of their purchased item’s origin. These findings suggest there is huge potential for growth for the American furniture industry. With international retailers like IKEA offering competitive low prices, we understand why buyers might still opt for non-American-made products. Plus, international retailers employ a substantial number of U.S. workers. But Turner says there are affordable options made right here in the United States. Additionally, there is the “strong unquestioning level of quality” of American furniture ensured by federal safety regulations, Turner argues, noting that even the Chinese want American-made furniture “because they know the quality is guaranteed.” If the quality and accessibility of American furniture have not persuaded you, there’s also the environment to consider. “From a green perspective, you’re lowering the carbon footprint of things,” Turner says because U.S.-made furniture doesn’t have to travel as far to your home. Turner’s efforts for American-made furniture don’t end with the Tuesday press conference. The April issue of House Beautiful features the growing furniture and design sector in Southern California, with brands like Cisco Brothers , Elite Leather and William Haines Designs (the company founded by a former silent movie actor) shipping products across the country. Although we agree that buying American-made anything is important to our economy, we believe the largest obstacle to buying locally remains the price. Budget is often the single biggest factor when it comes to choosing furniture. So although we may want the gorgeous coffee table handcrafted in California and made with locally harvested wood, if our budget doesn’t allow it, we may just stick to our $20 Ikea Lack table … for now. Have something to say? Be sure to check out Stylelist Home on Twitter , Facebook and Pinterest .

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Why You Should Buy American

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Huffington Post…

Forget collecting coins in a red kettle — charities are increasingly netting donated homes as a result of the foreclosure crisis. And the trend is likely to to continue. USA Today reports that Bank of America donated 150 homes in 2011 and plans to donate more than 1,200 next year. Wells Fargo donated almost four times as many homes this year compared to last. And Habitat for Humanity almost doubled the number of donated homes that it’s rehabbed in the year ending last June. “It’s a win, win, win” Rebecca Mairone, head of Bank of America’s donation program, told USA Today. Those three “wins” include one for the neighborhood where the house is located, one for the bank, and one for the investor. By donating homes — typically of low value — owners rid themselves of a mortgage and the expenses that go with upkeep, as well as earn tax breaks for their donation. Depending on who the home is donated to, it might be torn down, refurbished or rebuilt completely. In some places home donations are becoming too popular. CrainsDetroit.com reports that in Detroit, nearly 98 percent of homes offered are declined, as many are too rundown. And as home donation inquiries increase, some charities are still figuring out what they can and cannot accept. “We had to kind of look at our policy on accepting house donations,” William Brazier, executive director of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul Detroit, told CrainsDetroit.com . But saying “no” to that many home donations still puts most nonprofit organizations and banks ahead of the game. Nonprofit News reports that Real Estate Donations, a division of the West Dundee, Ill.-based nonprofit Restoration America, is still taking advantage of the upward shift in donations. By November, the group had closed on its 101st donated home of 2011. Charles Konkus, president of Real Estate Donations told the news source that was “way ahead” of the 73 last year.

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Charities See Huge Increase In Foreclosed Home Donations

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Woman Arrested After Punching Walmart Employee In The Face

December 26, 2011

People: we know holiday sales are great, but they’re not worth spending the night in jail. A New York woman was charged with two counts of second-degree assault after punching a 70-year old Walmart employee in the face. Jacquetta Simmons, 26, assaulted Grace Suozzi on Saturday night after the Walmart greeter asked to see her receipts, according to authorities. Simmons quickly fled the scene, but employees and customers chased her until she was surrounded. Not long after, police arrived and arrested her. Police reported that when they checked Simmons’ bags, she had receipts for all of the merchandise. WATCH:

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Major Museums And Organizations Collect Materials Produced By Occupy Movement

December 24, 2011

By CRISTIAN SALAZAR AND RANDY HERSCHAFT, The Associated Press NEW YORK (AP) — Occupy Wall Street may still be working to shake the notion it represents a passing outburst of rage, but some establishment institutions have already decided the movement’s artifacts are worthy of historic preservation. ( CLICK HERE FOR LATEST UPDATES ) More than a half-dozen major museums and organizations from the Smithsonian Institution to the New-York Historical Society have been avidly collecting materials produced by the Occupy movement. Staffers have been sent to occupied parks to rummage for buttons, signs, posters and documents. Websites and tweets have been archived for digital eternity. And museums have approached individual protesters directly to obtain posters and other ephemera. The Museum of the City of New York is planning an exhibition on Occupy for next month. “Occupy is sexy,” said Ben Alexander, who is head of special collections and archives at Queens College in New York, which has been collecting Occupy materials. “It sounds hip. A lot of people want to be associated with it.” To keep established institutions from shaping the movement’s short history, protesters have formed their own archive group, stashing away hundreds of cardboard signs, posters, fliers, buttons, periodicals, documents and banners in temporary storage while they seek a permanent home for the materials. “We want to make sure we collect it from our perspective so that it can be represented as best as possible,” said Amy Roberts, a library and information studies graduate student at Queens College who helped create the archives working group. The archives group has been approached by institutions seeking to borrow or acquire Occupy materials. Roberts said they were discussing donating the entire collection to the Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives at New York University. Tamiment declined to comment. A handful of protesters began camping out in September in a lower Manhattan plaza called Zuccotti Park, outraged at Wall Street excess and income inequality; they were soon joined by others who set up tents and promised to occupy “all day, all night.” Similar camps sprouted in dozens of cities nationwide and around the world. Many were forcibly cleared. Much of the frenzied collection by institutions began in the early weeks of the protests. In part, they were seeking to collect and preserve as insurance against the possibility history might be lost – not an unusual stance by archivists. What appears to be different is the level of interest from mainstream institutions across a wide geographic spectrum and the new digital-only ventures that have sprung up to preserve the movement’s online history. The lavish attention poured on the liberal-leaning movement has not gone unnoticed by conservatives. Judicial Watch, a conservative watchdog group, blogged sarcastically under its “Corruption Chronicles” about the choice by the Smithsonian to document Occupy. “It looks like it’s taxpayer-funded hoarding, as opposed to rigorous historical collecting,” said Tom Fitton, president of the organization. The Smithsonian said its American history collection also now includes materials related to the massive tea party rally against health care reform in March 2010 and materials from the American Conservative Union’s Washington, D.C., conference in February. The Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media at George Mason University launched OccupyArchive.org in mid-October on a hunch that it could become historically important. So far, it has about 2,500 items in its online database, including compressed files of entire Occupy websites from around the country and hundreds of images scraped from photo-sharing site Flickr. “This kind of social movement is probably more interesting to me, to be honest about it. And also so much of it is happening digitally. On webpages. On Twitter,” said Sheila Brennan, the associate director of public projects. “I guess I didn’t see as much of that with the tea party.” Curators and those in charge of collections at institutions said it was not too soon to think about preserving elements of the Occupy movement. “We like to collect things as they are happening before the artifacts go away,” said Esther Brumberg, senior curator of collections for the Museum of Jewish Heritage in lower Manhattan. Brumberg said the museum had approached “Occupy Judaism” co-organizer Daniel Sieradski about a poster he had done for a Yom Kippur prayer service for protesters at Zuccotti Park that drew hundreds of people. The poster shows the silhouetted fiddler image from the Jewish musical “Fiddler on the Roof” astride the Wall Street bull. Sieradski said it made sense that his poster should end up in the museum’s permanent collection. “What I think is great is that they are actually looking to build their collection around contemporary American Jewish history and maybe broaden what their offerings are to the public so that they can tell a more complete story,” he said. While there are no immediate plans to use the poster in an exhibition, Brumberg called it “just one of a number of instances of Jewish activism” that they are interested in and are trying to collect. The Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History gave a similar explanation for sending staff to Zuccotti Square during the encampment, where they were spotted picking up materials. The museum said it was part of its tradition of documenting how Americans participate in a democracy. It declined to allow staff to be interviewed. “Historians like to take the long view and see how things play out,” said spokeswoman Valeska Hilbig in an email, adding that staff wouldn’t feel “comfortable” discussing the protests until some time had passed. Staff at the Robert W. Woodruff Library at Emory University set up a system to download and archive tweets about Occupy. So far, they have harvested more than 5 million tweets from more than 600,000 unique Twitter users. Ultimately the database will be made available to scholars, said Stewart Varner, the digital scholarship coordinator at the library. The New York Public Library has added Occupy periodicals to its collection and is considering obtaining some protest ephemera. And the Internet Archive, a massive online library of free digital books, audio and texts, has opened a mostly user-generated collection about the movement. As of Friday, the Occupy collection included more than 2,000 items, while its “Tea Party Movement” collection had fewer than 50. Unlike other institutions focused only on collecting, the Museum of the City of New York is planning a photography exhibition on Occupy at its South Street Seaport Museum offshoot when it reopens in January. Chief curator Sarah Henry said the museum will also include materials on the movement in a new gallery opening in the spring that focuses on social activism in New York City. The New-York Historical Society has collected between 300 and 400 items from the movement, said Jean Ashton, the library director. Ashton recognized the contradiction inherent in an establishment institution collecting Occupy materials. “There are probably people in Occupy Wall Street who the last thing they want is to have their materials in a library or museum somewhere,” she said. Roberts, the OWS member who is on the archives working group, said it was good that such institutions want to document the movement. However, she said they would prefer the institutions collaborate with the participants. “We know more about the movement and the stories behind the materials that have been collected,” she said. ____ Follow Cristian Salazar at twitter.com/crsalazarAP and Randy Herschaft at twitter.com/HerschaftAP

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Hold Your Fired: Cities That Have Disbanded Their Police Forces

December 13, 2011

On December 1, Youngtown, Ariz., joined the ranks of the many U.S. cities and towns that have fired their local police forces. In recent years, it has become somewhat of a trend across the country for municipalities to disband police departments, most often due to financial restrictions. 24/7 Wall St. has identified six cities and towns that have completely dissolved their local law enforcement groups.

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Protesters Eye West Coast Ports

December 12, 2011

OAKLAND, Calif. (Reuters / December 11) – Anti-Wall Street protesters, hoping to briefly cripple a key supply chain of American commerce and re-energize their movement, plan to attempt to block major West Coast ports Monday. By marching on U.S. ports from California to Alaska, organizers look to call attention to economic inequalities in the country and a financial system they complain is unfairly tilted toward the wealthy. The planned action comes after the Occupy Wall Street movement that began in New York in September has seen its tent camps in most big West Coast cities dismantled in police raids, leaving the movement looking for new avenues to voice its discontent. But a plan to shutter multiple ports simultaneously could prove difficult because some of the facilities are in massive complexes with multiple entrances that would be tough to fully block, even if large numbers of demonstrators turn out. Activists aligned with the Occupy Wall Street movement did briefly succeed in shuttering Oakland’s port, the fifth busiest in the country, for hours on Nov. 2 after police kept their distance. Oakland, long an Occupy hot spot, may again be center stage Monday in a day of protest seen as a test of the movement’s momentum, along with the combined ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach. Organizers are also targeting Portland, Anchorage, Seattle, Tacoma and Houston. “The objective of the day is to shut down the port through mass action,” said Mike King, a graduate student who acts as a media liaison for Occupy Oakland. “The Occupy movement is attacking the 1 percent at their point of profit.” Police in several cities were so far not disclosing their plans for handling the protesters or whether they aimed to confront them, risking clashes, or stand back. FOCUS ON TRUCK DRIVERS The Port of Oakland has mounted a public relations campaign to dissuade protesters from joining the effort, while two of the largest labor unions involved have split — with the International Longshore and Warehouse Union opposed to the blockade and Teamsters in favor. But union workers were largely expected to stay on the job, and were contractually barred from joining such a strike. The protest will focus in part on truck drivers who earn low wages and cannot join unions because they are classified as independent truck drivers, and must provide their own trucks. “It’s a group that encapsulates basically everything that is wrong with society,” King said. Among the companies at which protesters directed their ire was SSA Marine, which loads and unloads cargo ships. Organizers said they planned to target its terminal at the combined ports of Los Angeles-Long Beach, which together handle 40 percent of the nation’s waterborne imports. “They are independent contractors,” SSA Marine spokesman Bob Watters said of the nonunion drivers. Truckers provide their own vehicles and the lease agreements are day by day, he said, allowing them to work for many companies. Oakland port spokesman Isaac Kos-Read said the issue of independent truckers was being adjudicated in court, and that the port was working with unions and its tenants to improve the environmental impact of trucking. “The port empathizes with the issues brought up by the Occupy movement,” he said. “But we have a strategy for inclusive development. Shutting down the port is only going to hurt the people they are trying to help.” (Reporting By Laird Harrison. Additional reporting by Teresa Carson in Portland, R.T. Watson in Los Angeles, Karen Brooks in Houston and Laura L. Myers in Seattle; Writing by Dan Whitcomb, Editing by Sandra Maler) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Fired RIM Execs ‘Chewed Through Restraints’ In Flight

December 10, 2011

New details are emerging about the rowdy behaviour of two Research In Motion executives who were fired for disrupting a transcontinental flight — including that they managed to chew their way out of restraints and wound up being subdued by other passengers until the plane landed. George Campbell, 45, and Paul Alexander Wilson, 38, each pleaded guilty to mischief for disrupting a Nov. 30 flight from Toronto to Beijing. The plane landed instead in Vancouver, where a court later ordered them to pay $72,000 in restitution. They also received suspended sentences and were placed on parole for a year. RIM fired both men after investigating what happened, but little information has been made public about what was so disruptive about their behaviour. However, court documents obtained by CBC News paint a very chaotic picture. The pair seemed heavily intoxicated from the start of the flight, according to one passenger. They drank, passed out, and woke up to continue consuming alcohol and yelling at one another. Campbell was described as a “rowdy and abusive” passenger who at one point warned that he would “off people when they left the plane,” according to the Crown prosecutor. One of the men also “assaulted a flight attendant and threatened to punch another,” the prosecution said in court. Crew members tried repeatedly to subdue the pair, but they kept struggling to get free, “verbally abusing” people on board and eventually “chewed their way through their restraints.” Diverted to closer airport As the situation escalated, the pilots decided to divert the plane to Anchorage. But the situation become so dire that they opted for the Vancouver airport, which was closer. During the final 80 minutes of the flight, “several flight attendants and a couple of passengers” restrained the two men and the crew initiated a “lockdown situation” so that no one was allowed to leave their seats. The prosecutor in the case called Campbell and Wilson’s conduct “way over the top.” “The repercussions for the company as well as every single person on the plane, both financially and perhaps even emotionally, are going to be huge.” Air Canada pegged its losses for diverting the flight at nearly $200,000 and RIM issued a statement saying that the conduct did not fit with the company’s “standards of business behaviour.” The two men were on a week-long business trip for the BlackBerry maker, but they were arrested after the flight landed in Vancouver. Both men live near Waterloo, Ont., where RIM is headquartered. Campbell refused to comment on the incident when reached by phone on Friday. Air Canada issued a statement but would not answer questions about the case.

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Scam Poses As Email From Better Business Bureau

December 7, 2011

An email with the subject line “Complaint from your customers” may be a scam, according to an urgent scam alert issued today by the Council of Better Business Bureaus. The Council warned businesses and consumers that the return email address, riskmanager@bbb.org, is not an address the BBB uses, according to an email from BBB spokesperson Kelsey Owen. The fake scam email is signed with the address of the Council of Better Business Bureaus, which is the national office of the BBB system, but links to a non-BBB website. Owen, in her email alert, warns, “Do NOT click on the link.” While a scam email has been circulating for a couple weeks, the Council of Better Business Bureaus received another email with a malicious link today. “We’re considering this a second wave,” Owen told The Huffington Post. She confirms that other businesses have received the suspect email today: “The phones are ringing off the hook.” The BBB has requested that recipients of the scam email alert the BBB at https://www.bbb.org/scam/report-a-scam/ . In the meantime, Owen says they’re trying to track down whoever sent the email. “We have the FBI looking into it,” she says.

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Vacant Homes Impose Big Costs On Cities: GAO Report

December 6, 2011

The foreclosure crisis is costing cities at a time when they can least afford it. Millions of homes in America are standing vacant, and in many cases they represent a financial sinkhole for their communities . Local governments — forced to absorb the costs of maintaining or razing these homes, and seeing property taxes plummet in response to the spread of urban blight — are increasingly shouldering the burden of the country’s slumping housing market, according to a report released Tuesday by the U.S. Government Accountability Office. Assuming responsibility for millions of vacant homes comes as just one more source of economic pressure for many American cities, which are straining to do more with less in an atmosphere of budget cuts and dwindling tax revenues . The report notes that the number of vacant properties in the United States grew by more than 50 percent between 2000 and 2010 — a decade that included two recessions and a catastrophic collapse of the national housing market. In 2000, there were about 6.8 million vacant homes in the U.S., according to the GAO. By 2010, that number had jumped to 10.3 million — a rise encompassing countless homeowners in default, with their wealth all but erased in the sharp plunge of real estate values that accompanied the burst of the housing bubble. The rapid spread of vacant homes has taken a toll on local governments, which often incur costs as a result of so many properties standing empty. The municipal costs of high foreclosure rates have been observed for some time , but the GAO report makes clear the scope of the problem. While the upkeep and maintenance of a vacant home is technically the responsibility of either the homeowner or the mortgage owner, in practice it often falls to the town, which has to pay for basic services — like cutting the grass, boarding up windows and draining swimming pools — to keep the property from falling into total disrepair. Alternatively, the town can have the vacant property demolished. Either way, the tab for cities and towns is often high. Detroit, for example, has paid $20 million to demolish 4,000 properties in the past two and a half years, the GAO found. Communities incur costs in other ways as well. The GAO noted that vacant homes are often associated with crime and accidental fires, which require the attention of police and fire departments, thus tying up city resources. And cities often see their property taxes fall as vacant homes drive down the value of homes around them. The foreclosure crisis — which has pushed home values down to historic lows in recent years, and directly resulted in many of the vacancies that came into being between 2000 and 2010 — is thought to be less than halfway over , according to a recent report from the Center for Responsible Lending. This week, the Occupy Wall Street movement — which has faced increasing resistance in its attempts to inhabit various public spaces — aligned itself with distressed homeowners in a day of mass action. Occupy protesters moved into foreclosed homes, and took up the cause of homeowners facing eviction, in about 25 cities Tuesday , saying they were working to bring attention to a national crisis.

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Carrier IQ Hit With Class-Action Suit

December 3, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO — Technology bloggers are asking if our cellphones are spying on us after a security researcher said a piece of software hidden on millions of phones was recording virtually everything people do with them. Amid a broad outcry, Sen. Al Franken (D- Minn.) is calling for an investigation. A class-action lawsuit has been filed against the software’s maker, Carrier IQ Inc. of Mountain View, Calif. The software, which Carrier IQ says is used on some 150 million mobile devices, appears relatively innocuous. It does watch what owners of Sprint Nextel Corp. and AT&T Inc. smartphones do with them, including what people type and the numbers they dial. But it doesn’t seem to transmit every keystroke to the company. Instead, it kicks into action when there’s a problem, like a call that doesn’t go through, and it lets the phone company know. “It is software that is developed in partnership with carriers with the intent to improve network performance. As far as we can tell, it meets this description in execution,” said Tim Wyatt, principal engineer at Lookout, a cellphone security company. “In line with our privacy policy, we solely use CIQ software data to improve wireless network and service performance,” AT&T said in a statement. Carrier IQ says the data its software gathers is stored by the phone companies or at Carrier IQ’s facilities. It doesn’t sell the data to third parties. Phone companies, of course, already are custodians of a wealth of private information, including whom you call, where you surf and what your text messages say. The brouhaha started a few weeks ago, when a programmer named Trevor Eckhart documented Carrier IQ’s workings with videos on his blog. The software company threatened him with a lawsuit if he didn’t take the information down. The Electronic Frontier Foundation took on Eckhart’s case, and the company backed down. Eckhart posted another video this week, showing Carrier IQ’s software logging keystrokes on an HTC EVO 3D from Sprint. A central privacy worry is what kind of data Carrier IQ is retaining. Andrew Coward, a Carrier IQ vice president, said the software doesn’t record every keystroke or send information about all of them back to the company. The only keystrokes it cares about are specific administrative commands, including those instructing the software to phone “home.” The rest it discards, Coward said. “We never expected to need the content of SMS messages, so we didn’t code for it,” Coward told The Associated Press in an interview. Apple Inc. has said it has stopped supporting Carrier IQ in most of its products. Separately, the company came under fire last year over location-tracking features of the iPhone and made a software change to keep data on users’ movements for less time. For now, there’s no easy way to uninstall the Carrier IQ software without unsanctioned third-party software. Coward said it is “too early to tell” whether the company will make any substantial changes to the software because of the uproar. ___ Svensson reported from New York.

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AT&T Defends $39 Billion Deal

December 1, 2011

NEW YORK — AT&T Inc. blasted the Federal Communications Commission on Thursday for compiling what it called an unfair and biased report on what would happen if AT&T were allowed to buy T-Mobile USA. AT&T agreed in March to buy T-Mobile USA for $39 billion, but the deal has encountered opposition, first from the Justice Department and then from the FCC. Analysts now give it only a slim chance of going through. The FCC took the unusual step of releasing its analysis of the merger on Tuesday. It found “questions of fact” about AT&T’s stated justifications for the merger and dismissed most of AT&T’s arguments. It said competition in the industry would suffer if AT&T swallowed T-Mobile, and potentially lead to higher prices for consumers. AT&T immediately attacked the release of the report, saying it was a draft that had never been voted on by the five-member commission. The “questions of fact” would have been addressed at an administrative hearing that now won’t take place, since AT&T has withdrawn its merger application. The company is expected to resubmit the application. On Thursday, AT&T released a more thorough, combative response to the report. It’s an unusual one for a company that spends heavily on lobbying and cultivates close relationships with regulators. “The document is so obviously one-sided that any fair-minded person reading it is left with the clear impression that it is an advocacy piece, and not a considered analysis,” the Dallas-based company said. The FCC report said the merger would threaten fragile competition in the industry, yet AT&T pointed out that it also cites existing competition from Verizon Wireless as a strong motivator for AT&T to build out its new data network, even without the resources it would gain by buying T-Mobile USA. The FCC report disputed AT&T’s claims that the merger would create jobs rather than eliminate them, as is usual for mergers. AT&T says the expansion of wireless broadband will stimulate job creation, and points out that the FCC itself says its own $4.5 billion broadband fund would create half a million jobs over six years. That’s counting not just phone-company jobs, but jobs created by the availability of broadband. “This notion – that government spending on broadband deployment creates jobs and economic growth, but private investment does not – makes no sense,” AT&T said Thursday. The war of words is unlikely to affect the outcome of AT&T’s quest to buy T-Mobile USA, since the chief hurdle is a suit filed in August by the Justice Department to block the deal.

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Police Raid Occupy Philly Camp, Evict Protesters

November 30, 2011

PHILADELPHIA — Police have cleared the Occupy Philadelphia encampment near City Hall and sanitation crews are standing by to begin cleaning it. Police began pulling down tents at about 1:20 a.m. Wednesday after telling demonstrators they had to leave. Protesters began marching through the streets but later were stopped by police. Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey said breaking up the camp in the early-morning hours helped minimize any disruption to businesses and traffic. No arrests were made, he said. The action comes more than two days after the deadline for protesters to remove structures and belongings from Dilworth Plaza. Protesters have camped on the plaza since Oct. 6 to protest economic inequality and corporate influence on government. The city plans to clear the site to make room for a $50 million renovation project.

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Occupy L.A. May Branch Out To Occupy Beverly Hills, Skid Row

November 28, 2011

WASHINGTON — After a tense all-nighter with the Los Angeles Police Department, Occupy L.A. activists and their tents outside City Hall have been given a temporary reprieve. The police re-opened the streets around City Hall to traffic Monday morning and essentially left Occupy L.A. alone. Four activists had been arrested — hardly the anticipated outcome from either side. Late Friday, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa declared 12:01 a.m. Monday as the deadline by which Occupy L.A. had to vacate City Hall Park. In a letter to the activists, he wrote: “The Occupy movement is now at a crossroads.” Villaraigosa did not give an explicit explanation as to why he wanted the park cleared of the occupation’s 500 tents, food service and library. Peter Sanders, the mayor’s senior press secretary, said in an email Monday afternoon that the mayor “respects Occupy L.A.’s right to exercise their freedom of speech but that going forward, tents will not be allowed in City Hall Park and the laws regarding city parks will be enforced.” If the mayor thought his threat Friday would send Occupy L.A. members scattering to off-site locations, he was wrong. Sunday night’s general assembly was packed . When a moderator asked how many people were attending the assembly meeting for the first time, many hands shot up. But Occupy L.A.’s continuing general assemblies might be short lived. Los Angeles Police Department Chief Charlie Beck told reporters at a Monday morning press conference that the eviction will happen. “We will enforce the law on our own time schedule,” Beck said. Rumors had already begun that the eviction could come Monday at noon. The Occupy L.A. activists have been just as adamant about holding their ground. “We’re not going away,” PJ Davenport assured The Huffington Post. “We knew that the eviction order was coming down,” Davenport said. “But you can’t help but feel cheated yet again by your local government when they tell you that your time is up and you need to move elsewhere.” Yet some within Occupy L.A. are already considering such a move, Davenport conceded. Los Angeles is a sprawling city with 9.8 million residents and a nearly endless stretch of distinct neighborhoods, enclaves and cultures. Post-eviction, activists aren’t thinking about shrinking. They’re thinking about franchising. Instead of one space, how about 50 spaces? Instead of Occupy L.A., how about Occupy Beverly Hills and an Occupy Skid Row? “You will see tents across the metro area,” Davenport suggested. “If they’re not allowed at City Hall, you will see them around City Hall.” “None of us are interested in working out of an office,” Occupy L.A. activist Joan Donovan insisted. “We want real change. We hope that we show that by occupying, we are extremely serious.” Donovan said the idea of diversifying into several spaces may grow out of necessity — and a way to empower the leaders who grew up through the City Hall space. “We don’t know if we are going to get space this big again,” she explained. “The tactic would be to let all the people who became leaders here to begin the process somewhere else … It would be awesome if there was an Occupy Beverly Hills. It would be the perfect opportunity to talk to tourists about how to better spend their money, how to be better citizens. The idea is to get people to think.” There’s serious talk, Donovan said, of an occupation starting up in Los Feliz. And others are talking about Occupying Rodeo Drive. The greater Los Angeles area already boasts an Occupy Long Beach , an Occupy Venice and an Occupy Pasadena , among other spots. “There are people talking about doing a more permanent occupation of Skid Row,” said Jeremy Rothe-Kushel, an Occupy L.A. activist. “The other possibilities are fully on the table. I think there’s going to be a negotiation about centralization vs. decentralization.”

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PHOTOS: Artist Takes The Occupy Movement Underwater

November 26, 2011

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

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FBI Nabs Suspected AT&T Hackers

November 26, 2011

Philippine police and the FBI have arrested four people that Manila said were paid by a militant Saudi Arabian-based group to hack into U.S. telecom AT&T’s system, but the company said it was neither targeted nor breached.

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Cops Taser Black Friday Shopper

November 25, 2011

If they’re not pepper spraying each other or rioting over waffle makers, Black Friday customers are being tasered by cops and being violently arrested for shoplifting. WAAY reports that cops said they had to use a stun gun to subdue belligerent customer Christopher Blake Pyron at a Wal-Mart in Florence, Ala. From WAAY: According to police, Pyron was stumbling and grabbing items and causing a scene in the busy store. An officer tried to get Pyron to calm down, and tried to take him somewhere less crowded. According to investigators, Pyron jerked away and swung at the officer. At that point, the officer grabbed his taser and shot Pyron, taking him to the ground. Pyron was charged with public intoxication, disorderly conduct and resisting arrest, according to WAAY. The arrest wasn’t the only taser-aided cuffing of this holiday season. Miltord Patch reports that an officer used a stun gun to bring down a man involved in a scuffle at a Wal-Mart on Thursday night. Then there’s the case of the grandpa who was either the victim of a violent police mistake, or a shoplifter taken down with appropriate force, depending on who you ask. MyFox Phoenix reports that witnesses said a young boy was trampled by bargain-hunting shoppers at a Buckeye, Ariz. Wal-Mart. In an effort to free up his hands so he could protect his grandson, witnesses told the station that the grandpa put a video game in his pants. But police told a different story. They told MyFox that the man was trying to shoplift and when they tried to question him about the video game, he started “flailing his arms.” Police used a leg sweep to bring the man down. He hit his head and had to be treated at a local hospital, police told the station. He’s charged with resisting arrest and shoplifting.

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WATCH: Why Are Tents So Important To Occupy Denver?

November 21, 2011

In cities all over the world, Occupy movements have started tent cities in their local parks causing many of which to be evicted or arrested. Whenever even a handful of tents appear in a park, Denver authorities have lately been responding with extreme force . And despite the opposition, protesters continually come back to their local parks in hopes of being able to erect tents again. Ever wonder why the tent so important to the occupiers? Occupy Denver has put together a video that explains the protesters position on why the tents are crucial to the movement, both symbolically and practically. One unnamed protester in the video says, “Denver is now going to spend over a million dollars because of tents, for a fine that was probably less than 100 dollars. If [the city] would instead invest that money into the local community they could house all of the Denver homeless population for a year. But instead, they decide on this: riot police, they’re going tear gas us, they’re going to hit us with batons.” Last week, it was reported that the city of Denver has already spent $360,000 for two weeks of police action against Occupy Denver. DPD then asked for an additional $200,000 to help cover more costs. Fox31 reported . Another anonymous protester says, “If you’re not allowed to have tents in the middle of a housing crisis — for a lot of us that shows you’re not allowed to have anything unless you have considerable amounts of resources — then you’re just going to be left out in the cold, literally.”

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WATCH: Chilling Video Of Students Confronting UC Davis Chancellor

November 20, 2011

A crowd of UC Davis students confronted chancellor Linda Katehi in the wake of an incident that occurred between protesters and campus police on Friday. According to reports , police unleashed pepper spray on a group of students protesers who were part of the Occupy Wall Street movement. Video footage of the protest shows that students were sitting quietly when police began to show off a can of pepper spray before dousing the students. Katehi held a press conference on Saturday to address the incident. Students began to surround the building in protest and she reportedly refused to leave amid safety concerns. Finally, the students cleared a path for her to exit. As she walked back to her car, surrounded by students, some began to ask her questions, which she mostly brushed off “Chancellor, do you still feel threatened by the students?” someone asked. She replied, “no” and a companion said that “we’ve asked for it to be a silent, respectful exit.” Katehi will address the students directly on Monday. The officers’ behavior has sparked outrage among the Occupy Wall Street and UC Davis communities. Two involved officers have reportedly been put on administrative leave and students have even called for the chancellor’s resignation . WATCH:

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A Poet’s Beating At Occupy Berkeley

November 20, 2011

LIFE, I found myself thinking as a line of Alameda County deputy sheriffs in Darth Vader riot gear formed a cordon in front of me on a recent night on the campus of the University of California, Berkeley, is full of strange contingencies.

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WATCH: Occupy Wall Street: A Night Of Action

November 18, 2011

As night fell on Foley Square in Lower Manhattan, Occupy Wall Street protesters came out in the thousands for a final rally at the end of the movement’s two-month anniversary. The atmosphere was festive — it even drew a large number of families. Erica Brody brought her young daughter Ella to the protest. “I think it’s important to be out here for our children, and for people to see that we care about the future and what happens to this country. … they are the next generation”, she said. Jessie Spector and Helen Stillman are recent college graduates, who, by their own account, come from wealthy families. They said they want to use their wealth and privilege to leverage resources for change. “All of us have a role to play, including those of us who are connected to communities of the one percent”, Stillman explained. As the protesters gathered to leave the square for a final march across the pedestrian walkway of the Brooklyn Bridge, scores of riot police stood by. A sense of enthusiasm filled the crisp night air. Holding a small candle in his hand, union worker Lewis Torres appeared hopeful about the future of the movement, but when asked about the next step he replied, “I’m feeling good, but that’s the best question — what is going to happen next?” Watch the video above to get a better sense for the scene at Foley Square.

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Iraq War Veteran Hurt In Occupy Oakland Protests Leaves Hospital

November 14, 2011

OAKLAND, Calif. — Friends say that Scott Olsen, the Iraq War veteran who suffered a serious head injury during a police raid on the Occupy Oakland encampment, has been released from the hospital. Olsen suffered a skull fracture during tear-gas filled clashes between police and demonstrators on Oct. 25. The 24-year-old Marine Corps veteran had been attending Occupy protests in San Francisco and Oakland after working his day job as a security software engineer. Dottie Guy of Iraq Veterans Against the War said Sunday that Olsen was released last week. She says he can now read and write, but still has trouble talking. Wall Street protesters nationwide have rallied around Olsen’s plight. A second Iraq War veteran was hospitalized earlier this month after Oakland officials said he was hurt during another round of protests, but has since been released.

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‘It’s No Longer Safe’: Oakland Police Beg Occupy Protesters To Leave

November 12, 2011

OAKLAND, Calif. — Leaders across the country felt increasing pressure Friday to shut down Occupy encampments after two men died in shootings and another was found dead from a suspected combination of drugs and carbon monoxide poisoning caused by a propane heater inside a tent. Citing a strain on crime-fighting resources, police first pleaded with and then ordered Occupy Oakland protesters to leave their encampment at the City Hall plaza where a man was shot and killed late Thursday. The Oakland Police Officer’s Association, which represents rank-and-file police, issued an open letter saying the camp is pulling officers away from crime-plagued neighborhoods. “With last night’s homicide, in broad daylight, in the middle of rush hour, Frank Ogawa Plaza is no longer safe,” the letter said. “Please leave peacefully, with your heads held high, so we can get police officers back to work fighting crime in Oakland neighborhoods.” Late in the afternoon, police officers acting at the direction of Mayor Jean Quan distributed fliers to protesters warning that the camp violates the law and must be disbanded immediately. The notices warned campers they would face arrest if tents and other materials were not removed, although the warnings did not say by when. The city issued similar written warnings before officers raided the encampment before dawn on Oct. 25 with tear gas and bean bags projectiles before arresting 85 people. A day later, Quan allowed protesters to reclaim the disbanded site and the camp has grown substantially since then. City Council President Larry Reid said outside City Hall on Friday that the shooting was further proof the tents must come down. He was confronted by a protester who said he wouldn’t be in office much longer. “You didn’t elect me,” Reid snapped back. “You probably ain’t even registered to vote!” Reid said the encampment has been a major setback for the area while attracting sex offenders, mentally ill and homeless people, and anarchists. “This is no longer about Occupy Wall Street,” he said. “This is about occupying Oakland and extracting whatever you can get out of Oakland by holding our city hostage.” The Oakland shooting occurred the same day a 35-year-old military veteran apparently shot himself to death in a tent at a Burlington, Vt., Occupy encampment. On Friday, a man was found dead inside a tent at the Occupy Salt Lake City encampment, from what police said was a combination of drug use and carbon monoxide. A preliminary investigation into the Oakland shooting suggested it resulted from a fight between two groups of men at or near the encampment, police Chief Howard Jordan said. Investigators do not know if the men in the fight were associated with Occupy Oakland, he said. Protesters said there was no connection between the shooting and the camp. The coroner’s office said it was using fingerprints to identify the victim and that a positive identification was not likely to be released before Monday. Protesters have been girding for another police raid as several City Council members have said the Oakland camp must go. After police cleared the camp last month, Quan changed course and allowed protesters to return. The mayor’s reversal strained relationships with city police and other San Francisco Bay area law enforcement agencies. More than a dozen agencies joined Oakland police in the Oct. 25 raid on the camp under a mutual aid policy in which each agency covers its own costs. Alameda County Sheriff’s Department spokesman Sgt. J.D. Nelson said Friday that Oakland will have to pick up the entire tab if it asks for deputies to assist another raid. Mutual aid was designed for law enforcement agencies to assist each other in unplanned emergency situations, Nelson said. “When government officials allowed those campers to go back in, well now you know what you’re getting. It’s not an unplanned event,” he said. In Vermont, police said a preliminary investigation showed the veteran fatally shot himself in the head in a tent in City Hall Park. The name of the Chittenden County man was being withheld because not all of his family has been notified. The shooting raised questions about whether the protest would be allowed to continue, said Burlington police Deputy Chief Andi Higbee. “Our responsibility is to keep the public safe. When there is a discharge of a firearm in a public place like this it’s good cause to be concerned, greatly concerned,” Higbee said. The discovery of the man believed to be in his 40s at the Occupy Salt Lake City camp led police to order all protesters to leave the park where they have camped for weeks. The man has not been identified. Group organizers said many of the roughly 150 protesters plan to go to jail rather than abandon the encampment. “We don’t even know if this is a tragedy or just natural,” protest organizer Jesse Fruhwirth said. “They’re scapegoating Occupy.” Salt Lake City police Chief Chris Burbank said officers have made 91 arrests at the camp, roughly the same number seen in the area during all of the last year. Tensions were also high at the 300-tent encampment in Portland, Ore., which has become a hub for the city’s homeless people and addicts. Mayor Sam Adams ordered the camp shut down by midnight Saturday, saying the tipping point came this week with the arrest of a camper on suspicion of setting off a Molotov cocktail outside an office building, as well as two non-fatal drug overdoses at the camp. “I cannot wait for someone to die,” he said. “I cannot wait for someone to use the camp as camouflage to inflict bodily harm on others.” Many at the camp said they would resist any effort to remove them. “There will be a variety of tactics used,” said organizer Adriane DeJerk, 26. “No social movement has ever been successful while being completely peaceful.” Police said some elements inside the camp may be building shields and makeshift weapons, including nails hammered into wood, while trying to gather gas masks. “If there are anarchists, if there are weapons, if there is an intention to engage in violence and confrontation, that obviously raises our concerns,” Portland police Lt. Robert King said. ___ Associated Press writers Dave Gram in Burlington, Vt., Nigel Duara in Portland, Ore., Josh Loftin and Brian Skoloff in Salt Lake City and Sudhin Thanawala and Marcus Wohlsen in San Francisco contributed to this report.

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Wine Industry Adopts Universal Carbon Emissions Formula

November 11, 2011

Ever wonder how many carbon emissions it takes to make and ship that enticing bottle of Australian wine? Well, now it looks like the world’s wine community has taken action and come up with a standard way to calculate the industry’s carbon footprint, reports JustDrinks.com . Led by the International Organisation of Vine and Wine , the global trade body brought together producers, suppliers, logistics firms and ad retailers to help them agree on a way to assess environmental impact. Dubbed the Greenhouse Gas Accounting Profile, the standardized formula has two parts. The enterprise protocol helps businesses calculate their carbon emissions, while the product protocol gives winemakers carbon reduction tips to cut emissions even more, notes Harpers.co.uk . According to the UK Wine and Spirit Trade Association , the wine sector is one of the first industries to lead with such a move. This isn’t the first time the wine sector has examined its carbon footprint. Last year, the Guardian reported on the world’s first wine sold with a carbon footprint label for each individual glass serving — the Mobius Marlborough sauvignon blanc. With the warming climate said to inhibit France, Spain and Italy from growing grapes for wine production , it’s not too surprising that winemakers have taken action to track and reduce their own emissions. But the threat of global warming is extending beyond wineries. Just last month, Starbucks’ Sustainability Director spoke about how the Arabica coffee bean could become extinct due to climate change . A study funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation suggested chocolate could become a luxury item if farmers from the Ivory Coast and Ghana can’t adapt to warming temperatures . Take a look at some other examples of endangered foods and drinks potentially threatened by climate change.

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Occupy Wall Street Protesters Clash With Police Outside Courthouse

November 6, 2011

NEW YORK — Hundreds of Occupy Wall Street protesters clashed with police in front of the New York Supreme Court building Saturday afternoon, after they and thousands others marched across to Foley Square from Zuccotti Park. At first, police officers stationed along the route largely stood by and watched as protesters marched up Broadway, playing tambourines, drums and harmonicas and chanting slogans like “How do you fix the deficit? Stop the wars, tax the rich!” As the protest swelled near Foley Square, New York Police Department motorcycles and cars began blocking off intersections. Stranded drivers honked — angrily, as they impotently inched forward towards the protesters, or in support, cheering and sticking thumbs ups and peace signs out the windows of their vehicles. The protesters were met on the steps of the courthouse by a line of officers, and more soon arrived, armed with plastic ties and rolled up orange barricades. Before moving in, a group of officers coordinated. One, holding a rolled piece of paper, told the group, “We’re saying it’s blocking a pedestrian walkway.” “Let’s go,” another officer shouted at his colleagues waiting with zip ties and barricades. “Get up there!” “Let’s stand fast there, huh?” a female officer encouraged, as other officers began saying through megaphones: “Right now, it’s illegal to be on the sidewalk, it’s a hazard.” Protesters began questioning the NYPD’s actions, citing their right to peacefully assemble. They paced the sidewalk in an effort to defend against the argument that the crowd was an obstruction. Several got in the faces of officers forming a human barricade on the courthouse steps. “You’re supposed to be our nation’s finest,” they shouted. “You’re the ones blocking the sidewalk!” Physical altercations began, with several officers roughly shoving protesters and protesters refusing to move, shouting in the faces of officers narrowing the sidewalk space behind the orange net barriers. “We don’t want nobody to get hurt!” an officer shouted on the megaphone. Officers provided several different reasons for the courthouse crackdown. “It’s our jobs, it’s taxpayer money,” a plainclothes man standing with the officers on the steps shouted at protesters. “It’s the rules.” An Officer Vance described the space as a “frozen zone” and said the officers’ actions were “securing the area.” “You can see I’m having a bad day here,” Vance said, asking HuffPost to keep moving. “They asked me to clear it and I cleared it out,” said Officer Birmingham beside him, confirming that the NYPD had “deemed it unsafe.” According to witnesses, one woman was caught between advancing cops and protesters and dragged across the barricade. She was taken up the courthouse steps and cuffed with zip ties against a courthouse column. Desiree Frias, 18, cried as two cops brought her down the steps toward squad cars. “I just want to go back to college,” she said, gasping. She tried to spell her name between sobs, asking for someone to tell her fiance what had happened as the arresting officers urged her to calm down. Activist and former New Jersey city councilman Jim Keady, 40, tried to advise Frias of her rights before officers took her. “It’s going to be okay,” he said. “You might not make it back to class on Monday, but this is going to be one of the most important lessons you’ll ever learn, in exercising your rights.” One officer said she was to be taken to One Police Plaza and likely processed back at the courthouse. “They just handed her to me, I have no choice,” said the female officer on her right. The number of officers present swelled to about one hundred but only an estimated half-dozen protesters were arrested, according to witnesses. Officers declined to comment or stated they didn’t know the number arrested. Despite physical altercations and heated exchanges, there are no known injuries at this time. Pepper spray did not appear to be used to push back the crowd. The standoff between protesters and police lasted several hours before protesters dispersed, many headed back to Zuccotti Park. After they had cleared out, several dozen officers remained stationed on the courthouse steps. Later on Saturday night, several hundred protesters marched to One Police Plaza, where the arrested protesters were due for arraignment, in a show of solidarity. The march organizers interrupted a meeting of the General Assembly in Zuccotti Park to recruit support. Several dozen police officers responded by accompanying the protesters from Zuccotti Park on foot and by vehicle. Motorcycles formed a barrier in front of the courthouse steps. The protesters stopped in front of the courthouse on the corner of Hogan and Centre streets, where officers also blocked the steps. “They say this shit can’t happen,” said a speaker on the steps via the “people’s mic,” while officers looked on. Rumors have swirled in recent days that officers will attempt a clean-up or clear-out of the park this weekend, but those rumors are as of yet unconfirmed. An officer standing near City Hall Saturday afternoon additional authorities had been mobilized for the night to perform duties beyond a nightly counterterrorism check of the city’s most iconic sites. Nearly 30 additional cars were out beyond the usual 100. “We’re on standby in case anything goes on downtown,” the officer said, clarifying, “at Zuccotti.” UPDATE: 9:45 p.m. — Desiree Frias is being charged with assaulting an officer, a felony, and obstructing government administration and resisting arrest, both misdemeanors, according to the clerk’s office at One Police Plaza. According to witnesses, Frias was caught between officers trying to clear the area in Foley Square and protesters trying to hold their ground. It remains unclear what type of assault was allegedly committed by Frias, who was wearing a purple knitted cap and long blue skirt at the time of her arrest. Court clerk Joe Simon said he could not provide information about the other protesters who were arrested, and he said he believed Frias would not come before a judge Saturday night. He expected the protesters would be arraigned no sooner than 1:00 p.m. Sunday, which is when the courthouse is scheduled to open. It typically takes at least 24 hours to process the paperwork, Simon said, but he noted that at least 350 people were awaiting processing at the 5th precinct where Frias was being held. Frias’s fiance Hector Asavedo said he had not been able to reach her and had not been given any information, though the clerk said she would have access to a phone at the precinct and could consult legal aid once her paperwork was processed. The lawyer would then stand with her before the judge “once she’s physically brought up.” Moira Meltzer of the New York office of the National Lawyers Guild contacted this reporter in search of information about Frias’ charges. Meltzer said her office had so far had difficulty obtaining information from the authorities. The Lawyer’s Guild Is representing all the protesters arrested at the demonstration in front of the court building and associated protests Saturday. Meltzer said she has 21 names, but doesn’t know if that list includes all who were arrested.

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Restaurant Near Occupy Wall Street Lays Off 21 Employees

November 2, 2011

Steel police barricades near the Occupy Wall Street protests in New York’s Zuccotti Park are hurting some nearby businesses — and have led at least one restaurant owner to lay off employees . Marc Epstein, owner of Milk Street Cafe, said the metal barriers are reducing foot-traffic and forced him to lay off 21 of his 120 workers last week amidst plummeting sales . The restaurant’s troubles have not been uncommon . Several small businesses in the vicinity of New York’s protests and near similar gatherings in city centers across the country have reported that they are feeling the effects of the Occupy movement, as the protests prompt local police to erect barriers and take security measures that may be deterring customers . “The barricades have created a siege mentality down here that is bad for business,” said Epstein, whose cafe is located across the street from where protesters first started camping out six weeks ago. Since then, Epstein said he has seen his restaurant’s sales plummet by more than 30 percent, as the metal barriers police use to cordon off protesters block easy access to the cafe’s front door. His repeated calls to police to remove the blockades have gone unanswered. Paul Browne, a spokesman for the New York Police Department, did not immediately respond to e-mails requesting comment. “The police concerns about safety are legitimate,” Epstein said. “I just wish that, in their desire to maintain the peaceful environment, we not be the sacrificial lamb.”

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Michael Moore Fires Back At Critics

October 29, 2011

Michael Moore has a message for Republicans: just because he’s wealthy doesn’t mean he can’t stand with those angry with America’s economic system. The documentary filmmaker, who has been active and vocal in the Occupy Wall Street movement since it began in September, posted on his blog on Thursday a response to conservatives who criticize the seeming juxtaposition between his personal wealth and his involvement in a movement that seeks to balance fiscal inequity in the United States. Noting that he was once an unemployed striver in Flint, Michigan, Moore laid out a basic set of guidelines that he has followed since the success of his film “Roger & Me” in 1989. Included were paying his full taxes, give a large chunk of his money to charity and avoid owning stock on the principle that he’d make money from work, not on the fiscal wrangling of Wall Street that hurt so many members of the middle class. Moore then defended his views in an historical context: “I make my money the old school, honest way by making things. Some years I earn a boatload of cash. Other years, like last year, I don’t have a job (no movie, no book) and so I make a lot less. ‘How can you claim to be for the poor when you are the opposite of poor?!’ It’s like asking: ‘You’ve never had sex with another man — how can you be for gay marriage?! I guess the same way that an all-male Congress voted to give women the vote, or scores of white people marched with Martin Luther Ling, Jr. … It is precisely this disconnect that prevents Republicans from understanding why anyone would give of their time or money to help out those less fortunate. The blog came after Moore squared off with Piers Morgan the night before, with Morgan also going after Moore’s wealth in an attempt to discredit his activism. “I am devoting my life to those who have less and who have been crapped upon by the system,” he said. “And that’s how I spend my time, my energy, my money on trying to up-end this system that I think is a system of violence, it’s a system that’s unfair to the average working person of this country.” He also noted that, given that the 1% made over a million dollars per year, he was not a member of that group. Moore on Friday visited Occupy Oakland , where he paid tribute to Scott Olsen, the Iraq war veteran who was beaten by authorities and remains in hospitalized. “We’ve killed despair across the country and we’ve killed apathy,” he told the crowd there . To read the entire blog, click over to Moore’s website .

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Many Cities Leaving Occupy Protesters Alone

October 29, 2011

By ERIKA NIEDOWSKI and MEGHAN BARR, The Associated Press NEW YORK (AP) — While more U.S. cities are resorting to force to break up the Wall Street protests, many others – Philadelphia, New York, Minneapolis and Portland, Ore., among them – are content to let the demonstrations go on for now. (CLICK HERE OR SCROLL DOWN FOR LATEST UPDATES ) New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, for example, said Friday that the several hundred protesters sleeping in Zuccotti Park, the unofficial headquarters of the movement that began in mid-September, can stay as long as they obey the law. “I can’t talk about other cities,” he said. “Our responsibilities are protect your rights and your safety. And I think we’re trying to do that. We’re trying to act responsibly and safely.” Still, the city made life a lot harder for the demonstrators: Fire authorities seized a dozen cans of gasoline and six generators that powered lights, cooking equipment and computers, saying they were safety hazards. In the span of three days this week, police broke up protest encampments in Oakland, Calif., Atlanta and, early Friday, San Diego and Nashville, Tenn. Nashville police cracked down after authorities imposed a curfew on the protest. Twenty-nine people were arrested and later released after a judge said the demonstrators were not given enough time to comply with the brand-new rule. They received citations for trespassing instead. Fifty-one people were arrested in San Diego, where authorities descended on a three-week-old encampment at the Civic Center Plaza and Children’s Park and removed tents, canopies, tables and other furniture. Officials there cited numerous complaints about human and animal feces, urination, drug use and littering, as well as damage to city property – the same problems reported in many other cities. Police said the San Diego demonstrators can return without their tents and other belongings after the park is cleaned up. Earlier this week, in the most serious clashes of the movement so far, more than 100 people were arrested and a 24-year-old Iraq War veteran suffered a skull fracture after Oakland police armed with tear gas and bean bag rounds broke up a 15-day encampment and repulsed an effort by demonstrators to retake the site. But other cities have rejected aggressive tactics, at least so far, some of them because they want to avoid the violence seen in Oakland or, as some have speculated, because they are expecting the protests to wither anyway with the onset of cold weather. Officials are watching the encampments for health and safety problems but say that protesters exercising their rights to free speech and assembly will be allowed to stay as long as they are peaceful and law-abiding. “We’re accommodating a free speech event as part of normal business and we’re going to continue to enforce city rules,” said Aaron Pickus, a spokesman for the mayor of Seattle, where about 40 protesters are camping at City Hall. “They have the right to peacefully assemble. Ultimately what the mayor is doing is strike a balance.” Authorities have similarly taken a largely hands-off approach in Portland, Ore., where about 300 demonstrators are occupying two parks downtown; Memphis, Tenn., where the number of protesters near City Hall has ranged from about a dozen to about 100; and in Salt Lake City, where activists actually held a vigil outside police headquarters this week to thank the department for not using force against them. In the nation’s capital, U.S. Park Police distributed fliers this week at two encampments totaling more than 150 tents near the White House. And while the fliers listed the park service regulations that protesters were violating, including a ban on camping, a park police spokesman said the notices should not be considered warnings. In Providence, R.I., Public Safety Commissioner Steven Pare said the protesters will not be forcibly removed even after the Sunday afternoon deadline he set for them. He said he intends to seek their ouster by way of court action, something that could take several weeks. “When you see police having to quell disturbances with tear gas or other means, it’s not what the police want and it’s not what we want to see in our society,” Pare said. Similarly, in London, church and local government authorities are going to court to evict protesters camped outside St. Paul’s Cathedral – though officials acknowledged Friday it could take weeks or months to get an order to remove the tent city. Several hundred protesters against economic inequality and corporate excesses have been camped outside the building since Oct. 15. On Oct. 21 cathedral officials shut the building, saying the campsite represented a health and safety hazard. It was the first time the 300-year-old church, one of London’s best-known buildings, had closed since German planes bombed the city during World War II. In Minneapolis, where dozens have been sleeping overnight on a government plaza between a county building and City Hall, the three-week-old occupation has been far tamer than those in other cities, with only a few arrests. Sheriff Rich Stanek has made it a practice to meet with protesters daily to talk about their issues and the day ahead, and he has refused to engage what he called “the 1 percent” who want to cause trouble. “We decided that’s not the tactic we want to take. Doing that sometimes requires biting your tongue,” he said. He added: “Some people have said that’s `Minnesota nice.’ It’s a balance.” ___ Niedowski reported from Providence, R.I. ___ Associated Press Writers Doug Glass in Minneapolis; Lucas L. Johnson II in Nashville, Tenn.; Samantha Gross in New York; Terry Collins in Oakland, Calif.; Jonathan J. Cooper in Portland, Ore.; Josh Loftin in Salt Lake City; Julie Watson in San Diego; Chris Grygiel in Seattle; Ben Nuckols in Washington; and Laura Crimaldi in Providence, R.I., contributed to this story.

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PHOTOS: Rome On Fire

October 16, 2011

(Reuters) – Anti-greed protesters rallied globally on Saturday, denouncing bankers and politicians over the international economic crisis, with violence rocking Rome where cars were torched and bank windows smashed. Galvanized by the Occupy Wall Street movement, protests began in New Zealand, touched parts of Asia, spread to Europe, and resumed at their starting point in New York with 5,000 marchers decrying corporate greed and economic inequality. After weeks of intense media coverage, U.S. protests have still been smaller than G20 meetings or political conventions have yielded in recent years. Such events often draw tens of thousands of demonstrators. The demonstrations by the disaffected coincided with the Group of 20 meeting in Paris, where finance ministers and central bankers from major economies were holding talks on the debt and deficit crises afflicting many Western countries. The Occupy Wall Street movement has gathered steam for a month, culminating with the global day of action. It remains unclear what momentum the movement, which has been driven by social media, has beyond Saturday. While most rallies were relatively small and barely held up traffic, the Rome event drew tens of thousands of people and snaked through the city center for miles (kilometers). Hundreds of hooded, masked demonstrators rampaged in some of the worst violence seen in the Italian capital in years, setting cars ablaze, breaking bank and shop windows and destroying traffic lights and signposts. Police fired volleys of tear gas and used water cannon to try to disperse militant protesters who were hurling rocks, bottles and fireworks, but clashes went on into the evening. Smoke bombs set off by protesters cast a pall over a sea of red flags and banners bearing slogans denouncing economic policies the protesters say are hurting the poor. The violence sent many peaceful demonstrators and local residents near the Colosseum and St John’s Basilica running into hotels and churches for safety. NOT AS LARGE AS HOPED American protesters are angry that U.S. banks are enjoying booming profits after getting massive bailouts in 2008 while average people are struggling in a tough economy with more than 9 percent unemployment and little help from Washington. In New York, where the movement began when protesters set up a makeshift camp in Lower Manhattan on September 17, organizers said the protest grew to at least 5,000 people as they marched to Times Square in midtown Manhattan. Some were disappointed the crowd was not larger. “People don’t want to get involved. They’d rather watch on TV,” said Troy Simmons, 47, who joined demonstrators as he left work. “The protesters could have done better today. … People from the whole region should be here and it didn’t happen.” The Times Square mood was akin to New Year’s Eve, when the famed “ball drop” occurs. In a festive mood, protesters were joined by throngs of tourists snapping pictures, together counting back from 10 and shouting, “Happy New Year.” Police said three people were arrested in Times Square after pushing down police barriers and five men were arrested earlier for wearing masks. Police also arrested 24 people at a Citibank branch in Manhattan, mostly for trespassing. At about 8 p.m., police arrested another 42 people for blocking the sidewalk. Protesters complained they had no place to go with a wall of police in riot gear in front of them and thousands of demonstrators behind them leaving Times Square. Small and peaceful rallies got the ball rolling across the Asia-Pacific region on Saturday. In Auckland, New Zealand’s biggest city, 3,000 people chanted and banged drums. In Sydney, about 2,000 people, including representatives of Aboriginal groups, communists and trade unionists, protested outside the central Reserve Bank of Australia. Hundreds marched in Tokyo. Over 100 people gathered at the Taipei stock exchange, chanting “we are Taiwan’s 99 percent” and saying economic growth had only benefited companies while middle-class salaries barely covered basic costs. In Hong Kong, home to the Asian headquarters of investment banks including Goldman Sachs, over 100 people gathered at Exchange Square in the Central district. Students joined with retirees, holding banners that called banks a cancer. Portugal was the scene of the biggest reported protest action, with more than 20,000 marching in Lisbon and a similar number in the country’s second city Oporto, two days after the government announced a new batch of austerity measures. Hundreds broke through a police cordon around the parliament in Lisbon to occupy its broad marble staircase. “This debt is not ours!” and “IMF, get out of here now!,” demonstrators chanted. Banners read: “We are not merchandise in bankers’ hands!” or “No more rescue loans for banks!” Around 4,000 Greeks with banners bearing slogans like “Greece is not for sale” staged an anti-austerity rally in Athens’ Syntagma Square, the scene of violent clashes between riot police and stone-throwing youths in June. Many were furious at how austerity imposed by the government to reduce debt incurred by profligate spending and corruption had undermined the lives of ordinary Greeks. In Paris, around 1,000 protesters rallied in front of city hall, coinciding with the G20 finance chiefs’ meeting, after coming in from the working class neighborhood of Belleville where drummers, trumpeters and a tuba revved up the crowd. “This is potentially the start of a strong movement,” said Olivier Milleron, a doctor whose group of trumpeters played the classic American folk song “This land is your land.” “THE INDIGNANT ONES” The Rome protesters, who called themselves “the indignant ones,” included unemployed, students and pensioners. “I am here to show support for those don’t have enough money to make it to the next pay check while the ECB (European Central Bank) keeps feeding the banks and killing workers and families,” said Danila Cucunia, a 43-year-old teacher. “We can’t carry on any more with public debt that wasn’t created by us but by thieving governments, corrupt banks and speculators who don’t give a damn about us,” said Nicla Crippa, 49. “They caused this international crisis and are still profiting from it. They should pay for it.” In imitation of the occupation of Zuccotti Park near Wall Street in Manhattan, protesters have been camped out across the street from the headquarters of the Bank of Italy for days. The global protests were a response to calls by New York demonstrators for others to join them. Their example has prompted similar occupations in dozens of U.S. cities. At a small protest in Dublin, Ireland, Gordon Lucas, an unemployed software developer said “We don’t have economic democracy anymore. … I don’t feel I am being represented.” In Madrid, around 2,000 people gathered for a march to the central Puerta del Sol. Placards read: “Put the bankers on the bench” and “Enough painkillers — euthanasia for the banks.” “It’s not fair that they take your house away from you if you can’t pay your mortgage, but give billions to the banks for unclear reasons,” said 44-year-old telecom company employee Fabia, who declined to give her surname. In Germany, thousands gathered in Berlin, Hamburg, Leipzig and outside the European Central Bank in Frankfurt. Demonstrators gathered peacefully in Paradeplatz, the main square in the Swiss financial center of Zurich. In London, around 2,000 people assembled outside St Paul’s Cathedral, near the City financial district, for a rally dubbed “Occupy the London Stock Exchange.” Joe Dawson, 31, who lost his job as a product developer at Barclays Bank, said he had taken his two children aged 10 and 8 to the rally to show them people had a voice. “I’m not passive anymore and I don’t want them to be. This is their future too,” Dawson said. “I work four jobs part-time, I take whatever I can get.” WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange told the crowd: “I hope this protest will result in a similar process to what we saw in New York, Cairo and Tunisia,” he said, referring to revolutions in the Arab world. Outside of New York, similar protests were held in other U.S. cities and Canada. Hundreds turned out in Washington, D.C., while a couple of thousand people gathered near Toronto’s financial district as well as in Portland, Oregon. A protest in Los Angeles drew about 5,000 people. (Additional reporting by Catherine Hornby in Rome, Naomi O’Leary and Michael Holden in London, Natalia Drozdiak in Berlin, Alexandria Sage and Gus Trompiz in Paris, Iciar Reinlein, Jonathan Gleave and Carlos Ruano in Madrid, Cameron French in Toronto, Edith Honan, Ray Sanchez and Ed McAllister in New York, Carmel Crimins in Dublin; Writing by Mark Heinrich; Editing by Angus MacSwan, Mark Egan and Todd Eastham) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Dozens Arrested At Occupy Des Moines

October 11, 2011

Dozens were arrested at the first Occupy Des Moines event Sunday night, including a former Iowa state representative and a 14-year-old girl. All but one of them have pleaded not guilty , and some are now asking how much the state’s governor knew beforehand. Video from the event shows police officers dragging or carrying away some protesters. Others were escorted away with their hands zip-cuffed. According to some who were arrested or witnessed the arrests and later spoke with The Huffington Post, many had bruises, cuts and scrapes from the arrests — and they believed police had used excessive force. Police arrested the protesters remaining on the Iowa statehouse’s west lawn Sunday night for “trespassing” because they said the area closes to the public at 11 p.m. Sgt. Jana Rooker, the public information officer for the local sheriff’s office, told HuffPost she didn’t have an exact number, but estimated around 40 people were arrested for trespassing and various other charges. Sally Frank, a Drake University law professor who is providing legal guidance to the protesters, said she believes the arrests violated the protesters’ constitutional right to peacefully assemble. Drake accused the police of going too far. “There was a level of force that was used that I have not seen before in Iowa, and I’ve been doing legal support for protesters since 1990,” Frank said. Protesters had gathered on the lawn of the Iowa statehouse Sunday at noon to start a general assembly for the first Des Moines version of the protests that have spread around the country since Occupy Wall Street began on Sept. 17. At many Occupy events, general assemblies have been used to make consensus decisions about how to proceed. The Des Moines protesters decided to rename the area “People’s Park” and later to stay beyond the 11 p.m. curfew. They also heard from a lawyer about what to expect should police try to clear them off the property. They had been warned that if they did not leave at 11, the state police would begin making arrests. David Goodner, who was arrested, told HuffPost that police began arriving at 10:30 p.m. Another attendee, Jon Vaage, said at least two police vans arrived near 11 p.m. About 150 people reportedly remained at 11 , and around 40 to 50 stayed in the area they had been told to vacate. Frank said two officers approached them at 10:30 with a warning that arrests would begin at 11, but she said the protesters were not given one last chance to leave at 11. “They came right at us, and we chanted our statement of intent,” Goodner said. He added that protesters linked arms and sat down — a common tactic for resisting arrest during political demonstrations. A 14-year-old girl was among those arrested and was taken to a juvenile detention center. Frank said that usually in such cases the teenager would be promptly released to her parents, but the troopers opted to take her away instead. The girl was released around 1:30 a.m. Monday. A similar protest began in Iowa City near the University of Iowa only two days before Occupy Des Moines. Several more demonstrations are planned in smaller towns around the state . Police have not interfered with the protest at Occupy Iowa City , in part because that group obtained a permit from the city. The protesters in Des Moines couldn’t get a permit for their location at the capitol building. Former state Rep. Ed Fallon was one of the first to be arrested Sunday night. Fallon said he has walked through the area late at night many times before without being stopped, and he wondered who made the call to begin arrests and whether Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad (R) was involved. “The governor did not order these arrests,” said Tim Albrecht, communications director for the governor’s office, in an email to HuffPost. “The governor supports the Iowa State Patrol’s actions, which followed proper protocol. The citizens were informed a permit was needed, and chose not to pursue one.” At a press conference on Monday, Branstad said that permits are not available to stay overnight on the state capitol grounds. “My feeling is I think it’s all right to have a demonstration here at the capitol, but it’s not meant to be a place to camp out overnight,” the governor said. State troopers reportedly told protesters that the capitol grounds are considered a state park and close at 11 p.m. But Frank said there are no signs to indicate either of those things. Fallon said he thought the state police were out of line Sunday. “We were in public space, not obstructing traffic,” he said, “so there was nothing to be gained except to just bust us up. … It ruined my fond impressions of the state patrol and also just fueled this movement. We are not intimidated by this.” Vaage, who watched the arrests from a distance, said he couldn’t believe how they took place. “After I left, I was thinking to myself how unbelievable this is happening here. It doesn’t seem like the product of what this country is about,” Vaage said. “It was unnecessary to coordinate such a large force to eradicate this movement at this park. It was kind of, like, shocking to see that kind of show of force or show of authority over something as simple as a curfew.” Goodner, Fallon, and other protesters told HuffPost that, despite the setback with the arrests, they felt optimistic the movement was gaining power. “I’ve been a political activist for 27 years and never seen anything that carries this much potential for change,” Fallon said. He planned to go back to the Occupy Des Moines protest. More Occupy events are scheduled to begin later this week in Iowa. Frank said the protesters who were arrested would request a trial by jury to fight the trespassing charges.

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WATCH: Beck’s Dark, Gruesome Occupy Wall Street Warning

October 10, 2011

Glenn Beck made several gruesome predictions about where the Occupy Wall Street movement is headed. Speaking on his radio show Monday, Beck made his already-crystal-clear disdain for the protests, which have spread across the U.S., even more plain. He took a slightly surprising turn, though, in warning establishment Democrats like Nancy Pelosi (who has voiced her support for the movement ) as well as any rich backers of the protests not to trust anyone in Occupy Wall Street. “Nancy Pelosi, you really think these people are your friends?” Beck asked. “Are you that stupid? People around Nancy Pelosi, are you this stupid? Do you really think that you’re going to be able to somehow or another control these people?” Beck then made the first of his dark analogies. Saying that the only thing that could control the movement would be a forceful crushing from “the top,” he added, “It will be the Night of Long Knives. It will be a purging of this country.” This was a seeming reference to the political murders carried out by the Nazis in 1934 . Beck then turned to “capitalists,” and here his warning was even starker and more graphic: “Capitalists, if you think that you can play footsies with these people, you’re wrong. They will come for you and drag you into the streets and kill you…they’re Marxist radicals…these guys are worse than Robespierre from the French Revolution…they’ll kill everybody.” WATCH:

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Kanye West Visits Occupy Wall Street

October 10, 2011

Kanye West has become the latest celebrity visitor to the Occupy Wall Street protests. The hip hop artist/fashion designer/all around impresario showed up at the rallies in downtown Manhattan on Monday. Russell Simmons, who has been involved with the protests for some time, tweeted a picture of West on his way down. West, of course, became known for his unscripted televised moment in 2005, when he said , “George Bush doesn’t care about black people” during an appeal for aid to the victims of Hurricane Katrina. PHOTO :

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WATCH: Obama Heckled By Shouting Man

September 27, 2011

(AP/The Huffington Post) LOS ANGELES — A heckler shouting about Jesus Christ interrupted President Barack Obama at a fundraiser before security dragged him out. It happened at the House of Blues in Los Angeles Monday night. The man positioned himself up in front of the stage and started shouting loudly right after Obama started talking. The heckler proclaimed that “Jesus Christ is God” and a Christian God. According to Real Clear Politics, the outburst was met with boos from the crowd at the event. Obama stopped talking. Then after a moment the crowd started chanting “Four more years! Four more years!” and drowned out the heckler. As he was taken out by security the man called out that Obama is an antichrist. Later, another, more-friendly heckler shouted out, “Don’t forget medical marijuana!” Obama responded: “Thank you for that.”

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Paul Ryan’s Office Calls Cops On Jobless Protesters

August 19, 2011

Staffers for Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) called police on Thursday evening to disperse unemployed protesters staging a sit-in at his Kenosha, Wis., office, according to the protesters and police. Two protesters told HuffPost they’re unhappy with Ryan’s proposals to gut social programs and also his new policy of not holding free public meetings with constituents during the congressional recess. During the summer of 2009, Ryan hosted some 17 town halls. Admission to Ryan’s one town-hall style event in his district this summer will cost $15, according to the Whitnall Park Rotary Club , which is hosting the Milwaukee-area event on Sept. 6. “People don’t realize that they have every right to stand up and talk to their congressman,” Shanon Molina, 31, told HuffPost on Friday. Molina, who lives in Kenosha with her daughter, said she lost her full-time job as an office administrator in 2009. For 18 months she received unemployment benefits and picked up a few shifts as a waitress and bartender. In January, she landed a new job as an office administrator, but at half the hours and half the pay of the previous job, which she said she’d had for 10 years. “I have a child to support, I have a house to keep up,” Molina said. “I didn’t choose to be in this situation. I’m in an emergency here.” The unemployment rate is 10 percent, unchanged from a year ago, in nearby Racine — the closest city with numbers available. Molina said she and other members of Wisconsin Jobs Now , a coalition of community groups, neighborhood associations and labor unions, organized the Kenosha protest, which at one point on Thursday she said attracted more than 100 people. “I went there to talk to Paul Ryan,” Molina said. “They said he was on vacation with his family in Colorado.” Shortly after the protesters arrived, said Molina, Ryan’s staffers handed them a written statement from the congressman. She described the staffers as cordial and polite. “Although I was unable to personally meet with those who stopped by my Kenosha office, I appreciate hearing from so many on the urgent need to create jobs in Southeast Wisconsin,” the statement said, according to a YouTube video of protesters reading it into a bullhorn outside the Kenosha office. “I pride myself on being accessible to those I represent.” A spokesman for Ryan did not respond to requests for comment. Lt. Eric Larsen of the Kenosha Police Department told HuffPost that Ryan’s office called the department around 4 p.m. on Thursday, and that the officers who responded found seven protesters inside the building where the office is located and about 50 protesters outside. “They left peaceably,” Larsen said. Some of the protesters returned on Friday. Kenosha resident Scott Page, 32, said he brought his laptop so he could look for jobs from inside Ryan’s office. He said he hasn’t been able to find anything better than temporary and part-time work since being laid off from a factory at the end of 2007. “My rent’s due in a short time here, and I honestly don’t know where I’m going to come up with that money,” Page said. “We’re just gonna sit here until we get to talk to Ryan face to face. Every day we’re going to sit here.” Ryan has boasted that he hosted lots of town hall meetings during the summer recess of 2009. “I had 17 and shattered attendance records at my town halls,” Ryan said during an appearance on MSNBC. “You know, at the end of them, I was asking for a show of hands of the people who had never been to a town hall before, and it was about 95 percent. They were very civil.” During town halls in April of this year, Ryan heard from hecklers opposed to his plan to turn Medicare into a voucher system.

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Dedrick Muhammad: London’s Calling, But Are We Listening?

August 12, 2011

Last year, on my second day on the job as the new Senior Director of Economic Programs for the NAACP, I went to London with our President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous to attend a conference on Global Youth Employment. Eight months later I, along with the rest of the world, am seeing images of economically disenfranchised youth throughout England rioting and rebelling. The ignition for these rebellions appears to be the fatal shooting of Mark Duggan, a young black man, by the police. Youth rioting and rebelling in economically disenfranchised areas in relation to possible racial discrimination and police brutality is something with which most Americans are all too familiar. In a BBC video clip in which Darcus Howe, a black English migrant, is interviewed about the riots, Mr. Howe states that what is happening throughout England is insurrections similar to those throughout the Arab world, where youth have been a leading force in street protests demanding change from their government. Where I agree with Mr. Howe is that these incidents of riots and rebellions from economically disappointed and disenfranchised youth are not something that is limited to the context of London or even England. During the 2010 Global Youth Employment Conference in London, sponsored by the NAACP, CNBC, The Blackstone Charitable Foundation, the International Youth Foundation and others, the crisis of global youth unemployment was highlighted. Between the years 2008 and 2009 global youth unemployment increased by almost 7 million. This is about 35 times the increase in global youth unemployment that occurred before the recent global recession. As BusinessWeek wrote in its February 2011 article ” The Youth Unemployment Bomb ,” “[A]n economy that can’t generate enough jobs to absorb its young people has created a lost generation of the disaffected, unemployed, or underemployed — including growing numbers of recent college graduates for whom the post-crash economy has little to offer.” The relationship between youth unemployment and long-term social and economic disenfranchisement coupled with austerity budgeting, which threatens to lessen the opportunities and support provided to the youth of today, reminds me of the words of Dr. King: “The people will rise up and express their anger and frustration if you refuse to hear their cries. A riot is the language of the unheard.” Laurie Penny, in her article ” Panic on the Streets of London ,” writes: The people running Britain had absolutely no clue how desperate things had become. They thought that after thirty years of soaring inequality, in the middle of a recession, they could take away the last little things that gave people hope, the benefits, the jobs, the possibility of higher education, the support structures, and nothing would happen. They were wrong. And now my city is burning, and it will continue to burn until we stop the blanket condemnations and blind conjecture and try to understand just what has brought viral civil unrest to Britain. What is happening in Britain today, like what happened in France in 2005 and 2007, and in Israel with some of its largest demonstrations focused on growing economic insecurity, can serve as a warning to the United States. We must recognize that our current economy is one that can also breed despair that can easily turn to rage. The record-breaking global youth unemployment rate of 13 percent is far below the 2010 youth unemployment rate in the United States of 19.1 percent . Similar to England, youth of color have even worse unemployment numbers. In the U.S., about 22 percent of both Asian-American and Latino -American youth are unemployed. For African-American youth the unemployment rate was 33.4 percent , representing just over a third of all African-American youth in the labor market. There is a consensus as to how to address these types of challenges. In a 2010 report on employment trends, the International Labor Organization notes that comprehensive training, as well as programs that include classroom and on-the-job training, technical and non-technical assistance, financial support for the employer and employee, and job placement services have all been shown to have the most success in advancing youth employment. These type of programs require private- and public-sector partnerships in order to properly function. Recently, such a program was announced in New York City. Mayor Bloomberg announced a $130-million project focused on black and Latino men that will be funded by two private foundations and the New York City budget. This program will invest in job training, educational classes, paid internships, and paid mentorship positions all aimed at young black and Latino men. This type of local initiative is important but must be replicated on the national level and throughout countries across the globe. The global recession must be met by a global investment in our future, and this will mean targeting economically disenfranchised and, often, youth of color. The NAACP and its new Economic Program department is dedicating itself to these type of initiatives, and in this globalized 21st century, we recognize that bridging racial and economic disparities is not a domestic challenge but an international one.

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PHOTOS: Nations Most Exposed To Natural Disasters

August 12, 2011

The United States may have to grapple with the highest overall costs for natural disasters, but other emerging nations face other social and economic risks, according to a new report. Released Wednesday by British risk analysis firm Maplecroft , the 2011 Natural Hazards Risk Atlas ranks 196 countries based on economic exposure to disasters including earthquakes, tsunamis and floods. As the AFP is reporting , both the U.S. and Japan were deemed at “extreme risk” with regard to overall costs from a natural disaster, but emerging economies pose a greater risk to investors simply due to lack of capacity to combat environmental and social impacts. “The emerging economies, although buoyant with growth, lack the socio-economic conditions to limit their disaster risk. This lack of resilience could threaten their economic growth and the extent to which businesses with operations there hope to flourish,” Maplecroft CEO Alyson Warhurst said in a press release. So far, 2011′s natural hazards — from Japan’s devastating tsunami to the deadly tornadoes throughout much of the U.S. — have been more costly to the world economy than any other year on record, contributing to a massive $265 billion total for the first six months of the year, according to Maplecroft officials. View more information about the report, including additional rankings, here . View a selection of countries and see how their economic exposure ranks below:

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Stocks Suffer In US And Europe As Investors Get Jitters

August 11, 2011

PRESS ASSOCIATION — Stock markets in Europe and the US have tumbled again, a day after a Federal Reserve pledge to keep extremely low interest rates for two more years temporarily calmed investors’ jitters. An initial US surge continued into Asian and European trading sessions, although traders remained nervous after the market turmoil of recent weeks, which has sent many global markets officially into bear market territory – falling 20% from recent peaks. That nervousness became more acute as the US open loomed and European markets gave up all their earlier gains. “So far, panic has eased but fear remains,” said Kit Juckes, an analyst at Societe Generale. Over the past few weeks, markets have suffered a severe reverse amid worries over the US economic recovery and the country’s debt situation in light of a protracted debate in Congress to get the debt ceiling lifted. That contributed to last weekend’s announcement by Standard & Poor’s to downgrade the US’s credit rating for the first time ever. And in a sharp reversal of opinion, economists now believe there is a greater chance of another US recession. The other major market concern is Europe’s debt crisis. Investors have grown increasingly worried that Italy and Spain could become the next European countries to have trouble repaying their debts. Greece, Ireland and Portugal have already received bailout loans because of Europe’s 21-month-old debt crisis. The fears have pushed investors to shun Spanish and Italian bonds, which have led to higher yields and even higher borrowing costs for the two countries. Earlier in Asia, the Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.9% to 2,549.18 and the smaller Shenzhen Composite Index gained 1.4%. Indexes in Taiwan and India also gained. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng jumped 2.3% to 19,783.67. Japanese stocks underperformed somewhat as investors continued to fret over the export-sapping appreciation of the yen. Japan’s Nikkei 225 index climbed 1.1% to close at 9,038.74 as the dollar headed near to post Second World War lows against the yen.

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Discounts, Warm Weather Help Drive People TO Shop

August 1, 2011

(Dhanya Skariachan) – Retailers are poised to report higher sales for July, a discount-driven month that may do little to lift their margins. July sales figures will give investors an early read on demand in the consumer-driven U.S. economy at the start of the back-to-school season, the second-biggest selling period of the year after Christmas. Retail chains ranging from Target Corp to Saks Inc will report closely watched sales at stores open at least year on Wednesday and Thursday. (For a related graphic, click r.reuters.com/ryz82s ) Analysts are expecting same-store sales to show a 4.3 percent rise for July, compared with a year-earlier increase of 2.8 percent, according to Thomson Reuters data. “The hot weather has certainly helped drive people into malls and helped clear out summer seasonal merchandise,” said Ken Perkins, president of research firm Retail Metrics Inc. At issue, he added, is whether retailers will be able to sell their wares at full price in the back-to-school season. It is not uncommon for retailers to offer discounts in July as they try to clear store shelves for back-to-school merchandise. Some investors worry that the discounting may have been deeper than usual and could weigh on margins. “There was a lot of clearance merchandise,” said Trutina Financial Chief Investment Officer Patricia Edwards. “While the sales may be there, the margins may not.” The back-to-school selling season has important implications as consumer spending accounts for about 70 percent of the U.S. economy, which barely grew in the first half of 2011. Retail stocks have fallen in the past month. The Standard & Poor’s Retail Index is down 4.2 percent since retailers reported June sales, although the broad Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell more steeply at 5 percent. NO STOMACH FOR FULL-PRICE GOODS Analysts expect warehouse club operators such as Costco Wholesale Corp and BJ’s Wholesale Club Inc to post some of the largest sales gains in July. Warehouse clubs, which charge customers an annual fee to shop in their stores, have won shoppers seeking low prices on necessities such as groceries or toiletries. Analysts also expect healthy sales gains at dollar stores and off-price retailers TJX Cos Inc and Ross Stores Inc. Off-price chains sell sharply discounted designer merchandise often returned to vendors by department stores. “I just don’t think that the consumer has the stomach right now to really pay full price, even for new … back-to-school merchandise,” Perkins said. “Consumer confidence is not particularly strong right now.” U.S. consumer sentiment fell in July to its lowest point in more than two years as anxieties over stagnant wages and unemployment deepened, a survey showed. Rhonda Douma, who was shopping for her 3-year-old daughter at American Girl in a mall in Hollywood, California, said she planned to spend the same amount this back-to-school season as she did last year. Her top destinations for the season highlight the price sensitivity of the post-recession American shopper. “Usually it’s Walmart and Target and Marshalls,” said Douma, 42. “We just found out about this store, and they have a lot of cute, fun stuff — and brand names for cheaper prices. Analysts also expect a strong July for luxury chains such as Saks and Nordstrom Inc because of the purchasing power of higher-income shoppers. One underperformer of the month could be clothing retailer Gap Inc. Same-store sales at the parent of the Gap, Old Navy and Banana Republic chains are expected to range between staying flat and falling as much as 3 percent, according to Thomson Reuters data. Same-store sales reports capture only part of the retail economy. Industry leader Wal-Mart Stores Inc and other major retailers such as Best Buy Co Inc and Amazon.com do not report monthly sales. (Additional reporting by Alexandra Alper in New York and Mary Slosson in Los Angeles; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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How Banks Are Using Bulldozers To Minimize The Foreclosure Glut

August 1, 2011

Banks have a new remedy to America’s ailing housing market: Bulldozers. There are nearly 1.7 million homes in the U.S. in some state of foreclosure. Banks already own some of these homes and will soon have repossessed many more.

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Online Room Rental Startup Airbnb Scores $112 Million in Financing

July 25, 2011

(Reuters) – Airbnb, a website that lets travelers rent rooms in private homes around the globe, has secured $112 million in a second round of financing from Andreessen Horowitz, DST Global and General Catalyst. Airbnb co-founder Joe Gebbia said the new financing will help the company expand internationally and open new offices. Gebbia and his roommate Brian Chesky founded Airbnb — or “Air bed-and-breakfast” — in 2008 after renting out air mattresses in their apartment to people attending a San Francisco design conference. The three-year-old website, which garners 30 million page views a month, matches travelers looking to rent a temporary space — from a room in a New York City apartment to a villa in France — with homeowners looking to pad their earnings or fill a short-term vacancy. Airbnb, which now has total funding of $119.8 million, offers listings in more than 16,000 cities in 186 countries. “Growth has been flat-out explosive, with over 2 million room nights already booked,” Andreessen Horowitz general partner Jeff Jordan said. Venture capital investments are on the rebound. VC firms raised $2.7 billion in the second quarter, an increase of 28 percent from a year earlier, according to data from Thomson Reuters and the National Venture Capital Association. But the fund-raising was spread across just 37 firms, continuing a trend of VC investment concentrating in a handful of more influential outfits such as Andreessen Horowitz. The concentration on fewer start-ups is pushing up valuations, industry experts say. During the 2010 second quarter, 48 firms raised $2.1 billion. (Reporting by Edwin Chan; editing by John Wallace) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Seventeen Charged With Running Wall Street Prostitution Ring

July 20, 2011

NEW YORK (Bernd Debusmann Jr.) – Seventeen people were indicted on Wednesday on charges of running a high-end prostitution ring that catered to Wall Street clients who often spent more than $10,000 in a night, authorities said. The ring pulled in more than $7 million over three years, Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes said at a news conference. “The business of high-end prostitution is enormously profitable,” Hynes said. The prostitution service, named High Class NY, was run 24 hours a day out of an office in Brooklyn and charged from $400 to $3,600 an hour for its services, according to the 144-count indictment. It also provided customers with cocaine and other narcotics, the indictment said. Hynes said clients often spent in excess of $10,000 in a single night. They were “all high-end customers coming from the financial markets. People with nothing but money,” he said. Police said the business was extremely sophisticated, running several escort websites and using dummy corporations with misleading names and codes during business-related phone calls. High Class NY even had a law firm draw up employment contracts for its prostitutes, who described themselves as models and fraudulently agreed to refrain from sexual contact with clients, police said. “They were on the high-end of sophistication,” said Vice Detective Joe Panico. Among those indicted were High Class NY owner Mikhail Yampolsky and his wife Bronislava, who allegedly used the proceeds from their business to finance expensive trips to Atlantic City and luxury car purchases, Hynes said. Also indicted were Yampolsky’s son Alexander, step-son Jonathan, 11 managers and supervisors and two investors, Efim Gorelik and Yakov Maystrovich, he said. Each of the investors had put $700,000 into High Class NY and were being paid back with interest, he said. Each of those indicted faces the possibility of 25 years in prison if convicted. Two prostitutes face separate indictments on prostitution and drug charges. (Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst and Tim Gaynor) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Vinod Thomas: Global Crises, Social Safety Nets and the Poor

July 14, 2011

A striking difference between the recent financial, food, fuel and economic crises of previous decades is the attention some nations — Colombia, Georgia, Ethiopia, and Mexico among them — have been able to give this time around to the plight of the poor from the outset. The handle these countries had on helping protect the poor and vulnerable extended from social safety nets that were already in place before the crisis struck. Development organizations, especially the World Bank, financed some of these programs. Much of the Bank’s support to social safety nets over the past decade, $11.5 billion worth, came during 2009-2010. Such efforts were nevertheless insufficient to prevent about 64 million more people from slipping into poverty by the end of 2010 on account of the financial crisis, or to withstand the additional impacts of the food or fuel price hikes. In West Africa, Pakistan, Haiti, and several other places, devastation from natural disasters severely strained vulnerable segments of the population. But the recent experience with safety nets provides precious lessons going forward. First, it pays to build safety net systems in relatively stable times so that the worst poverty impacts from unanticipated events can be cushioned. The recurring nature of financial, food and fuel crises, as well as climate-related disasters, makes clear the need for all nations to be prepared to protect against shocks with social safety nets. Prior preparation is important because during a crisis it is hard to initiate or even scale up social programs or modify target groups to respond adequately. Organizations like the World Bank are most effective when they engage consistently during stable times to help develop social safety net programs and to build sufficient flexibility into them. Second, the coverage of these programs needs to be expanded to more countries. Thus far, middle-income countries such as Brazil and Mexico, which had built up institutional capacity in this respect, have been in the forefront. But low-income countries too need to give priority to such efforts with more support from development agencies. Of particular importance are efforts to strengthen the capacity in low-income countries to design flexible programs that consider the local context. Ethiopia, a low-income country, set up a large public safety net program to handle chronic and repeated poverty due to predictable shocks, such as droughts. Over time it has built-in an automatic contingency mechanism that provides support in times of food insecurity. During the disastrous 2010 floods, Pakistan, a lower-middle-income country, was able to draw on the experiences of the 2005 earthquake and the 2007 national social protection strategy to create the Citizen’s Damage Compensation program using the national database to identify beneficiaries and provide cash grants through debit cards from the private banking sector. Third, it is key for these programs to reach the right beneficiaries, without corruption or leakage. In many programs when the poverty focus is mentioned, it is often in general terms of poverty reduction rather than as part of a time-bound objective directed toward a specific subset of the population. Countries and external financiers need to develop rigorous mechanisms that effectively identify the targeted beneficiaries and build strong results frameworks that focus on supporting the poor and the vulnerable. The cost of well-targeted programs is usually a small share of GDP, typically below one percent. Yet for their sustainability, it is vital that they focus on the right results and ensure that they indeed reach the poor and vulnerable.

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British Policymakers Pursuing ‘Half-Measure’ In Trying To End Too Big To Fail

July 5, 2011

WASHINGTON — British proposals to force large banks to separate their riskier trading operations from their retail units go further than what U.S. policymakers ordered when revamping their financial system, yet still fall far short of truly ending the perception that megabanks are too big to fail, experts say. The Independent Commission on Banking, a panel formed at the urging of the government last year to recommend ways to increase the stability of the British banking industry, suggested in April that lenders should isolate their basic banking operations into separately capitalized subsidiaries within the larger bank. This would make it easier and cheaper for regulators to wind down failing firms while protecting retail and business deposits, the panel argued, and more expensive for banks to engage in capital markets activities like trading in derivatives. Britain spent more than 65 billion pounds in taxpayer funds rescuing Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Lloyds Banking Group Plc during the financial crisis. Policymakers, trying to avoid a repeat scenario, have latched onto the idea of a subtle separation of banks’ retail and investment units. Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne backed the proposal last month during his Mansion House speech. But that idea, while it has caused an uproar among British bankers for the costs it would likely impose, barely takes a stab at ending so-called “Too Big To Fail,” say experts like Simon Johnson, a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund. “The question is what’s the size you’re left [with] and are you afraid of them failing,” said Johnson, a professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management and a member of the U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s systemic resolution advisory committee. “By itself, [ringfencing] is not going to do much.” Johnson reckons the banks will still be too big, and policymakers will remain too scared to let them fail. While banks would be forced to hold a bit more cash as a buffer against extreme losses — a result of having to raise more capital for the separate subsidiary — they would ultimately remain nearly as large as they are now, and would not hold nearly enough capital to protect taxpayers from having to rescue them in case of failure, experts argue. “In principal, this is a perfectly reasonable thing to do,” said Richard Portes, president of the Centre for Economic Policy Research and an economics professor at London Business School. “But it doesn’t strike at the essence of the problems that caused the crisis or try to prevent future ones.” “The banks will still be very, very big — it will be just as big as before — and with that comes not just ‘too big to fail’ but ‘too big to manage’ and ‘too big to cope with politically,’” Portes said. Johnson recommends big banks be broken up. Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, an arm of the U.S. central bank, says the same thing, as do his counterparts in St. Louis and Dallas. Hoenig says that financial firms that take deposits, which enjoy taxpayer backing, should not be allowed to leverage that support to engage in riskier activities like trading for their own account. Last year, the U.S. passed a financial regulation law known as Dodd-Frank that aimed to end the perception that some firms are so big that policymakers would not allow them to fail. One of the law’s provisions mandates that banks reduce trades made for their own account, while another calls for some of banks’ derivatives activities to be organized within a separately capitalized subsidiary. Regulators are at work defining key terms that would govern such moves. The British independent commission, led by former Bank of England chief economist John Vickers, could have gone further, particularly given the size of the banking industry relative to the economy. However, the commission dismissed ideas like Johnson’s as “radical” in its interim report, released in April. Instead, the Vickers panel pursued “more moderate measures.” “You can’t get half-pregnant in this game,” said Amar Bhide, a professor of international business at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and a former proprietary trader at E.F. Hutton. “It’s not enough to have a ringfenced subsidiary; I think the ringfenced entity ought to be free and clear on its own accord,” Bhide said. Bhide, like Johnson and Hoenig, supports cleaving off capital markets units from retail banks. “These things are spaghetti-like creatures, where no one quite knows who owns what, what the obligations are, and to whom and by whom,” Bhide said. “People have no clue from the outside — including, I suspect, the regulators — what a mess it is, organizationally speaking, within these large entities.” British policymakers, like their counterparts in the U.S., don’t seem inclined to take the sort of steps that would make their jobs easier. Vickers’s suggestion was the next-best thing. “They feel the need to do something,” Johnson said. “This is the least they could do.” Ultimately, the ringfencing idea is “terrific,” Bhide said, “but no half-measures, please.” * * * * * r Shahien Nasiripour is a senior business reporter for The Huffington Post. You can send him an email ; bookmark his page ; subscribe to his RSS feed ; follow him on Twitter ; friend him on Facebook ; become a fan ; and/or get e-mail alerts when he reports the latest news. He can be reached at 1+917-267-2335.

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Xcel Acquitted In 5 Worker Deaths During Plant Fire

June 29, 2011

DENVER (Reuters) – Public utility Xcel Energy Inc. (XEL.N) and a subsidiary were acquitted on Tuesday of criminal charges stemming from a fire that killed five workers in 2007 at a Colorado hydroelectric plant. A U.S. District Court jury returned the not guilty verdicts on the second day of deliberations after a 16-day trial in Denver. Xcel and subsidiary Public Service Company of Colorado each were each charged with five counts of violating federal Occupational Safety & Health Administration regulations and causing deaths. The workers were relining a tunnel at the Georgetown, Colorado plant, about 45 miles west of Denver, when chemical vapors ignited in the pipe and fire blocked their escape. Xcel has characterized the deaths at the plant as a tragic accident. “It’s not a day of joy,” Xcel’s lead attorney, Cliff Stricklin, told reporters after the verdict. “Xcel sends its deepest and heart-felt sympathy to the families of those men.” The company that employed the workers, RPI Coating Inc., of Santa Fe Springs, Calif., as a contractor for the utility, and two of its executives are scheduled to stand trial later this year on the same charge. The U.S. Chemical Safety Board concluded in a report issued last year that Xcel and RPI failed to implement safety procedures for the safe handling of flammable liquids, the hazard of static discharge, emergency response and rescue, and fire prevention. “Today the jury has spoken, finding Xcel Energy and Public Service Company not guilty of criminal violations of certain OSHA safety regulations,” U.S. Justice Department spokesman Jeff Dorschner said in a written statement. “We believe that this was an important case to prosecute, as it involved the loss of five lives. That said, we respect the jury’s verdict,” Dorschner said. (Editing by Dan Whitcomb and Peter Bohan) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Mexico: $250 Million In Oil Stolen In 4 Months

June 17, 2011

MEXICO CITY — Increasingly sophisticated thieves stole thousands of barrels per day of oil products from Mexico’s state-owned oil company in the first four months of 2011, thefts worth about $250 million, the company’s director said Thursday. Those thefts amounted to almost one million barrels in the first four months of the year, a level almost 50 percent more than what thieves stole in the same period of 2010, according to the Petroleos Mexicanos oil company, also known as Pemex. Pemex director Juan Jose Suarez Coppel said the stolen fuel was the equivalent of 100 tanker trucks per day. “Fuel theft has increased in the last few years,” said Energy Secretary Jose Antonio Meade. “The gangs that participate in these crimes are increasingly sophisticated, better organized and many times they have carried out these thefts using the latest technology.” Mexican officials say drug cartels have been involved in the thefts, often by tapping into state-owned pipelines. The thieves will sometimes inject water into pipelines to cover up the drop in pressure caused by thefts or drill a second tap near the first to continue siphoning off oil if the first is detected. Drilling into pipelines is dangerous because of the high pressure and combustibility of the fuel; while illegal pipeline taps have caused explosions, fires and spills in the past, authorities still find hundreds of successful taps each year. Suarez Coppel said 556 illegal taps had been detected so far in 2011, compared to 710 in all of 2010. Officials have said in the past that drug cartels have been implicated in some of the thefts, especially in northern Mexico. Suarez Coppel said the largest number of thefts – about 150 – occurred in Sinaloa state, considered the cradle of Mexican drug trafficking. He said the cartels may sell the fuel or even use it for their own vehicles. About 390 of the taps involved refined fuel pipelines, while about 135 were at ducts carrying crude. Because there is little market in Mexico for unrefined oil products stolen from some pipelines, the thieves often sell the oil products to U.S. refineries. Pemex filed lawsuits in May against nine U.S. companies for alleged involvement in buying or processing Mexican oil products. But thieves have also sold unrefined fuels to bulk users like brick kilns and factories, so authorities have proposed new laws that would stiffen penalties for the possession, sale or use of stolen oil products. The changes being discussed in congress would also allow organized crimes charges to be brought in fuel-theft cases, and allow charges to be brought against Pemex employees or subcontractors who give information to thieves. In the past, investigators have said workers may have told thieves when pressure in pipelines would drop for maintenance or other reasons, allowing them a window of opportunity to drill into ducts more easily.

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Jodi R. R. Smith: The Top Ten Things Your Boss Will Never Tell You But Wishes You Knew

May 31, 2011

It was around this time of year, almost 20 years ago, when I first learned that managers are human too. I was fresh out of college and all of my management theory coursework stated that the boss was hardworking and fair. The boss was a mentor and a motivator. The boss assigned work based upon ability and provided training to shore up skills. The fact that bosses had human foibles and failings were simply not mentioned. So, it came as a big surprise when a boss approached me about an open job requisition I was sourcing. The hiring manager had whittled the candidates down to the top three and references were being sought. The top candidate’s boss came to my office to explain that while his subordinate was likely the most qualified for and deserving of the position, he would not provide a recommendation for her. Apparently she was the only person keeping his department together. Her organizational knowledge and positional expertise were unmatched. If she were to be promoted, he would need to hire two or three new employees to replace her. Even with training, it would take over a year before his department would run smoothly again. He simply could not afford to let her go. The gravity and reality of the situation were eye-opening. I learned that day that bosses are human… just like the rest of us. Even with the most professional of managers, there are some conversations they would prefer to avoid. Listed are the top 10. Fashion Police . Bosses have enough on their plates already. They do not want to add evaluating your attire. Review the written dress code, and observe the unwritten dress code. Remember what grandmother said, dress for the job you want, not the job you have. Total Package . Appropriate attire is just the beginning, as everything about you should communicate that you are a professional. This includes your entire visual résumé. Your visual résumé begins with your wardrobe, and includes your grooming and accessories. It continues to your workspace and your work. Your Attention, Please. Bosses do not want to monitor your electronic ADD. All cell phones and mobile devices should be turned off when in meetings or interacting with others. Social Media is a great equalizer. Your boss is on Facebook and Twitter too. Be wary of any job related posting … especially if it is negative. Constantly checking your personal email distracts from your focus at work. Stealing Time . While not everyone punches a time-clock, bosses are not as oblivious as you may think. Being late to work, arriving late back from lunch and being tardy to meetings is noticed. Whether you are “just” checking your Facebook page, chatting on your cell phone with friends or shooting the breeze with colleagues, you are stealing time. The company is paying you to get work done. Office Soap Opera Stars . There is enough happening in the office. Do not add your own personal drama. This includes everything from flirting to full-blown affairs. Bosses want you to have boundaries between your personal and professional lives. More Picturesque Speech . Bosses cringe when you open your mouth and foul language, inappropriate topics or grammatically incorrect speech comes out. Your inability to monitor your mouth reflects poorly on everyone. Facts Not Feelings . The boss is pulled in many different directions already. When you need to report something, take the time to think before you speak. Present the facts of the situation. Panicking only adds stress. And speaking of facts, understand how the company makes money and how your part plays into the bigger picture. This knowledge will help to guide and direct your behavior. Anticipatory Actions . When there are issues, do bring the boss at least one possible solution. While understanding what caused the problem is relevant, blaming others and making excuses is unhelpful. Even when there are no immediate issues, take the time to look forward and plan ahead. It is better to act than react. Next Stop, Knowledge . The boss can not possibly be fully responsible for your career. You need to be responsible for your professional development. Research and source training that you need. Make it your goal to stay current in your field. Replace Yourself . If the boss finds you irreplaceable, your chances of promotion diminish greatly. Divide your job into manageable chunks and train others in your department as back-ups. This way, you will position yourself for promotion. The candidate’s boss was looking out for his own best interests. Fortunately, the hiring manager was savvy. He was able to read between the lines of the weak recommendation. The candidate was offered the job and she took it. Hopefully your boss would not attempt to sabotage your opportunity for promotion. But chances are there is something your boss wishes you knew, but is hesitant to tell you. An honest self-evaluation, using these top 10 tips as a starting point, may prove to be enlightening. I would like to thank the following managers who took the time to tell me the things they would prefer not tell their employees and consultants who enlighten managers on such delicate communications: Tom Armour, Chantay Bridges, Marlene Caroselli, Kathi Elster, Pamela Feld, Diane Gayeski, Neil Gussman, Antoine Lane, Holly Paul, Don Phin, Jack Signorelli, Patricia Sigmon, Leslie Singer, as well as many other HARO responders who opted not to be mentioned by name. Jodi’s latest book, “The Etiquette Book: A Complete Guide to Modern Manners” is now available. Chapters 10 – 14 cover professional protocol in detail.

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Spain Protests Rock Nation, Tens Of Thousands Fill The Cities Over Joblessness

May 21, 2011

By Tracy Rucinski and Fiona Ortiz MADRID – Tens of thousands of Spaniards angry over joblessness protested for a sixth day on Friday in cities all over the country, and the government looked unlikely to enforce a ban on the demonstrations, fearing clashes. Dubbed “los indignados” (the indignant), tens of thousands of protesters have filled the main squares of Spain’s cities for six days, in a wave of outrage over economic stagnation and government austerity marking a shift after years of patience. The electoral board ruled on Thursday that protests would be illegal on Saturday, the eve of elections when Spaniards will choose 8,116 city councils and 13 out of 17 regional governments. But Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, who has failed to contain the highest unemployment in the European Union, at 21.3 percent, said he may not enforce the ban. “I have a great respect for the people protesting, which they are doing in a peaceful manner, and I understand it is driven by economic crisis and young people’s hopes for employment,” Zapatero said during a radio interview. He said the Justice Ministry was reviewing the electoral board’s ruling to determine whether it should stand. PROTESTERS WILL STAY “We are not going to budge from here,” said a 44-year-old unemployed man who declined to give his name, during an assembly at Puerta del Sol in central Madrid, where protesters reached an informal consensus to stay in the square despite the ban. The man was among hundreds who have camped out all week at Puerta del Sol. His wife and daughter join him every day and the crowd swells to thousands every evening. “Our next move is to spread this to the rest of Europe,” he said. Many protesters told Reuters that they are scared the police will crack down, but analysts said police action against the protesters would be a disaster for the Socialists. The protesters have called on Spaniards not to vote for the two main parties, the Socialists or the center-right opposition Popular Party. Spain has struggled to emerge from a recession, and the collapse of the construction sector and a slump in consumer spending have hit the young particularly hard — 45 percent of 18- to 25-year-olds are unemployed. “They can’t kick us out. The politicians won’t allow it, it’ll make them look bad right before the voting,” said Virginia Braojos, 32, a logistics technician who has come with three friends to the protests every night this week. NOT A GAME CHANGER The protests have drawn huge media attention, but will not change the outcome of Sunday’s elections, when the ruling Socialist party is expected to suffer heavy losses over its handling of the economic crisis, a prominent pollster said. However, the symbolic impact of the protests is huge and will make things even tougher than they already are for the increasingly lame-duck Zapatero, said Jose Juan Toharia, president of Metroscopia pollsters. “There will be an authentic cataclysm for the Socialists, who are going to head into general elections next year without a single stronghold,” Toharia said. The next general election is due in March, though some analysts say a Socialist rout could lead to an early election. The protest movement has captured the mood of many Spaniards who have been out of work for months and face a bleak future as the economy is not yet growing robustly enough to create jobs. While most protesters are young, organizing themselves through Twitter and social media, middle-aged and older people joined the crowds on Friday, frustrated with stagnation. STICKING TO DEFICIT COMMITMENT The risk premium on Spanish debt, as measured by the difference between yields on Spanish and benchmark German bonds, rose on Friday due to concerns that following the elections, new regional leaders will uncover budget shortfalls. Budget trouble in the regions would rekindle concerns about a fiscal crisis in Spain. Spain has been under intense market scrutiny since Greece, Ireland and Portugal were forced to accept EU/IMF bailouts. It is widely accepted that a bailout for Spain, the euro zone’s fourth largest economy, would stretch the European Union’s resources and political will to breaking point. The Spain/Bund spread traded at its widest since mid-January at around 239 basis points. Zapatero, who slashed government spending this year, promised there would not be a new round of spending cutbacks following the elections, but stressed Spain’s obligation to international markets to stick to its plan to cut the deficit. “I can guarantee there will be no more spending cuts after the May 22 elections (but) we are committed to the budget target. I insist we will meet this obligation because, if we don’t, markets and investors won’t finance us, and that would make things worse.” (Additional reporting by Paul Day; editing by Mark Heinrich) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Municipal M&A: Budget Woes May Force Cities To Combine

April 22, 2011

As cities grapple with continuing declines in revenue, some are considering merging with other strapped localities or sharing services in a bid to cut costs. Local officials in Michigan, Indiana, New Jersey, California and other states are considering municipal mergers, which some see as the only way to preserve services amid a historic economic downturn. Zionsville, Ind., combined with two townships last year, and political and economic pressures are pushing other communities in that direction. In California, some cities are outsourcing services to their counties. In Michigan, politicians in Detroit and neighboring Hamtramck say merging the two governments might save the dollars needed to stay afloat. In short, struggling governments are employing a strategy familiar to corporate chiefs and Wall Street investment banks: the merger or acquisition. Just as the recession has spurred companies to pair up, the persistent economic stagnation has made some cities see municipal M&A as a tempting, if incredibly complicated, method of cutting costs while still providing services to taxpayers. Jobs can be lost when such combinations take place, and thickets of obligations have to be reorganized. But municipal experts and local politicians say M&A is some cities’ best hope for fiscal survival. “This is, I think, going to happen nationwide. Not just in Detroit suburbs or New York suburbs or Chicago suburbs, but in effect everywhere,” said veteran municipal strategist Thompson Dyke, founder of the Chicago-based urban planning firm Thompson Dyke & Associates. “They’re approaching the concept of consolidating their governments reluctantly,” he continued. “They don’t want to do it, I don’t think. But they see this as something the electorate is going to increasingly ask for.” The worst economic downturn since the Great Depression has left many governments struggling to perform the most basic of functions. Tax receipts have withered as property values have fallen and residents have cut back on spending. Pension fund assets plunged as the stock market tumbled, with many municipal pension plans now requiring outsized contributions from taxpayers. And with states desperate to fill their own budget holes, many localities have gone without crucial portions of state aid. Awash in red ink, governments have laid off crossing guards and dismissed teachers. Others have delayed repairs to pothole-ridden streets or crumbling buildings. Still others have slashed bus service , preventing residents from accessing tens of thousands of potential jobs. And some of the nation’s statistically most dangerous cities have axed sizable percentages of their police forces. But there may be another way. Over the course of centuries, the U.S. has developed tens of thousands of local governments, designed to be responsive to citizens’ needs. There’s now one local government or public school system for every 3,500 Americans, according to Census data. But in today’s economic slump, not all of these small governments can survive on their own. With politicians reluctant to raise taxes to a level commensurate with other developed countries, localities are casting about for help. Frank Shafroth, director of the State and Local Government Leadership Center at George Mason University, speculated that in the next 20 years, one in four local governments will dissolve or merge into other governments. “It’s going to have to happen, and it’s going to be very, very hard,” said Shafroth, who was formerly director of government relations for Arlington County, Virginia. “There’s going to have to be change. The issue is who can be really creative and innovative in thinking how to make it work.” Local officials will likely look to history for guidance. In 1963, Nashville, Tennessee, merged with Davidson County. Six years later, Indianapolis, Indiana, combined with Marion County. And in 2003, Louisville, Kentucky, consolidated its government with Jefferson County’s. Consolidations are also happening on a service-by-service basis. Last summer, officials in Maywood, California, fired all municipal employees, and outsourced services to Los Angeles county. In Costa Mesa, every firefighter was issued a layoff notice last month, but nearly all of them had been offered jobs by the Orange County Fire Authority. If that deal goes through, Costa Mesa would cede control of its fire department, allowing the county to manage any future labor negotiations. The city would shed payroll costs, but it would pay the county for fire protection. Elsewhere, officials are itching to engage in some outright governmental M&A. Mitch Daniels, the Republican governor of Indiana, has made the elimination of township government one of his priorities. Last fall, Indiana voters approved a constitutional amendment that capped local property taxes. Given that restraint, local governments might be going the way of Zionsville, which combined with its townships last year. With fiscal pressures mounting, such mergers are likely necessary for many localities’ financial survival, said Matt Greller, executive director of the advocacy group Indiana Association of Cities and Towns. Combinations might also be in the works in Michigan, where local officials are mulling over the possibility of a merger of cities. A cluster of municipalities in the Detroit area faces severe strains, and a combination could potentially bring much-needed relief, some politicians say. Last year, Detroit and Hamtramck , an independent city located entirely within Detroit’s borders, were locked in a dispute over tax revenue. A General Motors plant — the one that produces the Chevrolet Volt — straddles the cities’ border, and the two governments agreed decades ago to share that property tax revenue. But then Detroit started withholding payments, critically weakening Hamtramck’s budget, the tiny city claimed. Desperate, the city of 20,000 people attempted to enter bankruptcy. As part of a deal struck last month, Detroit agreed to pay Hamtramck $3.2 million for the lost tax revenue, and Hamtramck agreed to pay Detroit for water and sewer charges it owed. But both cities still face myriad woes. Hamtramck, for its part, will remain solvent only for the next 10 months, estimates Bill Cooper, the city manager. Detroit, too, faces trouble. The decline of automobile manufacturers has put thousands out of work, and an exodus of residents has left the government scrambling to fill its coffers. Whole neighborhoods of buildings are decaying. The most recent Census numbers showed Detroit’s population had dropped by a fourth over the last decade. Making matters worse, Detroit’s population has officially dipped below a legal threshold, now preventing the city from collecting a tax on electricity, heat and phone lines, and forcing the government to reduce its income tax rate. Mayor Dave Bing has taken the matter up with the state, and significant portions of the city’s tax collection now hinge on whether the state legislature passes certain bills. In the meantime, the city stands to lose more than $100 million this year. Residents of Detroit and Hamtramck have talked about a possible merger for years. Last month, Michigan passed a law empowering state-appointed managers to take over the finances of troubled local governments, a scenario that local officials are striving to avoid. With budget strains mounting, local politicians now see a municipal merger as a potential way to resolve fiscal difficulties without state intervention. Outside city hall, Detroit politicians have quietly considered the idea of combining their city with Hamtramck and Highland Park, another municipality surrounded by Detroit. Councilman Kenneth Cockrel informally proposed taking a potential combination even further, merging Detroit with the suburbs of Ecorse and River Rouge. “It would automatically solve the population issue,” Cockrel said. “But it’s not like you can just go out and do an annexation next week. There’s a process you’ve got to undertake, and, I’ll admit, I’m not totally familiar with that process.” Even if a merger could solve some of Detroit’s problems, Hamtramck might resist. Hamtramck residents see their city as a relatively safe haven within Detroit, which, according to an analysis of FBI data, is the nation’s third most dangerous city. The police in Hamtramck pride themselves on fast, thorough service, and some officers and residents doubt that Detroit police would be able to provide the same level of protection. What’s more, a merger would likely require a reworking of payrolls, potentially resulting in layoffs. Dan McNamara, president of the local Detroit firefighters’ union, wouldn’t speculate about what might happen in a merger, but expressed support for the Hamtramck firefighters. The president of the Hamtramck firefighters’ local didn’t respond to requests for comment. But almost certainly, some jobs would be eliminated. At the very least, Cooper, the city manager, would be out of work, he said. “If a community can’t afford to provide the services that it should provide to its citizens, then you’ve got to look for alternatives,” Cooper said. “If that means combining communities, then that may be what has to happen.” Any combination of cities would be complicated, likely requiring the cities to hire outside consultants. Urban planners would serve the role of bankers in a corporate merger, poring over records in search of ways to maximize efficiency. But municipal M&A presents its own set of challenges. In Milwaukee, a local think tank released a study last year examining the consequences of a potential dissolution of Milwaukee County government. A county-city merger could yield efficiencies, the Public Policy Forum’s study noted, but the county’s pension and health care liabilities would present a potentially major challenge. Those benefits have to be paid, but the question is: if the government no longer exists, who will pay them? The study authors proposed a plan where the state would administer the benefits, but only the former county residents — the taxpayers who originally were on the hook — would be responsible for paying them. And, of course, a merger might not succeed in strengthening a city’s budget. Local governments across the nation are saddled with ballooning pension obligations, which are protected by state constitutions. Combining governments might just amount to rearranging the deck chairs. “Talking about merging entities will start to flush out some of the cost problems that you have,” said David Johnson, a partner at the Chicago-based ACM Partners, a boutique financial firm that advises municipalities. “But that’s not going to move the dial nearly as much as restructuring pension obligations would.” A successful merger, moreover, would have to better provide services to residents, said veteran bankruptcy lawyer James Spiotto, who has decades of experience in municipal restructuring. That’s the metric that local officials will use, he said. “The more local you get, the more responsive the government likely will be,” said Spiotto, who heads the bankruptcy division at the law firm Chapman and Cutler. If a merger doesn’t provide residents with the service they’re used to, he added, “it isn’t going to last.”

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