the-federal

Costar…

Through an aggressive push in Washington, DC, to cut costs and improve operational efficiencies, the federal government’s listings of properties for sale could balloon from less than a hundred or so to include potentially thousands of properties – and also, reduce the government’s reliance on leased space. The effort is already influencing how landlords and brokers make decisions affecting commercial real estate . With pressure building to lower…

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Excess Federal Property a Game Changer for Commercial Real Estate

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Huffington Post…

Gov. Rick Scott campaigned against President Obama’s “failed stimulus” program — yet the freshman politician kept nearly $370 million of the federal cash in the Florida budget he signed last week.

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After Bashing Obama’s Stimulus Program, Rick Scott Kept Millions In State Budget

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Jagadeesh Gokhale: Confused Thinking on Social Security

May 27, 2011

Is Social Security a program that is independent of the federal budget (“off budget”) or one that is intimately linked to the federal budget (the “unified budget” perspective)? Writers on Social Security appear to constantly switch between the two alternative perspectives on the program’s finances, which ends up confusing rather than illuminating readers. Allan Sloan’s recent column in the Washington Post is a case in point. Mr. Sloan writes that We can make the trust fund as big as we want by putting in general revenues, as we’re doing this year, or by simply stuffing new Treasury securities into it [ Note: "unified budget" perspective here ]. But the cash flow shortages [ "off budget" perspective here ] tell us that Social Security’s problems are now in the present, not in the future [ No, references to cash-flow shortages are valid only under the "off-budget" perspective. But under it, the Trust Funds are meaningful as Social Security assets, which implies that the problem is not in the present ]. A $2.6 trillion trust fund stuffed with Treasury securities makes a lot of people feel good [ "off budget" perspective here ]. But no matter how big the trust fund is, the cash flow deficit means taxpayers are going to have to borrow — heavily — to cover beneficiaries’ checks [ "unified budget" perspective here ]. The trust fund is now irrelevant in financial terms [ "unified budget" perspective here ], although it retains moral and some legal force. Cash is king. As always. Cash is not king, confusion is. If Social Security is viewed as an “off budget” program, its Trust Fund represents a valid funding source. It consists of trust fund loans to the federal government of past surplus payroll taxes that the federal government will repay with “full faith and credit.” Since the program’s payroll and other tax revenues are dedicated to it, its financial condition and sustainability can be judged by comparing projected revenues plus the trust fund’s value with projected Social Security benefits. Under the “off budget” perspective, even if dedicated revenues are falling short of promised benefits, that “cash flow shortfall” is not a problem because the trust fund (which equals the federal government’s liability to Social Security) will allow benefit payments to continue under current laws for a long time — until 2036 under the Trustees’ latest projections. The program’s past payroll tax surpluses were, by law, invested in special issue Treasury securities, which can be redeemed to pay for benefits when revenues from dedicated taxes fall short of promised benefits. But when pundits such as Mr. Sloan mention the possibility of providing ” new ” federal transfers to Social Security — beyond redemptions of the existing trust fund — the “off-budget” attribute is negated and the “unified budget” perspective becomes relevant; under the latter, Social Security is one among equals across the entire slate of federal government programs and the term “cash flow shortfall” is rendered meaningless. “New” government transfers can plug any holes in dedicated taxes relative to benefit outlays. In that case it is not valid to question whether government transfers would “solve” the program’s “cash flow shortfall” as Mr. Sloan does. They will, by construction. Under the unified budget perspective, the only valid “cash flow shortfall” is the federal government’s annual deficit. Note that the Social Security Trust Funds are not financially irrelevant — even under the “unified budget” perspective because they authorize the automatic payment of promised benefits despite the “cash flow shortfall” of dedicated revenues compared to promised benefits. Thus, they provide fodder for liberals to argue that there’s no need to reform the system for another couple of decades. According to the Trustees, if the federal government simply owed Social Security about $21 trillion rather than the $2.6 trillion it owes today, there would be no long-term funding problem for Social Security under the “off-budget” perspective. Liberals would love to see policymakers simply make that ledger entry granting the required spending authority to Social Security. (And it would have the added benefit of putting Mr. Sloan out of the business of sowing confusion in people’s minds.) But perhaps a different ledger entry would achieve even more: Let us recognize that past excess payroll taxes relative to benefit outlays (past Trust Fund surpluses under the “off budget” perspective) have been spent on other government programs. Grants of additional spending authority for Social Security must ultimately be paid out of today’s and future taxpayer resources so making them whole is not really possible. Let us also recognize that the provision of such grants — which now increasingly appear in Social Security reform proposals — makes the “off budget” perspective economically irrelevant. Note that this is different from saying that the Trust Funds themselves are irrelevant. So policymakers should be encouraged to make the reverse ledger entry — to simply wipe out the Trust Funds entirely. That change might deliver the sorely needed sense of urgency to the debate on Social Security reforms — as is currently happening for Medicare which has very few government IOU’s in its trust fund.

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States Shorten Duration For Unemployment Benefits

May 22, 2011

WASHINGTON — Some of the states that have drained their unemployment insurance funds are cutting the number of weeks that a laid-off worker can count on those benefits. Legislators are trying to limit tax increases for businesses to replenish the pool and are hoping the federal government keeps stepping in when the economy slumps. Michigan, Missouri and Arkansas recently reduced the maximum number of weeks that the jobless can get state unemployment benefits. Florida is on the verge of doing so. Unemployment in those states ranges from 7.8 percent in Arkansas to 11.1 percent in Florida. The benefit cuts come as legislatures deal with the damage that the recession inflicted on state unemployment insurance programs. The sharp increase in the number of people who lost their jobs drained the reservoir of money dedicated to paying out benefits. About 30 states borrowed more than $44 billion from the federal government to continue payments to laid-off workers. Many states hastened the insolvency of their funds by keeping balances at historically low levels going into the downturn. The burden of replenishing the funds and paying off the loans will fall primarily on businesses through higher taxes, but the benefit cuts are an effort to limit the tax increases. States usually provide up to 26 weeks of benefits to laid-off workers. Michigan and Missouri have cut that to a maximum 20 weeks. Arkansas went to 25. Florida is considering a more complex change that would link the duration of benefits to the strength of the economy. The cap would range from 23 weeks during periods of double-digit unemployment to as low as 12 weeks during periods of extremely low unemployment. The Florida Legislature approved the changes, but the governor hasn’t signed the bill. Once state benefits are exhausted, laid-off workers often are eligible for 13 weeks to 20 weeks of extended benefits. States and the federal government usually split the cost for that program. During recessions, Congress typically takes the aid a step further, providing several more months of emergency benefits entirely paid for by the federal government. The actions taken by legislatures apply specifically to state benefits, but also will reduce future federal benefits because the changes affect the formula used to calculate them. Allen McClendon, 40, of Kansas City, Mo., said he lost his job as a mechanic in August 2010 and has been getting unemployment benefits in Missouri since February. He said the payments allow him to buy food, make payments on his pickup truck and pay for gas and auto insurance. He is worried about what will happen if his state and federal benefits run out before he lands a job. Before that happens, he hopes to get training from a Missouri employment center that would allow him to get a commercial driver’s license or to repair heating and cooling units. “If they run out before I’ve completed my schooling and have got a job, then I’m really in trouble,” he said. “I’d so much rather be working than dealing with this,” he said. Benefits vary from state to state, but average about $300 a week, or about one-third of a recipient’s previous wages. In good economic times, most of the unemployed find a new job before their benefits expire. But in times of high unemployment, states have come to count on extra help from the federal government. Some say that reliance is playing a role in the bills to cap benefits. “A lot of states are basically saying, `Hey, why are we paying for these benefits when, in a recession, the federal government will step in?’” said Steve Woodbury, an economics professor at Michigan State University. Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., said relying on the federal government to keep up the cash flow is risky. She said last year’s fight to extend unemployment benefits was difficult, with Democrats barely able to generate the votes necessary to pass a bill. “I think it would be an error in judgment to assume that the Republican House would extend unemployment benefits,” she said. Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said Congress in the future might worry that repeated extensions of unemployment benefits would serve as a deterrent to finding a job. “There’s some truth to that” concern, said Hatch, the top Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, which has jurisdiction over the program. Employers pay both state and federal taxes for unemployment insurance. States collect the taxes that pay for basic benefits. The federal taxes help pay for administering the program and providing the federal government’s share of extended benefits. State tax collections will have increased about 44 percent since 2009, according to the Department of Labor. Still, as a percentage of wages paid, unemployment insurance taxes are at historically low levels, less than 1 percent. When the unemployment insurance program began in 1938, the tax rate for unemployment insurance averaged about 2.7 percent of wages. Nevertheless, higher taxes in tough economic times are challenging businesses. States apply their highest tax rates to those industries with the most worker turnover. Those often are the same industries that are hardest hit by recession, such as manufacturers. In Florida, the minimum tax that is applied to businesses with low employee turnover went up from about $25 per employee to about $72 this year. The maximum tax for businesses with high turnover remained at $378 per employee. Companies could use that tax money to keep their doors open or to expand and hire more workers, said Teye Reeves, a policy director for the Florida Chamber of Commerce. “For our economy to thrive again, we need businesses to be strong,” Reeves said. “They want to have more employees. They want to open new stores. … They’ve got to have the capital to be able to provide those jobs.” But Rick McHugh, of the National Employment Law Project, argued that legislatures should not shore up their unemployment insurance programs by making workers share the pain. “It’s not a shared-sacrifice situation because, certainly in most states, employer organizations lobbied to keep the programs from being properly funded in advance of the recession,” McHugh said. “Now, they’re saying the program is broke so we have to cut benefits” McHugh said he’s worried that more states will seek to limit benefits when legislatures return to work next spring. Most have adjourned for the year. “It’s really a threat to the vitality of the safety nets because each state feels pressure to go to that lowest common denominator,” McHugh said. ___ Associated Press writer Heather Hollingsworth in Kansas City, Mo., contributed to this report. ___ Online: Labor Department: http://workforcesecurity.doleta.gov/unemploy/uifactsheet.asp National Association of State Workforce Agencies: http://www.workforceatm.org

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The Missing Energy Piece

May 13, 2011

Peering into the future, the federal Energy Information Administration recently released a kaleidoscopic collection of 57 computer-generated scenarios for how the nation might produce and consume energy over the next 25 years.

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GSA Embarks on Comprehensive Reinvention of Leasing

May 5, 2011

Looking to bring its leasing procedures more in line with market conditions and correct inconsistencies with market practices, the U.S. General Services Administration just released its final Lease Reform Implementation Report. According the GSA, the process of offering to lease space to the federal government differs so much from the process in the private commercial real estate sector that it discourages many building owners or developers from…

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Video: Thwaites Says Budget Impasse Testing Patience of Market

April 8, 2011

April 8 (Bloomberg) — Christian Thwaites, chief executive officer of Sentinel Investments, and Ernest Istook, a former U.S. Representative from Oklahoma, talk about the likely impact of a possible shutdown of the federal government on financial markets. They speak with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Stocks Drop, Oil Rally Drives Down Transportation Shares

April 8, 2011

April 8 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Deborah Kostroun reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks fell, preventing the third straight weekly gain for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, as oil’s rally to a 30-month high drove down transportation shares and investors speculated the federal government may shut for the first time since 1996. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Feldstein Sees Reasonable Chance of Government Shutdown

April 8, 2011

April 8 (Bloomberg) — Martin Feldstein, an economics professor at Harvard University and former chief economic adviser to Ronald Reagan, talks about the political battle over the federal budget and the likelihood of a U.S. government shutdown when spending authority expires at midnight. Feldstein speaks with Mark Crumpton on Bloomberg Television’s “Bottom Line.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Government Shutdown Looms as Lawmakers Seek Budget Deal

April 8, 2011

April 8 (Bloomberg) — A third round of talks between congressional leaders and President Barack Obama last night failed to end an impasse over the federal budget. Without an agreement by midnight tonight, the government would begin shutting down for the first time in 15 years. Bloomberg’s Peter Cook reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Utah Recognizes Gold Coins As Legal Tender

March 30, 2011

The Beehive State has a new measure on the books that eliminates state taxes on the exchange of gold and silver coins and directs the legislature to study an “alternative form of legal tender.” The law, signed by Gov. Gary Herbert last week, also recognizes gold and silver coins issued by the federal government as legal tender in the state.

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Main Jailed For Taking Out A ‘Liar’s Loan’

March 27, 2011

On Valentine’s Day, the elder Mr. Engle said, his son had entered a minimum-security prison in Beaver, W.Va., to begin serving a 21-month sentence for mortgage fraud. He then proceeded to tell me the tale of how federal agents nabbed his son — a tale he backed up with reams of documents and records that suggest, if nothing else, that when the federal government is truly motivated, there is no mountain it won’t move to prosecute someone it wants to nail. And it was definitely motivated to nail Charlie Engle.

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Man Jailed For Taking Out A ‘Liar’s Loan’

March 27, 2011

On Valentine’s Day, the elder Mr. Engle said, his son had entered a minimum-security prison in Beaver, W.Va., to begin serving a 21-month sentence for mortgage fraud. He then proceeded to tell me the tale of how federal agents nabbed his son — a tale he backed up with reams of documents and records that suggest, if nothing else, that when the federal government is truly motivated, there is no mountain it won’t move to prosecute someone it wants to nail. And it was definitely motivated to nail Charlie Engle.

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Scott Walker Op-Ed: Striking The Right Bargain In Wisconsin

March 17, 2011

Imagine the outrage if government workers did not have collective bargaining for wages and benefits. Consider the massive protests that would be staged by labor leaders all across the country. Think I’m talking about Wisconsin? No, I’m talking about the federal government.

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A Federal Board for Building Sales? U.S. Govt. Looks To Expedite Sales, But Obstacles Remain

March 10, 2011

As far as rummage sales go, the federal government’s proposal to set up a board to sell its vacant and underutilized commercial real estate may rank as one of the largest ever proposed. But like any white elephant sale, it could be a mammoth undertaking with uncertain results for the sellers and the buyers. The U.S. General Accounting Office and the Office of Management and Budget are backing President Obama’s proposal to create a board to expedite…

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AbTech Industries Welcomes Bjornulf White as Vice President of Strategy and Business Development

February 28, 2011

SCOTTSDALE, AZ–(Marketwire – February 28, 2011) – Abtech Holdings, Inc . ( OTCBB : ABHD ) is pleased to announce that Bjornulf White, former portfolio manager at Lockheed Martin Corporation, has been named AbTech Industries’ Vice President of Strategy and Business Development. He will be responsible for multiple aspects of the company’s growth and development of business opportunities and revenue generation, including corporate strategic planning, formation of major partnerships, and business capture improvement. He will also manage AbTech’s government relations and spearhead business and R&D opportunities focused on the federal government.

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U.S. Patent Office Opens Branch In Detroit

February 21, 2011

WASHINGTON — President Obama, who emphasizes American innovation, says modernizing the federal Patent and Trademark Office is crucial to “winning the future.” So at a time when a quarter of patent applications come from California, and many of those from Silicon Valley, the patent office is opening its first satellite office — in Detroit.

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Video: Swonk Says Recovery Not Fast Enough for Labor Market

January 7, 2011

Jan. 7 (Bloomberg) — Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial Inc., and Richard Berner, co-head of global economics at Morgan Stanley, talk about the December U.S. employment report, the labor market, the federal budget deficit and the outlook for economic growth. Employers in the U.S. added fewer jobs than forecast in December, confirming Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke’s view that it will take years for the labor market to heal. Swonk and Berner speak with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance Midday.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Call To Adopt Securitization Mortgage Standards

January 3, 2011

A group of more than 50 senior economists academics former regulators and investors is calling on the federal government to adopt national securitization and mortgage standards reports GFS News

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Video: Coffee Says Hedge Funds Are in `Government’s Crosshairs’

December 16, 2010

Dec. 16 (Bloomberg) — John Coffee, a securities law professor at Columbia University, discusses the expansion to companies of the federal investigation into insider trading at hedge funds. Three people who worked at technology firms including chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices Inc. were arrested along with an “expert networker.” A fifth man, Daniel DeVore, formerly a supply manager at Dell Inc., pleaded guilty in federal court in New York on Dec. 10 to conspiracy to commit securities fraud and wire fraud as part of the probe, prosecutors said today in a statement. Coffee speaks with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Lloyd Chapman: Pentagon Wants Secret Blacklist for Suppliers

November 30, 2010

In December, Congress is expected to consider legislation that may allow senior Department of Defense (DoD) officials to create a secret “blacklist,” authorizing the exclusion of any business from federal contracting programs. If passed, the bill could lead to “de facto” debarments of small businesses across DoD federal contracting programs, with potential for these “de facto” debarments to touch every corner of the federal government’s contracting programs. Section 815 of S. 3454, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2011, would allow a small coalition of defense agency heads to secretly “blacklist” specific contractors. Small business advocates are concerned that DoD’s determination will be shared with each agency where the company competes as a prime contractor or subcontractor. This could lead to the broad based exclusion of contractors from federal contracting programs without due process. Section 815 does not require DoD to notify excluded parties, and protects DoD’s secret “blacklist” from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), protest at the Government Accountability Office (GAO), or action brought in the federal court system. This blatant power grab by the Pentagon puts America’s 27 million small businesses directly in the line of fire. We should be protecting the nation’s small businesses by building more government accountability, not chipping away at it. This is yet another move by the federal government to exclude small businesses from the federal government’s contracting processes. The federal government has a congressionally mandated goal of awarding 23 percent of its purchases to small businesses. The ASBL has estimated that the federal government is missing its goal by more than 18 percent due to the continued diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants. Since 2003, more than a dozen federal investigations have uncovered billions of dollars in federal contracts intended for small businesses actually flowing into the hands of Fortune 500 corporations and other large businesses. The ASBL estimates that every year more than $100 billion in federal small business contracts are diverted away from the nation’s small business community. The most recent information released by the Obama Administration shows there were large recipients of small business contracts such as Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, Dell Computer, Xerox, SAIC, General Dynamics, Bechtel and John Deere. The ASBL is the only national small business advocate fighting to stop billions of dollars in fraud and abuse in federal small business contracting programs.

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Video: Stockman Says Fed Policy Designed to Pacify Wall Street

November 4, 2010

Nov. 4 (Bloomberg) — David Stockman, who was U.S. budget director in the Reagan administration, talks about the Federal Reserve’s plan to buy $600 billion in Treasury securities through next June in a bid to further reduce long-term borrowing costs and keep prices from falling. Stockman also discusses the midterm congressional elections and the federal deficit. He talks with Carol Massar and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Lazear Says Entitlements Key to Dealing With Deficit

October 26, 2010

Oct. 26 (Bloomberg) — Ed Lazear, a professor at Stanford University and former economic adviser to President George W. Bush, talks about his prescription for boosting U.S. economic growth and reducing the federal budget deficit. Lazear speaks with Matt Miller and Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Treasury Shields Citigroup as FOIA Made Meaningless: Video

October 25, 2010

Oct. 25 (Bloomberg) — The late Bloomberg News reporter Mark Pittman asked the U.S. Treasury in January 2009 to identify $301 billion of securities owned by Citigroup Inc. that the government had agreed to guarantee. He made the request under the federal Freedom of Information Act on the grounds that taxpayers ought to know how their money was being used. More than 20 months later, after saying at least five times that a response was imminent, Treasury officials responded with 560 pages of printed-out e-mails, none of which Pittman requested. Bloomberg’s Suzanne O’Halloran reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Companies That Received Bailout Money Giving Generously To Candidates

October 25, 2010

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) was a fierce critic of the federal bailout of General Motors and Chrysler last year, saying he “cannot ask the American taxpayer to subsidize failure.” But General Motors doesn’t seem to hold a grudge.

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Obama’s Stimulus Revives Car Town, Dropping Unemployment Rate

October 22, 2010

Kokomo is going back to work. A year and a half ago the fate of this car town, home to four Chrysler plants and a Delphi facility, was as uncertain as the American auto industry itself. Now, thanks largely to the federal government, the town’s unemployment rate has gone from over 20% to under 14%.

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Video: Rattner Says U.S. Automakers Are Poised to Gush Profit: Video

October 21, 2010

Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) — Steven Rattner, the former head of the federal government’s auto task force, talks about the outlook for the U.S. auto industry, global competition for U.S. manufacturing, the national debt and his investment strategy. Rattner, who is co-founder of private-equity firm Quadrangle Group LLC, speaks with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance Midday.” Rattner is also a financial adviser to New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who is founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News parent company Bloomberg LP. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Paul Krugman: Bush Tax Cut Debate Is Proof Of Our ‘Dysfunctional And Corrupt Political Culture’

August 23, 2010

What’s at stake here? According to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, making all of the Bush tax cuts permanent, as opposed to following the Obama proposal, would cost the federal government $680 billion in revenue over the next 10 years. For the sake of comparison, it took months of hard negotiations to get Congressional approval for a mere $26 billion in desperately needed aid to state and local governments.

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Luxury Condos In New York City Boast FHA Backing

August 13, 2010

Whitney Gollinger, marketing chief for a Manhattan condo building with an outdoor movie theater and panoramic city views, is highlighting a different amenity to spur sales: the financial backing of the federal government.

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Amitai Etzioni: Give Them an out

July 15, 2010

The U.S. Department of Justice should draft a contract for every American who opposes “big government” and wishes to cut it down and have their taxes slashed. The contract should stipulate that those who sign it will have to pay only a third of the regular tax rate (to cover the costs of our military and homeland security). However, in exchange they will not be entitled to any government services.  They will not be able to obtain passports, enter public parks, or use the highway system paid for by the federal government. They will all go on the no-fly list because they have not paid for the air control system. They will have to take their children out of public schools. Above all, if they grow ill, they will have to pay the doctors a fee that will help cover the costs of training these physicians which is now largely covered by the federal government. If they are hospitalized, they will have to pay their share of the building costs, also often largely covered by the federal government, including of the so called “private” hospitals.  The contract will of course have to be much longer. In effect, I suspect that it will extend to at least 20 single-spaced pages. However, you get the point. We shall never be able to gain a hearing from the millions who have been brainwashed by the libertarian nonsense and its laissez-faire conservative accompaniments until we find a dramatic way to drive home the point that although there is great room — in effect, urgent need — to reform our government, nobody really wants to live without most of the services it does provide. And if a bunch of libertarians want to sign the contract and move to some mountaintop and take care of each other, so be it. Just remind them not to call 911 in an emergency.

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70 Percent Of Americans Say Economy Is Mired In Recession: Bloomberg

July 14, 2010

July 14 (Bloomberg) — More than 7 out of 10 Americans say the economy is mired in recession, and the country is conflicted over how to balance concerns over joblessness and the federal budget deficit, according to a Bloomberg National Poll. Just like the experts, Americans are torn about whether the federal government should focus on curbing spending or creating jobs, the poll conducted July 9-12 shows. Seven of 10 Americans say reducing unemployment is the priority.

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For-Profit Colleges At A Crossroads In Face Of Federal Aid Cuts

June 7, 2010

Any day now, the federal Department of Education will formally propose new regulations that would cut off federal aid to for-profit colleges whose graduates cannot earn enough to repay their student loans. The regulations, known as the “gainful employment” rules, are an effort to rein in the high debt loads students take on when they enroll in for-profit colleges that offer certificates or degrees in fields like nursing or culinary arts. Students at for-profit colleges are much more likely than others to default on their loans.

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Video: Romer Discusses May Jobs Report, Stimulus Spending: Video

June 4, 2010

June 4 (Bloomberg) — Christina Romer, who chairs the White House Council of Economic Advisers, talks with Bloomberg’s Betty Liu about the May U.S. jobs report released today and the prospects of additional stimulus spending by the federal government. Payrolls rose by 431,000 last month, including a 411,000 jump in government hiring of temporary workers for the 2010 census, according to Labor Department figures. Economists projected a 536,000 gain. The jobless rate fell to 9.7 percent. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Customer Stuck With Counterfeit Money From The Post Office

May 25, 2010

A business inadvertently gives you counterfeit money — are you stuck with it? In most cases, yes. But what if that business happens to be a branch of the federal government? Los Angeles resident David Lipin found himself asking this question the other day after he cashed a $1,000 Postal Service money order at a West Hollywood post office.

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ABA Argues Against Financial Reform Bill Amendment Allowing States To Regulate Credit Card Interest Rates

May 17, 2010

Right now banks are allowed to pretend that application fees, late payment fees, annual fees, and periodic fees are not part of the cost of credit. That’s a bad thing. And if the federal agencies aren’t going to fix it, then states should be allowed to.

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Majors dropped against the federal currency

May 3, 2010

Majors dropped against the federal currency

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Unpaid Internships Investigated: ‘Mostly Drudgery’ Means Employers Must Usually Pay, Say Regulators

April 2, 2010

Convinced that many unpaid internships violate minimum wage laws, officials in Oregon, California and other states have begun investigations and fined employers. Last year, M. Patricia Smith, then New York’s labor commissioner, ordered investigations into several firms’ internships. Now, as the federal Labor Department’s top law enforcement official, she and the wage and hour division are stepping up enforcement nationwide.

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Federal Government Closed Thursday: OPM Status Reveals Federal Closings For Fourth Day

February 10, 2010

The federal government will be closed again Thursday, Feb. 11, 2010, according to a new status update from the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) , after three days of being closed due to snow. The Washington Post notes that “four consecutive snow days is unheard of,” and the possibility of the federal government being closed the whole week with a Friday off day could mean “uncharted territory.” To provide this latest update, the OPM also gave its Web site a server boost, after it had been crashing each of the last three days due to surges in traffic. The following notice was posted on the site : Notice: Due to very high volume traffic access to all other OPM.gov pages has been modified. Select the following link to proceed to opm.gov.

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Truestone Names Rick Deloney Senior Vice President, Corporate Development

February 2, 2010

HERNDON, VA–(Marketwire – February 2, 2010) – Truestone, LLC, a leading provider of enterprise IT and mission operations solutions to the federal government, announced today the appointment of Rick Deloney as Senior Vice President of Corporate Development. Deloney will be responsible for all aspects of new business development for Truestone. His duties include identifying and capturing new strategic business, forging senior client and industry partner relationships, branding and marketing.

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Geithner’s Treasury May Help Banks Avoid Obama’s Proposed Limits

January 22, 2010

Only a year after the government stepped in to aid Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley by granting them access to the federal safety net, policy makers are developing an exit path that would allow them and others to escape limits on banks being proposed by the Obama administration.

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Bernard Madoff Moved to Medical Center in North Carolina by Prisons Bureau

December 23, 2009

By Bob Van Voris Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Bernard Madoff, the con man who operated the biggest Ponzi scheme in history, has been moved to the Federal Medical Center at the Butner Federal Correctional Complex in Butner, North Carolina, according to the federal Bureau of Prisons website.

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Video: Michigan’s Granholm Says Additional Stimulus Is Needed: Video

December 4, 2009

Dec. 4 (Bloomberg) — Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm, a Democrat, talks with Bloomberg’s Matt Miller and Carol Massar about the need for additional economic stimulus from the federal government. Granholm also discusses Michigan’s labor market and the availability of credit. (Source: Bloomberg)

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‘Cash For Appliances’ Announcement Expected Within Weeks

November 27, 2009

On the heels of its ballyhooed “Cash for Clunkers” program for cars, the federal government is expected to finalize details in the coming weeks of another tax-supported shopping extravaganza, known as “Cash for Appliances.”

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Neil Barofsky, TARP Watchdog: Bailout Will ‘Almost Certainly’ Result In Loss For Taxpayers

November 12, 2009

Nov. 12 (Bloomberg) — Neil Barofsky, the federal watchdog for the $700 billion financial industry bailout, said the program will “almost certainly” result in a loss to U.S. taxpayers.

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GMAC posts smaller net loss in 3rd quarter on improved results in …

November 4, 2009

May 9th, 2009 How could a government-run GMAC reshape car sales ?DETROIT — With the federal government almost certain to take control of GMAC Financial Services, analysts suggest it could become a loan machine that gives General Motors and Chrysler a … GMAC says 1st -qtr loss widens to $675M as credit markets weigh on auto, mortgage businesses. May 6th, 2009 GMAC won’t necessarily follow GM to Chapter 11NEW YORK — GMAC Financial Services said Tuesday that it will not be …

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NYT: Citigroup Hires Former S&L Crisis Lobbyist

October 12, 2009

The New York Times takes a look at Citigroup’s hiring of Richard F. Hohlt — a former lobbyist with a controversial past who will now advise the volatile bank on policy issues. The Times reports that the decision has taken many industry insiders by surprise. Hohlt, who served as a high-powered lobbyist for the savings and loan industry in the 1980′s, helped stymie attempts at government oversight leading to that decade’s S&L crisis, which cost taxpayers $150 billion. Now he has been hired as a “political adviser” by Citigroup chairman Richard D. Parsons. Few banks can use advice about navigating the federal government more than Citigroup, a company so hobbled by the crisis that it has essentially become a ward of the state, kept alive through multiple infusions of taxpayer funds. The Times reports that several former regulators expressed shock that Hohlt had been hired by a bank that has received tens of billions of dollars from the federal government. “It is singularly obscene that any recipient of taxpayer assistance through the TARP program during the current financial crisis would hire one of the most infamous lobbyists in the world to represent them,” says William K. Black, a former regulator and top investigator for the definitive Congressional report on the S & L crisis. Citigroup received $45 billion bail out from the federal government last year and is said to be considering shrinking its North American retail banking focus, according to Bloomberg. In an interview last week, Hohlt said he was “simply the messenger” for the savings and loan banks decades ago. “Yeah, mistakes were made,” he said.

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Video: President Obama Gets Lots Of Support

September 18, 2009

There is a lot of support for the main positions that Democrats put forward but there is no support for adding one more cent to the federal tab. (Political Capital)

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Lehman’s Failure: Why We Bailout Banks And Not Families

September 11, 2009

A year ago, century-old Lehman Brothers lapsed into bankruptcy, completely spooking the oligarchy that runs our nation’s financial sector. The oligarchs had fully expected to see Lehman bailed out by the federal government that serves them, especially after the government had dutifully bailed out Bear Stearns earlier in the year. When Lehman was not so served, panic set in, unleashing global economic turmoil and pain.

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U.S. Sees A Profit As Big Banks Repay Bailout Money

August 30, 2009

Nearly a year after the federal rescue of the nation’s biggest banks, taxpayers have begun seeing profits from the hundreds of billions of dollars in aid that many critics thought might never be seen again

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CIT’s Failure A Wake-Up Call For Small Companies

July 22, 2009

he troubles at CIT Group Inc., a key lender to small businesses, underscore the importance of developing back-up plans for borrowing.

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