Sunday, June 30, 2013

Pride Parade London: ?Love (and Marriage)?


Revellers hold high a rainbow flag at last year's event. Picture: Pride London/Flickr Revellers hold high a rainbow flag at last year's event. Picture: Pride London/Flickr

Saturday, June 29, 2013
9:53 AM

More than 150 groups have registered to take part in today?s Pride Parade 2013 in London, as David Cameron said equal marriage reforms will allow gay schoolchildren to ?stand a little bit taller?.

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The Prime Minister told how he hopes youngsters would be able to see that Parliament ?believes their love is the same as anyone else?s love? as thousands of people prepare to hit the capital?s streets for the annual gathering.

Organisers expect the parade and festival, whose theme is ?Love (and Marriage)?, to be the biggest lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender event in London over the last decade.

Among the sponsors is Mayor of London Boris Johnson, who caused a stir after making a controversial joke at a gala dinner for Pride in London about gay men taking their husbands ?up the Arcelor? - a reference to the ArcelorMittal Orbit sculpture in the Olympic Park.

The parade, which begins at 1pm, will travel through the heart of London, along Oxford Street and Regent Street before ending up on Whitehall, and will be followed by events across the city.

Writing in the official Pride guide, Mr Cameron said: ?There will be girls and boys in school today who are worried about being bullied and concerned about what society thinks of them because they are gay or lesbian.

?By making this change they will be able to see that Parliament believes their love is the same as anyone else?s love and that we believe in equality. I think this will enable them to stand that bit taller, be that bit more confident and I am proud of that.?

Michael Salter, chairman of Pride in London, said: ?London is an amazingly diverse city attracting the most talented people from across the world, which is vital to the economic welfare of our city.

?Pride in London is a great opportunity to promote a charity or community group and campaign. This year the theme is Love (and Marriage) to celebrate civil partnerships, parents? love for their children, love of friends and family but it also recognises the Equal Marriage bill going through Parliament.?

London Mayor Mr Johnson, who has provided London LGBT and Community Pride with a grant worth up to ?500,000 to stage the event in 2013 and develop it over five years, said: ?As befits a city with a large LGBT population, London hosts one of the biggest events of the year and I am delighted to support the festivities, which attract people from across the UK and beyond.

?As the parade shows, it is a diverse and multi-faceted community, which makes an enormous contribution to our city?s success, socially, culturally and economically. We should be very proud of London?s reputation as a place where LGBT people can be open about who they are.

?Our city has been at the forefront of the drive towards equality, but let?s not rest on our laurels - of course more needs to be done to tackle prejudice and discrimination. This means standing up against homophobic bullying in the workplace, schools and elsewhere.?

Source: http://www.london24.com/pride_parade_london_love_and_marriage_1_2256830

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The founder of the Scottsboro Boys Museum, Sheila Washington, says paperwork wil...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/LOCAL15News/posts/10151476404301587

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Amanda & Garrett : Magnolia Plantation Wedding

Amanda & Garrett?s crazy gorgeous wedding at Magnolia Plantation was nothing short of fabulous. They enlisted Cindy Zingerella of Engaging Events to coordinate their day and there were a million extra touches included into everything.

Their wedding day began with a first look on the red bridge at Magnolia. One of my favorite shots below is of Amanda and her sister walking towards Garrett, who is in position and waiting to be told that he can turn around. You could tell that their friends were very important to them and their extended wedding party was full of fun and laughter.

They were married under one of the great oaks along the Ashley river. Their dog, Derby, played a huge part in the day and his green seersucker bowtie matched the groomsmen. Amanda?s dress was a light blush Ulla Maija gown ?with lace overlay. It was perfectly understated and exquisite all at the same time.

They had a rocking reception with Two 3 Ways playing and one of the groomsmen had a cameo with some awesome Dave Matthews covers. At the end of the night, they ran under an arch of sparklers to their black cab.

Congratulations you two! Thanks for having us there to capture it all for you!

?

Event Planner: Engaging Events

Ceremony & Reception Venue: Magnolia Plantation

Flowers: Judy Johnston

Catering: Mosaic

Transportation: Black Cab

Videographer: Artistic Eye

Band: Two 3 Ways

Wedding Cake: Jim Smeal

Hair & Makeup: Vanity Salon

My second shooter: Sally Watts?

Source: http://www.leighwebberphotography.com/blog/amanda-garrett-magnolia-plantation-wedding/

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Monday, June 24, 2013

Action needed to help tobacco users quit across the globe

Action needed to help tobacco users quit across the globe [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 24-Jun-2013
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Contact: Ben Norman
Sciencenewsroom@wiley.com
44-012-437-70375
Wiley

More than half of the countries who signed the WHO 2005 Framework Convention on Tobacco Control have not formed plans to help tobacco users quit.

The World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC) is a treaty developed to tackle the global tobacco epidemic that is killing 5 million people each year. It came into force in 2005 and is legally binding in 175 countries. The FCTC requires each country to develop plans to help tobacco users in their population to stop -- plans that should be based on strong scientific evidence for what works.

Two surveys of 121 countries just published in the scientific journal Addiction reveal that more than half of those countries have yet to develop these plans.

Just 53 of the 121 countries surveyed (44%) report having treatment guidelines: 75% of the high-income countries; 42% of upper-middle-income countries, 30% of lower-middle-income countries and only 11% of low-income countries.

Only one-fifth of the countries surveyed had a dedicated budget for treating tobacco dependence.

Commenting on the findings, Professor Robert West, Editor-in-Chief of Addiction, said: "Tobacco dependence treatment is a very inexpensive way of saving lives, much cheaper and more effective than many of the clinical services routinely provided by health systems worldwide. These reports map out for the first time the work that needs to be done to make this treatment accessible to those who could benefit from it. I hope they will be a spur to action."

###


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AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Action needed to help tobacco users quit across the globe [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 24-Jun-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Ben Norman
Sciencenewsroom@wiley.com
44-012-437-70375
Wiley

More than half of the countries who signed the WHO 2005 Framework Convention on Tobacco Control have not formed plans to help tobacco users quit.

The World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (WHO FCTC) is a treaty developed to tackle the global tobacco epidemic that is killing 5 million people each year. It came into force in 2005 and is legally binding in 175 countries. The FCTC requires each country to develop plans to help tobacco users in their population to stop -- plans that should be based on strong scientific evidence for what works.

Two surveys of 121 countries just published in the scientific journal Addiction reveal that more than half of those countries have yet to develop these plans.

Just 53 of the 121 countries surveyed (44%) report having treatment guidelines: 75% of the high-income countries; 42% of upper-middle-income countries, 30% of lower-middle-income countries and only 11% of low-income countries.

Only one-fifth of the countries surveyed had a dedicated budget for treating tobacco dependence.

Commenting on the findings, Professor Robert West, Editor-in-Chief of Addiction, said: "Tobacco dependence treatment is a very inexpensive way of saving lives, much cheaper and more effective than many of the clinical services routinely provided by health systems worldwide. These reports map out for the first time the work that needs to be done to make this treatment accessible to those who could benefit from it. I hope they will be a spur to action."

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-06/w-ant062413.php

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Psychic Game | Glory Academy

A Psychic game facilitates the development of psychic capabilities. It facilitates on the ways and means of becoming a psychic by assessing psychic capacity. Psychic capacity has to encompass a self-assured spirit for it to develop. A psychic game is intended to distinguish one?s capabilities increasing and it is somewhat of a teeming term and can mean several things. One construal relates to questions and comparable pieces which are sometimes provided by widespread magazines. This type of psychic game normally does not cover much to put forward apart from perhaps a little recreational value.

A different construal refers to minor assessments, brief practice meeting or then and there queries a psychic can put for himself so as to constantly guide devoid of too much vigorous exertion. It is helpful for honing a well thought-out method for attaining insights. Another construal brings up diversions as schemes. A diversion is usually a scheme of stability wherein set out elements work together with one other. If concentration is focused, performing such diversion helps build up a feeling of stability and harmony. Equally, more multifaceted schemes can be taken with a good-natured and applied stance which promotes insight.

Several free of charge psychic games are in fact trivial examinations to facilitate find out if an individual holds any dormant psychic gift. These types of psychic games do present several advantages in a way that it can assist in finding out if one possesses a knack and can as well be used to put into practice and promote build up insight. One should be cautious of a psychic game offered online that offer to test one?s capacity with charge.

There are a lot of free psychic games offered online that can be taken without having to put in any amount or reveal any private information.

A psychic game gives slight amusement value. On the other hand, a lot of free psychic games are created on the websites of those claiming to possess psychic capability. If there is curiousity with reference to psychic event, one can freely send an email for any inquiries. If contacting a psychic is being considered, one must be certain to acquire recommendations and then verify information. Given that psychic capability is not easy to assess, it is a better to read comments from former clients. If not, one may be put through a totally diverse type of psychic game.

A psychic game has constantly been among the new fascinating past time. These games have a hitch that some simply cannot appear to solve right. Extrasensory perception, clairvoyance or any other psychic power is not the motivating influence of a psychic game. It is the pleasure of being enthralled that makes a difference eventually. Viewpoints can be set to make a person coincide with psychic gamers? standpoint, but it is in the intricacy of the set viewpoints that provides it with its fault. A person must find gaps in the protective covering, marks where senses are deceived and by that, one will effortlessly recognize the parts to discover themselves gradually answering in accord.

Source: http://www.glorychildrenacademy.com/psychic-game/

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Wikileaks Traveling With Edward Snowden - Business Insider

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REUTERS/Olivia Harris

Sarah Harrison, assistant to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, thanks supporters outside Ecuador's embassy in west London on June 21, 2012.

Russia's Interfax news agency reports that NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden is hanging out at the Russian airport, waiting for a flight to Cuba, and is accompanied by a woman named?Sarah Harrison.

Harrison is the?closest adviser to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who orchestrated the release of reams of classified U.S. government documents and other embarrassing information.

Wikileaks confirmed: "Miss Harrison has courageously assisted Mr. Snowden with his lawful departure from Hong Kong and is accompanying Mr. Snowden in his passage to safety."

Harrison is a U.K. journalist, legal researcher, and?section editor for WikiLeaks who has been with the organization for more than two years. She was assigned to Assange ahead of WikiLeaks' publication of the Afghan war logs.

An interesting point from Dominic Rushe of The Guardian?(emphasis ours):

Despite her closeness to Assange, Harrison may seem a strange choice to accompany Snowden, as unlike several people close to WikiLeaks ? most notably human rights lawyer Jennifer Robinson ? Harrison has no legal qualifications or background.

She previously worked as an investigative researcher for The Bureau of Investigative Journalism and the Centre for Investigative Journalism.

Rushe also notes that?the "direct intervention in Snowden's situation marks a departure in practice for WikiLeaks ? which has previously stressed its arms-length relationship with sources ? but is consistent with the organisation's world view on protecting and supporting whistleblowers."

WikiLeaks is equating the situations of Snowden and Assange as former Spanish Judge Baltasar Garzon, legal director of WikiLeaks and lawyer for Julian Assange, said Wikileaks is "interested in preserving Mr. Snowden?s rights and protecting him as a person. What is being done to Mr Snowden and to Mr Julian Assange - for making or facilitating disclosures in the public interest - is an assault against the people".

In August Ecuador granted political asylum to Assange, who is currently holed up in the country's London embassy. Snowden has requested asylum in Ecuador.

Here's Harrison in July 2012 reading a statement from?Assange ? who, like Snowden, is avoiding U.S. prosecution for espionage?? about the release of the Syria Files i.e., emails from the Syrian government.

Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/wikileaks-traveling-with-edward-snowden-2013-6

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Monday, June 17, 2013

Big Brother may not be listening, but he's watching: Why metadata snooping is legal

By Bob Sullivan, Columnist, NBC News

The debate about the NSA spying program feels like a bad game of charades. Members of Congress and leaders of three-letter agencies keep saying how much they welcome public debate about spying, then immediately regretting that they're unable to talk in public about it. Winks and ear pulls follow. But one phrase has permeated the discussion over and over.

?Nobody is listening to your phone calls.?

It?s a rare statement of clarity in an otherwise murky discussion. President Obama said it in his first comment about the NSA scandal, and it?s been echoed by members of Congress and law enforcement agency officials for days, with good reason. U.S. surveillance law has long drawn a distinction between the content of communication and information?about?that content, the ?metadata.? For example, government agents can read the address on a piece of U.S. mail without much legal wrangling; opening the envelope technically requires a judge-approved warrant.

By drawing a hard line around this distinction ? you might call it "watching" vs. "listening" ? when it comes to phone calls, email and other digital interactions, NSA defenders think they are on high legal ground. But they also understand what most of the public does not: In the age of Big Data, collecting information about our conversations yields more intelligence than observing the content of the conversations themselves. And it has the added benefit of?sounding?less intrusive.

As my NBC News colleagues?and?others?have persuasively argued, big data crunchers can play the ?six degrees of separation? game with metadata, using, for example,?a huge database of email transactions to connect you with potential suspects, something transcripts of emails might never yield. Phone call patterns reveal your whereabouts and life habits in a way that a conversation never could.

This is why some argue the disclosure that Verizon is sending lists of millions of phone call records daily to the NSA?(reportedly along with other telecom firms) is the most disturbing revelation of the recent flurry. Some privacy advocates go so far to say that the legal distinction between content and metadata is now meaningless.

But it wasn?t always that way. The distinction evolved logically enough, through legislation and debate, long before anyone could fathom the potential value of 100 million phone call records.

Wiretaps and warrants
The Fourth Amendment stems from a simple idea: Law enforcement officials can observe your home from the street, but in most cases?they can't barge in unless they prove to a judge they need to. In the digital world, the line between knocking on your door and barging in is much more complicated. And as the analogy breaks down, so too it seems has Fourth Amendment protection.

Telephone calls were the first technology to attack the notion. Are calls passing through wires inside or outside your home? Back in 1979, the U.S. Supreme Court clarified this issue and ruled that information?about?telephone calls ? such as numbers dialed, or the length of phone calls ? was distinct from the content of phone calls, and thus was not protected by the Fourth Amendment.?Phone call information has come to be known as "pen register" data, a term that reaches back to the time of the telegraph, when records of transmissions was kept with ink on paper.

When the 1986 Electronic Privacy Information Act essentially codified these findings, Congress clarified that law enforcement officials can obtain data kept by a pen register with a simple subpoena, which doesn?t require a judicial review. Listening in on the content of phone calls ? using a wiretap ? required a finding of probable cause from a judge.

Fast forward 25 years, and the "pen register" vs. "wiretap" distinction remains a critical element of all surveillance debates. The pen register metaphor has been extended ? most specifically by the original Patriot Act in 2001 ??to cover a lot of other digital-age "metadata,? including email headers and cellphone location information. Law enforcement has come to expect liberal, easy access to metadata, evidenced by research last year from the American Civil Liberties Union, which?revealed that even local cops make thousands of requests for the information every year.?Cellphone companies have even set up self-serve Web portals so cops can easily obtain the data.

The Supreme Court explained its pen register vs. wiretap distinction in 1979 by calling on the "third-party doctrine." Americans lose their expectation of privacy, the court reasoned, whenever they voluntarily give information to a third party, such as a phone company. Telling the phone company who you call by dialing a number is enough to surrender your expectation of privacy that you are contacting that person, the court held. It did, however, preserve the letter analogy from law governing U.S. mail. That is, only what's on the envelope's outside is fair game.

But emails sent and stored on services such as Gmail seem to fall in between these two legal categories. Is the email content, like a call conversation or a letter sealed in an envelope? Or it is data freely given to a third party? Congress tried to split that baby with the Stored Communications Act back in 1986. The law?s messy subtleties are still the subject of debate in federal court, but suffice it to say it created some situations under which law enforcement officials can peek at any data given to third parties, including email, without needing to show probable cause.

This means law enforcement officials are sometimes not required to ask before they barge into your virtual home.

Foreign threats, domestic calls?
Enter the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, first passed in 1978. Its basic premise is simple: It made clear that U.S. security agencies didn't have to worry about the Fourth Amendment when surveilling foreign nationals overseas.

Over time, as the legislation has been updated, that definition has expanded to mean U.S. spies can monitor any communication, as long as they have good enough reason to believe that one of the parties involved is a foreign national on foreign ground. A 2006?update to FISA, renewed in January, explicitly permits warrantless electronic wiretapping of foreigners for up to one year, among other broadened powers.

Depending on circumstance, some FISA monitoring requires prior approval of a special, secret FISA court, and some only requires after-the-fact notification. The distinction appears moot, however. In its?annual report to Congress on April 30, the Department of Justice said it made 1,789 requests to conduct electronic surveillance in 2012. None were denied, although 40 were "modified."

The 1986 laws don't apply to requests that come before the FISA court, but politicians often defend the NSA using the pen register vs. wiretap logic. Americans have ? like it or not ? tolerated the easy release of metadata for some time.?Lawyers have always been more concerned with wiretaps, and the public has been conditioned, say privacy advocates, to think that the release of metadata has no impact on our Fourth Amendment rights.

That might be a mistake.

It?s almost certainly true that no one from the federal government is listening to your phone calls, or reading your emails. But this assurance should provide you with only cold comfort. The NSA has millions, and probably billions, of pieces of information about you and your neighbors filed away ? that much is clear from the leaked Verizon FISA court order. Technology has long outgrown 50 years of U.S. surveillance law designed to protect you. Who cares if no one is listening? They are most certainly watching.

Follow Bob Sullivan on Twitter or Facebook.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653377/s/2d566111/l/0Lredtape0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A60C150C1893860A40Ebig0Ebrother0Emay0Enot0Ebe0Elistening0Ebut0Ehes0Ewatching0Ewhy0Emetadata0Esnooping0Eis0Elegal0Dlite/story01.htm

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Teaching complete evolutionary stories increases learning

June 15, 2013 ? Many students have difficulty understanding and explaining how evolution operates. In search of better ways to teach the subject, researchers at Michigan State University developed complete evolutionary case studies spanning the gamut from the molecular changes underlying an evolving characteristic to their genetic consequences and effects in populations. The researchers, Peter J. T. White, Merle K. Heidemann, and James J. Smith, then incorporated two of the scenarios into a cellular and molecular biology course taught to undergraduates at the university's Lyman Briggs College.

When the students' understanding was tested, the results showed that students who had understood an integrated evolutionary scenario were better at explaining and describing how evolution works in general.

The results of the research, described in the July issue of BioScience, are significant because evolution is not usually taught in this comprehensive, soup-to-nuts way. Rather, instructors teach examples of parts of the evolutionary process, such as the ecological effects of natural selection or the rules of genetic inheritance, separately. It appears that this fragmentation makes it harder for students to understand the process as a whole.

White and his colleagues note that "surprisingly few" comprehensive evolutionary study systems have been described, although the number is growing. The two employed in the BioScience study were about the evolution of sweet taste and wrinkled skin in domestic garden peas, and the evolution of light or dark coat color in beach mice living on light or dark sand. Students were tested on the beach mouse coat color scenario as well as on evolutionary principles in general. Understanding the beach mouse example was a better predictor of good responses to questions about evolution in general than was performance on the course as a whole. This suggests that improvements in evolutionary understanding came mostly from studying the integrated evolution scenarios.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Institute of Biological Sciences.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Peter J.T. White, James J. Smith, and Merle K.Heidemann. A New Integrative Approach to Evolution Education. BioScience, 2013 DOI: 10.1525/bio.2013.63.7.11

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/MOMF52XZBwA/130615152417.htm

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Friday, June 14, 2013

Report: 73 Syrian officers, families cross border

(AP) ? Turkey's state-run news agency says 73 Syrian military officers ? including seven generals and 20 colonels ? have crossed the border with their families "seeking refuge" in Turkey.

The Anadolu Agency said Friday that the group totaled 202 people. It said they arrived in the town of Reyhanli and were taken to a Turkish refugee camp that houses military officers who have defected from the Syrian army.

The report did not say when they had arrived.

Turkish Foreign Ministry officials and the local administrator in Reyhanli could not immediately confirm the report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-14-EU-Turkey-Syria/id-2742e50bbea04c659d0f085e913671a8

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Lululemon's Day says CEO search under way, other executives to be named soon

By Solarina Ho

TORONTO (Reuters) - Lululemon Athletica Inc's outgoing chief executive said on Thursday the upscale yogawear retailer has begun its search for a new leader and will soon fill other senior positions.

A chief executive search firm has been selected, Christine Day told an investor conference in Chicago.

Day stunned markets on Monday when she said she would step down once a replacement was found. Lululemon shares have plummeted some 20 percent since.

The stock was up 4.3 percent at $67.12 on the Nasdaq and up nearly 4 percent at C$68.22 in Toronto trading.

Day's departure follows the March recall of the company's signature yoga pants because they were too see-through, which led to the departure of its chief product officer and put a blemish on Day's leadership.

"I want to give you that assurance that morale is high, that we're connected, and the reality is, I'm coming back to work on Monday. And I'm there until the next CEO is in place. So it is business as usual for us at Lululemon," said Day. She said earlier she notified the board only last Friday of her decision.

Analysts who spoke to company directors have said they were convinced Day was not forced out.

"We interviewed three Board members and it was clear all were enthralled by Ms. Day, her contribution to the (company) and LULU's performance," said John Zolidis, an analyst with The Buckingham Research Group, in a research note.

Day, a former Starbucks executive, was behind the Vancouver-based company's extraordinary growth over the last half decade, turning a niche retailer into a high-profile international brand with big ambitions.

For many shoppers and investors, Day embodied Lululemon, with its distinctive community-oriented culture and fiercely loyal customers.

"(The board) took a chance on me. You know, I was a first-time CEO, but they saw the qualities in me that have created the last five years. And I am confident they will see the qualities in the next person to deliver the next five and 10 years," said Day. "I am not the culture of Lululemon."

Day also said that the search to fill other senior executive positions was winding down. The vacated chief product officer was split into two roles, while a new logistics role was added.

Lululemon is halfway through its process of finding an executive vice president of design and merchandising. It has narrowed its search for the senior vice presidents of product operations and logistics to two candidates each.

It also posted about its CEO search on its Facebook page, with a big red picture with the message "CEO wanted, apply within." By Thursday afternoon, the picture had attracted 1,448 likes and 247 shares.

(Reporting by Solarina Ho; Editing by Janet Guttsman and Nick Zieminski)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lululemons-day-says-ceo-search-under-way-other-200129410.html

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Monday, June 10, 2013

Grandmother says she watched officer shoot girl, 7

DETROIT (AP) ? Beneath a multi-colored quilt of Disney cartoon characters, 7-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones lay peacefully on the living room couch of her grandmother's first-floor flat on Detroit's east side.

Mertilla Jones lay at the other end, having recently put the girl to sleep.

Within seconds ? maybe as few as three ? a stun grenade smashed through a window, exploding over the couch. Armed, black-clad and masked police officers swarmed into the living room and, moments later, Aiyana lay bleeding to death with a gunshot wound to her head.

"As soon as they came in, their guns were just pointing right there, and he pulled the trigger," Aiyana's grandmother, Mertilla Jones said Monday of Joseph Weekley during the Detroit police officer's involuntary manslaughter trial in Wayne County Circuit Court.

"I seen the light leave out of her eyes and the blood started gushing out her mouth and she was dead," testified the 50-year-old Jones, who then broke into tears.

For members of the Detroit police special response team, the May 2010 nighttime raid on the two-family flat on Lillibridge was one of hundreds they had taken part in as a unit. This time they were being shadowed by a crew from the reality TV show, "The First 48."

Armed with an MP5 submachine gun and behind a shield, team veteran Weekley was selected as point man for the operation ? tasked with being first into the home in search of murder suspect, Chauncey Owens.

Weekley has said his gun accidentally fired when Mertilla Jones bumped into him or grabbed it. Prosecutors say he was negligent in failing to control his weapon.

Jones testified she rolled onto the floor after the noise and flash from the grenade, and was on her stomach when Weekley stormed in.

She said Aiyana's head was propped against the armrest of the couch as she slept and Weekley was holding the gun right next to the armrest when his weapon discharged.

"The gun went off and shot her in the head. I started screaming and hollering. ... 'Y'all done killed my grandbaby,'" Jones told the courtroom.

Special response team member Larry Davis testified Monday that Weekley told him after the shooting that someone grabbed his weapon.

"I told him things would be OK. That's about it," Davis said.

Last week, a neighbor testified that he tried to tell officers before they raided the home that children were inside. Under cross-examination Monday, Jones said the officers were negligent.

"They knew there were children in there. So why would they come in there like that? They came to kill, and they killed a 7-year-old."

Davis, the officer who tossed the stun grenade, said the team was unaware children were inside.

When asked by prosecutors if knowing children were in the house would have forced police to change raid tactics, Davis responded: "Probably not."

It was Owens they were after. Two days before the raid 17-year-old Je'rean Blake was standing outside a neighborhood convenience store when he was shot to death following a dispute.

Mertilla Jones testified that Owens lived in the upper unit with her daughter, LaKrystal Sanders. Police found Owens in the upstairs flat and he was arrested.

Owens pleaded guilty in April 2011 to second-degree murder and was sentenced to 28 years in prison for Blake's slaying.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/grandmother-says-she-watched-officer-shoot-girl-7-164739315.html

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Ayotte to back immigration overhaul

FILE - In this March 15, 2013, file photo Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference in National Harbor, Md. On a Sunday morning talk show June 9, 2013, Ayotte said she will back the bipartisan overhaul of the nation's immigration system. She said the immigration system is broken and needs to be fixed, and that the Senate proposal secures the border and provides a "tough but fair" way for immigrants to earn citizenship. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

FILE - In this March 15, 2013, file photo Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., speaks at the Conservative Political Action Conference in National Harbor, Md. On a Sunday morning talk show June 9, 2013, Ayotte said she will back the bipartisan overhaul of the nation's immigration system. She said the immigration system is broken and needs to be fixed, and that the Senate proposal secures the border and provides a "tough but fair" way for immigrants to earn citizenship. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta, File)

(AP) ? Republican Sen. Kelly Ayotte on Sunday said she would support the bipartisan immigration overhaul under debate in the Senate and criticized "the broken immigration system we have now" as "unworthy of a great nation."

In a television interview and in a longer statement on her website, the New Hampshire senator became one of the first Republicans who didn't write the bill to line up behind the proposal that would offer a pathway to citizenship for the estimated 11 million immigrants living in the country illegally. Ayotte's support helps the bill's advocates move closer to the 60 votes needed to avoid a filibuster.

"The status quo isn't working. It's de facto amnesty. We need immigration reform that serves the best interests of our country," Ayotte wrote on her website.

A bipartisan group of eight senators ? four Republicans and four Democrats ? drafted the bill.

The Senate Judiciary Committee approved the measure last month with support from two of the Republican authors, along with Sen. Orrin Hatch. However, the Utah Republican says he will vote for the measure in the full Senate only if it includes higher penalties and delayed Social Security benefits for immigrants living illegally in the country.

Separately, Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., said he will vote for the bill he helped write only with stronger border security than the bill already includes.

As drafted, the legislation also creates a low-skilled guest-worker program, expands the number of visas available for high-tech workers and de-emphasizes family ties in the system for legal immigration that has been in place for decades.

The legislation creates a 13-year route to citizenship for an estimated 11 million immigrants currently living in the United States illegally.

The bill is a "tough but fair way" for the estimated 11 million to come "out of the shadows" and "earn citizenship ? go to the back of the line, pay taxes, pass a criminal background check, learn English," Ayotte told CBS' "Face the Nation."

It also sets border security goals that the government must meet before immigrants living in the U.S. illegally are granted any change in status.

"As a nation of immigrants, we must remember that we're all descended from people who came here from somewhere else in search of a better life," she said.

"But the broken immigration system we have now is unworthy of a great nation," she added. "It's time for Washington to tackle this problem head on."

Despite support from the White House, the AFL-CIO labor unions and the pro-business Chamber of Commerce, the bill's passage is by no means assured. Sixty votes are usually required to end Senate debate and consider adoption. There are currently 54 senators, including two independents, in the Democratic caucus, and 45 Republicans.

Leaders in the Democratic-led Senate want a final vote on the legislation by July 4.

The Republican-led House, meanwhile, is taking a smaller, piecemeal approach to the issue. Many of the components of the Senate bill are likely to find strong opposition there, giving House Republicans greater sway even before the Senate votes.

"What they have in the Senate has zero chance of passing in the House," said Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky. "So, why not come to a conservative like myself and say, he's willing to work with you, why not work with me to make the bill closer to what would be acceptable in the House?"

Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., said he remained hopeful a bill could be passed but said the bill would have to see changes if it stood any chance in the House.

"It doesn't do anybody any good just to pass in the Senate," Johnson said.

Immigration also has deep political implications.

In 2012, President Barack Obama won re-election with the backing of 71 percent of Hispanic voters and 73 percent of Asian voters. A thwarted immigration overhaul could send those voting blocs more solidly to Democrats' side in future elections. That has led some Republican lawmakers to support immigration reform, but the party's conservative base still opposes any legislation that would create a pathway to citizenship for immigrants living here illegally.

Paul and Johnson were on "Fox News Sunday."

___

Follow Philip Elliott on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/philip_elliott

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-06-09-US-Immigration/id-4c97a03d399d42afb7110665e03dd387

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Iran says it sets up space monitoring center

(AP) ? Iran said Sunday that it set up its first space tracking center to monitor objects passing in orbit overhead, the breakthrough claimed by the Islamic Republic in its space program.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who inaugurated the facility near the town of Delijan some 200 kilometers (125 miles) south of Tehran, said the center will help the country to manage "activities of satellites" but was also capable of monitoring "very remote space," according to the official IRNA press agency.

Iran says it wants to put its own satellites into orbit to monitor natural disasters in the earthquake-prone nation, improve telecommunications and expand military surveillance in the region. The U.S. and its allies worry that the same technology could also be used to develop long-range missiles.

Defense Minister Gen. Ahmad Vahidi said the center was for Iran's space-related security but that Tehran would also share the acquired data with other countries, the official IRNA news agency reported.

Iran frequently announces technological breakthroughs that cannot be independently verified. It has long pursued space ambitions aimed at putting its own satellite into orbit as well as a manned space flight.

"The base is aimed at securing the country's space facilities and monitoring space objects especially satellites that pass overhead," Vahidi was quoted as saying.

The country has nine command and control ground stations for its space program including one in Syria, the country's main Arab regional ally. The rest are located mainly in the central and southern parts of the country.

Vahidi said the Delijan center used radar, electro-optic and radio tracking.

In one of its most recent high-profile space announcements, Iran said in February that it send a monkey into space.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-06-09-Iran-Space/id-22e171af475d4d118bc86e8bfafbe1ae

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Sprout's Original Life Farm Tour (and other food/drink events ...

bittermelon.jpgSprout's Original Life Farm Tour: On June 15, Sprout gives a tour of Original Life Farm; an aquaponic farm where fish and plants are raised together in harmony. And o, this isn't some sort of sci-fi utopian hoopla involving plexiglass bio domes and whatnot, but a practical system proven to produce higher quality food. There'll even be a presentation on the differences between traditional, organic, and Original Food, and the always China-relevant topic of food safety and the future of agriculture. You'll get to tour the aquaponics system and even take some Original Life food home with you! Reservations are essential so RSVP to events@sproutlifestyle.com.
180RMB in advance + 200RMB at the door // 1-5pm // Details will be provided to participants in the RSVP reply.

Yanping Lu Market: Every second and fourth Saturday of each month, head on down to Yanping Lu and enjoy a bigger/better version of the Jiashan Market. The foodapalooza features goodies from Fat Mama, Amelia Heaton-Renshaw's Little Blue Cart, Portuguese newcomer Skioco, and more. Don't forget to pick up gifts like fresh crafted pasta from the Art of Pasta and wasabi cheese for your friends!
Free // 11am-5pm // 425 Yanping Lu, near Changping Lu Jingan district (??????425?, ????).

Churrascaria at Unico: On Saturday, June 15 superchef Mauro Colagreco of Mirazur in France returns to Unico and turns the place into a Churrascaria for a night. Pork out with your fork out on some all-you-can-eat Argentinian barbecue along with a glass of cachaca and a glass of wine.
390RMB (+10% service charge) // Unico // Three on the Bund, 2/F, 3 Zhongshan Dong Yi Lu, near Guangdong Lu (?????3?????2?, ????).

Head to our calendar for more.

Benjamin Cost is Shanghaiist's Food Editor. Email tips, recommendations, and news updates on Shanghai's dining scene to food@shanghaiist.com.

Source: http://shanghaiist.com/2013/06/09/sprouts_original_life_farm_tour_and.php

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Thursday, June 6, 2013

More fresh air in classrooms means fewer absences

June 5, 2013 ? If you suspect that opening windows to let in fresh air might be good for you, a new study by scientists at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) has confirmed your hunch. Analyzing extensive data on ventilation rates collected from more than 150 classrooms in California over two years, the researchers found that bringing classroom ventilation rates up to the state-mandated standard may reduce student absences due to illness by approximately 3.4 percent.

With this reduction in student absence, California's school districts would gain $33 million annually in attendance-linked funding and families would avoid an estimated $80 million in caregiver costs due to having a sick child at home. In contrast to these large potential benefits of raising classroom ventilation rates, the associated energy costs would increase by only $4 million annually. "Our overall findings suggest that, if you increased ventilation rates of classrooms up to the state standard, or even above it, you would get net benefits to schools, to families, to everybody, at very low cost," said Berkeley Lab scientist Mark Mendell. "It's really a win-win situation."

The findings were published in the journal, Indoor Air, in an article titled "Association of classroom ventilation with reduced illness absence: a prospective study in California elementary schools." Mendell was the lead author. His co-authors were Ekaterina Eliseeva, Molly Davies, Michael Spears, Agnes Lobscheid, William Fisk and Michael Apte, all of Berkeley Lab. It is the largest U.S. study to date to look at ventilation rates in classrooms.

The Berkeley Lab scientists collected data from 162 3rd, 4th and 5th grade classrooms in 28 schools in three California school districts in the Central Valley, the Bay Area and the south coast. They found that more than half of the classrooms did not meet state ventilation standards. California building codes require schools to provide a ventilation rate of 7.1 liters per second per person, or about 15 cubic feet per minute per person, which is also the California standard for offices and retail stores, assuming the default occupant density. (The ventilation rate is a flow rate, measuring how much outside air is brought indoors, whether through natural ventilation, such as open windows, or mechanical ventilation, using ventilation system fans.)

The study found that ventilation rates varied widely across the districts, within districts, and even within schools. Portable classrooms, on average, had less ventilation. In the Central Valley, where temperatures are more extreme in both summer and winter, so that all classrooms are air-conditioned and windows are closed and ventilation rates kept low most of the year to save on heating and cooling costs, ventilation rates were below the state standard 95 percent of the time.

School districts provided data on daily absences due to illness for each classroom. The researchers calculated ventilation rates based on measured carbon dioxide levels indoors and estimated levels outdoors. "You can think of CO2 as a tracer gas," Mendell said. "Occupants emit CO2, then by doing some calculations we can figure out how much outdoor air ventilation the room has."

Indoor CO2 levels were based on readings from an environmental sensor in each classroom that measured carbon dioxide levels as five-minute averages. The data was transmitted via Internet to the researchers. "This new device is what made this study possible," Mendell said. "In the only previous study, they took measurements on just one day in each classroom and assumed it was the same for the whole school year. In this study, we could measure every day all year in hundreds of classrooms without having to travel there each day."

The overall finding from all three districts was that for every additional 1 liter/second/person of ventilation provided to a classroom, illness absence declined by 1.6 percent, with the benefit continuing at least up to 15 liters/second/person, more than double the state standard. "It turns out 1.6 percent fewer absences is very important when you're talking about lots of people," Mendell said.

The researchers extrapolated that finding using two assumptions: that the findings represented true causal relationships and that all K-12 classrooms in the state have the average ventilation rate of 4 liters/second/person estimated from carbon dioxide data from a prior state-wide survey. They calculated that raising all classrooms to the state standard of 7.1 liters/second/person would reduce illness absence by 3.4 percent and increase overall State funding to schools by $33 million. (California schools receive roughly $29.50 a day in funding for every student who attends on a given day.) Further increases in ventilation rates, at least up to 15 liters/second/person, would result in additional benefits.

The researchers noted there were likely other benefits not included in the study, such as reduced costs related to sick leave for teachers and staff and reduced health care costs for students. They also noted that, in most parts of California, replacing ventilation equipment would probably not be necessary to increase the ventilation rates.

However, the researchers don't know how or why poor ventilation results in more illness absences, or if there is even a causal connection. "We saw a correlation, but we don't know if it's directly causal," said Mendell, who is an epidemiologist.

Still, the Berkeley Lab researchers found that the correlation between ventilation rates and illness absence was consistent across school districts, climate zones and ventilation types.

Previous studies in office buildings and dormitories have provided some evidence linking ventilation rates to transmission of infectious respiratory diseases, such as flu and the common cold. However when the Berkeley Lab researchers looked at the lag time between the ventilation rates and absence, the data did not support this. Instead, the correlation between ventilation rate and illness absence was strongest with a 21-day lag, rather than the 3 or 7 days one might expect with transmission of respiratory infections.

"We speculate that perhaps chronically poor ventilation exposes you to more of the chemicals and irritants inside classrooms, such as from building materials, furniture, equipment and cleaning products, and maybe that chronic exposure makes you more susceptible to getting respiratory infections," Mendell said.

He said they hope to do further studies that include students of other ages, different climate zones, more specific data on illness type and the effects of outdoor air pollutants, which were not included in this study. A follow-up paper on the effects of ventilation rates on test scores is expected soon.

This study was supported by funding from the California Energy Commission.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/Sw5b5wQ7yRI/130605144503.htm

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Eastman to Blumenauer: ?Beyond preposterous? (Powerlineblog)

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It wasn't always this bad. The growth of political polarization, in 1 chart. (Washington Post)

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Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Gunmen in Iraq ambush, shoot dead 14 travelers

Shiite pilgrims carry a symbolic coffin at the holy shrine of the Imam Moussa al-Kadhim during the annual commemoration of the saint's death at Kazimiyah district of Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, June 5, 2013. (AP Photo/ Karim Kadim)

Shiite pilgrims carry a symbolic coffin at the holy shrine of the Imam Moussa al-Kadhim during the annual commemoration of the saint's death at Kazimiyah district of Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, June 5, 2013. (AP Photo/ Karim Kadim)

Shiite pilgrims gather at the holy shrine of the Imam Moussa al-Kadhim during the annual commemoration of the saint's death at Kazimiyah district of Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, June 5, 2013. (AP Photo/ Karim Kadim)

(AP) ? Gunmen ambushed a group of travelers at a fake checkpoint at a remote desert site in western Iraq on Wednesday and killed at least 14 of them, according to Iraqi officials, in what appeared to be the latest blow in sectarian violence gripping the country.

The gunmen, apparently looking for Shiites to kill, struck near the town of Nukhaib. The town, near the site of a deadly 2011 ambush, sits at a desert crossroads west of the Shiite holy city of Karbala, but is in the Sunni-dominated Anbar province.

The assailants manning the fake highway checkpoint checked the identities of travelers, presumably to identify their sect based on their names, according to officials. Police said they found blood-stained IDs on the ground identifying some of the dead as coming from Karbala, 100 kilometers (60 miles) south of Baghdad.

Officials said the 14 victims of Wednesday's attack were shot in the head. They said the dead included police and soldiers, as well as civilian residents of the overwhelmingly Shiite Karbala.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information to reporters.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for Wednesday's attack. Iraqi officials believe Sunni insurgents including al-Qaida's Iraq branch as well as loyalists of Saddam Hussein's former regime are responsible for much of the violence against Shiites and government security forces, which are dominated by the Muslim sect.

Mohammed al-Moussawi, a provincial councilman in Karbala, confirmed that four of the dead ambushed were civilians from the province.

The area around Nukhaib, near where Wednesday's killings happened, was the site of an eerily similar September 2011 ambush on a bus carrying Shiite pilgrims.

In that earlier attack, uniformed gunmen set up a fake checkpoint and hijacked a bus from Karbala that was carrying Shiite pilgrims heading to the Sayida Zeinab shrine in Syria. They told the women and children to stay aboard while 22 men were marched out and shot dead further down the road.

Wednesday's attack came at the end of a Shiite commemoration of a revered eighth century saint, Imam Moussa al-Kadhim, believed to be buried in Baghdad. Authorities imposed tight security measures in the Iraqi capital to protect pilgrims, and no serious violence was reported there during the commemoration.

Violence has spiked in Iraq in recent weeks, raising fears of a return to widespread sectarian bloodshed.

According to the United Nations, at least 1,045 Iraqi civilians and security personnel were killed in May. The tally surpassed April's 712 killed, making May the deadliest month recorded since June 2008.

Iraq witnessed its bloodiest bout of violence between 2006 and 2007, when the country was on the brink of civil war and armed men freely roamed the streets of Baghdad.

Killers frequently used victims' names to identify them as Sunni or Shiite at the height of the conflict ? often targeting motorists at fake checkpoints ? and forgers sold fake ID cards bearing false names identified with a particular sect. At the peak of the sectarian violence between Shiites and Sunnis, more than 3,000 people died each month.

___

Associated Press writer Adam Schreck contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-06-05-ML-Iraq/id-a590f76948194b84a59c3bbb5ded05a5

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Asia stocks up slightly on Fed hopes

A man looks at an electronic stock board outside a securities firm Monday, June 3, 2013, in Tokyo. Uncertainty about the U.S. Federal Reserve's next course of action and a sharp, sudden plunge on Wall Street sent Asian stock markets lower Monday. Japan?s Nikkei 225 index lost 2.2 percent to 13,475.64, echoing U.S. stock markets losses Friday. The Dow dropped more than 200 points, its worst drop in six weeks. (AP Photo/Junji Kurokawa)

A man looks at an electronic stock board outside a securities firm Monday, June 3, 2013, in Tokyo. Uncertainty about the U.S. Federal Reserve's next course of action and a sharp, sudden plunge on Wall Street sent Asian stock markets lower Monday. Japan?s Nikkei 225 index lost 2.2 percent to 13,475.64, echoing U.S. stock markets losses Friday. The Dow dropped more than 200 points, its worst drop in six weeks. (AP Photo/Junji Kurokawa)

(AP) ? Asian stock markets recovered modestly Tuesday, after negative economic news out of the U.S. was neutralized by the belief among many investors that the U.S. central bank would maintain its stimulus program to help the economy.

Japan's Nikkei 225 index rose 0.3 percent to 13,305.72. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.1 percent to 4,893.90. Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 0.1 percent to 22,312.52. South Korea's Kospi fell 0.3 percent to 1,983.21.

A report that showed U.S. manufacturing activity at its lowest level in nearly four years kept Wall Street afloat, oddly enough, by convincing investors that the Federal Reserve would not scale back on its massive bond-buying effort.

Speculation about the Fed's intentions regarding its program, called quantitative easing or QE, has sent stocks on a rollercoaster ride in recent sessions. The Fed purchases $85 billion a month in bonds and the proceeds eventually translate into bank loans intended to spur borrowing and spending. All that extra cash sloshing around the economy pushes interest rates down, which makes stocks more appealing to investors.

Worries that the good times might end if the Fed pulls the QE plug sent Asian stocks plummeting on Monday. But a weaker-than-anticipated U.S. manufacturing survey released later in the day led investors to believe it is more likely that the Fed would continue with QE, a positive for stocks. Wall Street closed higher.

Figures released Monday suggested the eurozone may be stabilizing somewhat. The monthly manufacturing purchasing managers' index from financial information provider Markit rose to 48.3 in May from the initial estimate of 47.8 ? the upward revision takes the index nearer to the 50 threshold between expansion and contraction.

On Monday in New York, the Dow Jones industrial average closed up 0.9 percent, at 15,254.03. The Standard & Poor's 500 index rose 0.6 percent to 1,640.42. The Nasdaq composite index rose 1 percent to 3,465.37.

Benchmark oil for July delivery fell 40 cents to $93.06 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract rose $1.48 to close at $93.45 per barrel on the Nymex on Monday.

In currencies, the euro fell to $1.3061 from $1.3076 late Monday in New York. The dollar rose to 99.59 yen from 99.45 yen.

___

Follow Pamela Sampson on Twitter at http://twitter.com/pamelasampson

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-06-03-World%20Markets/id-14041c3852094d88b8a6fd02a7d463e0

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Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Huntsville Hospital cancels raises for about 8,000 employees ...

We recognize that they impact you and your families and we wish we did not have to make such difficult choices.

HUNTSVILLE, Alabama - About 8,000 Huntsville Hospital employees won't be getting raises in the coming budget year and will also have to pay more for their health insurance.

CEO David Spillers notified employees on Friday that hospital leaders were forced to make some "difficult decisions" because of flat patient volumes, rising employee health insurance costs - expected to top $50 million next year - and declining reimbursements from Medicare, Medicaid and private insurers.

"It is a very challenging time for the health care industry," Spillers wrote in a memo to the hospital's workforce. "People in our country want all the fabulous service and technology we can provide when a loved one is in need. The problem is no one wants to pay us fairly to provide those services."

"All of this leads us to little choice but to continue to manage our expenses prudently and look for ways to reduce our operational costs."

Spillers said the following changes will take effect July 1, at the start of the hospital's new budget year:

  • Salaries will be frozen at current levels, with no possibility of merit increases or cost-of-living adjustments.
  • Employees covered by the hospital's health insurance plan will see their monthly premiums for both single and family coverage jump by about $40. Spillers said $13.48 of the increase is directly related to Affordable Care Act mandates.
  • The hospital will no longer make a basic annual contribution to employee retirement accounts equaling 5 percent of a person's salary. However, it will increase its matching contribution to 100 percent of their first 5 percent of salary saved by employees.
  • Beginning with the July 7 pay period, employees will no longer accrue earned time off while taking earned time off. However, some staffers with large ETO reserves who had been required to take three days off each month will have to use only two days of ETO each month in the new budget year.

The changes affect about 8,000 employees of Huntsville Hospital, Huntsville Hospital for Women & Children, Madison Hospital and Decatur Morgan Hospital's Decatur General and Parkway Medical Center campuses.

"None of these decisions were easy to make," Spillers wrote. "We recognize that they impact you and your families and we wish we did not have to make such difficult choices. We encourage you to keep up your good work and we are confident we will get through this period.

"Huntsville Hospital has been in business for 118 years because of the great care we have provided," he wrote, "and because we have made wise but difficult decisions in our history."

Spokesman Burr Ingram said the hospital is dealing with a "healthcare world that has turned upside down," including $4.5 million in recent sequestration-triggered Medicare cutbacks and patients avoiding hospitals because they can't afford to pay for the care.

"We're certainly sensitive to the challenges this puts on all employees, but it's very clear these are unusual days we're in," Ingram said Monday. "The great news is that no jobs are being lost and everybody stays employed."

Source: http://blog.al.com/breaking/2013/06/huntsville_hospital_cancels_pa.html

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