Monday, August 5, 2013

BART labor talks continue as planned strike looms

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? With an eleventh hour order, Gov. Jerry Brown averted a strike of San Francisco's Bay Area Rapid Transit system late Sunday night, easing the minds of hundreds of thousands of anxious commuters.

In the order, Brown named a board of investigators for a seven-day inquiry into the contract dispute that threatened to shut down, beginning Monday, one of the region's major train lines.

Brown's order comes under a law that allows the state's intervention if a strike will significantly disrupt public transportation services and endanger public health.

"For the sake of the people of the Bay Area, I urge ? in the strongest terms possible ? the parties to meet quickly and as long as necessary to get this dispute resolved," Brown said in the order.

In a statement, BART spokesman Rick Rice said the transit authority's board president Tom Radulovich sent a letter to the governor requesting his intervention and a cooling off period of 60 days. The governor issued an order with considerably less time of a week.

"The formal impartial fact-finding that accompanies the cooling-off period will help clarify the points of difference between the proposals," the statement said.

Union leaders issued a critical statement after the order, accusing BART management negotiators of stalling until only hours remained before the strike would have begun to provide counter proposals on core pay and benefits.

"Our hope is that the Governor's Board of Investigation will reveal how little time BART management has spent at the bargaining table in the past 30 days, compared with how much time they've spent posturing to the media," said SEIU 1021 President Roxanne Sanchez.

Bay Area Rapid Transit managers and union leaders had returned to the bargaining table Sunday in hopes of heading off a strike that would have affected 400,000 commuters and created traffic nightmares for the San Francisco area for the second time in a month.

Representatives from BART management and the agency's two largest employee unions negotiated for about 14 hours Saturday and resumed bargaining Sunday morning as a midnight deadline loomed. Brown's order came at around 10:30 p.m. Sunday.

Big differences remain on key issues including wages, pensions, worker safety and health care costs, but the parties had expressed some optimism that an agreement could be reached to avert a strike planned for Monday.

Despite allegations of stalling late Sunday, earlier in the weekend union leaders cautiously expressed hope for agreement and said progress was being made.

"The parties made some important but incremental moves yesterday, and I hope to get to a deal," Josie Mooney, chief negotiator for the Service Employees International Union 1021, said Sunday before heading into negotiations. "If the parties work very hard, then it's certainly possible in the amount of time we have left."

"There was definitely movement from both sides," BART chief negotiator Thomas Hock said as he left negotiations late Saturday night. "Hopefully, if we keep moving, we will get to a proposal that both sides can agree to."

BART's two largest unions issued a 72-hour notice Thursday that employees would walk off the job if they didn't reach agreement on a new contract by midnight Sunday.

"BART really is the backbone of the transit network. No other transit agency has the ability to absorb BART's capacity if there's a disruption," said John Goodwin, spokesman for the Metropolitan Transportation Commission.

In the event of a strike, transit agencies had planned to add bus and ferry service, keep carpool lanes open all day and even give away coffee gift cards to encourage drivers to pick up riders. They were also encouraging workers to avoid peak traffic hours or telecommute if possible.

When BART workers shut down train service for four days in early July, roadways were packed and commuters waited in long lines for buses and ferries. The unions agreed to call off that strike and extend their contracts until Sunday while negotiations continued.

Bay Area and state officials have been pressuring BART managers and union leaders to reach an agreement this weekend, saying a strike would create financial hardship for working families and hurt the region's economy.

___

Mohajer reported from Los Angeles.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bart-labor-talks-continue-planned-strike-looms-165001996.html

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Broken Arrow Family Razes Tornado-Ravaged Home

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    Friday, August 2, 2013

    Former NBA player Craig Ehlo jailed in Washington


    Associated Press

    Craig Ehlo. AFP file photo

    SPOKANE, Wash. ? Authorities say former NBA player and Eastern Washington University coach Craig Ehlo has been arrested in Spokane, Wash., in a domestic violence case.

    The Spokesman-Review reports (http://bit.ly/11xuUS0 ) Ehlo was booked into jail Thursday morning on suspicion of first-degree reckless burning, domestic violence. The charge is a felony.

    No additional details on the case were released.

    The 51-year-old recently coached at Eastern Washington Universityand resigned July 11.

    Ehlo played at Washington State University from 1981 to 1983 and was drafted into the NBA by the Houston Rockets. He played for 14 seasons with the Rockets, the Cleveland Cavaliers, Atlanta Hawks and Seattle SuperSonics.

    Ehlo also worked as a television analyst for the Sonics and Gonzaga.


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    Source: http://sports.inquirer.net/112351/former-nba-player-craig-ehlo-jailed-in-wash

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    Thursday, August 1, 2013

    Anne the Adventurer: No, I Will Not Go On a Diet With You / Choose ...

    In our culture, we seem to find peace in the common struggle to be thin and look perfect. We engage in group put-down sessions where we repeatedly talk about things we hate about ourselves or what we want to change, and it's not uncommon to hear people talking about their latest diet.

    I've been in many a situation where I'm at a party and someone suggests we all take a picture together. You know how this goes. Everyone gathers, people suck in their stomachs or turn their heads in just the right way, the way they've practiced so you can't see that double chin, and Snap!?the picture is taken. Then, we gather around the camera to look at the captured image, and take turns saying what we don't like about it. Oh my gosh, I look so tired. My hair is all messed up! That double chin, blech. I look so fat.

    It's usually moments like these where the conversation turns to dieting or health or fitness. We go through our rolodex of fad diets, which ones we've tried and failed at. And this is when I about when the question comes out: I'm going on a new diet. Do you want to try it with me?

    I am so sick of this.

    So sick of the line of thought that diets are the answer, that thinness is the answer to all of our problems, and that if we don't change, we're doomed.

    I wrote a bit about this on Tuesday, about how these sorts of questions are intrusive and insulting to me, but I wanted to go a bit deeper. Deeper into what I think is the way out of all of this diet talk.

    There are so many facets to this, but I think it all comes down to one simple phrase: I am enough.

    As I sit at my desk typing these words, I stopped to think about if I believe this phrase, in this exact moment. It takes some twisting and bending of my usual questions - am I thin? Am I well dressed? Those aren't the right roads. So I turn to the fact that I am healthy, that my skin is clear because I am eating whole, nutritious foods and exercising a few times a week. That my mind is alive and the creative juices are flowing. That I am contributing my story to the world, to this blog, to the Choose Beauty series. That I am in a strong and healthy marriage. That I have beautiful friendships.

    I could go on.

    The truth is, I am enough. Without changing one thing about myself, I am enough.

    It's hard for me to write about this because I am at a point in my recovery where I am trying to lose the weight I gained when I first entered treatment last year. I'm doing it in a healthy way, and I am being monitored by health care professionals. With every meal, I think about my eating disorder and dieting, and can you imagine how hard it is to make the healthy choice to eat in a balanced way when I am being asked about going on a diet?

    Diets don't work. Balanced, healthy eating works.?

    But before any of that, you have to believe that you are enough.

    Do you?

    Image by?Lou Mora.?

    Source: http://www.annetheadventurer.com/2013/08/no-i-will-not-go-on-diet-with-you.html

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    Tuesday, July 30, 2013

    Robert Mugabe rants about the West and gays, may exclude 2 million voters

    Ahead of historic Zimbabwe elections this Wednesday, the long-time dictator has not released national voting lists, and increased ugly threats.?

    By a correspondent / July 29, 2013

    Zimbabwean President and Zanu PF leader President Robert Mugabe addresses party supporters at his last campaign rally in Harare, Sunday, July, 28. Mugabe is set to contest against his main rival Morgan Tsvangirai in an election set for Wednesday.

    AP

    Enlarge

    Robert Mugabe is striking out left and right with geysers of vitriol and loathing ahead of national elections Wednesday that could finally unseat him after 33-years of iron rule, and could also potentially change the dynamics of the southern region of Africa.

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    Yet Mr. Mugabe is a strong man who will not go down easily, say analysts and the opposition in Zimbabwe.

    As he campaigns at age 89, Mugabe is on the trail, stirring his base: Wearing lime and red colored baseball caps and sunglasses, he has said his chief opponent Morgan Tsvangirai will soon resemble a dead dog, that the West and its imperialist leaders must reconcile with him, and that homosexuals are ?filth? that should be beheaded.

    It?s part of Mugabe?s standard pyrotechnics, seen before, and designed to further swing a vote that may already be rigged. ?

    Tsvangirai, a former trade union leader who is currently prime minister in a coalition government, is winning handily in opinion polls. But he and other opposition candidates point out that Mugabe controls the election commission and its lists of voters, which have not been revised since bloody elections in 2008. ?

    As Africa specialist Robert Rotberg points out, ?An independent analysis of the national voters? roll shows that it still contains nearly two million potential voters under 30 who are unregistered. (The national population is about 10 million.) More than a million names on the official voting lists are for people who are dead or have left Zimbabwe.??

    Two days before the elections, the question may not be whether younger Zimbabweans have abandoned in wholesale fashion the dark murmurings of Mugabe. They have, the polls show. The question may be whether they will be able to exercise their franchise against a Mugabe machine that includes many powerful generals, police leaders and security chiefs, and against a leader who has stymied numerous other attempts to unseat him.?

    As the Monitor reported over the weekend:?

    In a somewhat chilling development for?Zimbabwe?and its people, leader?Robert Mugabe?is beginning to send mixed signals about whether he will tolerate the outcome of the elections he himself picked to be held July 31.?

    Mr. Mugabe, who has ruled Zimbabwe with an iron fist for the past 33 years, has begun to speak openly, as he did Thursday at a political rally, about Zimbabwe needing only "one party."

    At Mugabe's rally on July 23 in the city of Mutare, about 150 miles southeast of the capital?Harare, he ridiculed his main opponent,?Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, in terms that set off fears that Mugabe will not hand over power even if he loses the elections. The polls are now favoring Mr. Tsvangirai, a former trade union leader who now sits in an unequal "coalition" government with the long time ruler. Mugabe is now 89.?

    In Mutare, in front of thousands of supporters, Mugabe said his rival Tsvangirai was ?a coward like my Uncle Shoniwa?s dog, Sekahurema, which used to run away from game when we were hunting." Mugabe went on to say, "That stupid dog died without killing a single prey, and the same will happen to Tsvangirai."

    Mugabe leads the?Zimbabwe African National Union Patriotic Front?(ZANU PF), against Tsvangirai?s younger Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).?

    To the outside world this might appear to be the rhetoric of any current hard fought contest. But many Zimbabweans read the statements by Mugabe ? and those recently of his security chiefs ? as new hints that they might not cede power to Tsvangirai and his organization in the event of a loss.?

    Top army, police, and spy personnel have, in the run-up to the elections, openly supported Mugabe's candidacy, and a number of them have campaigned for the veteran leader.

    A senior intelligence official revealed to a reporter recently that some security groups wanted to ?block Tsvangirai by any means necessary, because he is an agent of the West and wants to reverse the gains of our independence."?

    These ?gains of independence? were in reference to large farms violently taken from whites in the last decades, and to the "indigenization" policies that require foreign-owned companies to cede 51 percent of their companies to local persons or firms.

    Mugabe's party, ZANU PF, is using the same themes on the campaign trail. The party is handing out tens of thousands of T-shirts at rallies emblazoned with the words, "Indigenize, Empower, Develop and Create Employment.?

    While these policies are advertised as benefiting the majority black population, it is a fairly open secret that Mugabe?s compatriots and partners have instead taken the lion's share of benefits from "land reform" and "indigenization."

    Mugabe?s ministers, top Army, and police chiefs, are now believed to be among the richest in the region, benefiting mainly from the sale of diamond deposits in the Marange region. Their holdings include businesses, farms, safari firms, large houses, and cars.?

    Three companies in particular with close ties to Mugabe ? Anjin, Mbada Diamonds, and Marange Resources ? also have solid links to the Army.

    Speaking to the?BBC?in London three months ago, Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa confirmed the Army will wait on their wings to wrestle power from Tsvangirai if he wins.

    As Mr. Chinamasa put it: ?Now if anyone is going to say, ?When I come into power I?m going to reverse that,? they [the military] have every right to say, ?Please, you are asking for trouble.? You will be asking for trouble.??

    Chinamasa continued on this line in the BBC interview: ?He [Tsvangirai] will be asking for trouble [if he] seeks to reverse the land reform program. There is no one who is going to accept any enslavement."

    Later, Zimbabwe's top justice official seemed to imply that other countries were making it possible for Mugabe to lose: "And if those countries impose for him [Tsvangirai] to win, that result will not be acceptable. We will not accept it. We will just not accept it. Isn?t that clear??

    The Institute of Security Studies, based in Pretoria,?South Africa, claims that Zimbabwe?s military commanders are wealthier than those from South Africa ? ?which has the most robust economy in?Africa.

    The opposition party's organizing secretary, Nelson Chamisa, says that while he is aware of rumors and plans to seize power by force, his MDC party is confident that the police and Army will respect the constitution.

    ?It is something we have heard for a long time, but as a party we believe people will follow the constitution. Leaders are delivered by the people and that must be respected. The people of Zimbabwe want change and come the 6th of August we are ready to govern,? says Mr. Chamisa, referring to the date of an ostensible handover, should Tsvangirai win.?

    Unlike in the past where campaigning in Zimbabwe took place strictly through gatherings and political rallies, the current campaign landscape has greatly changed. A more independent press, particularly in print, includes more than 10 newspapers. A private television station was established in neighboring South Africa two weeks ago for the first time since independence, although most Zimbabweans still receive their news from state-run channels.

    The Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) ? a state broadcaster ? enjoys a monopoly within Zimbabwe and mostly airs Mugabe?s rhetoric and positions.

    Yet the biggest unexpected impact as elections approach in a country of 13 million, comes from social media,?where a fictional Facebook character called Baba Jukwa has taken the country by storm. Baba Jukwa, whose page sports the cartoon image of a small, elderly man, has been pumping out material on the indiscretions and inside politics among ZANU PF bigwigs in Harare to great attention.?

    Since joining Facebook in March, "Baba Jukwa" has collected nearly 300,000 followers.?

    Baba Jukwa, or the writer behind him, claims to be a former member of Mugabe?s ZANU PF party, and says he (or she) is a ?Concerned father, fighting nepotism and directly linking community with their Leaders, Government, MPs and Ministers.?

    ZANU PF minister Saviour Kasukuwere last month admitted to the local media that Baba's posts ?had greatly affected his family? after Baba Jukwa accused him of carrying out assassinations on political opponents. Mugabe has allegedly put $300,000 on the head of Baba Jukwa for revealing state secrets.

    Commentator Takura Zhangazha argues the popularity of foreign-based radio and television stations during the current campaign owes to the ?lack of opportunities? in the media industry in Zimbabwe, pointing out that they "have not been democratized."?

    The Monitor?s correspondent in Harare cannot be named for security reasons.

    Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/2iEcASdjUWA/Robert-Mugabe-rants-about-the-West-and-gays-may-exclude-2-million-voters

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    Sunday, July 28, 2013

    IRS employees union: Please don?t make us enroll in Obamacare

    The union that represents IRS employees is urging its members to write to their congressmen to help get the union out of Obamacare.

    ?I am a federal employee and one of your constituents. I am very concerned about legislation that has been introduced by Congressman Dave Camp to push federal employees out of the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program (FEHBP) and into the insurance exchanges established under the Affordable Care Act (ACA),? according to a form letter drafted by leaders of the National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU), which represents IRS employees.

    NTEU members currently get health coverage through FEHBP, which represents federal employees, but Republican House Ways and Means chairman and Michigan Republican Rep. Dave Camp seeks to obliterate that program and push legislation that would put federal employees into Obamacare exchanges.

    ?If the ObamaCare exchanges are good enough for the hardworking Americans and small businesses the law claims to help, then they should be good enough for the president, vice president, Congress, and federal employees,? Camp?s spokesperson said, making clear that Camp?s move has political motives.

    ?Camp has long believed every American ought to be exempt from the [Obamacare] law, which is why he supports full repeal,? Camp?s spokesperson also said.

    NTEU is not happy.

    ?H.R. 1780 would put federal employees in a special class where they would be prohibited from receiving health insurance through their employer. It would treat federal employees differently from state and local government employees and most employees of large private sector companies who receive health insurance benefits through their employer. The primary purpose of the Affordable Care Act was to provide a marketplace for the sale and purchase of health insurance for those who do not have such coverage ? not to take coverage away from employees who already receive it through their employers,? the letter reads.

    ?I work hard and am proud of the services that I provide to your constituents every day.? One of the main benefits I receive as a federal employee is the ability to purchase health insurance coverage through the FEHBP with an employer contribution towards those benefits. Please let me know your views on this legislation. I look forward to hearing back from you,? the letter concludes.

    NTEU recently made news by preventing acting IRS commissioner Danny Werfel from fully canceling taxpayer-funded employee bonuses this year as he promised, citing the union?s labor contract with the IRS.

    Follow Patrick on Twitter

    Source: http://dailycaller.com/2013/07/26/irs-employees-union-please-dont-make-us-enroll-in-obamacare/

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    Saturday, July 27, 2013

    University Hospital of Wales is dangerous, with patients 'dying regularly' due to waiting list delays

    • 2,000 procedures cancelled in three months at University Hospital of Wales
    • Hospital confirm 15 patients have died while waiting for heart surgery
    • Children given hearing aids to save time and money of grommets surgery
    • Report also found failures in cleaning and sterilisation of theatre equipment

    By Jenny Hope

    |

    The biggest hospital in Wales has been branded 'dangerous' in a damning new report, which says patients are at risk because of increased waiting lists.

    The Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) warns that people waiting for heart operations at the University Hospital of Wales in Cardiff are 'dying regularly' and some children are suffering because of delays.

    No fit state: 2,000 patients failed to get non-urgent surgery in the first three months of the year alone, because of lack of beds or cancellations at University Hospital of Wales

    No fit state: 2,000 patients failed to get non-urgent surgery in the first three months of the year alone, because of lack of beds or cancellations at University Hospital of Wales

    Its report says:

    * Children are being fitted with hearing aids because of a lack of time and resources to insert grommets to treat ear infections

    *Patients are suffering complications because of delays in treating kidney stones

    * A&E and intensive care units are 'frequently gridlocked' with patients 'often stacked up in corridors and ambulances'.

    Bosses at Cardiff and Vale University Health Board said the 'unacceptable' situation was now being addressed and were looking at options to increase cardiac surgery capacity.

    ?

    The seven-page RCS report says 2,000 patients failed to get non-urgent surgery in the first three months of the year alone, because of lack of beds or cancellations.

    'This has resulted in increasing waiting lists such that patients are clearly coming to harm. In cardiac surgery we heard that patients are regularly dying on the waiting list from their cardiac pathology, mostly valvular disease' it says.

    The RCS report came following a visit to surgical departments by its Public Affairs Board for Wales (PAB) in April this year.

    The report from the Royal College of Surgeons also found failures in the cleaning and sterilisation of theatre equipment

    The report from the Royal College of Surgeons also found failures in the cleaning and sterilisation of theatre equipment

    It highlighted a 'universal consensus' among clinicians that some services at the hospital were dangerous and of poor quality.

    The perception among doctors, it said, was that operations are being cut to save money and meet financial targets.

    Increased waiting lists mean patients are regularly dying from their cardiac pathology before surgery

    Increased waiting lists mean patients are regularly dying from their cardiac pathology before surgery

    Some services had been effectively suspended' such as paediatric tonsillectomy and children are now regularly being fitted with hearing aids because there is no ability to do grommet insertion instead.

    The RCS report found 'inadequate' facilities for urgent and emergency, failures in the cleaning and sterilization processes and concerns that the A&E department was failing to cope with demand.

    Labour MP Ann Clwyd, whose husband died at the hospital, called for the chief executive and the whole board to step down.

    She told BBC Radio 4's The World At One: 'I'm horrified because some of my constituents go to this hospital, constituents in the Cynon Valley, and to hear from the RCS through a leaked report that certain departments are dangerous, with patients dying regularly, that the services at the UHW were dangerous and of poor quality, that is horrifying and particularly because we didn't know about it.

    "The situation sounds to me very similar to the Mid Staffs situation. This is the Welsh Mid Staffs moment.

    Health board chief executive Adam Cairns apologised for performance at the hospital and confirmed that 15 people had died in the 12 months while on the waiting list for heart surgery.

    But he rejected calls to resign.

    'Our role, I think, is to look the problems that we have in the eye and then be very determined to fix them and I think it would be a dereliction of duty to walk away from these problems. We have to fix them' he told the programme.

    The RCS' report comes less than a week after the Royal College of Physicians warned that vital NHS Wales services were at risk of collapse because of severe staff shortages.

    Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2379081/University-Hospital-Wales-dangerous-patients-dying-regularly-waiting-list-delays.html?ITO=1490&ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490

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