Saturday, September 29, 2012

FEMA trailer lawsuit settled for $42.6 million

David Friedman / NBC News

File photo shows a FEMA trailer park near Highway 90 in Bay St. Louis, Miss., in 2007.

By Mike BrunkerNBC News

More than six years after Gulf Coast victims of Hurricane Katrina began experiencing adverse health effects while living in travel trailers provided by the federal government for temporary housing, a federal judge in New Orleans has given his final approval to a $42.6 million settlement of a class-action lawsuit alleging that the units emitted hazardous levels of the toxic chemical formaldehyde.

U.S. District Judge Kurt Engelhardt approved the deal Thursday after hearing from attorneys who brokered the agreement between the plaintiffs and more than two dozen manufacturers of mobile homes provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency in the wake of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.

Roughly 55,000 residents of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Texas will be eligible for shares of $37.5 million paid by more than two dozen manufacturers, the Associated Press reported. They also can get shares of a separate $5.1 million settlement with FEMA contractors that installed and maintained the units.


Dan Balhoff, a court-appointed special master, will determine the plaintiffs' awards, the AP said. Up to 48 percent of the total settlement money ? or approximately $20,5 million -- will be deducted for attorneys' fees and costs, it said. Assuming the remainder is divided equally among 55,000 plaintiffs, the plaintiffs would receive about $4,020 apiece.

Payments are expected to go out late this year or early next year, the AP said.

Engelhardt presided over three trials for claims against FEMA trailer manufacturers and installers after he was picked in 2007 to oversee hundreds of consolidated lawsuits. The juries in all three trials sided with the companies and didn't award any damages.

As msnbc.com (now NBCNews.com) first reported in July 2006, residents of the trailers began complaining of headaches, nosebleeds and breathing difficulty shortly after moving into the trailers, which were trucked to the Gulf Coast by the tens of thousands after Katrina and Rita devastated the area in rapid succession in 2005.

Air quality tests of 44 FEMA trailers in early 2006 conducted by the Sierra Club found formaldehyde concentrations as high as 0.34 parts per million ? a level nearly equal to what a professional embalmer would be exposed to on the job, according to one study of the chemical?s workplace effects.

And government tests on hundreds of trailers in Louisiana and Mississippi announced in 2008 found formaldehyde levels that were, on average, about five times what people are exposed to in most modern homes.?

FEMA, which isn't a party to the settlements, had long downplayed the health risks from formaldehyde exposure before those test results were announced.

It eventually began auctioning off the units as ?scrap? ? meaning they should not be used for human habitation ? in October 2008, but some unscrupulous buyers apparently were able to dodge regulations?and return them to the housing pool.?

Formaldehyde gas -- the airborne form of a chemical used in a wide variety of products, including composite wood and plywood panels in the travel trailers that FEMA purchased to house hurricane victims -- is considered a human carcinogen, or cancer-causing substance, by the International Agency for Research on Cancer and a probable human carcinogen by the EPA.

Gerald Meunier, a lead plaintiffs' attorney, told the AP that the deal provides residents with "somewhat modest" compensation but allows both sides to avoid the expense and risks of protracted litigation.

"Dollar amounts alone do not determine whether a settlement is fair and reasonable," he said.

Jim Percy, a lawyer for the trailer makers, said Engelhardt would have had to try cases individually or transfer suits to other jurisdictions if the settlement wasn't reached.

"It was not going to end quickly, and it was going to be even more monumental for all the parties concerned," he said.

But that doesn't mean the deal isn't a disappointment for many residents who blame their illnesses on the cramped trailers they occupied for months on end.

"We were told not to look for much," said Anthony Dixon, a New Orleans resident who says he developed asthma while living in a FEMA trailer for two years.

Dixon, 58, attended the hearing with his wife and mother to learn more about the deal.

"We're glad to get it over with," he added.

Engelhardt noted he received a letter from a woman whose 66-year-old mother, Agnes Mauldin, of Mississippi, died of leukemia in 2008 after living in a FEMA trailer. Mauldin's daughter, Lydia Greenlees, said the settlement offers "very little" for what her family considers to be a wrongful death case.

"I am saddened about the settlement in that I feel like it makes a mockery of my mother's life," Greenlees wrote. "I don't want anyone to think for one second that I view this settlement as a fair trade for my mother's life. I do not."

A group of companies that includes Gulf Stream Coach Inc., Forest River Inc., Vanguard LLC and Monaco Coach Corp. will pay $20 million of the $37.5 million settlement with the trailer makers.

Shaw Environmental Inc., Bechtel Corp., Fluor Enterprises Inc. and CH2M Hill Constructors Inc. are among the FEMA contractors that agreed to pay shares of the separate $5.1 million settlement.

Only a handful of formaldehyde-related claims are still pending, including some against FEMA by a group of Texas residents.

Mike Brunker is the projects editor for NBCNews.com; the Associated Press contributed to this article.

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Source: http://openchannel.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/09/28/14140222-class-action-suit-against-fema-trailer-manufacturers-settled-for-426-million?lite

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An experiment: Journalists at a convention take time to engage with ...

A week ago, I helped moderate an experimental discussion between South Florida residents and a group of journalists from all over America. Why? Because a big gathering???the joint convention of the Society of Professional Journalists and the Radio and Television Digital News Association ? had come to Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and the journalists wanted to hear what community leaders had to say about the news media.

The ?community engagement lunch? was worthwhile and long overdue. Community members learned about the daily realities journalists face. They learned both organizations have strong codes of ethics. The journalists learned that community members have longstanding issues that are not being dealt with - yet anyone who seeks credibility as a source of news and information must address them.

We started by looking at the Knight Commission on Information Needs of Communities. Did community members and journalists agree that news and information are core community needs? They did. Had they noticed the digital-age explosion of traditional media?s advertising-based model and the resulting local journalism cutbacks? They had.

Then we got into it. Here are the major topic areas:

Real names on news websites

Community members said they do not leave comments on media websites because of all of the anonymous hate speech there. Why, I asked, do news organizations allow anonymity on the web? The Society of Professional Journalists Code of Ethics says journalists should ?always question sources? motives before granting anonymity.? Says the?Radio and Television Digital News Association?code: ?identify sources whenever possible.? Yet many news organizations do precisely the opposite. They never question the motives of the people who comment on their web sites and then all of them remain anonymous. They do not ?identify sources whenever possible.? So? what is the point of having a code of ethics if we then ignore it?

When real names are required, the conversation is more civil. But no technology can guarantee all the names will be real, observed Howard Saltz, editor of the Sun Sentinel in Fort Lauderdale. Some always will fake an identity to get in. Even so, news organizations, including major ones like the Gannett newspapers, have switched to Facebook registration and found other ways to ask for real names. When they do, bigoted name-calling falls off fast and people are more likely to post thoughtful comments.

Half a story now and half later

One-sided stories are a real problem, said Mary Ross Agosta, communications director at the Archdiocese of Miami. The 24/7 news cycle creates ?frustrating? situations where a reporter posts part of the story now and the rest later, because many never see the second version. Mohammad Shakir, director of the Asian-American Advisory Board, talked about how ?wire service? stories written by people outside the community can contain stereotypes and factual errors that would not have happened had the story been done locally.

These are valid issues, and again, fly in the face of ethical values the journalists promoted. Resisting the temptation to be first when it?s more important to be right ? that is a constant struggle. Hearing the damage and alienation that wrong stories create can help us do the right thing more often.

Of cats and trees: Where?s the good news?

Several community members said there just was not enough good news in the media, that every story seems to have a villain ? and a lot of the time, it really does seem to be that way. As Walter Cronkite used to say, it?s not our job to cover all the cats, just the ones that get stuck up in the tree. Why? So we can get them down. But the world of finite journalism was smashed nearly 20 years ago with the World Wide Web. Now, we have as much space as we want. (That is why YouTube covers all the cats, not just the ones in trees.) The secret: We need to let go of a little control and let people put their own good news onto a special section of our web sites.

Community members and journalists agreed there should be a lot more transparency ? news organizations explaining how they operate, making sure phone numbers and other contact information is easy to find, even putting the codes of ethics on their web sites so the public knows they have them. We also appeared to agree that cable news, at least in recent years, is giving people the idea that everyone in journalism has an agenda and no one cares about the facts.

Whose problem is this, anyway??

The shrinking local news staffs in recent years are pushing more journalists into covering topics they do not know much about. Yet we need journalists with expertise, community members said. Could they help, we asked, by putting more general information on their own web sites? Some are, but admit they could do more. The Broward County Sheriff?s Office, for example, has its own radio show (where they interview reporters about how and why they do what they do). Commander Michael Calderin summed it the philosophy when he said: ?Whose responsibility is it to care about community news and information? Everyone?s.?

How the community engagement session came about

At the University of California at Berkeley this spring, I spoke at the invitation of investigative legend Lowell Bergman about journalism and transparency. We do such a bad job of telling the world how and why we do what we do, I argued, it?s no wonder most people think it would be no big deal if newspapers were to go away (but it would be, of course, because they do most of America?s original reporting).

Among my suggestions: Open up our conferences. ?Our professional organizations have for 100 years held conferences where storytellers tell stories to storytellers about how to do great stories,? I said. ?We should include our communities in these conferences. No journalism conference should happen anywhere without a session involving leaders and citizens of the host community.? Such ?open journalism? sessions would create thousands of journalist-community encounters.

Bergman, the former 60 Minutes sleuth who still wins journalism?s top awards through his investigative reporting projects at UC-Berkeley, has ?open sessions? at his annual Logan Symposium. At times, you have to be an investigative reporter just to figure out who is at the conference: It is common for FBI, CIA, private investigators and many others to be there. That fits his topic. But I was more interested in the connection between journalists and specific geographic communities.

The next day I was still on my high horse. Dori Maynard, who runs the Maynard Institute, journalism?s leading diversity organization, and Sally Lehrman, author of News in a New America, liked ?open conference? sessions. ?Lehrman told the Society of Professional Journalists' Associate executive director Chris Vachon and colleague Scott Leadingham, who wanted to try it.

From Fort Lauderdale to America to Macon

Leadingham, the society's director of education, developed and co-moderated the community engagement session in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. He loved it, and said he believes this kind of ?open session? should continue. At first, he had worried the lunch would become a ?gripe? session, with the journalists becoming defensive. But it did not. He was ?pleased? with the quality of the conversation.? He thinks these sorts of sessions ?need to happen all over the country.? Congratulations, Society of Professional Journalists!

Kenny Irby also thought the conversation was a success, which is saying something. Irby is director of community relations and diversity at the Poynter Institute, the top journalism training organization, home to News University.?Irby?offered to help duplicate the Fort Lauderdale, Fla. session; it reminded him of the ?time out for diversity? events he did in the late 1990s, with one important difference. These days, if community members do not like the local news, they have alternatives. They can beef up their web sites, go out and publish some of their own. That makes community engagement an essential element of local news reporting.

Later today I am in Macon, Ga., moderating a panel of journalists at an open session at Mercer University, home of the Center for Collaborative Journalism. We will be talking with students and community members about what it will be like for daily newspaper journalists, public broadcasters and student journalists all to occupy the same physical newsroom. I will raise the community issues from Fort Lauderdale, ?and ask how community engagement in Macon will be strong enough to address them.

By Eric Newton, senior adviser to the President at Knight Foundation

Related: "Let's get it right with real names in 2012," by Eric Newton on KnightBlog.

Source: http://www.knightfoundation.org/blogs/knightblog/2012/9/28/experiment-journalists-convention-take-time-engage-community/

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Sony ties up with Olympus, takes 11 percent stake

TOKYO (AP) ? Sony is expanding its sprawling electronics to movies business empire with a new venture ? looking inside the human body.

The company on Friday said it will spend 50 billion yen ($640 million) for an 11 percent stake in Olympus Corp., an embattled maker of endoscopes, which are the long thin camera-equipped instruments that allow medical professionals to peer inside the body.

The deal was widely expected as Sony president Kazuo Hirai had expressed interest in moving into the medical equipment business.

Olympus Corp. is the world's biggest maker of endoscopes and is also known for its cameras. It has been on shaky ground after its British chief executive Michael Woodford turned whistleblower and helped unearth a scandal involving a systematic cover-up of massive losses.

Sony Corp. has its own problems and is hoping new businesses will be part of its turnaround. Sony has reported losses for four straight years as it fell behind in portable music players, flat-panel TVs and smartphones. Sony's red ink for the latest fiscal year through March was the worst in its 66-year history.

The two companies said they will set up a new medical equipment company together later this year, 51 percent owned by Sony and the rest by Olympus.

The alliance between Sony and Olympus will focus on the camera business as well, and both sides can benefit from sharing their technology, and working together to become more competitive, they said. In such alliances, companies can share in procurement on parts, boosting their bargaining power with suppliers and lowering costs.

"I will do my best to make this meaningful and profitable for both Olympus and Sony," Hirai said in a statement. Sony will become the biggest shareholder in Olympus after acquiring the 11 percent stake.

Olympus President Hiroyuki Sasa said working with Sony will help shore up Olympus' finances, and that its endoscope business would benefit from Sony's image-sensor technology.

Sasa and Hirai plan a joint news conference Monday morning in Tokyo, where they will likely face questions about how two troubled Japanese companies getting together might lead to them competing more successfully on the global stage.

Earlier this week, Sasa was at the Tokyo District Court to enter a guilty plea for Olympus, along with three former executives who faced charges as individuals, in the opening session of a trial into the fraudulent financial reports.

Olympus has said it hid 117.7 billion yen ($1.5 billion) in investment losses dating to the 1990s.

Prosecutors outlined in detail the elaborate schemes concocted over the years, using overseas bank accounts, paper companies and transactions controlled behind-the-scenes, all to keep massive losses off the company books.

___

Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at http://twitter.com/yurikageyama

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/sony-ties-olympus-takes-11-percent-stake-084731134--finance.html

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Celebrating Catholic Speakers?Fr. Michael Gaitley | Columbus ...

Posted on 27. Sep, 2012 by Michele Faehnle in People of Interest

Image Credit: Felix Carroll, used with permission

Today I am writing a unique post for you, as I am participating in a special project going on at Brandon Vogt?s blog (brandonvogt.com). Vogt, a popular blogger and author, is hosting an on-line event for September?s ?Support a Catholic Speaker Month.?? To honor this celebration, Vogt launched a campaign to list the top 100 Catholic speakers. ??The purpose was not a popularity contest, but to promote Catholic speakers who are important to the life of the Church, introduce new and unfamiliar speakers and connect them with bloggers.

Now that it is finalized, bloggers from around the country have selected a speaker to highlight on their blog.? Be sure to check out the complete list here to see all the speakers and blogs that highlight their profiles! ??I have the honor of writing to you about my all-time favorite speaker and friend, Fr. Michael Gaitley, Marians of the Immaculate Conception (MIC) .

Have you ever met someone who by just being in his or her presence makes you a better person?? A speaker who although is addressing a crowd of thousands, speaks directly to your heart?? Whose words penetrate your soul like a spiritual injection?? Their writing and speaking transforms your life and draws you more intimately into union with our Creator?? I am blessed to know one, Fr. Gaitley, and thank God for he is a gift to the Church.

Fr. Gaitley is a young, on-fire priest with the Marians of the Immaculate Conception.? Those of you who are regulars on our blog or conference attendees, can attest to Fr. Gaitley?s powerful words and speaking abilities.? Fairly unknown a few short years ago, Fr. Gaitley has become a frequent face on EWTN.? While trekking the country, he speaks about Divine Mercy, the merciful outlook as articulated by Pope John Paul II, Consoling the Heart of Jesus, Spirituality, and Consecration to Jesus through Mary.? At the 2010 Columbus Conference, he shared about his father?s conversion which he attributes to Divine Mercy; in February of 2011, he spoke to us about The Little Way of St. Therese and Consoling the Heart of Jesus; in August 2011 he lead a two-day retreat on his first book, Consoling the Heart of Jesus A Do-It-Yourself Retreat Inspired by the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius.

Since then he has authored two more books, 33 Days to Morning Glory and his latest book, The ?One Thing? is Three: How the Most Holy Trinity Explains Everything, planned for release November 15, 2012.

In April, Fr. Gaitley launched an amazing new program called Hearts Afire Parish Based Programs for the New Evangelization (HAPP).? Designed for small groups within a parish setting, this new study has caught fire in the United States and is getting rave reviews.? The studies use the three books accompanied by DVD presentations by Fr. Gaitley, and a retreat companion book. For more information, visit www.allheartsafire.com and my previous posts: http://www.columbuscatholicwomen.com/whats-happening/, http://www.columbuscatholicwomen.com/all-in-the-family/

I am very excited to post that Fr. Gaitley will be returning to the Columbus area to give his HAPP retreat at St. John Neumann parish in Sunbury on October 20, 2012.? This is an event you don?t want to miss!? For information and registration, visit http://www.saintjohnsunbury.org/Gaitley.

Hope to see you there!

Tags: Brandon Vogt, Fr. Michael Gaitley, Top 100 Catholic Speakers list

Source: http://www.columbuscatholicwomen.com/fr-michael-gaitley-makes-top-100-catholic-speakers-list/

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Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Change Management: The People Aspect of a Project | MAVERICK ...

Posted by John Clemons on September 26, 2012 @ 7:30 am

I was talking to several people recently and I mentioned the importance of change management to them and they didn?t know what I was talking about.? It seems that most people still haven?t heard about change management, or behavioral change management as some call it.

And even the people who have heard about don?t really know much about it or why it?s important.? Maybe it?s one of those things that people talk about but never do.? Anyway, I thought I spend just a little bit of time talking about change management and explaining a bit about what it is and why it?s so important.

So, if you do projects in the engineering space or in the IT space like with PLCs or DCSes or HMI/SCADA or MES or even ERP, you are probably doing a lot of thing which are supposed to have a pretty big impact on the way that the company does business.? If the project goes well you hope to have a significant impact on the bottom line for the company.

But, all that impact in the way the company does business means that the project or system is going to have a big impact on a lot of people and on the way that those people do their jobs.? If you?re putting in a new DCS, HMI/SCADA, MES, or ERP then you?re going to affect a lot of people.

In some cases you just might be affecting every single person that works on the shop floor.? That?s a huge impact.? Some aspect of every single person?s job on the shop floor is going to change somehow someway with the new system.? You are changing something that impacts every single person on the shop floor.

You need to know that and you need to plan for handling all that change.? Change management is all about managing these kinds of changes.? Not reactively when you have problems but proactively to make sure that you minimize the issues long before they become problems.

Said another way, everyone knows about the importance of project management to keep the project on track with scope, schedule, budget, and so forth.? Well, change management is all about the people side of the project.

It?s all about making sure that people know what?s happening and why it?s happening and how it affects them.? And getting them on board with the changes.? Whatever you?re doing there?s a good chance that it will be met with resistance at many different levels.? Change management is about proactively managing the change and managing the resistance.

You need change management from the very beginning of the project.? It shouldn?t be an afterthought or an add-on to the project.? You need to admit that you are making big changes and proactively manage those changes.? Based on research, and my personal experience, change management is the number one success factor for shop floor projects of all shapes and sizes.

Here are your greatest contributors to change management success:

  • Active and visible sponsorship ? get the key sponsors on board with the project and make sure everyone sees that they?re committed to the project
  • Buy-in from front-line managers and employees ? get these people on board and let them know that what they?re doing is going to have a big impact on the company
  • Exceptional project team ? if it?s worth doing it?s worth doing right ? make sure you have a good project team that knows how to work with people on the shop floor and knows how to make these projects successful
  • Continuous and targeted communications ? the communications needs to come from the sponsors, the executives, and the project and needs to be targeted at every single person being affected
  • Well planed and organized approach ? the change isn?t going to just happen by itself.? You need a well organized approach to proactively manage the change
  • Solid knowledge transfer plan ? call it training, knowledge transfer, or what you will, but making sure that everyone thoroughly and completely knows what to do and how to do it
  • Entrenchment ? you need follow-up, you need long-term metrics, you need ongoing training and support ? in short you have to keep it all going for the long term

So, in a small nutshell that?s change management.? It?s like project management but it?s the people side of projects.? It?s proactively managing the people side of change to achieve the desired business results.? And, it really is the number one success factor for shop floor projects.

I hope all this makes sense.? I?ve covered a lot of materials in a short space.? If you?ve got some questions or comments, let me know.? I also welcome any and all feedback.? Good luck!

?

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Source: http://www.mavtechglobal.com/ideas/2012/09/26/change-management-the-people-aspect-of-a-project/

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Stephanie Cutter: Women aren?t concerned what?s happened over the last 4 years, only what?s going to happen in the next 4 years (Michellemalkin)

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

First-time Home Buyer Help: How to put Money back ... - Finance Fox

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As a new buyer, saving for your very first home can be a challenging task, especially if you?re hoping to purchase in a big city like Toronto or Vancouver where real estate prices have hit record levels. Finding the lowest mortgage rate can help reduce the monthly mortgage costs, however, you still need to save for the down payment and the closing costs. Currently the average purchase price for a first-time home buyer is approximately $295,000 and our a mortgage calculator reveals that you would need to save $14,750 just to meet the minimum five per cent down payment in Canada.

For young buyers, saving an amount as large as $15,000 requires long-term financial planning and a few sacrifices along the way. Rest assured there is good news! The government has implemented programs designed to aid first-time home buyers by alleviating the financial challenges that come along the way.

Land Transfer Tax Rebates

All provincial governments levy a land transfer tax (LTT) or land title tax on the purchase of property. Toronto is the only city that charges a municipal land transfer tax in addition to the provincial tax. However, some provinces offer land transfer tax rebates which can significantly reduce the overall tax charge. The provinces of Ontario, British Columbia, Prince Edward Island, and the city of Toronto all offer this rebate.

Below, we calculate how each province would tax a $295,000 property AND the corresponding rebate for first-time home buyers.

Location?????????????????????????? Land Transfer Tax?????????????????? LTT Rebate????????????? Amount Due

Ontario (province level only) ? ? ? ? ? $2,900 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? $2,000 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?? $900

Toronto (municipal level only) ? ? ? ? $2,675 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? $2,675 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?? $0

British Columbia ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? $3,900 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? $3,900 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?? $0

PEI???????????????????????????????????? $2,950????????????????????????????????????????????????????? $0???????????????????????????????????? ?? $2,950

Since land transfer tax rates differ by province, first-time home buyers can use a transfer tax calculator to understand how much of an LTT rebate they would receive.

The RRSP Home Buyers? Plan (HBP)

Many young consumers are familiar with the RRSP HBP, a program that allows first-time buyers to withdraw funds from their RRSPs tax-free. The plan permits withdrawals up to $25,000 per first-time home buyer. If you and your spouse are both first-time buyers, you may withdraw up to $25,000 each for a total of $50,000!

The First-time Home Buyers? Tax Credit (HBTC)

This is a non-refundable tax credit made available to first-time purchasers which amounts to a return of $750 (as of 2012). The first-time home buyers? tax credit should be claimed in the same year the home was acquired. For example, if you purchased your first home in 2011, you would need to claim the HBTC on your 2011 personal income tax return.

Put money back into your pocket. Saving the necessary money to pay for something as large as your first home may seem intimidating, however, there is relief. Three programs are available to help reduce the financial burden of the home buying process that puts money back into your pocket.

Readers, can you suggest anymore tips for first-time home buyers? Did you make use of the home buyers plan (HBP)?

Source: http://www.financefox.ca/first-time-home-buyer-tips-to-save-more-money/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=first-time-home-buyer-tips-to-save-more-money

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Monday, September 24, 2012

Researchers call for specialty metals recycling

ScienceDaily (Sep. 24, 2012) ? An international policy is needed for recycling scarce specialty metals that are critical in the production of consumer goods, according to Yale researchers in Science.

"A recycling rate of zero for specialty metals is alarming when we consider that their use is growing quickly," said co-author Barbara Reck, a research scientist at the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies.

Specialty metals, which include rare earth elements such as indium, gallium and germanium, account for more than 30 of the 60 metals in the periodic table. Because they are used in small amounts for very precise technological purposes, such as red phosphors, high-strength magnets, thin-film solar cells and computer chips, recovery can be so technologically and economically challenging that the attempt is seldom made.

"Specialty metals are used in products in only small amounts, but their value typically does not provide enough incentive to invest in a complicated recovery process. Also, the technology to do so is untested," said Thomas Graedel, the study's other co-author and Clifton R. Musser Professor of Industrial Ecology.

The researchers said improved design for recycling, deposits on consumer goods, recycling targets for specialty metals and financial incentives for industry to apply state-of-the-art separation techniques and recycling technologies would improve metal recycling.

"Metals are infinitely recyclable in principle, but, in practice, recycling is often inefficient or essentially nonexistent because of limits imposed by social behavior, product design, recycling technologies and the thermodynamics of separation," said Reck.

The researchers said that modern technology has produced a conundrum. The more intricate the product and the more diverse the materials it uses, the better it's likely to perform but the more difficult it is to recycle.

The benefit to recycling metals, they said, includes the potential to reduce the extraction of virgin ores, thus extending the life of those resources. The environmental impacts of metal production are reduced substantially when recycled materials, rather than primary materials, are used, and recycling a metal is generally much more energy-efficient than acquiring it from a mine.

"Depending on the metal and the form of scrap, recycling can save as much as a factor of 10 or 20 in energy consumption," Graedel said. "The situation clearly calls for international policy initiatives to minimize the seemingly bizarre situation of spending large amounts of technology, time, energy and money to acquire scarce metals from the mines and then throwing them away after a single use."

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Yale University.

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


Journal Reference:

  1. B. K. Reck, T. E. Graedel. Challenges in Metal Recycling. Science, 2012; 337 (6095): 690 DOI: 10.1126/science.1217501

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/4s7L95FLXL8/120924175211.htm

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Do You Really Need a Detox Diet? | Health X Pert Articles-Health ...

We are pumped to share one of our favorite stories from Prevention here on FitSugar! Peer inside the daily diary of a woman on a liquid cleanse. Plus: top nutritionists weigh in on whether these explosively popular diets help ? or harm ? your health By Holly C. Corbett, Prevention Nothing riles up health writers like the debate over the relative merits and perils of detox diets. In one camp, you have women convinced that cleanses are needed to flush harmful toxins from your body; in the other are people persuaded they?re dangerous fad diets that deprive you of essential nutrients (and then trigger binges). I was in neither, so I decided to give one a whirl myself. Now, I?d like to say my motivation was pure professional curiosity: a desire to use my body as a research tool so that I could better report on a trend that celebrities like Gwyneth Paltrow to Beyonc? have sworn by, inspiring legions of women in their wake. But that wouldn?t be completely true. When I volunteered to test a liquid cleanse, it just so happened I had a trip planned to a tropical island just one week later. If, in the name of journalism, I could also feel better in my two-piece, well, wouldn?t that be nice? There are countless trendy detox diets out there, but I opted for the Master Cleanse. Sure, subsisting on spicy lemonade for 10 days sounded like cruel and unusual punishment. But unlike other cleanses that cost hundreds of dollars, this one was super easy to follow, and it was cheap. In fact, the only ingredients required were laxative tea, organic lemons, cayenne pepper, and maple syrup. Ten days sounded like a bit much, so I tasked myself with trying it for five. Here is my daily diary of what happened. Warning: you?d best stop here if toilet humor isn?t your cup of (laxative) tea. Debloat Your Belly! See if the cleanse worked after the break!

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Do You Really Need a Detox Diet?

Source: http://healthxpert.org/do-you-really-need-a-detox-diet/

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How To Have A Successful Home Based Business | Richard ...

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Having a home business can be just as intimidating as it is appealing. But, how do you begin? How do you make it work? Having a home business will spawn many questions. Fortunately, with the following article at your disposal, some direction is at your fingertips.

Your family needs to be supportive of your home business. A great deal of time must be devoted to a home business, and the experience can be stressful and difficult. You need to have the support of your family if you want to be able to start a successful home business.

TIP! while working from your home office dressed in pajamas sounds appealing, you may soon find you miss the daily interpersonal interactions and routines you had with your last job. Make it a point to travel to other locations during the week, so you can enjoy some social interaction.

Use home business forums to get support from home business owners. There are many online resources for those that own a home business, and the information on these sites is valuable. You?ll be able to interact with other business owners who can empathize with your situation and are happy to provide you with the strategies and methods that helped them overcome similar problems.

One of the best ways to ensure that your home business makes as much money as possible, is to effectively market your business and products on the internet. You can market your business online by blogging, writing articles, or sending out an email newsletter. These actions will increase the traffic to your site and can lead to greater success.

Let your loved ones know whenever you are working so that they will not interrupt you. Do you have a buddy that always drops in on you at work or a family member who comes for a visit an hour early? The best thing to do is politely explain to them that you are currently busy and you must not be bothered. If they arrive during your work hours, ask them to go somewhere else in the house and read a magazine or watch television until it?s your break time.

TIP! If your home business is a daycare, then you may need to hire some help to keep the kids in line. If you are lacking sufficient help, everything will be out of control.

To make your customers feel special, give them personalized service. Think about adding a little extra to their order, or slip a thank you note into the package. When you show someone that you are grateful for their business, they will come back for more. Clients love receiving free merchandise, and feeling appreciated by businesses they have relationships with. Show your customers that that you?re taking their business seriously.

If your home business taxes are complicated, consider hiring on an accountant to look over your books. You need to spend time with learning what you can about tax laws for small businesses.

Make sure your home business meets safety standards, especially if you have children. You may need to invest in a security system, and set rules for those who enter or live in your home. Taking the proper steps will keep both your business and your family from unforeseen accidents. Just because you work from your house doesn?t mean you are exempt from inspections.

TIP! You can receive a tax break when entertaining clients. Taking clients or business associates out for meals can be a deduction on your taxes.

Try starting a business, such as daycare or a service in which you do errands. Get creative, and find ways to help out those around you.

Keep costs down when starting a home business. You will save money by setting aside a place in your home for an office instead of renting a separate space. Keep your costs down by only buying supplies that you really need. If you keep your expenses in a budget, you will be able to keep your products cheap.

Before deciding on your home business, be sure you have a good understanding of all its needs. You should look at all of the issues that come with a home business opportunity.

TIP! You should have a short paragraph stating your goals for your business objective, keeping it to a couple brief sentences. State what your company focuses on and the things that you want to accomplish.

If you have a home business, you will want to have a second phone line. The money you invest in phone lines will pay off with increased sales. You can simply turn the phone off when you?re not working.

As was mentioned earlier in this article, a home business can be both appealing and intimidating. Hopefully you have gleaned some good information and advice from the tips shared in this article. Put that advice into action, and watch as things begin to work more smoothly for your home business

As a business owner, it is important that you are constantly aware of your competition?s pricing schemes. This will ensure that you will be in sync with them and you will have a better understanding of your profits.

TIP! Finding the right product for your business can be difficult. Think about products that make your life easier as a start.

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Sunday, September 23, 2012

FACELESS

FACELESS~A Slenderman Rp~Characters Needed

Its true then. Hes no longer just a myth, no longer just the story that sent shivers down your spine, no longer just that stupid horror game. The Slenderman is most certainly real, and our very own human brains have made him flesh and blood...

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Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for your playergroup.
This is the auto-generated OOC topic for the roleplay "FACELESS"

You may edit this first post as you see fit.

User avatar
LunaSpirit
Member for 2 years



o.o

*covers eyes* He can't get me if I don't see him.

User avatar
CherrySwirl
Member for 1 years


the slenderman only wants his 20 dollars from you

User avatar
Aniihya
Member for 3 years


I would like to join this, but may not be able to get a character in before wednesday. I will try though! If you wouldn't mind sending me a PM too so I can find this RP in a few days that would be great also.

Sometimes I can't help but wonder why I do what I do, until I realize that what I do makes me who I am, and I like who I am. When I make a mistake, it only makes me better. All those right choices I make aren't remembered, not even by me. But the stupid, silly, down-right insane things I do will never leave my mind and I kinda like that.

-Me:)

User avatar
gezzygezzy
Member for 1 years


I cant. It wont allow me to send a PM. -.- I dont have a clue why. I'm new to the site but I'll try to find a admin.

Last edited by LunaSpirit on Sun Sep 23, 2012 5:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
LunaSpirit
Member for 2 years


By the way I know it says I have been a memeber for two years, but thats cause I refound the sight ^.^ Im a noob

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LunaSpirit
Member for 2 years



Post a reply

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Saturday, September 22, 2012

Astrochemistry enters a bold new era with ALMA

ScienceDaily (Sep. 20, 2012) ? Combining the cutting-edge capabilities of the ALMA telescope with newly-developed laboratory techniques, scientists are opening a completely new era for deciphering the chemistry of the Universe. A research team demonstrated their breakthrough using ALMA data from observations of the gas in a star-forming region in the constellation Orion.

Using new technology both at the telescope and in the laboratory, the scientists were able to greatly improve and speed the process of identifying the "fingerprints" of chemicals in the cosmos, enabling studies that until now would have been either impossible or prohibitively time-consuming.

"We've shown that, with ALMA, we're going to be able to do real chemical analysis of the gaseous 'nurseries' where new stars and planets are forming, unrestricted by many of the limitations we've had in the past," said Anthony Remijan of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Charlottesville, VA.

ALMA, the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array, is under construction on the Atacama Desert of northern Chile, at an elevation of 16,500 feet. When completed in 2013, its 66 high-precision antennas and advanced electronics will provide scientists with unprecedented capabilities to explore the Universe as seen at wavelengths between longer-wavelength radio and infrared.

Those wavelengths are particularly rich in clues about the presence of specific molecules in the cosmos. More than 170 molecules, including organic molecules such as sugars and alcohols, have been discovered in space. Such chemicals are common in the giant clouds of gas and dust in which new stars and planets are forming. "We know that many of the chemical precursors to life exist in these stellar nurseries even before the planets form," said Thomas Wilson of the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C.

Molecules in space rotate and vibrate, and each molecule has a particular set of rotational and vibrational conditions that are possible for it. Each time a molecule changes from one such condition to another, a specific amount of energy is either absorbed or emitted, often as radio waves at very specific wavelengths. Each molecule has a unique pattern of wavelengths that it emits or absorbs, and that pattern serves as a telltale "fingerprint" identifying the molecule.

Scientists call the individual wavelengths in such a pattern spectral lines, because of their appearance in plots. A specific chemical can produce numerous spectral lines. The exact wavelength of each line can be measured, but that process is quite laborious and challenging. However, without such measurements, it has been difficult to identify many lines seen in astronomical observations. Adding to the difficulty is the fact that the pattern of lines for a particular molecule changes with its temperature.

The breakthrough comes because of new technology that allows scientists to gather and analyze a broad swath of wavelengths at once, both with ALMA and in the laboratory.

"We now can take a sample of a chemical, test it in the laboratory, and get a plot of all its characteristic lines over a large range of wavelengths. We get the whole picture at once," said Frank DeLucia of the Ohio State University (OSU). "We can then model the characteristics of all the lines of a chemical at different temperatures," he added.

Armed with new OSU laboratory data for a few suspected molecules, the scientists then compared the patterns with those produced by observing the star-forming region with ALMA.

"The matchup was amazing," said Sarah Fortman, also from OSU. "Spectral lines that had been unidentified for years suddenly matched our laboratory data, verified the existence of specific molecules, and gave us a new tool to attack the complex spectra from regions in our Galaxy," she added. The first tests were done with ethyl cyanide (CH3CH2CN) because its existence in space was already well established and thus it provided a perfect test for this new method of analysis.

"In the past, there were so many unidentified lines that we called them 'weeds,' and they only confused our analysis. Now those 'weeds' are valuable clues that can tell us not only what chemicals are present in these cosmic gas clouds, but also can give important information about the conditions in those clouds," DeLucia said.

"This is a new era in astrochemistry," said Suzanna Randall of ESO Headquarters in Garching, Germany. "These new techniques are going to revolutionize our understanding of the fascinating nurseries where new stars and planets are being born."

The new techniques, Remijan pointed out, also can be adapted to other telescopes, including the National Science Foundation's giant Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia, and laboratory facilities such as those at the University of Virginia. "This is going to change the way astrochemists do business," Remijan said.

Randall, Remijan, Fortman, Wilson, and DeLucia worked with James McMillan and Christopher Neese of the Ohio State University. The scientists are publishing their research results in the Journal of Molecular Spectroscopy.

ALMA, an international astronomy facility, is a partnership of Europe, North America and East Asia in cooperation with the Republic of Chile. ALMA construction and operations are led on behalf of Europe by ESO, on behalf of North America by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO), and on behalf of East Asia by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ). The Joint ALMA Observatory (JAO) provides the unified leadership and management of the construction, commissioning and operation of ALMA.

The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National Science Foundation, operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_technology/~3/4WGCR1eoD3s/120920120551.htm

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Friday, September 21, 2012

Warming Arctic fossil forest may live again

A fossilized forest that flourished more than 2.5 million years ago could return to life thanks to a warming planet, scientists say.

The paleo-scene won't sprout up overnight, of course, said Alexandre Guertin-Pasquier of the University of Montreal, who will present his research at the Canadian Paleontology Conference in Toronto this week.

Rather, he said, climate forecasts suggest that, by 2100, the now-uninhabited Bylot Island where the fossilized forest was discovered will support temperatures similar to those prevalent when the forest thrived.

"The fossil forest found in Bylot Island probably looked like the ones actually found in the (present-day) south of Alaska, where tree-line boreal forest grows near some glacier margins," Guertin-Pasquier wrote in an email. "The main plant diversity also seems to be similar between these two environments," which both include willow, pine and spruce trees. [ See Photos of the Fossil Forest Site ]

He and his colleagues analyzed samples of wood that had been preserved in the area's peat and permafrost. They specifically looked for pollen, which would reveal the types of trees growing in the area at the time.

To help nail down a specific date when growth occurred, the researchers analyzed the sediments laid down at the time the forest lived. They specifically looked at magnetic particles found in the soil, particularly magnetite. This works because, throughout our planet's history, the orientation of the magnetic north pole changed several times, a well-documented phenomenon. Since these "magnetic sediments" line up with Earth's magnetic orientation, scientists can use this to date the sediment layers.

They estimate the forest thrived between 2.6 million and 3 million years ago.

The trees in the ancient forest, as interpreted from the pollen samples, usually grew in areas with a yearly average temperature of about 32 degrees Fahrenheit (0 degrees Celsius), Guertin-Pasquier said. Currently, average temperatures on Bylot Island hover around 5 degrees F (minus-15 degrees C), he added.

Will our grandchildren actually see this forest come to life?

"I think it's very possible we might see forest compositions of the past returning with warming," Larisa R.G. DeSantis, who was not involved in the study, told LiveScience. "The question is whether those trees will be able to make it up there," DeSantis said, adding that in some ways it's a lot easier for animals to migrate to different conditions.

"But trees have another whole level of difficulty, their potential for movement is based on their dispersal of seeds and that sort of thing, so their movement is constrained," said DeSantis, who studies, among other topics, the reconstruction of ancient environments, at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn.

Fossil forests of a similar age have also been found on Ellesmere Island in the Canadian Arctic, where so-called " mummy trees" were uncovered in the wake of a melting glacier. The spindly, mummified trees showed signs of stress, likely the result of a changing climate (from a greenhouse to an icehouse, of sorts) as well as the seasonal darkness occurring at the top of the world.

That, in fa

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ct, is one of the mysteries surrounding these Arctic forests, "how these trees managed to survive the relentless dark of the Arctic winter," Guertin-Pasquier said.

Next, the researchers plan to look more closely at other plant remains from Bylot Island to get a better idea of the possibly diverse flora.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook? and Google+.

? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/49125117/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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Thursday, September 20, 2012

AP source: Mitt Romney plans uptick in traditional campaign events in battleground states (Star Tribune)

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Monitoring brain activity during study can help predict test performance

ScienceDaily (Sep. 18, 2012) ? Research at Sandia National Laboratories has shown that it's possible to predict how well people will remember information by monitoring their brain activity while they study.

A team under Laura Matzen of Sandia's cognitive systems group was the first to demonstrate predictions based on the results of monitoring test volunteers with electroencephalography (EEG) sensors.

For example, "if you had someone learning new material and you were recording the EEG, you might be able to tell them, 'You're going to forget this, you should study this again,' or tell them, 'OK, you got it and go on to the next thing,'" Matzen said.

The team monitored test subjects' brain activity while they studied word lists, then used the EEG to predict who would remember the most information. Because researchers knew the average percentage of correct answers under various conditions, they had a baseline of what brain activity looked like for good and poor memory performance. The computer model predicted five of 23 people tested would perform best. The model was correct: They remembered 72 percent of the words on average, compared to 45 percent for everyone else.

The study is part of Matzen's long-term goal to understand the Difference Related to Subsequent Memory, or Dm Effect, an index of brain activity encoding that distinguishes subsequently remembered from subsequently forgotten items. The measurable difference gives cognitive neuroscientists a way to test hypotheses about how information is encoded in memory.

She's interested in what causes the effect and what can change it, and hopes her research eventually leads to improvements in how students learn. She'd like to discover how training helps people performing at different levels and whether particular training works better for certain groups.

The study, funded under Sandia's Laboratory Directed Research and Development program (LDRD), had two parts: predicting how well someone will remember what's studied and predicting who will benefit most from memory training.

Matzen presented the results of the first part of the study in April at the Cognitive Neuroscience Society conference in Chicago. She presented preliminary findings on the second part this summer to the Cognitive Science and Technology External Advisory Board, made up of representatives of universities, industry and laboratories who advise the investment area team managing the LDRD portfolio.

The second part tested different types of memory training to see how they changed participants' memory performance and brain activity. One of Matzen's goals is to find out whether recording a person's brain activity while they use their natural approach to studying can predict what kind of training would work best for that person.

She's still analyzing those findings, but said preliminary results are encouraging. The computer model from the earlier study was used to predict who would perform best on the memory tasks, and the high performers did even better after memory training.

"That's promising because one of the things we want to do is see if we can use the brain activity to predict how people react to the training, whether it will be effective for them," Matzen said.

A next step would be "to use more real-world memory working tasks, such as what military personnel would have to learn as new recruits, and see if the same patterns apply to more complex types of learning," she said.

About 90 volunteers spent nine to 16 hours over five weeks in testing for the memory training techniques study. Their first session developed a baseline for how well they remembered words or images. Most then underwent memory training for three weeks and were retested.

A control group received no training. A second group practiced mental imagery strategy, thinking up vivid images to remember words and pictures. The final group went through "working memory" training to increase how much information they could handle at a time. Matzen said that averages about seven items, such as digits in a phone number.

Each volunteer, shut into a sound-proof booth, watched a screen that flashed words or images for one second, interrupted with periodic quizzes on how well the person remembered what was shown.

"It's designed to be really difficult because we want lots of room to improve after memory training," Matzen said. The test was divided into five sections, each about 20 minutes long followed by a break to keep volunteers alert.

Each section tested a different type of memory. The first, middle and last sections consisted of single nouns. During quizzes, volunteers hit buttons for yes or no, indicating whether they'd seen the word before. The other two sections combined adjectives and nouns or pairs of unrelated drawings, with volunteers again tested on what they remembered. The image section tested associative memory -- memory for two unrelated things. Matzen said that's the most difficult because it links arbitrary relationships.

When performance was compared before and after training, the control group did not change, but the mental imagery group's performance improved on three of the five tasks.

"Imagery is a really powerful strategy for grouping things and making them more memorable," Matzen said.

The working memory group did worse on four of the five tasks after training.

Volunteers trained on working memory -- remembering information for brief periods -- improved on the task they'd trained on, but training did not carry over to other tasks, Matzen said.

She believes it boils down to strategy: The imagery training group learned a strategy, while working memory training simply tried to push the limits of memory capacity.

While the imagery group did better overall, they made more mistakes than the other groups when tested on "lures" that were similar, but not the same, as items they had memorized.

"They study things like 'strong adhesive' and 'secret password,' and then I might test them on 'strong password,' which they didn't see, but they saw both parts of it," Matzen said. "The people who have done the imagery training make many more mistakes on the recombinations that keep the same concept. If something kind of fits with their mental image they'll say yes to it even if it's not quite what they saw before."

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