Three people die in New South Wales storms

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

In New South Wales (NSW), Australia, two men and a woman died yesterday after search-and-rescue operations failed to rescue them from floods in Dungog, roughly 200 km (125 miles) north of the state’s capital, Sydney.

Storms hit communites along the east coast of Australia including Newcastle, the Hunter Region, the Central Coast, the Illawarra region, and Sydney. The Bureau of Meteorology reported a deep low-pressure system has caused heavy rainfall and strong winds which reached 130kph (80mph). Winds were predicted to ease today.

There have been blackouts throughout the region and severe flooding which has caused roads, bridges and houses to be washed away. More than 500 volunteers were working with the State Emergency Service to assist with operations and protect individuals, with firefighters from the Rural Fire Service and Fire Rescue according to State Emergency Service deputy commissioner Steven Pearce. They issued a warning that residents in Newcastle and surrounding areas might experience flash flooding.

The Insurance Council of Australia reported already during the day yesterday more than 5500 policyholder claims due to the storms. New South Wales premier Mike Baird said people should leave work early and arrive home before dark, as storms were predicted to intensify.

NSW transport authorities said 300 sets of traffic lights in Syndey were out and motorists should be cautious or preferably not drive. Authorities advised residents to stay away from flood-waters and from areas exposed to surf, where heavy surf can lead to coastal damage and erosion.

The New South Wales Emergency Services Minister David Elliot said it was a “once-in-a-decade storm”.

Window Coverings Offer Energy Saving Options For Families

Window Coverings Offer Energy Saving Options for Families

by

Blinds Chalet

Though windows can be an attractive feature in any home, they can also account for 10 of a family’s heating bill. Using energy efficient window treatments can translate into considerable utility bill savings.

Rising prices for heating oil and natural gas could mean big bills once again this winter. Choosing energy saving window coverings and implementing other energy efficiency improvements can reduce the cost of heating and cooling the average home by up to 25 to 25. Wood blinds and

faux wood blinds

are extremely practical and provide for unsurpassed air and light flow, work to minimize harmful summer sun radiation and maximize heat retention during winter. Also blinds with trapezoid shaped bottom rails offer better closure, block more light, and maximize insulation.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LRrxbwuplws[/youtube]

Shades can also greatly increase the energy efficiency of your home. The U.S. Department Of Energy website states that, “when properly installed, window shades can be one of the simplest and most effective window treatments for saving energy.”

According to Russ LeSueur, Owner of Blinds Chalet, “Cellular shades, sometimes called

honeycomb shades

provide excellent insulation to your windows. The unique double cell construction traps the air and keeps your home cooler in the summer months and warmer during the winter months.” Blinds Chalet, a window covering company, offers cell shades in both single and double cell construction.

Here are some other simple solutions to keeping energy costs down:

* During winter, keep the shades or blinds on south-facing windows open during the day to allow sunlight and heat to enter the home.

* Close blinds and shades at night to help reduce heat loss. Also, when closing blinds, you’ll maximize insulation if you close the blinds with the leading edge up.

* During summer, keep the window coverings closed during the day to prevent the sun from heating the home.

* Be sure to caulk and weatherstrip around the windows, to reduce air leakage or infiltration.

Blinds Chalet, a window covering company with more than 25 years of experience selling and installing window blinds & window shades, offers many options to help families save money. Their attractive, high quality, and durable window blinds and window shades fit any energy saving plan, decorating style, and budget. Blinds Chalet window coverings come from manufacturers who use only the highest quality materials and resources, and each is backed by a limited lifetime warranty. For expert energy saving and window treatment advice contact Russ LeSueur at or call him at 480-633-7840.

Blinds Chalet has over 25 years of experience in the window covering industry. Blinds Chalet is an online retailer of custom window blinds and shades, offering only the highest quality products

Article Source:

ArticleRich.com

Russia: Governor Tuleyev resigns after deadly mall fire

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Effective Tuesday, Siberian Governor Aman Tuleyev resigned his office of 20 years after Kemerovo’s Winter Cherry Mall caught fire killing 64 individuals on March 25, 2018. The newly reelected Russian President Vladimir Putin accepted Tuleyev’s resignation Sunday in Moscow approximately 1,600 miles from Kemerovo.

The investigation is lead by the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation which arrested seven individuals in connection with the fire including the woman responsible for the building inspections. Of the 64 dead were 41 children trapped in a movie theater with the exit doors locked. An additional 79 individuals were injured escaping the fast moving blaze. In compensation for their loss, families of the deceased received one-million rubles ($17,500 USD) issued by Tuleyev before his resignation.

According to Russian state run television (TASS), the security firm ‘Protection Center’ exceeded their legal abilities by undertaking fire control. The cause is still unknown with investigators looking at faulty wiring, children playing with lighters, and arson. Winter Cherry Mall is 248,000 sq ft (23,000 sq m) with a theater, trampoline area, bowling alley, and a 200 animal petting zoo all of which died in the fire.

Since the fire, demonstrations have occurred throughout Kemerovo with a population of approximately a half million citing widespread corruption on the local and national levels. Kemerovo is a coal city and acts as the administrative center for the Kemerovo Oblast. TASS has been suppressing political corruption and the demonstrations replacing them with stories about the heroics. Stories include the firefighters battling the blaze, cadet Dmitry Polukhin saving three children, and a local high school teacher Tatyana Darsaliya saving her daughters before re-entering to save more losing her life in the process.

The corruption allegations centered around the seven individuals arrested and the Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations. TASS nor international media reported Tuleyev was a focus of corruption demonstrations.

[edit]

Japan asks “Where’s the beef?”

Tuesday, March 29, 2005

Shortages of beef in Japan prompted consumers to submit a petition with about 1.19 million signatures to Japan’s Agriculture Minister Yoshinobu Shimamura on Tuesday. The petition was presented by a group led by Takashi Sakamoto, president of a chain of used book outlets.

Japan has banned imports of U.S. beef for 15 months, citing concerns about mad cow disease after authorities discovered a cow with the disease in the United States.

Japanese health and agriculture ministers said they would ask their country’s food safety commission to approve lifting the ban.

“We will ask the commission to decide if resuming U.S. beef imports is safe based on safety measures taken in the U.S.,” said health minister Makoto Kanie.

Analyst Kazuhiko Saito says this may cause a delay “until later this year”, telling Bloomberg, “The Commission has been very slow on reviewing domestic mad cow tests and will also be slow to review the U.S. beef import plans.”

U.S. lawmakers and diplomats have pressed Japan to re-open their market, and some Washington lawmakers have even threatened Japan with sanctions should beef imports not resume soon. US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice brought up the matter earlier this month during her visit to Japan.

So far, the Japan Food Safety Commission has only taken the step of loosening inspection rules, such that mad cow testing is not required for all imported live cattle.

Japan has dealt with 14 cases of mad cow disease of their own.

Blair will quit as British PM within a year

Thursday, September 7, 2006

British Prime Minister Tony Blair bowed to pressure from within his own Labour Party today by publicly confirming he will resign within a year. “I would have preferred to do this in my own way,” said Blair who added “the next party conference in the next couple of weeks will be my last party conference as party leader.” However, he refused to name the specific date of his resignation, “The precise timetable has to be left to me and has to be done in the proper way,” Blair insisted. “I’m not going to set a precise date now. I don’t think that’s right. I will do that at a future date, and I will do that in the interests of the country.”

He apologised for the party’s conduct this week saying it “has not been our finest hour, to be frank”.

Demands that Blair announce his resignation plans have mounted over the past few months particularly over concerns about the Prime Minister’s strong support for Israel during the Israel-Hezbollah war, the perception that he is a loyal follower of United States President George W. Bush and a precipitous slide in Labor’s support in public opinion polls where the party is now at a 16 year low.

Yesterday, eight Labour MPs resigned from their junior government positions over Blair’s refusal to announce his retirement. They had previously been considered staunch Blairites. The British press reports of a shouting match yesterday between Blair and his likeliest successor, Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown over the handover date.

“I want to make it absolutely clear today that when I met the prime minister yesterday, I said to him, as I have said on many occasions to him and I repeat today, that it is for him to make the decision,” Brown said.

“I said also to him, and I make clear again today, that I will support him in the decisions he makes, that this cannot and should not be about private arrangements but what is in the best interests of our party and, most of all, the best interests of our country.”

Despite Blair’s announcement, several MPs expressed their dissatisfaction at his refusal to name a precise date and demanded that he leave sooner rather than later.

Manchester Blakeley MP Graham Stringer told the BBC if Blair “thought it was going to take the politics out of the next nine months that simply is not going to happen”.

MP Doug Henderson said “It doesn’t seem to me that the public knows any more about the PM’s retirement plans. People keep saying to me that the Labour party must have a clear direction forward with clear priorities and a new leader before the May 2007 (regional) elections.”

The eight MPs who resigned as junior ministers or parliamentary secretaries, Wednesday, expressed a concern in their resignation letter that Blair needed to go soon in order not to harm the party’s prospects in next May’s elections to the Scottish parliament, Welsh assembly and English local authorities.

Blair became Prime Minister in 1997 when Labour defeated the Conservative government of John Major. He has led the party to three majority victories and promised before the last election that his third term would be his last.

Learn How To Sell Your Business Without The Hassle With A Nj Business Broker}

Submitted by: Rhegie Taylor

The job of a real estate broker is to buy or sell assets for other people. When you hire a broker, they are your agent or dealer. The agent negotiates and arranges, makes deals and sets plans in motion.

You got as far as planning, setting up and running your own business, this is your primary focus, not as a real estate agent, a whole different ballgame. You are setting yourself up for failure to get the best price possible for your business by not being educated in the subtle applications of selling a business.

Your agent takes away from you all of the frustrations that come with the course of selling a company. Yes, there are challenges to the sale of a company, but you have your broker on your side and these issues disappear because of the power and knowledge your broker has, giving you peace of mind that you remain on the right track.

Get Your House in Order

Before you even begin to list your business for sale, your broker wants all documentation for potential buyers. Have all documentation ready to present to prospective buyers is not something you can do overnight. When you decide to sell your business the decision is not a spur of the moment decision, but a decision that you have put much thought into for a few years. Your broker wants to know,

All financial documentation

Your profitability

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n7Yb4MTGxBk[/youtube]

Employee and staffing concerns

Know what your business sells for on the market

Leasing particulars

Your Possessions, Worth More to You, Not Others

Your broker discourages you from placing a value on your company according to what you feel it is worth. The potential buyer does not see the same money value. Your broker knows what companies like yours are worth on today’s market in the real world.

Are Your Buyers Qualified to Buy Your Company?

Brokers pre-qualify the buyers to make sure potential, future owners are prepared to buy your company. This process weeds out buyers who are not serious. Pre-qualification of potential buyers by your broker keeps all of your business information private, thus your private company information enters only into the hands of serious buyers.

Be a Serious Seller

Be truthful and honest with your agent. Your broker must research your books making sure that the picture you give to buyers is the same story your books tell. Never over-estimate your company profits and expenses. Never make the picture of how your company is doing sound better then what your books show. Serious buyers have a right to look at your books.

Be a Flexible Seller

In today’s economy, you must offer appealing benefits to serious buyers such as but not limited to,

Never demand cash paid in full, this is rare

Provide seller financing options

Offer flexibility in payment options

Offer third party financing

You need to discuss with your broker and buyers the transition of your company before signing on the dotted line. Your broker works out all of the details of how you and the buyers want this transition to go.

About the Author: To seek the advice of our professional

business brokers New Jersey

clients are invited to the following website. Request for further info today by clicking on this link http://www.efcib.com/.

Source:

isnare.com

Permanent Link:

isnare.com/?aid=1957082&ca=Real+Estate}

US president Obama, Congress call for blocking of executive bonuses at AIG insurance company

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

United States President Barack Obama stated Monday that insurance giant AIG is in financial trouble due to “recklessness and greed,” and called for legal action to stop the company from giving out millions of dollars in bonuses to its executives.

“It’s hard to understand how derivative traders at AIG warranted any bonuses, much less $165 million in extra pay,” Obama said. “How do they justify this outrage to the taxpayers who are keeping the company afloat.”

Obama’s statement comes after reports surfaced last weekend saying the insurance agency, which is in deep financial trouble, had paid US$165 million to executives in bonuses, after receiving $170 billion as part of a government bailout plan.

AIG has said that the bonuses have to be given out, as the company is legally required by contract to do so. A representative with the National Economic Council, Lawrence H. Summers, also said that the bonuses were required to be given out. If AIG had refused to give out the bonuses, employees could file a lawsuit against the company for the money.

“We cannot attract and retain the best and the brightest talent to lead and staff the A.I.G. businesses — which are now being operated principally on behalf of American taxpayers — if employees believe their compensation is subject to continued and arbitrary adjustment by the U.S. Treasury,” AIG CEO Edward M. Liddy said in a letter addressed to Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner on Saturday.

Liddy said that he asked Geithner “to use that leverage and pursue every legal avenue to block these bonuses and make the American taxpayers whole.”

“I want everybody to be clear that Secretary Geithner’s been on the case,” Obama said. “He’s working to resolve this matter with the new CEO, Edward Liddy, who, by the way, everybody needs to understand, came on board after the contracts that led to these bonuses were agreed to last year.”

If the bonuses cannot be stopped, the U.S. Congress says they want AIG to reimburse the government. Congress is looking to impose stiff new taxes on the pay, or ordering the company to return the money which was originally granted from a government bailout. In a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Tuesday, senator Richard Shelby promised that the treasury will recover all of the money. Several U.S. senators along with Liddy have sent letters to AIG asking for the bonuses to be renegotiated, something AIG agreed to and says they will reduce future bonuses by 30%. Senators state that if Libby does not respond by renegotiating the bonuses, the Senate Finance Committee will propose an excise tax. Not only will an excise tax be proposed on AIG, but all companies receiving bailout money and their employees who receive bonuses.

What is the highest excise tax we can impose that will stand up in court? Let’s find out.

Numerous House Democrats have introduced legislation which would place a 100% tax on any bonuses of over $100,000 from companies that are receiving government bailout funds. Meanwhile in the Senate, a bipartisan proposal by Max Baucus (D-Montana) and Charles Grassley (R-Iowa) would levy a special 90% excise tax on AIG’s bonuses. Asked Senator Baucus, who chairs the Senate Finance Committee: “What is the highest excise tax we can impose that will stand up in court? Let’s find out.”

Airbus launches world’s largest passenger plane

Tuesday, January 18, 2005

Toulouse, FRANCE – In a ceremony attended by several European political leaders and 5,000 VIP guests, Airbus unveiled plans for the A380, a twin-deck aircraft that can carry up to 840 people in all-economy class (550 for a Boeing 747), or 555 people in typical three mixed classes layout.

The new aircraft will take the world’s-largest title away from rival Boeing’s 747. Boeing’s upcoming new design, the 7e7, does not attempt to compete directly with the A380 but instead is aimed at a more efficient and comfortable flight at 200-250 seats.

Airbus chief executive Noel Forgeard stated that he expected sales of the aircraft to exceed the 250 required for the project to break even. To date, 149 confirmed orders for the aircraft have been received. Airbus has hopes that sales will exceed 700. The company is currently in talks with China regarding possible sales there.

The first test flight of the aircraft may take place as early as March, and the first commercial flight is expected to take off in mid-2006 from Singapore’s Changi Airport.

British and American airline Virgin Atlantic has purchased six of these aeroplanes and intend to fit them with gyms and bars as well as seats.

Scottish artist Alan Davie dies at age 93

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

The death of Scottish artist Alan Davie was announced on Sunday. Davie, 93, was known for his colourful abstract paintings.

Davie’s career also saw turns as a jeweler, a jazz musician, a lecturer, and a poet. Born in Grangemouth, near Falkirk, in 1920, he studied painting from 1938 to 40 at Edinburgh College of Art.

It’s an urge, an intensity, a kind of sexual need

His father was a teacher who dabbled in art and his mother’s family was musically inclined. Upon seeing Coleman Hawkins performing in a music shop in Edinburgh, Davie borrowed £600 from his father to buy himself a saxophone. After serving in the Second World War, at which time he wrote much poetry later transcribed by his father, Davie toured with Scottish jazz bands.

Davie’s work was admired by the likes of Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko and David Hockney. Davie himself collected non-Western art and liked tattoos, graffiti, and ‘outsider art’. His final interview before death, with The Telegraph, gave an insight into how he viewed art: “It’s an urge, an intensity, a kind of sexual need[…] something I do from an inner compulsion, that has to come out.”

He initially avoided painting as a career at all, then spent several years earning money by other means whilst his paintings failed to sell. His exhibitions in the late 1950s, however, were highly successful and launched his career. He was in the habit of choosing titles for his art only after completion.

Despite a strong presence owing to his lengthy red beard and off-beat humour, he was shy; his international fame waned. Recent years have seen a revival of interest with price increases for his early art. London alone is host to three exhibitions this month including at the Tate.

Tate Britain calls Davie “one of the first British artists after the war to develop an expressive form of abstraction” producing “kaleidoscopic canvases[…] that the artist relates to his love of jazz”.

Boxing great Muhammed Ali dies aged 74

Sunday, June 5, 2016

Legendary boxing great Muhammed Ali died on Friday aged 74 in a hospital in Phoenix, Arizona in the United States. A family spokesperson said Ali had been admitted with respiratory problems. The former heavyweight champion lived with Parkinson’s disease for decades, diagnosed in 1984.

Born on January 17, 1942 as Cassius Marcellus Clay, he changed his name to Muhammed Ali after his 1964 conversion to Islam. In his professional career, Ali won 56 out of 61 fights — including 31 consecutive wins. He won the World Heavyweight Championship three times and had also won an Olympic gold medal in the light-heavyweight category.

Often considered the greatest boxer of all time, Ali was the world heavyweight champion in the 1960s and 1970s. His famous fights with George Foreman in 1974 when he won his title back and against Joe Frazier are considered by many as two of the greatest fights in the sport’s history. Ali had also defeated Sonny Liston to claim the championship title.

Ali was also known as a political activist. He came under considerable controversy after his decision to refuse the Vietnam War draft.

He lit the flame in the 1996 Olympics hosted in Atlanta.

His funeral is to be in Kentucky.