Google Groups
Join To Get Blog Update Notices
Email:
Visit the Hickory Hound Group

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Hickory City Council Meeting - February 5, 2013 - Video Presentation

The following is a video presentation of the Hickory, NC City Council Meeting of January 15, 2012. The most relevant topics of this meeting:

Presentation by Mr. Mack McLeod, Parks and Recreation Director, Zahra Baker Playground

Approval of Historic Preservation Fund Grant Application for (former) Ridgeview Public Library in the amount of $13,579

Quarterly Financial Report presentation by Asst. City Manager Warren Wood

Citizen's Requesting to be Heard: Jimmy Davis addresses the Council





Old Ridgeview Library Museum Project






Demolition of former Regency/Howard Johnson's Motel








Horseford Creek Waterline












Quarterly Financial Report (October - December 2012)









Monday, February 4, 2013

Economic Stories of Relevance in Today's World -- February 3, 2013

Shocking Numbers That Show The Media Is Lying To You About Unemployment In America - The Economic Collapse Blog - Did you know that the percentage of the U.S. labor force that is employed has continually been falling since 2006 according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics? Did you know that the increase in the number of Americans "not in the labor force" during Barack Obama's first four years in the White House was more than three times greater than the increase in the number of Americans "not in the labor force" during the entire decade of the 1980s? The mainstream media would have us believe that 157,000 jobs were added to the U.S. economy in January. Based on that news, the Dow broke the 14,000 barrier for the first time since October 2007. But if you actually look at the "non-seasonally adjusted" numbers, the number of Americans with a job actually decreased by 1,446,000 between December and January. But nowhere in the mainstream media did you hear that the U.S. economy lost more than 1.4 million jobs between December and January. It is amazing the things that you can find out when you actually take the time to look at the hard numbers instead of just listening to the media spin. Back in 2007, more than 146 million Americans were employed. Today, only 141.6 million Americans are employed even though our population has grown steadily since then. When the government and the media tell you that we are in a "recovery" and that unemployment is lower than it was a couple of years ago, I encourage you to dig deeper. The truth is that even the government's own numbers tell us that the percentage of the U.S. labor force that is employed continues to fall and that the U.S. economy is heading into a recession. The Obama administration and the media have been lying to you about unemployment and about the true condition of our economy. After you see the numbers that I have compiled in this article, I think that you will agree with me.                              First of all, let's take a look at the percentage of the civilian labor force that has been employed over the past several years. These numbers come directly from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. As you can see, this is a number that has been steadily falling since 2006...    2006: 63.1     2007: 63.0    2008: 62.2    2009: 59.3    2010: 58.5    2011: 58.4...                  In January, only 57.9 percent of the civilian labor force was employed....                  That number has risen by more than 8 million since Barack Obama first entered the White House, and that is highly unusual, because the number of Americans "not in the labor force" only increased by 2,518,000 during the entire decade of the 1980s....


Fewer Americans count on retiring by 65 - Life Inc. on Today - Allison Linn - January 31, 2013 -  If you’re planning to work past age 65, you may find that you have a surprising amount of company among your peers.                         A larger chunk of Americans are working into their late 60s and even beyond, part of a long-term trend that has continued despite the tight job market of the past five years and is expected to increase in coming decades.                        “It’s one of the most important changes in the labor force over the last generation,” said Richard Johnson, director of The Urban Institute’s Program on Retirement Policy.                  Most Americans still stop working by the time they hit 65. But about 18.5 percent of Americans age 65 and over were working in 2012, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That’s a nearly 8 percentage point increase from a low in 1985, when just 10.8 percent of Americans over age 65 were still at work.                   The trend toward working past age 65 is an about-face from the decades that followed World War II. From the late 1940s through the mid-1980s, the percentage of people over age 65 who were in the labor force generally fell as workers took advantage of pensions and Social Security payments that gave them plenty of financial incentive to quit working by age 62 or even before....



Duke Energy to close Riverbend, Buck plants in April - The Charlotte Observer - Bruce Henderson - February 3, 2013 - Duke Energy will close two of its oldest coal-fired power plants, Riverbend west of Charlotte and Buck in Rowan County in April, two years ahead of schedule.
Both plants date to the 1920s and had been planned for retirement in 2015. They’re among a wave of older, smaller coal plants closing down rather than investing in new pollution controls to meet federal environmental regulations.                         The plants had been little used in recent years as larger, more efficient plants came online and falling natural gas prices shifted generation to gas.
Efficiencies in Duke’s management of a larger power plant fleet, following its merger last year with Progress Energy, also contributed to the early retirements, the company said.                     “These stations played pivotal roles in the 1920s and 1930s in helping to electrify the industries and homes of the Carolinas, and we honor all those employees who contributed their time and talents over the years to ensure safe, reliable operations,” Keith Trent, chief operating officer of Duke’s regulated utilities, said in a statement.....                           Duke said it would try to find new positions within the company for the 65 people who work at Riverbend and Buck.


Kraft: No more Cracker Barrel grocery products - The Tennessean - Duane Marsteller - February 3, 2013 - Consumer foods giant Kraft Foods is suing to block Cracker Barrel Old Country Stores from selling a new line of branded products in grocery stores.                   Legal experts say a Kraft victory could threaten the restaurant chain's brand expansion efforts if a resolution isn't reached.                      Kraft said it has sold cheese products branded "Cracker Barrel" in grocery stores for nearly 60 years, and that the Lebanon, Tenn.-based restaurant chain's planned move into supermarkets would unfairly infringe on that trademark, according to a federal lawsuit filed Thursday in Chicago.                    "(The chain's) actions threaten to destroy the substantial goodwill that Kraft has created in its Cracker Barrel trademark, and to create significant confusion and cannot be permitted," the lawsuit said.                           Cracker Barrel said Friday that it's reviewing the lawsuit but otherwise had no immediate comment.                         The chain already sells various food products, such as cornbread mix and pancake syrup, under its name exclusively through its retail stores and on its website. Kraft said it never objected to the practice because of that limited availability.                        That changed in November when Cracker Barrel signed a licensing agreement with John Morrell Food Group to sell Cracker Barrel-branded food products through grocers, mass merchandisers and other retail outlets.



Rising beef prices threaten $1 McDouble - Reuters - Lisa Baertlein – February 2, 2013 - McDonald's popular $1 McDouble cheeseburger, which has lured customers to the Golden Arches since 2008, is getting hard to sustain as rising beef prices threaten the company's profit margin....                            The dilemma for McDonald's Corp restaurant operators is that the McDouble has the highest ingredient costs on the Dollar Menu, making it a bad financial proposition unless customers add high-margin sides such as french fries or soda.                          "If the McDouble is all the customer buys, you lose money," said Richard Adams, a former franchisee who now advises the chain's restaurant operators. "Depending on what happens to beef prices, McDonald's management should be open to taking the McDouble off the Dollar Menu."                         The decision would be a significant one. McDonald's gets 10 to 15 percent of its sales from the Dollar Menu and experts say the McDouble is one of the most popular items on it....                             The Dollar Menu food and marketing changes are part of McDonald's plan to stop two consecutive years of margin declines at its 14,000 U.S. restaurants. They come as new McDonald's Chief Executive Don Thompson sharpens the company's focus on its famed Dollar Menu to lure cash-crunched diners and fend off resurgent rivals such as Yum Brands Inc's Taco Bell chain and Burger King Worldwide Inc .
They also hint at strategies that U.S. restaurants could use to contain the damage from higher beef costs. McDonald's has a history of shaking up the Dollar Menu lineup in response to food cost spikes.....                            Beef prices are expected to rise above recent highs and to stay high for at least the next two years as the effects of last summer's historic U.S. drought ripple through the food system, said Jim Robb, an economist at the Livestock Marketing Information Center.
Ground beef prices already are up 6 percent to 8 percent so far this year, said John Davie, CEO of Consolidated Concepts, a firm that helps restaurants negotiate purchases.                              To be sure, McDonald's is known for using its massive size to squeeze better prices out of suppliers. The company forecast commodity inflation of just 1.5 percent to 2.5 percent this year for its U.S. business, far less than the National Restaurant Association's expectation for 2013 wholesale food price inflation in the low 4 percent range.                            But analysts are skeptical that McDonald's can control rising prices as well as it thinks, meaning there could be even more pressure on the McDouble's bottom line....


Audit shows North Carolina wastes millions on Medicaid - WTVD 11 - Durham, NC - 
Governor Pat McCrory and State Auditor Beth Wood held a rare joint news conference Thursday to discuss the findings of a scathing audit commissioned by the General Assembly about North Carolina's Medicaid program.                   Legislators directed Wood's office in last year's budget bill to conduct a performance audit of the Division of Medical Assistance and the Medicaid system it runs. Medicaid provides health coverage for more than 1.5 million North Carolina residents - most of them poor children, older adults and the disabled - and spends $12 billion in state and federal funds annually.                     Wood said she found hundreds of millions of dollars in Medicaid cost overruns because of administrative inefficiency, lack of oversight of contracts, lax cost-control and cost-management measures and disjointed accounting practices that have led to inaccurate financial projections.                           Click here to download Wood's audit (.pdf).
The audit shows the state is spending nearly 40 percent more than the national average just to administer Medicaid, and that's costing taxpayers an extra $180 million a year.                      Last year, the state's Medicaid program was $1.4 billion over budget. It was the same in 2011, and even more in 2010.                     "The people of North Carolina have sent us here to fix broken system and that's what we're going to do.  These issues should be of concern to everyone.  This is taxpayer money," said McCrory...


Medicaid bureaucracy pinching some NC group homes - WRAL - Raleigh, NC - January 29, 2012 - The operators of adult group homes across North Carolina report increasing delays in the Medicaid reimbursements that they depend on to keep their doors open.                   The delays result from a combination of a new billing system the state implemented this month and a growing backlog of appeals by people seeking to retain their Medicaid coverage under new eligibility rules.           As of Jan. 1, group home residents were no longer eligible to receive Medicaid payments for personal care services, such as assistance with bathing, feeding or other daily chores. Federal regulators pushed for the changes to ensure the same personal care eligibility standards exist for people no matter where they live, instead of having rules that may steer people toward institutional care.                         The new eligibility requirements came with new Medicaid billing forms that operators say are more complex, and some providers aren't filling them out correctly or completely. That means their reimbursements are held up until the paperwork errors are fixed.                    "No one really knows what's going on and what we should do about it," Jenny Gadd, manager of Booth Road Group Home in Chatham County, said Tuesday......


Some families to be priced out of health overhaul - WWLP - Springfield, Massachusetts - January 30, 2013 - Some families could get priced out of health insurance due to what's being called a glitch in President Barack Obama's overhaul law. IRS regulations issued Wednesday failed to fix the problem as liberal backers of the president's plan had hoped.                  As a result, some families that can't afford the employer coverage that they are offered on the job will not be able to get financial assistance from the government to buy private health insurance on their own. How many people will be affected is unclear.                    The Obama administration says its hands were tied by the way Congress wrote the law. Officials said the administration tried to mitigate the impact. Families that can't get coverage because of the glitch will not face a tax penalty for remaining uninsured, the IRS rules said.                          "This is a very significant problem, and we have urged that it be fixed," said Ron Pollack, executive director of Families USA, an advocacy group that supported the overhaul from its early days. "It is clear that the only way this can be fixed is through legislation and not the regulatory process."                But there's not much hope for an immediate fix from Congress, since the House is controlled by Republicans who would still like to see the whole law repealed.                    The affordability glitch is one of a series of problems coming into sharper focus as the law moves to full implementation.                   Starting Oct. 1, many middle-class uninsured will be able to sign up for government-subsidized private coverage through new health care marketplaces known as exchanges. Coverage will be effective Jan. 1. Low-income people will be steered to expanded safety-net programs. At the same time, virtually all Americans will be required to carry health insurance, either through an employer, a government program, or by buying their own plan.                  Bruce Lesley, president of First Focus, an advocacy group for children, cited estimates that close to 500,000 children could remain uninsured because of the glitch. "The children's community is disappointed by the administration's decision to deny access to coverage for children based on a bogus definition of affordability," Lesley said in a statement.                       The problem seems to be the way the law defined affordable....


Buying your own health insurance will never be the same - AP through Vitals on NBC News - RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR - January 27, 2013 -  This fall, new insurance markets called exchanges will open in each state, marking the long-awaited and much-debated debut of President Barack Obama's health care overhaul.                       The goal is quality coverage for millions of uninsured people in the United States. What the reality will look like is anybody's guess — from bureaucracy, confusion and indifference to seamless service and satisfied customers.               Exchanges will offer individuals and their families a choice of private health plans resembling what workers at major companies already get. The federal government will help many middle-class households pay their premiums, while low-income people will be referred to safety-net programs they might qualify for....


Guess Who's Driving the Demand for Rental Apartments? - CNBC - Diana Olick - January 29, 2013 - The housing market is supposedly roaring back. Home prices are seeing their biggest annual gains since 2006.                       Renters must be rushing back to buy, right?                       Not exactly.
In fact, even as housing and the greater economy improve, a shift in demographic trends will likely favor the rental apartment market for the foreseeable future. It is all about women.                     "I rent in an apartment building because it gives me a certain amount of freedom: I'm not positive that I want to stay in D.C. long term so I could leave at year's end if I wanted to," says 25-year-old Caitlin Huey-Burns, a working journalist. "My building has nice, built-in amenities, and it's in the location I want, but where I know I wouldn't be able to afford to buy.".....                      
No, according to a recent Raymond James report:
Renter household formation remains at the strongest level in decades. Roughly 1.32 million new renter households were formed in the past year (including owner conversions), while the number of owner-occupied households declined by 175,000. Resident turnover and move-outs to homeownership remain near historic lows for most operators. Incoming leasing traffic is more than offsetting move-outs while paying higher rates.
The home ownership rate declined yet again in the fourth quarter of 2012, according to a new report from the U.S. Census today. It now stands at 65.4 percent, down from 66 percent a year ago and from a high of 69.2 percent in 2004. If you include the 5.3 million borrowers who are delinquent on their mortgages or in the foreclosure process, per Lender Processing Services, the real home ownership rate is even lower.....


Economy Could Be 'Significantly Worse' Than US Says - Money News - January 30, 2013

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Morganton Grace Hospital Billing Practices - WBTV - Richard Garrison

Richard Garrison is a reporter for WMNC "The Big Dog" radio in Morganton. Richard covers the Hickory-Lenoir-Morganton Metro area. He regularly attends both Hickory and Morganton City Council meetings and we correspond frequently about issues in the area. Richard is his own man and he is someone who I respect greatly, because of his forthrightness.

The other night Richard was on WBTV news at 11pm. The following is the story relating to his ongoing battle with Morganton's Grace Hospital involving their billing practices. Richard had a very negative experience with the hospital when his mother died and the hospital was ambivalent about their business practices and Richard believes that there is a pattern here and it certainly does look like there is a pattern here.

WBTV 3 News, Weather, Sports, and Traffic for Charlotte, NC


PSI: Medical bills are a prescription for confusion - WBTV - Jamie Boll - January 31, 2013 - MORGANTON, NC (WBTV) - Richard Garrison didn't know it at the time, but when his phone rang one day last summer, he was about to lose his mother.

"She had fallen in the driveway," said Garrison.

Jean Garrison who was a nurse before retiring had hit her head, but she didn't go to the hospital until the next day, when Richard came home to find her on the couch.

"I said 'Mom, how you doing?' No response," said Garrison.

She was rushed by ambulance to Grace Hospital in Morganton, then flown to Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte.

"She passed away about 4:30 that afternoon," said Garrison.

His grief was compounded by the stress of trying to understand the medical bills. The bill from Grace Hospital alone topped $9,000.

"All this for essentially less than two hours at Grace Hospital," said Garrison.

Medicare was paying for almost all of it. Or was it?

"You really don't even know what was actually paid," said Sen. Jeff Tarte.

Tarte, a freshman state senator from Cornelius, doubts anyone came close to paying the $9,000. He knows a thing, or two about the health care industry. He's consulted hospitals on how to set prices.

"The financial model in health care, and I've been doing this work for almost 35 years, is completely broken," said Tarte.

Not only that, it is rife with error. It's been estimated as many 80% of hospital bills have mistakes.

"Doesn't surprise me," said Tarte.

What other business could get away with that? Tarte says none. So, why do we accept it, in what is the most important business we use?

"Nobody has the ability to audit with a degree of accuracy," said Tarte.

So, if experts in the field have trouble making sense of the gobbledygook that is your hospital bill, where does that leave the rest of us?

"98% of the population has no possible way just to look at (charges) and know if that's reasonable or not," said Tarte.

"You have to pay attention," said Dr. Michael Matthews.

Matthews teaches health care administration at Winthrop University in Rock Hill, SC. He agrees medical bills are way too complicated, but he say you're not helpless.

"Mistakes come in a multitude of areas," said Matthews.

He says he's seen them in bills for his own family. He says he's seen charges for pills never give, services never provided and tests never done. Is it malice? Is it like a mechanic try to sneak in an unnecessary repair?

"No, no, no," said Matthews. "Health care is so complex. There are so many people getting their hand on the medical bill (and) with that many hands, with human error, you are bound to have a mistake."

It's why Matthews says you should examine your itemized bill closely. He says make sure everything you're being charged for was actually done and billed for correctly. He also says compare the prices to what you find on popular web sites like healthcarebluebook.com

"It will give you a rough estimate of what a procedure should cost," said Matthews.

He says with so much cost shifting going on to cover people who can't pay, it's an important tool as you enter what is really a negotiation over your bill.

"Be courteous, be respectful and be prepared to discus the specific issues and you'll get a lot better response," said Matthews.

As for the $9,000 Garrison bill, Sen. Tarte was correct. No one paid the full amount. Grace Hospital says Medicare only paid a small fraction, probably less than $2,000. Garrison, who says the entire ordeal has been stressful, paid the remaining $320.

Grace Hospital in a written statement said, "We understand and regret that billing for hospital and other medical services is so complex. The variety of providers, settings, treatments and coverage plans involved in the care a patient receives can make billing confusing."

The statement from Jerry Davis, Vice President of Blue Ridge HealthCare, which owns Grace Hospital goes on to say, "We encourage patients to be in touch with us as soon as possible if they have questions, or need information about their bill or about financial assistance. There are often ways we can help, but it begins with that contact."

The billing system is complex. It's also important to note private insurers don't pay full cost either. In fact, each insurer likely pays something different for the same exact service. The price is based on its contract with the provider.

Tarte says it's time to do something about this broken pricing model. He says he'll be working to get the major players involved at the table to start work on simplifying the billing system.

Friday, February 1, 2013

City Branding: More than Just a Logo and a Tagline? - From WNCT News in Greenville, NC featuring our City Manager Mick Berry

I have family who live on the coast and they saw this and sent the link to me.


City Branding: More than Just a Logo and a Tagline?
WNCT - Greenville, NC
Jonathan Rodriguez | 9 On Your Side
Published: January 31, 2013
Updated: January 31, 2013 - 7:03 PM



GREENVILLE, N.C. (WNCT) – Branding. You see it everywhere. It’s been proven that logos and slogans can be used to market just about any product or service, but can it work for a city?

That’s where North Star Destination Strategies comes in.

"It’s competitive out there. Communities need to work to be as competitive as they can be,” explained Don McEachern, CEO of North Star, based in Tennessee.

He says they've worked with more than 150 communities, giving cities not just a catchphrase, but an identity.

"It’s more than just a logo and a line,” McEachern said, “you’re spending money and resources already marketing your community so it just makes good sense to make sure your spending those dollars and those efforts are working as hard as they can."

It’s all in an effort to bring in new business.

Greenville, New Bern, and Jacksonville are hiring North Star to get them branded.

"We’re trying to make Greenville more attractive for companies to locate here and bring jobs to our community,” said Greenville Mayor Allen Thomas

"I do a lot of traveling and most people I run into in other states have never heard of New Bern,” explained Alderman Dennis Bucher.

So how much will it cost?

Each city is paying between $80,000 and $90,000 taxpayer dollars.

A lot of people in the community say they think it could be a good idea, but were very concerned about the price. So 9 On Your Side went looking for proof.

We talked to Mick Berry, city manager of Hickory,North Carolina. They hired North Star about two years ago. Their brand is “Life. Well Crafted.” We asked if it was worth the money.

"Absolutely,” said Berry, “I know it is pricey when you’re spending, in our case about, $80,000 that did raise some eyebrows. But when you look at the overall value of a community, when you talk about having a tool to market your community to the broader world, it's a very small fraction of the overall value of that community."

But will bring tangible results?

“That’s a fair question and it's a hard question to answer when you talk about tangible results. We’ve had a number of new businesses come here to Hickory, we’ve had success in recruiting new events in our convention center, even activity at our airport. Can you say that that was purely because we have this very crisp branded message? No. They're coming for a lot of other reasons as well, but it just helps you in your sales pitch. We’re a unified community, we understand who we are, life is well crafted in Hickory, and it just helps you with the message. It’s kind of just the icing on the cake you need in a very competitive world,” explained Berry.

He says it will take a full community effort to get the brand to work. But with this deal, there's no "money back guarantee" so cities have to wait and see if it was money well spent.

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Here comes the Truth - GDP down in 4th quarter

As I said, after the election is over and the swearing in ceremonies take place, then they are going to start pushing upon us just how bad it is to set us up for higher taxes and reduced services. This kind of massaging of reality is called lying by most of us. If your kid times the reality of conditions of honesty, trust, and integrity when communicating with you, then you call him out on it. When your government does it, you seem to think it's alright. Since I try to keep this forum as clean as possible, I'm not going to tell you exactly what I think. The problems don't really lie with these government people and their fake numbers and perspective. The numbers lie with the depth and breadth of a weak nation of Zombie Robots looking to be told what to do instead of telling their representatives what they expect.

What do I expect? The Truth.

The facts are that the economy has not grown in over 5 years now. The only "Growth" we have seen was through monetary fuel injection. When you subtract the real inflation rate from non-governmental Gross Domestic Product (GDP created by the Private Sector), then you see that we have had negative growth over the last five years. All of the Quantitative Easing and Stimulus has nearly doubled the Federal Debt over the last five years and if we continue these policvies, the debt will double again over the next 5. The government is telling you that the National Debt will only rise to $21 trillion by the end of 2016, where are they showing the increased tax revenues? Where are they showing the reduction in expenditures? It seems to me that they are carrying forward the same policies that they have been and those policies, as I have shown you, have nearly doubled the National Debt over the last five years. That means a National Debt, not at the projected $21 trillion. That means a National Debt of Approximately $30 trillion.

GDP Shows Surprise Drop for US in Fourth Quarter - AP through CNBC - January 30, 2013 - The U.S. economy posted a stunning drop of 0.1 percent in the fourth quarter, defying expectations for slow growth and possibly providing incentive for more Federal Reserve stimulus.                     The economy shrank from October through December for the first time since the recession ended, hurt by the biggest cut in defense spending in 40 years, fewer exports and sluggish growth in company stockpiles.                                    The Commerce Department said Wednesday that the economy contracted at an annual rate of 0.1 percent in the fourth quarter. That's a sharp slowdown from the 3.1 percent growth rate in the July-September quarter.


It is easy to see that these Economic Comptrollers haven't a clue about what they are doing other than cooking the books. I really don't think they are doing this on purpose. They just have a certain economic belief system and they are going to drive us to hell instead of admitting they are wrong, because there is no accountability in our governmental system. As a matter of fact we reenforce failure through back slaps and gladhanding. As Rand Paul said to Hillary Clinton about Benghazi last week, paraphrasing, 'I don't think you are a bad person or had bad intentions. I just don't think you understand or know what you are doing. And so therefore, If I were the President, I would have had you relieved of your duties.'

People keep being given these positions of leadership and they strut around like peacocks as if they are royalty, when they have a fiduciary responsibility to do what is best for the people they represent. And they are not doing that. They are representing a handful of people who line their pockets with cash and the rest of us be damned. There is no Honesty, Integrity, Honor, and Loyalty in the current political paradigm. It's just every man for himself and this is all going very, very badly. We can turn this all around by demanding Accountability and for some reason we have way too many people who seem to think that is a hard thing to do. Folks, demanding Accountability is the easiest thing we can do to begin to turn this economy around. The hardest part will be picking up the pieces of this shattered economy and putting them back together again.

Economic Stories of Relevance in Today's World


US economy shrinks 0.1 percent, first time since recession ended - Fox News - January 30, 2013

Google News on the shrinking of the U.S. Economy

The only chart you need on the GDP report
- The Washington Post - Dylan Matthews - January 30, 2013


Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Richard Garrison about two Morganton Issues

From Richard Garrison in Morganton (January 29, 2012):

"I just heard that my interview about Grace Hospital will be shown on the WBTV 11 pm Newscast on Thursday night.
(1-31). If you can mention it on the 'hound' Wednesday or Thursday I would appreciate it."

Also:

"I spent a considerable amount of time with the NC Department of Water Quality and DENR on Monday, after researching the story here of an untreated wastewater spill, I learned the City of Morganton FAILED to follow NCGS 143-215.1c, and DID not issue a "Press Release" concerning this spill as required by statute. Morganton did pay for a "legal notice" published in the News Herald Sunday Edition which states, " An approximate 1,824,000 gallons of untreated wasterwater spilled into the Hunting Creek and then into the Catawba River. " I am waiting to see the fallout on this. This is one of the worst mistakes Morganton has made that I know of. Keep watching for updates."


What is news? What is the business model of the News Media? What is the responsibility of news organizations? In the end, who is the Media responsible to, Corporate or Community Interests?






Monday, January 28, 2013

Economic Stories of Relevance in Today's World -- January 27, 2013

CHART: The Real Inflation Rate Is 11% According To CPI Calculations From 1980s - The Daily Bail -



History of the CPI - By John Melloy - Executive Producer, CNBC's Fast Money - ...Since 1980, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has changed the way it calculates the CPI in order to account for the substitution of products, improvements in quality (i.e. iPad 2 costing the same as original iPad) and other things. Backing out more methods implemented in 1990 by the BLS still puts inflation at a 5.5 percent rate and getting worse, according to the calculations by the newsletter’s web site, Shadowstats.com...


Compound Inflation - The Hickory Hound




How to Get America Online - The New York Times - Susan Crawford - January 23, 2013 -  Although Julius Genachowski, the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, has challenged the country to build additional gigabit fiber networks — about 100 times faster than most residential connections today — his words won’t advance our digital future unless they are backed up with the leadership necessary to enact pro-growth, pro-innovation and competition-enabling rules.
                        At the heart of the problem lie a few powerful companies with enormous influence over policy making. Both the wireless and wired markets for high-speed Internet access have become heavily concentrated, and neither is subject to substantial competition nor oversight. Companies like Time Warner Cable routinely get their way when they seek to prevent local officials from encouraging competition. At the federal level, Verizon Wireless is keeping the F.C.C. in court arguing over the scope of its regulatory powers — a move that has undermined the agency’s authority.
                     As a result, prices are too high and speeds too slow. A third of Americans opt not to buy high-speed Internet access at home, often because they can’t afford.               Incumbents like Comcast and Verizon Wireless (now cooperating in a joint marketing venture) claim that their market is characterized by robust competition. But where is the competition when 94 percent of new wired high-speed customers bought service from their local cable distributors during the third quarter of 2012? Not surprisingly, America lags behind almost every other industrialized country in high-speed access — even France, the bête noir of American free-marketeers, has better and cheaper Internet access.              ( The Hound: If you ever want to get a deer in the headlights look, talk to a politician about the need to upgrade the internet infrastructure. First of all, they can't do it because they have been bought off by the telecoms and other media corps. and second they don't understand it, which makes it easier to control them through part one.)



Goldman Sachs Made 400 Million Betting On Food Prices In 2012 While Hundreds Of Millions Starved - The Economic Collapse Blog -  ...Goldman Sachs made about 400 million dollars betting on food prices last year.  Overall, 2012 was quite a banner year for Goldman Sachs.  As I reported in a previous article, revenues for Goldman increased by about 30 percent in 2012 and the price of Goldman stock has risen by more than 40 percent over the past 12 months.  It is estimated that the average banker at Goldman brought in a pay and bonus package of approximately $396,500 for 2012.  So without a doubt, Goldman Sachs is swimming in money right now.  But what is the price for all of this "success"?  Many claim that the rampant speculation on food prices by the big banks has dramatically increased the global price of food and has caused the suffering of hundreds of millions of poor families around the planet to become much worse.  At this point, global food prices are more than twice as high as they were back in 2003.  Approximately 2 billion people on the planet spend at least half of their incomes on food, and close to a billion people regularly do not have enough food to eat.  Is it moral for Goldman Sachs and other big banks such as Barclays and Morgan Stanley to make hundreds of millions of dollars betting on the price of food if that is going to drive up global food prices and make it harder for poor families all over the world to feed themselves?                                This is another reason why the derivatives bubble is so bad for the world economy.  Goldman Sachs and other big banks are treating the global food supply as if it was some kind of a casino game.  This kind of reckless activity was greatly condemned by the World Development Movement report...




So clucked up! Chicken wing prices up ahead of Super Bowl - Life Inc. Today.com - Allison Linn - January 25, 2013 - Last summer’s drought has come home to roost in the price you’ll be paying for those Super Bowl party chicken wings.                           The U.S. Department of Agriculture said Thursday that chicken prices were up 6 percent in December, versus a year earlier. That's more than triple how much overall food prices have risen over the same time.                        Food economists had been warning that the price of foods such as meats and dairy would likely rise because of the summer’s severe drought.                     In the case of poultry, the drought led to a rise in prices for the grains that are typically used to feed animals such as chickens and turkeys. That, in turn, has pushed up the price of the chickens.


GOP Moves to Suspend Debt Ceiling Until May - CNBC - Eamon Javers - January 22, 2013 -
House Speaker John Boehner indicated Tuesday that Republicans will vote on an extension of the federal debt ceiling to allow Treasury to borrow money until mid-May. The move would reverse the order of a series of expected debt and spending fights in Washington, an effort designed to put the GOP on more sound political footing.                       The Speaker said the measure would be tied to a provision that would suspend the pay of lawmakers if they do not agree to a budget by April 15th. A vote is expected Wednesday.                             "I think the American people understand that you can't continue to spend money that you don't have," Boehner said.                      At the White House, spokesman Jay Carney indicated the president would likely sign the measure if the Congress passes it. "The House Republicans made a decision to back away from the kind of brinksmanship that was very concerning to the markets, very concerning to business, very concerning to the American people," Carney said.                            Extending the debt limit for a few months without demanding specific spending cuts means the next moment of high political and market drama will occur when the so-called "sequester" or automatic across the board spending cuts, kicks in on March 1. That deadline is itself the result of another temporary maneuver by Congress on New Year's Day to avoid the fiscal cliff. (Hickory Hound - Splat!!!)



My master's wasn't worth it - Be careful what you study. Going to grad school isn't always worth the time, effort and money. - CNN Money - Annalyn Kurtz @CNNMoney - Last updated January 24 2013



Older smokers priced out of Obamacare? - AP through CBS News - January 25, 2013 - Millions of smokers could be priced out of health insurance because of tobacco penalties in President Obama's health care law, according to experts who are just now teasing out the potential impact of a little-noted provision in the massive legislation.                       The Affordable Care Act — "Obamacare" to its detractors — allows health insurers to charge smokers buying individual policies up to 50 percent higher premiums starting next Jan. 1.                       For a 55-year-old smoker, the penalty could reach nearly $4,250 a year. A 60-year-old could wind up paying nearly $5,100 on top of premiums.                         Younger smokers could be charged lower penalties under rules proposed last fall by the Obama administration. But older smokers could face a heavy hit on their household budgets at a time in life when smoking-related illnesses tend to emerge.


Manufacturers cutting white-collar jobs now, too - By BERNARD CONDON, AP Business Writers; PAUL WISEMAN, AP Business Writers through WRAL.com - January 24, 2012 - Manufacturers have been using technology to cut blue-collar jobs for years. Now, they're targeting their white-collar workers, too.                      Factory Automation Systems makes machines that help companies cut, bundle and load products faster and cheaper than humans can. But it didn't realize how much technology could help its own business until the Great Recession hit.                       To save money, the Atlanta company cut nine workers doing administrative tasks, like booking flights, answering phones, managing employee benefits and ordering parts and supplies.                        "I had to lay people off to survive, then I noticed it's not such a big deal" to do things myself, President Rosser Pryor says. "When I'm buying something, I can go online. I don't need a buyer."                                    Pryor says do-it-yourself software means he doesn't have to rehire though business has rebounded.                        Other manufacturers are using technology to avoid hiring blue-collar workers when business improves.


Let the Banks Fail - President of Iceland