Monday, August 5, 2013

Spectator loses leg after controlled implosion of California power plant: police

Autumn Parry / The Bakersfield Californian viAP

An explosion knocks down one of the remaining towers at the old Kern Power Plant, Saturday, Aug. 3, 2013 in Bakersfield, Calif.

By Tracy Jarrett, NBC News

A spectator lost his leg while watching the implosion of a decommissioned PG&E plant Saturday morning and at least four more people were injured, authorities said.

The 44-year-old man, whose name has yet to be released, was gathered along with about 1,000 other spectators to watch the planned demolition of the Pacific Gas and Electric plant in Bakersfield, Calif., the Associated Press reported.

The man lost one leg and received major injuries to the other after shrapnel from the plant explosion flew across the street and struck his lower body, police said. An officer heard the man screaming for help after several plant structures came down, police told the AP.

The man, "sustained an apparent complete amputation of one leg, and the possible amputation of the second," Bakersfield Police Lt. Scott Tunnicliffe told NBC News affiliate KGET.


In California, authorities investigated what went wrong at the demolition of a decommissioned power plant Saturday. Hundreds had gathered around what was deemed a safe area but proved to be dangerous. NBC's Miguel Almaguer reports.

At least two other people received minor injuries that were treated on the scene, according to Tunnicliffe.

Those injured were part of a crowd gathered in a Lowe?s parking lot to watch the demolition that brought down the four-story plant decommissioned in 1986. Thousands of others lined the Rosedale Highway to watch the explosions, KGET reported.

There was a parameter set up around the plant, according to Tunnicliffe. However, according to KGET, PG&E stressed that no official accommodations were made for the general public to watch the explosions.

PG&E did not immediately respond to requests for comment from NBC News.

Roadways around the scene were reopened on Saturday, Tunnicliffe said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663306/s/2f8581d5/sc/3/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A80C0A30C198517920Espectator0Eloses0Eleg0Eafter0Econtrolled0Eimplosion0Eof0Ecalifornia0Epower0Eplant0Epolice0Dlite/story01.htm

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Jamie Dupree's Washington Insider: Pentagon asks Congress to end sequester

When the sequester became a real political threat last year, many lawmakers complained that the Pentagon didn't seem ready for the possibility of across-the-board budget cuts; now the military is sending the message to Congress that if the sequester isn't drastically changed, it will mean unacceptable defense cuts in the future.

"Under sequester level cuts, our military options and flexibility will be severely constrained," said Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, as officials painted a dark picture of the Pentagon's future, saying it could mean mothballing several aircraft carriers and deep cuts in other military branches.

"The sequester level scenario would compel us to consider these changes because there would be no realistic alternative," Hagel told reporters at a Pentagon briefing.

Hagel said a recent review of the Pentagon's budget situation focused on possible cuts in management efficiency and overhead, military pay and benefits, basic force structure and size, and future defense missions.

Other than management efficiency, the Congress hasn't shown any interest in making changes to the military's health care system, or its pension and pay system - and certainly not in terms of cutting unneeded weapons systems.

So far though, Hagel's warnings haven't brought lawmakers to their knees in the Congress, as critics of the Pentagon note that even with the across the board cuts of the sequester in place, the military's budget could well remain over $500 billion each year through the end of this decade.

Congress and the sequester

Right now, the sequester almost seems likely to stay in effect, mainly because there don't seem to be the votes in Congress to agree on any other budget plan, or to agree to target the cuts instead of having them go across the board. For example:

+ Democrats would like to wipe away the sequester with more targeted cuts and tax increases; House Republicans are emphatic in their opposition to new taxes of any kind.

+ Republicans have offered up targeted cuts as a way to shift more money into defense, but Democrats have made clear they will not agree to any kind of tradeoff where social programs are cut so the military can be made whole.

+ Even though Republicans set out a discretionary budget of $967 billion, they can't seem to keep GOP troops in line to vote for that plan; on Wednesday, House GOP leaders yanked a Transportation spending bill off the floor when it became obvious that Republicans were short on votes for the plan, as just four of the 12 spending bills have been acted on by the House.

+ The record is much worse in the Senate, where none of the dozen spending bills for next year have been approved; the Senate's version of the Transportation spending bill may get hung up by filibuster on Thursday.

+ The idea of the House voting for the Senate's $1.058 trillion budget seems far-fetched.

+ The idea of the Senate voting for the House's $967 billion budget seems unlikely as well.

But in that sea of inaction, that $967 billion figure for discretionary spending may be the trump card for Republicans - because if Congress can't get anything done at all on the sequester - that $967 bllion is the post-sequester budget level in law under the Budget Control Act.

Source: http://www.newstalkradiowhio.com/weblogs/jamie-dupree/2013/jul/31/pentagon-asks-congress-end-sequester/

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College Basketball recruiting 2014: News and analysis on top prospects

Published 5 hours and 52 minutes ago Last updated 5 hours and 16 minutes ago

Sporting News Sporting News
  • 1. Top news

    ? Jones and Okafor to Duke? Sure seems that way
    ? Villanova adds 4-star guard Phil Booth
    ? Kevon Looney could make Duke fans ship their pants
    ? PG Quentin Snider being pursued by Indiana
    ? Rashad Vaughn has 11 schools left to consider
    ? Don Mattingly's son plays college hoops? Where?
    ? Trey Lyles wishes UNC was after him, but that can't happen
    ? AAU team wears 'I am Trayvon' shirts in Las Vegas

  • 2. Must-read player profiles

    Jahlil Okafor and Tyus Jones: Not a package deal, just total package
    Emmanuel Mudiay: Impressive even when play is sloppy
    Cliff Alexander: 'War' rages to land powerful 2014 recruit
    Stanley Johnson: The uniqueness of this California product

  • 3. Las Vegas tournaments analysis

    As July came to a close, so too did the month's huge scouting period. SN's Mike DeCourcy was in Las Vegas for the last big hurrah, and seven players, including North Carolina recruit Theo Pinson, caught his eye.

  • 4. Peach Jam analysis

    When the stars of tomorrow collect in one spot, the college basketball world watches. That's what happened at Peach Jam, and there were eight players, including Trey Lyles, Justise Winslow and Luke Kennard, who really caught Mike DeCourcy's eye.

Source: http://www.sportingnews.com/ncaa-basketball/story/2013-08-03/college-basketball-recruiting-2014-news-analysis-jahlil-okafor-tyus-jones-mudiay

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American economy adds modest 162,000 jobs in July

FILE - In this Monday, July 15, 2013 file photo, a woman waits to talk with employers at a job fair for laid-off IBM workers in South Burlington, Vt. The government issues the jobs report for July on Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. (AP Photo/Toby Talbot, File)

FILE - In this Monday, July 15, 2013 file photo, a woman waits to talk with employers at a job fair for laid-off IBM workers in South Burlington, Vt. The government issues the jobs report for July on Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. (AP Photo/Toby Talbot, File)

Chart shows unemployment rate and monthly job creation; 2c x 3 inches; 96.3 mm x 76 mm;

(AP) ? The U.S. economy is steadily adding jobs ? just not at a consistently strong pace.

July's modest gain of 162,000 jobs was the smallest since March. And most of the job growth came in lower-paying industries or part-time work.

The unemployment rate fell from 7.6 percent to a 4?-year low of 7.4 percent, still well above the 5 percent to 6 percent typical of a healthy economy. The rate fell because more Americans said they were working, though some people stopped looking for a job and were no longer counted as unemployed.

All told, Friday's report from the Labor Department pointed to a less-than-robust job market. It suggested that the economy's subpar growth and modest consumer spending are making many businesses cautious about hiring.

The report is bound to be a key factor in the Federal Reserve's decision on whether to slow its bond purchases in September, as many economists have predicted it will do. Some think July's weaker hiring could make the Fed hold off on any pullback in its bond buying, which has helped keep long-term borrowing costs down.

Friday's report said employers added a combined 26,000 fewer jobs in May and June than the government had previously estimated. Americans also worked fewer hours in July, and their average pay dipped.

For the year, job growth has remained steady. The economy has added an average of 200,000 jobs a month since January, though the pace has slowed in the past three months to 175,000.

Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight, called the employment report "slightly negative," in part because job growth for May and June was revised down.

Scott Anderson, chief economist at Bank of the West, said it showed "a mixed labor market picture of continued improvement but at a still frustratingly slow pace."

The reaction from investors was muted. Stock averages closed with modest gains. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.6 percent from 2.71 percent ? a sign that investors think the economy remains sluggish and might need continued help from the Fed.

Beth Ann Bovino, senior economist at Standard & Poor's, said she thinks the Fed will delay any slowdown in its $85 billion a month in bond purchases.

"September seems very unlikely now," she says. "I'm wondering if December is still in the cards."

Still, it's possible that the lower unemployment rate, along with the hiring gains over the past year, could convince the Fed that the job market is strengthening consistently. Job growth has topped 140,000 each month for nearly a year, and unemployment has steadily declined.

"While July itself was a bit disappointing, the Fed will be looking at the cumulative improvement," said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics. "On that score, the unemployment rate has fallen from 8.1 percent last August to 7.4 percent this July, which is a significant improvement."

The government uses a survey of mostly large businesses and government agencies to determine how many jobs are added or lost each month. That's the survey that produced the gain of 162,000 jobs for July.

It uses a separate survey of households to calculate the unemployment rate. That survey captures hiring by companies of all sizes, including small businesses, new companies, farm workers and the self-employed.

The household survey found that 227,000 more people said they were employed last month. And 37,000 people stopped looking for work and were no longer counted as unemployed.

The number of self-employed jumped 241,000, or 2.6 percent, to 9.7 million ? the most in eight months. This group includes freelance workers, construction contractors, lawyers and other professionals with solo practices and farmers and ranchers.

Combined, those factors explain why the unemployment rate declined from 7.6 percent to 7.4 percent.

More than half of July's job gain in the survey of big companies and government agencies came from retailers, restaurants and bars, which tend to offer lower pay. That extends a trend that's limiting Americans' incomes and possibly slowing consumer spending. Retailers, for example, added nearly 47,000 jobs ? the biggest gain for any industry last month. Restaurants and bars added 38,400.

One Atlanta-based retailer, Cellairis, which sells mobile phone accessories, says it hired about 75 employees last month to meet growing demand. The company has 650 U.S. outlets, most of them mall kiosks. It plans to add 45 walk-in stores this year.

"People are willing to spend more now to protect and personalize their devices," said CEO Taki Skouras.

By contrast, employers in higher-paying industries, like Stripmatic, a steel parts maker in Cleveland, remain wary. Stripmatic hasn't hired anyone since adding five workers in the first three months of the year. Revenue has fallen 10 percent below projections this year.

The company's exports have picked up a bit in Mexico and Brazil but remain flat in Asia. Company President Bill Adler says he's concerned that slower growth in China could hamper his overseas sales.

Low-paying industries have accounted for 61 percent of jobs added this year, even though they represent only 39 percent of U.S. jobs overall, according to government data analyzed by Moody's Analytics. Mid-paying industries have accounted for fewer than 22 percent of the jobs added.

Some job gains were made in higher-paying fields last month. Financial services, which include banking, real estate and insurance, added 15,000 positions. Information technology added 4,300 and accounting 2,500. And manufacturing added 6,000 jobs, though that figure was offset by an equivalent loss in construction.

One growing source of better-paying jobs is local governments. They've now added jobs for five straight months and have helped offset job cuts by state and federal governments.

The result is that governments overall are much less of a drag on hiring than in the first three years of the economic recovery, which began in the summer of 2009. All told, they've shed 39,000 jobs in the 12 months that ended in July. That's down from a loss of 137,000 in the 12 months that ended in July 2012.

Most of the hiring by local governments has been for teachers and other jobs related to education. Local property tax revenue, a key source of funding for localities, fell after the recession but has begun to recover in some communities. Nationwide, home prices have risen, a trend that typically leads to higher property tax revenue.

More broadly, many of the jobs added in July were only part time. The number of Americans who said they were working part time but would prefer full-time work stands at 8.2 million ? the highest since last fall. Part-time jobs accounted for 65 percent of the jobs added in July and 77 percent of those added this year.

The government defines part-time work as being fewer than 35 hours a week.

The percentage of adult Americans either working or actively seeking work dipped in July to 63.4 percent. This is called the "labor force participation rate." The participation rate has been generally declining since peaking at 67.3 percent in 2000. That's partly the result of baby boomers retiring and leaving the workforce.

Job gains are being slowed by the economy's tepid growth. It grew at an annual rate of just 1.7 percent in the April-June quarter, the government said this week. That was an improvement over the previous two quarters, but it's still far too weak to rapidly lower unemployment.

Recent data suggest that the economy could strengthen in the second half of the year.

___

AP Economics Writers Paul Wiseman and Martin Crutsinger contributed to this report.

___

Follow Christopher S. Rugaber at http://twitter.com/ChrisRugaber .

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/MSJBJ/0db96b6363bf4fe8a81d630820d8eb8c/Article_2013-08-02-Economy/id-6336872eb9bc462b8279479bf089ac13

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Fantasy baseball world: Young pitchers to consider

Tony Cingrani

Reds starter Tony Cingrani had a 2.90 earned-run average in 77 2/3 innings this season. (Nhat V. Meyer / McClatchy-Tribune / July 23, 2013)

August 3, 2013, 4:02 p.m.

Talented young pitchers are in abundance this season, and staff writer Tim Hubbard looks at three who could play pivotal roles for contending teams real or fantasy.

Chris Archer

SP | Tampa Bay

After the Cleveland Indians and Chicago Cubs thought of him as expendable, the Rays are reaping the spoils of the talented Mr. Archer. The 24-year-old right-hander started the season in the minors, but has been a major cog for one of baseball's hottest team, and has a 6-4 record with a 2.65 earned-run average and a 1.08 WHIP. Hitters are managing only a .201 batting average against Archer, who had given up only one run in his previous four starts before losing to San Francisco on Friday.

Tony Cingrani

SP | Cincinnati

The Dodgers know first hand about Cingrani's talent, as they were held scoreless and struck out 11 times in seven innings by the left-hander last Sunday. Cingrani has spent much of the season shuttling between Cincinnati and Louisville, the team's triple-A affiliate, but the 24-year-old is doing his best to stick with the big club, posting a 4-1 record with a 2.90 ERA and 90 strikeouts in 77 2/3 innings.

Randall Delgado

SP | Arizona

After a losing bid to land the Diamondbacks' last rotation spot in the spring, Delgado found himself getting knocked around at triple A to the tune of a 1-4 record with a 6.84 ERA in 11 starts. But two solid outings and a Brandon McCarthy injury later and the 23-year-old Panamanian was called up, and he is making the most of the opportunity. The right-hander was 3-1 in July with a 2.14 ERA, giving Arizona the confidence to trade former ace Ian Kennedy for bullpen help.

tim.hubbard@latimes.com

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/latimes/sports/baseball/mlb/~3/Sb9fiot4GBs/la-sp-0804-fantasy-world-20130804,0,5237111.story

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Vera Bradley will expand design HQ, add 128 jobs

Just how many purses does a woman need anyway?

The answer must be plenty as Vera Bradley Inc. is at it again with a $26.6 million investment and a plan to create up to 128 new jobs by 2017, the company announced Friday.

Just two years ago, the handbag designer announced a $22.5 million expansion for its Roanoke distribution center to 420,000 square feet, adding 124 new jobs. Now, it plans to expand its present 40,000-square-foot design center by 149,000 square feet and grow its distribution center an additional 10,000 square feet.

Both locations are just south of Fort Wayne, off the Lafayette Center Road exit on Interstate 69. The expansions should be completed by next year.

?We are proud to invest in our home state,? Barbara Bradley Baekgaard, chief creative officer and cofounder, said in a statement.

?Our design center expansion will bring nearly all of our northeast Indiana employees together on one campus.?

And eventually the company intends to have all of its operations at the Stonebridge Road campus, spokeswoman Melissa Schenkel said. The company has its headquarters at 2208 Production Road, and a manufacturing operation in New Haven.

That pleases officials at the Fort Wayne-Allen County Economic Development Alliance.

?Ever since the company went public in 2010 there have been others out there (courting) them,? said Ashley Steenman, vice president of business development for the alliance. ?They?ve become a global company. We always want Allen County and Fort Wayne to be the first place they consider when they?re adding facilities and workers.?

That growth hasn?t been without some pains. The company more than doubled its share price to $52.25 in May 2011 from its first trading price of $24.85. On Friday, Vera Bradley shares closed at $22.65, down $1.32 or 5.5 percent on the Nasdaq stock market.

The company also is in the midst of replacing CEO Michael Ray, who announced his retirement in June ? the same day the corporation reported a 27 percent drop in earnings for its first fiscal quarter. Ray is Baekgaard?s son-in-law.

Supporters and others insist the future is bright for Vera Bradley.

?As I travel across this great Hoosier state, I witness daily the endless possibilities that can result from a terrific idea,? Gov. Mike Pence said in a statement. ? ? I?m proud that because of Indiana?s low- tax, pro-growth business climate, the company has been able to grow at an incredible rate right here at home, further proving that Indiana is a state that works for business.?

Founded 31 years ago by Baekgaard and Patricia R. Miller, Vera Bradley products are available at 79 retail stores and 14 outlet locations across the country.

Fiscal 2013 net revenue was $541 million. Vera Bradley has 1,000 full-time employees in Indiana.

The Indiana Economic Development Corp. has offered the company up to $1.75 million in conditional tax credits.

The tax credits are performance-based, meaning until Hoosiers are hired the company is not eligible to claim incentives. Allen County will consider additional property tax abatement, but officials were unavailable Friday to comment further.

pwyche@jg.net

Source: http://www.journalgazette.net/article/20130803/BIZ/308039974/-1/BIZ09

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

DaVita settles in Federal Way office and plans to add jobs

Kidney dialysis company DaVita Healthcare Partners Inc. moved its accounting and payroll operations to Federal Way ? along with 350 jobs and room to grow.

Based in Denver, DaVita is a publicly-traded Fortune 500 company (NYSE:DVA) that claims billionaire investor Warren Buffett as its largest shareholder. Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. owns 15.6 million shares (about 15 percent) of DaVita stock, according to USA Today. DaVita reported $8.186 billion in revenue in 2012.

DaVita serves 160,000 patients at nearly 2,000 kidney dialysis clinics across the U.S. and in nine other nations. Federal Way is already home to a 24-seat dialysis clinic at 1015 S. 348th St.

Located in a remodeled building on the Weyerhaeuser campus, the Federal Way accounting office plans to add at least 50 more jobs in the near future to help handle the entire company's finances.

The Federal Way office measures about 125,000 square feet. The site was selected because of its proximity to Tacoma, therefore minimizing disruption to employees' commutes.

"We were running out of space in downtown Tacoma," said Lin Whatcott, senior director for corporate accounting, on the move to Federal Way in April. "It was fortunate we found this big building that was sitting empty."

Jim Hilger, DaVita's chief accounting officer, told The Mirror last fall that one perk of moving a portion of employees to Federal Way is the lack of a Business and Occupation (B&O) tax. About 550 employees remain at the downtown Tacoma office.

Employees hail from King and Pierce counties. The Federal Way office presents a vibrant atmosphere filled with reminders of the company's core values for service.

One of those values is reflected in the name of the company itself: DaVita means "giving life" in Italian.

DaVita employees also receive permission to spend up to eight paid hours a year on community service projects. In one local example, a team from the tax department helped package school supplies for Federal Way-based World Vision.

About kidney dialysis

Patients suffering from kidney failure either need a transplant or dialysis to stay alive. With kidney dialysis, a machine removes and filters waste from the blood and body. Patients typically undergo dialysis three days a week for an average of four hours per session. Unless they find a kidney transplant, the patients must endure dialysis for life.

DaVita's Federal Way dialysis center serves 146 patients. Of those patients, about 26 self-administer their treatment at home, according to David Natali, regional operations director. Dialysis patients often have other health complications in addition to kidney failure. Life expectancy for dialysis patients is typically seven to 10 years.

?

Contact Federal Way Mirror Editor Andy Hobbs at editor@fedwaymirror.com or 1-253-925-5565 (ext 5050).

Source: http://feeds.soundpublishing.com/~r/fwmbusiness/~3/5f65CfuFAvU/217812571.html

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