Wednesday, 26 February 2014

Noting tech needs, mining companies seek graphite


Experts say the promise of expanded uses for "pencil lead" in electronic car, cellphone and tablet computer batteries has helped touch off the largest wave of graphite mining projects in decades.


Industrial minerals expert Don Hains says more than 200 companies are searching for graphite deposits around the world.


At least four companies are exploring prospects in the U.S. at sites in Alaska, Alabama, Nevada and Montana. And more are exploring in Canada.


The optimism also has been fueled by moves from China to reduce exports. The nation has long dominated world production.


From technological to industrial, graphite products comprise a $13 billion industry.



Smartphone cameras step closer to DSLR cameras


Expect sharper, clearer selfies this year.


Samsung Electronics Co. has beefed up the camera in its Galaxy S5 smartphone due for April release and added smarter camera software, following Sony and Nokia in their upgrades of handset cameras. The tweaks mean smartphone photos, ubiquitous nowadays because of social media such as Facebook and Twitter, will be closer in quality to images captured by digital single-lens reflex cameras, also known as DSLR.


How to give a super-thin smartphone the power of a DSLR camera that can capture moving images with clarity is a key challenge for the likes of Samsung, Sony, Nokia and LG as they try to differentiate their offerings in a crowded handset market. Their efforts to make smartphone cameras more powerful have taken a toll on the compact, point-and-shoot camera market, but catching up to the high-end cameras used by professional photographers had appeared a far-fetched ambition.


The gap is getting narrower thanks mainly to improvements in camera software and other technologies, but may never close completely.


The global wireless show that wraps up in Barcelona on Thursday showed smartphone makers using software trickery to offset their camera weaknesses: inferior image sensors and lack of optical zoom lens. The companies are also making photo manipulation on the phone easier to learn than manually controlling DSLR cameras.


Instead of touting their smartphones as thinner, lighter or bigger screened, Samsung, Sony and LG were boasting how their latest mobile gadgets can record ultra-high definition videos known as 4K, take big-pixel pictures without a second of delay and capture clearer images even at a low-light settings and when a subject is moving.


One trend in smartphone camera this year will be phase detection autofocus, previously available only in cameras with interchangeable lens, said Chris Chute, a director at research company IDC.


Samsung showcased the feature in the Galaxy S5, the latest version of the South Korean company's flagship smartphone. It reduces the time it takes to focus on a subject to 0.3 second so even when the subject is moving, the image can be captured with a sharp edge, said Seshu Madhavapeddy, Samsung's senior vice president for product and technology.


"Now that phones are starting to have this, consumers will only be more likely to use phones for not just everyday pictures, but more and more for special event photography," Chute said.


With the 16 megapixel rear camera in the Galaxy S5, it is possible to preview the result of applying high dynamic range imaging to pictures. HDR imaging usually helps create better pictures but with digital cameras, it is processed after snapping a photo.


Samsung and LG also showed how their high-end smartphones can selectively blur and sharpen a picture by tapping the area a user wants to adjust. This feature, which adds depth to a photo, was a major trait in DSLR cameras. While DSLR cameras did this trick in the image's raw data by changing the lens aperture, Samsung's S5 and LG's G Pro 2 do it through software. Nokia and Sony said their latest smartphones have similar features.


Nokia is also betting big on powerful camera features to lure buyers from Samsung and Apple Inc. Among Nokia's major products is the Lumia 1020 smartphone announced last year, which can take 38 megapixel images. Larger pixels in the camera don't necessarily mean a better picture, which also depends on the lens and image sensors. But bigger pixels allow taking photos with sufficient details for poster-size prints, something that professional photographers are keen on. Other high-end smartphone cameras are around or below 20 megapixels.


Sony's Xperia Z2 smartphone, announced at the Mobile World Congress, has a rear camera with 20.7 megapixels, same as the predecessor Z1, but Sony upgraded the camera's video-recording power to 4K. The Z2 is also equipped with technologies that allow users capture to moving subjects blur-free.


All these handsets from Samsung, Sony and LG can record ultra-HD picture quality video, something that isn't widespread among digital cameras.


"This trend is happening much faster than most predicted," said IDC's Chute of the 4K video recording in high-end smartphones.


But will these moves push smartphone cameras to reach the market reserved for premium cameras over $1,000?


"You're getting to the stage where cameras in high end models are good enough for the majority of consumers in most environments," said Nick Dillon, a senior analyst at Ovum. But there will be a significant quality gap between the pictures from DSLR cameras and smartphones for the foreseeable future, he said.


One reason is the sensor. The larger the sensor is, the better the image's quality.


"There is a limitation in the sensor size you can put in smartphones because it would make smartphones bigger," Dillon said.


And that's one crucial reason why professional photographers haven't swapped their cameras for smartphones.


Smartphone cameras have yet to match high-end digital cameras especially in low-light settings, said Jun Michael Park, a freelance photo journalist in Seoul.


"I still wouldn't switch. Smartphone's small camera comes in handy, but when I take pictures I always think about getting it printed, having a show, or getting them published," Park said.


Winning over photographers like Park could be the next trophy for smartphone makers.


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AP Technology Writer Anick Jesdanun contributed to this story from Barcelona.


Follow Youkyung Lee on Twitter: http://bit.ly/1d3R2pn



Oil prices drop in Asia on demand expectations


Oil prices fell in Asia on Thursday as expectations for reduced demand due to warmer weather outweighed a smaller-than-expected increase in U.S. oil supplies.


Benchmark U.S. crude for April delivery was down 31 cents to $102.28 a barrel at 0610 GMT in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.


The contract closed up 76 cents Wednesday at $102.59 after the U.S. Energy Department said crude oil supplies rose by 68,000 barrels last week, well below the increase of 1.5 million barrels expected by analysts surveyed by Platts. Supplies at the key storage point in Cushing, Okla., fell by 1.1 million barrels.


The inventories figures pointed to resilient demand but oil shed some of those gains Thursday as the approach of spring in the U.S. and weaker Chinese manufacturing could reduce crude consumption.


Investors will be watching for new policy initiatives from China's annual legislative session in early March to see what steps the government might take to shore up growth.


Brent crude, which is used to set prices for international varieties of crude, shed 26 cents to $109.25 on the ICE exchange in London.


In other energy futures trading on Nymex:


— Wholesale gasoline was down 0.2 cent at $2.983 per gallon.


— Heating oil shed 0.4 cent to $3.035 per gallon.


— Natural gas lost 3.2 cents to $4.509 per 1,000 cubic feet.



Lowe's 4Q profit meets analysts' estimates


Lowe's fiscal fourth-quarter net income rose 6 percent, as the home-improvement retailer continued to benefit from the housing market's recovery.


The company also announced a new $5 billion stock repurchase program on Wednesday. Shares of the company rose nearly 6 percent in morning trading.


The U.S. housing market has emerged from a deep slump, aided by rising home prices, steady job growth and fewer troubled loans dating back to the housing-bubble days. That has spurred customers to spend more to renovate their homes.


Housing market growth is expected to slow in 2014 but CEO Robert Niblock said in a call with investors he thinks consumer spending on home projects will stay strong.


"Homeowners continue to believe the value of their home is increasing and report that they are less likely to decrease spending," he said. "With consumers more willing to invest in their homes, the job and income growth forecast for 2014 should provide the wherewithal for continued home improvement spending."


Lowe's strong results came the same day as the Commerce Department said that U.S. sales of new homes rebounded in January to the fastest pace in more than five years. That gave some hope that housing could be regaining momentum after a slowdown last year caused by rising interest rates.


Lowe's Cos. earned $306 million, or 29 cents per share, for the period ended Jan. 31. That's up from $288 million, or 26 cents per share, a year ago.


Excluding impairment charges, earnings were 31 cents per share. That matched the expectations of analysts polled by FactSet.


Revenue rose 6 percent to $11.66 billion from $11.05 billion. Wall Street forecast $11.67 billion.


Lowe's financial report comes a day after larger rival Home Depot Inc.'s quarterly results topped analysts' estimates on cost cuts despite sluggish sales.


For the full year, Lowe's earned $2.29 billion, or $2.14 per share. In the prior year it earned $1.96 billion, or $1.69 per share. Annual revenue rose 6 percent to $53.42 billion from $50.52 billion.


Looking ahead, the company foresees fiscal 2014 earnings of about $2.60 per share, with revenue rising approximately 5 percent. Based on fiscal 2013's revenue of $53.42 billion, that implies about $56.1 billion.


Analysts expect earnings of $2.64 per share on revenue of $56.19 billion.


Lowe's also announced a new $5 billion buyback. The company said that the remaining $1.3 billion balance under its prior repurchase program will continue to be used, for a total authorization of $6.3 billion as of Jan. 31.


Shares rose $2.77, or 5.8 percent, to $50.88 in morning trading.



New food labels would highlight calories and sugar


Those "Nutrition Facts" labels that are plastered on nearly every food package found in grocery stores are getting a new look.


Calories would be in larger, bolder type, and consumers for the first time would know whether foods have added sugars under label changes being proposed by the Obama administration. Serving sizes would be updated to make them more realistic. A serving of ice cream, for example, would double to a full cup, closer to what people actually eat.


The proposed overhaul comes as science has shifted. While fat was the focus two decades ago when the labels first were created, nutritionists are now more concerned with how many calories we eat. And serving sizes have long been misleading, with many single-serving packages listing multiple servings, so the calorie count is lower.


The idea isn't that people should eat more; it's that they should understand how many calories are in what they are actually eating. The Food and Drug Administration says that by law, serving sizes must be based on actual consumption, not ideal consumption.


"Our guiding principle here is very simple, that you as a parent and a consumer should be able to walk into your local grocery store, pick up an item off the shelf and be able to tell whether it's good for your family," said first lady Michelle Obama, who was to join the Food and Drug Administration in announcing the proposed changes Thursday at the White House.


Mrs. Obama was making the announcement as part of her Let's Move initiative to combat child obesity, which is celebrating its fourth anniversary. On Tuesday, she announced new Agriculture Department rules that would reduce marketing of unhealthy foods in schools.


The new nutrition labels are likely several years away. The FDA will take comments on the proposal for 90 days, and a final rule could take another year. Once it's final, the agency has proposed giving industry two years to comply.


The FDA projects food companies will have to pay around $2 billion as they change the labels.


The Grocery Manufacturers Association, the industry group that represents the nation's largest food companies, did not respond to any specific parts of the proposal but called it a "thoughtful review."


President Pamela Bailey also said it was important to the food companies that the labels "ultimately serve to inform, and not confuse, consumers."


It was still not yet clear what the final labels would look like. The FDA offered two labels in its proposal — one that looks similar to the current version but is shorter and clearer and another that groups the nutrients into a "quick facts" category for things like fat, carbohydrates, sugars and proteins. There also would be an "avoid too much" category for saturated fats, trans fats, cholesterol, sodium and added sugars; and a "get enough" section with vitamin D, potassium, calcium, iron and fiber.


Both versions list calories above all of those nutrients in a large, bold type.


The proposed rules would also overhaul serving sizes for soda and single-serving packages. Both 12-ounce and 20-ounce sodas would be considered one serving, and many single-serving packages — a bag of chips, a can of soup or a frozen entree, for example — would either be listed as a single serving or list nutrient information by serving and by container.


The inclusion of added sugars to the label was one of the biggest revisions. Nutrition advocates have long asked for that line on the label because it's impossible for consumers to know how much sugar in an item is naturally occurring, like that in fruit and dairy products, and how much is added by the manufacturer. Think an apple vs. apple sauce, which comes in sweetened and unsweetened varieties.


According to the Agriculture Department's 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, added sugars contribute an average of 16 percent of the total calories in U.S. diets. Though those naturally occurring sugars and the added sugars act the same in the body, the USDA says the added sugars are just empty calories while naturally occurring ones usually come along with other nutrients.


David Kessler, who was FDA commissioner when the first Nutrition Facts labels were unveiled in the early 1990s, said he thinks focusing on added sugars and calories will have a "demonstrative public health benefit."


Kessler said the added sweetness, like added salt, drives overeating. And companies will adjust their recipes to get those numbers down.


"No food company wants products to look bad," he said.


While some may ignore the panels, there's evidence that more people are reading them in recent years as there has been a heightened interest in nutrition.


A USDA study released earlier this year said 42 percent of working adults used the panel always or most of the time in 2009 and 2010, up from 34 percent two years earlier. Older adults were more likely to use it.



Proposed changes in 'Nutrition Facts' labels


The White House and the Food and Drug Administration are proposing an overhaul of the "Nutrition Facts" labels on food packages. Among the possible changes:


—Calories displayed more prominently.


—A new line for "added sugars" — those sugars that aren't naturally occurring and are added in processing.


—Serving sizes updated to reflect the amount of food people really eat. By law, the FDA has to create the labels based on how much people eat, not what they should eat. This means per-serving calorie counts on the package would be more meaningful.


—Dual listing of nutrients per serving and nutrients per container for some foods. These are items like frozen dinners or a can of soup that could be consumed in a single sitting.


—A listing for nutrients that Americans need more of, such as potassium and vitamin D.


—"Calories from fat" would be removed because it's confusing. The type of fat is more important than the amount.



Editorials from around Pennsylvania


Editorials from around Pennsylvania:


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ILL WILL


Last week, Gov. Corbett sent an official application to the federal government explaining why he thinks that his plan for offering health coverage to low-income Pennsylvanians is better than the feds' plan. A draft of Corbett's proposal was made public in December and was the subject of hearings in January. Unfortunately, the official application hasn't improved with time.


To review: As part of the Affordable Care Act, the feds have given states the option to expand Medicaid in order to make sure that as many people as possible will have health coverage. For the first three years, the feds will pick up 100 percent of the cost, and 90 percent thereafter. Corbett, who fought to overturn ACA, has declined the expansion, saying that it would be too costly for the state. (His math: Expanding Medicaid would lead to a swell of new enrollments, so even if the federal government starts picking up only 90 percent of costs, it will still be too much.) By turning down the Medicaid expansion, Corbett turned down $522 million this year alone.


What he's proposing is a plan that would use Medicaid money to allow low-income people to buy private health coverage on the open exchange.


Medicaid expansion is designed to ensure health coverage to many; Corbett's plan is designed to instill "personal responsibility" by requiring low-income people to pay a premium for their coverage, and engage in "healthier choices," including looking for work. The component that ties coverage to work/job-seeking is almost guaranteed to be scuttled by the feds.


There is nothing wrong with encouraging personal responsibility, but the implication is that ill health is a direct result of irresponsibility. That's offensive. So is the requirement that being able to access medical care should be tied to job-seeking; those working less than 20 hours a week will be required to enter job training and engage in job searches as a condition of their coverage. And there's more: According to Corbett, "Reducing the cost of health-care coverage needs to be the responsibility of both the provider and the individuals receiving care."


Really? So, in addition to paying a premium for health coverage - which is likely to be difficult for a great many low-income recipients - the state's poorest citizens will be busy making sure that they never get sick, and in their spare time, making sure that they're doing their bit to keep down health-care costs . . . which, the last time we looked, were driven primarily by high drug and physician costs, expensive technology and profound systemic problems. All of which, by the way, the Affordable Care Act was designed to address.


That's not encouraging personal responsibility; that's scapegoating our most vulnerable citizens.


Medicaid is a big expense to the state; one in six people receives benefits, and it accounts for 27 percent of the state's general-fund budget. But there are factors that drive these costs. According to the Pennsylvania Budget and Policy Center, they include a higher percentage of seniors and disabled individuals than most states, as well as a reliance on expensive nursing-home care.


— The Philadelphia Daily News


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TAXPAYER SAVINGS


The Department of Defense is right to slash $1 billion in subsidies to commissaries.


Each year, $1.4 billion in taxpayer dollars go to the 178 commissaries nationwide and 67 located overseas.


The cuts are part of a broader budget plan. Currently a family of four can save $4,500 a year at commissaries on average, according to the Defense Commissary Agency. Under the new proposal, the savings for a family of that size would be closer to $1,500 a year.


The problem with taxpayers subsidizing commissaries is that former servicemen and women and their families may continue to shop there after they leave the service, regardless of their income. They may shop in commissaries regardless of where they served in the military, even if they didn't leave the U.S. People with good paying jobs continue to go to commissaries to save money.


The Defense Department does not plan to shut any commissaries. And people who are eligible to shop there will still see a big savings in their annual food bill.


People need to get a break on their taxes. Lower taxes would benefit everyone, including people who served in the military. There must be cuts in the federal budget and for the Department of Defense to cut commissaries subsidies is a good step toward that goal.


— (Somerset) Daily American


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UKRAINE REVOLUTION IS JUST BEGINNING


The flight of President Viktor Yanukovich and the takeover of the government in Kiev by protesters does not mean that the revolution in Ukraine is over. The bloody battle in Independence Square was just the conclusion of Act I in a long play. Much is yet to come after the intermission.


Politicians are likely to begin jumping from their seats, marching down the aisle and shouting at the characters on the stage. They will inevitably boo those actors they consider villains, cheer those they see as heroes and heckle our own government for its actions or lack of them in regard to the crisis. Before they do, it might be a good idea to consider history and the motivation of the characters.


This is a critical moment in world history. Ukraine is not some little, out-of-the-way republic; with 45 million people, it is the size of France. Its industry, agriculture and natural resources are already formidable, its potential great. But it is also a country deep in debt, crippled by government corruption, and it is split by ethnic, cultural and linguistic traditions.


Ukraine has little experience as an independent nation. At various times over the past thousand years, it has been ruled by the Kingdom of Poland, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the Mongols, tsarist Russia and the Soviet Union. Its land has been trampled by invaders and laid waste during World War II. Its people have been the victims of pogroms, famines and communist dictatorship.


Kiev is central to Russia and its history. It was the capital of Russia, or Kievan Rus, from 882 to 1169. Kiev and Ukraine came under the control of the tsars in 1686 and completely lost autonomy under Catherine the Great in 1775. Ukraine became an independent state late in the 20th century, but to suggest that Russia has no legitimate interest in it is to ignore a millennium of history. Much of the population of eastern Ukraine and the south, where Russia maintains a naval base, is ethnically Russian and speaks Russian. Many of them remember when Ukraine was called the breadbasket of the U.S.S.R. and Nikita Khrushchev, a fellow Ukrainian, was the Soviet Union's top man.


It is no wonder that many Ukrainians and Russians are alarmed at the country's separation and drift to the West. It should come as no surprise that Russian President Putin wants to maintain influence and control of Ukraine. We wonder how an American president would act if Texas, for example, were to declare itself an independent nation, or if California were to withdraw from the union and begin cozying up to China.


What will happen in Act II is anyone's guess. Counter-revolutionaries in Eastern Ukraine could split the nation in two, but not before a civil war. Putin might send in troops to reinstall a government of his liking. And if he did, what would the United States and the European Union do about that?


A more likely scenario would be the emergence of a government in Kiev that is willing to cooperate with Russia while at the same time move the nation more toward democracy. Yulia Tymoshenko, the former prime minister freed from jail a week ago, has had a working relationship with Putin, according to an Associated Press article in this paper Tuesday. Should there be elections in May, and should Ukrainians choose her, she could be the one to guide her nation away from civil war and the world out of crisis.


That's the final scene of Act III we'd like to see.


— Observer-Reporter


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ATTORNEY GENERAL KANE, DOMA AND THE DUTY TO DEFEND


In July 2013, Pennsylvania Attorney General Kathleen Kane drew national media attention when she announced that she would not defend Pennsylvania's version of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) in a lawsuit filed against the state challenging the act's constitutionality. Kane explained that she could not ethically defend the law when she herself believes it to be wholly unconstitutional. In support of her decision, Kane cited the Commonwealth Attorneys Act, noting that it was her duty under the act to authorize the Office of General Counsel to defend the state in litigation in which she deems such a decision to be in the best interest of the state. Kane also referenced her ethical obligations under the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct.


Kane's refusal to defend the law as it currently stands in Pennsylvania sparked controversy, with critics viewing her decision as an inappropriate interjection of her personal beliefs on gay marriage. On the other hand, Kane's supporters, of which there are many, point out that she made no secret of her stance on the issue during her campaign, and was eventually elected with the support of more than 3.1 million Pennsylvanians. Regardless of her motives, significant legal and ethical considerations regarding Kane's decision still remain.


For instance, Kane's reliance on the Commonwealth Attorneys Act to support her decision is curious in light of the fact that the act specifically provides that it is her duty as attorney general to "uphold and defend the constitutionality of all statutes so as to prevent their suspension or abrogation in the absence of a controlling decision by a court of competent jurisdiction." Pennsylvania's version of DOMA was lawfully enacted and the constitutionality of the law remains intact until the Pennsylvania Supreme Court holds otherwise or the legislature decides to revisit the issue. Simply put, Kane has no personal say in the matter, nor should her conscience. Her obligations to defend the statute derive from the law of the very state she refused to defend.


Attempting to further justify her position, Kane pointed to her ethical obligation under the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct to withdraw from a case in which she has a fundamental disagreement with the client, which, in this case, is the state of Pennsylvania. She repeatedly stated that she cannot ethically or in good conscience defend DOMA, finding it wholly unconstitutional. A lawyer's ability to withdraw from representation under such circumstances derives from Rule 1.16(b)(4), which provides that "a lawyer may withdraw from representing a client if the client insists on taking action that the lawyer considers repugnant or with which the lawyer has a fundamental disagreement." Rule 1.16 cites several instances in which a lawyer shall withdraw, including if the lawyer's abilities are materially impaired by a physical or mental condition, and others in which the lawyer has the option of withdrawing at his or her discretion, such as the example cited by Kane. Indeed, while Kane has stated that it is her ethical obligation under the Rules of Professional Conduct to refuse to defend DOMA, the truth of the matter is that this is not an affirmative obligation, but rather an elected option she chose to exercise.


What role politics played in Kane's refusal to defend the law is not our focus here. Kane's political motivations, however, cannot be ignored when considering the ultimate effect her decision may have on similar issues in the future. As attorney general, Kane is charged with defending the laws of the state, regardless of political affiliation or partisan ideology. By rejecting this obligation on the strength of her own moral compass, Kane has arguably acted outside the power of her office, which is defined by the constitution that she claims to defend. Kane's role as attorney general does not bestow on her the authority to selectively choose what lawfully enacted state statutes she will and will not defend. Allowing her to do so creates a dangerous precedent for future inhabitants of her office, leaving those who assume her role in the future the ability to disregard state laws that are constitutionally sound.


Though unique, Kane's situation is certainly one we can learn from as young lawyers. The idea that everyone is entitled to representation is one that we, as lawyers, are tasked with fulfilling, even when such representation is not necessarily aligned with our own moral and ethical values. While our professional judgment is certainly guided by our own personal philosophies, our duty is to represent the interests of our clients, and there will no doubt be times when those interests are contrary to our own. We may be confronted with situations in which we are at odds with the actions or perspectives of a client, and it is during these times that we may find it most difficult to provide representation, perhaps to the point we find it necessary to withdraw as counsel.


The truth of the matter, however, is that as young lawyers, we may not have the luxury of picking and choosing those whom we represent. In such circumstances we must do our best to set aside our personal philosophies and instead focus on the law because it is our ability to interpret the law that our clients rely on most.


Of course, in those circumstances where we disagree with our clients' position on the law, a far more significant conflict results. It is important to remember in these situations, though, that our duty to represent our clients is not relieved by a difference of opinion. We have a responsibility to advise our clients of our interpretation of their legal rights and obligations. The important thing is that our clients understand our position on the issues so that an informed decision can be made on whether the representation should proceed. If, after we do so, a fundamental disagreement remains, terminating the representation may be best for all involved.


Kane has made no secret of her stance on DOMA. She has stated in no uncertain terms that she believes the statute is unconstitutional, and Kane is certainly not alone in that opinion. Nevada Attorney General Catherine Cortez Masto refused to defend Nevada's ban on gay marriage, and Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring refused to do the same, explaining that he would not defend laws that violate Virginians' rights.


This, of course, all comes in the wake of the Obama administration's announcement that it would not defend DOMA, a law originally signed by President Bill Clinton in 1996 that defined marriage as between a man and a woman, and the U.S. Supreme Court's decision to strike down a key portion of it this past summer. The high court's decision catapulted the issue to the political forefront, triggering a call for change in many states where similar laws still stand. Currently, 17 states allow for same-sex marriage, and that number is expected to grow as constitutional challenges on bans against it continue to mount.


Indeed, the ban on gay marriage continues to erode state by state, and it remains possible, if not inevitable, that it will one day fall in Pennsylvania. When all is said and done, Kane will likely find herself on the right side of history; however, we as attorneys are ethically bound to continue to question whether the ends justify the means.


As the state's chief attorney, Kane undoubtedly has the platform to pursue a change in the law, but must do so within the checks and balances of democracy. For example, per the Commonwealth Attorneys Act, she is to serve as a close adviser to the governor, including offering official comment on the constitutionality of legislation presented for approval. Likewise, her office is trusted to analyze the legality and constitutionality of certain rules and regulations promulgated by state agencies. It is through these channels that Kane will most effectively be heard, and perhaps then she can ultimately facilitate the change she so strongly stands behind.


— The Legal Intelligencer's Young Lawyer Editorial Board


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POLITICS, HOMICIDE CASES JUST DON'T MIX


Of all the circumstances that have been politicized in Northumberland County, no one expected a homicide case to be next on the list.


It there's, though, with reaction to warden Roy Johnson's decision to move defendant Miranda Barbour from the county prison to the state correctional institution for women at Muncy.


Controversial as the move may have been, in part because it occurred within a few hours of a visit by Barbour's mother and grandmother to Sunbury and, more importantly, without her attorney's knowledge, a public spat over the details among county commissioners is not necessarily in the best interest of the public.


The dispute is merely an extension of the two-year-long Vinny Clausi and Stephen Bridy vs. Rick Shoch rift on the commissioner board. Shoch, currently the highest ranking member of the prison board as vice president, gave Johnson's decision his blessing - whether needed or not. That, in turn, prompted criticism from Clausi and Bridy, and the latest round of public name-calling was on.


Barbour's attorney, chief public defender Edward Greco, doesn't like the fact that his client was moved to Lycoming County, either. As the person probably most affected except for the defendant herself, Greco acted on his displeasure with the proper course of action: he filed a motion with the court asking a judge to consider reversing the warden's decision.


That's how such sensitive matters should be handled.


Shoch said the warden moved Barbour for reasons related to security, including disruptions to normal operations at the prison. Considering all of the publicity, that sounds reasonable, and a judge will have to weigh that argument against Greco's concerns that it violates his defendant's constitutional rights and affects his access and, therefore, his ability to prepare a defense.


The commissioners do have a role in the operation of the prison; they're part of a seven-member board charged with overseeing the management.


But engaging publicly in a dispute about this highly publicized case is wrong and could jeopardize the fair administration of justice.


The public the commissioners serve would be better off if they don't drag their ill feelings toward one another further into this homicide case.


— The (Shamokin) News Item



Top Senate Dem: Koch brothers are un-American


The Senate's top Democrat criticized a pair of billionaire brothers in unusually harsh terms Wednesday, accusing the conservative duo of being "un-American," spreading lies about President Barack Obama's health care overhaul and lacking a conscience.


In a pair of appearances on the Senate floor, Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., became the latest Democrat this election year to denunciate Charles and David Koch — pronounced "Coke."


The brothers' representatives said Reid's attack was "disgraceful" and accused him of attacking people hurt by the 2010 health care law.


Reid's focus was on television ads that are being used against Democratic congressional candidates, commercials that he said misleadingly criticize the health care law.


"When you make billions of dollars a year you can be as immoral and dishonest as your money will allow you to be," Reid said. "It's too bad that they're trying to buy America, and it's time that the American people spoke out against this terrible dishonesty of these two brothers who are about as un-American as anyone that I can imagine."


Hours earlier, Reid said the ads were misleadingly lambasting the health care law. "It's easy to do if you have no conscience and are willing to lie," he said.


Reid's comments come at a time when Republicans believe the glitch-plagued startup of the health care law gives them a winning issue in this fall's congressional campaigns. Democrats have launched a counteroffensive in recent days, focusing on how the law has helped millions of Americans.


The Koch brothers are financial backers of the conservative Americans for Prosperity, one piece of the brothers' sophisticated political and advocacy network. It has spent at least $27 million already on television ads criticizing Democrats, well outpacing Democratic spending.


Reid cited ads that he said misleadingly say the health care law made one patient's treatment unaffordable, and that use paid actors posing as residents of Louisiana and reading made-up letters from insurance companies. He described news media reports that debunked some of the ads.


In a written statement, Philip Ellender, an official with a Koch-owned company, said the brothers were not responsible for an Americans for Prosperity ad that Reid seemed to cite showing a Michigan leukemia patient.


"It is disgraceful that Senator Reid and his fellow Democrats are attacking a cancer victim as part of their campaign against Charles Koch and David Koch," said Ellender, president of government affairs for Koch Companies Public Sector LLC. He said the brothers have "devoted their lives to advancing tolerance and freedom in America" and want a country where people "are free to make decisions about their lives."


In a written statement, Tim Phillips, president of Americans for Prosperity, said, "Sen. Harry Reid stood on the Senate floor today and attacked the character and integrity of every American who had the courage to share how they're being hurt by the president's health care law — some of whom are battling serious, life-threatening illnesses."


Philips said Democrats were trying to distract attention on the health care law's problems "by declaring war on its victims."


In frequent messages to reporters and supporters, the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee has made a point of mentioning the Koch brothers. The party seems to be trying to turn them into boogeymen of this campaign and their wealth into a rallying point for the liberal base.


Koch Industries of Wichita, Kan., is one of the largest privately controlled companies in the world. The two brothers are among the wealthiest men in America.



Associated Press writer Philip Elliott contributed to this report.


Building in oil patch hub Williston booms in Jan.


Williston's construction boom is showing no signs of slowing, as the western North Dakota oil patch city continues to receive requests for construction permits as it works to ease its years-long housing crunch.


Commercial and residential construction permit values in January increased 85 percent over the year, according to the city Building Department. The department issued 43 permits with a total value of $27.6 million in projects, office manager Kelly Aberle told the Williston Herald (http://tinyurl.com/kou7hkm ).


Permit numbers and values in the city have been soaring since 2007, when there were 339 permits with a value of $42 million, Aberle said. Last year there were 696 permits with a value of $353 million, and in the peak year of 2012 there were 1,018 permits issued with a value of $470 million.


There was a big push for apartment buildings last year, according to Aberle.


"If you build it, they will come," she said.


That demand has driven up the market. A national study from an apartment renting guide recently found that Williston had the highest average rent in the country, at nearly $2,400 a month for a one-bedroom apartment.



Grain mixed, livestock higher


Grain futures were mixed Wednesday on the Chicago Board of Trade.


Wheat for March delivery fell 15 cents to $6.00 a bushel; March corn was .25 cent lower at 4.5550 a bushel; March oats gained 3.75 cents to $5.0675 a bushel; while March soybeans advanced 8.25 cents to $14.0725 a bushel.


Beef and pork were higher on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.


April live cattle was 2.12 cents higher $1.4452 a pound; March feeder cattle was .93 cent higher at $1.72 a pound; while April lean hogs rose .45 cent to $1.0102 a pound.



Ohio justices hear local drilling rules dispute


Ohio Supreme Court justices vigorously challenged attorneys on Wednesday over the power of state-level oil and gas drilling regulations to supersede local zoning laws.


One justice asked whether Ohio's regulatory scheme violates communities' constitutional home rule protections, while another said an inability for cities to challenge state-issued drilling permits gives Ohio's natural resources director seemingly god-like sway.


The questioning came in a case brought by the Akron suburb of Munroe Falls against Beck Energy Corp. The lawsuit is being closely monitored by both pro- and anti-drilling forces for its potential impact on community efforts to block hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, used by the industry to capture gas or oil from underground shale. A court decision is expected in a few months.


The energy company in this case received a state-required permit from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources in 2011 to drill a traditional well on private property in Munroe Falls. The city sued, saying the company illegally sidestepped local ordinances by not involving the city in the process.


Deputy Solicitor Peter Glenn-Applegate, the state's attorney, told the court Ohio's natural resources director was empowered in 2004 to regulate drilling and that a permit can't be gained without meeting established setbacks, fencing and other siting requirements.


He and Beck's attorney, John Keller, argued that state lawmakers made the decision to centralize authority over drilling at the state level after a period of decades when local governments were in charge.


"That was a conscious decision by the General Assembly to eliminate the dual regulation as to the location of wells," Keller said.


Justice Paul Pfeifer drew a distinction between that process and the locating of windmills, which goes through a commission. "For those who object there's no place to go. ... The director of natural resources is God in this case," he said.


Glenn-Applegate said although Ohio citizens can't directly challenge drilling permits issued by the state, they have a remedy through the courts if they feel the natural resources director failed to adequately protect public health and safety.


Munroe Falls attorney Thomas Houlihan argued that cities have the right to impose zoning restrictions as they plan their communities. He told the court the two levels of government can and should work together.


The law says Ohio has sole and exclusive authority to regulate the location of wells, which Houlihan said is different from determining their location.


"If the state seeks to pre-empt local zoning, it can attempt to do so, but it must do so with express language," he said.


Justice William O'Neill questioned why Houlihan wasn't going further with this legal argument to challenge Ohio's regulatory setup as a violation of constitutional protections of home rule.


"If the state is given exclusive control over the location of a building, a structure, or a well, isn't zoning gone?" he asked.


Houlihan kept his arguments focused on the ability of state and local laws to work in tandem, citing similar shared authority in other drilling states such as California, Oklahoma and Texas.


In New York, where fracking isn't yet legal and many communities have instituted pre-emptive bans, and in Pennsylvania, where fracking is widespread, similar cases have been decided in favor of shared regulation, with municipalities overseeing such things as land use and aesthetics and the state overseeing safety and construction.


Beck said in court filings that Ohio's 2004 law was intended "to end the confusion, inefficiency and delays under the earlier patchwork of local ordinances, and to ensure that Ohio's oil and gas resources are developed on a uniform statewide basis."


The company's lawyers said the only area of Munroe Falls that's zoned for industrial development is the tiny corner of a small airport that was not conducive to oil and gas development.



US bank earnings rise 17 pct as loan losses fall


U.S. banks' earnings rose 17 percent in the October-December quarter from a year earlier, as losses on loans fell to a seven-year low and banks set aside less to cover losses as well as legal costs.


The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. reported Wednesday that the banking industry earned $40.3 billion in the final quarter of 2013, up from $34.4 billion in the same period in 2012.


For all of 2013, bank earnings increased 9.6 percent to what the agency calls a record annual level of $154.7 billion.


The data provides fresh evidence of the banking industry's sustained recovery more than five years after the financial crisis struck. Still, the FDIC said banks continue to have difficulty increasing revenues, and are relying on setting aside less for loan losses to boost earnings.



Transformational Changes in Schools Nationwide

Ed. note: This is cross-posted from the Let's Move! blog. See the original post here.


As part of the fourth anniversary celebration of Let’s Move!, First Lady Michelle Obama highlighted the transformational changes happening in schools across the country – from school breakfast and lunch, to snacks and physical activity. Since launching Let’s Move!, the First Lady has been dedicated to ensuring that the school environment is one that supports that health of all its students.


read more


Police confiscates spoiled food in Beirut warehouse


BEIRUT: Police confiscated large quantities of spoiled food during a raid of a warehouse in the Beirut neighborhood of Ashrafieh, the Internal Security Forces said in a statement.


Members of the ISF along with a unit from the Economy Ministry's Consumer Protection Directorate searched the building after receiving a tip off.


Police consequently confiscated large quantities of expired meat and chicken, the statement added.


A delegation from the Health Ministry also went to the warehouse to inspect the goods.



Lack of coal-waste oversight is under fire after giant spill


A massive North Carolina coal waste spill into a major river is increasing pressure on the Obama administration to start policing the more than 1,000 such waste storage sites across the nation.


The federal government doesn’t regulate the disposal of “coal ash,” the dustlike material that’s left over when pulverized coal is burned to fuel electrical power plants. Pennsylvania leads the nation in coal ash production, followed by Texas, Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky.


Coal ash can contain toxic materials such as arsenic and selenium, but the Environmental Protection Agency has left it to the states to decide what rules to put in place. The result has been an inconsistent patchwork of regulations that the EPA acknowledges is full of gaps.


The agency promises to come out with long-delayed rules by the end of the year, but it’s likely to leave the enforcement in the hands of the states.


State coal ash enforcement is under particular fire in North Carolina after a Duke Energy spill this month poured coal ash into the Dan River. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has estimated that up to 39,000 tons of the waste traveled 80 miles downstream and coated the river bottom in a layer of sludge. It’s endangering aquatic life in the river, and health officials warn against eating fish caught in the contaminated stretch.


“If this doesn’t prove you need to have a strong federal regulation, then what proof does it take?” said Frank Holleman, attorney for the Southern Environmental Law Center, which has challenged state oversight of coal ash dumps.


The U.S. Justice Department has launched a criminal probe of North Carolina’s environmental agency in the wake of the spill, with state regulators receiving subpoenas to appear next month before a federal grand jury. Among the subpoena demands: State officials must bring any records they have of gifts from Duke Energy.


Other states also have come under criticism for their coal waste oversight. The environmental group Earthjustice has singled out Texas and Georgia as having particularly lax regulations, and the group documented 208 coal ash storage sites in 37 states with contamination or spills.


According to the EPA, without sufficient protection the contaminants in coal waste can leach into groundwater and migrate to sources of drinking water. The agency identified more than 40 wet ash storage units nationwide as having “high hazard potential,” meaning they’re sites where the failure of the impoundment probably would lead to the loss of human life.


Coal waste burst into public consciousness in 2008, when a dike rupture at a Tennessee power plant spilled more than 1 billion gallons of ash slurry that covered 300 acres and flowed into two rivers. The EPA subsequently proposed the first federal rules for handling coal ash, but the Obama administration has delayed implementing them for the past four years.


That led environmental groups to sue and a judge to order the EPA to come up with a timeline. The agency said it would release new regulations by the end of this year, but it’s unclear what the rules are going to be.


One of the two options the EPA is considering is to declare coal ash a hazardous waste. That would require special handling and disposal of the waste, with direct oversight by the EPA. The other option would impose a less stringent set of new federal rules, with enforcement through states and citizen lawsuits.


The industry has been fighting hard against the hazardous designation, and it doesn’t think the EPA will do it.


“We do expect that it will be designated as nonhazardous, so that’s the general assumption that we’re working with,” Keith Trent, Duke Energy’s chief operating officer, said in a call with investors last week.


Scott Segal, a lobbyist who represents coal-burning utilities and other energy firms, said designating the coal ash as hazardous would be a blow to recyclers who turn the waste into materials such as cement and wallboard.


Coal waste is high in volume and low in toxicity, Segal said, and doesn’t fit the hazardous designation. Coal mining and utility companies say such a designation brings with it costly requirements.


“My own personal opinion is that the agency will not embrace a hazardous determination, because if they did they would be undermining billions of dollars’ worth of recycling, they would be placing even more electrical power systems in peril and they would be increasing the cost of energy,” Segal said.


Southern Environmental Law Center attorney Holleman said it was in the companies’ best interest to clean up coal waste because it insulated them from risk and protected their reputations. It’s been proved that state regulators can’t be trusted to make that happen without a strong federal rule, he argued.


In an emailed response to questions, the EPA wouldn’t explain the reason for its four-year delay in implementing coal waste regulations or suggest whether it plans to leave enforcement to the states.


The EPA said it was committed to finalizing the rules by Dec. 19 and that the regulations “would ensure stronger oversight of the structural integrity of impoundments in order to prevent future accidents.”



Court allows Stanford Ponzi scheme suits


The Supreme Court says class-action lawsuits from investors who lost billions in former Texas tycoon R. Allen Stanford's massive Ponzi scheme can go forward.


The justices on Wednesday ruled against individuals, law firms and investment companies that allegedly aided Stanford's fraud. They wanted the lawsuits thrown out.


Federal law says class-action suits related to securities fraud cannot be filed under state law, as these suits were. But a federal appeals court said these could move forward because the main part of the fraud involved certificates of deposit, not stocks and other securities.


The high court agreed in a 7-2 decision.



Cold weather delays indoor sports complex opening


The cold winter weather has been so harsh that it's delayed the opening of a $3 million indoor sports complex in Bay County.


The Bay City Times (http://bit.ly/1dyLWBJ ) reports a new, 73,500-square-foot domed structure in Williams Township is home to the Tri-City Sports Complex.


The venture's co-owner Manoj Shah says the winter weather has prevented crews from installing the complex's turf field. Shah says they want to have "the best playing surface around," and frost on the ground created a chance that the turf might not be flat.


A January opening had been pushed back to this coming Saturday, but that's also been delayed. Shah says the new opening date depends on the weather.


---


Online:


http://bit.ly/1eworsA



Lobbyists Amp Up Efforts To Sell Washington On E-Cigarettes



Blair Roberts, a 22-year-old sales associate at Colorado E-Smokes, "vapes" with an electronic cigarette in the Aurora, Colo., store. In the absence of federal rules, Colorado is among states that considered its own age requirements for the nicotine-delivery devices.i i


hide captionBlair Roberts, a 22-year-old sales associate at Colorado E-Smokes, "vapes" with an electronic cigarette in the Aurora, Colo., store. In the absence of federal rules, Colorado is among states that considered its own age requirements for the nicotine-delivery devices.



Ed Andrieski/AP

Blair Roberts, a 22-year-old sales associate at Colorado E-Smokes, "vapes" with an electronic cigarette in the Aurora, Colo., store. In the absence of federal rules, Colorado is among states that considered its own age requirements for the nicotine-delivery devices.



Blair Roberts, a 22-year-old sales associate at Colorado E-Smokes, "vapes" with an electronic cigarette in the Aurora, Colo., store. In the absence of federal rules, Colorado is among states that considered its own age requirements for the nicotine-delivery devices.


Ed Andrieski/AP


In a scene from the new season of the popular Netflix political drama House of Cards, the elegant Claire Underwood catches her soon-to-be vice president husband puffing an e-cigarette.


"You're cheating," she says, referring to their efforts to quit smoking.


"No, I'm not," Congressman Francis Underwood replies. "It's vapor....addiction without the consequences."


A Washington-based drama with an implicit endorsement of "vaping" – the practice of partaking in nicotine without burning tobacco?


It could have been ripped directly from the playbook of lobbyists working Capitol Hill and Washington regulators on behalf of the estimated $1.7 billion-and-growing e-cigarette industry.


Eric Criss of the Electronic Cigarette Industry Group (ECIG), laughs off the suggestion that his Florida-based organization, which recently opened a lobbying office in suburban Washington, orchestrated the House of Cards scene.


"No, we did not have anything to do with that product placement," Criss says, or with the Golden Globe Awards gag last month where Julia Louis-Dreyfus ostentatiously puffed a blue-tipped e-cigarette. (Pro-"vaping" sites lit up with comments about the House of Cards moment since the show has become almost synonymous with product placement.)


As e-cigs continue to embed themselves in popular culture, lobbying efforts are heating up around the issue of how government will ultimately regulate the nascent battery-powered nicotine delivery system. All eyes are on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, which, in concert with the White House Office of Management and Budget, is expected to soon release a long awaited proposal for regulating e-cigarettes.


Selling D.C. On A New Cig


Debate over the product's health effects continue. A recent Bloomberg Businessweek cover on e-cigs captured the discussion with this tagline: "They're new. They're blue. But will they still kill you?"


Because e-cigarettes don't burn tobacco, cancer-causing tar isn't delivered to users' lungs. But there are concerns that the electronic version could serve as a "gateway" to traditional cigarettes for young people, and that the full health effects of inhaling the nicotine vapor have yet been studied.


The question occupying both ECIG, which represents small producers of e-cigarettes, and tobacco giants like Reynolds American, which has a growing e-cigarette subsidiary, is whether the FDA will seek to regulate the nicotine delivery system in the same manner as traditional products that burn tobacco.


"We're focused not so much on the Hill, but more on the regulators," says Bryan Haynes, a partner and tobacco regulation expert at the large national law firm Troutman Sanders LLP and counsel for the ECIG.


"We do want the public to have a comfort level that what the manufacturers say is in the product is actually accurate," Haynes says. "At the same time, we do not believe that e-cigarettes should be regulated in the same way traditional tobacco products are regulated."


The 2009 Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Act includes restrictions on retail and online tobacco sales, limits on advertising and marketing to young people, and assesses user fees based on market share.


Criss, ECIG's spokesman, says that most e-cigarette producers, big and small, agree the product needs to be regulated to prevent its sale to minors, to control its ingredients, and to provide proper and accurate labeling.


He also acknowledges the concerns of anti-smoking advocates who have "worked very long and hard to make smoking not look cool – and this product looks like a cigarette, and has nicotine."


"That is a real concern when it comes to kids," he says, "but it is combusting tobacco that kills people."


The "white hat" message that ECIG is using to persuade regulators and Congress is this, according to Criss: e-cigarettes can "move existing smokers down the ladder of risk."


The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids has another view. The group claimed this week that tobacco giant Lorillard Inc., in a Sports Illustrated advertisement for its e-cigarette, directly targeted teenage boys.


The ad by Lorillard, which last year spent about $2.8 million lobbying for issues including c-cigarettes, featured a close up of a model in a tiny bikini bottom emblazoned with the company's e-cigarette's logo.


In a blog post on its website, the group called on the FDA to prevent such marketing, asserting that the ad "is just the latest example of how marketing for e-cigarettes is using the same slick tactics long used to market regular cigarettes to kids."


The organization is on record, however, as saying that e-cigarettes could benefit public health if responsibly marketed.


Big Tobacco, New Market


David Howard is spokesman for Reynolds American, the parent company of subsidiaries that include the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., maker of Camel, Pall Mall and Winston cigarettes, and the relatively new R.J. Reynolds Vapor Co., which produces the VUSE e-cigarette.


"We are in this business, and we are going to lobby on issues that affect our business, and we are going to have our side represented," Howard says. "These products are different from traditional tobacco products. There's no tobacco. There's no combustion."


The company, which in 2013 spent about $3.3 million lobbying for issues including e-cigarettes, activated it first statewide distribution of VUSE in Colorado last July. It went statewide in Utah in January, and the company is taking steps for a national rollout, he says.


"We believe there is significant potential in the category," Howard says. "Some analysts say it could be a $5 billion industry in the next handful of years."


When the FDA releases its proposed regulation, it simply begins a lengthy comment period, one that could very well spawn litigation. Howard mentions that R.J. Reynolds successfully challenged a marketing provision in the 2009 Tobacco Act after it was proposed.


So while e-cig lobbying has already been kicked up a notch, the real fight begins when the FDA makes its regulation proposal — any day now.



Dollar Tree's 4Q profit falls on lower sales


Dollar Tree Inc. said Wednesday that its fourth-quarter net income fell nearly 7 percent as severe weather and a shorter holiday selling period hurt the discount retailer's sales.


Its results for the quarter and its forecast for full year 2014 fell short of Wall Street expectations and shares fell more than 2 percent in premarket trading.


The Chesapeake, Va., company earned $213 million, or $1.02 cents per share, for the period ended Feb. 1. That's down from $228.6 million, or 1.01 cents per share, in the year-ago period that included an extra week.


Analysts polled by FactSet expected earnings of $1.05 per share.


Revenue fell less than one percent to $2.23 billion. Analysts expected revenue of $2.28 billion.


Sales at established stores rose more than a percent. That comparison is a key gauge of a retailer's health. It excludes the volatility associated with stores that recently opened or closed.


Dollar Tree operates more than 4,990 stores in the U.S. and Canada.


Dollar stores offer a wide variety of products, from beach toys to vitamins. They have done well throughout the recession and its aftermath, attracting budget-conscious customers. They've also promoted themselves as easy to navigate and get to, because they're much smaller than big-box stores like Wal-Mart and Target, and often have more locations in cities.


For the full year, the company said its profit fell more than 3 percent to $596.7 million, or $2.72 per share, from $619.3 million, or $2.68 per share, a year ago. Revenue rose to $7.84 billion from $7.39 billion a year earlier. Same store sales rose 2.4 percent.


Dollar Tree expects a full-year 2014 profit of $2.91 to $3.13 per share on revenue between $8.35 billion and $8.58 billion. Analysts expect earnings of $3.25 on revenue of $8.59 billion.


Its shares fell $1.19, or 2.3 percent, to $51.39 in premarket trading shortly before the market open.



Michael Felberbaum can be reached at http://bit.ly/1dbspXO .


Obama seeking $300 billion for roads, railways


President Barack Obama is asking Congress for $300 billion to update the nation's roads and railways.


Obama plans to make the proposal Wednesday at the Union Depot rail and bus station in St. Paul, Minn.


The Highway Trust Fund finances federal highway and transit programs but is forecast to go broke as early as August.


The fund needs $100 billion over the next six years just to maintain current spending levels. But Obama and Congress don't want to raise gas taxes to make up the gap.


Obama is proposing that half the $302 billion he's proposing come from an overhaul of corporate taxes, but he says he's open to other ideas.


He also plans to announce a $600 million competition for federal grants to fund infrastructure projects that create jobs.



Worker dies in Corpus Christi terminal accident


Investigators say a contract worker at a South Texas storage terminal complex has died after a metal pipe fell on him.


The Corpus Christi Caller-Times (http://bit.ly/1bLz547 ) reports operations at the Trafigura EF-90 plant have been halted since the death of 54-year-old Jeffery Babzien.


State and federal safety officials were at the Corpus Christi site on Tuesday, a day after the accident. Babzien was dead at the scene after being struck by a pipe that fell from a crane.


A statement Wednesday from Trafigura says company officials are helping review the accident. A spokeswoman described the site as a storage terminal for crude and refined products and an LPG export facility.


Two workers were killed in December at the complex when a tank collapsed and the men fell about 60 feet.



Berri signals compromise over resistance clause


BEIRUT: Speaker Nabih Berri signaled Wednesday a potential compromise over the divisive issue of the Cabinet's policy statement, voicing optimism that ministers would soon finalize a draft.


Rather than focusing on the controversial tripartite formula "the Army, the people, and the resistance," Berri used his weekly meeting with lawmakers to emphasize Arab support for "the right of the resistance and Lebanon in resisting occupation [and] Israeli aggression with all legitimate means," according to a statement released by his office.


The March 14 coalition has insisted the tripartite formula of previous policy statement be removed and replaced with the Baabda Declaration, which calls for distancing Lebanon from regional and international conflicts, particularly the war in Syria. Hezbollah so thus far insisted on keeping the tripartite formula.


Berri’s remarks were seen as a compromise intended to facilitate the work of the ministerial committee tasked with drafting the government’s policy statement.


The committee, chaired by Prime Minister Tammam Salam, has held five meetings at the Grand Serail with no tangible results.


But a source close to Salam told The Daily Star Tuesday that the committee was working to reach a compromise on the thorny issue of Hezbollah's armed resistance against Israel.


Ministers are expected to reconvene Wednesday to resume discussion on the policy statement.


Lawmakers who visited Berri said the speaker voiced optimism that the committee would finalize the draft policy.


“We have been flexible in discussing the statement and we are ready to continue as such until we reach a consensus regarding disputed items,” the MPs quoted Berri as saying.



Lebanese Army detains suspected Nusra Front commander


HERMEL: Lebanese soldiers ambushed Wednesday a suspected commander of the Nusra Front in the Lebanese border town of Masharih al-Qaa, security sources told The Daily Star.


Nidal Sweidan, a Syrian national who is suspected of being a leader in the Al-Qaeda-linked group, was detained in the afternoon, the sources said.


More to follow...



Army arrests suspected Nusra Front commander

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Aurora residents sue city over tax incentives


Several Aurora residents are suing the city over local tax incentives awarded the Gaylord Rockies Hotel.


The residents contend the tax incentives violate the state's tax- and spending-limitation amendment that requires a vote for any tax increases.


According to the Denver Post (http://tinyurl.com/l685vbq ), Aurora agreed to provide Gaylord Entertainment a refund of city sales, hotel occupancy and other taxes so it could build a hotel and conference center near Denver International Airport.


Over 30 years, the value of the subsidies the city is providing could approach $800 million, making it one of the largest incentive awards by any government in state history,



Santa Fe County board OKs minimum wage increases


The minimum wage in unincorporated areas of Santa Fe County is going up.


An ordinance approved unanimously by the county commissioners sets the minimum wage in the county at $10.66 an hour, up from $7.50.


Meanwhile, the minimum wage for tipped employees will increase to $6.40 an hour from $2.13 currently.


The increases take effect in early May.



ConAgra plans building new C. Ind. warehouse


ConAgra Foods plans to move about 150 jobs from a central Indiana warehouse after it opens a new distribution center in a nearby city.


ConAgra officials say the company expects to start construction this summer on the new 1.6 million-square-foot warehouse in Frankfort. The Nebraska-based company says the Frankfort facility will have about 225 workers by 2015, including jobs being moved from its current distribution center about 20 miles to the south in Lebanon.


ConAgra says the new warehouse will accommodate current and future business needs for the packaged-food company.


The new warehouse will be built on a 288-acre site near Frankfort's industrial park. ConAgra says it will have a logistics company manage the warehouse and employ its workers.



EU accepts Visa concessions, ends antitrust probe


The European Union's antitrust authority is closing an investigation against Visa Europe after accepting the firm's offer to lower some card fees.


The EU Commission said Wednesday its concerns are sufficiently addressed by Visa's concession to cut inter-bank fees for credit card payments to 0.3 percent of a transaction's value — a reduction of about 40 to 60 percent.


The Commission, which acts as the 27-nation bloc's antitrust watchdog, says the company has also offered to reform its rules to facilitate competition across Europe by reducing cross-border fees between banks on credit and debit card payments.


The settlement with the EU Commission makes the concessions legally binding for Visa for five years. Violation could incur stiff fines.


Separately, the Commission continues its probe against Visa Inc. on international inter-bank fees.



Appeal filed over state retirement fund


Colorado Springs attorneys have filed an appeal in the city's dispute over whether it owes the state retirement fund millions of dollars in pension liabilities for Memorial Hospital employees.


The lawsuit was filed after a privately hired judge sided with the Colorado Public Employees' Retirement Association in a dispute with Colorado Springs over compensation after 4,000 city hospital employees left the state pension system.


The judge says Colorado Springs should pay the state fund $190 million plus interest because the Memorial Hospital workers left the state retirement plan when the city leased the hospital to University of Colorado Health in 2012.


Retirement fund officials say the decision means the city and hospital cannot shift their obligations to other government agencies and public employees.



Big changes ahead for frequent fliers on Delta


Delta Air Lines is making fundamental changes to its frequent flier program and will reward those who buy its priciest tickets, as opposed to those who fly the most miles.


It will be the first major carrier to make such a change and other airlines will certainly be watching to see how travelers react to the change.


Delta said Wednesday that the 2015 SkyMiles program will better recognize frequent business travelers and leisure customers who buy premium fares.


It's a bid to lure the much-sought-after business traveler, but it will affect everyone who flies with the carrier and uses the program.


Delta had been moving in the direction of a revenue-based program. In January 2013 the company said that its 2014 frequent fliers would need to spend at least $2,500 to qualify for the lowest level of elite status. Previously, they could qualify on miles alone.


A revenue-based program generally rewards business travelers. Those fliers are critical to airlines because they book flights on short notice and buy more expensive tickets, versus the typical leisure traveler that plans a trip well in advance and hunts for the cheapest fares.


JetBlue Airways Corp.'s "True Blue" frequent flier program already awards points based on dollars spent, not on miles. And in 2011 Southwest Airlines Co. changed its frequent flier program to reward more-expensive tickets.


But the change by a carrier that has the reach of Delta could signal a more definitive shift in catering more to those sitting in the front of the plane, rather than the back-seaters.


Delta Air Lines Inc., based in Atlanta, says it's making the announcement about changes to its SkyMiles program 10 months in advance so customers have ample time to make travel plans. The new program goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2015.


Delta said that other program updates will include a new mileage redemption structure that will improve Award seat availability at the lowest mileage requirement levels; offering One-Way Awards at half the price of round-trip and providing additional Miles + Cash Award options.



Fraud allegations at issue in oil spill hearing


BP's allegations of fraud against a prominent Texas lawyer are at issue in a federal court hearing.


Wednesday's hearing involves claims by the oil giant that attorney Mikal (MEYE'-kahl) Watts falsely claimed to represent thousands of deckhands who lost money in the 2010 Gulf oil spill.


Through his lawyer, Watts has denied the accusation.


BP wants the court to halt distribution of money from a fund to compensate seafood industry interests affected by the spill pending a hearing aimed at finding the extent of the alleged fraud.



Couple stumbles upon $10 million in rare coins


A Northern California couple out walking their dog on their property stumbled across a modern-day bonanza: $10 million in rare, mint-condition gold coins buried in the shadow of an old tree.


Nearly all of the 1,427 coins, dating from 1847 to 1894, are in uncirculated, mint condition, said David Hall, co-founder of Professional Coin Grading Service of Santa Ana, which recently authenticated them. Although the face value of the gold pieces only adds up to more than $28,000, some of them are so rare that coin experts say they could fetch nearly $1 million apiece.


"I don't like to say once-in-a-lifetime for anything, but you don't get an opportunity to handle this kind of material, a treasure like this, ever," said veteran numismatist Don Kagin, who is representing the finders. "It's like they found the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow."


Kagin, whose family has been in the rare-coin business for 81 years, would say little about the couple other than that they are husband and wife, are middle-aged and have lived for several years on the rural property in California's Gold Country, where the coins were found. They have no idea who put them there, he said.


The pair are choosing to remain anonymous, Kagin said, in part to avoid a renewed gold rush to their property by modern-day prospectors armed with metal detectors.


They also don't want to be treated any differently, said David McCarthy, chief numismatist for Kagin Inc. of Tiburon.


"Their concern was this would change the way everyone else would look at them, and they're pretty happy with the lifestyle they have today," he said.


They plan to put most of the coins up for sale through Amazon while holding onto a few keepsakes. They'll use the money to pay off bills and quietly donate to local charities, Kagin said.


Before they sell them, they are loaning some to the American Numismatic Association for its National Money Show, which opens Thursday in Atlanta.


What makes their find particularly valuable, McCarthy said, is that almost all of the coins are in near-perfect condition. That means that whoever put them into the ground likely socked them away as soon as they were put into circulation.


Because paper money was illegal in California until the 1870s, he added, it's extremely rare to find any coins from before that of such high quality.


"It wasn't really until the 1880s that you start seeing coins struck in California that were kept in real high grades of preservation," he said.


The coins, in $5, $10 and $20 denominations, were stored more or less in chronological order in six cans, McCarthy said, with the 1840s and 1850s pieces going into one can until it was filed, then new coins going into the next one and the next one after that. The dates and the method indicated that whoever put them there was using the ground as their personal bank and that they weren't swooped up all at once in a robbery.


Although most of the coins were minted in San Francisco, one $5 gold piece came from as far away as Georgia.


Kagin and McCarthy would say little about the couple's property or its ownership history, other than it's located in Gold Country, a sprawling, picturesque and still lightly populated section of north-central California that stretches along the western slope of the Sierra Nevada.


The discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill, about 50 miles northeast of Sacramento, set off the California Gold Rush of 1848.


The coins had been buried by a path the couple had walked for years. On the day they found them last spring, the woman had bent over to examine an old rusty can that erosion had caused to pop slightly out of the ground.


"Don't be above bending over to check on a rusty can," Kagin said she told him.


They were located on a section of the property the couple nicknamed Saddle Ridge, and Kagin is calling the find the Saddle Ridge Hoard. He believes it could be the largest such discovery in U.S. history.


One of the largest previous finds of gold coins was $1 million worth uncovered by construction workers in Jackson, Tenn., in 1985. More than 400,000 silver dollars were found in the home of a Reno, Nev., man who died in 1974 and were later sold intact for $7.3 million.


Gold coins and ingots said to be worth as much as $130 million were recovered in the 1980s from the wreck of the SS Central America. But historians knew roughly where that gold was because the ship went down off the coast of North Carolina during a hurricane in 1857.



Gov. Inslee to sign immigrant financial aid bill


Gov. Jay Inslee is scheduled on Wednesday to sign into law a measure that expands state college financial aid to students in the country without legal status.


In a highly divided Legislature, passage of the bill represents a big win for immigrant advocates.


The Senate and House versions of the bill were almost identical but had different names. The House version didn't identify a funding source, but the Senate proposal allocates $5 million through June 30, 2015, from the general fund to pay for the financial aid payments under the state need-grant program.


The bill requires students to have received a high school diploma or equivalent in Washington state and to have lived in the state for at least three years before getting aid.



Mayor to give Detroit's State of the City address


The first State of the City address for Detroit since the city declared and was allowed into bankruptcy will be delivered by Mayor Mike Duggan.


Attendance is by invitation only for the annual speech, which takes places Wednesday evening in the Erma Henderson Auditorium in City Hall.


It comes less than a week after state-appointed emergency manager Kevyn Orr filed his plan of adjustment to pay creditors while providing money for city services and improvements in the coming years.


Duggan is a former Detroit Medical Center chief. He was elected mayor in November.


Under the state's emergency manager law, Orr controls Detroit's finances. Duggan is in charge of financial matters relating to day-to-day functions of city government, blight removal and some other city operations.



Boy's death from infected rat spurs suit vs. Petco


The death of a 10-year-old San Diego boy from a bacterial infection he reportedly got from his pet rat prompted his family to sue retailer Petco, saying they want to raise awareness among parents.


Attorney John Gomez told The Associated Press on Tuesday that his firm filed the lawsuit Monday in San Diego County seeking an unspecified amount for the suffering endured by the Pankey family, whose son, Aidan, died June 12, 2013, hours after he was rushed to the hospital with severe stomach pains.


The San Diego County medical examiner's office ruled that the cause of death was streptobacillus moniliformis infection, commonly known as rat-bite fever, after exposure to an infected rat.


Gomez said the Pankey family was not giving interviews, but they are devastated by the death.


"It's a means to ensure this doesn't happen again," Gomez said of the lawsuit. "Apparently there was some breakdown in procedures. They want tighter controls."


According to the lawsuit, the rat appeared safe. But the lawsuit says Petco should have known about the rodent's health and did not adequately test for the disease. It also says that negligence led to the boy's death, which has caused his parents, Andrew Pankey and Vanessa Sauer, emotional and economic hardship, and that the retailer did not post adequate warnings about the potential risks, especially for children.


Petco Animal Supplies Inc. said it is "in the process of investigating these claims and will respond appropriately when we have more information."


Meanwhile, the retailer in a statement expressed its condolences.


"We are deeply saddened by the Pankey family's tragic loss," Petco said. "The health and safety of people and pets is always a top priority, and we take the family's concerns very seriously."


The boy's grandmother purchased the male rat, which Aidan named Alex, because her only grandson wanted a mate for his female rat, Gomez said. The boy took the rat home May 27, 2013, and woke up the night of June 11 in severe pain with a fever and stomach problems. He was pale, lethargic and could barely walk, according to the lawsuit. He died at 1:09 a.m. the next day.


"He was a bright, energetic, friendly, happy kid who actually had a prior rat, who was a female, and he had this idea in his young head of having his female rat get married," Gomez said.


The lawsuit was not filed until now because attorneys were awaiting the lab results from the federal Centers for Disease Control, which tested the rat to confirm it was infected, Gomez said. The agency could not immediately confirm the results Tuesday.


According to the CDC, people can contract rat-bite fever from bites or scratches from infected rodents, such as rats, mice and gerbils, or even just by handling an animal with the disease without a bite or scratch. It can also be contracted by consuming food or drink contaminated with the bacteria. It is not spread from person to person.


Antibiotics, such as penicillin, are highly effective at treating rat-bite fever, and it is rarely fatal, according to the CDC.


The CDC says those at higher risk of contracting the illness are people with pet rats or who work with rats in laboratories or pet stores, or live in rat-infested buildings. The agency recommends that people who handle rats or clean their cages wear protective gloves, wash their hands regularly and avoid touching their mouths with their hands after being in contact with rodents.


Petco also mentions preventative measures for rat-bite fever in information it posts online and provides in stores. The company warns that all rats are potential carriers and that pregnant women, children under the age of 5 and people with weakened immune systems should contact their doctor before buying a rat and "should consider not having a rat as a pet."


Only about 200 cases of rat-bite fever had been documented in the U.S. as of 2004, according to the Center for Food Security and Public Health at Iowa State University. Scientists believe the disease may be underdiagnosed because it is hard to detect and responds to commonly used antibiotics. But the number of cases, they say, may be increasing, especially among children, with the growing popularity of rats as pets.



Two men shot in Tripoli Souk


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: Two Alawite men were shot Wednesday in the Kandarjiyeh Souk in the northern city of Tripoli.


Unidentified gunmen opened fire against Saleh Omran and his father, wounding them in their legs.


The reasons behind the shooting remained unclear.


The victims were transferred to a local hospital.


Tripoli has witnessed over a dozen rounds of clashes between Alawites and Sunnis linked to the Syrian crisis.



Court orders arrest of key Indian business leader


India's Supreme Court has issued arrest warrants for a key Indian business leader for failing to attend a hearing in a case relating to the refund of 200 billion rupees ($3.2 billion) to investors.


The court order asked police to produce Sahara India chief Subrata Roy next week after he defied its directive to appear in court Wednesday.


The Indian market regulator has accused Roy's group of raising the funds through bonds that were later found to be illegal. Sahara India says its liability was much less and that it has deposited an adequate amount with the regulator.


Sahara India has business interests in real estate, media, entertainment, tourism, health care and hospitality.